sup, iâm victor. I usually use tumblr for reading but thought i should join roleplay (looking for friends please donât be afraid to hmu đ)
admin of: @emmetgrant
I like; playing my guitar, horror movies, games, music, drawing, queen of damned, friends, dc comics, playing the drums (sometimes), concerts, weed, weird and interesting people.
admin is 20.
anons and dms opened for conversations and questions
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TIMING: 30 December
PARTIES: Jade @highoctanegem, Vic @natusvincere and Jenny @whimmortal
LOCATION: Jennyâs house
SUMMARY: Jade & Vic deliver some blood to Jenny!
CONTENT WARNING: None
Jenny was not sure how to be any more. The confines of her home were restricting but a poor cage for a creature like her. Ever since sheâd come home from Henri, sheâd seen little of the world outside the walls, aside from driving to Bazâ place to drop off Edward and his things. Her car had smelled wrong as sheâd driven, reminding her of the way sheâd cleaned all the blood off a few nights before.
There had still been a fleck or two on the dashboard.
And now Jenny sat at home. She showered and bathed and showered again. She tried to slather her skin in expensive lotions and to comfort herself with scrub gloves and head massages. She tried to feel clean but failed to, so resorted to sitting on the couch and staring at the television, blasting animated films as they impacted her hunger least. There was the promise of blood coming to her soon, with Jade and her associate coming by, but the anticipation until they would be at their door was making her restless and frantic.
Eventually the doorbell did ring, the night already started, and Jenny turned off the television and moved down the stairs with haste. She had tried to look presentable, having put some make up on her face and exchanging dirty pyjama bottoms with somewhat more stylish yoga pants. She was still hiding most of herself in a big Yale hoodie, though. She opened the door and inhaled sharply, a human habit not yet dead. She stared out for a moment before remembering her manners, âHi.â
â
There was dread filling Vic up, and then emptying out at the same moment. Truthfully, she didnât know how she was meant to feel. Even after her conversations with Jade, there was still an air of unease between both of them. Usually in their endeavors, there was a strong chance that either of them would be overconfident, assuring the other in that snippy way they liked to speak amongst themselves. But now, with both of them on edge, Vicâs unabashed confidence was nowhere to be seen. She had taken all the precautions she needed for safety. Rosie was safe at the nannyâs house (the nanny who, thank god, never asked questions about why the HOA seemed to occupy so much of Vicâs time). They had arrived in a rented vehicle, one that couldnât be traced back to her. Sure, they had floated the two of them riding there on Jadeâs bike, but ultimately, Vic was concerned about the safety of that as well (and maybe she was also a bit concerned about looking ridiculous riding on it).This girl, Jenny, would not know Vicâs real name, nor would she know exactly where she lived. That way, if things went sour, Vic would be able to back out without risk of retaliation. Â
As she and Jade walked toward the door together, Vic knew all these things to be true, but they did nothing to quell her nerves. On the other hand, what they were doing was good, right? To offer a helping hand to someone who wanted to do good- to possibly prevent her from the decades of carnage that might have awaited her if they didnât? It actually might have been more immoral to leave well enough alone, right? That was why, with one last resounding breath, she finally had the courage to reach forward to ring the doorbell. She looked over at Jade as they waited for her to answer the door, but offered no quips or silly remarks. Just a look shared between friends, and a hope that they were doing good. As the door opened, she adjusted the bag over her shoulder, taking the girl in with pursed lips. She looked⊠harmless. âHelloâ, she said after a moment, looking to Jade again to gauge her reaction. âYou must be Jenny. My name is Colleen.â
â
Vic always had a plan Z. (And a plan alpha and beta and⊠whatever other alphabet she needed to have as many solutions as possible). That was just how it had been since the moment Jade ambushed her at the park. (But who needed to remember that? Pft. Definitely water under the bridge). And it was a nice balance, actually, as far as team ups went. Cause having a plan A at all was uncharted territory that she was only recently stepping into. (As it turned out, you could sustain a career like this on vibes alone) (So you know⊠growth!).
So you know, she totally went along with renting the vehicle and agreeing that Vic would use a fake name, and whatever else was needed to keep her (and her baby) safe. Jade figured Vic was covering all the bases possible (but again, Jade had long term planning blindness). She trusted it. And that was it, they were off to see Jenny, not much of the usual quippy chatter passing between them. All that fun replaced by a tense silence. (Understandable, Vic was probably going through her plans list) (She was busy thinking about food, and the snack she was going to reward herself for being totally brave about this) (Cinnamon rolls were claiming the top spot at the moment).Â
Vicâs knocking on the door redirected her focus, giving a few precious seconds for Jade to prepare for what was on the other side of the door.
It made some difference, at least. Jade clenched her jaw, schooling her usually lively expressions into something blank the moment she laid eyes on Jenny. The girl looked⊠about as crappy as she had that day in the coffee shop, but a little more worn down. She also smelled. Nope, stank of shampoo and body lotions (like maybe she had been trying to cover up the stench of blood) (or worse, rotten bodies). It made her sensitive nose protest. Jade blinked, her always juicy eyes ready to show that they didnât agree with all this fragrance wafting in the air. (Honestly? She didnât mind it, on account of how much of a distraction it was for her Spidey sense not to be the loudest thing screaming inside her body).
Jenny and Vic exchanged greetings. (And did that mean they could be done, then?) (Could she grab Vicâs container and plop it onto the ground and peace out?) (No? Wait, Vic wanted to do the whole vampire 101. Wanted to drop her business card, or whatever). She cleared her throat, glancing between the two women, shuffling closer to Vic. (Not only cause of the safety and familiarity) (But cause her bracelet was doing its job of fooling Jadeâs undead sense, so at least one of them felt⊠not dead). And hold up⊠what was that name Vic gave? âRight. Jenny, this is Colleen!â She fully turned toward Vic, blinking in confusion. A quarter of a âwhat were you thinking?â expression took over her face. âNot to be confused with that one romance writer terrorizing the New Yorkâs Best Seller,â And fine, it was a smidge better than Gertrude (which she assigned as a petty joke last time), at least.
But enough about fake names and perfumes and all the other fluff. Jade adjusted the slayer mask once again. âSo, this is all of us, here,â she swallowed, taking the step back Jenny had taken as a come in. (She figured she wanted this to be over ASAP, too). And so Jade went in first, cause walking into the lionâs den wasnât even second nature. It was her essence. âThe door stays open,â She instructed Vic, who followed close behind. And yup, this was the part of the scene where the audience leaned forward in their chair, warning alarms firing off.Â
Donât be fooled by the ghosts of her past failures. (That could probably fill three cemeteries, fine!). Here, Jade understood the risk. Not in that superficial way she used to, back when she, Onyx, and Ruby would gather post physical training to debrief and analyze dangerous situations. (Back when all she wanted was to put on some cartoons and get a snack) (And be left alone to cry) (So she just shouted the answer that would make Onyx grin and Ruby roll her eyes to make it all go faster. Not actually considering her options). She internalized the risk now, like tendrils spreading along her muscles. She let the weight of it conduct her in a measured manner.Â
That door was just as much of a potential way out for her and Vic as it could be a way to unleash Jenny on the world. Yes. Jade calculated the risk, believed (if nothing else) in her stubbornness to stop the second outcome from ever becoming real. She was also, in a more hubristic way (Amber would chime in), confident that no one could swing a knife faster and with more pinpoint precision than she could. It would pierce Jennyâs throat, if she willed it. It would, at the very least, delay an escape attempt. (She did feel⊠a little strange) (Like someone had given her the script for a different Jade, seasons away) (She wasnât gonna argue with the vision, though) (Cause she rarely got to show off her aim anymore, what was up with that?) Â
Jade did a quick scan of Jennyâs depression core interior design (not really trying to judge a girly too much) (cause of the dying and all) (who cared about wrappers and a little mess?), and spotted the windows that would also come in handy, should they need a way out. Honestly? She and Vic had once escaped through a vent, if things went south, a door or a window sounded way cozier to make a quick exit anyway. In a little white flag waving moment, she slid the bag off her shoulder, something heavy setting on the ground. Sheâd brought her crossbow (that letâs be serious, she had no intention of using, but it was a cool intimidation tactic). She was left with only two (three) knives in her person. And the stake sheâd tucked in the lining of her coat.Â
âHello,â she breathed out, glancing at Jenny. Her mouth would just not agree to a smile. (Dark timeline). She reached for Vicâs transport box, and she positioned herself as in between the two vampires as possible. Vic wanted to know about Jenny, sure. Good for her, socializing and stuff. (It was her right to choose how much she wished to help the poor girl) But Jade had insisted on frontlining this whole thing. She crouched down and started unzipping like she meant business. (She was a total pro at unzipping things, obviously). And she was gonna cut to the chase, there was no point in torturing and making Jenny hungrier and antsier.Â
âWe were thinking weekly drop-offs, you know⊠in case you struggle to portion at first and all that, so you wonât beâŠâ tempted to tongue someone, she almost said. She glanced up at Vic, who likely had questions about control and other vampire-related experiences that Jade had never really⊠questioned too much. (Or rather, cared to question). âItâs not like, set in stone though⊠Itâs a bit like, playing it by ear, figuring out the best subscription plan.â Her eyes drifted to Jenny, a smile still resisting her, but her eyes softened.
