* Jesse Fforde had been spending a lot of time with Clover. It was as if getting bound on a whim had revived their relationship even when no revival was required; where they'd spent a lot of time together before, now, it was like they couldn't stay apart. Though Jesse did break away in order to work, and Clover to do whatever it was that Clover did - and Jesse knew that he was being remiss. He knew that he had only just sired, and it was unlike him to leave the new childe alone so quickly. A lot had happened, though. Honestly, Jesse wasn't optimistic that Langdell would last, so why bother? Except, the guilt had slowly begun to build. Langdell was still there - Jesse had seen him, around Limbo. It was time to seek him out. To make up for lost time. He dressed and stepped out of the apartment and into Limbo's main space, bright eyes scouring the place. First, he would search here. Then upstairs. He hoped that Langdell was here - did the guy even carry a phone?
* Langdell was there, and had been for several hours that night. He waited to see Esperanza. She was the only one he'd become close with, or at least had had the majority of his conversation. He promised to make her a necklace out of an emerald he found, but hadn't had much luck with its creation. There, in the main space, he sat on the floor. He had a chain. He had the jewel. But he had no way to combine the two as a gift for her. Suddenly, he looked up and caught sight of Jesse. Langdell ducked down. He didn't want to be in trouble for something, anything, not that he had done much, if any, evils. He fed. He came home. It was simple life.
* Jesse Fforde didn't take long to find the guy. He was sitting in the floor; Jesse didn't know what Langdell was doing, but he figured the best way to find out was to ask. Nor did he miss the way Langdell ducked, as if Jesse were only there to throw a shoe or crack a whip. Which amused Jesse - Langdell hadn't been witness to many - or any - of Jesse's tempestuous outbursts. Jesse snagged one of the beanbags on the way past, and dumped it near Langdell, only to throw himself into the it. "Langdell," he greeted. "Sorry I haven't been around much. How's things?"
* Langdell mumbled, "They've been fine." He kept his eyes down. Jesse hadn't done anything to cause Langdell to feel intimidated, and yet he did. Maybe it was because the man had been the only one to ever "hurt" him, AKA the turning. But then again, he'd been nervous around the women, too. It had remained a difficult concept for him to realize he, too, was vampire like they were. And not a human, fearing them.
* Jesse Fforde nodded, even while he laughed. It was a low laugh, which soon grew into something a little more robust. Would Jesse have turned this guy, if he'd known just how he was going to tun out? But he supposed timid submissiveness was better than a flighty attitude. It was different. It was a calm that the family needed - and yet, Langdell didn't have to be so afraid. "I'm not going to hurt you, man. You don't have to be afraid of me," he said, reaching over to lightly nudge Langdell's shoulder with a closed fist.
* Langdell looked up at him finally. "You did bite me. I'm honestly not sure what to expect." He rubbed at his neck. "Not that you can really do that again, I guess. I don't think I can be turned twice."
* Jesse Fforde smirked, even as his tongue swiped over the grooves of his own front teeth. They weren't so sharp, now, but it would take only the slightest suggestion of blood to bring the canines to the fore, to bring that insatiable hunger into focus. "I was going to kill you, you know," he said. "People tend to remember, when I feed on them, which isn't good. So they end up dead," he added. It probably wasn't helping his cause, but he was getting to the point. It was a good thing! "But you're here instead. Alive. Because I changed my mind at the last minute. Would you prefer to be dead?"
* Langdell grimaced. Now he felt like a mistake. "No, I don't want to be dead. I'd rather be a vampire than dead, even if I'm not a scary, monstrous-type guy. Maybe that will change with time."
* Jesse Fforde laughed and shook his head. "No. It doesn't have to change, and you don't have to be a monster to be a vampire. That's just a myth," Jesse said. He settled in, chewing at the inside of his lip before deciding to continue - to explain, fully. "One of my other progeny killed himself in that week that you were sick. I'd only just started to mend bridges, but I realised I hadn't achieved anything. I had a goal for this bloodline - I wanted a cohesive unit, like a family. I wanted a family," he admitted, though he did so as if he were delivering a lecture, a slab of cold facts. He'd distanced himself from the loss. "We're an eccentric group, though. There's no real glue holding everyone together. The point, I suppose - so many of them have attitudes, and are bloodthirsty, in their own ways. You don't have to be a monster. Because you could be what we need. As you are."
