He had worn many faces, and that evening he was a guide. Like the faerie lights written about in myth and legend, he was a will-o-wisp. He was something bright and tempting, that could lead to enthrallment and eternal loss of self. But he was a creature of the grave, and so there was that dynamic, that dichotomy found between the natural world and the darkness that animated him. He was a step outside of real, a hop and skip towards some beautiful and deadly fantasy. He was the promise of death undone, and a dream composed of cryptic prophecy that could lead to nothing to ruin, both of those things, and all of the above at once.
Curiosity killed the cat. “I hope you’re not disappointed. It’s not nearly so mystical as it all sounds. Really, it’s even a bit dreary.” He said as he continued down the stone steps. One hand grasped his coat, his fingertips brushing over buttons, as the other slid underneath so that he could find the hidden sheath that always contained one of his favored weapons; the ceremonial dagger. With metal that curved back and forth, and script etched into the surface in a long dead language, the edge was sharp enough to split hair. It wasn’t particularly long, but it could draw blood with barely a knick. It wasn’t obvious from behind, but the specters that called the crypt beneath the church their home, they knew Az’s intentions. He could indeed share the secrets of his kind, but boys in coffins didn’t tell tales.
At the base of the stairs there was one large chamber that had been converted into a meeting spot of sorts. Az was of the opinion that the décor needed to be updated, but that was pretty low on his to do list. There were other necessities, like a library office, and Circe – the most favored of his creations. Magog was a creature of silence who moved like the winding of a river. She was like the man whose soul she supposedly shared – a creature of life and death poured into the same cast. Because, you see, snakes represented rebirth. With each time they shed their skin, they were made new and fresh. Az, being a mystic, identified with that. But they were also venomous.
She wound around Andrew’s leg first, ascending his body with lax movement that said she had no particular urge to get anywhere quickly. Around his thigh and then narrow waist. She was long enough that one might have guessed her to be old. And she ended up wrapped around a neck – not constricting, because that wasn’t her nature. She laid there across shoulders with her tongue darting into the air.
“You see, I am a vampire. I think our community settled on that term because it was the easiest way to describe what we do. Who we are. When you pass over into the darkness, where we play, you gain the gift of unfaltering life, but at the same time – you lose everything that you were. The afterlife is all around you. There are spirits that roam the streets, seen only by a few, and then there are those who have faded into nothing but dissipate energy. For us, for my kind, when our bodies die, we pass into this land of shadows. Because we come from the shadows, you see.” He half turned, and was ready to pull the dagger from his coat. He was going to cleanly slice a throat and be done with it, but Magog lay there. She saw something in Andrew, and had given him her favor. Seer of omens, soothsayer, Azraeth let his hand fall away at the sight. It was as if she said to him: This one. This one is chosen. He is to be protected, cherished, loved.
He stood there for a moment, unsure what to do with the weight of the new development bearing down on his shoulders.
“We return through the veil that separates this world and that. Tell me, Andreas, have you ever felt safe in the knowledge that you are eternal? I think that’s something only a few people ever feel. Great men who invent things that change the world, warlords who consume vast lands, men who amass fame, fortune, respect. But those men are never truly immortal – theirs is a legacy of blood that becomes more shallow with each passing generation.” He took a step closer so that he could lift his hand. The pad of his thumb brushed delicately over the scales of his serpent, and then lifted so that they could draw down over jaw, ending with a faint tap right at the tip of a chin.
“Do you feel safe, Andreas?”