â
She looked between Jade and Colleen for a moment, somewhere glad that Jade was making the comment that had been snaking into her mind. The fact that she was still making such connections â relating every day names to pop culture â meant there was still something inside her that was her. A small comfort. âNice to meet you, Colleen. Not-Hoover,â Jenny said. She did not smile, but the thought of a smile was there. âCome in.âÂ
She did not mind leaving the door wide open. It was a good suggestion, considering the the Henriâs arm of it all. She was not feeling as frantic as she had felt that day, but there was still something inside that was hungry. Something that kept looking at the box that Colleen was carrying, that moved to Jadeâs hands. She knew that the thing she longed for was right there, just an exchange away. Sheâd tried to prepare her bathroom for it, figuring that the best place. She watched Jade kneel down, unzipping the bag and imagining this to be a movie scene for a moment, where they were shady criminals making a deal. Except Jenny had no suitcase of cash in exchange, and her home was a poor scene for something like that to happen.
âAlright,â she said. âThat ⊠I agree with that. That seems smart. I âŠdonât want to binge, like I said, and end up with nothing.â It wasnât like this was a roll of cookies that she could easily replace through a doordash order, after all. This was blood, with an unknown source. Something that should tide her over for a while, to keep situations like Henriâs or the woman in the alley from happening. Her throat was straining. She didnât think Jade would kill her any more, which was a poor comfort but one all the same.Â
Jenny wrapped her arms around herself and looked at Colleen, intrigued by the stranger with a supply of blood. Was she a vampire too, or just a weirdo? âAnd you ⊠what do you want in return? I can pay you, of course.â Considering the nature of the world, she figured there were plenty of people offering black market blood. Even if vampires didnât exist, she was sure sheâd be able to buy it somewhere. But this might be better.Â
â
Vic ignored Jadeâs pointed look, and all of the accusations that came with it, because Colleen was one of her most completely palatable pseudonyms. Certainly better than Missy Spitz. Colleen was forgettable, too. And she lived in Ohio, or something. She followed behind Jade into the house, ignoring her instructions about the door (because obviously), and didnât let her eyes leave Jenny as they entered. She watched her, wondering just how monstrous an upior could be up close. She was sure she had betrayed dozens of them, but had she ever met one before? âItâs Coover, actually. Colleen Coover.â Shit. Was that too obvious of a fake name? All the best real names were alliterative, right? She didnât want to look at Jade to see her response. Â
She let Jade take the box from her and set it down, still watching Jenny carefully. âThe goal, despite how unrealistic it may be, is to stop you from binging.â, she said, her eyes flicking down to the box. âBut youâre going to be tempted to, at first.â Everything she knew about upiors was all hearsay and rumors. Did Jenny think she was talking out of her ass, or did the cool air of superiority float around her like it was meant to? âIt seems like youâre in an okay state of mind right nowâ, okay must have been rich, but she didnât have another word for it. âSo I want you to understand the gravity of what could happen if you do binge. If you run out, and you become desperate enough, you put the people of this town, people Iâm sure that you love and care forâ, she paused to look at Jade, but the moment was barely brief enough for anyone to notice, she was sure, â...you put them at risk for dying extremely painful deaths.â
Her voice was not cruel, nor was it condescending, but laced with a matter-of-factness that few could accomplish. It was the truth, and it was out there, so Vic only let the veiled threat linger before she decided to move on. âJade will accompany me with the drop-offs, at first, since I donât live in town and donât know my way around very well.â She paused, in case Jade wanted to add anything to these stipulations and explanations before she continued. âAnd do not ask where I liveâ, she said curtly. There was something that felt awful about being so cold to this girl, someone who she already saw so much of herself in. She could relate to the desperate need to fight against the new monster inside her, the one that was telling her to kill, feed, destroy. But there was no cruel sire here, no one to mock Jenny as she reluctantly gave into the whims of her new self. Apathy had to be better than cruelty, for now, and then warmth would come once Vic was sure Jenny could be trusted. Â
âDonât worry about payment. Not yetâ. Not ever, actually, would Vic be accepting payment for any supply that she offered to Jenny. But people always seemed content with the promise that payment would be accepted, even if that promise was never fulfilled. âWhen youâre more stable, when youâre able to integrate back into the world, then we can talk about payment.â Colleen Coover only lived in a one bedroom apartment, after all. These deals were crucial to her. Vic, on the other hand, could have supplied the whole town with blood and wouldnât have batted an eyelash. Â
â
It was a true testament to her professionalism (yeah, thatâs right), that Jade kept her head down, focused on the transport bag when Vic finished fully introducing herself as Colleen Coover. She didnât snicker once! The part of her that always wanted to make everything about herself (so like, most of her, really), wondered if Vic was sprinkling on some bits of comedy cause she knew how much this was affecting her. She was clearly the one who was suffering more here, obviously) (But then, that would imply Vic knew who Colleen Hoover was, which didnât sound very likely) (Regardless, she really appreciated it).Â
The good thing about bringing Vic for this meeting (other than the obvious good she was providing), was that she came in with the kind of tough love everybody needed from time to time. As she began talking to Jenny, she made no attempts to sugarcoat what was going to happen, or her expectations. Jade figured it was way better if Jenny heard it from one of their kind instead of one of the members of the other team, who had been tasked with their extermination. (Jenny didnât need to know that said vampire was at one point a double agent and betrayed hundreds, if not thousands, of her own) (Tiny details) (Everybody needed a few character flaws, or something) (Letâs ignore the fact that she thought that was the coolest thing about Vic, yup).Â
Jade moved their conversation to the background of her mind (at the right time too, cause why was Vic dropping Colleen lore?), and instead opened the box. It was probably like, the equivalent of opening a cartoon treasure chest, but instead of a ray of gold light shooting up the sky and blinding all of them, it was just transparent bags of red elixir. âYou can pop this on your fridge or⊠your freezer, maybe.â They might make decent popsicles, Jade mused, without knowing too much about blood preservation. (It didnât matter, Vic had attached a post-it with all the info Jenny might need) (Plus⊠Google). âIt wouldnât hurt to get one of these, actually,â she tapped the transport box. It might make the restocking process easier, faster, less personal. (Which was a good thing in her opinion. This once, and this once only). Not every drop off had to be something that dragged on for minutes. (She was sure Vic would insist on visiting and catching up with Jenny, though. She had that whole maternal instinct about her already fine tuned) (But maybe that desire for face-to-face interactions would come back to Jade eventually as well) (Maybe).Â
Jade debated whether she should be the one handing the bags of blood to Jenny, with the possibility she might be drooling for them already, or let her pick them up herself and risk her going to town on them like they were Capri Sun. But by Vicâs assessment, Jenny seemed to be in an alright state of mind. And Jade trusted the assessment of the woman who got turned into a vampire in the Stone Age and therefore had eons more experience with this. She stood up, her boot pushing the box forward, sliding it toward Jenny. Her thumbs hooked in her belt (reasons unknown).   Â
âAnyâŠuh, other questions?â She wondered. And while she was mostly addressing Jenny, she still wasnât sure Vic was ready to simply be done with this, so she had to confirm.Â
â
Any other time, she might have said something about the name and how ridiculous it was. But Colleen was not holding back in everything else she was saying, and so Jenny found no sass or wit within her. There was no part of her that could argue it either, as she was salivating at only the thought of what was in that box. She was tempted to eat it all in one setting, the thought of t becoming heavy in her mind as Colleen even mentioned it. But the longer she went on, the more her hunger seemed to grow bitter in her mouth. It was coming onto New Yearâs soon. She did not want to enter the new year with another corpse to feel responsible for. She wanted to be able to spend it with Baz.
âI will try,â she said, not bothering to pretend she had any grand allusions about her control. She would usually fake such things, the way she had faked her way through confidence, expertise and even talent before. But Jenny understood that there were lives on the line. âBecause ⊠I donât want that.â Not again. Her eyes closed for a second, a little longer than a blink, and she saw Henri and his arm. She opened them again and looked at Colleen. âIâll really try to pace myself. But in the case I donât ⊠is there any room to receive more?â
The way she demanded privacy and separation was a little startling. She had not encountered such a thing before, but that was before sheâd become something of a monster. âI wonât ask,â she said, âThat seems best.â She could imagine it, her showing up at Colleenâs door and banging on it endlessly to ask for more. She would like to think herself better than that. But then there was Henriâs arm.Â
There was a part of her that wanted to argue, that she could pay right now, but she kept her jaws wired. She clenched them even harder when Jade opened the box. The blood was enough to make Jenny feel like something was thrumming under her skin, even if she could not smell it due to the plastic. She moved her jaws to bite her tongue, trying not to bite it too hard so that sheâd taste her dead blood. âOkay.â She ground her jaws shut again. âWill order one.âÂ
Jade slid the box forward and her eyes tracked it cautiously. She felt like a hawk watching prey move, except she was one that was pathetically biting her tongue and noticing an increased amount of saliva in her mouth. Jenny moved to close the thing with a slam. She felt her skin itch. She wanted to rip it open and dig into one of the bags with her hands, rip it open and do what sheâd just said she didnât want to: drain it all. With a strained voice, she muttered: âNo more questions.â
â
Jade, for her part, was being impressively professional. She had seen it before, but Vic couldnât help but be impressed every time her counterpart was able to pull it together when she needed to. She nodded along as Jade added more information as she saw fit. Truthfully, she used the opportunity to make note of Jennyâs home. The more information she could garner about this girl, the better. But there was not much her mind could focus on. Not on the girl in front of her, one who was, on the outside, momentarily okay, but on the inside, reeling. Part of Vic wanted to abandon protocol (the protocol, of course, that she had created in her head on the drive over)- to run forward and hug the girl, and tell her it would be okay. Truthfully, there was no way of knowing if it would be okay, so instead, she stood solidly in her place. Â
âNoâ, she answered Jennyâs question quickly. âNo, thereâs no room to receive more. There are 7 here now. One for today, and once a day until we return. Itâs your decision on how you want to scatter each bag throughout the day.  I live very far away, and you must learn to pace yourself. You cannot give in to the urge just because you think more is easily accessible. If you do, youâll always be as you are nowâ. That reasoning was the truth behind why she would never be restocking Jenny early. It was important for the safety of not only herself, but the rest of the town, that she build up a tolerance for the hunger. She needed to learn to deal with it. Vic knew she was not the expert. She just hoped this method would work. Â
There was a beat, and then she spoke again. âIâve heard rumors⊠about using your senses if things get bad once youâre reintegrated into society. If youâre desperateâŠâ Truthfully, Vic didnât know much about the rumors, but admitting ignorance was never her strong point. âIf youâre back out in public and someone gets a papercut or something, I mean, if youâre about to lose control, thereâs some sort of failsafe that maybe sometimes works for some certain upiors. If thereâs a certain scent that evokes a strong reaction from you, it might shake you out of whatever fervor youâre about to act upon.â She paused a bit before continuing, âBut that may just be a rumor.â
For Jennyâs sake, and for Jadeâs sake, she hoped it wasnât. Perhaps this rumor was something that could take hold, something that could save her in the face of completely freaking out. When they came back next week, Vic would suggest testing this rumor out with different strong smells. She might even suggest some sort of pseudo-therapy session where the three of them could explore deeply to find whatever strong smell might evoke such a reaction out of Jenny together. Or maybe such an invasive conversation could be saved for week three. Either way, she turned to Jade, signaling silently that she was ready to go. Whatever else was going to happen over this first week, it was in Jennyâs hands now. Despite herself, she turned to the girl one last time. âI donât believe in luck. But I believe you have the gumption to get through this. You just have to trust yourself.â Vic had learned, over time, that people were appreciative of misplaced optimism. Sometimes, this misplaced optimism even turned into a sort of self-fullfilling prophecy.Â
TIMING: Current
PARTIES: Vic @natusvincere & Inge @nightmaretist
LOCATION: Masque of the Red Eye
SUMMARY: Two immortals cross paths again and speak of current events, among which mostly daughters.
