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The Damned do not dream... but for the first time in centuries, Bishop Odovico's daysleep was disturbed by phantasms of the mind.
They floated above a swampy nightscape - five giant, fanged skulls painted with colors that recalled the Feast of Saint Clair of Assisi. There was no mirth to their pageant, simply the grotesquery of their gawping mandibles overflowing with red, trailing down their chins like a drunkard gorging on wine. The gray sky was suffused by an amorphous glow that illuminated the scenery in place of the sun's long-forgotten face.
Free of the tumorous weight of a body twisted by centuries of unlife, he walked to the place where all the gore collected, a channel in the swamp that meandered aimlessly like a snake. He found his attention drawn to the bottom, lined with bloated corpses whose faces were on the edge of recognition.
Unbidden, a warm hand found his forearm, turning him to face his mother. She always seemed to laugh with her eyes, even during the worst of those old times. "What are you staring at? Do you wanna be late?"
Late for what mama?
"My lord, late for what... come sweet boy, the fifth evening bell is soon to sound. Grandma is already there with Catia - they received dispensation to leave the cloister today." Mother tugged him along as she'd always done. "Are you going to keep them waiting after not seeing them all year?"
Of course not.
She ruffled his brown, shaggy hair - had it been brown? Or black? - and drew him closer to a cacophony of festive music... drums and pipes, a trio of mandolins. "It's so nice to see you outside, actually doing something. Good-lady Pipa brought her oven out, can you smell the raisin bread?"
I can, it smells amazing. Can we buy some? I brought my coin purse. In truth it'd been so long since he'd consumed any real food that such flavors were as lost to his memory as the afternoon sunshine.
"After the show, my hungry pigeon." He pouted quietly - there was never enough time for raisin bread - but the sights and sounds of the festival had him chattering and pointing with her. Striped red and white tents lined either side of the blood river where faceless people played bawdy games and listened to ballads that were fashionable centuries ago
The river emptied into a sea that stank of refuse and excrement, just as he remembered. Straddling the winding stream was a steel platform whose design was far too modern for a place and time such as this
A crowd of townspeople wearing the undyed browns and grays of common folk, dappled by the occasional blue dress or red tunic that marked a person of status, were milling eagerly before the anachronistic stage, taking little notice of anything out of place. He spotted his sister and grandmother in their nun's habits, as faceless as the rest of the crowd; his mother's was the only visage he could remember. Excited to finally see them after unending decades of eternal night, he ran towards them both to kiss their cheeks just as a church bell struck five times
The smile withered and fell from his face as he finally got a clear glimpse through the throng. A dust-gray figure on the stage was bent over, its head plunged into the bloody river; following the logic and physics of dreams he suddenly found himself standing a few yards from the platform
Squatting on over-long, emaciated legs like a spider, he listened to it greedily gulping down the river's contents. Obscured by greasy shadows that squirmed like vermin over its body, he watched blue veins pulse in taloned hands gripping the edge of the steel stage
As if compelled by his presence, the ghoulish thing straightened and lifted its head from the blood, staring directly at him. A mantle of polished stone squares with heathen imagery carved in geometric complexity hung around its throat. He could see its heart pulsing rhythmically like a coal in its chest; a mask of burnished, featureless iron was nailed crudely to the edges of its face.
The sun hung like a pink tumor against the horizon as the crowd fell quiet with anticipation. "It's about to start!" His sister whispered in excitement.
What? No, that thing shouldn't be free -
Their voices were drowned out by the baying of hounds, twisted and keening. The crowd clapped and cheered as if in the opening scenes of a passion play as the thing brought its claws to the edge of the mask, tugging.
He knew intimately the mind-scourging horror that lay beneath.
What are you all doing?! Look away!
They couldn't hear him over the crackling rip of tearing skin, the -tnk- of rivets striking the stage. It was staring at him, specifically, through the featureless pane of metal as he shook his mother, his grandmother and sister in vain.
You can't look at it, you'll lose yourself! Look away, stop! Please mama!
