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< Dusty Books ~ Whispers of Shal-ka Mense |
Shadow of a Memory
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Posted: Tue Mar 11, 2003 11:17 pm |
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Get your clan name here - PM JuliusPosts: 4Joined: Sat Jul 31, 2004 8:30 pm
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[i:0bafa293c3]Chateau Chenonceau, Loire Valley, France[/i:0bafa293c3]
Khemintiri walked the peaked roof of the gallery that ran from the Chateau to the river's edge. Even as her eyes looked into dark night, her mind looked into the soul of Eveshka Shuvolov. There was no love for her there, but there was no hate either. Pity perhaps, even hopes for Khemintiri's escape if it did not mean danger for Eve. Clearly, the Toreador's motivation was survival. Part of the Firebird wanted Khemintiri to flee, to lose the hounds in the night, while part of her wanted the hounds to finally catch their quarry - if they did, Eveshka would never have to worry about her again.
Khemintiri knew that Eveshka had betrayed her to Lucinde. She also knew that Eveshka sought to warn her about Lucinde. Now, Khemintiri could feel Eve's mind reaching out to find her. Would she watch? Did she want to see Khemintiri make her stand? If she fell, would Eveshka rejoice or mourn? Did it matter? Many would dance upon Khem's ashes given the chance, what difference could it make if Eve were one of them? Still, to Khemintiri, it did make a difference. Khemintiri had actually tried not to hurt Eveshka, a rare thing in Khem's recent life. For Eve to rejoice at her destruction would prove that Khem really was the villain that many made her out to be.
Khemintiri's mind wandered away from Eveshka and sought out the mind of her hunter, Lucinde.
The Ventrue's Justicar's soul was as different from the Toreador Prince's as could be. Lucinde was the Ice Queen to Eveshka's Firebird. Lucinde was a true hunter. Once she had a goal, nothing could dissuade her from pursuing it. Khemintiri tried to probe Lucinde's mind but she was more disciplined and less distraught than Eveshka and consequently more difficult to read.
Khemintiri did know she had brought the host of the Ventrue with her. Khem lept from the gallery roof to the Chateau roof and peered into the dark across the river. They would come soon. Not tonight, for the hour was already late, but tomorrow, or the next night at the latest. Running now would be difficult as Lucinde would surely station sentries all around Chenonceaux. Still, it would not be as difficult as defending against the assualt.
But running left her with no options.
And Khemintiri still had one option left she wished to try. She smiled as she looked down into the river Cher. This was not her river, but at least it was [i:0bafa293c3]a[/i:0bafa293c3] river. If she were to perish, finally, after three millenia, she wanted to do it within sight of a river. For Khemintiri, every river held a promise; a promise of travel, of new places and distant lands where your troubles did not follow. The waters flowed past wherever you stood and on down the course of the waterway into lands you could not see. Khem had often wished to simply leap into a river and let it carry her away. Now, Khem had come to a cataract in the river of her own life. She could not see what lay beyond, if anything. Perhaps a friendly shore - perhaps the oceanic oblivion of final death. And from there, where? The afterlife? Khemintiri still believed in it, but she also believed that it likely held only torment for her. Had she not offended the gods themselves.
A crimon tear formed in her eye. She hoped that if she fell, her last sight would be the river, and her last thought would be of where it might take her, far away from here, from her former lovers, both old and new, from the past and the present. Perhaps to someplace where she would not be an anathema, a destroyer or a whore, to some place where she would just be a girl, a girl with beautiful green eyes and hope......
_________________ No one knows what it's like To be the bad man,
To be the sad man, Behind blue eyes.
And no one knows hat it's like to be hated.
To be fated to telling only lies. |
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Chauncey
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Posted: Wed Mar 12, 2003 12:28 am |
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Get your clan name here - PM JuliusPosts: 0Joined: Mon Aug 11, 2003 10:20 pm
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Eveshka sat in the plush chair before a roaring fire. [i:3c41aec51f] Rotschreck [/i:3c41aec51f] had long ceased to play any part in her existence. She reached out one last time to Keminitiri before recalling her soul. [i:3c41aec51f] "Please forgive me."[/i:3c41aec51f] For better or for worse the dye had been cast. Now she had to carry on. Her next trip was to Paris. She needed some answers that had been gnawing at her.
_________________ OOOOOOOOOOoooooooooooooooh. Tra-la-la. |
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Morathi
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Posted: Wed Mar 12, 2003 3:25 am |
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TremerePosts: 25Location: Somewhere close to Bath's ChantryJoined: Sat Apr 05, 2003 5:40 am
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Gabriel sat motionless, a frigid, lifeless effigy doomed to wait out eternity an empty shell. Or that's how he felt currently at any rate. Still for nearly an hour now, or was it two? It could've been a day for all he would've noticed. There was a horrendous feeling of emptiness within him, and he had no idea why.