CONTENT WARNINGS: Child death.
The meeting at the Good Neighbors had ended early. There had been a tenseness in the air that Vic couldnât quite place, but, being a new member, she figured it wasnât her place to question it. People in Wickedâs Rest were odd, and the do-gooder Good Neighbors must not have been any different. Regardless, Rosie was asleep at home with the nanny who had already been pre-paid, so Vic took it upon herself to saunter over to the Masque of the Red Eye, a place she had hadnât ventured to since her days of betraying vampires. It might have been stupid to come back to the Masque- there was probably an unknown number of friends of those sheâd betrayed, waiting to enact their revenge. But Vic, ever stubborn and ever so determined, was desperate to make amends in any way she could, even if the mere thought left a pang of anxiety in her stomach that felt too deep to quell.
300 years of hatred was hard to overcome in just 3.
A familiar face from across the way interrupted her nerves almost the moment she walked in, filling her with a strange sense of familiarity. It was a face she hadnât seen in years, not besides about six months when she swore she jogged past her in the park. But Vic was always seeing flashes of faces she once knew in strangers, so she barely gave it a second thought. âInge?â, she called out, feeling uncharacteristically brave as she approached the other. There was always something comforting about the other woman, even if they had only passed through each otherâs social circles once or twice in the past few decades. Vic couldnât even remember first meeting her, only that it was at an art museum in god knows where âItâs uh⊠Vic. Um, Victoria, maybe. I canât remember which name I gave you.â She gestured to the seat beside Inge, wondering if it was okay to sit down. âSince when do you spend your time in a seedy town like Wickedâs Rest?â This would turn out to be utterly humiliating if Inge didnât remember her, and Vic was already turning red at the thought of it. Â
â
It was an embarrassing thing to her, to feel unsafe. Inge didnât tend to let herself feel unsafe â she tended to run, to turn on her heel and go to a different place where there would be no room for such a feeling. And yet, she was still here, in this town where a man had threatened to scoop out her insides, where a ghost had made the earth split, where the sky trembled and something else horrible was bound to happen any second. She found it hard to explain to herself why she stayed â it certainly wasnât for her job (though she did enjoy that). Maybe it was because her art was better than it had been in years, the town like a never-ending muse. Or maybe it was because of something more embarrassing than feeling unsafe â because she found herself tied to the people inhabiting this space.
Regardless, the feeling of being unsafe persisted, and so she stuck to the places she felt safest in. The corners where the undead gathered. The astral, her studio, her home, the casino. Masque was another on the list, a nice place to grade papers and sip her coffee and feel like she was surrounded by her own kind. And she was doing a good job at focusing on said papers (something that sheâd been struggling with due to the aforementioned causes of dismay), at least until her name was called. She looked up, pen floating above the page in mid-action. (She printed out the papers â sheâd never gotten the hand of grading digitally.) âVic,â she said, eyes widening with surprise. âHi!â Inge got up, placing the paper on the tiny table and giving the other a quick embrace. âCome, come, sit.â She laughed. âSince when do you?â She sat down, wondering how to explain the magnetism of this horrid town. âI guess thereâs something inspiring about a place like this to the likes of me, hm? I teach here, too. Itâs nice.â It was the first time sheâd been employed in at least a decade. âTell me, howâve you been?â
â
Vic was not used to the feeling of being embraced.  Not by arms that werenât child-sized, anyway. And not sinceâŠÂ Well, not since a lot of things, she supposed. She tried not to let her body harden at the act, fighting past every instinct that told her to fight affection for the last 300 years instead of relaxing into it. It was over before she knew it, and Inge didnât seem to notice her aversion, and Vic herself was embarrassed that her mind was making such a big deal of a little hug. She really needed to get a grip.
She sat as requested, again comforted by the magnetism that Inge seemed to hold. âOh, Iâve been here for around 13 years, actually. Not at the Masque, of course. But living in town. I didnât get out much until around three years ago, though. And who can blame me?â, she asked, trying to make a joke of the townâs reputation in an attempt to quell any questions Inge might have about what she had been doing while so recluse. What would Inge think of her if she knew how many people she had betrayed? âTeaching!â, she said with surprise, her eyes traveling down to the papers scattered around the table. Clearly, she had interrupted some hard work. âThatâs a reputable job if Iâve ever heard of one. Are you teaching children?â
Vic thoughts flashed to Rosie, wondering what type of student she might be as she grew older. A confident one, surely, but well-behaved and demure. Inge would certainly be a wonderful teacher for her. âIâve been⊠well, better lately than I had been in a while, if Iâm being honest. Iâm living over in Deer Springs in this beautiful home Iâm restoring, and I have a small business going painting storefront windows. Itâs not much, of course, nor is it incredibly mature, but I find myself quite enjoying it.â She smiled at the thought, remembering the adorable yellow minion men sheâd painted out in front of a bookstore just last week. The owner had seemed shocked at her choice of character, but she would come to see the vision of it soon, Vic was sure.
âWhat about you, Inge? How has life been treating you as of late?â
â
Thirteen years, Vic said sheâd been here for thirteen years. Inge found it impossible to imagine. Where had she been, thirteen years ago? Somewhere in Europe, gorging on peopleâs dreams and struck with grief, that must have been it. She had flown back to America something over a decade ago, but sheâd flit around plenty of states even then. To stay in one place for that long â especially a place like this â she found inconceivable.
But then Vic had said sheâd been inside for a lot of it. She didnât know why, but she could imagine. She found herself avoiding the streets too, especially after her latest encounter with Emilio. She had the luxury of astral projecting, though, and still going out even without walking around an awful lot. âNo one can,â she said definitively, not particularly interested in asking why Vic had stayed in all those years. âIt tends to either smell horrid here or thereâs puddles or goo, or all at ones.âÂ
She smiled a little at the otherâs reverence for her career of choice. âItâs nice, I never thought Iâd enjoy it. And yes, in a way â college. They donât think theyâre kids any more but they certainly are.â
Inge took a sip from her coffee, wondering how sheâd never encountered Vic in all the years she had been here. Different circles, perhaps. If only she could avoid certain types like that. âI live in the same neighborhood â itâs nice there, isnât it? Painting storefronts ⊠thatâs wonderful!â Certainly not the kind of creative expression she preferred, but she couldnât judge too harshly if someone was picking up a paintbrush. âIâd love to see some of it. And you would be welcome in my studio, if you want to change it up.âÂ
The question about her life seemed a little futile. Sheâd told Vic, hadnât she? She was a teacher. âOh, you know â Iâve been between towns a lot the past few years. Was in New York before this, so this is quite the change of pace. But I donât mind it. I never thought Iâd return to a small town.â
â
Vic felt herself smiling, relieved that chatter with an old acquaintance seemed to be feeling more natural than not. There was so much about Vic and her past that Inge was never told- especially about who Vic truly was and what she was doing to those like her until Rosie came into the picture. The two of them had always seemed to dance around their shared status as undead (at least Vic assumed, due to her lack of a heartbeat) ⊠(maybe it was rude to assume). This mostly happened on Vicâs end, as it did with all the undead she ended up having a fondness for, so she could ignore the repercussions of longing for friendship with someone who was a monster just like her. But now that she was done betraying vampires and hating those who had the unfortunate circumstance to be like her⊠perhaps the two of them would have a chance to delve more into each other. âOr, the people are just horrid in general. Stinky or not. Sometimes I find myself avoiding them altogetherâ.
Vic would deny she was desperate for adult interaction. She loved Ms. Rachel, and those yellow minion men, and the cute little cartoon girl who sang the phonics song on youtube. And Rosie was enough interaction- she was all Vic needed, especially now that her vocabulary was thriving in both English and Swedish. But she would have been lying if she said she didnât intentionally pick fights with her nasty neighbor Tracy or the mailman who kept delivering packages to the wrong house, just to have a meaningful interaction with someone who could drive. Maybe a real friend might do her some good.
