A Question, An Answer, A Reappraisal (Ambrose)
Posted: 05 Apr 2016, 23:29
Backdated to January 25th
Ambrose Acheron: Tizoc had taken to wandering the streets of Harper Rock, keeping his ear to the ground as the saying went. It was amusing that saying was still used even today. It had been first brought to his attention in New Orleans after he fled the destruction of his sire along with the rest of his line, the Tozoztontli. It had been used to locate Buffalo and other herd animals, the rumbling audible to the ear to the ground. Ambrose instead reached out, touching minds every so often when someone seemed the type to interest him. So far this evening, nothing. It seemed that the dredges of society, the criminal element was busy with matters indoors. It could very easily be the storm keeping them in.
The wind was blisteringly cold. Ambrose was dressed warmly and kept moving, the dead blood in his veins being kept in motion so as not to freeze. He felt the cold in a different way that mortals did. He never shivered, the nerve endings not firing the same way. He knew that extreme temperature posed a threat to him though. Frostbite would heal readily enough but it was a painful process. Especially if digits fell off. He wasn’t taking that risk tonight.
An added benefit of being bundled up was the illusion of extra bulk and one's face being covered, preventing easy identification.
He looked out over recently ploughed streets already filling back up with the onslaught of snow. Snow was an issue he had dealt with in New York, briefly. He’d hated it then. Time had not changed his sentiments toward the winters of the north. Coahoma’s voice filled his mind suddenly. “T atacapitz ueli in tlalticpac.” Truly this was the time to be hoarding, he agreed but did not speak or answer.. The vampires in the past age had their stables of human retainers, people they had either enslaved or bought who could sustain them through the harsh winter months. Ambrose had Moema. She was a good thrall, a childhood friend of one of his childer, but far from enough to sustain the brood for months of difficult hunting. The modern world had forced the old vampire to evolve in his hunting methods.
Moema was willing enough to stick around even when released and Ambrose frequently did so, never letting her know when he was using supernatural compulsion on her. Several times now he had enthralled another only to return to the factory with the new thrall in tow for religious purposes and find Moema there, cleaning the altar with the oils Ambrose had shown her and on one occasion in his West Tower apartment watching television. Her mind was an open book to him but he never asked her why she stayed. He assumed she was waiting for Nakoma to return. Ambrose had not seen the young vampire in some time and he thought of her frequently. Vega had returned from wherever she had been off to soul-searching. Some of the Brood left and returned, others it seemed simply… vanished.
Flexing his fingers in the thick gloves Moema had picked out for him Ambrose decided to find shelter from the elements for a time to let his body warm back up. It wouldn’t do for people to find him frozen out in the street like an all-too-realistic snowman. He headed toward the nearest building with an open sign… an internet cafe, Jose, his first thrall upon his return from the Shadow realm had called this type of place, and reaching the door, pushed his way inside out of the cold.
He brushed some snow from his jacket and stomped his feet to rid his boots of the snow before pushing back his hood and looking around the place...
Maddra: It had become a routine. Kill, loot, auction and repeat. Sure, routines could be bad, really bad if you were being watched. But Maddra almost relished the idea of someone trying. Maybe that would ease some of the anger she felt. The irony was, she didn’t know why she was so angry. It wasn’t directed at a person. No one had really ever hurt her, at least in this new life. If anything, everyone was almost too nice.
Taranto was one. He always went out of his way to speak, and be kind to her. Wolffyn as well, though she was probably still annoyed at Maddra, because Maddra wasn’t the sort to pick up the phone and call to shoot the breeze. When Maddra came back to the city, Wolffyn thought she should have called. Riiight. And say what precisely? “I’m back.” Followed by an abundance of dead air? Yea. That’s why she didn’t call. What was there to say? Then there was Jonah, her sire. Granted they had had their moments. He killed himself.. came back as something .. weird; and their estrangement grew. But even he had shown back up and had been.. nice to her.
It was like they all knew something about her, that she didn’t know. In her human life, no one was ever nice to her. They overlooked her, they ignored her, made fun of her, but never was anyone nice or kind to her, for no reason. The few times that kindness was shown, was during the endless funerals or extended hospital stays that her family was destined for. So why were people that owed her nothing, nice to her now? What did they get out of it? What was the point? There had to be a point, and she couldn’t figure it out. Frustration coupled with anger, had to have an outlet. And that outlet was killing hunters. Kill, loot, auction and repeat.
Making her way to the Station Net Cafe, she entered, stomping the caked up snow from her boots, before she headed to her usual computer. Her steps came to an abrupt halt and her lips curled into a frown. Her usual computer was taken. Some generation Xer with his unkempt beard, was sprawled all over it. She liked that computer. She liked the way the keyboard keys sounded. She liked that particular mouse. Huffing in annoyance she moved to a foreign computer. Sitting down, and resting her fingers briefly on the keys, she knew immediately, she hated this computer.
So she moved, from one computer station to the next, wanting to find one that met her approval. After three more tries, and three more fails, she knew Gen Xer had to go. Stalking over to usual station, she dropped the heavy duffel beside it. “You’re in my seat. You need to go. Now.”
Ambrose Acheron: The elder watches from the side of the entry as a woman, one of his own kind enters the establishment. Tizoc feels a momentary sense of embarrassment internally as his eyes alight on her legs and the shape of her buttocks as she walks past. He has managed to get used to cars going past him on the streets, light without fire, even great metal birds soaring overhead with people in their bellies. The sight of a woman in pants still vexes him and immediately sends images of smooth thighs and soft curves into her mind.This age is beyond baffling. It is full of men who wish to be women and women who wish to be men and some of each who wish to be both. Things light up. Almost everything lights up. The gods have been replaced with the Google, no long do men turn their eyes to the heavens for answers and you can seen all the way up between a woman’s leg with nothing but a thin layer of fabric between reality and imagination.
His old friend Ambrose, his namesake would have sighed, shook his head and bemoan the fact that society had become positively indecent. He was dead though. He bemoaned nothing but that he was captured and trapped within the shadow, slowly being devoured, fading away slowly if he had not already done so.
Like her. Like Tizoc’s Coahoma.
The woman made her way over to claim a seat which was taken. Tizoc wasn’t sure of the protocol but the woman did say that the chair was hers. Tizoc had no reason to disbelief her. The man should probably move for her. Then again these modern people were odd. Like when the little man in the slums had told him to give the man his money. Tizoc did not wish to give away that which he had earned. He had told the man to earn his own and a fight had ensued. He wondered if a fight would ensue here.
