“My Lord! My Lord! The wall has broken! Our enemy flee! You have won!†The young retainer came running, shouting into his masters Keep. A look of triumph and pride on his mud-stained face. His leathered feet padded down the steps to his master’s private chambers, he had lain sleeping growing in strength for his final battle.
“Lord Taarnish?†Suddenly wary the youthful attendant paused before knocking on the thick, oaken door that banned the threshold, beyond which his master lay.
“O srèkan fant prosto!. Zdaj povej mi ðe , kakðen sporoèilo ali je to vi prebuditi se mi s?â€Â¹
“Aye Lord, I bring great news of your victory.â€
He pushed the solid door open slowly, his eyes struggling to adjust to the pitch black beyond, only broken by the scintilla of moonlight that crept through the archery hole that served as a window. As he stepped into the room the figure of his master appeared. Seated on a vast hardwood chair the form of his master stirred almost unseen, his eyes now turning to face his serf, flaring vermilion in the blackness.
“Excellent, retrieve my horse and arms. We will ride them down tonight, ready my men.â€
The serf ran out as his master rose to his booted feet. He heard the leathered thud of his masters footsteps echo behind him as he headed to the armoury, sending the stablehand out to retrieve Polter his masters steed. Heading swiftly back to his masters chamber he ran, hands laden with platemail and studded leather, a sword and bucklered gauntlet swinging from his side. He rose his hand, straining to knock his arrival on the door before again his master pulled the door open.
“Help me change boy. Then leave me.â€
Nodding he began strapping first the studded leather then the plates of mail onto his cold masters frame. Finally sheathing and fastening his sword and gauntlet to his waist. Bowing he bade farewell to his master then left to discover the progress of the stablehand.
Tanos strode purposefully up to the ramparts that crowned his keep, the weight of his armour barely registering on his powerful frame. He let out a long sigh of satisfaction as he gazed out across the landscape before him, the Wallachian moon glaring down bitterly. His mane of death-bleached hair flowing in the night wind, lit by the fires below and the glow of his scarlet eyes. Sniffing the air he stepped back, his muscular, lean back flexing under the armour. As he passed the threshold to his keep he lifted his helmet, a cruel barbed steel cap, thickened over his forehead for butting.
As the clouds consumed the light of moonrise he rode out accompanied by seven of his ghoulised warriors. His horse, boosted by his own blood, easily covered the distance between his Keep and the front-line. Trotting in front of his troops he smiled darkly, his armour and faceplate glinting in the darkness, firelight reflecting in the shine granting the metal a bloody hue.
“You have proven exceptional! Now is the time for us to crush our enemy! Let noone stand in our way!â€
At that he whirled his horse around, raising his sword he led his men in a final charge against the tattered, broken remains of the Turkish horde.
Dawn fast approached, bodies from both sides littered the lightening scene. Mud painted with crimson stained the hooves and boots of his men. As the arrows of sunlight reached the ramparts of his Keep he retreated below to his chambers. The bloodstains repeated on his pale, weathered flesh and brutal armoury. Lowering his now naked, battered body into his coffin he settled into the collected earth of his homelands to the east. He slept then, his undead mind plagued with dreams of the past and aspirations for the future.
It was the year of their lord 1410. Tanos Scirenczy, being the son of a peasant and serf to the Voevod Mircea the Old, was raised in total subservience to the noble Lords superiority. His father served as stablehand, his mother serving as chambermaid within the obsidian walls of his “benefactors†Keep. Tanos being too young, and therefore of no present use to the Voevod was given free rein on the grounds and forests the Lord held. His father’s people, the Szgany of Romania were famous for their storytelling and archaic beliefs. Tanos as a result was no exception, having been told of ancient spirits and myths that used to, and do still in some places, wander the land. It was on one such morning of play that he found it.
Hidden by bracken and collapsed hillside the monolith stood untouched, the grey rock it rose from dusted with lichen and centuries of burial staining. Unafraid and equipped with the inquisitive mind of an eight-year-old, Tanos brushed aside the denser clumps of growth. The revealing of ancient markings proving meaningless to the illiterate mind that read them. He capered and ran around the grey sentinel chasing dragonflies and laughing at the wind. It was then he saw it.
Near the rear of the rock a hollow shadowed in the undergrowth, partly hidden by dead branches and fallen leaves. He trotted over, peering into the blackness. The soil framing the darkness suddenly moved sending him spiralling into hell.
He awoke what seemed like hours later, sunlight filtered through reducing the pitch black to a grey haze. He pulled himself to his feet looking around as his eyes adjusted, irises widening to absorb as much light as the hole above would provide. As he began to identify the dark, shadowy shapes around him he saw the figure. Seated in the corner on a vast throne of tree root, bone and rock the figure sat motionless. His mind unable to determine if it had once been living or was simply a memorial to a fallen Lord.