âI donât think Iâd have the patience for teachingâ, she said earnestly. She never thought sheâd have the patience for motherhood, either. Maybe another 10 years in Wickedâs Rest would soften her up even more. She shook her head at the thought of Inge seeing her âprofessional workâ, almost regretting telling her. âItâs nothing incredible, if Iâm being frank. Just cartoons, mostly inspired by my daughter.â Her elephant in the room, the one Inge wouldnât have even realized existed, blurted out faster than Vic had expected it too. She picked an imaginary piece of dust off her pants after the pseudo-admission, pressing her lips together. Â
Would Inge be ashamed of her? Would she think it odd that someone like her suddenly had a child? Should she have kept it private? Vic couldnât change the subject fast enough, it felt like the entire building were looking her way. âYou know, in all my years traveling around, I never ended up in New York city. I was in Boston two separate times. But never New York. Did you enjoy yourself there?â
â
It seemed for a moment as something in the air paused. As if a collective breath was held, as if the invisible flow of air halted. Vic said something incredulous. My daughter. Inge blinked her eyes at her, this woman who had not aged a day since the last time she had seen her. A face unmarred by the signs of aging, not a gray hair growing from her head. A woman who was frozen in time just like her, and she had a child.Â
So there were two horrifying options â either the child was like them and would not age, which would be a small mercy for Vic but otherwise something so unethical it made Inge squirm as well. And then there was the other option, the one that made her unbeating heart skip a beat. Vic was the mother to a human child, one way or another, and that child would age and age and age, and in four or five decades time look older than her mother. Veraâs hair had not gone gray at the end, but there had been a few random silver hairs among the brown. Vera â
She closed her mind off for memories of her own daughter, of the hospital, of the end. She looked at Vic, disregarding most of the other things sheâd said. âA daughter? Since when â how old is she?â She wanted to leave. She didnât want to speak of the dead. There was probably a whole slew of dead people between herself and Vic, considering the nature of their unlives. âHow â Is she like us?â This was said in a lower tone and with a level of shame, a level of quietness. Inge didnât feed off children. She had, a few times, but they were too easy to scare. If she were a vampire she wouldnât even consider it, but there were some out there that might.
She reached for a coffee like it was an anchor. âYou â You should go to New York, sometime. Itâs great. The museums are wonderful, and every child should visit good museums â everyone, actually, regardless of age.â
â
Vic tried to look down at the table, to occupy herself with anything other than the emotions that were processing on Ingeâs face. If the situation had been reversed, she wasnât sure how she would have reacted. There was something unspoken between them- they always seemed to dance around the fact that the other was undead, the Vic of the past never wanting to sit on the subject too long just incase Inge turned out to be a vampire, too (it was why she shouldnât have been making friends). And she knew that unspoken secret was exactly what had caused Ingeâs questioning look now. The silence between them was palpable, and Vic practically had to hold herself to the chair to stop from running away.
âShe just turned threeâ, she said, trying to sound matter-of-fact. She wondered if Inge would put together her earlier words, or if they had seemed as throw-away as Vic had tried to make them sound at the time. I didnât get out much until around three years ago, though. At the thought that Rosie could be anything like them, Vic moved back in her seat, clutching her chest in surprise. Her face morphed into one of distress before she answered. âSheâs, noâŠno. Sheâs nothing like me⊠like us. Sheâs perfect. Sheâs⊠sheâs human.â After she was sired, Vic was told horror stories of children turned, and the thought, now more so than ever, made her stomach turn. If being turned as an adult felt like torture, she couldnât imagine the anguish and despair that must have come with eternal childhood. Â
Three years had already gone by in a blink. She couldnât bring herself to think what their lives would look like in 30⊠or 60⊠or 100. Â
âSheâs perfectâ, she said again, as if to reiterate. Vic truly believed she was. âAnd I would never⊠I wonât⊠nothing like that will ever happen to her, Inge. I wonât let it.â She felt she should explain more, but she didnât know how. When she thought back to her first night with Rosie, it still didnât make sense why she was picked. âHer parents were slayers. Friends of mineâ. She tugged at her cloaking bracelet, unsure if Rosieâs birth parents ever actually knew the truth. âThey had betrayed someone, or somethingâŠthere was a bounty on their heads, and their families had already been killedâŠthere was no one else.â Vic hated herself for the times she felt grateful that there had been no one else. She couldnât look at Inge, not after all the revelations.
âI havenât been to New York in⊠decadesâ, she admitted, clearing her throat of the emotion that threatened to rest there. âRosie loves museums. Maybe we should travel there on a small vacation.â Â
â
Vera had been three once â just as she had been four, five, ten, twenty, thirty, thirty-six. Inge thought back to that blur of the early years of childhood, the years before her transformation, the years she sometimes, very quietly and very guiltily, yearned for in a way sheâd lost. She tried to blink the memories from her head, those thoughts of a toddler that had her eyes moving around the world while her motherâs eyes were growing more and more sunken, less and less similar. She tried to imagine Vic with her human child, her perfect human child, who would look older than her in a couple of decades and then die before Vic would.
Her coffee wasnât strong enough and severely lacking in a shot of whiskey, and yet she clung to it, taking another sip. âA great age,â she said, because that was what people said in situations like these. She wasnât sure what to say or do besides that, though, as there was no etiquette when it came to undead parenthood. Vic spoke about their natures as if it was something ugly and perhaps it was, if you thought about imposing it on your child. And how could she judge? Inge had never even thought changing Vera into something undying to save her from her coming death. She would have hated it. So no matter how much she thought herself and other undead better than human, some sort of upgrade, she understood not wanting to give it to ones own child.
But â the child would have to die. Rosie â she had a name â would die if she wasnât turned and Inge wanted to warn Vic of it, this sword of Damocles hanging over her neck. And Vic kept talking, kept making it worse. The child was the result of two slayers procreating and was now hers. She kept drinking her coffee, the bitterness not bitter enough, her throat speechless.
She had to say something, though. âSheâs ⊠sheâs ⊠well, you wonât raise her as a slayer at the very least, right?â How could Rosie be perfect if she were to be a slayer? How could Inge condemn a toddler for something she couldnât control? Why was Vic someone slayers trusted enough to give their child to? âI am happy â yes, Vic, Iâm happy for you. It can be a wonderful thingâ magical, motherhood. I do ⊠well, I wonder. But as long as youâre happy. And I thinkâŠâ She placed her saucer down. âFor what itâs worth, you seem like a gentle parent.âÂ
It was easier to talk of New York, even if it was in context of the child. âYou should go, then. The natural history museum will probably also be fun for her, hm?â
â
Vic pressed her lips together and nodded, because she didnât know what else to say. Or to do, for that matter. This conversation was bringing up far too many âwhat-ifsâ that Vic spent her time ignoring because they were too horrifying to think about. Now, under Ingeâs unsure gaze, they raced to the forefront of her mind. As Rosie grew older, as she grew to understand what the world around her and what she was, there was an inevitable consequence hanging in the air, one that sucked the air from Vicâs lungs and forced her back to feelings sheâd been attempting to bury away for 300 years. Surely their diametrically opposed natures would one day be the downfall of their relationship. She couldnât hide who she was from Rosie, not anymore than she could force her to deny who she was-... but what did that mean for their future? Ever stubborn, Vic made it seem that there wasnât a problem. Only a slight twitch in her brow might have implied otherwise, to someone paying close attention.
âI canât very well deny her of her nature, Inge. That would beâŠunethical. It would be wrong. And it would leave her questioning things that she shouldnât have to worry about.â She tucked a hair behind her ear and blinked, willing the tears that threatened not to fill her eyes. âI have my ways of⊠hiding myself from those that threaten me. Iâll find someone to teach her what she needs to know, but Iâll teach her about the rest of the world, too. It doesnât need to be as black and white as youâre implying itâll be.â But it would be, wouldnât it? Letting Rosie learn about hunting and slayers⊠about the truth of the monstrosity of what she was, it would be the beginning of the end. Â
âI donât know that Iâve ever been much happierâ, she replied quietly, knowing that alone was where her juxtaposition stemmed from. Still, she found herself chuckling at Ingeâs next comment. She wasnât sure anyone had ever referred to her as âgentleâ. âYou speak of motherhood like you know something about itâ, she commented, letting her unasked question fill the space around them. Â
âI assumed it would be, yes.â  There was a far-off look in her eyes as Vic wondered just what a trip to New York might look like. Rosie had never left Wickedâs Rest before. âAnd the art museum, too. Sheâs quite taken with art, as of late. This week, anyway. Perhaps next week sheâll be interested in horses again.â Â
â
What a strange reunion this was. Inge had experienced plenty of reunions in her time (that was how an undead life went â lots of coming and going of relations) but none were quite so tense so fast. She wanted to be nothing but happy for Vic, but she spoke of the ethics of keeping a child from being a slayer. As if it wasnât a gift to not indoctrinate them into indiscriminate murder. And who was she, to judge a mother on how she was raising a child? Vera had been gone before she was dead, the wedge that had grown between mother and daughter a constantly evolving thing until finally they had been definitively severed.
âHer nature? Do you suggest it is nature and not nurture that makes slayers go after us?â She tried to keep her tone to a lower volume but she felt a wave of indignation pass through her. âMaybe you shouldnât leave her in ignorance, but come now â another slayer? Weâve plenty.â But it had been slayers whoâd given Vic the child, so maybe there was more that. She bristled at the notion that it wasnât as black and white, âSlayers never consider shades of gray in my experience, either. But â I do trust ⊠your judgment.â Did she? How well did she really know Vic?
