ldyofshadows
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« on: November 06, 2009, 10:58:07 AM » |
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I'm feeling especially brave...or suicidal right now. This is a lil' over 5 pages b/c it gets through the introduction (sort of) all three main chars and the world itself. Look forward to hearing something, good or bad.
The planned 45th Anniversary Gala of the Bureau of Non-Human Species had been the talk of Tampa for more than six months. Plates ran between a thousand and fifteen hundred a head; all funds gathered were being donated to the Red Cross. The Bureau, more so than memories of the Great Coming Out, was a monument to the fact that the non-human races, vampires, mages, weres, dhampires and half-demons, no longer had to hide their differences from the humans. Instead they were protected under the laws just as humans were. The Bureau served two main purposes: it gave the humans a sense of being protected against the non-humans, with its Investigator unit so non-humans could capture and bring in non-humans. Its primary focus was to serve the non-humans though, so there was a licensing unit for the mages after they had undergone training in their powers, a registration service for vampires to ease access to blood supplies, along with other units more applicable to the weres, dhampires and half-demons.
The air on the evening of the Gala was heavy, thick with the threat of rain that hadn’t fallen. Athdara MacKechnie, head liaison to the vampire’s Council of Nine, was running late. She’d been expected at the Gala by seven thirty at the latest to mingle and celebrate at the instruction of the Bureau’s director, Grant Price. Her attendance at the function was mandatory as she was also one of the two guests of honor at the function, in commemoration of her part both in the Great Coming Out of the 1920’s when the non-humans finally made their presence known to the humans and her part in getting the Bureau established during the Civil Rights movement of the 1950’s and 1960’s.
As she pulled her Mercedes convertible up to the valet parking attendant at the Imperial Hotel, she glanced at her niece, Sarah Hensley. “You do know I hate you for making me come, right?”
“Now dear,” the elderly woman said comfortingly, “You like parties.”
Sarah was the descendant of Caila, Athdara’s half-sister, and had lived with her since Athdara had gone to France during World War II to rescue her after her parents died. No one and nothing was more important than her niece and so she’d grudgingly consented to attend the Gala. But even Sarah hadn’t been able to convince her to go until after she’d satisfied her fear that the other guest of honor, the founder of Savage Enterprises, was sending the current CEO of the corporation in his stead. Anthony Caldwell, one of the oldest vampires known, had founded the company in the early 1930’s. It had grown into an international conglomeration on the strength of its research division, SRI, which had focused solely on research and development to meet the needs and demands of the non-humans of the world. Savage was also responsible for funding a great deal of the Bureau’s activities, relieving the American tax-payers of some of the burden for the Bureau.
Athdara hated no one more in the world than she the arrogant billionaire, who most saw as a philanthropist and playboy since he’d stepped down from position as CEO seventeen years earlier. She had had the misfortune of knowing him when she was human. Only a very small group of people were privy to how she had known the bastard. It was her darkest shame, that she’d been his mistress, especially in light of the fact that he’d slaughtered the young twin boys she’d always considered her brothers when she’d ended their two-year arrangement.
Smiling politely at the attendant who’d opened her car door, she took his hand and stepped out of the car. Sarah had picked out the dress especially for tonight, not willing to trust the disaster that was Athdara’s fashion sense, and she supposed it was flattering enough. The gown was dark green silk, with a full skirt, high collar and long-sleeves. She never wore anything that would reveal skin below her chin into public. Too many questions might be asked, although she accepted that she was probably overly sensitive about the subject.
Waiting for Sarah to join her at the entrance to the hotel, Athdara looked out over the parking lot. It was filled with expensive cars and limousines, testament to the exclusive A-list caliber expected attendees. Having looked at the list, she knew there were three US Senators, fourteen Representatives, the state’s governor, along with numerous celebrities expected. The proof of so many famous faces being expected had been in the barricade she’d had to drive through that the Bureau had gotten permission to put up to keep the members of the media at bay. A few select journalists had been invited as well, to satisfy the media hounds.
