Chapter 2
Feeling distinctly rebellious, Taylor desperately wanted to take up the deacon's offer and use his phone to try and contact… anyone.
The police came to mind, her grandparents were a distant second, the PRT, perhaps, if only to scream at them. But at the same time she honestly had no idea what use any of that would actually have. As, at the end of spending about three hours trying to cry, the teenager had found that tears simply did not come.
So she complied with her benefactor's request.
Neryessa had insisted she not contact anyone until they'd had time to speak again, as something had called the rather
eccentric woman away. What it was, the teenager had no idea, but it had resulted in the kindly sisters of Immaculata taking in a wayward soul. Wanting something other than to stew in her thoughts, a series of events had ended up with Taylor doing her best to vacuum the nave of her savior's apparent residence.
"That's enough dear. The area is clean enough. Come have breakfast."
Deacon O'Mally of the Blessed Mother's Church of Penance was the only male member of the staff of Immaculata High School and Deacon of the school's quite functional church. And he had managed to hobble over to her, tap the teenager on her shoulder, and quite politely ignore her yelp. All to let her know that she'd finished her requested task… even if she'd only covered about a quarter of the space inside.
"Sure."
Following behind the older man, she stepped forwards when he stumbled slightly, but found that he was more than happy to gently wave her on. Hesitant, she complied, stopping and holding the doors of the church open for him before loaning the still smiling deacon her arm as they went down a few short stairs.
Out of breath, the old man sat down on a small bench set perhaps five yards in front of the church.
They were painted metal, set under a covered pathway that led from the front of the church to a fork in a brick path - a cluster of administrative buildings one way, the school facilities the other. Hardly a comfortable place for a man pushing seventy to rest.
Not that the old timer seemed the sort to complain as, soon enough, he stood back up and began to slowly make his way towards a cafeteria. He didn't suggest Taylor go on again, nor did she hover overly close, the two choosing to more or less silently make their way onwards as a pair. And hardly an unusual one, considering the nature of the place they were in, so the few people that were out and about by now hardly gave them more than a moment's look.
Their silent walk lasted the rest of the way.
Taylor was thankful.
It helped.
How? She wasn't entirely sure. But part of her throat seemed to be stuck in her mouth and there was something in her stomach that seemed to be too hot and too cold at the same time. Even just walking made her feel light, airy, like she was sick and high at the same time.
The silence… helped.
As for the cafeteria itself, it was a low, long building with several wooden tables set in two rows. A number of nuns, lay staff, and school staff seemed to be helping themselves to food set out in the same metal pans Taylor herself was served from at Winslow.
'Food definitely looks better.'
Surprisingly enough, the low chatter stilled immediately and the teenager chose to tell herself that it was out of respect for Deacon O'Mally.
"So, Father."
"Yes, child?"
"Do you actually speak any Irish?"
That got a low chuckle.
"Not a lick of it, my dear, and I speak six different languages. Now, go get something to eat. I must speak with the Mother Superior."
Complying, for want of anything else to do with herself, Taylor helped herself to bacon, eggs, toast. And standing in front of an entire shelf of teas, she picked a packet of Twinnings' Earl Grey. Standing there, watching the electric kettle boil the water, she counted bubbles as they popped into existence. None of them lasted very long and without a doubt it was silly, but she couldn't help but wish she'd been back at home, boiling a few tea bags in a pot, and leaving out a tall mug for… everyone.
It also gave her plenty of time to wait for one of the tables to clear out. Mostly because it would be weird to sit at a lunch table with a bunch of adults.
Again, that is what she repeatedly insisted to herself.
'I wonder if I'm getting good at that?'
Despite her thoughts, the teenager still felt off. Like there was a balled fist somewhere between her heart and her stomach.
Sipping the hot leaf juice, slurping a little to keep from burning herself, the heat and almost angry bitterness was good. Better than the food that was bland. Oh, there was a taste, in fact she was pretty sure that the bacon was the premium cut deli kind. But it simply didn't register.
The food simply had all the flavor of soggy cardboard.