She wanted it to be so simple, to be happy for a friend who found happiness in motherhood. But Inge was bitter and ruined and felt like sheâd flayed herself in front of the other. Did she wear it on her sleeve so obviously, then? Leila had pricked through it too. âI do. Did. Itâs in the past now.â She didnât want to talk of it, of children that grew older than their mothers and died before them.Â
âGood,â she said, âA child interested in art is a promising one. But the changing interestsâŠâ She did remember that, too. Vera had been a girl of many passions. âItâd be nice, to go. Iâm sure.â
â
Vic picked at the tablecloth beneath her fingernails, feeling a small spot unravel as she dug into the fabric. She didnât know what to say, because she felt at an impasse. She respected Inge a great deal, but it seemed like her opinion on this matter would do more to upset her than anything. âI suggest that hunters have senses, abilities, and culture. Culture which includes protecting the secret of supernatural existence, not just eliminating it. Do you suggest I should have her ignore these senses, instead?â There were plenty of hunters who werenât killing machines, Vic knew this first hand. A decade ago she would have called them weak. Â
If truth were to be told, she didnât know what the best route was when it came to Rosie being a slayer. She did not ask for her parents to die, nor did she ask to be raised by the very creature that she was born to kill. âI will sit in on her training. I will not allow anyone to traumatize her. But it will be up to her to decide who she wants to be in life.â Which meant one day Rosie might hate her, or⊠or worse. A kind of worse she wouldnât let herself imagine. Â
She felt the urge to reach forward and squeeze Ingeâs hand, wondering how much more of the story there was here. There really had been not much substance to their relationship in the past, but now, it felt like everything was tumbling out. âIâm sorry. For whoever you might have lost.â She looked down at her watch, noting that time was passing faster than she had expected it to. Â
âI didnât realize it had gotten so lateâ, she muttered, worried that this might be the end and that their friendship would never spark. âI donât want you toâŠYou should know that Iâve thought about this situation long and hard, Inge. Iâm just trying to do right by her. Because she deserves it, more than anyone.â
â
âYou can protect the secrecy of the supernatural without calling yourself a hunter. It is in the name, Vic. They hunt. Their existence is built on murder,â Inge said icily. To her, it was different from the predatory existence of the undead â they needed to prey on others in other to survive, could not live without nightmares, blood or flesh. Hunters didnât need to maim, chase and murder in order to breathe their mortal breaths, though. âI donât â you can raise her aware of her senses, of what she comes from but why would you rear her to be that?â
The scars on her body would have throbbed dully if there was any blood in her system, so in stead there was a mental itch. She was overstepping, she knew. It was bad praxis to criticize a mother, but it was easy to do from the side. She swallowed. âItâs â Iâm sure youâll do well by her.â Just do right by our kind too, she wanted to add.Â
She felt exhausted, which was a strange thing to feel as a creature of the night who didnât need sleep. Memories of Vera were sharp, however, as was the knowledge that Vic would watch her child grow old and die. She wanted to say that the undead were not supposed to have children, that such a thing was reserved for the living â but what good would it do? Inge had been a human when Vera had been born. Vic had happened upon a child. Life happened and more importantly, death did. âMe too,â she said, voice somewhat small. She swallowed her warnings. Grieving someone who wasnât dead yet wasnât something she wanted to make Vic do.
She frowned at the comment, âI suppose it did,â she said. âI â I know.â At least, she figured she did. She felt bitter and ugly, like a pessimist and a bad friend. If Vic and her were still friends, or could rekindle it now. âI didnât â donât mean to be harsh. If youâd like, maybe we can ⊠She can come to my studio with you, if youâd like. We could see each other again.âÂ
â
âItâs not up to you or me what she chooses to call herself. Itâs up to her guardian to give her all the information possible, to nurture and guide until sheâs old enough to decide for herself. Until then, sheâll be raised as she would have had tragedy not befallen her family.â It was enough that Rosie was ripped from someone who would have a natural maternal bond with her, worse that sheâd been given to someone she was born to kill. Vic didnât often think about this, because the consequences of raising her how nature intended were innumerable. Thinking about it only made her second guess her choices. In an effort to quell the tension, Vic hadnât been holding eye contact with Inge, but her companionâs comment about murder changed that. âAnd how is that any different from our existence?â, she asked sharply and defensively, staring daggers into Inge. Â
But there was the catch 22. It was the problem with her whole change of heart. How could she still find value in what hunters did while befriending vampires and trying to rescue them? How could she ethically raise a daughter while teaching her it was okay to kill her motherâs friends, just for existing? Conversations like this brought too much to light- it was too hard to question how things were going when she was already so unsure of their outcome.
But there, again, was a spark of kindness from Inge. A permission, even, to make the choices she thought was best. She didnât know if she would have granted someone else that grace had the situation been reversed. Vic sat back in her chair, letting out a low breath. Â
âI think sheâd like thatâ, Vic said, although her voice was smaller than earlier. Her eyebrows were furrowed in contemplation, like they so often were. âI think sheâd like to meet you, too.â She stood up, pulling her bag over her shoulder with a shaky breath. Reaching in, she pulled out a business card with her phone number and business instagram plastered in bright, bold letters. âWill you send me your information? We can set up a time to make this all happen.â Inge would meet Rosie, Vic was sure, and understand how important raising her was. Sheâd understand that no one could mother her without putting meticulous thought into every decision that was made about her life. Sheâd understand, and give Vic her blessing, and then Vic could stop worrying that she was making a huge mistake. Â
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TIMING:Â Current
LOCATION:Â Daiyu's house
PARTIES:Â Alistair @deathsplaything, Emilio @mortemoppetere, Vic @natusvincere, Zane & Daiyu @bountyhaunter
SUMMARY:Â A conspiracy meets to plan an ambush.
CONTENT WARNINGS:Â N/A
She had never had this many people in her house. Scratch that: Daiyu had never had people in her house, ever. Not this one, anyway, this small cabin that sheâd been able to rent through hunter connections and had been living in for about half a year. It was kind of overwhelming, if she was honest, but she never was to herself and so she didnât pay it any mind.Â
She returned to the living room with a stack of mismatched cups and a bottle of soda, placing them on the table where a few other key ingredients for a strategy meeting already resided. A package of grocery store chocolate chip cookies and a bowl of potato chips, for one, and then all the bits and bobs of paper like the blueprints and guard schedules Alistair had provided. She looked around the strange combination of people â from Emilio to Vic (who sheâd just thought a very sweet suburban mom up until recently) to a guy named Zane (whoever that was) to Alistair. Brutus and Nugget were hopefully entertaining each other in corner. Sheâd be very sad if they didnât get on.
âAlright,â she said, ignoring the cups and soda now that sheâd placed them on the table. These people were capable of pouring themselves a drink and she wasnât very good at hosting, anyway. To the dismay of her father â but well, that wouldnât be the main thing thatâd bother him about this ordeal. âWhere were we? Us âŠâ She gestured at Alistair and herself. âOn the inside. Weâll make sure thereâs not a lot of peeps on schedule.â Daiyu tucked her legs underneath herself as she got comfortable on the floor. She didnât have enough chairs. She barely had enough forks for one person. âWhatever. Getting inâs not the issue.â She was down to brush over those details, because something else was nagging at her. Daiyu wasnât very good at boring planning details. She pulled a messy list of captives toward her. Sheâd worked on that over the past week. âWhat do we do about the people?â
â
Tension turned his body into a coiled spring, ready to leap up at the slightest irritation. Emilio stood in the kitchen with his back against the wall, eyes darting periodically between Alistair and the woman he didnât know with the occasional uncertain glance towards Daiyu. The only person in this room he trusted fully was the one heâd brought himself, and he was already feeling a little guilty for dragging Zane along.Â
He looked to the table, to the blueprints and papers and things he probably wouldnât understand. This level of planning was new to Emilio. Most of the time, his plans consisted of âgo in, kill what needs killing, try not to die.â (Except for the ones that omitted the last point â he tried not to let himself think of those for the moment.) This kind of strategizing was foreign to him. He wasnât entirely sure what he was doing here. Part of him wanted to protest, wanted to point out that it wasnât necessary for the blade to know what the hand was planning. Point him in the direction where he needed to slice, and heâd do it. Everything else seemed wasted on him.Â
But⊠he wasnât sure he trusted any of them, even Daiyu, enough not to know the plan. If he was going to put Zaneâs stupid life on the line, he was going to make sure the plan was a decent one. He owed the vampire that, at least. Reaching into his pocket, he retrieved a flask and took a swig, ignoring the soda and snacks Daiyu had set out. This was more his style. âCase by case, I think,â he piped in, glancing at the list Daiyu had provided. âSome of them might not be the kind we want to put back into the world.â But Emilio wouldnât leave anyone locked up. A quick death was kinder, he thought; heâd give them that. It was what heâd want for himself, when the time came. âOkay. So, we need to⊠look into this. Right? See why they were brought in, decide what to do with who. We donât want to send serial killers loose on the town.â
â
It had taken a lot from Alistair to leave Tommy at the apartment to come to this meeting. The two had become dependent on each other since the loss of Melody and both of their worlds crumbled from under them. The only thing that propelled Alistair forward on this mission was that his life was on the line, and there was no way they would leave Tommy alone. They owed everything they could to make this out alive. And if that meant going against The Good Neighbors and Winnifred herself? Then so be it. Brutus had been playing with Nugget in the corner, but Alistair gave the command, and Brutus ceased his playtime and made his way over to his owner, eager to work.Â
A case-by-case basis was necessary. Alistair remembered a lot of the names that went into those cages and remembered the atrocities that were committed. âWinnifred has a better-kept log that has names, dates of imprisonment, and reasoning,â Alistair spoke up, arms crossed over their chest as they stared blankly forward. âDaiyu and I could call her to the keep to discuss overcrowding,â Alistair suggested, knowing that the keep was getting seriously overcrowded. It was something theyâd have to talk about eventually, whether Winnifred wanted to or not. âSheâd bring her book with her and make decisions for âthe good of the town.â or whatever she tells herself.âÂ
âListen, this mission is not going to be easy,â Alistair warned, hand gripping around the hold of Brutusâs harness. âPeople are going to get hurt, people are going to die. Not everyone you release will be happy to see you.â Alistair knew from experience how wily they could be. They knew they had to prepare for the worst, a spell that theyâd already begun to prepare for. Alistair was going to die there, they knew they were. But they didnât want anyone else to get killed along with them. If they could warn them of the dangers, theyâd at least have done their part.
