He needed to clear his damn head.
His journey into Hudson High School was expressly for that purpose. It was, after all, so much easier to forget about his anger and the things that plagued him when he was distracted. There was a wealth of supplies in the school for those willing to risk facing the Infected that lurked there. It was so lucky for him then that they were no threat. Or perhaps a curse. He wasn’t quite sure. He preferred to stay away from mankind until he felt drawn to feed and that left him plenty of time to ponder his existence. Often he wondered whether or not things would have been better if he had died during one of the many times he was rushed to the hospital.
Would he be less furious, less consumed with near blinding rage? Would he have been better off never having seen his brother again? Would he be content never having to witness the end of the world? Would his disgust with humanity and its selfishness have never reached the peak it was at now? Or would his anger with North and the rest of the world prevent him from passing on? Was that the reason he was still here now, despite being a mindless beast for such a long time? Was that why the Military never put an end to his existence? Had this all been intended?
The answers to those questions, he found, were beginning to provoke a part of him he disliked, and so he pushed them to the back of his mind. Locked away where he pretended they did not exist, he could focus on the task at hand -- supplies. If nothing else, there was at least one benefit to being a bloodsucking monster -- the rest of his kind paid him no mind. It was for that reason Silas strolled through the halls of the school without much care, or a need to appear stealthy. He did not expect to find a human here...alive, that was. It seemed most of them were too intelligent, or still attached to a sense of self preservation to traverse these halls, let alone at night.
Apparently, even after the end of the world there were still reckless idiots.
Reckless idiots with a gun pointed right at him.
Oh dear.
Silas raised his hands slowly, looking past the man as though to give the illusion he could not see in the dark. “Are you crazy?!” He whispered harshly. “If you pull that trigger, we’ll be swarmed!” Well, there wasn’t a we. Silas knew well enough that he would be fine. In fact, there was not an ounce of fear in his body. It was this reckless idiot who would be torn to pieces. Perhaps if he was coldhearted, he would have goaded the man into shooting him, risking injury or death, as though watching a human being being ripped apart amused him. He was, however, not so cold and so, played along if only to spare this man a most painful end.
“Please,” he whispered. “Put that down.”