Tenebrous darkness dripped like oil from its chin as the mask slithered upward. He did the only thing he could, turning away and shielding his eyes as the cheers turned to screams. They warped and warbled in agony, the crowd driven from joy to a soul-wrenching terror; soon the familiar notes of violence unleashed surrounded him and he fell to his knees to babble prayers he couldn't recall correctly
The shadows of men and women thrown against the ground morphed as their bodies stretched and broke, turning upon one another in homicidal mania. Iron-hard fingers dug into his shoulders, stabbing into the joints. The horror shook him violently, rattling his bones -
- and then Odovico was there in the waking world. An inhuman sound rasped from beneath his white sleeping veil, hands flailing at the still air of his tomb like an old man waking up frightened in his own coffin; he experienced a twisting tension in his stomach, as if a large spider had died in there with twitching legs. A pair of hands indeed grasped and shook his shoulders, rattling the inert flesh of his brain in his skull - he batted them away with a hiss of complaint, gripping the edges of his sarcophagus.
Sister Clementia let her hands fall to her sides, bowing her head in a show of contrition for juddering him awake. It was truly unprecedented; absent the human curse of dreams, there'd never been cause to pull him 'unnaturally' from his slumber... he must have been disturbing the blessed quiet of the sacral mortuary, and ultimately he was grateful that she'd awakened him.
"Be at peace Sister," Bishop Odovico hauled his misshapen form out of the coffin like a blood-gorged tick. He was shaken enough by the jarring experience of dreaming that he neglected to kneel before the Black Icon in the center of the burial chamber, his withered claw seeking the reassuring weight of his iron crozier resting against the wall. Intimately aware of Clementia's gaze beneath her gilded mask, he turned ponderously to face her. "My thanks for stirring me from a less than graceful slumber, my dear."
Odovico held an open hand, banded by rings of white gold and faceted rubies - she came to him, wrapping her delicate, velvet-gloved fingers around his palm. His fondness for her had never wavered during their long centuries together, and she remained one of three entities he trusted; the other two were Longinus and, of course, the Lord himself. Where all else was the sort of banal complexity that grew between figures of authority that had long hated one another yet saw little choice but to collaborate, theirs was a simple understanding
As surely as letters engraved in stone, so could Odovico read Clementia past her vow of silence. Beneath the gilded mask guarding a visage he'd all but forgotten over the cobwebby years, her questioning gaze was apparent to him. "I dreamed," he confessed as she walked by his side, leaving the burial chamber; he felt her give pause in her stride beside him... clearly alarmed.
"It comes as no coincidence, given the unpropitious timing," Odovico whispered, his voice barely above a grave scarab's skitter. "Only a matter of moments before we reap the fruit of disturbances like last night's... and it won't be angels bringing His displeasure at the interruption of mass, before you get excited," her chided her, knowing well her childlike fixation on them, "it's the Blood... we couldn't present nearly enough." Clementia stiffened, casting her gaze southwards towards the sea where their dark secret stirred.
Built in the swampy flats of Louisiana's shore, the sort of underground spaces he'd once found comfort within were an impossibility. A long staircase curled within the confined tower of his cathedral. The journey to and from the fourth floor awaited him at the night's zenith and nadir, with their footsteps barely scraping the smooth stone when they left their resting places
Before their descent Sister Clementia simply placed her fingers over her unbeating heart, the motion subtly pregnant with the promise of violence
"No, you can't set out against her," Odovico hissed with a sharp creak as he shook his head. "A visit from the Carnifex was in store for Miss Carter until her stunt last night... in exercising equal justice among her followers, we'd either drain the ranks of the Neonates dry for their complicity, or in going after her alone would we simply provoke her fellows to open rebellion
This was Ashland after all, not Los Angeles where the Carthians had taken to the barbarity of displaying the bleached skulls of their Invictus overlords. "Not that the others would even take that into account," he groused, long frustrated with the despotic conduct of his fellow Overseers.