So the tea was good, more filling than the food too.
In the end, her plastic fork was left forgotten, a small stirring stick and the bitter coffee her only companions. Thoughts, heavy and obvious, ran through her.
Mostly she wanted her mom and her dad.
It wasn't a sharp pain, instead, as she thought about never seeing either of them alive it was like she had the flu. A bone deep pain that filled up her insides, a bruise in her bones and under her skin, swallowed up the shame she felt at not being able to cry.
Thoughts about Sophia came too. Surprisingly Emma didn't matter all that much. Her betrayal paled in comparison to multiple murder.
'Attempted murder? What did Sophia do?'
Suddenly, something splashed into her tea.
A tear, fat and heavy, rolled down her cheek.
Taylor wasn't crying, in fact she wasn't making any noise at all. Her shoulders moved and more tears were falling from her eyes but there wasn't any room inside of her for grief. No, there was only the bone-bruise and a ball of fire in her gut. And it was all too, too much.
So when a middle aged woman in a habit sat down next to her, pulling her into a tight, one armed hug, there was no will to resist.
And still more tears fell into her tea.
Feeling deeply conflicted, the young woman was confused as to how she could proceed.
"I truly am sorry. It's right after Christmas and we clear out all the donation boxes. So unless you're sure you don't want to see if you can borrow a shirt…."
"No." Aware that her clipped answer was a smidge rude, Taylor forced a smile. "Thank you, Sister Min." The Chinese expat gave her a small smile in return, far less stilted than her own. "I'll pick something."
"Then I'll leave you to change."
And just like that, the nun was gone, leaving the teenager an almost painfully unenviable selection of clothes to choose from.
Sitting before her was a massive, as in XXXXXL, orange shirt, a tie died abomination that still stank of pot after being washed repeatedly, a pink and blue abomination that had a cartoon on it she wasn't exactly eager to be repping, and… a nun's tunic. Only part of the habit, it lacked an apron, veil, wimple, or other accoutrements, and was, more or less, a simple black dress.
"Am I really considering the tunic?"
Murmuring to herself, for want of anyone else to speak too, Taylor rubbed her face in her hands. She was glad that they'd found jeans and socks that would fit her. But that was more because a good belt made most things fit. So, unwilling to be rude any further, especially when one of the other nuns had run to a Walmart and picked up things that weren't exactly the sort of things you wanted as hand me downs, she chose what was by far the simplest option.
All while she was passed out on a stranger's bed - one of the sisters having brought her back to the guest room in Father O'Mally's house and gotten her to sleep, however fitfully, for several hours.
"Who thought a new toothbrush would make me feel guilty as all Hell?"
Biting her lip, and unable to keep from looking around, several conflicting feelings, many common to lapsed Catholics, filled up the wayward girl as she made a small prayer of apology. Her faith might be… severely lacking, but that didn't mean she wanted to curse in a Deacon's house.
One thirty minute shower later and a solid twenty minutes of additional arguing with herself and Taylor was dressed.
In a nun's tunic.
Thankfully the belt was completely normal and it was more than she could have asked for.
So, as ready to face the day as she ever would be, the now orphaned girl stepped out of her room.
"Hello, my child." Father O'Mally, sitting at his kitchen table, nursed a glass of whiskey. "Take a seat?"
Frowning, because his tone of voice was sad. The same way her father's voice had been sad when he told her Mom was dead. But she genuinely couldn't think what news he had for her.
"Is everything ok?" She asked.
"Sit. Please?"
Swallowing, she complied, and the old priest poured a generous serving of liquor into a second glass, one she hadn't noticed before, and knocked the rest of his back.
"Bourbon, before you ask, no Midleton, but you Americans are good enough." When she didn't drink he poured himself a second helping and, looking tired, asked a question she didn't expect. "So, do you know
what your 'benefactor' is?"
Confused, Taylor took a moment to sniff the glass before she grimaced and sat the liquor down.
"Are you asking if she's a villain? Because I don't… think so."
