The skies above Nephalia were never welcoming. The sun would only ever shine weakly in the wan skies, but even at its fairest, it was still miserable to anyone who hadn’t been born there. The weather tonight was quite possibly the worst that Sorin had ever seen, which spoke of exactly how terrible it was. The air was thick with something ominous, something more substantial than storms and stress. There was something foul in the air tonight. The heavy clouds hanging low on the horizon were pregnant with menace and somehow stained, discolored with an infernal glow from within.
It was astounding that he was considering his destination as some sort of sanctuary to get out of the bleak conditions.
The abandoned chapel stood alone, far from civilization, an isolated and lonely place forgotten either by the oppression of time or scoured from memory by some darker hand. Once, it had been a refuge, a small place of shelter to weather the storms of the soul and body alike. Whatever it had been built for, it was no longer fit to be called a place of faith.
Twisted trees, their branches gnarled and bare, reached for the churning sky, casting long and horrific shadows across the small building each time a flash lit the sky. The wood and stone had long since fallen to decay, but the precious windows, brilliant color set in their dark frames, had somehow remained untouched. Gravestones were strewn haphazardly around the yard of the chapel, sunken or tipped over into the fetid waters that overran the graf. Sorin didn’t even want to consider what the bloated corpses interred below might look like and cast it from his mind, focusing instead on the doors ahead. They hung open and the shadows shifted within, milling about as if they were alive and waiting for him to step foot into their dark embrace.
Sorin sneered and for the hundredth time, wondered how he’d been drawn to this crossroads and went to the doors, pushing them open with a nerve jangling screech. The fiend stood against the altar, leaned casually against the heavy stone taking his time examining the dark stains that coated very nearly every surface of the floors and walls. Even in the darkness Sorin knew what they were, the sour stink of dried blood pungent over the odd scents of the waters beyond the walls. Whatever had driven people from this place had happened a while ago and this was the aftermath, left forever as a warning to those foolish enough to stumble into this place. The vampire stood and watched the creature across from him and when it finally deigned to notice him, its face split in ecstatic joy.
“Ah! The guest of honor has at last arrived!” He said, and it sounded genuinely mirthful. His casual pose against the altar remained unchanged, and if one could ignore the surroundings, it would seem a joyful reunion between two familiar companions. “You are a bit earlier than I had expected though. How did you find me?”
“By calling in favors that I did not care to pay for from people that I dislike quite a bit.” Sorin said, staring hard at the other man. He was tall and thin in a way only a fever patient could be, but despite that, there was something solid about his frame, wide shoulders and long limbs. A greasy mop of hair fell over his face and a pair of horns curled from the brow beneath it, horns as darkly crimson as the rest of his skin. He was a devil, but so strange that Sorin didn’t know what to make of him. He was far more human than any devil he had seen before, not least because he was actually clothed. Not in rags either, but flamboyant clothing that spoke of careful and precise ministration to his appearance. He wore a waistcoat beneath an overcoat whose tails split to allow the appendage that sprouted from behind free movement. It curled as if it had a mind of its own and Sorin’s gaze was drawn back up. “You are by far one of the strangest things I have ever seen, and that is saying something.”
“Thank you.” The other said, fairly unconcerned with if it was a compliment or not. “Coming from a being of such high repute as Sorin Markov, that is quite the statement.”
“You have the advantage of me, and have for a while I dare say. That displeases me more than you can imagine, so please, be civilized…” Sorin’s voice dropped, power thrumming in his next words, “and tell me who you are.”
“You may call me Tibalt.” Tibalt shivered slightly, almost imperceptibly if his tail’s frantic lashing hadn’t given him away. He appreciated the threat in Sorin’s voice, even if they were feigning geniality at the moment. “I like to think of myself as a student of life. Everything done in service to the joy of discovery.”
“What business do you have with me that you’ve made yourself such a nuisance in my affairs?”