* Langdell stared straight-on as the mother man spoke. Langdell was attentive to his words, and frowned. Someone had mentioned a man killing himself, and he had sat with her, comforting her. He even gave her one of the emeralds he found to cheer her up, at least briefly, knowing a gift could never really repair the damage done. "How could I help? I'm new. I'm not close to anyone yet. We don't know if anyone will ever even like me. I might be too strange."
* Jesse Fforde laughed again. "Strange. You'll fit right in," he said. He thought of Marian, then - the albino woman who seemed to have no feelings at all. About anything. They were all a little strange, if not twisted. "What I mean, is that we're not very balanced. I suppose I don't really know what I mean, except that you're different. Better, even, if black and white scales of good and evil are taken into account. You just... I mean, no one's going to hurt you. Or if they do, you'll heal. You don't have to cower..."
* Langdell looked down at his stomach. He thought of when a human shot him for trying to feed. He'd been shot again recently in his attempts, that time in the shoulder. Both wounds already were healed. "I'm not cowering. I'm only nervous. Everything's so different than home. Wouldn't you feel nervous, too?"
* Jesse Fforde nodded. "Okay. Not cowering," he said with a shrug. He tried to put himself in Langdell's shoes - coming from some closed-off community away from the world, finding the world itself foreign, let alone being thrown into it as a vampire. It probably would be overwhelming. "Sure, I suppose. Given the same circumstances," Jesse said. Though, he'd never had a nervous temperament. He was too proud to be nervous. "Given time, you'll get used to it. Take your time. I'll try not to be as absent as I have been. I had to get **** straight in my head..."
* Langdell shook his head. "It isn't your fault.You have a lot on your plate, I'm sure. Especially with the ... suicide, that happened." He had the worst timing, it seemed. "Death takes time to come to terms with. You only have to think, at least they're with God now."
* Jesse Fforde laughed. It was a loud, bitter sound, before Jesse shook his head. "No, Victor is not with God. He's in the Shadow Realm. The Shadow Realm is where we go when we die - he just didn't have the willpower or the strength to resist, and to come back. He's stuck there. There is no God in the Shadow Realm. It's just shadows, and darkness, and silence. Sometimes there's screaming, sometimes voices that you can't really understand. It's the furthest thing from heaven that you could possibly imagine."
* Langdell diverted his eyes again. "Hell, then. I'm sorry that he's there, of all places. Perhaps ... with prayer, forgiveness ... " He lifted his eyes again. "You said we. ... Because we're vampires, we all go there when we die?"
* Langdell was there, and had been for several hours that night. He waited to see Esperanza. She was the only one he'd become close with, or at least had had the majority of his conversation. He promised to make her a necklace out of an emerald he found, but hadn't had much luck with its creation. There, in the main space, he sat on the floor. He had a chain. He had the jewel. But he had no way to combine the two as a gift for her. Suddenly, he looked up and caught sight of Jesse. Langdell ducked down. He didn't want to be in trouble for something, anything, not that he had done much, if any, evils. He fed. He came home. It was simple life.
* Jesse Fforde didn't take long to find the guy. He was sitting in the floor; Jesse didn't know what Langdell was doing, but he figured the best way to find out was to ask. Nor did he miss the way Langdell ducked, as if Jesse were only there to throw a shoe or crack a whip. Which amused Jesse - Langdell hadn't been witness to many - or any - of Jesse's tempestuous outbursts. Jesse snagged one of the beanbags on the way past, and dumped it near Langdell, only to throw himself into the it. "Langdell," he greeted. "Sorry I haven't been around much. How's things?"
* Langdell mumbled, "They've been fine." He kept his eyes down. Jesse hadn't done anything to cause Langdell to feel intimidated, and yet he did. Maybe it was because the man had been the only one to ever "hurt" him, AKA the turning. But then again, he'd been nervous around the women, too. It had remained a difficult concept for him to realize he, too, was vampire like they were. And not a human, fearing them.
* Jesse Fforde nodded, even while he laughed. It was a low laugh, which soon grew into something a little more robust. Would Jesse have turned this guy, if he'd known just how he was going to tun out? But he supposed timid submissiveness was better than a flighty attitude. It was different. It was a calm that the family needed - and yet, Langdell didn't have to be so afraid. "I'm not going to hurt you, man. You don't have to be afraid of me," he said, reaching over to lightly nudge Langdell's shoulder with a closed fist.
