“Are you saying the murders were committed by a supernatural creature?”ย Jeannie Anderson asks private investigator Holly Gibney in Stephen King's 2018 novelย The Outsider.ย “Something like a vampire?”
The murders Jeannie is referring to are a string of depraved and brutal slayings that her husband, Detective Ralph Anderson, has the displeasure of investigating.ย Andย the supernatural creatureโthe “vampire”โis of a species that has appeared multiple times in King's work, both withinย The Outsider'sย extended universe and beyond. It goes by many names and wears many faces, but I believe Jeannie was fumbling in the right linguistic direction. I've grown to think of it as a “dread vampire.”
The dread vampire is aย kind ofย psychic vampire, though not of the Colin Robinson variety. It feasts on negative emotions, but its victims rarely escape with a mild need for a nap and a Gatorade. Most die in unimaginable agony, their misery and pain ingested instead of (or in addition to) their blood and flesh. And when the bodies are cold, the dread vampire often slurps up all the remnants of the ruined lives it has left in its wake.ย
These creatures aren't as common as some of King's favorite character archetypesโthe writer, the recovering alcoholic, theย child imbued with devastating psionic powersโbut whenย they do show up, they make for some of the author's most unspeakably evil villains. A big part of that is their choice of victims. The dread vampire has a penchant for eating children.
Join me, fellow Constant Reader, as we track these foul creatures down through the caves, sewers, and caravans in which they hideย to better understand them.ย Perhaps alongย the way, we canย evenย uncover what King's dread vampires say about how we process inconceivable evil in ourย realย world.ย But leave your stakes and crucifixes at home. They won't do you any good here.ย
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Fear adds flavor to Pennywise's victims inย It
The first time I encountered one of the creatures I've come to call the dread vampire, I wasย traversing the fictional town of Derry, Maine, in the pages of 1986'sย It. Something dressed as a clown was luring children into the sewers, tearing off their limbs and feasting on them. But It wasn't always a clown.ย Sometimesย Itย was a werewolf, a mummy,ย aย cackling witch.ย Whatever it took to terrify Its young victims, to season them with fear.
“It had always fed on children,” King explains to us. “Many adults could be usedย without knowingย they had been used, and It had even fed on a few of the older ones over the yearsโadults had theirย ownย terrors, and their glands couldย be tapped, opened so that all the chemicals of fear flooded the body and salted the meat. But their fears were mostly too complex.ย The fears of childrenย could often be summoned upย in a single face.”
For Pennywise the killer clown, fear is flavoring. It will sometimes torment a child for weeks or even months before snatching them, making sure they're goodย and frightened before It chows down.ย Asย Tim Curry's Pennywise succinctly puts it in the 1990 miniseries adaptation ofย It, “You all taste so much better when you're afraid.”ย
It likely doesn't hurt that the pervasive atmosphere in Derry, a town where the murder rate is six times higher than that of any other town of comparable size in New England, is one of overt violence and indifferent cruelty.

“Children disappear unexplained and unfound at a rate of forty to sixty a year,” even outside of Pennywise's killing cycles, according to Derry's unofficial historian, Mike Hanlon. Adults seem toย turn a blind eye, leaving the children alone in their misery and terror.ย
King describes Derry as “It's private game-preserve,” but perhaps it can more accurately be called a slow cooker. Pennywise's victims have been marinating their whole lives.
Grief tastes good to El Cuco inย Theย Outsider
Negative emotions play a slightly differentโthough no less sinisterโrole inย the aforementionedย The Outsider. Rather than flavoring the meat of the main course, fear and misery serve as something of a dessert to this breed of dread vampire, which the characters name “El Cuco” after the child-eating boogeyman of Latin American folklore. “In the stories,ย El Cucoย lives on blood and flesh, like a vampire, but I think this creature also feeds on bad feelings,” Holly Gibney explains. “Psychic blood, you could say.”
Like Pennywise, El Cuco prefers to eat children, later explaining itself by saying they are “the strongest, sweetest food” (there's also a disturbing sexual element to this creature's crimes, but let's not get into that here).