He could already imagine with accuracy how their emergency session would proceed as he climbed down the claustrophobic staircase, voicing his frustrations to Clementia behind him. "Isidoro will advise pointless overcaution, infiltrating their organization as if that has ever worked... that pox-addled Bratva, I have no doubt Maksim would personally lead his ghouls door to door, dousing our flock in kerosene - and Lord damn me twice before I begin, don't let me start on Shira
Clementia's silence just happened to be tacit permission for him to continue to vent. "Remember Jacksonville?" His crozier clunked against the ground with each uneven step. "That nightmare passes over my waking eyes every time I look at her."
No amount of time spent in Torpor would banish the memory of those Shira had put to the torch for defying her rule, gleefully unafraid of the fires. He'd never seen Shira happier than when she exulted in their screams.
Clementia gently touched his shoulder, turning him to face her and pressing her palms together. She inclined her head ever so slightly, inviting him to prayer. The simplicity of the gesture was heart-warming for the Bishop, who suspected he'd have become like others his age without her consideration. The people and places that had defined the human remnants Elders' requiems were almost always dead or ground to grave dust by the merciless march of the changing world. Clementia had pulled him more than once from blustery tirades that served to only deepen his despair at the ironic powerlessness of his authority, but she reminded him that her own mental and spiritual stability was tied to his constant ministry
He closed his palms in prayer around hers. "Help me Lord, that my hands may find the strength to bring penance to the deserving, that they might guide the worthy to Your side, and that I might find the courage to be Your monster, rather than simply a monster."
They shared a moment of quiet together, a private validation of their mission in this afterlife
The two heads of the Lancea et Sanctum in Ashland - the so-called Church of the Damned - left Saint Eleanor's Cathedral with the crowds departing from evening mass; so often had the two Nosferatu come to cloak their presence among the Kine that it'd become reflexive
Odovico's gaze lingered on a handsome woman in a paisley gown and wide-brimmed hat, walking arm-in-arm with her stately husband... once he traipsed among them, trailing the human flock for whole nights, patiently awaiting an admission or evidence of sin to justify feeding from them. Now that he and Clementia had become such dread things as to require sustenance from other Kindred, he found himself meekly swept among the Mortals, hiding in their midst rather than stalking them.
Looking at them as children of the Lord, rather than simply meals, had given Odovico a different perspective than others of his kind. Even those who didn't worship or believe were merely acting upon the autonomy and freedom God had granted them, and that they so rightly vaunted here in this New World. It was an attitude he'd ultimately come to admire. He, Clementia and every undead were forcefully guided by their inner-Demons made manifest in the Beast, and the buzzing temptations of Beelzebub only grew louder with each passing night.
The Kine had little clue how precariously dangled their treasured independence. Just because the brutal nights of undead kings and queens had been thoroughly forgotten (and the memory painted over by rightly paranoid Kindred) did not mean they were forever extinguished. Human lives, even in their swarming billions, were sacred. That made the task of winnowing the wicked along to Hell and testing the virtuous all the more urgent in its own way
All of that could be cast unto screaming ruin if the younger Damned did not pay their tithe - if she knew the Truth of the matter, why they demanded this pound of flesh from her fellows, would Monroe Carter be moved to her previous pious compliance
Impossible. The risk was too great, and she was far too cunning.
A black Sedan waited outside to transport them to The Pit, Maksim's gathering place of choice; surely the former Boyar was aware of Odovico's and Clementia's deeply held disdain for that place where humans beat each other to death like unprized fighting animals. That was likely why he chose the venue.
Their driver dared not utter a word in their presence, and they themselves maintained a careful quiet born from the passage of countless nights. The two of them, having preached for a hundred years in this place, had watched it grow from an anonymous wound in the landscape to a sin-swollen tumor.
A woman wearing a dirty gray hijab limped along the concrete median, swaddling an infant, hawking balloons that glowed from within with LED lights. She was staunchly ignored by those driving by.
