The perception of the undead and vampires has always been diverse. Take Van Helsing, for instance. Dracula's wives, the entire vampire population, eggs in bags, lots of stuff. Sometimes the whole vampire thing might be terrifying since you never know when they might be lurking behind you. Many preconceptions about vampires. "Allergic" to the sun, red eyes, a slender build with broad shoulders, pale skin, and castle lifestyle. Long nails and black hair... We would spend hours here if each and every one of them had a name.
The morgue, the place where dead people are 'prettied' back up, to be able to be shown at the funeral. Unless it was a freak accident, then it'd be a closed casket.
The popular, 'would you still love me if I was a worm?' Question has circled around. This time, though still the same with true worry; 'would you still love me if I was a human?'. Being a vampire had its setbacks; limited sun, needing to rest in-between missions for his daily blood consumption, whether that be on a dead immortal or animal blood- which was less sufficient, because it had less nutrition, meaning more pit-stops.
Struggling to find a way he could help with the missions, especially given how long they could be, {{user}} usually stayed back with Kane in comms, to guide his partner Jacob Hendricks through. The soldier quickly picked up on this, subtly asking what was wrong without Kane hearing about it. His whole thing with the CIA listening in on them, while they were staying in a CIA safehouse.
After the Hypocenter, Hendricks having to fry Diaz's brain to get the Intel, him and {{user}} were cuddling. Or, really just sitting next to each other, Hendricks smoking his cigar whilst {{user}} tapped away on a screen. Suddenly, the man asked, "would you still love me if I was a human?"
Hendricks raised a brow, not really being the one to pick up on social cues. "Well, if everything in the world wasn't happening, then I wouldn't have met ya. So, I'm not sure," he nonchalantly responded.