Jesus, Mary, and Joseph, how long had it been since he'd even uttered a sound? Seemed like hours ago that Julius and Eveshka had returned from whatever romp they had embarked on, whatever it was they smelled of bodily fluids and seawater. Their faces carried the expressions of those enraptured with one another.
It sort of reminded him of Kathy and himself, in a happier time. Certainly a more prosperous time for Gabriel, both spiritually and financially. He seemed to recall a conversation earlier in the night with Tyler, something about stocks dropping. His life long quest for power and money held little interest for him these nights, and searching for this blasted scroll and hanging around Eveshka and Julius was all he could do to stay busy.
He groaned slightly and felt his vocal chords reverberate, coarse and thickened from unuse. A brief wave of awakening nerves trickled through the skin on his neck and raised tiny follicles near the back.
Finally the Ventrue shifted slightly, glancing over at the object that lay on the table some feet away. The sword had still revealed no clues to the coterie....but then again the Tremere had not even examined it. He seemed content to frolick and prance about with his Toreador "Goddess" while the forces that be more than likely edged closer and closer to the blood of Caine.
But in such a situation, Gabriel had little influence, he could not sway them. All he could do was hope he was on the winning team.
The room illuminated with harsh blue light for a moment and echoed with the sharp SNAP of a breaking light bulb fuse before the furnishings and a very moody Ventrue were doused in darkness.
[i:41af00d877]"...."[/i:41af00d877]
_________________ "All that we see or seem Is but a dream within a dream...."
Edgar Allen Poe |
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kathy Belvadere
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Posted: Wed Mar 12, 2003 5:08 am |
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ToreadorPosts: 234Joined: Sat Apr 05, 2003 7:11 pm
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(( verry good.. all of you..))
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Serai
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Posted: Wed Mar 12, 2003 5:33 pm |
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GhoulPosts: 7Joined: Thu Sep 25, 2003 1:54 am
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Julius prepared the suite for his guests. First of all he replaced his skull upon the dressing table. Eveshka had made him move it, something about not caring to be grinned at whilst putting on her makeup. Julius smirked, "while the cat's away.." he thought to himself. By a strange quirk of coincidence, the exact spot just in front of the ornate mirror was the perfect place from which to operate a series of remote magical wards and Julius did not wish to be disturbed during this meeting.
By the time Gabriel and Morathi had arrived, Julius had laid out the various artifacts into groups. Gabriel's sword, with a neatly printed label "Proto-Scythian". The artifacts from Morathi's dig, in a pile with the label "Scythian". Eveshka's rubbing and a small statue of the moon goddess Nanna were labelled "Sumerian" and finally a Thoth sigil placed on top of the label "Egyptian".
"Thankyou both for coming." Began Julius politely. Morathi smiled and Gabriel gave him a sour look. Clearly he had been unimpressed with Julius and Eve taking off for a night. "The hell with you." Julius thought. "What are we fighting for anyway, if it's not a little joy in our existances. Miserable bloody Ventrue." Julius closed his eyes and activated the magical defences. Hotel staff would conveniently forget there was a suite in the Zorlu Grand. Any greater powers would meet stiffer resistance to entry.
Julius bade his guests to sit and served them drinks. "So, this is what we have so far. A scythian, or possibly pre-scythian" Julius pointed at the sword, "civilization, flooded out when the mediterranean hit the black sea. It's culture and presumably survivors spread to become the Sumerians and ultimately the Egyptians. Anthropological sources place them all from the same stock, which for now we'll assume are these proto-scythians."
Morathi listened and nodded knowledgably. Gabriel stifled a yawn. Julius grinned. "But of what interest is this fascinating archaeo-anthropological data to us?" Julius started to enter his stride, enjoying a little moment of theatrics. Morathi nodded again, but inwardly considered if there was such a word as archaeo-anthropological or if Julius had just made it up. Regardless of the etymology of Julius' vocabulary, Gabriel thought the question a valid one.
"Three things link these artifacts to our quest." Julius continued unabated. "The first is this map, detailing possible locations for Enoch, under the waters of the Black Sea. Morathi may or may not have found Enoch itself, but surely the settlement she has discovered is part of the same civilisation. Secondly the dream. If we take the dream as truth and I see no reason to doubt it at this time, then we are witness to ancient kindred living in this area prior to the great flood."
