When the original Town Hall Meeting was being discussed, and was then subsequently held, Myk was undoubtedly enraptured by some silly thing and had therefore been ignorant to the whole affair. He had missed what had happened, including the whys, and struggled to ascertain many details; reading the people’s CrowNet was hardly a source of facts. What he had learned, however, was that only certain people could be trusted to share their thoughts after Ripper’s intervention, which was why round two was going to be structured differently. Honestly, Myk still couldn’t understand how Alexandrea’s invitation model differed from an invite-only, VIP affair, but then, he didn’t want to bother chasing clarification any longer. Vampires may have had an eternity to waste, but many things were beyond his patience and tolerance threshold. It was possible that he would just never understand her perspective on the matter, even if she had assured him that anybody could get an invite provided they asked. What he could understand, however, was that Alexandrea wasn’t doing this alone and that she had the assistance of two other Vampiresses; Mortll and Every.
What Myk knew of the other two females would be incapable of filling a thimble. His experience of them was limited to a sequence of ones and zeroes that, when transcribed from binary to English, made up a language of opinions at any rate. The Telepath tended to believe that facts and opinions were as comparable as dogs and cats; they shared ties and varied, and obviously one was better than the other or people saw no difference at all because their brain just wasn’t wired to think that way. As far as his cognitive processes were concerned, Myk trusted facts over opinions, but he understood that many an opinion had become listed as fact in mankind’s history when it failed to be appropriately challenged. After all, it was a long, and strongly held
fact, that there was an omniscient, omnipresent, and omnipotent being sitting up there in the clouds casting judgment on mankind for his ability to pray at certain times of the day and separate his fabrics.
With this in mind, Myk understood that the facts and opinions about Mortll and Every were equally damning. Still, he’d not let those thimble-sized matters deter him. If anything, he was more determined than ever to ensure that these thimble-sized matters wouldn’t deter others. The CrowNet was a great example of what could happen if people allowed their opinions and misconceptions to dictate their lives; it distracted them into picking faults, identifying their differences, and expanding their tribal wars. This second proposal of the Town Hall Meeting would finally be a chance to put such differences aside and work together for a mutually beneficial arrangement. Of course, the Telepath had no idea what ambitions the people around him had as they gathered in the rooftop gardens of Jardin De Fleurs. Pewter eyes took note of each individual who had entered and purple instinct autonomously made a list of their general qualities.
Myk collated each individual to memory like pinning a piece of paper to a cork message board. In order of appearance, his eyes passed over Every, to Alexandrea, to Levi, to Caligrace, and to Baptiste – there was no sign of the third piece of the triangle just yet, however. Alexandrea glistened under the spotlight as she held out the talking-stick, while Every busied herself with the final stage preparations. Their actions struck him as kind of odd as each woman seemed to be in a state of limbo; ready to go, but not fully prepared. As a matter of fact, there was an air of tension around them all, like everyone was waiting for the bonfire to light, yet nobody wanted to extend their own flame. The only person who had taken a seat thus far was the newest member to their ranks. Baptiste, or Sparky, as the Qs had fondly named him, looked so young that Myk wondered if the boy had even been
born when the catastrophe had hit Harper Rock City. Meanwhile, the two remaining attendees were as far away from centre stage as they could possibly be without being on the streets themselves. The bird-like features of Caligrace sharply contrasted against the very domineering, draconic influence of the man she was attempting to strike up a conversation with; Myk hoped that everyone would try for civility tonight.
“I appreciate we’re still waiting for people,” Myk offered in a clear, softened voice that harkened back to a life spent in London.
He decided to join the only seated guest, sitting directly next to Sparky’s left side. One leg crossed over the other in a slide of black leather and his pentagram belt buckles jangled with the movement. Porcelain white hands were folded into his lap; fingers laced and exaggerating already elongated cat-claws. With a straight back and shoulders squared, he presented a very fine example of elegance as milk-white hair spilled down the front of his lace-up blouse – it too in black.
“Do we have a register as to keep track of who’s left to arrive?” he added with a scarlet smile.
“I’m fairly impatient.”
The
unique invitation model should have allowed for a quick analysis of outstanding guests, but this number was only known by three individuals. It was now up to the ladies to take charge.