The sewers.
They weren’t exactly welcoming, but they were a way to get from A to B. Cosimo wasn’t exactly a sewer-rat; they reminded him of that five minutes of his life where life had reached rock bottom. The paladin cult was something that he had slipped into via a friend of a friend – a guy that he lived with because it was the only place that he had to go on such short notice. Rafael had been so convincing, too. He was tough as nails and had a brusque honesty about him. As soon as it was proven to Cosimo that vampires were real and that they were the scourge of the Earth, what else could the Italian do but fall in line? Without knowing the other side of the story, what else was he to know?
He was told they had no souls.
He was told they were as good as the zombies in the Quarantine Zone. The rabid vampires there – the ferals? That was how he pictured all vampire-kind. That was why he assumed that this cause he had inadvertently been roped into was a good one. They should all be destroyed, for the good of mankind.
And yet, there was so much he didn’t know, too. He was fed snippets, bits and pieces. And his English, to begin with, left a lot to be desired. There were things he’d have missed. At least he no longer had the tattoos. After he’d discovered that he didn’t heal, but scarred, he’d sliced them off with a hot knife. Now, where they had once been there were scars. Athena didn’t seem to mind. That was all that really mattered.
The moment he met a coherent vampire face to face was probably the moment it had all started going south. He’d discovered that not all vampires were feral or rabid. There were those who we rethinking, rational beings, and yet he was training to kill them. The whole notion of vampires was still so new and disconcerting that the knowledge threw Cosimo off balance. He fucked up. He got caught. The rest, as they say, was history.
He was ostracised, bereft, homeless, and suffering. Until he had been adopted, taken under the wing of one of the vampires he’d been taught to hate. Elizabeth. How long had it been since he’d seen her? He was on his way now to the Catacombs, where he would search out more pieces to use to forge more weaponry. He’d started to sell it on the Auctions rather than keep them for a family who had their own operations, and their own forges. Their own ways of gaining what they needed. Cosimo had been so attached, so determined to please Elizabeth in all things, but lately he’d been forcing himself to try to gain some distance. He tried not to go back to the Tower too often; he never did see her there anymore. And he only ever heard from her when he was the one who called her, or summoned her, or expressed a wish to see her.
The woman was busy, he told himself. She had a husband and a family to take care of, as well as her other political affiliates. And yet, he didn’t think it did him much good to pine for his sire’s company; he did not think she would appreciate being bothered so often. And so he had stopped, and had taken a step back. He spent the rest of his time with Athena. At least when he was with her, all thought of his sire was banished.
Tonight, however, Athena was at work. And Cosimo had worked so hard to learn how to forge his own swords, that it was the only way he knew how to preoccupy himself. The catacombs were his haunt when not at home. At least he could sell what he created; he could sell them cheaply, to young vampires who might not have someone to help them, like he had.
His boots sloshes through a puddle of water; it wasn’t too far to the entrance and he normally could get there without running into trouble. At least, these days, he could take on the hunters in the sewers. He wasn’t too weak or inexperienced to best them. Which was why he walked with something bordering on a swagger of confidence.
When he rounded the corner, however, it was not a hunter that he ran into. It was a vampire. Wild – about as rabid as the vampires in the Quarantine Zone, but different. Cosimo didn’t think to harm it, until it lunged at him as he tried to pass. As if it would attack anything that moved. A flurry of Italian curse words crawled from Cosimo’s throat as he hastily drew his weapons. He slammed against the wall to steady himself as he aimed his gun, taking a deep breath to steady himself. He fired. And he missed.
The wild vampire retaliated – bullets flew, and though Cosimo felt one lodge into his shoulder and another rip through his jacket to graze at his upper arm, he didn’t stop, nor did he give up. He’d been forced to drop his gun, but lunged forward to wrestle the other vampire to the ground; in a moment of utter frenzy, the vampire began to scream and write, its skin bubbling and blistering as it burned. Cosimo was unsure what he had just done. Was that him? Had he done that? He didn’t have the time to stop and think about it. The vampire was up on its feet again, lunging and slashing with a sword. Cosimo flailed backwards, the blade narrowly missing his face several times before he ducked and rolled, unsheathing his own blade.
They danced and tarried for a few long minutes before Cosimo gained the upper hand; first a plunge in the heart, next a slash across the chest, and finally a hack at the head. Blood spurted from the fallen vampire, the face now unrecognisable. The body slumped to the ground before dispersing into ash, and Cosimo was left panting, staring.
What the **** just happened?