A quartet of young Asian men wearing gray suits and sunglasses carefully led an older man in their midst. He stared forward with the paralyzed fear of a deer, trudging ahead like a cow rounding a corner to the killing chamber.
In the eaves of tall apartment buildings, many of whose rooms were empty and merely used as investment toys for the wealthy, homeless children sought shelter from the night. He could smell their tears.
In the life he'd once known, under the tyranny of brutal regimes and old families, there was a more tangible separation between the worlds of the high and the low. Here, in the heart of Ashland, their interests flowed together like tributaries melding into one great river of humanity. At the least there were elements of good and innocent thrown among the bad, such that they stood out like diamonds amidst the coal dust.
At one street corner he saw and heard a souvenir vendor hand out keychains to a trio of children whose parents he knew to attend morning benedictions. Odovico found relief that he was yet unjaded enough to feel moved by their giddy joy.
Under a bus stop, a pair of young lovers nestled in each other's company, laughing at whatever they were watching on a phone screen. They were thoroughly within the world of their own love, distanced from the city's grime.
"Look," he whispered, barely uttering a breath as he directed Clementia's attention to a trio of musicians performing jazz under the Threlfall Tower. They listened for the time they were stopped at the light; both of them had heard these songs when they were the newest thing to hit the radio waves.
He held on to those few beautiful things, locking them firmly into the front of his mind... children's laughter, the happy sighs of lovers, and music would serve as a bulwark for the darkness they were to confront.
The Sedan dropped them off in front of a nondescript alleyway, one of many in Ashland's labyrinthine downtown. The smooth black stone of skyscrapers on either side sweated in the humidity, forming greasy puddles that slithered through grates under the street. A dumpster gravid with waterlogged trash had been neglected by the city for weeks; its black bags had burst, their rotten contents spilled along the ground like entrails
The alley was distinguished by a single neon-flashing sign about halfway down reading 'The Frail Maid'. Odovico had only ever entered drinking establishments after death had denied him a relationship with alcohol, and though he'd entered many in pursuit of prey they never failed to tug his heart toward despair. Here the mortals drank and pissed away their judgment, eroding the morality from their collective compass - they may have kept the Lancea busy, but the existence of such darkness was regrettable.
Such a place as this shouldn't have had this many patrons, not least of all because of its innocuous positioning. The floorboards creaked with mildew, cigarette smoke cast a reeking (and illegal!) pall through the air. Odovico surmised that one of the patrons at a table was quite dead.
Seeming unnoticed were those who slipped surreptitiously through a well-disguised door by knowing just where to press their fingers. Unseen amidst the throng, the elder Vampires followed the trickle of human heartbeats down a bare hallway into what looked like it might have once been a factory floor, now thoroughly defiled and known as the Pit.
The Pit... repugnant to every sense, physical and spiritual. The 'underground' fighting arena was at once barren yet overripe with stimulus, as Odovico could taste the spilled blood of many upon the air. Coiled around the tang of rusty iron corroded by the unavoidable humidity, it left an abusive flavor upon his tongue whenever he left
Ululating shrieks of bloodlust strained his sensitive hearing, and even Clementia seemed to shrink away from the unholy sounds. There were easily two hundred mortals in the crowd, all of them fixated on the raised concrete slab in the center of the factory floor, cordoned off by a cage. In that cage two men struggled, their bared fists beating a meaty percussion against each other.
The mortals' faces were somehow twisted and wild, distorted down here. Mouths gaped a little too wide, the shine of sweat had a slimy quality to it... their eyes were unsettling, pinpoint pupils like those of wild dogs.
The bishop's gaze was drawn to the pair of men lashing out at each other, seemingly absent of technique beyond the simple desire to break the other. A rotund, swarthy bald man was holding the other against the cage and pounding his ribs - his opponent, a similarly built man whose teak-dark skin shined with blood, broke free and lashed out for his nose.