* Langdell looked up at him finally. "You did bite me. I'm honestly not sure what to expect." He rubbed at his neck. "Not that you can really do that again, I guess. I don't think I can be turned twice."
* Jesse Fforde smirked, even as his tongue swiped over the grooves of his own front teeth. They weren't so sharp, now, but it would take only the slightest suggestion of blood to bring the canines to the fore, to bring that insatiable hunger into focus. "I was going to kill you, you know," he said. "People tend to remember, when I feed on them, which isn't good. So they end up dead," he added. It probably wasn't helping his cause, but he was getting to the point. It was a good thing! "But you're here instead. Alive. Because I changed my mind at the last minute. Would you prefer to be dead?"
* Langdell grimaced. Now he felt like a mistake. "No, I don't want to be dead. I'd rather be a vampire than dead, even if I'm not a scary, monstrous-type guy. Maybe that will change with time."
* Jesse Fforde laughed and shook his head. "No. It doesn't have to change, and you don't have to be a monster to be a vampire. That's just a myth," Jesse said. He settled in, chewing at the inside of his lip before deciding to continue - to explain, fully. "One of my other progeny killed himself in that week that you were sick. I'd only just started to mend bridges, but I realised I hadn't achieved anything. I had a goal for this bloodline - I wanted a cohesive unit, like a family. I wanted a family," he admitted, though he did so as if he were delivering a lecture, a slab of cold facts. He'd distanced himself from the loss. "We're an eccentric group, though. There's no real glue holding everyone together. The point, I suppose - so many of them have attitudes, and are bloodthirsty, in their own ways. You don't have to be a monster. Because you could be what we need. As you are."
* Langdell stared straight-on as the mother man spoke. Langdell was attentive to his words, and frowned. Someone had mentioned a man killing himself, and he had sat with her, comforting her. He even gave her one of the emeralds he found to cheer her up, at least briefly, knowing a gift could never really repair the damage done. "How could I help? I'm new. I'm not close to anyone yet. We don't know if anyone will ever even like me. I might be too strange."
* Jesse Fforde laughed again. "Strange. You'll fit right in," he said. He thought of Marian, then - the albino woman who seemed to have no feelings at all. About anything. They were all a little strange, if not twisted. "What I mean, is that we're not very balanced. I suppose I don't really know what I mean, except that you're different. Better, even, if black and white scales of good and evil are taken into account. You just... I mean, no one's going to hurt you. Or if they do, you'll heal. You don't have to cower..."
* Langdell looked down at his stomach. He thought of when a human shot him for trying to feed. He'd been shot again recently in his attempts, that time in the shoulder. Both wounds already were healed. "I'm not cowering. I'm only nervous. Everything's so different than home. Wouldn't you feel nervous, too?"
* Jesse Fforde nodded. "Okay. Not cowering," he said with a shrug. He tried to put himself in Langdell's shoes - coming from some closed-off community away from the world, finding the world itself foreign, let alone being thrown into it as a vampire. It probably would be overwhelming. "Sure, I suppose. Given the same circumstances," Jesse said. Though, he'd never had a nervous temperament. He was too proud to be nervous. "Given time, you'll get used to it. Take your time. I'll try not to be as absent as I have been. I had to get **** straight in my head..."
* Langdell shook his head. "It isn't your fault.You have a lot on your plate, I'm sure. Especially with the ... suicide, that happened." He had the worst timing, it seemed. "Death takes time to come to terms with. You only have to think, at least they're with God now."
* Jesse Fforde laughed. It was a loud, bitter sound, before Jesse shook his head. "No, Victor is not with God. He's in the Shadow Realm. The Shadow Realm is where we go when we die - he just didn't have the willpower or the strength to resist, and to come back. He's stuck there. There is no God in the Shadow Realm. It's just shadows, and darkness, and silence. Sometimes there's screaming, sometimes voices that you can't really understand. It's the furthest thing from heaven that you could possibly imagine."
* Langdell diverted his eyes again. "Hell, then. I'm sorry that he's there, of all places. Perhaps ... with prayer, forgiveness ... " He lifted his eyes again. "You said we. ... Because we're vampires, we all go there when we die?"