“Now… that would be telling. We shall just say that we have a friend in common, and I simply had to investigate if the rumors about you were true.” Tibalt said with a gesture, and at that point the gleam of metal drew Sorin’s eye. Tibalt was holding an immense knife longer than his hand, pointed straight at Sorin’s chest. It was a thin blade, almost invisible from the side despite its length, and the crosshilt was enormous and ornate, studded with heavy gems and wreathed in gold.
“I hope I didn’t disappoint.” Sorin replied coldly. He was getting tired of the charade, being on the receiving end of it for a change. Is this what it was like when he acted this way? Tibalt stepped forward, carefully holding the blade between the fingers of his other hand and studying Sorin in response to his question.
“Well… let’s just say that I haven’t made my final judgment yet.” The two men stood staring tensely at each other, a scowl on Sorin’s face and a smirk on Tibalt’s. The silent moments stretched on until finally the façade snapped and at once they were both in motion.
Tibalt struck, all languid grace and indolent ease in his movements. Sorin jumped back, his own posture of careful control, weaving around the fiend’s strikes with little room to spare. Tibalt cackled raucously, redoubling his efforts as he drove the vampire back. A growl ripped out of Sorin’s throat and the sudden screech of metal on metal broke the cacophony. Sorin’s own dagger licked out, jarring the knife in Tibalt’s hand. Tibalt smoothly ducked back, suddenly wary now that Sorin had drawn his own dagger.
The curved fang of metal that Sorin held was longer than Tibalt’s straight blade and was all edge while the fiend’s own was hardly anything but point. The combatants circled each other carefully, slipping in and out in a blur of steel, the hiss of air being cut the only noise aside from the heavy steps on the flagstones.
Sorin’s blade bit into the man’s chest, splitting skin and splashing blood down the fine ruffles of Tibalt’s shirt. He was thrown back by Sorin’s inhuman strength and stumbled, somersaulting into a back roll before resting in a crouch, tail writhing in irritation. Tibalt’s unruly mop of hair fell across his face and shadowed one eye, but the other held a sort of manic serenity, the mad glint of satisfaction rather than anger. Sorin growled again, deep voice rumbling within his chest as he stalked forward.
Tibalt jumped back to his feet, straightening his own jacket and carefully avoiding the wound where the dagger had opened his chest. It was virtually all Sorin could stare at, the blood darker than it should be and a scent in the air like nothing he’d smelled before. A threatening smile grew on his face and he watched Tibalt with an air of careful study as he lifted the blade to his lips and tasted the dark liquid. A wave of power rolled off of him as he sampled the other man’s blood and he pulled a face of distinct displeasure.
“Ugh! That is foul…” Sorin spat, wiping the blade off on his pants and resheathing the knife. “By far one of the worst things I’ve ever tasted and I have had my share of experiences.” He complained as he reached to the greatsword at his waist and freed it in one smooth pull. The pure blackness of the sword gleamed strangely in the weak light.
Tibalt rose to his feet, despite his wound, his features broke out into an infuriating smile. When he saw Sorin’s greatsword clear its sheathe, he nodded and stretched, wincing deliciously as the gash on his chest pulled with the movement.
“I see that we’re going to get serious now, are we? Good, I’ve been preparing for just this.” He opened his arms wide, as if master of a carnival and with a diabolic smile on his face, snapped his fingers. Sorin scowled and then the air was rent with the clatter of shattering glass as devils began to stream into the church, shouldering each other as they flung themselves in, hooting and whooping with excitement. Tibalt’s smile grew wider and the mad glint in his eye grew.
Devils of all sizes and shapes gathered to every side, climbing over the shattered pews and pushing to get a look at Sorin as his own gaze took in the precarious position he was in. The devils weren’t alone either, hounds with flayed skulls and burning eyes scattered in the crowd, their skulls wetly shining in the dead light. Tibalt stood on the outside, the scourge of devils crowding him out as they ambled into position around him.
