"Listen, bozo, I like some girls and certain guys, yeah, I am bisexual, but I don't want anything to do with a creepy bozo like you," I said to my stalker, Geoffrey Paddock, and the skinny, Dashiki-wearing, decidedly effeminate Jamaican bozo looked at me with wide eyes, looking a bit frightened by my response. Without bothering to wait for the creep's response, I walked away, fuming after being driven to my wits end by this bozo.
"Can I at least respond?" Geoffrey replied in a mewling voice, and I shook my head and headed for the elevators. Other people sitting inside the Carleton University library looked at me, but I didn't give anything close to a damn. Geoffrey has made a habit of following me around town, and at school. Dude followed me to Hurdman Station when I went to visit a buddy one night, and accosted me there, even though I knew it wasn't on his route.
"Save it," I said to Geoffrey as I stepped into the elevator. A plump white chick who was already inside shot me a look. I looked at her and shrugged, then made sure that Geoffrey wasn't following me. I have my reasons for behaving this way. This creep followed me all the way to Barrhaven one night, running past my friend Matt and I, screaming like a crazy person as we walked home from Marketplace Station. Geoffrey is a creepy like bozo who looks a bit like Steve Urkel from that old television show Family Matters.
While Steve Urkel the nerd was nice and friendly, Geoffrey is super creepy, flamboyantly gay, with a thousand female friends, and he's obsessed with me. I like both sexes but effeminate gay guys appeal to me as much as watching wet paint dry. When I like a female, I go for a big-booty gal like Tennis legend Serena Williams or Coco, rapper Ice-T's curvaceous blonde wife. When I like a man, I prefer a manly-looking, manly-sounding and manly-acting guy, thank you very much. Sorry, just being honest.
I'm not into guys who look or act like Geoffrey Paddock. I tried to be nice about it and let him down easy, but Geoffrey simply wouldn't take no for an answer, forcing me to be more direct. He is annoying as fuck, passive-aggressive, snide, and gets on my last damn nerve. No, I can't just kick his ass. I'm not trying to get kicked out of school. I have enough problems as it is.
The City of Ottawa, Ontario, is full of passive-aggressive folks who smile to your face, and stab you in the back. I'm not anything like them. On the island of Haiti, where I was born and raised, we're more honest. I'm usually pretty chill, but if you irk me, I let you know in no uncertain terms. I was absent when diplomacy was invented, and I don't think I've missed out. I go my own way. Cheers. If you don't like it, you can kiss my fine Haitian ass.
"Stephen, my man, did you have to lay into him like that?" asked Matt, a good buddy of mine from my days at Walmart. Tall and blond, with icy blue eyes and a friendly, Clark Kent kind of vibe, Matt Sykes and I have been friends for ages. He's originally from Toronto, and came to Ottawa for university studies. The number of universities and colleges in the G.T.A. made that choice dubious, but what do I know? Dude's got a cushy job working for Stats Canada and he's not even done with his accounting studies yet. Nice, eh?
"Matt, you know I'm usually chill, but that dude Geoffrey Paddock has been stalking me, I told Campus Safety, and the Equity Office, and they didn't do shit about it," I replied, and Matt smiled and nodded sympathetically. We headed for the crowded cafeteria inside the University Center Building, and grabbed some Thai food. Just two old buddies sitting down for a quick meal.
"Hmm, this is nice," Matt said as he wolfed down his shrimp-fried rice, and I smiled politely and sipped my Pepsi. Matt inquired about why I wasn't eating, and I informed him I didn't have much of an appetite. I simply couldn't tell him the truth, not without endangering us both. Ladies and gentlemen, I sincerely do hope you're sitting down because I have a major secret to share with you.
"I'm full, but these icy drinks are nice," I replied to Matt, who continued to devour his food. The smell of his food was nauseating to me, because, well, I am different. No, I don't just mean because I'm a big and tall young Black man, or, you know, a switch-hitter. I didn't eat because I've lost the ability to process solid food. I am a Dhampir. What is that, you may ask? A creature that's the result of a human/Vampire mating.
You see, when I was growing up in the City of Jacmel, Haiti, my mother, Helene Augustin, had me believing that my father Antoine Augustin was dead, thanks to his ill-fated opposition to the Duvalier Regime in the 1980s. What mommy dearest neglected to tell me was my dear Papa was a Vampire. When the Duvalier Storm-Troopers, locally known as the Tonton Macoutes, came for my father, it had more to do with the fact that he was a Vampire, than his political views.
I was born on January 30, 1989, and lived most of my life as a regular guy. My mother Helene Augustin and I moved to Ottawa, Ontario, in 2010, following the deadly earthquake which devastated the island of Haiti and completely destroyed our Capital of Port-Au-Prince. For a time, we stayed with my mother's brother, my uncle Wilson Augustin. Fast forward seven years, and I was doing alright. I recently acquired my Canadian citizenship and I'm in the Sprott MBA program at Carleton University. Everything was looking good for me, and then I ran into a dying Vampire...
"You must help me," said the old Arab man, as he all but collapsed in my arms one night, as Matt and I walked out of my favorite pub, the Honest Lawyer Bar, located in the By Ward Market area of Ottawa. The By Ward Market is a fairly nice area but it also attracts unsavory types. I thought the well-dressed old Arab dude had been mugged or something, and promptly called him an ambulance.
"Don't try to talk, sir, you are hurt, badly, but don't worry, help is on the way," Matt said, and I nodded at him as I held onto the old Arab man. Passers-by gathered around us, and some people were offering help while others were taking pictures with their cell phones. The old man's blood got on me, but I didn't worry about it at the time. When the ambulance came to take him away, the old Arab dude looked at me.