It's the fourteenth century of the common era. Men huddle by lamplight through dark shadowy cities and sail by wild stars. But in their numbers, their friends and the lists of names around the world are the monsters of bad dreams. Forever remembered in laughed-at tales as caricatures of creeping misshapen things condemned to ever hunger for living blood. In those hidden faces exist the society of Our Dry Angels...
But those monsters...do exist. Those creeping misshapen nightmares normally were leashed in like hounds by the vampires...but what happens to the world when even the cruelty and malice of the vampires can't keep these beasts from the throat of the earth... What happens is that John Wight, the oldest of all vampires, pens a note, scrawled fantastically on folded toughened vellum paper. Copies of the note are sent around the world...
One was sent to the Lorraine manse in Wasserlundt. The manse was without a light in it’s windows nor a puff of smoke from any chimney. In it’s many hundred rooms, stirred no single creature beyond mice, rats and bugs. Sitting, unfolded on the desk of Jean Francois Lafayette was the very same note. Scrolled on it’s toughened vellum with large looping text was the following:
“What I pen concerns all ye peoples of the moon and righteous governors. Let no governor stall. The diet of our nobleborn must meet all in Stanes. Let those, seas away, sail ye now without fail. Let those miles away begin their entourage. We can, none of us, hold back our own numbers now. I shall receive all our brethren with oaths of safety. Fair ye well, until we receive you at your journey’s end.
-W”
Scrolled on a personal journal, also on the desk was the following:
“Entry September, 3rd,
Dearest Lorraine,
Wight calls and I must away. I wish you to stay, do not follow. Keep our foresworn at your side at all times no matter where you go. The attacks on us must stop. The diet of governors will find a way. All shall be well. stay true to me, my dearest love.
-JfL"
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The Napier was a small Wasserlundtian caravel ship. It was black from bow to stern. It had been sighted bobbing along the coast of Wasserlundt and was currently wanted for impoundment concerning charges of piracy. Somehow…the boat always seemed to slip away in clots of mist and sea spray.
Now the helpless little ship was being forced through billowing and swelling seas, pelted with rain and shoved with wind. It was stuck. In trying to maneuver the narrow channel between Wasserlundt and Sundenen it was caught between the sharp Rocks du Lorelei and the Wasserlundtian coast. It was bobbing and rocking back and forth like a splinter of driftwood trapped in a tide pool with no particular place to go.
Captain Aaron McKuen was a big fella, rough and swarthy. Six-foot-three with a wiry brown and gray beard. Born in Sundenen fifty years ago, he had made his coin purse from salvage and commandeered national property. He smelt like the grog and limes he kept on his person. Braces of pistols tied to ropes were dangling off his neck, shoulders and waist. His rough hands spun around the wheel of the ship as lightening flashed and rain smacked the deck. He was belting out rounds of “The Dreadnaught”, an old shanty that he would sing when the sea was mean. But cruel sea or not, there was a laugh behind his eyes that may have sounded through the broken lyrics of the song.
No other shipmate was on deck at the time. ‘They’re all bilge-rats…yellow to their cores.’ He thought moments before he began his hearty song. Superstition from the storm and the one or two deaths days ago. The boys below deck only heard of the ‘bloodless fevers’, but McKuen knew what it was and couldn’t care less. He had a big sack of gold in his cabin that he had counted and recounted. They could fall like flies, one for every gold coin he had. He dared the roar of the bruised dark-blue storm with shouts of song.
“Now the Dreadnaught is sailing the Ocean, so wide,
Where the high roaring seas roll along her black side.
With her sails taughtly set for the Red Cross to show,
And away in the Dreadnought to the west wind we'll go!”
“Derry down, down, down derry down.” Came a heavy accentuated voice in song. McKuen turned; his scarred wet face, roughly shocked. A pale porcelean figure smiled, shrouded in black habiliments and pitch jet hair that dangled to his shoulders.
“Yar shudn’t be above deck, Jean!” The raspy salt’s voice warned. The man’s face was beaded with rain, a plaintive smile on his lips. He lifted his palms to the skies.
“But it’s such a beautiful night.” He said, growling restlessly with his accent above the storm.
"'Tis more'n I can speak ta." The pirate said. "Beauty bein in tha eye of the beholder 'n all."
Jean nodded appreciatively. "It's true." He said, happily. "But do you think it's beautiful?" Jean said, teasingly.
"Speakin as a sailor…It's been prettier." He said, laughing away.
“Where is my little Marilynn?” The vampire cawed out against the storm. He looked around, his smile on the way out. “Where oh where is my little Marilynn?”