Though, now that she thought about it, nothing at all about Neryessa said she was a hero, either. More like she was eccentric, in the way people who were stupidly rich were eccentric instead of insane. But poor mental health was probably not restricted to just the bad guys. Especially considering her own current and past conditions.
"It would be much simpler if she were simply playing cops and robbers. No, she,
it, is quite simply Evil." Sipping his second drink, the old priest elaborated. "Capital E intended, as you kids say. What she is, is inhuman. And the reason she has taken residence under the church is, quite simply, because it is not in my power to refuse her entry."
Surprised and even more confused, she couldn't help but defend her savior.
"If she's so evil, then why did she save me?"
Now seeming almost patronizing, Father O'Mally simply responded with another question.
"Did she? Really?"
Now quite angry, Taylor grabbed her throat.
"Yeah. Neryessa did. I had a crossbow bolt sticking out of my
neck from where a
Ward shot me!"
Holding up his hand, giving her a sad smile, the old man simply asked one final question.
"So how did she heal your throat?"
"Obviously it's part of her power." Even as the words left her mouth, the schoolgirl knew that couldn't really be true. "But wait. Isn't she a Mover?" Making a go on gesture, the priest encouraged her to move on. "So she's not a Tinker. Maybe a Trump? That would be how she healed me and fought Sophia."
"Trump? Ah. The one whose powers change. I do suppose that is a technically correct explanation."
Standing in the priest's kitchen, perfectly still and wearing that strange military uniform, now complete with a saber at her side, was Taylor's savior.
"Though if you had questions, I would be willing to answer your questions, priest."
Screwing his eyes shut, the old man seemed terrified. And now feeling ashamed of her earlier actions, the teenager reached across the table they were sitting at and took O'Mally's shaking hand. It seemed pitiful, but her host was glad for it with how tightly he squeezed Taylor's fingers, and she was glad to be able to help him too. Doubly so because the young woman owed him at least that much.
"How did you get inside my house?"
His voice was firm and there was no hint of the priest's trembling in his words.
"You left a window open." Neryessa spoke, seemingly totally at ease. "Considering what I have learned of this city, that seems most unwise."
Neither adult said anything at that point, with the Catholic deacon almost sullen in silent defiance, and the too-perfect parahuman so utterly still Taylor was sure the older woman wasn't breathing. Of course that was rather secondary; finding her father, no matter what state he might be in, was still the child's sole concern.
"Um."
So she spoke up.
"Are we still going to… find my dad?"
Something in the woman's posture softened and she took a few, jerky steps forward. O'Mally, tensing up, moved to seemingly protect the black haired girl he'd taken into his home, but was simply unable to rise. Still holding his hand, she tried to reach out, to grab him before he hit his head on the table or the ground, but having been utterly focused on the new, strange woman in front of her, Taylor simply hadn't been paying much attention at all.
Falling forwards as he tried to stand up, the old man nearly slipped from his chair and began to fall forwards. Moving so fast that her eyes were unable to perceive Neryessa's body as anything other than a flicker of color, the woman caught the priest before he hit the ground, before his hand could even fully leave the teenager's own, replaced him in his chair, and returned to where she had been standing.
As eerily still as before.
Taylor had no idea what the Hell she should do.
"In regards to Daniel, there are a few things you should know." Continuing as if nothing had happened, the woman spoke, her accent seemingly growing increasingly more foreign as she did - as if the very act of speaking naturally was something she was re-learning. "And the first thing is that I strongly suspect he is still alive."
This time O'Mally's hand finally slipped free and, other than making sure the still silent and once again sweating Deacon wasn't having a stroke or a heart attack, as best she could anyways, Taylor focused utterly and solely on her savior.
"What do you mean you 'suspect he is still alive'?"
"When I reached out into the Shadowlands, I found no trace of his passing, nor could I find his soul when I called to it. He is, I believe, both alive and well hidden, likely so that he may hunt that which attacked you, as the only other option is that someone else has captured his soul and taken it beyond my range to connect."