Julius stopped and fixed Gabriel with his piercing gaze. "Finally, the clue which led us onto this road, the ultimate cause of our quest. The greatest inspiration and a still unsolved mystery." Now Gabriel's interest was piqued, whilst Morathi stifled a yawn. "Behold, Gabriel," Continued Julius, as with a flourish he produced a scroll case from somewhere on his person, "The scroll of Shal-Ka Mense."
If Julius had expected to get a reaction from Gabriel he was sadly mistaken. Gabriel was way beyond being shocked to discover that Julius had been in possession of the scroll all along. Now he just grunted and nodded. "Well, let's have a look at it then." Julius handed it over.
Gabriel studied it for a moment, the elaborately written farsi characters blending with the almost hidden Thothian symbology on the faded parchment. "So what does it say, oh great Wizard?" He asked, somewhat testily. Julius grinned again. "Haven't the first clue, old boy." Gabriel slumped back in his chair and stared at the ceiling. "However," Julius continued. "I have got as far as rendering this somewhat cryptic farsi cypher into English. Trouble is, it is all nonsense. Doesn't make sense. I am hopeful though. I have a small fragment of a previous translation. Using that, I should be able to piece together the whole. Meantime, Morathi will be working on these artifacts."
"And what should I do?" Asked Gabriel pointedly. "Well, here's the thing." Said Julius, who had the good grace to look somewhat embarrassed. "I don't really know where your skills are. What do you think you should do?"
_________________ My soul is lost, my will compromised. Who am I now? What will I become? |
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Shadow of a Memory
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Posted: Thu Mar 13, 2003 1:38 am |
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Get your clan name here - PM JuliusPosts: 4Joined: Sat Jul 31, 2004 8:30 pm
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[i:50a99afd7a]The River Cher, Loire Valley, France[/i:50a99afd7a]
They appeared like phantoms in the hour following dusk. Throughout Chenonceaux, the kindred of the Camarilla host rose from there daytime resting places and began to gather. One group used their presence and intimidation to take control of the small boats which often traveled down river to Chateau Chenonceau in the evening. They would use the boats this night, but not in the way the usual tourists and lovers would.
Across the river Cher opposite the famous 16th century chateau, three kindred gathered. The dark woods ran thick with kindred soldiers and these three held the leash of the beast. One is a blond woman, more a girl really, perhaps in her late teens. She is wrapped in a dark cloak that she pulls tightly around herself. Her name is Lucinde, she is over three hundred years old and she is the Ventrue Justicar. The second kindred is a youth in comparison to Lucinde, being but 136 years old. He is a tall man, thin, with green eyes and straw colored hair. His name is Anastasz Di Zagreb and he is the Tremere Justicar. The final figure dwarfs both of the other two; in size, in age and in reputation. He is tall, broad shouldered and massive. His wild hair falls around his shoulders like a lion’s mane. His skin is dusky and crisscrossed with the scars of countless battles. Those who know of him believe him to be at least 800 years old. His blood is strong; 5th generation Gangrel. While his true name is a matter of speculation, the Camarilla knows him as Kharsh, and he is the one and only Warlord of the Camarilla.
In the dark, the three watch with heightened senses as their legion of shadows closes in upon the Chateau Chenonceau and their foe. There forces are tri-parte: the first wave is comprised of the host of the Ventrue, blue blood soldiers bequeathed to Lucinde for this one endeavor – to avenge their clan against the Anathema Kemintiri. Though it is not said aloud, the first wave is but fodder – they will be sacrificed to weaken the Anathema, force her to expend her blood. Lucinde and Anastasz have taken measures to ensure that this wave cannot be used by Kemintiri to replenish her vitae, though the Ventrue soldiers themselves know nothing of the plan.
The second wave belongs to Kharsh. They are his soldiers, ex-military of many eras, proficient with all known weapons. They are armed and armored as each sees fit. Some bear assault rifles with combat sights and grenade launchers, while others carry ancestral swords. This wave forms the true assault force and will be led by Kharsh himself.
The final wave of the legion is comprised of archons. These are the followers of Lucinde and Anastasz. They are their trio’s most potent but least numerous contingent. They will be used to contain Kemintiri once battle is engaged. Should Kharsh’s force fail, then the archons and the two Justicars shall fall upon the Egyptian goddess themselves.
Under cover of the trees, Anastasz begins one of the many rituals he will cast this fateful night. Nearby, Kharsh watches a computer screen showing him an image of the locale shot from a helicopter high above. As he watches, he mutters orders to his troops through a throat-mike. Kharsh may be 800 years old, but his grasp of modern weapons and tactics is as good as any mortal soldier’s.
At the river’s edge, Lucinde simply waits and watches. This night has been almost a century in the making, and soon, very soon, battle will be joined…..
