Chapter Four: "Double Exposure" and "One Drop of Blood"
written by Scott Snyder and Stephen King
art by Rafael Albuquerque
Pearl and Skinner each survive their first moonless night. Lured back to Block and his Hollywood vampires by her roommate and close friend Hattie Hargrove, Pearl discovers her friendship to have been little more than pretense and Hattie to be murderously jealous and self-promoting and entirely lacking in loyalty, i.e., the exact inversion of Pearl herself. Her transformation—perhaps better described as the revelation of her character—happens entirely within "Double Exposure". The opening flashback of her introduction to Pearl is charming and believable, two young women struggling to make it as actresses in Hollywood and struggling to find friends in a strange city. That she would stab her newly transformed vampire friend in the back is surprising enough. That she colluded with Bloch and his buddies to kill Pearl in the first place is fully black-hearted.
In contrast, Pearl's burgeoning love interest, Henry, continues to prove himself. Despite her running off alone, Henry comes to her rescue under, quite literally, the shadows of the Hollywoodland Sign. Knowing about her new condition, he still recognizes her as the same person she was before. Though the correlation between vampiric feeding and sex is old-hat, Snyder pulls it off well. Henry's offer is both generous and loving, and Pearl's response liberating and honest.
Sweet's showdown is considerably less interested in saving his friends than it getting revenge on the Pinkerton agent and his friends responsible for his capture. Still figuring out the rules of his unprecedented bloodline—rules that continue to be a little too explained in every issue, for my taste—Sweet finds himself weaker and more vulnerable than he has yet experienced. This doesn't prevent him from getting the better of Felix Camillo and Jim Book. Yet Book's biggest ambush is the kiss from goddaughter Abilena, and his look is one of complete shock and not a little horror in itself. Sweet's revenge is creatively cruel, befitting the outlaw himself, the infection of Book with his blood.
[August 2010]
As collected in American Vampire, Volume 1 (ISBN 978-1401228309)
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