Instinctively he appraised both of them and found the male lacking in a physical contest. She would easily be able to claim her chair that he had taken.
What though, if she were like the man in the slums? Would they do battle here for the chair? Looking around Tizoc saw many other chairs, all the same. This little stop to get warm had turned into a chance to learn more about the modern ways. He gave a small smile to himself at the opportunity to gain some further insight into the strange creatures the once formidable paleskins had become.
Maddra: Gen Xer gave her a blank look. He looked around the room, and then looked at her pointedly, saying nothing, but intimating she should move on. The Gen Xer’s response to her request, displeased her. He should have been a gentleman and done as she asked. But no. He had to be an *** about it.
Her hands fisted and unfisted, as she tried once more. “This is my station.” The words were uttered slowly and clearly, as though maybe he was simple minded, and he needed it explained to him slowly. “You.. Need to move.” Her voice had even taken on a softer, though somewhat more threatening hint to it.
The male was unmoved, by her newest request. He sighed and pulled out the earbuds that had been hidden by his beard and mangy head of hair. “No. This is mine. Go get your own.”
“That is what I am trying to do. But there is a thick headed oaf in my way.” Her voice lost the softness, all pretence at patience forgotten. “I am particularly fond of this station and it displeases that you have your greasy hamfisted mitts all over it. Move .. or I will move you.”
Based on size of himself versus the woman, the male knew the woman could try to move him, but she wouldn’t be successful. His response was to laugh, reinsert his earbuds and go back to doing what he had been doing before she interrupted him.
Jaw clenched so tightly, one might think she could crack her teeth, she growled in frustration, pulled a boot knife from inside her boot, swiftly inserting it between his fourth and fifth rib in an upward motion. The dazed and dying look on the male’s face phased her not at all, as she shoved him out of her seat. She tentatively laid her fingers on the keyboard, only to pull them back in revulsion. His grime had already migrated to her keyboard. Fumbling for a small bottle of hand sanitizer and tissue out of her vest pocket, she started cleaning the mouse and keyboard.
Once she was satisfied that the germs and grime had been cleaned away, Maddra logged into her auction account and started listing her items. She would deal with the body in a while. What was one more death in the grand scheme of things? Nothing much really. At least nothing in her mind. For the next several minutes she studiously listed item after item. Once she got to the last item she turned her attention to body. Sighing with a droop of her shoulders, she sent Taranto an apology email, with a request that he erase the video tapes. If he didn’t so be it. The cops shot her on sight as it was.. what will one more death do? Make them shoot her faster? Right. She absently rubbed at the wounds in her gut, that were still leaking from her last run in with a cop. Bastards.
Sliding out of her seat, she shouldered the duffel bag, and then leaned over to grab Gen Xer by his collar. “Come on Ralph.. You’ve had enough to drink.. let’s get you home to sleep it off..” She gave the guy by the door a baleful look, as she dragged her ‘drunk boyfriend’ home.
Ambrose Acheron: Tizoc watched the altercation with a mild interest. The man’s infraction seemed initially to warrant death. He had understood this. A village could not survive if one of the members was taking what would help others to survive. Death was a typical punishment for those who broke the laws. The pant-clad woman had gone on about he business, which Tizoc had found slightly odd seeing as how she had just executed the transgression. Surely there were ritualistic formalities to follow such an action.
Tizoc knew that when he killed someone the people with the blue clothes showed up with the lit up vehicles and then stopped other people from perhaps desecrating the bodies of the fallen. This woman seemed to not care much if the body was tampered with.
Tizoc took the chance to touch minds with the dying man. He watched the highlight reel of the man’s life, a wife, his job, his dream job, his children…
On and on the slideshow went, Tizoc standing quietly absorbing it until finally the light started to fade from the criminal’s mind. Odd. He had seemed like a hard working person, not a layabout or thief.
He was ready to shrug off the entire thing when the vampire woman rose from her seat and started dragging the man away. She called him a funny name. A name he had heard meant someone was sicking up.
That wasn’t the man’s name. He also hadn’t been drinking. Tizoc was suddenly confused. As the woman moved to pass him he stepped into her way. “The thief’s name is Stephen, Maddra, Necromancer of the Vedarian Bloodline. He has not drank in six months since his wife told him not to.”
Tizoc was half-wondering if she killed the wrong man. Perhaps the altercation with the chair was a ruse, smoke and mirrors. Maybe he had wronged her another time.
“There is a blue-clad man in the car outside. The type with the lights. You should use the exit in the rear to take Stephen to his resting place.”
Maddra: As the man spoke to her, about his name and his not drinking she intended on ignoring him, until he used her name. Her eyes narrowed, the baleful look deepened. Guilt? He was trying to guilt her? “He was in my seat. He wouldn’t move. I moved him.” Her tone was adamant and yet, slightly defensive, perhaps a hint of guilt. Once more she was going to head on her way, when he mentioned the cops. “Blue clad?”
She hitched the body up some, as it started to slide downward. Maddra looked at the man. He seemed mostly nondescript, but she knew him to be a vampire. The chiding she received from him, annoyed her. So many others had done worse than her, and yet here he was chiding her. “Cops. The blue clad men are cops.” But she took his advice and turned to leave by the rear exit. She half carried half dragged Stephen, toward the back, pausing to toss a half-hearted “Thanks.” over her shoulder to the man.
Alright, maybe she had over reacted. But dammit, he wouldn’t move. If they had gotten into a fist fight, word of him having his *** handed to him, would have gotten out eventually. She came here a lot. She was sure to be spotted again. He would want revenge. Of worse, he and his grimey bearded friends would want to start something. No. All in all, ending it quickly was the way to go. No muss, no fuss. She could have done without knowing he had been married. Yuck. She made a face as she imagined having to kiss that bearded face. She told herself, she had done the wife a favor. They would have eventually ended up hating each other, and getting an acrimonious divorce, fighting over who go the house and car, and who paid the attorney fees. Yes. She had saved the woman all that grief. This way, he died always loving her.. unless he was a ne’er do well womanizing ********.. then she really did her favor. The wife was welcome.