__
Vic had turned back home three times before she finally convinced herself to join this meeting. This was why sheâd joined the Good Neighbors in the first place, right? To protect the vampires sheâd suspected were being targeted and start the path toward righting the wrongs of her past. Sure, she may have gotten a little distracted by the delicious little taste of neighborhood power joining the group had provided her (sheâd made more citizenâs arrests in the last month than probably her entire time in Wickedâs Rest, but littering was down a good 10%). But after finally overhearing the truth from Alistair and Daiyu a few days ago, it felt like something substantial was finally about to happen.
As she sat straight-backed in the chair that had been offered to her, pursing her lips at the menu offered to them, a punch of guilt invaded her stomach, scolding her for even thinking of freeing monsters from their cages. She had known for nearly 300 years that they deserved to die, and if she were in this meeting three years earlier, she would have elected to kill them all on sight. What kind of world was she leaving for Rosie-... for humanity⊠if she let monsters like herself walk free? But then her mind flipped again, to all the work sheâd done to be better, to all the âmonstersâ that had proved her wrong⊠Why couldnât this have been easier?
âWhy do we get to decide which of them deserves death?â Vic chirped from her corner, the first thing sheâd uttered the whole meeting. âIs that not just as reprehensible as what Winnifred is doing? Whoâs deciding morality here?â
__
Zane had rarely felt as out of place as he did here, working very hard to piece together the bits of information Emilio had provided with the people in the room and the words they were exchanging. It probably didnât help that heâd chosen to stand, wanting to fade into the background with his ill-defined role here but realizing it probably made him look like Emilioâs bodyguard or something equally silly. How the slayer would have seethed at that notion. Moving to sit now seemed worse but he did uncross his arms, trying to match names and what they were to the faces in the room.Â
It didnât take long for the conversation to turn grim - who gets to live. Heâd had this conversation with Emilio, about how locking up things like Zane wasnât a viable option. Not humane, either, especially for something that would practically live forever. It still made his skin crawl but the naivety heâd possessed last year existed no more, gone up in flames when that barn did. âSomeone has to do it,â he found himself speaking up, not sure how much of it was his own opinion and how much was simply support for Emilio, which seemed his only true role here. âAt least this way itâs⊠informed.â Was he even supposed to take part in the conversation? Well, too late now.Â
â
This was why she shouldnât get caught up in affairs. Not human affairs, not supernatural affairs â none. Daiyu functioned best on her own. If she had never joined up, she would have never known about this and she would have been able to spend this night watching Buffy. But here she was. Hosting the revolution for a place that should perhaps not be overthrown, hearing people talk about what she preferred to avoid. Morals. She tended to let herself be led by the bounty board, not by what felt good.
She started stuffing a cookie into her mouth so she had an excuse not to talk (which was nonsensical, considering she talked with a full mouth all the time) and felt herself grow agitated. âYeah, we could totally get the book off her, no doubt,â she said, âWhatever, but â even those are â you know.â Vic was making good points. All of them were. She wanted to slam her head into the table.
âWay I see it, Winnifred isnât ⊠sheâs just a human. Trying to do what she reckons is best, but she doesnât ⊠sheâs clueless, yeah?â She glanced at Emilio. âCortez and I, weâre hunters. We know this shit. Weâve been raised for this. We know whatâs a risk, whatâs not. What beast to take out in the woods and which to let run its course, ya know? So itâs the same as that. Just ⊠more âŠâ She wiped a crumb off the table. âPremeditated. Whatever. Most important is that it ends here. And yeah, for many thatâs gonna mean it ends-ends.â Daiyuâs job was to figure out who in town should be targeted, hadnât it? She knew in some cases why some of the prisoners had been put there. Sheâd made that judgment. None of them were innocent. (None of them at this table were either. Well, maybe Zane and Vic, she wasnât sure.) âIâll make sure thereâs plenty of weapons around for when push comes to shove.â
â
Zane had his back, though Emilio wondered how much of what he was saying was what he really believed and how much came from his perception that he still owed Emilio for what happened in that barn a year ago now. He didnât bring Zane along to have a yes man in his corner, didnât want someone who would agree with everything he said. He needed Zane for the same reason he needed Teddy, or Wynne, or XĂł: because sometimes, Emilio led with something that wasnât his head. Sometimes, the past got muddled in with the present, and nothing was quite right. If he was making the wrong choice here, he needed someone to tell him that. He needed it to be someone he trusted, someone who understood him. He had to hope that Zane was speaking his mind and not saying what he thought Emilio wanted to hear. He spared the vampire a quick glance, hoping to communicate all of this in a simple look. It was a lot of pressure to put on an expression that really wasnât much different than his usual.
He glanced to the necromancer, scoffing quietly. âI donât think anyone here walked in that door thinking this would be easy,â he replied flatly, crossing his arms over his chest. âIf it were easy, we wouldnât need this meeting.â This was going to be rough. It was going to be hard and it was going to be dangerous and people were probably going to die. People at this table were probably going to die. Emilio felt a surge of guilt for the fact that he hadnât shared his plan to participate in this with any of the important people in his life. If he died doing this, none of them would know until after. Theyâd probably be upset about that.Â
He nodded as Daiyu spoke, glancing around the table. âLook, I think⊠These people got into this shit thinking they were doing something good.â He let his eyes go from Daiyu to the clean-cut looking woman beside her to the necromancer. Maybe all of them had gotten into the Good Neighbors with good intentions, and maybe they hadnât. Emilio wasnât sure it mattered. What mattered more was their intentions now. âSome of the people locked up there are bad. Thereâs no denying that. But some of them arenât. Some of them are just people who have made mistakes, maybe, and they can learn from this. And the ones who canâtâŠâ He trailed off, clenching his jaw. âI would rather die,â he said simply. âIf I had to choose between being locked away for as long as these people live or dying for what Iâve done, I would rather die. Itâs better. Itâs faster for them. Itâs safer for everyone else. Itâs better. So this is what Iâm doing. If someone has a problem with it, you can try to stop me, but something tells me weâre all here because weâre on the same page, yes? So we figure out who gets what, and we figure out how to give it to them. Thatâs what we do. Anyone who wants to leave can leave, but Iâm all in.â
â
When it came to killing, Alistair was no saint. Theyâd done it before, theyâd probably do it again. Theyâd done it for the sake of saving Tommy, theyâd done it to save countless others. But theyâd never killed someone without someone else benefitting from it. Theyâd never killed on a scale such as this. And thatâs what they were doing, wasnât it? All those people who couldnât be set free were going to die. It caused Alistair to shift their weight from foot to foot, head downcast as they thought about the implications of taking more lives. They wanted no part of it anymore. Still, if it had to be done to keep people safe, then the benefits outweighed the costs in their minds.Â
âThere are alarms.â Alistair piped up, looking through Brutusâs eyes to point in the correct placements. âOnce when the front gate is breached, once when the button on the cages is hit.â Alistair pointed to the center control panel with a frown. âIf you want to set them all free, thatâs where you want to go.â He tapped his finger against the paper before removing it.
Alistair pulled out a set of keys that Daiyu had. âThis one opens cages.â They explained, pulling out a rather large key and laying it on the table, then pulling out a passkey. âThatâll get you in the building without detection. Weâve made sure that security is lighter that day by putting ourselves on duty.â Alistair put the pass key down on the table alongside the large ring of keys. âDaiyu and I will stick together, so we donât need both of us to have this on us.âÂ
âAs for who lives and who dies, weâll deal with that when the time comes when we have that book from Winnifred. What are we going to do about her?â They implored, knowing that Winnifred would go down kicking and screaming if it came to it. âSheâs a human, but sheâs a human that thinks what sheâs doing is justified and within reason.âÂ
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Vic had known some of them were hunters before she arrived. Of course thereâd be hunters in a situation like this. For years, hunters were probably the people she felt most comfortable with, as long as her bracelet was functioning properly. She was practically surrounded by them, whether at her old bartending job where they frequented or her more nefarious meetings where she was trading information about vampires for cash. But now, with everything between Rosie and her change of heart, she found herself actively avoiding them. She felt herself toying with the cloaking bracelet as they argued. Â
As Emilio spoke, Vic couldnât deny the familiar feeling that fluttered through her stomach, the one she felt after she was presumably betrayed by her first love, and again after she was sired. âIâm still not comfortable with us being so egotistical as to think we get to be the deciding factor, butâŠâ People were still important. Humanity was still important, as much as it sucked. There had to be a nuance between the belief that all vampires were monsters and all vampires were saints. Her sire was no saint. Neither was she. She sighed before she continued. âIt seems with the time crunch, itâs our only option.â She wasnât happy with it, because morality in general felt so gray these days, but she couldnât sit by and watch them all be prisoners. Not with everything she knew now.