Opening her mouth, nothing came out, and so Taylor shut it again. She repeated this a few more times as various things ticked over in her mind, all until she reached a final conclusion.
"Either you're a mini-Eidolon or you're… not a Cape, are you?"
Neryessa politely tilted her head.
"I am not an eidolon, no, though if there is a man named Eidolon nor, do I suspect, I am anything like him. But I do
have a cape. Is there a significant difference between that and
being a cape?"
"She's a vampire." O'Mally, having rallied, seemingly forced the words out. "A living dead. A child of the Dragon." His face was flushed, like he was pushing against something, and trying to force the words out. "And I am no slave!"
There was a small burst of light. Not so much a flash, as an impression of the sensation of light pressing against her eyelids, like the idea of light was triggering the nerves in her eyes even as nothing physically happened.
Gasping for air, the priest was holding his knees, having gone pale from whatever act of metaphysical defiance this was and Neryessa, despite the seeming antagonism, smiled.
That was when the fangs came out.
"Yes, my child, I am a daughter of Cain. However distant that claim might be, it is true, though I am no Tremere, nor a Tzmisce to claim kinship with a dragon." Speaking solely to Taylor, the apparently insane woman, because the thought she was a vampire was genuinely
insane, stepped a little closer. "And your mother was my precious servant. It is why I returned to this city and why I rose from torpor to save you. Now." She held out her hand. "Let us go find your father."
"I…." Her hand seemed to move on its own, reaching out to Neryessa. "Let me…." Hesitating, trying to find any excuse not to go, even if her hand was still trying to reach out to the parahuman in front of her, the somewhat panicked teen finally came up with an excuse. "Let me get the priest some aspirin first! Just to make sure."
Letting her arm fall back to her side, the hand almost moving in a perfect arc and coming to a stop without a hint of momentum, the woman simply nodded.
In her eyes there was a hint of something that made Taylor afraid. She thought there might have been hunger, pride, possession. Like the parahuman was looking at a faberge egg, or one of da Vinci's paintings.
'Or a particularly juicy steak.'
Finding a glass and O'Mally's medicine cabinet was simple enough and setting the glass down, she instead chose a chilled bottle of water. In fact, she took her time to choose from amongst a number of different kinds of drinks. It was so bad that Taylor had to pinch herself to stop prevaricating. So, deciding it was time to put her big girl pants on, she grabbed the water bottle, the bottle of pills, and turned around to face the insane cape.
"So. Can you find my dad?"
Taylor, currently in Neryessa's arms, found her benefactor neither flew, nor did she run. Instead, the alleged vampiress bounded. Each motion of her legs
pushed against the ground, launching her forwards with a long, arcing motion. Even then, when the woman moved, her body didn't act like a normal person's would either - as there was a sort of inertia or weight to each movement.
Having considered what powers might create something like this, gravity powers were considered and dismissed. She'd simply never heard of a hero, villain, or vigilante that had a power set even somewhat comparable to what she'd seen. Myrrdin and Eidolon came to mind, but the former simply wasn't even comparable, and the latter was one of the Triumvirate. And, to make things worse, that was seemingly where Neryessa stood.
She had at least Brute, Mover, and Master ratings, perhaps Stranger and Trump ratings too.
"To answer your question, yes, I'm actually quite experienced with Church Latin, but, ah, Classical Latin, I think you call it, is far more familiar to me. That, several dialects of Greek and Punic, Italian, French, Spanish, German, English, a few bits and pieces of Russian, though few learn the tongue out of fear of Baba Yaga, some Romanian, very little Japanese, and Four mainland dialects of Chinese. Before my last torpor I had begun to learn Arabic, so perhaps I shall continue to study that tongue too, when we have the time."
Maybe Thinker powers on top of all that, because the older woman spoke with absolute confidence.
"Huh." She responded, the peak of eloquence. "That's a lot."
The statuesque woman, literally, as her skin looked more like marble than not, simply demurred.
"Not particularly."