Having exited the building from the rear, she headed north to the farms. Her sire had a farm there. He raised pigs. Pigs would eat anything. Her steps faltered as she got closer. She couldn’t dump Stephen on Jonah’s farm. There was too much chance one of his farm workers would stumble on it and get Jonah into trouble. She gnawed on her lower lip, as she pondered her options. To keep Jonah in the clear, she needed to stay away from the farms, all of them, just in case. That meant she had to go with her old stand by. The water treatment plant.
Ambrose Acheron: For a few minutes the elder stayed where he was, pondering. The vampire woman was not in the man’s memories. There could not have been bad blood between them. He had stolen her chair, true. Chairs seemed plentiful though. There were many of them lined up in front of the computers, the altars of the Google. He narrowed his eyes as he looked each one over, walking through the room and noting there was no difference between one chair and the next.
The man had not earned his fate perhaps… not by any laws. Then again Tizoc had known many vampires through the course of his two centuries before the time of the Fade. There were none he would really consider sane. Perhaps she had killed him because he had infringed in her territory. Perhaps he had been wearing a symbol that reminded her of an enemy. He has picked his first thrall upon his return thinking the man a Paladin., one of the tattooed warriors of old.
The once great religious order now dwelled in the darkness of the sewers with the rats. It was fitting in Tizoc’s mind.
Regardless, there was more to learn from the younger vampire who had just left. The blue-clad men… (cops?) were unaware of what had happened. Tizoc was certain they would not follow the woman. Still, she was a woman dragging a body through the snow…
Making his way to the back door he saw her trail through the white covering, already starting to fill in with the fresh flakes bombarding the earth from the heavens. Once more he pulled his jacket tightly around him and plunged into the winter’s icy grasp.
He wanted more answers. He wanted to understand.
She had gone north, the trail easy to pick up and follow even when she crossed streets which had been ploughed. The storm’s accumulation left no breaks in her steps, no chance for evasion and the occasional hint of the scent of blood clawing at his senses, driving him onward would easily have been enough to follow even if the trail had been broken. He fought against the desire to rush forward, to run headlong toward the source. He was well fed, There was no need. Human battled monster, each backed up to an ever shrinking precipice behind them, one had to fall, one would rise and overtake the other.
Body on autopilot the long in the tooth vampire continued to follow, several minutes behind his quarry.
Maddra: The trek to the water treatment plant was longer than she would have liked. Plus she would have to backtrack. No it was best went the way she normally went. The sewers. Settling Stephen up against a tree, she scouted ahead, to make sure the way to the sewer was clear. It was late and cold. Most everyone was off the streets, but if anything were to catch someone’s attention, it was dropping a body into the sewer, versus dragging home a drunk friend.
Maddra awkwardly climbed a tree, once she got closer to Cherrydale. She was by no means, an outdoorsy type of girl but she appreciated the vantage point that height gave her. She stayed unmoving in the tree for several minutes, as she carefully watched and checked each building for moments in the windows. Finally assured it was as quiet as she could expect, she jumped down from the tree, easier than it had been for her going up. Collecting Stephen, she crept toward the opening that led to the sewer entrance.
Just as she was about to make her dash, headlights swept across the road in front of her. Quickly she pulled back into the darkness of the shadows provided by the forest. More cops. They were doing a long slow sweep of Cherrydale. It would be better to wait for them to finish their circuit before trying anything. Glancing at her watch, she knew it would take about ninety minutes to get from Cherrydale to the water treatment plant in Coastside. Ninety minutes if there were no interruptions. When had that ever happened? Never. Paladins roamed the sewers like roaches in a cheap roadside motel. Better to allow for a full two hours, just to be safe.
“I hope you appreciate the effort I am going to for you Stephen.” She whispered to the body. “If I had been a bad mood, I would have left you in a dumpster and leave you to be dumped into a landfill. But no, I have decided .. you are going to have a burial at sea. Do you realize how difficult it is to get a burial at sea in this day and age? People consider it barbaric. I call it the circle of life.”
Watching the taillights of the cop car disappear toward Westside, Maddra waited until it turned out view, then she hitched Stephen up and over her shoulder for the short dash to the sewer. A quick flip of the lid and the body was dropped down, followed by Maddra. It looked easier than it actually was. Practice made perfect. Maddra knew the sewers like that back of her hand. The lid was slid carefully back into place and she dropped to the ten feet to a watery splash. Grasping Stephen by the collar of his fleece jacket, she began the tedious trudge.
Ambrose Acheron: The woman was being secretive. Now the scenario was clear. This was not a killing before the gods. It was a murder. He had been present when one of his consanguineous had done murder. Eztli had taken the man under the chin, brought him face to face. None of us had understood exactly what was happening. Eztli had read the thoughts from the young vampire’s mind when he fed from him. He had been able to do that. “Acan atl ic timaltiz, ic timochipaoaz. “ He had said to the ancilla. “There is no water anywhere with which you can wash and cleanse yourself.” Had the victim been mortal Eztli may have simply waved it off, but the vampire had killed one of his own. One of Mexica blood.
Eztli had then opened his mouth, all of his teeth suddenly like a sharks and he had torn out the throat of his childe. He had pulled out his onyx blade, the same one Ambrose carried now and had taken his childe’s heart while he thrashed impotently on the ground, bleeding out.
Killing one’s one blood, be it bloodline of one’s own people was forbidden. Tizoc knew enough about the paleskins to know this was not the case with them. They murdered each other with impunity in wars. They had been doing so for centuries. They did not kill to protect their own, they did not kill for their gods. They killed for paper-money and the dirt beneath their feet. In this case, the chair beneath her bottom.
As Maddra dropped into the sewers Tizoc debated if following was worth it. The blood trail would be gone by the time the snow melted, shovelled out of the way by the great ploughs attached to huge automobiles, shovelled away by shop-keeps clearing a path to their stores to allow customers to get in to browse their wares…
There was no chance the attack would be linked to vampires, it was not done within his territory, it was not his business.He realized though that he wasn’t concerned about the human. He was concerned with the vampire woman in the pants. He wanted to ask her questions. He wanted to know what she did. Perhaps they could learn from one another like he had once done with the ancient Greek vampire, Ambrose when the man still lived, before Tizoc had seen him die and had fled New Orleans to New York.
He pulled the lid from the sewer entry aside and stepped onto the rungs leading down. Sliding the lid back into place he dropped into the stench below.
Heading south along the corridor he stopped, looking left and then right at the first branch off.. Fifty fifty chance. He chooses left, heading east along the tunnel wall.