At last, an enormous devil, eyes and mouth burning ferociously with an inner fire rode forward through the doors and Sorin calmly turned as it entered. It was atop a massive hellhound and dragged a collection of chains in his hands. This was the leader of the gang, as much as any of the devils were leaders considering Tibalt’s command over them.
Tibalt tapped his dagger on the altar next to him, standing unevenly on the stairs that led behind it. Sorin turned, ignoring the threats all around as he indulged the devil in his theatrics. Tibalt held the knife aloft, as a conductor would a wand, and with a flick of his wrist, the mayhem began.
The tremendous devil atop his hellish mount leapt forward and the rest of the scourge surged forward. Unholy howls and curses met the air as the ground itself shuddered under the diabolic stamped. A tidal wave of infernal flesh rose for him, to drag him down and tear him to bits.
And as one, they crashed against the bright blue dome of light that Sorin threw into place with a single encompassing wave. Light spilled across him and several of the weaker devils groaned and hissed, the harsh sound coming from their flesh sizzling and popping rather than from their tongues. White magic wasn’t Sorin’s specialty, far from it, but he was six millennia old and had learned more than his fair share of tricks. The one great task that he had done for Innistrad had led him to know far more than he otherwise would ever need.
The light faded, but the room of devils was still dazed, the hounds whimpering turning to growls as they recovered as well. The devil that had led the charge seemed far more resilient than his brethren, his infernal mount already climbing back to its claws and the bare tendons and muscles tensed, ready to spring. As mount and rider alike hurled themselves at him, they found it to be a short flight, ending quite suddenly on Sorin’s naked sword. He held it out calmly and the devil atop the hound blinked, agog and stunned from both the light and the rather abrupt end to his life.
With a flick of his wrist and inhuman strength, Sorin slashed across the devil’s body, limbs and blood alike spiraling into the air as he toppled off the hound, which met its own grizzly fate moments later as the sword split bone as Sorin whirled, deep laughter echoing in the ruined church. As they had come at him, he now washed among them like a dark incoming tide, merciless and implacable.
Sorin’s blade rose and spun, delivering punishing blows that split skin into gaping wounds, carving a charnel smile across throats and hacking limbs from their owners’ surprised forms. His coat billowed out as he danced, the shining black sword, his parasite blade, a perfect partner for the grim ballet mastered over eons. In that moment, he was more than a swordsman, he was a baleful force, elegant in its overwhelming violence.
Half the scourge lay butchered and bleeding already, broken bodies and severed limbs alike thrown away from the deadly center of the storm, but despite the casualties, the scourge still had numbers on their side and against a single sword, no matter how special, numbers would always overcome.
A heavy body fell across Sorin’s shoulders and he missed a step as thick claws reached across his face. A tenebrous voice burst from between Sorin’s lips and the flesh simply melted from the clutching hands, but too late, Sorin tried to regain his timing. Another devil, a great hog faced beast, slammed into his shins and sent Sorin sprawling across the heavy wood of a pew. The seat shattered beneath their weight and Sorin groaned as the bones of the rotting devil on his back jabbed him hard from underneath. The ugly thing attacking him began clawing at his pants and the vampire rammed his heavy boot into its face, breaking its neck with preternatural strength and flinging it back away from him.
They came, driven to frenzy by the sight of downed prey. On the ground, he could never win and he wildly swung the blade through the air, scoring the body of an air born devil that had flung itself at him. He rolled away and the body thumped heavily where he’d been laying, impaling itself on the broken bones of its kin. He rose, getting a foot underneath himself as a trio of devils charged him before he could gain his footing.
Dark sorcery ripped the air as Sorin spat foul syllables, his voice shaking the broken glass with its power. Long blades of darkness struck stray opponents, slicing ragged sucking wounds into their bodies as flesh simply fell into the abyss of the spells. Sorin hands flickered out, dark mist wreathing his fingers as the magic lashed at his foes.