It was less a dismissal of her response and more simple acceptance. So much so that Taylor genuinely believed the woman spoke those languages. If only because the sheer power she possessed and the nonchalance with which she wielded it made lying seem… beneath her.
More objectively, the fact that she was so convinced bothered the teenager as, other than a few
very scattered memories, Neryessa was an utter stranger to her.
'And willing to Master O'Mally too.'
Right now the teenager, still clasped in her savior's arms, was soaring from building to building. Each leap easily cleared a dozen yards in the time it would have taken her to take a step and the cape didn't even bother looking, merely landing on a ledge or outcropping or pillar before flying off again. To say they moved quickly was an understatement.
Cars were left behind, whole blocks were crossed, and they were on the other side of the city, back in front of Taylor's house, and settling down on the far end of the street before the teenager could figure out another awkward question to ask.
"Huh. That's a lot of police tape."
Several houses down, around the corner from where they'd landed, a police cruiser sat in front of her home. Her home which now had long rolls of yellow police tape wrapped from end to end across their front door. She could see the luminescent tape in the light of the one good street lamp left.
Something about it seemed to… deeply annoy her. Which was odd, because honestly Taylor should be terrified and confused. But right now she felt a heavy, pressing sense of mild annoyance. The obvious conclusion, considering that there was a Master standing right next to her, happened to be that the feelings weren't hers. But even as she intellectually understood that the feeling of safety and familiarity that grew with each passing moment was likely artificial, that did not change the fact she felt that way.
"Come, child."
And just like that, the self proclaimed vampiress was off. Even worse she totally ignored anyone that might have been able to see them, walking right past the police cruiser and up onto the drive.
"Hey, hold up ma'am!"
Stumbling out of his car, coffee in one hand, clearly surprised by the sudden appearance of an armed woman, the patrol officer tried to get Neryessa's attention.
"Ma'am!"
She didn't even turn around.
Taylor, who had been left by the woman's determined stride, simply came over to the now annoyed police officer and coughed. He looked over his shoulder, at first surprised, then deeply confused.
"Ms. Hebert?"
Grimacing, she nodded.
"Yeah, uh, yes sir." Pointing to the woman she'd been with, the teenager did what she figured was best for all of them. "She's a cape and this is all way above your pay grade. So maybe just forget you saw us?"
For a moment he looked deeply conflicted, brows furrowed, before the officer spoke.
"Are you ok? Safe?"
Nodding, Taylor turned and looked at the woman politely standing in front of her door.
"No godly idea. But I don't think there's much anyone can do one way or the other."
There was several more moments of silence between the two before the cop grunted.
"Fucking capes." The look of conflict had become one of anger and, before he did anything… unwise, Taylor put her hand on his arm.
"Perhaps. But I'll be ok for tonight. Just finish your shift and go home, ok? Cape business doesn't involve normal people."
What went unspoken was that until the night before, she had been one of those normal people.
"For what it's worth, I'm sorry."
And with that the officer got back into his car, turned off the interior light, and drank his coffee. A tiny part of her resented him for that, that he could just go back to a normal life. Mostly, though, Taylor was thankful he'd even thought to try. It was more than most. And she had recently come to the conclusion she should be rather thankful for what she had.
What she wasn't thankful for, however, was the state of the house.
Now, it wasn't like she lived in poverty or lacked a proper home. Her father would work himself to death if he ever thought he wasn't providing enough for them. But there was only so much that you could do for such an old house. Things that needed time and effort, not just money to put together. So skipping over the bad step, she pushed the door open and pulled down the police tape, showing her savior inside.
But once inside there were small things that bothered her.
A thin layer of dust over the counter. Something she could have cleaned up in ten seconds. The cobwebs over at the right upper corner, right where the cabinets formed a corner, were particularly annoying.
She'd planned to clean it up yesterday but got sidetracked preparing breakfast.
The dishes they left over at the kitchen sink and the fact her schoolbag was just sitting in a chair. Never mind the pair of socks she wished she'd been able to put on during the attack.