Maddra: Maddra was stronger than she looked. But dead bodies were unwieldy and dead weight. And the wetter the body got, the harder it was to drag. Her energy was flagging. She had just spent a long time killing and looting before she ever made it to the Station Net, and now she was dragging a dead body through the sewers, which tended to let people know you were coming. Therefore she couldn’t really ‘sneak’ up on hunters that prowled the sewers; but they could sneak up on her.
The pig farm was looking better and better. But she had made her decision and she was sticking to it. As turned a corner, she ran right into a waiting paladin. Normally she would take them out with a sword, but to be honest, she didn’t feel like even messing about. She dodged the first swing of the hunter’s blade, while pulling her .44 and firing into the paladin’s left eye. The back of the paladin’s head exploded, as did the sound. Having better hearing than humans, had the downside of loud reverberating reports like that from a .44 bouncing off the narrowed tunnels of the sewer, causing a sharp pain to the vampire’s ears.
Stopping only to loot the body, Maddra trudged onward toward the water treatment plant. The rest of the trip was mostly unremarkable, apart from passing a few fellow vampires that was resting in an alcove. How someone could rest down here, still amazed her. Hunting yes. Sleeping? No way. Give her a comfy bed any day over a sewerage soaked alcove.
Exiting the sewer at the back of the water treatment plant, Maddra made a beeline for the cesspool tank. A minute later, Stephen was dropped in, the tank closed, and she was headed back toward Cherrydale, and the Asylum.
Ambrose Acheron: The sound of gunfire halted the elder in his tracks, the tunnels made a mirage of the sound, amplifying it and throwing it all over the place. Nonetheless it was enough to tell Tizoc he was not on the right track. He turned and headed west, now rushing. His footfalls bringing him to a fallen body. One of the tattooed assassins of old. Now a sewer dweller. It was sad how the mighty had fallen. The echoes of the shot had long faded and the burning scent of the cordite was all but imperceptible in this place. Still, Tizoc believed he detected it in the rancid air of the tunnels. The blood scent was more pronounced and for a moment he had to fight back a frenzy. It was always easier when he was fed fully. Easier, but never easy. He stepped over the bleeding paladin and followed the direction of the tunnels south.
Only one hunter bars his way as he follows. Tizoc would normally dispatch them by blade or bullet, claw or fang. This time though, being short on time he reaches out with his mind as the man rushes him and shuts off the aggression the fool has toward him for whatever reason. “Run.” Tzoc slams the frail mortal mind with a dose of terror, striding past the man as he turns, fleeing screaming down a corridor to the south. The old vampire keeps going, making his way through the murky tunnels. Eventually he turns east and sees at the bottom of one of the manholes a pool of blood. Dead end. She had to have gone topside here.
Tizoc grunts and sets himself to climbing.
As luck would have it he emerges just in time to see her shoot out the door. The vampire nearly cursed his luck. Had he not gone the wrong way he would have caught her here already. He was getting tired of the chase. He reached out with his mind, concentrating on her. “Maddra, Necromancer of the Vedarian Bloodline, return to the building for a moment. I have questions I hope you can answer.”
Maddra: The voice in her head stopped her cold. Keara was the only one who ever spoke to her telepathically, so for the man from the internet cafe to do it, was a bit shocking. She knew the ability was easy for types of vampires, but for her it wasn’t anything remotely akin to her abilities. It was clear he had the ability to read more than most vampires she was acquainted with, because he knew her name, her lineage, and her special skill set. She looked toward Cherrydale and then back the way she came. All she really wanted to do was to get back to the Asylum and hunker down, alone and in peace. But… she did have a niggling sense of curiosity digging at her.
Who was this guy, with his formal and yet strange ways? Men clad in blue.. that were cops. Why didn’t he know this? He knew that Ralph was really Stephen.. but he didn’t know Cops were cops? Almost reluctantly she retraced her steps back toward the water treatment plant. Maybe he was trying to set her up. He had followed her, that much was evident. But what sort of questions did he have? And why ask her? Of all the people in this city, she was by far, the least knowledgeable and friendly. One would think he would want to pick someone’s brain who had something to offer.. so why her? Unless it was to her detriment.
Stopping briefly, she set her duffle bag down. She checked her .44 and refilled the chamber. Then she rummaged in her duffel for her .308, Making sure it had a full magazine, she tucked it inside her jacket. If he was setting her up, she would fill him and whoever was with him, full of holes. Zipping the bag shut, she shouldered it on her left shoulder, and headed into the building. Stopping just inside the door, she called out. “You know my name.. what is yours?”
Ambrose Acheron: The vampire waited quietly. There was no answer. He didn’t know if the woman had rushed ahead or it she had stopped and returned. Any number of possibilities were possible until the moment the doors opened back up and she reappeared. He was sure she was armed. It seemed all vampires in the city were armed. He was not without his own weapons though he had chosen to leave the rifle crafted by Lecovio at home tonight. He was carrying only his obsidian dagger and that when used as a weapon would be laughable to some.
They’d never seen an Aztec priest at work. Death was a necessary gift when life depended on pleasing the gods. The most precious gift was blood and to withhold it for even moments was to risk a horrific end. The Priest could remove the human heart in mere seconds. A cut, a hand shooting out, a retraction of that hand. His people had sacrificed over twenty thousand people a year to the gods. Tizoc himself had killed substantially less, but over his decades and decades of worship had offered hundreds of victims to the gods if not thousands.
He had never counted. The only thing he could say for sure is that none of those victims had been of the blood. No other servant of Tezcatlipoca had been killed by Tizoc. His sire had been another story. He and the elder members of the lineage had swept through the southwestern portion of the U.S. and murdered any Spaniard vampires they came in contact with. Eztli had at some point decided that by imbibing the blood of these murderers, the Spanish, he could gain power over them. What followed next was a purge of the line when it was found out that Eztli was a Necuratist.
Tizoc had not followed in his sire’s footsteps. He wasn’t a pacifist, he was pragmatic. If there was a reason to kill another vampire he would and could do so, but without a damning heap of evidence, words were the way to go. Teaching once was usually more productive than 100 whippings without cause. Wisdom was earned through tolerance and patience. Mistakes needed to be made to be learned from.
“I am…” he pauses, considers… “Ambrose Acheron, Allurist of the Acheron Bloodline. This is the name I go by now in this time. My name before this you would not be able to speak.” He makes a motion for her to come closer. “Please, come. Speak with me. Draw closer that I need not shout.”.