_________________ No one knows what it's like To be the bad man,
To be the sad man, Behind blue eyes.
And no one knows hat it's like to be hated.
To be fated to telling only lies. |
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Morathi
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Posted: Thu Mar 13, 2003 4:16 am |
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TremerePosts: 25Location: Somewhere close to Bath's ChantryJoined: Sat Apr 05, 2003 5:40 am
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Morathi, already entranced with the new additions to her growing list of artifacts, paid little attention to the offhanded comment. But to Gabriel, it certainly commanded his attention. Had he been in a lighter mood, he might've felt slightly embarrassed, but as it were, he was mired in a naive self-pity. He simply stared blankly at the Tremere for a moment before shrugging.
[i:d74080b7b1]"Well, I suppose it couldn't hurt for me to stretch my contacts and see if what we can find out about the other players. Salah Al-Hudin and Ali right? Perhaps I can dig something up."[/i:d74080b7b1] Compared to the rest of the loosely bound coterie, Gabriel found himself running short of skills that could compare to those they already possessed.
Whether or not Julius trusted Gabriel's research would reap any results, Gabriel could only guess. The smile on his face seemed to indicate that he was content with the decision, at least it would keep the troublesome Ventrue out of his hair. At the moment, Gabriel couldn't have agreed more with Julius' prognosis. While he was a powerful ally, the playboy seemed even more trouble proned than Gabriel himself.
[i:d74080b7b1]"Sounds good Gabriel,"[/i:d74080b7b1] Julius nodded, moving towards where Morathi's figure sat hunched over the glistening blade, [i:d74080b7b1]"just take care you don't get TOO close."[/i:d74080b7b1]
Gabriel grunted and made his way to the window and briefly wondered where Eveshka was...
((sorry it's short, but i'm short on time tonight :/
_________________ "All that we see or seem Is but a dream within a dream...."
Edgar Allen Poe |
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Shadow of a Memory
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Posted: Thu Mar 13, 2003 5:46 am |
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Get your clan name here - PM JuliusPosts: 4Joined: Sat Jul 31, 2004 8:30 pm
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[i:f766dcfa62]Chateau Chenonceau[/i:f766dcfa62]
Kemintiri could sense the gathering host outside the stone walls of the Chateau. So many kindred, so much hate, all for her. Outside in the darkness, Lucinde lurked, watching and waiting for Kemintiri to appear. Kemintiri had been preparing for this battle for the last two days, alternately hoping it would come to pass and hoping she was wrong and Lucinde would not find her.
Deep within the bowels of the Chateau, where no tourist or tour guide ever came, Kemintiri sat in the room where she and Eveshka had slumbered away the last few years. Kemintiri stared at the bed. She had found so much there with Eveshka; love, companionship, a safe harbor from the storm. That safe harbor had been bought and purchased with a lie however. Kemintiri had adopted the persona of Michelle St. Clair, a Ventrue, and that was who Eve had grown attached to. When the lie was exposed, Eve mistook her attachment to Michelle for an attachment to Kemintiri. She had allowed herself to be bonded. It was not too last.
Like Lucinde herself, Eve had her bond to Kemintiri broken by a Tremere wizard. Now, Eveshka had led Lucinde and her hounds to Kemintiri.
Kemintiri sat at the dressing table. She turned to the mirror. Lucinde and the hounds were here for Kemintiri, the arch-Anathema. Kemintiri thought they should get what they came for. Casually, as the first wave of Ventrue soldiers took their positions outside the Chateau, Kemintiri searched through Michelle’s make up kit. As the blue-blood kindred pulled the bolts back on their automatic weapons and drew razor sharp blades from well used scabbards, Kemintiri found what she was looking for. Kohl. Three thousand years ago she had rimmed her eyes with Kohl on a daily basis. The style had become a part of the iconography the modern world attached to its idea of Egyptian queens. Kemintiri pulled the Kohl pencil out of the make up kit. It was a little different from the ones she had used; this modern Kohl came in a wood pencil with the label “Elizabeth Arden, Kohlberry 02â€. Leaning into the mirror Kemintiri began to apply it to her eyes. The pencil’s line was as black as night. She smiled. Some things did not change, not really.
Outside, the Ventrue began their assault…….
_________________ No one knows what it's like To be the bad man,
To be the sad man, Behind blue eyes.
And no one knows hat it's like to be hated.