A tremendous hound surged towards him from behind the nearest pew and sank its fangs onto his forearm, jerking back and forth and trying to snap bone inside the meat of Sorin’s arm. Sorin’s magic went wide, carving wild blasts from stone and flesh alike. This close, the sword was useless and with little choice, Sorin began punching the ugly thing, hammering its bare, meaty skull over and over with the wet disgusting sound of slaps of flesh on flesh. Each strike drove its jaws tighter and Sorin was forced to kick another devil off his leg, sending the thing arcing over the pew behind him. Sorin’s growl met the hound’s own and he changed his target, punching the thing right in its throat.
It jerked up, wheezing and coughing blood. Sorin rolled to the side as it hacked, coming to his knee and driving his sword through the ugly thing’s eye and out the other side of its skull. Leaping the twitching corpse, he whipped the sword from its grizzly sheath as he finally stood. Sorin spun, lopping the hand off another devil holding a great splinter of wood in its now missing hand. It squawked and gurgled suddenly as Sorin’s sword rammed through its lung. He planted a foot against its pebbled skin and kicked, sending the dying devil sprawling into three of its kin with bone-shattering force.
A gigantic devil, proud horns and tiny gnashing teeth, fell from the rafters, muscular form flowing in the air as its tail lashed the air. Sorin saw it coming a moment too late, but rather than duck, he let it slam into him, grunting under the weight. A gigantic black spine seemed to punch through its back right next to the neat line of barbs that ran all the way down to its tail. It jerked momentarily and then slowly slid off his back. Sorin straightened again and grunted at the bruise already forming on his back. It slapped wetly into a pool of its own blood and the no others came for him.
The broken corpses fell silent and still, flames burning low as the light of their life burnt out. Sorin stood at the center of a circle of carnage, a dark visage of death as the blood soaked slowly into the blackness of his sword’s length. He wasn’t even breathing hard.
There was a strange tension in the air brought on by all that death, something that bothered Sorin, but before he could do anything, he felt a sharp insistent sting in his chest.
“Agh!” He whirled, wincing, and there Tibalt stood outside the messy ring of gore Sorin had made of the floor. The fiend smiled and pulled the needle out of the sackcloth doll he held, shaking the doll as he did, forcing it into a pantomime of a dancer’s jig.
“Aaaah, a blood soaked church.” He sighed happily, turning to the doll he held. “I don’t think there’s anything more delightfully blasphemous, don’t you agree?”
“Sure, it’s great!” The doll answered with Tibalt providing its high pitched voice. He laughed maniacally at his joke and left Sorin staring dumbfounded at him.
“You’re insane….” Sorin shook his head, slack jawed at the man who’d made his life so miserable lately. “Utterly insane.”
“Very probably.” Tibalt admitted, nodding with a shrug. He was obviously not bothered by the accusation. “But you’re missing something else. I may be crazy, very likely so, but I’m also very, very clever.” His maniacal smile suddenly took a sinister edge as he stared at Sorin, and with that, he tossed the stuffed doll into the thick pools of devil’s blood.
Sorin felt a small flair of mana, a spark that ignited the power hanging in the air. The devils had been a distraction all along, just one part of a larger working that Tibalt had been putting together since it had all started. The blood splashed all around burst into sudden flame and the doll lay there in the midst of it. Sorin had scant seconds before he put it all together and then his world exploded into a shock of pain and sweat. It felt as if his skin was being peeled from his flesh as fire licked at the tiny unburning doll and smoke rose from the pair of them.
Sorin gritted his teeth through the agony and pulled a staggering swell of energy from his mana lines. His body radiated with it and the cold touch of the void snuffed the flames nearest him. Sorin threw all that gathered might into a spell, and all the suffering he had endured went into it as well, a web of terrible fury and torment.