The Vampire's sensitive hearing picked up the fracturing bone so clearly it may as well have cracked by his ear. He turned his lip up with disgust and circumvented the arena for a rusty metal staircase leading up to an unlit foreman's office. The door was guarded by a greasy ghoul carrying a submachine gun, one who actually saw the Bishop and his guardian... he responded by letting them in, tipping his head forward in deference.
When the door shut behind them both Clementia and Odovico allowed the shroud of arcaneunknowing to drop, revealing themselves to the rest of the Committee who had come earlier. Knowing Maksim's and Shira's foul proclivities, they'd come to actually watch and indulge in the blood sport... he recognized that gleeful glinter in Shira's azure gaze, and even Maksim's ever-present sunglasses did little to hide his reptilian cruelty. Isidoro watched with neutrality, but Odovico knew the wheels were constantly turning in his loathsome head.
"Perhaps at our next meeting you can spare Clementia and myself the ordeal that is this place," the Bishop suggested, voice thin with disgust
"And deny myself the pleasure of watching your holiness squirm?" Maksim answered with irreverence, not even bothering to peel his gaze from the violence.
The Bishop touched Clementia's hand to stall her (and his own) warlike reflex; after all, Kindred blood shed on the balmy concrete, or bodies turning to ash were the last things anybody desired. "You make our work in this city all the harder by feeding this canker of sin, which in turn makes it all the harder to minister the faith. Perhaps if you cleaned up your thrice-damned messes instead of endangering the Masquerade - "
"That's why we're here though, isn't it? To clean up a thrice-damned mess before it becomes a dumpster fire?" Isidoro interjected diplomatically.
Odovico's fingers clenched around the iron haft of his staff. Isidoro, repugnant thing that he was, proved right about most things. Other Kindred and those few humans who actually spotted him looked upon Odovico and recoiled, and such was the curse of the Nosferatu. Isidoro, also of that clan, inspired a different sort of sickness that even Odovico hadn't become inured to.
Bishop and Sister seated themselves at the round table in the VIP room with its one-way mirror window overlooking the Pit. A moment of tense quiet passed where all five elder undead watched the barefist combat below. During that time, Bishop Odovico's mind wandered toward the unsettling daymare he'd experienced... after a brief internal struggle he resolved to keep it secret.
"We have a problem," Maksim began, twining a gold chain between his fingers.
"A few problems," Shira added - her voice was, uncharacteristically, reserved and cool.
"Yes, all of which seems to trace back to a singular source," Isidoro quietly gurgled.
"Monroe Carter," Odovico uttered the name like a curse... one they'd thoroughly earned for themselves.
Clementia's silence shifted ever so subtly with a gentle touch of her steel mask.
"If I were to guess," Shira began again with resigned impatience, "sending the Carnifex - the clean, simple solution - is off the table for... whatever coward's reason this August committee will formulate."
"Of course it is," Odovico growled, irritated with Shira's simplistic thinking. "If you'd had the idea sooner perhaps we could have been rid of her without consequence, but none of you myopic nobles budged an inch from your own petty squabbling and indulgences." The Bishop often found himself in this position, scolding his fellows as if they were children.
"You and Mother Church benefit from my indulgences as much as anyone here, Bishop," Maksim answered shamelessly, gesturing loosely out into the arena where teeth were being knocked from mouths. "I could always end this and you could crawl back to your old masters in Rome for funding."
"Might I suggest we focus our attention on this Carter problem?" Isidoro didn't sound impatient, bemused rather at Pakhan Maksim's irreverence. "Another week of this tithe boycott nonsense and we could see a, hmm, far greater problem on our hands."
That silenced Odovico's slow-growing fury at Maksim, the weight of their collective secret pressing down upon him.
Another sepulcheral quiet passed between the elder Dead, whose unblinking gazes were turned once more toward the spectacle at the center of the Pit. "So. What do we do about her, if simply taking her dreadful little head is out of the question?" Shira broke the stillness within the room by rising from her seat like an uncoiling python to idly pace the length of the sparsely furnished foreman's office.