To be fated to telling only lies. |
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Shadow of a Memory
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Posted: Thu Mar 13, 2003 9:17 am |
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Get your clan name here - PM JuliusPosts: 4Joined: Sat Jul 31, 2004 8:30 pm
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The first six Ventrue to enter the Chateau did not see her. Their heightened senses were not enough to penetrate Kemintiri’s obfuscation. As they made their way through the gallery built by Catherine De Medici, Kemintiri approached, unseen, unheard. Though the Ventrue could not see them, her fingernails had elongated into claws, her flesh was as marble and her strength and speed were enhanced to a level they could not comprehend.
The lead blue-blood was simply torn asunder. The second followed in a spray of vitae before he could even pull the trigger on his weapon. The third did manage to squeeze off a burst into the dark at his unseen foe but to no avail. The feral claws of the beast that was their enemy made short work of the young Ventrue. Two of the remaining three assaulters laid down a withering blanket of automatic weapon fire while the third hosed the gallery down with a flame thrower. For a brief instant, they could see what appeared to be a female silhouette breach the wall of flaming napalm and then she was upon them. The Ventrue screamed in defiance as they struggled with their attacker. Invisible claws raked horrid wounds into undead flesh and one by one the remaining assaulters fell until only the blue-blood with the flame thrower remained. He released a steady stream of burning napalm across the gallery, never letting up on the trigger. He was dimly aware the fire was so out of control he would likely burn with it, but now he wished only to take Kemintiri with him into a fiery final death.
Suddenly he felt her. Clawed hands, small, but with a strength of grip he could not have imagined took hold of his arms. The sputtering flame thrower fell to the floor, the gallery interior in flames around the now imobilized Ventrue. Kemintiri appeared to him then, in the midst of the inferno. Beautiful, marble skinned with raven hair and eyes as black as the pits of hell. As he stared into those eyes a forked tongue as hard as steel and as sharp as a razor entered his neck and tasted his vitae. The Ventrue tried to scream, to be free, to fall into the flames, to do anything that would stop her from draining him and replenishing her blood. Her grip was too strong. He could do nothing.
The tongue left his neck. He still lived, well, such as kindred do. She had not drained him. For a moment he thought he might escape. A look of rage crossed Kemintiri’s angelic face and the Ventrue knew what it was to anger a goddess. Her grip tightened and he screamed. She pulled on his arms and one tore away in a spray of gore. Kemintiri tossed the limb into the fires, and then threw the maimed Ventrue in after it. The blue-blood’s fortitude only helped him live long enough in the inferno to appreciate the pain of burning to death.
Kemintiri spat out what blood she had drawn from the last Ventrue. The blood had tasted…familiar. She tried one of the other downed Ventrue and the blood also had the same taste. It was the taste of Lucinde.
Outside, the blond Justicar could only smile. She had prepared long for this night. Each of the assaulters had been deprived of blood until the night of the assault when they were given specially prepared blood pearls to replenish themselves. Each of these blood pearls had been prepared by Lucinde from her own blood. It had taken her years to amass enough blood pearls to satiate such a host. The blood pearls themselves had been treated to a ritual by Anastasz. The ritual ensured that the vitae from the blood pearl would remain Lucinde’s once in the system of the kindred who consumed the pearl, at least for a while.
If Kemintiri drank from any of the assaulters, she was drinking from Lucinde. Kemintiri had tasted Lucinde’s blood once before, and if she drank tonight, it would be the second drink, well on her way to being bonded.
With the gallery interior in flames, Kemintiri made her way to the gallery roof. There, in the night, silhouetted by the fires raging out of the windows, she met the remaining Ventrue assaulters. There were many of them. Some had scaled the gallery walls from the river’s edge, while others had landed in tourist boats on the deck of the chateau and entered the gothic abode looking for the Egyptian. Now they found her atop the flaming gallery. They closed in on her from two sides, switching from guns to melee weapons. Kemintiri did not try to hide herself.
Across the river, Anastasz, Kharsh and Lucinde could see her. For Kharsh, this was the moment. They had flushed out the prey and it was time to move into striking position. He made his way down to a waiting boat with its crew of soldiers. Kharsh grabbed only one weapon on his way to the boat – his sword. This weapon had tasted the blood of countless enemies over the centuries, and now, it would taste the oldest blood it was ever likely too.
Anastasz also prepared to move across the river, though he would take a less direct approach. For the moment, his role was still containment. Lucinde would perform the same role from this opposite side of the Cher.
As the trio separated, they watched the roof of the Chateau Chenonceau. High atop its peaked roofs Kemintiri danced through her attackers. She was armed now, with two enchanted blades. As the Ventrue assaulters attacked she spun towards them, blades whirling faster than the young blue-bloods could see. Lucinde watched helplessly as Kemintiri cut a bloody swath through the first wave. Her assaulters were brave, but they were no match for Kemintiri. Lucinde knew it. She knew that dozens of promising young Ventrue were being sent to final death for no other gain than to deplete Kemintiri of blood.