Tibalt tensed. Abruptly, the pain mage fell to his knees shrieking as Sorin’s sorcery tore at him, repaying him for every agony he had inflicted in the duel. Blisters and burns erupted over the pain-mage’s body, skin breaking and blackening from third-hand flames. Even as his wounds grew more grievous, Sorin’s own injuries began to vanish. The vampire’s flesh healed rapidly and he rose to his feet, completely restored.
“That. Hurt.” He rumbled, the dark fury shaking the air, the remaining windows rattling with the force of his terrible wrath. “That was clever, I have to applaud that, but I have done this for Millennia! Did you seriously think you could beat me?” Sorin strode over and kicked the younger man hard, sending him flying with a crash into the nearby altar. The stone shook with the impact and he groaned as Sorin towered above him. “You lost the moment I had your blood you pathetic worm. Everything else was just show, but I have lost patience boy! Now…”
Sorin reached down and hauled Tibalt up by his lapels. He held the man clear of the ground, shaking him slightly and leveling his will against Tibalt’s mind, slamming his desires against the bulwark of Tibalt’s own.
“Who set you on my path?!” Sorin screamed, his will beating against Tibalt, compelling him to do as Sorin wished and slowly Tibalt’s mouth opened, a croaking voice spilling out of his throat.
“F-Falk…enrath…” Tibalt choked out against his own volition.
Sorin’s concentration snapped in shock and Tibalt began cackling. A scowl spread over Sorin’s face and he threw the other man over the altar with a dismissive toss. Sorin turned and stalked out of the church, the insane fiend’s laughter ringing in the dead silence of the swamp. Even as he passed through the doors, Sorin reached to the deepest power of the fens. He put some distance between himself and the building, drawing deep from the well of mana below. Finally, he turned and released the spell, the dark power rippling on the air as it went.
An eerie groan filled the swamps as roots emerged from the fetid waters. They rose, creaking and twining together, until they formed a group of enormous hands that reached to the heavens. They stretched, dripping water and detritus, and as one, slammed atop the church, splintering the roof and sundering the aged walls. They continued, tearing at the building as it began to sink, pulled below into the waiting maw of the mire. It sank quickly once it began, the sludge drawing it deeper in minutes until even the steeple sank into the ground, and with a final tug, it was crushed under the weight of the swamp. As it was dragged under, the bell in the tower rang until the murky depths forever silenced its toll. With a deafening gurgle, the last of the air escaped from its watery tomb, offering an ignoble end to the building, perhaps finally offering some peace to the spirits of its dark past.
“****.” Sorin grimaced. Moments before it had vanished, he’d felt a ripple in the aether. The bastard had been a planeswalker, which meant that final spell had been for nothing but show. He sighed and started to walk away, annoyed, but more sure of himself than he had been in days. It was good to remind himself now and then that there was little, if anything that could stand in his way. Now if he could only, finally, accomplish what he was actually here to do…
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Leopold von Straussreich was a man of a precarious position. Despite all that, very few, if any at all of those in Nephalia would dare cross him. He was almost universally reviled, though not for any known dark covenant or twisted experiment against nature, but for the simple fact of what his occupation happened to be. Leopold was a tax collector for the Church of Avacyn, and despite what many of his colleagues might think of the necessity of the noble profession, they still couldn’t bring themselves to like the man. They could hardly stand him, in fact. In part, it was because nobody could quite explain how such a minor functionary could afford to live so decadently on a salary as modest as his own. It was assumed that his opulent lifestyle was funded by the Stromkirks, though it had never been proven. It simply caused more resentment at his office, and it was easy enough to ignore simply for the fact that the assumption was dead on the money. As a tax collector, he made sure the church got their funds, and more importantly that the Stromkirks got their sizable cut in exchange for favors and wealth of his own. It was a satisfactory arrangement that allowed him to ignore all the revulsion aimed in his direction.
What neither the church nor the vampires knew was that despite his duplicitous work, his allegiance belonged to another entity entirely. There was only one being that he would truly bow to, the demon lord Griselbrand. The cult was the truest source of his wealth, and it had served him well as he served in turn. Horrible things happened in the darkness beneath his manor and the place screamed with long forgotten echoes to those who could hear them.
