It was late, but everyone was
shopping, or at least hurrying frantically along the sidewalks. He did not stop to decide if this was a good thing, that there were people to hide him from the shadow that followed obstinately behind.
He kept going.
He looked over his shoulder repeatedly, stepping in hurried strides over the cracks in the pavement, like a child, afraid of the demons that lived between the bricks. Behind him the people swallowed up his tracker but he knew, by the way the hairs on his neck prickled and the way his head thumped with panic, that he was there.
He stepped into the gutter, his heart blurring in his ears, filling his world with cars and feet and pulse, pulse, pulse.
In his shadowed pocket his gun felt heavy, dark, dangerous; his hand crept to it but instead held his thigh, squeezing the muscle to keep his slippery red blood behind the wound. He quickened his pace over a zebra crossing.
Terrified to near hysteria, he half-turned again, the crowd parting to let a red light glint off the eyes of his follower; flames flickered in the dark, gruesome, hellish eyes. He tried to run, but he couldn't, and horrible feeling of helplessness swept over him. His lungs gasped for air, his arms and legs ached, his nostrils seemed to bleed with snot and pain. Slap, thud, slap, thud; left, right, left, right. Pulse, pulse, pulse.
An arm swept past his, and he started with a scream, his hand rising to his pocket. The arm ran past, ignoring him; it belonged to a woman, old, hurried, busy, safe. He tried to turn across the street again, into a busier, wider one. His ankle twisted in the gutter; he stumbled with pain.
Behind him, the darkened face turned pale in the greeny traffic lights, then flickered a deep yellow as the color changed. He half fell backwards onto the road, then picked himself up. He forced himself into the rush.