Crossing the river, Anastasz also watched, horrified to some degree at the tactics and the carnage. His spells would also drain Kemintiri, but now was not the moment. The assaulters would weaken her first. Then Kharsh would attack, and, if that failed, Anastasz would try to fix the Anathema in a battle with his magic while Lucinde moved in for the kill.
On the roof, Kemintiri had no time to watch the approaching boats. She moved quickly across the roofs of the Chateau, her feet never losing purchase. Attackers approached and she went into a dance of death, her blades whirling through her attackers feeble defenses with a speed they could not hope to match. Kemintiri new she was wasting blood heightening her celerity, potence and fortitude. Her skin was as marble and these Ventrue could not likely harm her. Indeed, she could have killed them quite slowly with virtual impunity, but that might have caused the leaders of this attack to change their plans. Kemintiri could not have that. She needed them go forward with their assault, to keep coming, to get closer…….
_________________ No one knows what it's like To be the bad man,
To be the sad man, Behind blue eyes.
And no one knows hat it's like to be hated.
To be fated to telling only lies. |
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Chauncey
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Posted: Fri Mar 14, 2003 4:53 am |
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Get your clan name here - PM JuliusPosts: 0Joined: Mon Aug 11, 2003 10:20 pm
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At 11:20 pm, the first alerts went off at the guard station of Chateau de Chenonceau. The gallery was onfire. Firemen raced to the scene only to report what looked like some sort of terrorist activity. The distinct chatter of automatic weapons fire echoed across the grounds. It took perhaps 5 minutes for the military response team to begin moving the thirty miles from Tours to Chenonceau. The local gendarmerie quarantined the Chateau. There was only one route into the place.
As Khemintiri fought like a whirling dervish across the roof of the blazing palace and Lucinde moved around to cut off her escape, the combatants heard sounds of the approaching helicopters, still several miles off.
_________________ OOOOOOOOOOoooooooooooooooh. Tra-la-la. |
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Shadow of a Memory
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Posted: Fri Mar 14, 2003 9:49 pm |
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Get your clan name here - PM JuliusPosts: 4Joined: Sat Jul 31, 2004 8:30 pm
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From the prow of the lead Zodiac Kharsh watched the battle atop the roofs of Chateau Chenonceau. Kemintiri danced across the roof tops cutting a bloody swath through her Ventrue attackers. Kharsh had been a warrior for eight centuries and in that time the warlord had encountered few he would consider his peers in mortal combat; Xavier, once the Gangrel Justicar, Brunhilde, the Valkyrie and Euryon the beast, Fatima, the assamite assassin perhaps, and of course, his nemesis, Jalan-Aajav, Seraph of the Black Hand. Now, as he approached the Chateau he marveled at what he saw. Kemintiri moved with a speed he had never seen before, indeed, never thought existed. Even to his eyes, her blades were a blur of whirling steel. He watched carefully as she cut a Ventrue assaulter to pieces in a split second.
In all his centuries, Kharsh had never seen an opponent like this. His disciplined mind did not dwell on the revelation, however, but instead went to work looking for a weakness. It took him only a moment to see it. Her speed was incomparable, her strength likely the equal of his and her flesh as hard as stone – but her fighting skill was not of the same caliber. Certainly she had been trained, and trained well. She clearly had unparallel experience. And yet, she did not possess the same level of skill as he did, or even some of his warriors. She made up for the shortcoming with her physical attributes, but now, Kharsh could see, there was a weakness he could exploit.
Through the head set he wore Kharsh’s ghouls, who were stationed in a ring around Chenonceaux, informed him of the alarm and the approach of helicopters. Kharsh issued his orders without emotion. He knew this would happen and his troops were prepared for it. Some of his ghouls were dressed as French military and would shut down the roads. Others were in civilian clothes and would approximate ‘terrorists’. Several of those ‘terrorists’ lined the river, waiting with shoulder-fired anti-aircraft missiles for any incoming aircraft that would interfere with the battle raging at the Chateau. Kharsh did not want to kill any mortals, but he could not allow any interference with the assault – it would make it too easy for Kemintiri to escape. The lives of a few mortals were a small price to pay for bringing the Anathema to heel.
The Zodiac slowed and came to rest against the stone bulwark of the Chateau’s deck. Kharsh climbed out of the Zodiac and looked back on his men. They stood no chance at all against the demon who fought upon the roof. Their un-lives would be wasted here.