The group that they had gathered seemed valuable, and willing to work together, and for a moment, she doubted her place amongst them. Would she be much help? âThere wonât be much use in us trying to get through to herâ, Vic said. She was the newest member of the group, the one who knew Winnifred the least, but she knew more than her fair share about having the wrong idea about supernaturals and using it to try to rid them of the world. âPerhaps she needs a taste of her own medicine. At least until we figure out what to do with the others.â
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It would be even more difficult when the time came. This discussion was one thing, even looking over names on paper might be easy but when the time came⊠Zane wondered briefly if rehabilitation was an option. Where was the line? For humans, those who would eventually perish during a life sentence, there were cases of atrocities bad enough that redemption wasnât in the cards, would never be on the cards. Was this scenario that much different? They did lack a judge and jury but if murder, especially repeat offenses, meant a life sentence, wasnât that what they were executing in a way? At least for the ones like him, hadnât they already used up all their allotted time and simply cheated death? The brief ethics course in nursing school hadnât exactly prepared him for this.Â
Emilio was staring him down, face unreadable as always. Did he not want him to talk? Or maybe not agree? Who knew, honestly. At least it seemed settled that not everyone would be released into the wild from their prison, the older man with the dog moving on to plans that made Zane feel eerily like this was a heist movie. The odds for an end scene showing how they pulled everything off smoothly with no casualties didnât feel great, though. âWhat are we dealing with in terms of the people⊠running this? Are they all⊠human?â Zane found himself asking as they discussed the fate of the ring leader - it was hypocritical in some ways but the idea of harming humans didnât sit well with him at all. It had been over a year but he still felt more of a kinship with them than his fellow undead.Â
â
All of this went against all Daiyu had made herself know for the past years. She was a bounty hunter, plain and simple. The Good Neighbors had been a gig, a lucrative one at that â but sheâd joined with that stupid notion of doing something good and it seemed she hadnât given up on that. âWe donât touch that button, then. The one that opens everything at once. Thatâs disaster.â She looked at the keys, then at the would-be intruders. âJust get in with those, donât raise any fucking alarms, and the first bit should be smooth. Itâs when start opening the cages that we should be more alert.â
She took her list back. It had names, species, some transgressions on it. It wasnât Winnifredâs color coded book, but it was something. âLetâs get through some, at fucking least. Weâre here now.â She didnât want many more of these meetings. Daiyu splayed it on the table, pointed at the name Mack Ross. âLike, I can tell you now what and how. She killed a buncha people, isnât in control, which is âŠâ She made a motion. âLudacris, âcause itâs Mack fucking Ross. Then, Johnny no surname, heâs a vampire. You know, I think heâs alright, he loves Snicker Snackers, he could totally do an animal based diet, maybe.â She pointed to another name, âSvetlana, serial student killer. Stake.â Daiyu motioned staking a vampire, wooshing sound and all. She pointed at another name. âChang, dunno his first name. Kept the bones of all his kills after he ate âem whole. Probs best to not release him into the world again.â
To speak about killing undead and shapeshifters was something she did with an eerie ease, as it was who she was brought up to be. Later that night, sheâd reflect on her lackadaisical attitude with distaste, but for now it was something to hold onto. She felt something stir in her stomach at the mention of Winnifred, though, and her eyes moved to Emilio. Hunters were supposed to protect humans. Winnifred had tried to do the same, foolishly and cruelly, but she had. âWe destroy the keep. We make sure they donât make one again. And yeah, all human. Or like, human with some zest, like Al and I.â She wasnât going to kill them. âSo yeah. We destroy their means and thatâs that.â
â
âAgreed,â Emilio said, nodding towards Daiyu. âSetting everyone free at once would be a bloodbath.â The more violent offenders would kill each other, the ones offended by the time theyâd lost behind bars would kill anyone who got close. And that was to say nothing of the ones who might just be hungry. That wasnât the sort of chaos any of them could afford. They needed to do it slowly. It would be risky, sure, but⊠less risky than setting loose a whole slew of problems. âWhose cage gets opened first, then?â The ones with the best shot of actually getting out would be the ones freed in the very beginning. But beyond that⊠âAny prisoners who might help us out? Without killing any of us, ideally.â His eyes darted towards Alistair and Daiyu, whoâd both had some kind of a hand in the⊠acquisitions.Â
Daiyu, at least, seemed to be on the same page. She was already pointing to her book, and Emilio felt a little uneasy at the first name she pointed out. Mack Ross. Kaden and Monty were both fond of her, werenât they? âWe should spring her early on.â He pointed to Mackâs name. âAt the beginning.â He offered no explanation as to why. âJohnny no-name, too. Get the ones out who we think will need the⊠least amount of help staying honest. The ones we know weâre going to kill, we should get to last. That way if something happens and we canât get to everyoneâŠâ At least they could free the ones who needed freeing before going out in a blaze of glory. He let the thought hang unfinished. Looking at the list, he pointed at another name. âThatâs my clientâs friend. We free her early, too.â After all, that was why heâd gotten dragged into this whole mess to begin with.
Winnifred, though⊠That was more complicated. He met Daiyuâs eye, then glanced to Zane. Did it matter if a human didnât think they were doing harm, as long as harm was done? How much did good intentions matter, in a case like this? Emilio had to believe they meant something. After all the bad shit heâd done with good intentions, he wasnât sure he was the best one to judge. âWe donât have to kill any of them.â But would he stop any of the prisoners, if they tried? He wasnât sure. âWe destroy the place,â he agreed. âHow⊠detailed are their records? We should destroy those, too. Make it impossible for them to start up again next week or something.â
â
Staying silent as the others deliberated who lived and who died, it was like he was healing people all over again. The wellbeing and life for one, was the only way to help another. Some of the people who were locked up in those cages were less monsters than Alistair was, and they knew it. They stayed silent as they deliberated, then perked up at the name of Mack Ross. âYes, definitely free Mack,â Alistair spoke up finally, knowing that she was a sweet girl who had already been through enough. What she did to land her in the Good Neighborâs in the first place be damned. They, like Emilio, also offered no further comment.Â
âIâm all for destroying the place.â They muttered, knowing that their opinion on matters held little sway. âWinnifred will fight for this place, itâs her baby, itâs been her sole purpose for so long,â Alistair explained, tapping a finger against their other arm as they thought. âThe records are kept here,â Alistair spoke, tapping the map to a back room. âItâs got fireproofing, so youâll need to go in there first.â Alistair frowned, realizing the problem with that. âOnly Winnifred has access to that room, not even I can get in there.âÂ
Winnifred had good intentions, but she didnât know what the real world was really like. She saw what she wanted to see, and turned a blind eye to all the rest that made the rosy picture anything else. Theyâd learned that after being close to her after all these years. âThere will be after-effects of this we should think about as well. Just because the keep is gone doesnât mean they wonât try to reform somehow. People will always find a way. The top hitters are the ones youâll want to keep an eye on, like Winnifred if you decide to leave her in the ruins of her keep.â
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Vic shifted in her seat, uncomfortable as the names down the list were being read. None of them sounded familiar, even the first one that Daiyu seemed to imply would be well known, but the talk surrounding them didnât make her any less uncomfortable. What had kept her from the same fate as these vampires? What if they were freshly sired, or hadnât had a chance to learn yet? What if an old, grumpy bitch of a vampire had betrayed her own kind and caused them on a path of destruction, somehow? She stood up from her chair suddenly, crossing her arms over her chest. âYou donât have to speak of this so crassly. Itâs almost as if youâll enjoy killing them. If thatâs the case, youâre no better than them.â
She was no better than her old self, if she was allowing this to happen. Perhaps she could find a way to rescue those they were intending to harm. She could buy a property in the outskirts of town, far away from Rosie, and teach them to be less monstrous, somehow. It felt wholly cruel to take someoneâs second chance away. What would these people say about her if she had found herself in the keep? Their words sounded muffled around her as she concocted it. Victoria Larsson, reformed vampire hater and only feeds from what she calls âethically sourcedâ. Currently brainwashing a slayer child. Monster. Stake.Â
She sat back down with a huff. âSo our moral code includes deciding that some prisoners die for their crimes, but all of the people who locked them up just get to roam free with some property damage? Alistair is right. Theyâre just going to find a way to do this again. Maybe with more permanent consequences, as a backlash to our success. Letting them walk without consequence would be as foolish as not doing anything at all.
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The one with the notes, Daiyu, started moving down the list in a way that so clearly established her as a hunter. It was crass but not necessarily⊠wrong. There seemed to be a distinction made between pure malevolence and mistakes, a lack of control. Zane felt relief, realized that if his own transgressions were being judged, he would have stood a chance at this proposed reform. âIs it safe to assume no oneâs been⊠feeding them?â he wondered as Emilio suggested letting the previously captive help. âBecause I can⊠provide blood.â He didnât offer any explanation as to how - skimming from the hospital seemed like a necessary evil in this scenario.Â
â--
Daiyu felt her stomach sink as Vic chastised her, eyes blazing as she looked at her, âYou donât know shit about shit, lady,â she bit, before trying to turn to other matters. A headache was forming behind her eyes and she looked at the list before pulling it towards her again. With a pen she found somewhere on the table she added some asterisks next to names theyâd discussed and Xâs next to others. âThis isnât about being better or worse than âem, itâs about ending it. So. What the fuck do you suggest we do about the rest of the good neighbors? Should we punish âem all? Hang âem from their thumbs or something? What about you? Me? Alistair? Should we throw ourselves under the rubble to repent?â She was mostly talking to Vic now, even if she spoke to all of them. They were humans. Daiyu might not really keep to a code, but hurting humans? You didnât do that. That was the main hunter rule.Â
She tried to refocus. âThe cages are split in different rooms. We can make a plan, an order of operations. I can ⊠Alistair and I can list who seem aggressive.â Daiyu considered suggesting they just kill them all, but that was too crass, even for her. âWe just light all the shit on fire. Getting a flamethrower shouldnât be hard.â She would like to have one on hand, anyway, for totally legal reasons.Â
She glanced at Zane. âSometimes. When thereâs stuff. I give them some of the ⊠leftovers from my regular hunts sometimes. But if youâve got proper shit, sure. Smuggling stuff in isnât too hard.â Getting it out was what was harder. âMight be better if the vamps arenât starved. Can you get brains too?â
â
âI donât think trying to keep serial killers off the streets makes us shitty people,â Emilio added, nostrils flaring with brief irritation. âWeâre not talking about killing the people who were tossed in cages for fucking up. Weâre talking about the ones who carve peopleâs fucking hearts out for fun. You really want people like that running around this town?â The thing was, he understood where the Good Neighbors must have been coming from, in the beginning. Their philosophy wasnât that far off his own. The only real difference was that Emilio killed the people he deemed worthy of his judgment, while the Good Neighbors locked theirs away. In Emilioâs opinion, killing was kinder. In the opinion of others⊠Well. There were different schools of thought.