Ambrose Acheron: Tizoc had taken to wandering the streets of Harper Rock, keeping his ear to the ground as the saying went. It was amusing that saying was still used even today. It had been first brought to his attention in New Orleans after he fled the destruction of his sire along with the rest of his line, the Tozoztontli. It had been used to locate Buffalo and other herd animals, the rumbling audible to the ear to the ground. Ambrose instead reached out, touching minds every so often when someone seemed the type to interest him. So far this evening, nothing. It seemed that the dredges of society, the criminal element was busy with matters indoors. It could very easily be the storm keeping them in.
The wind was blisteringly cold. Ambrose was dressed warmly and kept moving, the dead blood in his veins being kept in motion so as not to freeze. He felt the cold in a different way that mortals did. He never shivered, the nerve endings not firing the same way. He knew that extreme temperature posed a threat to him though. Frostbite would heal readily enough but it was a painful process. Especially if digits fell off. He wasn’t taking that risk tonight.
An added benefit of being bundled up was the illusion of extra bulk and one's face being covered, preventing easy identification.
He looked out over recently ploughed streets already filling back up with the onslaught of snow. Snow was an issue he had dealt with in New York, briefly. He’d hated it then. Time had not changed his sentiments toward the winters of the north. Coahoma’s voice filled his mind suddenly. “T atacapitz ueli in tlalticpac.” Truly this was the time to be hoarding, he agreed but did not speak or answer.. The vampires in the past age had their stables of human retainers, people they had either enslaved or bought who could sustain them through the harsh winter months. Ambrose had Moema. She was a good thrall, a childhood friend of one of his childer, but far from enough to sustain the brood for months of difficult hunting. The modern world had forced the old vampire to evolve in his hunting methods.
Moema was willing enough to stick around even when released and Ambrose frequently did so, never letting her know when he was using supernatural compulsion on her. Several times now he had enthralled another only to return to the factory with the new thrall in tow for religious purposes and find Moema there, cleaning the altar with the oils Ambrose had shown her and on one occasion in his West Tower apartment watching television. Her mind was an open book to him but he never asked her why she stayed. He assumed she was waiting for Nakoma to return. Ambrose had not seen the young vampire in some time and he thought of her frequently. Vega had returned from wherever she had been off to soul-searching. Some of the Brood left and returned, others it seemed simply… vanished.
Flexing his fingers in the thick gloves Moema had picked out for him Ambrose decided to find shelter from the elements for a time to let his body warm back up. It wouldn’t do for people to find him frozen out in the street like an all-too-realistic snowman. He headed toward the nearest building with an open sign… an internet cafe, Jose, his first thrall upon his return from the Shadow realm had called this type of place, and reaching the door, pushed his way inside out of the cold.
He brushed some snow from his jacket and stomped his feet to rid his boots of the snow before pushing back his hood and looking around the place...
Maddra: It had become a routine. Kill, loot, auction and repeat. Sure, routines could be bad, really bad if you were being watched. But Maddra almost relished the idea of someone trying. Maybe that would ease some of the anger she felt. The irony was, she didn’t know why she was so angry. It wasn’t directed at a person. No one had really ever hurt her, at least in this new life. If anything, everyone was almost too nice.
Taranto was one. He always went out of his way to speak, and be kind to her. Wolffyn as well, though she was probably still annoyed at Maddra, because Maddra wasn’t the sort to pick up the phone and call to shoot the breeze. When Maddra came back to the city, Wolffyn thought she should have called. Riiight. And say what precisely? “I’m back.” Followed by an abundance of dead air? Yea. That’s why she didn’t call. What was there to say? Then there was Jonah, her sire. Granted they had had their moments. He killed himself.. came back as something .. weird; and their estrangement grew. But even he had shown back up and had been.. nice to her.
It was like they all knew something about her, that she didn’t know. In her human life, no one was ever nice to her. They overlooked her, they ignored her, made fun of her, but never was anyone nice or kind to her, for no reason. The few times that kindness was shown, was during the endless funerals or extended hospital stays that her family was destined for. So why were people that owed her nothing, nice to her now? What did they get out of it? What was the point? There had to be a point, and she couldn’t figure it out. Frustration coupled with anger, had to have an outlet. And that outlet was killing hunters. Kill, loot, auction and repeat.
Making her way to the Station Net Cafe, she entered, stomping the caked up snow from her boots, before she headed to her usual computer. Her steps came to an abrupt halt and her lips curled into a frown. Her usual computer was taken. Some generation Xer with his unkempt beard, was sprawled all over it. She liked that computer. She liked the way the keyboard keys sounded. She liked that particular mouse. Huffing in annoyance she moved to a foreign computer. Sitting down, and resting her fingers briefly on the keys, she knew immediately, she hated this computer.
So she moved, from one computer station to the next, wanting to find one that met her approval. After three more tries, and three more fails, she knew Gen Xer had to go. Stalking over to usual station, she dropped the heavy duffel beside it. “You’re in my seat. You need to go. Now.”
Ambrose Acheron: The elder watches from the side of the entry as a woman, one of his own kind enters the establishment. Tizoc feels a momentary sense of embarrassment internally as his eyes alight on her legs and the shape of her buttocks as she walks past. He has managed to get used to cars going past him on the streets, light without fire, even great metal birds soaring overhead with people in their bellies. The sight of a woman in pants still vexes him and immediately sends images of smooth thighs and soft curves into her mind.This age is beyond baffling. It is full of men who wish to be women and women who wish to be men and some of each who wish to be both. Things light up. Almost everything lights up. The gods have been replaced with the Google, no long do men turn their eyes to the heavens for answers and you can seen all the way up between a woman’s leg with nothing but a thin layer of fabric between reality and imagination.
His old friend Ambrose, his namesake would have sighed, shook his head and bemoan the fact that society had become positively indecent. He was dead though. He bemoaned nothing but that he was captured and trapped within the shadow, slowly being devoured, fading away slowly if he had not already done so.
Like her. Like Tizoc’s Coahoma.
The woman made her way over to claim a seat which was taken. Tizoc wasn’t sure of the protocol but the woman did say that the chair was hers. Tizoc had no reason to disbelief her. The man should probably move for her. Then again these modern people were odd. Like when the little man in the slums had told him to give the man his money. Tizoc did not wish to give away that which he had earned. He had told the man to earn his own and a fight had ensued. He wondered if a fight would ensue here.