Small things that piled up made Taylor wish the ground would swallow her and spare her the embarrassment of walking the clearly upper class woman into the lumpy couch by the slightly chipped dinner table or the rug that was due a good cleaning but was put off for nearly a month now. All of which was made worse by the clear signs of struggle and the blood and even a few spent shell casings and the broken glass.
'She doesn't fit in.'
Like hanging a famous painting at a garage sale.
The lack of… everything around her only seemed to accentuate the divide.
Shame the teenager had never felt before had started to bubble in her gut. Face burning with a feeling she often associated with being put on the spot by a teacher, or being caught with her hand in the proverbial cookie jar. Only it was worse. Hundreds of times worse. It felt like she was disappointing an important guest.
"Wait." Pinching herself, she tried to refocus. To push down these strange, alien feelings that seemed to come from the same place that… heat had been before. "Why do I feel like this?"
Neryessa walked over to her, eyes washing over the room with a modicum of interest, and only stopping on a small picture of Annette stuck to their fridge by a magnet.
"The blood bond is beginning to form. It will come and go." Speaking over her shoulder, the older woman seemed utterly unconcerned. "Eventually."
Engrossed with the picture, the woman didn't seem to notice when a soft tap-tap came from the living room. Worried that it was Sophia, Taylor moved towards the front door, throat frozen at the sudden flash of remembered pain grabbed at her. The terrified teenager tried to call out, only for a far more welcome shape to make itself known.
"Daddy!"
Her father, clearly heavily injured, with several scratches on his face, suddenly jerked his gun up as Taylor started to run to him.
"Daddy?"
Scared for an entirely new reason, she watched as a mixture of sorrow, regret, and eventually shame came over her father. But only in his eyes. His face remained like stone, his hand did not shake, and there was clearly part of him screaming out to shoot.
"Fuck."
And like that his gun was down.
"I don't care. Come here baby."
His arms were wide and he, still scared, but desperate for her father's embrace far more than she was terrified, Taylor ran to him.
"Shh, shh. It's gonna be ok."
She hadn't even realized she was crying, but when she did, the young girl couldn't help but begin to bawl. Even then, she could still feel her father's gun, and his arm snapped back up, the revolver now aimed at Neryessa. Something she could only just barely make out through the tears.
"So." He spoke, loud enough to be heard over the sobs. "Is my daughter still human?"
"H-human? Wh-what do you mean?" Only ever more confused, she forced the words out, even as continued to cry. Release and joy so intensely filling her up that the false shame that had just been eating at her was utterly subsumed.
"No." The parahuman had moved so that her silhouette was framed by the living room's entrance. "She was already wounded by the time I found her. Had I not intervened and made her a ghoul, she would have died from a crossbow bolt to the throat."
"W-What?" Danny stuttered, his face finally turning to horror as he pulled Taylor even tighter.
Quirking a perfectly sculpted eyebrow, the older woman hummed in thought.
"Would you rather I regale you with the visceral details? I assure you that without intervention, your daughter wouldn't have made it. Consider it a gift of sorts. Or just a whim."
Her father looked like he'd swallowed a lemon.
"You want her to replace Annette."
Still frustratingly lost, the girl in question could only try to follow the two adults as her father seemed to become sullen and angry, protectively holding her to his chest, even as the revolver remained aimed directly at Neryessa's head.
"And you were incapable of protecting her." The cape said. "So the simple truth is that there is a debt. Once it is repaid I shall give her the same liberty I offered her mother." Each word seemed to cut deep into her father, and once again Taylor cursed the fact she had
no idea what was happening. "Ignorance is no defense and I would not have her remain a victim."
The gun fell.
"I can't stop you. And… I can't do anything to protect you either." Her father had collapsed, just like he had after her mother had died. "I'm so, so sorry, Little Owl. I've failed you."
She didn't say anything.
Instead, Taylor buried her face in her father's jacket, this time thankfully only smearing tears on him, and hugged him with every bit of strength she could muster.
"Love you, Daddy."
"Love you too."
For some reason, these words seemed terribly final.