Eliot glanced over at her, frowning slightly. "I have no idea what you just said." He guessed it was something that was native to where she came from, aliens since that was what she had dealt with, but it was safe to say that he had never heard the name before. "I'm sure we won't have to worry about that. Although weirder things have happened around here." Like the couple of days he acquired the ability to read minds.
"I'm never surprised anymore by how far people will go to deny the existence of something." The people who didn't want to know continued to turn a blind eye and make up any excuse to keep from seeing the truth. Any explanation. "Then again, sometimes you have people who will do anything to make sure something doesn't get revealed. It's a matter of the forces at work, I guess." He'd done enough in his time, making sure what was supposed to stay quiet, stayed quiet, or stolen secrets found their way back to rightful owners with evidence removed.
But this city, maybe the rest of the world, he wondered how hard they really had to try to ignore the strange going-ons around the place. "A spaceship crashed into Big Ben? Yeah, that's definitely something you can't cover up or deny."
Eliot shook his head. "Haven't heard a word if she has." The conversation was starting to take a turn towards the subjects he wanted to avoid during the night. After days with the victim, Martha needed time away and that was what he could give her. Unfortunately, when it came to children running around after dark, it was an unavoidable subject. "If the law enforcement in this place is even semi-intelligent, it's most likely they'll be putting a curfew into place with what's been going on. Whether they know it's a vampire or not, someone very dangerous is out there. They'll do what they can to minimize the danger to children. No doubt, so will we." And he left it there, looking for a subject change.
He took another right turn onto a narrow street. It went down to a small parking lot beside a brick building, the front window softly lit and displaying the restaurant's name. "Might be a little twisted, but I'm wondering how some of our resident superheroes are going to take it when they see kids running around dressed like them," he said before he got out, grinning.