Unlike Pennywise, however, adults account forย a large numberย of El Cuco's calories. That's because this monster commits its murders while wearing the faces of local men, then drinks in the pain and horror this causes for them, their families, and the community at large.ย

Unfortunately for Little League coach Terry Maitland, El Cuco is wearing him as a disguise as it slaughters 11-year-old Frankie Peterson, which doesn't bode well for Terry's future. “I'd be in the death house up in McAlester before the end of summer, and two years from nowย I'dย be riding the needle,” Terry acknowledges, a fate that El Cuco wouldย surelyย find delicious.ย
As it turns out, Terry doesn't live long enough to be executed.ย A chain reaction of misery is triggered by El Cuco's actions, leading Frankie Peterson's father to attempt suicide, his mother to die of a heart attack, and hisย distraughtย brother to shoot Terry to death on the steps of the courthouse before being gunned down himself.ย The horror. Theย taste.ย
“If thereย reallyย wasย a monster that eats negative emotions, that would have been Thanksgiving dinner for it,” Detective Yune Sablo says of the ordeal at the courthouse.ย Andย throughout it all, El Cuco is lingering in the crowd, risking detectionย justย to lick the plate clean.ย
It even visits Terry's children for a midnight snack. “He told your daughter he was glad she was unhappy and sad,” Holly notes to Terry's widow. “I believe that was the truth. I believe he was eating her sadness.”
Hollyย succeeds in killingย El Cuco after tracking it back to the cave where it was transforming into another of the town's residents, already lining up its next meal.ย But itย isn't long beforeย she crosses paths with another of its kind.ย
Disaster is delicious for the Grief Eater in If Itย Bleedsย
The Outsider'sย El Cuco might be a secretive creature, but the dread vampire inย If It Bleedsย (a short story from King's 2020 anthology of the same name) has no qualms about being seen.
Going by the name Chet Ondowsky (among others), it has built a long career as a local reporter, giving it an excuse to chase ambulances and show up at the scenes of tragedies. Once there, it seemingly doesn't needย to physically eat and drink of theย bodiesย to feelย full. This dread vampire is all about the bad vibes.ย
“He always picks the ones who are most upset [to interview], the ones who were inside or lost friends who were,” says Brad Bell, grandson of Dan Bell, an ex-police sketch artist who has been tracking the creature's movements for years.
Holly understands why the creature would gravitate toward these witnesses. No self-respecting grief eater would settle for a salad when it could have a juicy steak.ย
The creature that calls itself Ondowsky initially appears harmless, if grotesque. “It lives off grief and pain, maybe not a nice thing, but not so different from maggots living off decaying flesh or buzzards and vultures living off roadkill,” Dan Bell explains.
Heย goes on to speculateย that Ondowsky might be similar to a mosquito, able to scent blood on the wind.ย When the world delivers tragedy,ย Ondowsky is ready with a knife and fork.
However, Ondowsky eventually grows impatient waiting for its Postmates to arrive. Slipping into one of its other faces, it blows up a school and eagerly reportsย onย the aftermath. “Now it is no longer content to live on the aftermath of tragedy, gobbling grief and pain before the blood dries,” Holly writes. “This timeย itย broughtย the carnage, and if it gets away with it once, it will do it again. Next time, the death toll may be much higher.”ย
Of course, the intrepid private investigator stops this burgeoning killer before it can put its next meal in the oven. But as the Constant Reader and Holly herself have learned, when one dread vampire falls, there's always another ready to take its place at the dinner table.ย
Sometimes, there's even a whole nest of them.ย
Pain purifies the True Knot's provisions inย Doctorย Sleep
While most of King's dread vampires hunt and eat alone, 2013'sย Doctor Sleep, the decades-later sequel toย The Shining, introduces a whole cult of these creatures. Called the True Knot, this nomadic group is obsessed with identifying people who possess psychic abilitiesโpeople who “shine”โand ingesting the “steam” (psychic essence) they release when they die.ย
Similar toย If It Bleeds, these deaths can sometimes happen without the True Knot's intervention.ย We're toldย that on September 11, 2001, the cult drove to New Jersey and passed around a pair of binoculars to watch the tragedy unfolding across the Hudson.