They weren’t exactly welcoming, but they were a way to get from A to B. Cosimo wasn’t exactly a sewer-rat; they reminded him of that five minutes of his life where life had reached rock bottom. The paladin cult was something that he had slipped into via a friend of a friend – a guy that he lived with because it was the only place that he had to go on such short notice. Rafael had been so convincing, too. He was tough as nails and had a brusque honesty about him. As soon as it was proven to Cosimo that vampires were real and that they were the scourge of the Earth, what else could the Italian do but fall in line? Without knowing the other side of the story, what else was he to know?
He was told they had no souls.
He was told they were as good as the zombies in the Quarantine Zone. The rabid vampires there – the ferals? That was how he pictured all vampire-kind. That was why he assumed that this cause he had inadvertently been roped into was a good one. They should all be destroyed, for the good of mankind.
And yet, there was so much he didn’t know, too. He was fed snippets, bits and pieces. And his English, to begin with, left a lot to be desired. There were things he’d have missed. At least he no longer had the tattoos. After he’d discovered that he didn’t heal, but scarred, he’d sliced them off with a hot knife. Now, where they had once been there were scars. Athena didn’t seem to mind. That was all that really mattered.
The moment he met a coherent vampire face to face was probably the moment it had all started going south. He’d discovered that not all vampires were feral or rabid. There were those who we rethinking, rational beings, and yet he was training to kill them. The whole notion of vampires was still so new and disconcerting that the knowledge threw Cosimo off balance. He fucked up. He got caught. The rest, as they say, was history.
He was ostracised, bereft, homeless, and suffering. Until he had been adopted, taken under the wing of one of the vampires he’d been taught to hate. Elizabeth. How long had it been since he’d seen her? He was on his way now to the Catacombs, where he would search out more pieces to use to forge more weaponry. He’d started to sell it on the Auctions rather than keep them for a family who had their own operations, and their own forges. Their own ways of gaining what they needed. Cosimo had been so attached, so determined to please Elizabeth in all things, but lately he’d been forcing himself to try to gain some distance. He tried not to go back to the Tower too often; he never did see her there anymore. And he only ever heard from her when he was the one who called her, or summoned her, or expressed a wish to see her.
The woman was busy, he told himself. She had a husband and a family to take care of, as well as her other political affiliates. And yet, he didn’t think it did him much good to pine for his sire’s company; he did not think she would appreciate being bothered so often. And so he had stopped, and had taken a step back. He spent the rest of his time with Athena. At least when he was with her, all thought of his sire was banished.
Tonight, however, Athena was at work. And Cosimo had worked so hard to learn how to forge his own swords, that it was the only way he knew how to preoccupy himself. The catacombs were his haunt when not at home. At least he could sell what he created; he could sell them cheaply, to young vampires who might not have someone to help them, like he had.
His boots sloshes through a puddle of water; it wasn’t too far to the entrance and he normally could get there without running into trouble. At least, these days, he could take on the hunters in the sewers. He wasn’t too weak or inexperienced to best them. Which was why he walked with something bordering on a swagger of confidence.
When he rounded the corner, however, it was not a hunter that he ran into. It was a vampire. Wild – about as rabid as the vampires in the Quarantine Zone, but different. Cosimo didn’t think to harm it, until it lunged at him as he tried to pass. As if it would attack anything that moved. A flurry of Italian curse words crawled from Cosimo’s throat as he hastily drew his weapons. He slammed against the wall to steady himself as he aimed his gun, taking a deep breath to steady himself. He fired. And he missed.
The wild vampire retaliated – bullets flew, and though Cosimo felt one lodge into his shoulder and another rip through his jacket to graze at his upper arm, he didn’t stop, nor did he give up. He’d been forced to drop his gun, but lunged forward to wrestle the other vampire to the ground; in a moment of utter frenzy, the vampire began to scream and write, its skin bubbling and blistering as it burned. Cosimo was unsure what he had just done. Was that him? Had he done that? He didn’t have the time to stop and think about it. The vampire was up on its feet again, lunging and slashing with a sword. Cosimo flailed backwards, the blade narrowly missing his face several times before he ducked and rolled, unsheathing his own blade.
They danced and tarried for a few long minutes before Cosimo gained the upper hand; first a plunge in the heart, next a slash across the chest, and finally a hack at the head. Blood spurted from the fallen vampire, the face now unrecognisable. The body slumped to the ground before dispersing into ash, and Cosimo was left panting, staring.
What the **** just happened?