“She’d be in tha hold, tryin ta keep dry.” Jean wrung his hands and drifted away on the shaking ship towards the cargo hold.
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Huddled under a pendulous lantern, was a small blond Wasserlundtian woman. Her adorably young and mousey face was rested on the side of a dark red Casket. She looked so frail and perfect. Jean had selected her for more reasons than her brains. She had two perfect light Wasserlundtian breasts that radiated from under her white linen nightgown. Her small bare feet were dug into the wood of the floor, trying to grip it and keep the cakset from sliding around as the ship shifted and tilted. Scratched into the polished wood of the casket were the untidy childish words: “I am best left where I lie, May God Forgive.”
It was the slinking figure of Jean Francois Lafayette that caused her to start with a sharp panicked breath. Having seen him, she seemed to relax a little. Her gorgeous messy blonde hair capped and framed her delicate pale peachish face. Although she was relaxed, she seemed visibly nervous.
“Jean.” She squeaked in a far heavier accent than Jean. “Zie ship…iz it going to break?” She asked, fearfully. Jean didn’t say a word, he just walked into the circle of lamplight. His face was silhouetted and looked…stark. The bulging and slimy timbers inside the hold, didn’t speak of promise.
“The situation isn’t it at all promising.” Jean admitted, smiling lightly. Jean had seen the outside, the situation wasn’t at all promising. For him to have admitted that giant understatement, was a bad sign and it showed on Marilynn’s tiny face. His smile widened reassuringly at her. “We’ll be okay, you’ll see.”
She nodded wordlessly, trying to keep hope on her face. Jean stepped closer, where Marilynn could see the whites of his eyes. His perfect pallid bone-white face shone like it was sculpted out of soapstone. His face was…as she had always known it to be, smiling sadly. He stood over her and reached down with his hand, stroking her cheek.
“Marilynn.” Jean called out, as if reminding her. Her eyes shot up, terrified. “My spies tell me that Lorraine Manse is empty.” She began to shake her head, denying an accusation that hadn’t been spoken yet. Instead of gripping the timbers with her feet, she started to back away from Jean. Jean’s eyebrows lifted with a searching gaze. “You told Lorraine where I was going and gave her my other pirate captain Bambatu.” It hadn’t been a question, it had been a indictment.
“No.” She whined with her accent. “No…no, no!” She cried, shaking her head. Jean smiled with expectation, like a cat that was holding a mouse by the tail. His fingers gripped her shoulders like iron vices and he dragged her to face him. She wasn’t speaking she was just shaking her head pleadingly. “I vouldn’t do dis if I didn’t care.” She begged.
Jean petted her head and hushed her. “I know. And I wouldn’t do this if I didn’t love it.” He said, baring his pointed fangs. He brought his head close enough to smell her. Her face was wide with terror and she tried to gently push him away. Jean loved her smell, the simple smells of soap and wild herbs. He opened his jaw and inhaled her scent, causing her to moan in dread. Right below her jaw-line on the nape of her throat were two old scars.
Jean felt the tips of his fangs press against the soft flesh, he heard Marilynn’s fast-beating heart and the quick susurrating ingress and egress of panicked breath. A quick clamping bite and Jean’s ears were filled with the delicious groans of pain and despair of his lovely familiar.
The coppery taste, appetizing and wondrous beyond the skill of any cook, flooded Jean’s mouth. It tasted so warm. Jean had been preying upon the cabin boys and hold workers, but he had gotten carried away and one or two of them had died. It was a depressing result. None of them seemed to be able to satisfy…they spent so quickly and they broke like fragile little toys. He didn’t mean to kill.
“Pleaze!” Marilynn screamed, urgently. Tears began to race down her cheeks and come from deep sobs. “You’ll kill me.” She sobbed. Jean pulled himself away from her neck. The corner of his mouth was red with a little trickle of her blood. He kissed her eyelids, leaving two red marks. Her fingers went to her neck and pressed against the wound, which must’ve smarted sharply. But she wouldn’t die, she wouldn’t turn into one of those hateful savages…Jean needed her here and now. He admitted to himself that he didn’t care that she told Lorraine and helped her escape the Manse… It was just one of his excuses…she knew it too.
“Vie…vie do you hate me...?” She asked, mostly to herself. Jean wrapped his arms around her and pulled her close. He could hear the rumbling of the storm outside. He could feel the sick motion of the ship. Laying there, holding Marilynn’s anemically pale body close to him like a small child would it’s favorite teddy bear, Jean’s mind drifted softly over thoughts of the Diet of Governors…over John Wight…Over Sundenen’s shores that they might reach in a ship or floating atop a coffin...
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