worthallthis (
worthallthis) wrote in
pennysheets2021-01-25 10:33 pm
Entry tags:
Vampire cult nonsense (PSL for Natasha)
It had taken her a while to get far enough into the ranks of this... organization. They have half a dozen names for themselves, depending on where one gains entrance, and most people don't ever go beyond those half-dozen entrance groups. Natasha is good, but these people are paranoid, and death cults are not a thing that you get access to immediately.
But because she is good, here she is finally, fresh from the ritual bath and dressed in undyed cotton, barefoot, ready for her first ritual. She's the only new one today, but there are other junior members walking in their two lines from the baths to the ritual room and its five sealed coffins. Natasha has yet to be told what's in them, only that they are very powerful.
"Which one is it today?" the young man who'd introduced himself as Stolen Moon (junior members tend to pick very pretentious ritual names) asks, quietly, of the senior member walking in front of him, who was known by the (slightly less pretentious) name Fox.
"You'll see when we get there," Fox says.
"Don't ask questions in front of the initiate," adds the senior at the head of the second column, an older woman called Hawk.
There are already three senior members waiting inside: Raven, Star, and Shimmer. Fox and Hawk motion for everyone to take their places, in an outward-facing ring inside the circle of coffins, and then join them, each standing between two of the coffins.
But because she is good, here she is finally, fresh from the ritual bath and dressed in undyed cotton, barefoot, ready for her first ritual. She's the only new one today, but there are other junior members walking in their two lines from the baths to the ritual room and its five sealed coffins. Natasha has yet to be told what's in them, only that they are very powerful.
"Which one is it today?" the young man who'd introduced himself as Stolen Moon (junior members tend to pick very pretentious ritual names) asks, quietly, of the senior member walking in front of him, who was known by the (slightly less pretentious) name Fox.
"You'll see when we get there," Fox says.
"Don't ask questions in front of the initiate," adds the senior at the head of the second column, an older woman called Hawk.
There are already three senior members waiting inside: Raven, Star, and Shimmer. Fox and Hawk motion for everyone to take their places, in an outward-facing ring inside the circle of coffins, and then join them, each standing between two of the coffins.

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It would, she thinks, be a very risky endeavour, if they wanted to keep their initiates in one piece, but it could also pay off. That sort of experience can't be discounted.
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He can feel the motions of guiding a hand into a punch, nudging shoulders and fingers into a proper stance, knows the sense of squaring off against someone with the intent of instructing them rather than hurting them. But he has no idea where from. For all he knows, it was before being a vampire, that life that's entirely gone now.
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"Hopefully long enough ago that we won't run into any of them," she says. "Having to take down someone you had a hand in training is never fun."
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He decides, after a moment, that he doesn't. "Do you have any other questions? Before we start planning actually taking Pierce down."
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Contextual questions, things that will help them refine their strategy. It's an inevitable part of that process.
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Then it's back to waiting, sketching out maps and memories he thinks might be useful, reading when he can. Watching tv and trying to figure out the internet.
He wants to get this over with, but he knows there's too much riding on it to just run in without having everything in place. But he wants to get it done. There's a stupid part of him that thinks maybe he'll feel safe again when Pierce is dead, that maybe he'll be able to think of a future once that obstacle is removed. He knows that's not how any of this works, but he still can't really think beyond that task, like it's going to be his salvation.
Natasha visits again, at last. He's hungry, trying to keep the local blood banks and late-night wandering population from running out, but keeping it under control. He's probably more twitchy about the plans she's bringing, anyway. He wants them.
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"Happy birthday," she says, tipping her head back to look him over. He looks paler, tenser than the last time she saw him, and the corners of her mouth crimp a little in concern. "You okay?"
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He huffs a needless breath out and adds, "And ready to relocate, honestly. If I stay here much longer I'm going to run out of easy meals." Because maybe she has another safehouse she can dump him in. One closer to Pierce. He doesn't want to mess anything up just because he had to eat and gave away his location to anyone looking for him.
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"Here," she says. "We'll have to move before the strike, so we're close enough to get the timing right. But this is at least one meal you don't have to worry about."
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So he hesitates. He doesn't know why she'd offer. It's her blood.
"Are you sure?"
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She's done what research she can, but folklore is contradictory, and vampires are rare enough - or good enough at hiding - that even her magical contacts don't agree on what's fact or fiction.
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He shakes his head. "I just didn't think you'd want to. I tried to kill you last time."
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"And since my Plan A hinged on you biting me to get the counterspell into your system, I really can't complain too much. You stopped once you were free."
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If it was part of her plan to get bitten, though, that might... make it less awful, he supposes. For her.
"If you're sure," he says finally, and tentatively holds his hand out for hers, looking like he'll jump back if she so much as twitches like she's afraid.
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But he has self-control. He knows how not to kill a person. And he doesn't want to hurt his rescuer. Neither does he want to be weird about it. He's a job to her, maybe someday a coworker if she succeeds in recruiting him, not-- anything else.
So he lifts her arm to his mouth, eyes down on her skin rather than her face, and gingerly slides his fangs in with the numbing venom ready. He finds the vein readily and bites down. It won't hurt. Like last time, her skin and muscles around the bite just goes numb.
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Her heart rate picks up a little - but only a little. It isn't panic, just animal reaction to the sight of his fangs in her skin. She has excellent control. She's still a mammal.
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He thinks he might like this better. Not just because he doesn't know that he likes scaring people-- cultists, maybe, sure, but regular people? But it tastes different. The adrenaline in the blood is something he can taste, and this has so little of it.
He doesn't take too much. Not even as much as he took the first night they met, but enough to hold him for a day or two if he doesn't do anything strenuous. And then he holds his thumb over the bite marks, applying pressure. The numbing venom should help them heal without the need for a bandage, but pressure helps, too.
It's only then that he risks a glance up at her face.