His voice flat, he issued a command, perhaps the last he ever expected to issue. “Return to the far shore, all of you.†His soldiers paused. All were kindred, some older than he. They were among the most accomplished warriors in the recorded history of human kind and they followed Kharsh without question. One of the soldiers simply shook his head no. The others began to do likewise and resumed their dismount from the boats.
Kharsh growled now, “I said return to the far shore.â€
“Non†came an answer. The speaker was Guillaume de Poitiers, a crusader from the 12th century and a Ventrue for nearly a millennia. He was Kharsh’s second in command. He locked eyes with the Warlord and for a moment none of these deadly warriors moved. In that moment, Kharsh understood their loyalty, and they understood his concern. There was nothing left to say. The soldiers completed their dismount and joined Kharsh on the deck of the Chateau.
A body fell from the roof above them, crashing into the stone at their feet. It was a woman, a Ventrue. Dressed in a form fitting black garment and outfitted with a variety of weaponry, she had clearly been a part of the initial assault force. Blood streamed from a wound in her belly and her left side was crushed from the fall. She used what vitae she had to close the wounds. She stood as best she could and began to stagger towards the river. It was then that she first saw Kharsh. Terror lit her eyes. The Warlord was known to have no tolerance for cowardice. Indeed, he was rumored to slay those that tried to run with greater vehemence than he struck down his enemies.
Kharsh did not move. While everything the girl feared was true, Kharsh did not think her a coward. Up on that roof was a force the Ventrue girl had no hope of contending with. Why then would it be cowardly to avoid such a confrontation? Indeed, it was only prudent for her to run.
Kharsh raised a hand to the terrified woman and pointed to the Zodiac boats. The wounded Ventrue, still looking shocked, staggered past him to the awaiting boats and made her escape. Kharsh watched her go. At least someone would live to tell this tale. With a look of resignation, Kharsh gripped the scabbard of his sword in his left hand and entered the door of the Chateau. The tiger had been flushed out, and now it was time for the real hunt to begin. Battle would soon be joined…
_________________ No one knows what it's like To be the bad man,
To be the sad man, Behind blue eyes.
And no one knows hat it's like to be hated.
To be fated to telling only lies. |
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Chauncey
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Posted: Sat Mar 15, 2003 3:32 am |
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Get your clan name here - PM JuliusPosts: 0Joined: Mon Aug 11, 2003 10:20 pm
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The lead helicopter circled the area only to be fired upon by a shoulder held surface-to-air missile. The pilot jinked to the left and nearly cleared the path of the missile. It clipped the tail rotor causing the helicopter to spin out of control and come to rest off in the wooded grounds someplace.
The pilot radioed his "May-day" and reported that he had recieved fire from a surface-to-air missile. The other helicopters set down well outside of the Chateau grounds and began to deploy.
Back at Usse, Madame Guil and Eveshka listened in to the guard channel frequency. Eveshka was in complete shock that her beloved chateau was being destroyed. Madame Guil was livid. In her opinion, Lucinde had way overstepped her charter. Or perhaps it was just an excuse for Madame Guil to torment her Ventrue Colleague. Either way, she had already spoken to Cock Robin, the Nosferatu Justicar and he was excited about the prospect of a little sport.
_________________ OOOOOOOOOOoooooooooooooooh. Tra-la-la. |
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Shadow of a Memory
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Posted: Sat Mar 15, 2003 5:19 am |
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Get your clan name here - PM JuliusPosts: 4Joined: Sat Jul 31, 2004 8:30 pm
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Kharsh held his sword, still sheathed in its black lacquered scabbard, in his left hand, and with his right, opened the doors to the grand ballroom of Chateau Chenonceau. The flames engulfing the gallery reflected off the water and flickered through the windows of the ball room. Kharsh stepped through the doors and began to make his way across the polished floor. He kept his sword sheathed.
That sword was a katana from the Sengoku period of Japan. It had been forged for Uesugi Kenshin, Daimyo of the Uesugi clan, and legend had it this was the blade Kenshin had wielded when he wounded his arch-nemesis Takeda Shingen at the Fourth Battle of Kawanakajima. Kenshin had taken the vows of a monk during his long struggles with the Takeda and it was said the folded steel blade of his sword had been blessed by Bishammon, the god of war, himself. Kharsh acquired the blade long after Uesugi Kenshin and Takeda Shingen had gone the way of their ancestors, but the blade lived on. Whether blessed by Bishammon or not, Kharsh knew it could wound even the fortified flesh of the undead. In his eight centuries of fighting, he had never wielded a finer weapon.
As Kharsh and his warriors strode confidently across the ball room, the ornate double doors at the far end of the hall opened. Angry orange light from the flames in the gallery beyond spilled across the ballroom silhouetting a female form in the doorway.
