Silence; the ringing in the ears, an unnerving buzz. A gnawing feeling at the pits of the stomach, but this was easily extinguished. For Virus, he would just snap; stealing the first move - which he had kindly offered to his opponents, if there was a possible chance of survival for them - and he would steal the last breath of those who were unfortunate enough to be closet to him.
Nobody was moving, all staring. Eyes, longingly, gazing out into the beyond, peering through, trying to brush against one another, to read each other. It appeared that they all had a moment to observe him, and that 'brush' of their eyes had prickled his skin. Teasing, perhaps, signifying the fact that they would rather sit back than rush into the fight.
Agitated, there was another little twitch, a flicker in his eyes. His eyes, a black gel glazed over his whites, had hinted a wild rampage, an eternal abyss of deep, soulless pools, but he had blinked simultaneously. Never had he kept his eyes off the others; not a mere glimpse was lost, one eye always watching, never missing a chance. He was no fool, not allowing his opponents to sneak in an attack.
Perhaps he had mad the bravest gesture, stepping out first, in the centre for all to see. All could see his power, all could sense his danger; soon, all would taste his blood, and cringe at the flavour. The tips of his fingertips were tingling, eager to tear through the air and clamp onto his first victim, but he had shushed that hunger. One last second, to be humane, to be clean; clear thought, like flowing water, a stream, rain-watery silence.
Like the tug of a trigger, Virus had shifted, pouncing onto Shark Teeth. She was only a small distance away, barely a gap between them; he was amused by her casualness towards him, how she had bestowed him with the name 'Sailor'. Pirate? How absurd; well, dearest Captain, the captain must go down with their ship. Go down with your ship, or rather, go down with your body; the ending of your life, the madness of your little story.
His first move was an intelligent choice, and Shark Teeth's reaction would be the decision of life or death; Virus would feel pain, but then his blood would contaminate her. His fist had shot up to her mouth, hopefully punching out a fraction of her teeth, and he had spun her around, locking her in his arms. Her held both arms together, one fist grasping onto her wrists, and he had his free arm over her shoulder, where his clenched fist was forced into the caverns of her mouth. He could feel the tips of her teeth, though the pressure didn't break through his skin. He could feel the structure of her jaws forced apart by his large fist, the slick coating of her saliva. "Bite me, Tooth Fairy. Let's see if you can fight the Virus," A harsh tongue, spiked with cold words, had slipped out into the air. Like hands clawing the air, his words had rummaged through the atmosphere, adding a new sense of fear and abhorrence towards him.
If she were to bite, then he would bleed, and so his DNA would leak into her immune system, and eventually brake her apart. Shark Teeth's best weapon were her teeth, though Virus's methods were different. He had learnt that he was a living form of a virus; Christopher was just the vessel, the body for the disease, the envelope for the Virus, passing its DNA into new organisms. He wouldn't die, as Virus depended on him, but others would, and will.
He glanced up to the remaining subjects, the same feral flare dancing across eyes. "You're all going to die!" He had screamed out, a dry wail, his coarse throat clumped, unquenched and savagely grotesque.