The figure was roughly but not entirely anthropoid. Resembling a heavily carapaced simian. Where it’s arms reached past the base of the throne they terminated in long, bone coloured talons, curling under like the arms of a tree sloth. The body was barrel chested, resting on folded legs that tucked under and behind the arms. The head had disappeared into the neck and chest, being nothing more than a sequence of baleful eyes and a razored, lamprey mouth. He stood awestruck, staring at the bizarre horrifying visage that seemed to watch from it’s pedestal. A soft, cooing voice rose from the darkness, thick with the old tongue.
“Priti sklepnik otrok , nikar ne strah.â€
He looked around trying to locate the speaker, seeing none.
“’Tis I that calleth. Come closer, closer. Ah that’s better . Now I can look upon you with my weary eyes.â€
Tanos suddenly became aware, the bony statue spoke again, though it’s sucker mouth moved not. Stepping closer he saw the figure tremble, a white, cancerous liquiescent arm melted free from the bony shell. Tapping at the chamber floor as though beckoning him closer. He walked tentatively towards the spot the tendril marked. Once there the voice whispered again.
“Ah dear Tanos. Long have I waited for you. I know the dreams you have in your straw bed, dreams of riches, of freedom.â€
Hearing his own name being uttered by this strange, etheric voice. Seemingly enthralled he staggered, not noticing the tendril come forward again, snaking its way from (behind?) the shelled form. It whispered on, seducing the young boy with lies of glory and power before it struck.
The tendril, suddenly barbed, lashed out, striking and latching onto his leg. The sensation numbed by shock as it began to feed on his very lifeblood. The feeding was minimal, serving only as a refreshment. Then the process was reversed as the blood of the tendril itself was pumped back into him. His mind clouded as the narcotic-like blood mirrored the cooing “voiceâ€.
“It is fortunate that you stumbled into my lair. You will bring me food, you will aid in my revival from my shell. And in return you will be rewarded in times to come. Now go child, return to your straw mat. But tomorrow you must bring me fresh blood. Fowl perhaps.â€
Tanos’ head had remained fuzzy and fogged until he lay down in his parents chambers. The straw mattress cushioning him as he fell into sleep.
By dawn the next day he headed back to the lair, his mind not his own as he caught the waterfowl and tossed it bound into the lair hole. Seconds later the bird shrieked then fell silent as the “creature†attacked and drained the blood. The next day he had managed to trap a small deer. The bloodlust growing in his malleable mind like a black, viscous egg. This process continued for weeks, and then the true horror began. Tanos now in full thrall to his vampiric master pretended to play with the daughter of Mircea’s man at arms. Leading her to the lair he pushed her in, a blank emotionless expression on his face as the vampire below drained and absorbed her. The vampire beckoned him down. He climbed down, supported by a column of flesh erupting from the floor below, lowering him down gently. He felt the vampire’s mind creeping in his own, felt it’s pleasure filling his thoughts as he looked upon the dried, desiccated, torn body of the girl. Turning he looked at the “statue†gasping as his eyes fell upon the cracked, broken shell. Widening further as the vampire stepped from the shadows behind him, now clothed in tarnished bronze plate. Standing over six feet in height the vampire moved closer, a hellish perfection of form. Skin ice pale, eyes crimson ringed with almond shaped eyelids, the body lean, muscular and perfectly symmetrical. Cat-like, elfin it spoke.
“I am Miklos Cel Rau. You have done well dear boy. As I said, I will reward you in time to come. You have freed me from my torpor and so I will free you from yours.â€
Over the next ten years Tanos grew strong. As strong as he became physically he increased even greater mentally. Yet beyond both his brutal, dark side grew strongest. He had long since become a foot soldier for Alexandru 1 Aldea by his twentieth year. Mircea’s reign having ended. Now powerfully, though not bulkily, built. Standing at six feet, his hair ice blonde, mirrored by his cold blue eyes. He had already proven his ferocity in battle, cleaving the heads from any that opposed him, it seemed the vampire’s influence had proven permanent. He began to rise through the ranks, becoming the leader of a battalion of footsoldiers, then becoming Warmaster to Alexandru’s mounted cavalry. It was on the winter night of 1423 that his old master rewarded him.
Tanos stood guard on the ramparts to his Lords Keep, watching the troops below circling the black stone walls. He turned to return to the stone halls within when the vampire stepped up behind him. He smiled darkly, awaiting his long due reward.
“So you return vampire? I trust you come with my reward?â€
Miklos smiled, his red wet mouth in stark contrast to his elfin, ovoid face.
“Ah but of course dear boy. After all I am of noblest blood. Your full reward will come yet, but for now…â€
The next two seconds blurred. Miklos shot forward, his flesh protoplasmic, melting and enfolding Tanos in a skin snare. Holding him to his chest in a blasphemous embrace. Miklos’ flesh opened leaking precious blood into Tanos waiting maw. Tanos fell limp as the sudden flash of strength flooded through him. The copper tinted taste made him retch, tilting forward to rid himself of the vampire vitae. Miklos snarled, his flesh smothering his mouth holding the blood within as Tanos fell to the rooftop floor. Miklos pulled him to his feet, smiling as Tanos’ body began to welcome the power the gift of blood gave.