“There had been plenty for everybody thatย day,ย and in the days following,” the author explains. “There might only have been a couple of true steamheads among those who died when the Towers fell, but when the disaster was big enough, agony and violent death had an enriching quality.”
With its “limited precognitive skills,” the True Knot can senseย majorย disasters on the horizon, but these are few and far between. Instead, the cult focuses its energy on tracking and murdering its prey. “[The True Knot] weren't vampires from one of those old Hammer horror pictures,”ย we're told, “but they still needed to eat.” And like Pennywise and El Cuco before them, this band of dread vampires prefers to eat kids.ย
Also, like Pennywise, the True Knot tends to play with its food. The cult tortures its victims extensively before murdering them because “agony and violent death had an enriching quality.”ย
Thisย is exemplifiedย in the novel's most shocking scene, where members of the True Knot lure an 11-year-old boy named Bradley Trevor into their van, drive him to an abandoned power plant, and torture him to death.

They torture Bradley for so long that his vocal cords rupture from screamingโso horrifically that he eventually begs for death. And throughout it all, they feel no shred of remorse.ย
“It was regrettable,” the novel notes, “but pain purified steam, and the True had to eat. Lobsters also felt pain whenย they were droppedย intoย pots of boiling water, but that didn't stop the rubes from doing it. Food was food, and survival was survival.”
Is it, though?ย Trueย Knot member Snakebite Andi certainly believes so, tellingย all-grown-up Dan Torranceย that “we didn't choose to be what we areย any moreย than you did.” But this is a lie: we witnessed Andi herself choosing to join the True Knot andย being transformedย into a steam-eating monster.
The tribe's members were humanโthey only began to “eat screams and drink pain” because it allowed them to “live long, stay young, and eat well.” Hannibal Lecter could just as convincingly argue that he had no choice but to do a little cannibalism because he was hungry.ย
There were other options on the table. The True Knot chose the unthinkable.ย
"They walk among usโฆ Monsters beyond ourย understanding"
Much likeย his psychic children, King's dread vampires are all a little different. But beyond their predilection for misery, there's one thing they all share in common, and that's echoes of real-world serial killers.ย
Pennywise has killing cycles and cooling-off periods. El Cuco and Chet Ondowsky enjoy returning to the scene of the crime. Even the True Knot, the most human of the bunch, feel no empathy for their victims. Rose Ferguson, who plays the cult's leader, Rose the Hat, in the 2019 adaptation ofย Doctorย Sleepย admits that sheย watched interviews withย realย serial killersย in preparation for the role.ย
It's no surprise, then,ย that Holly Gibney directly compares one of these creatures to Ted Bundy inย The Outsider, adding: “There are others.ย They walk among usโฆย They're aliens. Monsters beyond our understanding.” Sheย is referringย to the human monsters that Detective Ralph Anderson hunts,ย notingย “You've put some of them away, maybe seen them executed.”
For most of us, it's impossible to truly wrap our heads around how a person could commit the kinds of acts that Bundy did, let alone El Cuco or its kind. “Suppose itย hadย been Terry Maitland who killed that child,” Holly says to Ralph when he struggles to accept her theories about a shape-shifting grief eater. “Would that be any less inexplicableโฆ Would you be able to say, ‘I understand the darkness and evilย that wasย hiding behind the mask of the boys' athletic coach and good community citizen. I knowย exactlyย what made him doย it'?”
“I'veย neverย understood,” Ralph admits. “Most timesย theyย don't understand themselves.”
The monsters the detective is used to hunting may not understand what drives them to such obscene acts, but King's dread vampires do. That's what makes them so frightening. King poses the most horrifying answerย possibleย to that eternal question: “What could make someone do such a thing?”ย
They did it because they wanted to.ย
Because it tasted good.ย




