Midori And The Bloodlust Blues: 1st Night

Story by Hardcover

Okay, here we go, first post. This was a story I did recently which is having trouble finding a home. Having posted many lolicon and shotacon stories, I was attempting to branch out into regular hentai stuff, only to find that there weren't any suitable forums for hentai fiction. Anyways, this is my attempt at something similar to cool vampire anime like Vampire Hunter D: Bloodlust and Blood: The Last Vampire. Downloadable files included. Please comment and lemme know if I should post anymore.

http://www.mediafire.com/?4yinybotzm1

MIDORI AND THE

BLOODLUST BLUES:

1st Night

By Hardcover

“Hello, darkness, my old friend.

It’s good to see you once again.”

--The Sound Of Silence

It was hot, humid, grey, and overcast on the day the world changed forever. The slightly southern town of Burning City, one of many small urban communities that dotted the midsection of Niperica, was located in a thickly forested region in the state of Sappraska, some hundred miles south of the Urusei Mountains. Surrounded on all sides by thick untamed forests, the only way in and out of the minor metropolis was a snaking twisting road that led out of town and across the mighty Sasami River. Burning was a medium sized city, a far cry from the small towns seen in many films, but a long way from being Yew Nork. It was one of those small mesas that thrived on the spring to summer tourist trade, helped along by the enormous Lake Kawamori, and the annual Anime Gras Festival, a wild drunken party similar to the old Mardi Gras that used to occur in America, except with an animation theme and an enormous amount of cosplay. It was not, to be sure, a one road rural hick town, but rather a sizable city featuring all the shopping malls and movie theaters and homes and apartment buildings that one would expect of a city of any reasonable size. Unfortunately, during the winter off season, Burning practically shrunk in size as the weather turned moist and humid. For that matter, rainstorms in the area could last for months on end, and usually overflowed the river, effectively cutting off Burning from the rest of the world. Its full time inhabitants, however, had learned to deal with it.

Burnin