Instinctively he appraised both of them and found the male lacking in a physical contest. She would easily be able to claim her chair that he had taken.
What though, if she were like the man in the slums? Would they do battle here for the chair? Looking around Tizoc saw many other chairs, all the same. This little stop to get warm had turned into a chance to learn more about the modern ways. He gave a small smile to himself at the opportunity to gain some further insight into the strange creatures the once formidable paleskins had become.
Maddra: Gen Xer gave her a blank look. He looked around the room, and then looked at her pointedly, saying nothing, but intimating she should move on. The Gen Xer’s response to her request, displeased her. He should have been a gentleman and done as she asked. But no. He had to be an *** about it.
Her hands fisted and unfisted, as she tried once more. “This is my station.” The words were uttered slowly and clearly, as though maybe he was simple minded, and he needed it explained to him slowly. “You.. Need to move.” Her voice had even taken on a softer, though somewhat more threatening hint to it.
The male was unmoved, by her newest request. He sighed and pulled out the earbuds that had been hidden by his beard and mangy head of hair. “No. This is mine. Go get your own.”
“That is what I am trying to do. But there is a thick headed oaf in my way.” Her voice lost the softness, all pretence at patience forgotten. “I am particularly fond of this station and it displeases that you have your greasy hamfisted mitts all over it. Move .. or I will move you.”
Based on size of himself versus the woman, the male knew the woman could try to move him, but she wouldn’t be successful. His response was to laugh, reinsert his earbuds and go back to doing what he had been doing before she interrupted him.
Jaw clenched so tightly, one might think she could crack her teeth, she growled in frustration, pulled a boot knife from inside her boot, swiftly inserting it between his fourth and fifth rib in an upward motion. The dazed and dying look on the male’s face phased her not at all, as she shoved him out of her seat. She tentatively laid her fingers on the keyboard, only to pull them back in revulsion. His grime had already migrated to her keyboard. Fumbling for a small bottle of hand sanitizer and tissue out of her vest pocket, she started cleaning the mouse and keyboard.
Once she was satisfied that the germs and grime had been cleaned away, Maddra logged into her auction account and started listing her items. She would deal with the body in a while. What was one more death in the grand scheme of things? Nothing much really. At least nothing in her mind. For the next several minutes she studiously listed item after item. Once she got to the last item she turned her attention to body. Sighing with a droop of her shoulders, she sent Taranto an apology email, with a request that he erase the video tapes. If he didn’t so be it. The cops shot her on sight as it was.. what will one more death do? Make them shoot her faster? Right. She absently rubbed at the wounds in her gut, that were still leaking from her last run in with a cop. Bastards.
Sliding out of her seat, she shouldered the duffel bag, and then leaned over to grab Gen Xer by his collar. “Come on Ralph.. You’ve had enough to drink.. let’s get you home to sleep it off..” She gave the guy by the door a baleful look, as she dragged her ‘drunk boyfriend’ home.
Ambrose Acheron: Tizoc watched the altercation with a mild interest. The man’s infraction seemed initially to warrant death. He had understood this. A village could not survive if one of the members was taking what would help others to survive. Death was a typical punishment for those who broke the laws. The pant-clad woman had gone on about he business, which Tizoc had found slightly odd seeing as how she had just executed the transgression. Surely there were ritualistic formalities to follow such an action.
Tizoc knew that when he killed someone the people with the blue clothes showed up with the lit up vehicles and then stopped other people from perhaps desecrating the bodies of the fallen. This woman seemed to not care much if the body was tampered with.
Tizoc took the chance to touch minds with the dying man. He watched the highlight reel of the man’s life, a wife, his job, his dream job, his children…
On and on the slideshow went, Tizoc standing quietly absorbing it until finally the light started to fade from the criminal’s mind. Odd. He had seemed like a hard working person, not a layabout or thief.
He was ready to shrug off the entire thing when the vampire woman rose from her seat and started dragging the man away. She called him a funny name. A name he had heard meant someone was sicking up.
That wasn’t the man’s name. He also hadn’t been drinking. Tizoc was suddenly confused. As the woman moved to pass him he stepped into her way. “The thief’s name is Stephen, Maddra, Necromancer of the Vedarian Bloodline. He has not drank in six months since his wife told him not to.”
Tizoc was half-wondering if she killed the wrong man. Perhaps the altercation with the chair was a ruse, smoke and mirrors. Maybe he had wronged her another time.
“There is a blue-clad man in the car outside. The type with the lights. You should use the exit in the rear to take Stephen to his resting place.”
Maddra: As the man spoke to her, about his name and his not drinking she intended on ignoring him, until he used her name. Her eyes narrowed, the baleful look deepened. Guilt? He was trying to guilt her? “He was in my seat. He wouldn’t move. I moved him.” Her tone was adamant and yet, slightly defensive, perhaps a hint of guilt. Once more she was going to head on her way, when he mentioned the cops. “Blue clad?”
She hitched the body up some, as it started to slide downward. Maddra looked at the man. He seemed mostly nondescript, but she knew him to be a vampire. The chiding she received from him, annoyed her. So many others had done worse than her, and yet here he was chiding her. “Cops. The blue clad men are cops.” But she took his advice and turned to leave by the rear exit. She half carried half dragged Stephen, toward the back, pausing to toss a half-hearted “Thanks.” over her shoulder to the man.
Alright, maybe she had over reacted. But dammit, he wouldn’t move. If they had gotten into a fist fight, word of him having his *** handed to him, would have gotten out eventually. She came here a lot. She was sure to be spotted again. He would want revenge. Of worse, he and his grimey bearded friends would want to start something. No. All in all, ending it quickly was the way to go. No muss, no fuss. She could have done without knowing he had been married. Yuck. She made a face as she imagined having to kiss that bearded face. She told herself, she had done the wife a favor. They would have eventually ended up hating each other, and getting an acrimonious divorce, fighting over who go the house and car, and who paid the attorney fees. Yes. She had saved the woman all that grief. This way, he died always loving her.. unless he was a ne’er do well womanizing ********.. then she really did her favor. The wife was welcome.
Having exited the building from the rear, she headed north to the farms. Her sire had a farm there. He raised pigs. Pigs would eat anything. Her steps faltered as she got closer. She couldn’t dump Stephen on Jonah’s farm. There was too much chance one of his farm workers would stumble on it and get Jonah into trouble. She gnawed on her lower lip, as she pondered her options. To keep Jonah in the clear, she needed to stay away from the farms, all of them, just in case. That meant she had to go with her old stand by. The water treatment plant.