Leopold turned the key, hurrying in from the darkened night and chill drizzle outside. It had been a long and dull day, measuring and weighing gold hour after hour. It bored him, but he was home at last and he looked forward to an evening of fantasy and plotting. It had been some time since the cult had met, and it was overdue for them to prove their loyalty again. He was so consumed with those thoughts that he did not realize the fire was already roaring in the fire place despite the fact he had just arrived home. He shrugged off his coat happily, eager to warm himself next to his hearth, and it was only as he was hanging it upon its stand that it finally dawned on him that something was most certainly amiss.
He calmly turned towards the fire and found a figure lounging on his sofa, watching him with an equal mix of amusement and irritation, rolling a glass tumbler in his hand. Leopold quickly surmised the man sitting before him was a vampire, but it was not panic nor disgust that rose to face. It was confusion.
“The taxes aren’t due for weeks. What’s wrong?”
The man snorted and an eyebrow rose, amusement winning out against his ire. “For a change, I can actually say that there isn’t anything wrong at all. Admittedly, it comes as a surprise to me as much as anyone, but it’s been that sort of day.”
“I don’t understand then, what are you doing here?” Leopold was utterly perplexed and he went to sit opposite this stranger.
“Resting. I’m actually looking forward to sleeping in a soft bed.” He groaned and exhaled, giving the taxman a long suffering look. “It’s been weeks since the last time and I am very eager to never repeat that if I can.”
“Who… who are you?” The cultist had completely lost track of what was going on and he was at last starting to grow genuinely worried and somewhat angry at the intrusion.
“Sorin Markov.” The only part of that name that mattered was the last of it. Markov. The situation had completely changed just with that simple utterance. This was not one of the Stromkirks, not a being he could bargain with.
“Get out.” Leopold demanded, but Sorin just rolled his eyes at the man. When it became clear the vampire had no intention of moving Leopold decided to change tactics. “Fine, if you have no intention of leaving, then at least tell me why you’re here.”
“That would be you, or more accurately the cult.” Sorin replied calmly, clearly not in the least ruffled by the man’s demands. The same could not be said of Leopold. Upon hearing that, the color drained from the cultist’s face. Nobody could know, only others of his order knew who he was and he had worked hard to keep it that way. “You see, I needed to know what you knew of Avacyn’s disappearance, or at least that was true when I arrived, but you’ve been gone all day, and in that time, you became superfluous.”
“What are you talking about?!” Leopold’s agitation had grown with every sentence the other spoke, and now he was as worried as he was confused.
“Well… that’s not entirely true now that I think about it.” Sorin continued as if the other hadn’t spoken. “It’s not so much that you’re no longer useful, it’s that the question is now moot. While I was waiting, and I don’t have any explanation for it at all, but I felt the wards I placed so long ago surge with power, nearly more than I ever designed for them. Avacyn has returned and she has become so much stronger than she was in those early days. I suddenly find myself without purpose, but I couldn’t be happier.” Sorin chuckled and shrugged, quite at ease as he spoke to the cultist. “I told you, it’s been that sort of day. Now that you’re finally home, you can be a magnanimous host and invite me to stay the night.” Sorin suggested pleasantly. Leopold, for his part, simply blustered, words spluttering meaninglessly from his mouth.
“Why in every hell would I do that!?” he finally managed.
“I could just kill you if that makes you feel better. The point is, I’m sleeping in a feather bed tonight, regardless of if I have to end you to do so or not. So, do you intend to leave your guest waiting?”
Leopold stood stunned and fell heavily back into his seat, utterly trampled by the vampire’s manner. He shook his head and stared straight forward. “The bedrooms are upstairs. Go ahead.”