Kharsh stopped and took in the woman before him. Her arms were outstretched as she opened the two doors and stepped slowly into the room, her hips swaying sensuously. Her skin was purest white, her hair black and her eyes windows into the depths of hell. Kemintiri made no attempt to hide herself or what she was.
The sight moved Kharsh. He had never seen a more perfect female. Though tiny in stature, he guessed under five feet tall, she was beautiful beyond compare. The sight made him think of the legends of fey folk, faeries and elves, which the Europeans were so fond of. Indeed, she beautiful enough to be a Djinn of legend.
Here now, before him, stood a vampire that had been ancient before Christ or Mohammed had been born. A vampire who, if myth was accurate, would be the grand daughter of Cain himself. A vampire who had slain untold thousands of her kindred over the last three millennia. A vampire he had to destroy.
His hand went to hilt of his weapon and as it did so she smiled. A flick of her eyes and the doors to his left, opposite the windows and the water, burst open. A horde of shambling forms surged forth at Kharsh and his warriors. The forms were dressed in colorful, modern clothes, now ripped and stained with blood. Kharsh realized that none of the tourists or tour guides who came to Chenonceau this afternoon had ever left. They were Kemintiri’s unwitting soldiers now. They rushed from the doorways into the ball room armed with swords, halberds, daggers and axes taken from the Chateau’s collection. Kharsh’s warriors flew into action, blades flashing in the flickering orange light. Guillaume’s broad sword cut through the bright blue windbreaker of one overweight tourist eviscerating the man in an instant. The man screamed and threw himself forward like an animal. Guillaume stepped back and cut him down.
The tourists may have been innocents once, but now they were ghouls, zombies or just mind controlled. It did not really matter to Kharsh. Kemintiri was controlling them and now they were the enemy. Their deaths were just part of the price the world would pay for Kemintiri’s existence.
Kharsh’s own deadly blade came forth as he drew and attacked in a single motion cutting down what he guessed had been a tour guide judging by his blazer. These were not worthy opponents. All around him his warriors were cutting down Kemintiri’s slaves. The slaves were not skilled, or strong, but they were numerous. As Kharsh cut his way through more of them he had to guess there were at least a hundred of the creatures, compared to his six warriors and himself. She was using the slaves Kharsh, Lucinde and Zagreb had used the Ventrue; she used the slaves to drain them of their blood. It would not work. He did not need to use much blood to kill these vermin. He parried a slow moving axe head, whipped his blade around and took off the wielder’s head. All around him surged a sea of Kemintiri’s mindless slaves with their tourist clothes and museum piece weapons. He had to get out of this madness, he had to reach her. Escape did not seem to be her game, but he needed to regain the initiative.
As Kharsh ripped his sword through another attacker, pain shot through his back. He had been stabbed. He spun away from the unexpected blow and accelerated. He turned to face his unseen attacker, raising the katana to striking position only to see one of his own men. Kharsh paused and his warrior came forward, weapon in hand, on the attack. Kharsh parried and back pedaled, using his strength and speed to force his way through the attacking mob. For a moment Kharsh locked eyes with the attacking warrior – and the eyes were empty. What ever there had been of the man was gone, now replaced by what ever commands Kemintiri had given him. Kharsh did not hesitate.
The katana flashed at a speed the attacking warrior could not match, cutting through armor, skin, undead flesh and bone. Kharsh whipped the sword back and brought it down upon the warrior again, ending his unlife. Looking up, Kharsh could see Guillaume fighting not only with the mob, but with Aziz, one of Kharsh’s other warriors. This was the plan then. The mob was to occupy them while Kemintiri used her mental powers to turn his own warriors on him.
An arm wrapped around his neck and others tried to grab hold of his arms. The mob was on the attack again. He was still too strong for them however and he threw them off, then slashed the ancient katana across his attackers again and again. Still, the mob came on. In his peripheral vision he saw one of his warriors get dragged down in the tide of mindless slaves. Guillaume had disposed of Aziz, and now called out to him “M’lord, break out, leave us and get the beast!†Kharsh had every intention of doing just that. The katana slashed again and again, tearing through the hapless slaves of the Anathema. And then Kharsh came face to face with Guillaume – but it was not Guillaume.
Broadsword clashed with Katana in the fire-lit hall of Chateau Chenonceau, with no quarter asked and non-given. The two swordsmen moved with a speed that mortals could not comprehend and with a strength mortals could not hope to achieve. Gradually, Kharsh forced Guillaume on the defensive, pushing him back, but the mob was not through. Even as Kharsh gained the advantage on Guillaume the crowd surged forth and t |