Ambrose Acheron: For a few minutes the elder stayed where he was, pondering. The vampire woman was not in the man’s memories. There could not have been bad blood between them. He had stolen her chair, true. Chairs seemed plentiful though. There were many of them lined up in front of the computers, the altars of the Google. He narrowed his eyes as he looked each one over, walking through the room and noting there was no difference between one chair and the next.
The man had not earned his fate perhaps… not by any laws. Then again Tizoc had known many vampires through the course of his two centuries before the time of the Fade. There were none he would really consider sane. Perhaps she had killed him because he had infringed in her territory. Perhaps he had been wearing a symbol that reminded her of an enemy. He has picked his first thrall upon his return thinking the man a Paladin., one of the tattooed warriors of old.
The once great religious order now dwelled in the darkness of the sewers with the rats. It was fitting in Tizoc’s mind.
Regardless, there was more to learn from the younger vampire who had just left. The blue-clad men… (cops?) were unaware of what had happened. Tizoc was certain they would not follow the woman. Still, she was a woman dragging a body through the snow…
Making his way to the back door he saw her trail through the white covering, already starting to fill in with the fresh flakes bombarding the earth from the heavens. Once more he pulled his jacket tightly around him and plunged into the winter’s icy grasp.
He wanted more answers. He wanted to understand.
She had gone north, the trail easy to pick up and follow even when she crossed streets which had been ploughed. The storm’s accumulation left no breaks in her steps, no chance for evasion and the occasional hint of the scent of blood clawing at his senses, driving him onward would easily have been enough to follow even if the trail had been broken. He fought against the desire to rush forward, to run headlong toward the source. He was well fed, There was no need. Human battled monster, each backed up to an ever shrinking precipice behind them, one had to fall, one would rise and overtake the other.
Body on autopilot the long in the tooth vampire continued to follow, several minutes behind his quarry.
Maddra: The trek to the water treatment plant was longer than she would have liked. Plus she would have to backtrack. No it was best went the way she normally went. The sewers. Settling Stephen up against a tree, she scouted ahead, to make sure the way to the sewer was clear. It was late and cold. Most everyone was off the streets, but if anything were to catch someone’s attention, it was dropping a body into the sewer, versus dragging home a drunk friend.
Maddra awkwardly climbed a tree, once she got closer to Cherrydale. She was by no means, an outdoorsy type of girl but she appreciated the vantage point that height gave her. She stayed unmoving in the tree for several minutes, as she carefully watched and checked each building for moments in the windows. Finally assured it was as quiet as she could expect, she jumped down from the tree, easier than it had been for her going up. Collecting Stephen, she crept toward the opening that led to the sewer entrance.
Just as she was about to make her dash, headlights swept across the road in front of her. Quickly she pulled back into the darkness of the shadows provided by the forest. More cops. They were doing a long slow sweep of Cherrydale. It would be better to wait for them to finish their circuit before trying anything. Glancing at her watch, she knew it would take about ninety minutes to get from Cherrydale to the water treatment plant in Coastside. Ninety minutes if there were no interruptions. When had that ever happened? Never. Paladins roamed the sewers like roaches in a cheap roadside motel. Better to allow for a full two hours, just to be safe.
“I hope you appreciate the effort I am going to for you Stephen.” She whispered to the body. “If I had been a bad mood, I would have left you in a dumpster and leave you to be dumped into a landfill. But no, I have decided .. you are going to have a burial at sea. Do you realize how difficult it is to get a burial at sea in this day and age? People consider it barbaric. I call it the circle of life.”
Watching the taillights of the cop car disappear toward Westside, Maddra waited until it turned out view, then she hitched Stephen up and over her shoulder for the short dash to the sewer. A quick flip of the lid and the body was dropped down, followed by Maddra. It looked easier than it actually was. Practice made perfect. Maddra knew the sewers like that back of her hand. The lid was slid carefully back into place and she dropped to the ten feet to a watery splash. Grasping Stephen by the collar of his fleece jacket, she began the tedious trudge.
Ambrose Acheron: The woman was being secretive. Now the scenario was clear. This was not a killing before the gods. It was a murder. He had been present when one of his consanguineous had done murder. Eztli had taken the man under the chin, brought him face to face. None of us had understood exactly what was happening. Eztli had read the thoughts from the young vampire’s mind when he fed from him. He had been able to do that. “Acan atl ic timaltiz, ic timochipaoaz. “ He had said to the ancilla. “There is no water anywhere with which you can wash and cleanse yourself.” Had the victim been mortal Eztli may have simply waved it off, but the vampire had killed one of his own. One of Mexica blood.
Eztli had then opened his mouth, all of his teeth suddenly like a sharks and he had torn out the throat of his childe. He had pulled out his onyx blade, the same one Ambrose carried now and had taken his childe’s heart while he thrashed impotently on the ground, bleeding out.
Killing one’s one blood, be it bloodline of one’s own people was forbidden. Tizoc knew enough about the paleskins to know this was not the case with them. They murdered each other with impunity in wars. They had been doing so for centuries. They did not kill to protect their own, they did not kill for their gods. They killed for paper-money and the dirt beneath their feet. In this case, the chair beneath her bottom.
As Maddra dropped into the sewers Tizoc debated if following was worth it. The blood trail would be gone by the time the snow melted, shovelled out of the way by the great ploughs attached to huge automobiles, shovelled away by shop-keeps clearing a path to their stores to allow customers to get in to browse their wares…
There was no chance the attack would be linked to vampires, it was not done within his territory, it was not his business.He realized though that he wasn’t concerned about the human. He was concerned with the vampire woman in the pants. He wanted to ask her questions. He wanted to know what she did. Perhaps they could learn from one another like he had once done with the ancient Greek vampire, Ambrose when the man still lived, before Tizoc had seen him die and had fled New Orleans to New York.
He pulled the lid from the sewer entry aside and stepped onto the rungs leading down. Sliding the lid back into place he dropped into the stench below.
Heading south along the corridor he stopped, looking left and then right at the first branch off.. Fifty fifty chance. He chooses left, heading east along the tunnel wall.