"All of you have worms' hearts." Maksim clenched a fistful of glittering chains as if strangling them. "They're neonates, their blood is barely thick enough to drink. If they step up to protect their dear leader, they can join her at the chopping block."
"I'll not have another backalley war over your poor planning," the Bishop warned, stabbing his crozius at the old Russian mobster in censure. "The ashes spilled by the Moon-Beasts are scarcely cold, and I know they still howl for revenge against us. What makes you think they'd not move in upon us in our hour of civil war and simply end us all?"
"We'd have to Embrace far more than we could easily control to replenish the lower ranks, should they rise up." Shira's caution in this case would have been unexpected, but Odovico knew it was her healthy fear of the Lupines that drove her caution.
"Typical fucking priest, condemning the inaction of others while offering no solution yourself," Maksim growled, throwing the chains down upon the table."Shit on my planning, Bishop? This little show we have, it was all your idea in the first place, you're the one who nailed the mask to Supay's face - "
"Do not utter its name!" Odovico warned, rising ponderously alongside Clementia who in a moment had gone from cenotaph-stillness to a state that bristled with threat, one even the Pakhan knew to fear.
The Pakhan never stood, only pushed his chair roughly back from the table. "Control your dog, I'd hate to have to put her down." The Bishop knew the threat to be hollow.
"Gentlemen, allies, come now, come." Isidoro's swampy voice settled over them like a bog cloud, weighing them down rather than bringing peace. " Sanguinis obstricti sumus, non
The Blood binds us
It was enough of a reminder of their place in unlife that they fell from each other's throats and reflected on the shared nature of their fates.
"It's more like a chain at this point," Shira muttered, halting her pacing step to look at the rest of them with bitter bemusement
"Indeed, and should it break, we'll all drop into a certain Methuselean maw that will suck us and everyone else down." Isidoro picked up a wafer-flat tablet, tapping its screen and illuminating his pale face. The rest of them watched warily; he'd always been the most adept with modern technology, no matter the era. He turned the tablet screen toward them, giving them a few seconds to process.
"The hell am I looking at?" Lady Shira drew closer and leaned forward on the other end of the table.
Odovico narrowed his pit-like eyes beneath his transparent veil, wondering the same. The image on the tablet looked to him like some sort of freshly opened letter on elegant red cardstock. "Dearest family," he read to himself, "you are hereby cordially invited to - "
"You're actually giving them what they want? You can't be serious," Maksim deadpanned.
"What do we have to lose by allowing the Syndicate to appear gathered before us?" Isidoro responded, sliding the tablet across the table for the former Boyar to take
"Everything." Lady Shira sounded suspicious, though less flabbergasted than Maksim who rarely saw the true meaning behind Isodoro's actions. "Our standing, our reputation with the ancillae... surely I don't have to actually remind you, Isidoro, that it is reverence - "
"Fear," Odovico pointed out sharply.
" - by which we maintain order." The Daeva threw the Bishop a simpering glance of distaste, one he returned with a dry-lipped glower.
"His Holiness has the right of it." Isidoro sometimes reminded Odovico of a long-winded salesman, leading them along a path from skeptical indignation to quiet revelation. "The currency by which we keep our Amazonian friend at peace is the blood of our inferiors, but it is by their fear that we buy their acquiescence."
"Well don't keep us all waiting dammit. How will you maintain our investment in their terror if we allow them to parade their little Syndicate through our halls?" Maksim demanded.
"My fine Pakhan, your time-blackened heart is yet as innocent as a lamb's." That provoked a harsh bark of laughter from Shira and Maksim; Clementia, seated once again by Odovico, appeared as unamused as the Bishop. "No doubt you're all familiar with the Roman practice of Decimation... yes?"
Clementia and the Bishop exchanged their unease. Decimation had been fashionable among the nobles of Capua when they'd drawn breath and walked beneath the sun. The price for failure among soldiers, and even serfs, was to execute one of every ten of their number, randomly selected by sortition. Odovico began to understand just what was being suggested here.