He glanced to Daiyu, nodding his head. âGood idea,â he agreed. âGo in with a plan for the order, get it done as quick as possible. And destroy everything we can. Maybe they try to pick up again later,â he looked to Vic, acknowledging her concern, âbut it wonât be easy. We take away their base. We show them that their plans can go wrong. We put the fear in them. If theyâre smart, they go underground, try to put distance between themselves and the people they locked up. If theyâre not smartâŠâ He trailed off, letting it hang. Odds were, they wouldnât have to kill any of the people involved with the Good Neighbors. If they didnât disappear⊠someone else would take care of that part. Emilio found he didnât have any real desire to stop that. He wondered if he ought to feel guilty.
He nodded at Zaneâs question, looking at Daiyu again. Her smuggling shit in was part of what had clued him in that she might be willing to join his side of this shit. âTheyâre probably not well fed,â he replied, âso more blood is better. I⊠might know someone who can get us brains.â He grimaced, unsure he wanted to ask Monty for a favor. But if the zombie was really as into peace as he claimed, heâd probably be on board. And Emilio figured he owed it to him to let him know what was going on with Mack, anyway. Heâd want someone to tell him, if it were Nora or Wynne.Â
â
For a while, Alistair stayed silent, listening as people listed off what to do, about what they would do with what. For a moment, they found themselves completely detaching from the conversation, dissociating as they thought about the very real possibility of dying here. Some people were locked up who wanted them dead, theyâd been too close to Winnifred for too long. They were responsible for their cellmates disappearing and never returning. If anything, Alistair was just as much a monster as those who were locked behind those cell doors. Itâs something theyâd been wrestling with for quite some time, but now? Now they had to finally address it.Â
They couldnât let themselves simply die, they had to continue preparing for the worst-case scenario. While everyone else planned who to set free and what to do, Alistair was making a mental checklist of what they needed to gather for a spell. âThereâs no world where Winnifred wouldnât come after us if she was allowed to walk away unscathed.â They finally spoke up after some time, still distant, still somewhere else in their mind.Â
âI say we let the prisoners deal with her.â It was harsh, it was crass, but itâs what they thought. âIâm sure the prisoners will take care of Daiyu and me if weâre not careful,â Alistair added, crossing their arms over their chest. âWeâve been to the keep countless times, they know our faces.â They spoke to Daiyu, though they didnât look over to her. âItâs something to keep in mind, thatâs all.â They nervously scratched at the side of their nose, knowing that they were opening a can of worms with their words.
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Vic felt her grip tighten around the arm of the chair, staring Daiyu in the eyes as her sharp words echoed around the room. For her part, her expression remained stoic and still, but inside, she was seething. âThose who wish to take down positions of power inherently have to be better. Itâs the whole goddamn point of what weâre doing.â This was a bad idea, she should have never agreed to join this overtaking- never eavesdropped on Daiyu and Alistair in the first place. âI suggest that we do anything other than stick our thumbs up our asses and hope for the best.â Perhaps she should be one of the ones to be punished. Not for crimes involving the Good Neighbors, but for all sheâd done to vampires for centuries.  Â
But Emilio had a point. Some of the people in the cages were bad. That was the long and short of it. The problem, to her, came with who got to decide what bad was. âNoâ, she said quietly, and she stood up again, walking to the other side of the room in a huff. She wasnât used to having to work with people, or having to compromise on her beliefs to make someone elseâs plan work for someone else. But she wasnât naive to the fact that she was the newbie in all of this, and that everyone here thought they were doing the right thing. No matter how ignorant some of them sounded.
She glanced at Emilio, then at Daiyu, and then at the others, feeling calmer than she had a moment ago. âThen I think itâs worth discussing continuing to meet up after everything. Periodically, to make sure she doesnât try this again.â
She raised her eyebrows at Alistairâs suggestion, not hating it in the slightest. It would be the truest justice to let those that were scorned by Winnifred be the ones to decide her fate. Even if it were just the supposed âgoodâ ones. She looked between the rest of the group, eager to hear their thoughts.
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All of the arguing wasnât exactly inspiring hope. This was a group of people clearly not accustomed to working in a team, basically a bunch of Emilios struggling to find ways to make this collaboration work. Zane wondered if he was the only one in here with actual experience of working in a team - granted, a team focused on saving lives and not⊠whatever this was. âWeâre not gonna get far if the four of you tear each otherâs heads off, first,â he muttered, finally moving from the perceived safety of his position backed against the wall. âItâs a shit situation and thereâs obviously not going to be a conclusion everyone is comfortable with. So weâre all going to be uncomfortable and really morally compromised and we either deal with it or actual, good people are going to continue to rot away in cells.â It had come out a bit more⊠scolding than intended and he backed down again, arms once more crossing over his chest. âUp to you, I guess,â he added, withdrawn and hoping he hadnât overstepped any boundaries as the ârandom fifth additionâ.Â
Maybe all of this would work. Maybe it wouldnât. Honestly, it probably wouldnât and something would go wrong. Zane thought about the last âjail breakâ heâd been a part of. It had definitely gone wrong but⊠overall, it had been worth it. All he could hope was that this would be worth it, too. And he needed to remember to ask Emilio later where in the world he was procuring brains from.
â
It was easy to keep looking at Vic. To stare her down and take her words and consider throwing the soda bottle at her head. âThen you can fuck off if you want. Thereâs no better. Thereâs just ending it. And we are better, for ending their suffering, rather than keeping them there to rot.â Daiyuâs eyes glared darkly at Zane, another person she barely knew who was suddenly mounting a moral high horse as if there was any morality to be found here. Violence begot violence. This would ripple out. It was just another punch thrown in a never ending brawl. âFine.â
Speaking of brawls, sheâd prefer one of those rather than planning this. âMâfine with meeting up after this.â Then, to Alistair: âShe can try to come after me. I wish her a ton of luck fighting her hired muscle.â Daiyu didnât think herself above harm, but there was no way that Winnifred would win in a fight against her. âBest to keep her away from the Keep when we destroy it, if you ask me. Not alert her and all that shit. Just more trouble.â She rubbed her forehead. âAnd yeah, people will be pissed. I can deal. Iâve dealt with pissed off supernaturals before.â Kind of part of the job description. âWill watch your back though.âÂ
She wanted to beckon Nugget over and bury her face in his fur before rushing out and going for a run (where she punched trees). In stead she exhaled. âAlright. Emilio and Zane, blood and brains duty. Alistair, spells. Me? Weapons.â She glared at Vic. âExplosives?âÂ
â
âIf the people sheâs fucked over want to go after her, thatâs between her and them. Iâm not risking my ass to save her from shit she brought onto herself,â Emilio added, crossing his arms over his chest. He wouldnât kill Winnifred, but he wouldnât stop anyone sheâd wronged from doing so if they chose to. After all, heâd hope that anyone who came across him on his never ending quest for vengeance would offer the same courtesy. People got what they deserved, sometimes; Emilio had no intention of standing in the way of that. âIf you two want to get out before we start freeing the ones who might be a little angrier at you than others, thatâs fine, too,â he added, looking to Alistair and Daiyu. The latter, he figured, would turn down the offer. The former was more likely to take it.
Zane spoke up, and Emilio was reminded why he brought him in the first place. Having someone he knew he could trust was good, but having someone he knew he could trust who could also wrangle people in a way Emilio himself was incapable of? It was a good thing. It made Zane kind of perfect for this shit. He offered the vampire a curt nod. To the rest of the group, he said, âWe shouldnât wait long. Theyâre likely to figure out someoneâs planning something soon. We need to act before then. Catch them off guard. If everyone knows what theyâre doing⊠I say we move in sooner than later. Good with everyone?â
â
The slayer was giving Alistair an out, an out that they very well thought about taking before frowning and shaking their head. âIâm seeing this through.â They spoke, voice harsh and determined. There was so much that they still had to get done, and now was the time to expedite everything theyâd worked so hard to accomplish. They were going to do this. They were doing it for Tommy, no one else. Not even themselves.Â
The plan was set into motion, and there was nothing to do but go ahead with it. From helping to create the Keep and the Good Neighbors to taking it down, Alistair knew they were nothing more than a hypocrite and a traitor. But if this is what it took to keep themselves alive, then so be it. They gripped Brutusâs lead tightly, then nodded their head. âThen so be it. As soon as weâre ready to go, we go. Not a moment later.â Alistair waved a hand, and the papers in the middle of the table began to move around until they were in a neat pile. âThen next we meet, we burn it all to the ground.â
"you know, you don't have to pity invite me..." bea began with an unamused look on her face, arms crossed over her chest a bit defensively. she didn't mean to come across as cross, but knowing their shared history of getting on each others' nerves, she was certain that vic would rather be spending his time at this party with anyone but her. "i have plenty of things i could be doing tonight, like reading... i've got way too many books i need to catch up on." realizing how lame she sounded once the words were uttered, she mentally kicked herself. reading? instead of going to a party? get it together, bea. "anyway, like i said. you can just tell your mom i went and i'll be out of your hair, okay?" / @grcveyacd