“Excellent.” Sorin smiled, appearing genuinely refreshed by the entire affair. He stood and began to make his way to the stairs, setting his glass to the side. As he began to climb, he stopped and turned back to look down at the tax collector. “Just so you’ll know, I’ve sent a message to the church outlining your involvement in your asinine cult. It should arrive sometime tomorrow, so you have enough time to begin running if you start now. I wouldn’t bother with any of your cultists either. They’re all dead by now. Pleasant dreams Leopold.” Sorin laughed maniacally as he ascended the stairs, leaving Leopold alone as his world crumbled around him.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Jana sat at her desk, lamenting the fact everything had gone wrong. She sighed, and pinched the bridge of her nose, screwing up her tired eyes from the glare of the solitary lamp sitting next to her. The letters had arrived hours ago informing her that her ploy had failed. They bore the crest of House Stromkirk, and she cursed them for the insult they offered, thinly veiled as cordiality, in letting her know that her plan had been obvious and clumsy. And most importantly that it had spectacularly failed.
Leaning her elbows against the hardwood, she pressed her hands to her face, swallowing hard and thinking of what her next move could possibly be. She loathed to admit it, but she had played her entire hand. There was nothing left for her to do except cower or run, but as she considered those options, she dismissed them completely. By the old gods, she had her pride at least. She was a Falkenrath, not some peasant sow ready to run because of a bump in the night. She was mistress of a stronghold, the lady of all she surveyed, she would not surrender because her plans had gone amiss! She would rally those loyal to her and prepare.
He would be coming.
That thought sent chills down her veins, but she would meet him in glorious bloodshed. He had humiliated her once, trampled all over her in her own court in front of members from every family. She would never live that down if she did not fight. Deep within though, she screamed at the necessity. If only that accursed… abomination had just done what she’d wished! It was all his fault, it surely had to be, because she had done nothing but point him to her at the bane of her existence.
He would be coming.
It echoed in her mind and she nearly lost her composure once more. The cold of the thought washed through her again and she reached for the glass of warm blood at her hand, sure it would calm her nerves. Except it wasn’t there. She turned, wondering where she had left it and froze, every muscle going stiff as she saw the golden reflection of his eyes. Upon her couch, he sat, one leg casually crossed over the other and an arm splayed across the back of the cushions. It might have been anybody really, the figure barely illuminated by the desk’s lamp, more shadow than form, except for those eyes. Those golden glittering eyes.
It seemed… he had been there for some time. Jana swallowed, her mouth suddenly dry beyond description. He took a sip of the blood and then delicately sat it on the table in front of him, turning that warm and deceptive smile her way. Inwardly she quailed, but she simply raised her chin, defiance coming quickly to her defense. Despite the bravado, she could find no words.
“You know, I could grow quite fond of doing that. It’s just so damnably amusing watching the way you people react.” He chuckled and took her in. Jana was not as well kept as she had been when last he’d seen her. Oh yes, her clothes were still immaculately cut, but there were lines around her eyes that hadn’t been there before, which, itself was remarkable. “You and I have some unfinished business Jana. As soon as I deal with you, I can return to Thraben and get some long, long overdue answers.”
“What… business is that?” she swallowed, heart in her throat as she stared at the elder vampire across the room from her. He rose, an ugly smile on his face as he approached.
“I treated you quite poorly, but you must understand, urgency drove me my dear. Sacrifices had to be made, and unfortunately your reputation fell victim to necessity. I wish I could apologize, but I don’t really care. If you had simply suffered away in seclusion you wouldn’t have had to ever see me again.”
“I couldn’t.” she grimaced, anger welling up in her chest as fierce tears glazed her eyes.
“No, you couldn’t. So instead you meddled, and chose an absolutely terrible pawn to do so with. So now, I have to sacrifice my time to come and deal with you. I am quite unhappy about that Jana, but here I am.” He came up behind her and she refused to turn to look at him, sitting stiffly as strong hands slipped onto her shoulders and he pulled her gently back.
“After all, we all must make sacrifices for the good of Innistrad."