"Gathered in one secured place, liberated of their arms, jubilantly assuming their night of victory is finally here... a mere sacrifice of three Neonates on our part and theirs, and then... Order." Isidoro spread his fingers ghoulishly at them.
The thought of actually ending three Requiems sat poorly with Odovico, who viewed this shadowy state of monstrous existence as a second chance to serve as part of God's plan. Vampires were an exceedingly rare breed, with perhaps a handful past seventy in Pomdufond Parish, only about fifty of which dwelled under the suzerainty of the Overseers and the Church.
A loss of one was bound to be a setback in their duty to God's plan. Still... the price they would pay if the Blood stopped flowing into their mouths would be far more than mere starvation on the Elders' part. Shira, Maksim, Isidoro, Clementia and he had their own tithe to pay.
Odovico cleared his dry throat. "How is a random selection of dead Younglings of any benefit to us? How would this even take care of the Monroe Carter problem, whom we cannot allow to become a martyr?"
"I cannot exercise Clan or Family rights over her, something to do with that damnable Charter of theirs," Shira complained... typical of that foolish trollop, unable to see beyond simple force and coercion. "What about living family? Friends outside her little club? A lover, perhaps?"
"I'd expect you to know as her grandsire." Odovico had grown tired of her vicious stupidity years ago. "Besides, the time for that would have been before she desecrated the cathedral and spilled an entire week's tithe on the marble."
"The Bishop is correct I'm afraid," Isidoro added carefully. "Even that, though, has a solution."
Odovico's own shadowy Beast stirred; always there, rarely voicing its needs as he'd learned to live in concert with that part of his psyche, the issue of Monroe Carter had unsettled it. "What, then, is your solution, fellow Haunt?"
After the other Nosferatu had explained his plan to bring low Monroe Carter and they had argued pettily amongst each other over the details, Bishop Odovico and Sister Clementia returned to Saint Eleanor's Cathedral. He could tell from her gait that she was carrying the same cold in her stomach as he, and instinctively they were drawn to the side-altar that only they could perceive
Their movements were as in-sync as could be, given the ruinous state of his body and the post-mortum perfection of Clementia's, kneeling before the statue of Saint Hizara behind a curtain of Obfuscation. While their hearts and minds had been irrevocably altered by the Embrace and the passage of centuries, guilt was so deeply rooted in their psyches as to remain unaltered. He clasped his hands together, preemptively seeking divine forgiveness. The sin they were to commit against three Neonates whose only noteworthy crimes had been seeking reprieve from tyranny ate at him, but far worse was the fate awaiting Monroe Carter.
"O loving and gracious God, have mercy," he began in a low voice.
Have mercy, oh Lord, Clementia echoed, her breath barely audible behind her mask.
"Have pity upon me, a damned creature of the Night, and relieve the burden of my sin."
For this sin is most burdensome, oh Lord.
"For though purity shall never be mine again, even as I walk in your Shadow, I hunger eternally for your absolution."
Absolve me, oh Lord.
"I am an unclean and undeserving thing, yet still I beg you to cleanse me."
I debase myself for you, oh Lord.
"The shameful deeds I have committed haunt me through the night, they scourge me through the day."
It hurts, oh Lord.
"But it is for the cruelty I am about to commit, to preserve your peace, that I call for pity."
I don't want to do this to her, oh Lord.
Odovico's chest twisted. "Please, oh Almighty God, accept this penance which I offer to thee." Clementia understood, rising to retrieve a collection of steel cables, wrapped with barbed wire and clasped by a handle. The Bishop exposed his back to her as he knelt.
It was, after all, only fitting that he should suffer the same punishment that they, as an Overseer Committee, were about to mete out.
"God have mercy upon her," he whispered as Clementia raised the scourge. He screamed when she brought it down, forcing himself to stare at Saint Hizara's placid stone visage.
As the delirious pain overwhelmed his ailing thoughts, the marble-carved statue's face transformed into a featureless, burnished mask of iron.
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