Maddra: Maddra was stronger than she looked. But dead bodies were unwieldy and dead weight. And the wetter the body got, the harder it was to drag. Her energy was flagging. She had just spent a long time killing and looting before she ever made it to the Station Net, and now she was dragging a dead body through the sewers, which tended to let people know you were coming. Therefore she couldn’t really ‘sneak’ up on hunters that prowled the sewers; but they could sneak up on her.
The pig farm was looking better and better. But she had made her decision and she was sticking to it. As turned a corner, she ran right into a waiting paladin. Normally she would take them out with a sword, but to be honest, she didn’t feel like even messing about. She dodged the first swing of the hunter’s blade, while pulling her .44 and firing into the paladin’s left eye. The back of the paladin’s head exploded, as did the sound. Having better hearing than humans, had the downside of loud reverberating reports like that from a .44 bouncing off the narrowed tunnels of the sewer, causing a sharp pain to the vampire’s ears.
Stopping only to loot the body, Maddra trudged onward toward the water treatment plant. The rest of the trip was mostly unremarkable, apart from passing a few fellow vampires that was resting in an alcove. How someone could rest down here, still amazed her. Hunting yes. Sleeping? No way. Give her a comfy bed any day over a sewerage soaked alcove.
Exiting the sewer at the back of the water treatment plant, Maddra made a beeline for the cesspool tank. A minute later, Stephen was dropped in, the tank closed, and she was headed back toward Cherrydale, and the Asylum.
Ambrose Acheron: The sound of gunfire halted the elder in his tracks, the tunnels made a mirage of the sound, amplifying it and throwing it all over the place. Nonetheless it was enough to tell Tizoc he was not on the right track. He turned and headed west, now rushing. His footfalls bringing him to a fallen body. One of the tattooed assassins of old. Now a sewer dweller. It was sad how the mighty had fallen. The echoes of the shot had long faded and the burning scent of the cordite was all but imperceptible in this place. Still, Tizoc believed he detected it in the rancid air of the tunnels. The blood scent was more pronounced and for a moment he had to fight back a frenzy. It was always easier when he was fed fully. Easier, but never easy. He stepped over the bleeding paladin and followed the direction of the tunnels south.
Only one hunter bars his way as he follows. Tizoc would normally dispatch them by blade or bullet, claw or fang. This time though, being short on time he reaches out with his mind as the man rushes him and shuts off the aggression the fool has toward him for whatever reason. “Run.” Tzoc slams the frail mortal mind with a dose of terror, striding past the man as he turns, fleeing screaming down a corridor to the south. The old vampire keeps going, making his way through the murky tunnels. Eventually he turns east and sees at the bottom of one of the manholes a pool of blood. Dead end. She had to have gone topside here.
Tizoc grunts and sets himself to climbing.
As luck would have it he emerges just in time to see her shoot out the door. The vampire nearly cursed his luck. Had he not gone the wrong way he would have caught her here already. He was getting tired of the chase. He reached out with his mind, concentrating on her. “Maddra, Necromancer of the Vedarian Bloodline, return to the building for a moment. I have questions I hope you can answer.”
Maddra: The voice in her head stopped her cold. Keara was the only one who ever spoke to her telepathically, so for the man from the internet cafe to do it, was a bit shocking. She knew the ability was easy for types of vampires, but for her it wasn’t anything remotely akin to her abilities. It was clear he had the ability to read more than most vampires she was acquainted with, because he knew her name, her lineage, and her special skill set. She looked toward Cherrydale and then back the way she came. All she really wanted to do was to get back to the Asylum and hunker down, alone and in peace. But… she did have a niggling sense of curiosity digging at her.
Who was this guy, with his formal and yet strange ways? Men clad in blue.. that were cops. Why didn’t he know this? He knew that Ralph was really Stephen.. but he didn’t know Cops were cops? Almost reluctantly she retraced her steps back toward the water treatment plant. Maybe he was trying to set her up. He had followed her, that much was evident. But what sort of questions did he have? And why ask her? Of all the people in this city, she was by far, the least knowledgeable and friendly. One would think he would want to pick someone’s brain who had something to offer.. so why her? Unless it was to her detriment.
Stopping briefly, she set her duffle bag down. She checked her .44 and refilled the chamber. Then she rummaged in her duffel for her .308, Making sure it had a full magazine, she tucked it inside her jacket. If he was setting her up, she would fill him and whoever was with him, full of holes. Zipping the bag shut, she shouldered it on her left shoulder, and headed into the building. Stopping just inside the door, she called out. “You know my name.. what is yours?”
Ambrose Acheron: The vampire waited quietly. There was no answer. He didn’t know if the woman had rushed ahead or it she had stopped and returned. Any number of possibilities were possible until the moment the doors opened back up and she reappeared. He was sure she was armed. It seemed all vampires in the city were armed. He was not without his own weapons though he had chosen to leave the rifle crafted by Lecovio at home tonight. He was carrying only his obsidian dagger and that when used as a weapon would be laughable to some.
They’d never seen an Aztec priest at work. Death was a necessary gift when life depended on pleasing the gods. The most precious gift was blood and to withhold it for even moments was to risk a horrific end. The Priest could remove the human heart in mere seconds. A cut, a hand shooting out, a retraction of that hand. His people had sacrificed over twenty thousand people a year to the gods. Tizoc himself had killed substantially less, but over his decades and decades of worship had offered hundreds of victims to the gods if not thousands.
He had never counted. The only thing he could say for sure is that none of those victims had been of the blood. No other servant of Tezcatlipoca had been killed by Tizoc. His sire had been another story. He and the elder members of the lineage had swept through the southwestern portion of the U.S. and murdered any Spaniard vampires they came in contact with. Eztli had at some point decided that by imbibing the blood of these murderers, the Spanish, he could gain power over them. What followed next was a purge of the line when it was found out that Eztli was a Necuratist.
Tizoc had not followed in his sire’s footsteps. He wasn’t a pacifist, he was pragmatic. If there was a reason to kill another vampire he would and could do so, but without a damning heap of evidence, words were the way to go. Teaching once was usually more productive than 100 whippings without cause. Wisdom was earned through tolerance and patience. Mistakes needed to be made to be learned from.
“I am…” he pauses, considers… “Ambrose Acheron, Allurist of the Acheron Bloodline. This is the name I go by now in this time. My name before this you would not be able to speak.” He makes a motion for her to come closer. “Please, come. Speak with me. Draw closer that I need not shout.”.