Now a ghoul to Miklos, Tanos had strength beyond that of a normal man, his body could heal grievous injury as long as Miklos fed him. However such rewards have prices, and the cost was simple. From that night onwards Tanos must help his vampiric master grow in political power eventually to overthrow the human Voevod Alexandru. Tanos grew ever more powerful. His savagery in combat and cruelty in torture only bested by Miklos’ future clansman Draculea. As his mortal power grew and his mortal master’s enemies fell his true Lord, Miklos, grew stronger. Working behind the scenes of power, weakening those he had no use for, and strengthening those that would prove useful in the future. By 1437 Miklos had manipulated the Warlord Vlad Dracul, father of the future Draculea, into killing and thus replacing Alexandru. In return Miklos gained a semblance of power over the lands, a semblance that became absolute, albeit temporarily, when Dracul’s son Draculea was embraced into the Tzimisce clan. Miklos continued his manipulation of the mortal lineage’s driving Dracul into direct conflict with Hungary’s ruling classes. As a result Dracul lost his title, only to return, at Miklos bequest, to power a year later. He sent his two sons, one of which being Draculea, to Turkey to prove his loyalty where they were kept hostage for four years. Dracul and Mircea were assassinated in 1447, some say at the request of the Hungarian General Janos Hunyandi. Joining the Order of the Dragon, Dracul was sworn to obey the wishes of Hungary when they declared war on the Turks. The battles that followed brought Tanos even greater power. Draculea returned with an army, now embraced into the clan and at the age of seventeen he seized power, taking the Wallachian throne. Tanos was now a powerful Boyar in his own right. Having led countless successful attacks on the enemies of his Vampire Lord. His cruel streak however tinted as was his masters, with a strong sense of nobility. Miklos then at last fulfilled his promise, embracing the now weathered Tanos, bringing him into the noble lineage of the Tzimisce.
In 1462, Tanos led part of Dracula’s army against the Turks. However being outnumbered three to one the Wallachian force was driven back coming to ground in the capital Tirgoviste. However not to be outdone by the Turk invaders, Dracula poisoned and destroyed villages removing any option for the Turks to set up camps. He also created a sight since recorded in history as “the forest of the impaled†by impaling 20,000 Turk prisoners as a warning. And although the Turk Sultan withdrew, Dracula’s own brother Radu who had pledged allegiance to the Sultan drove on. Attacking the Impaler’s castle and terrifying his wife into suicide, throwing herself from the battlements.
Although Dracula escaped and eventually retook the throne, he was eventually slain in 1474. Tanos, weary of being a serf withdrew to his Keep, hiding within it’s obsidian walls throughout the subsequent Turk 150 year occupation.
In the years to come Wallachia became united in defiance of the Ottoman Empire, leading to an ongoing war that lasted almost 200 years. Tanos’ financial status grew, allowing him to fund the resistance against the Ottoman, and fuel his reputation, or publicly his descendants, reputation as an eccentric nobleman. As Russia and Austria reclaimed the lands from the Ottoman, Tanos began to master his disciplines. Soon becoming a master at fleshcrafting, as well as creating bigger and better warriors.
The renaissance criss-crossed the globe, art and literature became ever widespread and well received. Tanos, using fleshcrafting, posed as grandsons, nephews and distant relations ensuring his title throughout the ages.
The moon shone bleakly as ever, glinting in silvered darts over the water’s surface as the great ship came into the bay. The dockworkers scrambled, dragging heavy ropes into position. He watched from the deck, his vermilion gaze moist from the seawater sting as his thoughts returned to the present. Shouldering the heavy coat he hid under he headed towards the cargo hold, checking everything was in order before returning to the ship’s deck, ready to disembark as the great engine purred to a stop. The cane in his hand tapping the walkway as he left the ship, climbing into a waiting limousine. His belongings that hadn’t been sent in advance following behind in several container vans. The journey by car seemed positively instantaneous in comparison to the long voyage. As the driver wheeled past the city signs he smiled darkly against the neon and glittering glass, heading out into the old districts and further into the suburbs circling the sprawl.
The building was as old as could be hoped, sprawling like a stone replica of his Keep, a long driveway terminating with the great marble steps that led to the grand doors. Stepping from the car he walked stiffly, regally into his new home, haughtily studying the interior before heading hellward to the wine cellar. A series of tunnel linked chambers peppered the rock below the manor. His voice rasping, the barest slavonic accent permeating through his voice.
“Ah, this will do nicely. A little modification and expansion and they will be perfect for my vats. Randall? Arrange for the work to begin immediately. I wish to retire for the evening. Please see to your chambers yourself. We shall speak tonight. Good eve to you dear Randall, let us hope this “Cascadia†will prove fruitful in our studies.â€
At that he retired to the predetermined chamber, the heavy curtains and latticed window closed to block the suns rays.
¹“Ah come in dear boy! Tell me again, what news it is that wakes me?â€
² “Come closer child, do not fear.â€