[color=darkblue:cf0f6662ae][i:cf0f6662ae]In the Suite of the Cascadian Overlook Resort
Kincaid stepped into the darkened room mutely, taking another uneasy glance at his watch. He was easily two minutes late, an infraction that surely would demand a punitive response from his master. He had only been in his recent employers service for two weeks now and had already developed a healthy fear of him, and a love.
It had seemed like a gesture of courtesy and perhaps even affection, when his master had invited him to dine with him. The dinner had been wordless and leaden, but the mere fact that a SERVANT was being called in to feast was enough to lift his sullen heart. They had eaten together for a week, the most delectable of dishes. Cuisines from around the world had been placed before them on that dinner table, and yet his master rarely touched any of it.
What Kincaid hadn't known, and what he would discover all too late, was that the entire time the meals had been laced with his masters blood. Blood! The pork roast, which had seemed a bit rare for his tastes (although he dare not voice such opinions), had been doused in his master's life force. The wine skillfully manipulated to disguise all traces of the bitter tang of vitae.
Kincaid was hopeless now, forced into an eternity of service. He knew his feelings were false, he had figured that out during the first several nights. But it didn't matter. He had slid into his role perfectly. A banker and naturally gifted writer, he had never been offered a complete explanation of why his branch of the bank had been shut down...or just how his master knew he was seeking new employment, even when he himself had barely recovered from the shock.
But as it were, it didn't matter.
"Ah, Kincaid." the voice was exquisite, an army of composers could spend centuries trying and not produce a more melodious and pleasing tune. His master sat at the far end of the room, his figure concealed behind the draping fabrics that arched from the ceiling above. The anxious ghoul took several scanty steps forward, in the vain hope that he might not be heard. The heels of his loafers clacked loudly on the marble floors of the hotel suite, filling him with dread.
Kincaid could not know that it would've made no differance whether he was in the room or a thousand miles away, his master would ALWAYS know. He approached the bed where his employer lay, amid cushions and throw pillows, laid out like a Greek God.
"Kincaid my dear boy...you're late." Kincaid gulped woefully.
"I...I'm sorry Master Venetti...it won't happen again." he offered. His master set down the plate which he had held in his hands and sat forward, the shadows which once concealed his rigid facial features slid away, revealing a handsome, yet aged face.
"I know it won't..." he said, shifting off the bed and slowly making his way around the banister to where the ghoul stood trembling, half out of sheer terror and half out of pure rapture. His lithe body was draped in a cream colored toga, a long robe flowing over his taught shoulders and sweeping the floor behind him. When he moved it gave him a fluid appearance, almost ghost-like.
He moved slowly past his servant, the sweet smell of exotic oils and roses tickling Kincaid's nose. Upon his entering the world of the undead, he had been taught several key points. The bubble that had once been reality had been brutally and mercilessly shattered. His master himself however, stayed a mystery, content apparently to widdle away his nights on his highrise balcony, glancing over artifacts of the past.
Mr. Venetti, as he called himself, was somewhat of a collector of artifacts and antiquities from the glory days of Rome. Some of the pieces revealed their age, yet others look as though they had been in constant use throughout the millenia. The new ghoul didn't understand his purpose, but he wasn't about to pose the question.
"Kincaid....look at this, tell me what you think." Victorrio stood next to a large ornately decorated chest, the lid hanging ajar. As Kincaid moved closer, Victorrio reached into the chest and produced two small figurines.
Kincaid examined the figures for a moment. They were apparently made of ivory and were in the shape of a man and a woman, their faces plain and neutral. From their appendages, long strings draped threatening to touch the floor.
"Puppets sir?" Kincaid asked. Victorrio was visably disappointed. He set them in the ghoul's clammy hands and brushed past him, moving towards the balcony.
"Much more than puppets Kincaid....these miniatures were crafted for me more than two thousand years ago by a then famous Toreador bard." Kincaid nodded, failing to understand the relavence.
"They're very nice Master Venetti." he stated blandly. "Forgive my lack of culture..."
"I did not expect you to posess the faculties required to fully appreciate them Kincaid, so it is no fault of your own. I show them to you as a gift."
"A gift sir?" The ageless vampire plucked the ancient puppets from his hand once again.
"You've no doubt been wondering about your role in my plans...or what my plans are for that matter...." Kincaid said nothing, but merely stood silently. "I'll take your imprudent silence as a sign of agreement."
"Uh..."
"Look out there Kincaid....over that city." he motioned towards the now opened balcony. Thousands of twinkling lights illuminated the landscape. "Millions of mortal souls and hundreds of Kindred corpses, all plotting against each other. All involved in their own schemes to get ahead, to live out their greatest fantasies...a slice of eutopia."
Kincaid felt a wave of nausia sweep over him, but Victorrio only became more aggressive.
"Do you know what it means Kincaid? No, of course not, how could you? You've no grasp of the bigger picture. You're tiny lifespan is but a fleck in the infinate sandstorm of time!"
Kincaid struggled to retain his balance, the world was bogged down with weight. The very air in his lungs felt sodden with an unknown burden.
"I'll tell you what it means Kincaid....NOTHING. Absolutely nothing. Even in immortality, these fools and their power struggles fail to see the full production. Their nightly escapades are mere vignettes in a larger tragedy..."
Functioning was no longer an option, Kincaid grasped onto the bannister for a moment before falling to his knees. His innards felt as if they would explode at any moment. Victorrio swept his hair back out of his eyes, calming himself. He moved towards his immobile servant.
"In the end my dear Kincaid, they are no more than mere puppets." he tossed the relics onto the bed. "Simple toys to be manipulated for the greater end. And that.....is what you are my boy. A puppet. You have no choice...you can either fall victim to time and the will of others, or you can follow me and see the end result of this satire of an existance."
Kincaid felt the cold, lifeless hand of his master grip his shoulder. He looked up and saw Victorrio's figure silouhetted against the moon. For the first time he saw the creature for what it really was. Inhuman. Victorrio's empty gaze was instinctive and predatory, sterling blue eyes nearly transparent, displaying an empty space that should contain a soul. He was an empty husk, the weight of millinea of blood long since sapping his mortality. He had survived his mortal death, and even in undeath had outwitted, outmaneuvered, or simply over-powered his opponents. All to become this.
"I can't remember how many I've killed Kincaid." his voice was calm, almost reminiscant. "Thousands....who knows? Countless more will die before....." he stopped and stared at his ghoul silently for a moment. Kincaid prayed for death. The vampire handed the ghoul a glass of vitae and moved away. "Feast my servant, and clean yourself up, we have work to do."
As Kincaid gorged himself on the sweet, potent vitae, Victorrio Venetti moved onto the balcony, basking in the same moonlight he had for eons...[/color:cf0f6662ae][/i:cf0f6662ae]