Putting on her public face, she stepped through the doors and led her niece through the lobby toward the ballroom where the Gala was actually taking place. Deirdre Hensley, normally the day-time receptionist at the Bureau, had been drafted at the last minute to check off guests as they arrived. She was Sarah’s granddaughter, and like Sarah, was clearly related to Athdara. They all shared the same basic facial features, although Sarah’s hair in her youth and Deidre’s currently were black compared to the deep copper hue of the vampire’s. The hair was attributed to Athdara’s Scottish father, who Caila had not shared, but Athdara had inherited the luminous green eyes of their infamous mother, the courtesan L’Emeraude. Deidre beamed as she saw them, studied her list and nodded before turning to the caller next to her and whispering their names.
As the pair stepped into the glittering ballroom, their names were called out to the assemblage. That touch had been Director Price’s, insisting he wanted the affair to have an old-world touch, from an era when parties routinely made announcements as their guests arrived. Athdara had vigorously debated the point but in the end had lost. Giving those guests that looked in her direction the brilliant smile that had graced more than one magazine cover, she headed for the nearest waiter she saw.
Sarah broke off from her to find their assigned seats in the dining hall. Athdara knew they would be toward the front of the second room, hated it but accepted the way it was. It hadn’t mattered to the committee deciding who their two honorees would be that there had been hundreds involved in the process of bringing non-humans to the forefront of human attention. Somehow she’d been the one who got noticed, who had testified before Congress during the push to get the Bureau established. All she’d ever wanted was to make the world a little safer, for humans and non-humans alike, not the fame or infamy that had come with the efforts.
She snatched a glass from the tray the waiter was carrying and sniffed it cautiously. Blood/champagne cocktails were not her favorite, but it would have to do. Nothing less than a couple fifths of scotch would ease her nerves that night. The same vampiric metabolism and biological functions that kept them physically at the age they were converted also made it very difficult to become drunk on regular types of alcohol. She spied Grant across the room and as she sipped the drink, she wound her way through the room, stopping from time to time to talk with guests.
As she reached the director’s side, she frowned up at him. He was impeccably attired in a black tuxedo, and even in his early fifties he was a handsome man. “You know I’m still not talking to you for this, right?”
He grinned down at the petite redhead. Athdara was no more than five foot four barefoot compared to his nearly six foot frame, but she turned more heads than he did usually. “Of course not.” Grant appreciated lovely women, as most men did, and Athdara was precisely that. She’d been converted in her mid twenties, so retained eternal youth and had watched Grant progress over the past fifteen years from a unit chief to deputy director and finally four years ago Director of the Bureau. She’d remained in the same position she’d held since rejoining the Bureau fifteen years ago, vampire liaison, because she didn’t want more attention than she had to. She’d been asked by the former director to put in her application for the position of director, but had refused. That hadn’t stopped Grant from trying to push her into the role of deputy director though.
“Good turn out,” she muttered, looking back over the crowd. “Sorry for being late.”
“The main event isn’t until eight. Harry Myers from Savage isn’t here yet,” he commented.
Harry had taken the reins when Caldwell had stepped down seventeen years earlier, presumably to move on to other interests. She’d met the striking mage on more than one occasion in her work for the Bureau. They were putting the final touches on a merger of the Bureau’s research division and SRI, and because of her position as Grant’s de-facto deputy director, she’d been pulled into it. Harry Myers was just one of hundreds of examples of just why she’d helped bring the non-humans out of the shadows.
Prior to the Great Coming Out, the non-humans had frequently been at each other’s throats because they were beyond the laws of humanity and there were great species rivalries. The vampires of course thought they were top of the food chain, looking down on everyone else as a food source and were traditional enemies of almost everyone. Mages thought they were special, with powers ranging from telepathy and telekinesis to true spell powers. The dhampires, which many considered hybrid human/vampire crosses, unfortunately, had been everyone’s favorite scapegoat. They were neither as strong nor as fast as a vampire, but were longer-lived than the humans with some of the telepathic gifts of vampires and mages. The weres – no one had dealt much with the weres until the Coming Out because the weres had preferred to remain in the wild, far from the influence of mankind.
Sipping her drink, she sighed. “I’m only staying until after the ceremony, Grant. You got me here, I’ll make my little speech, and then I’m leaving.”
He patted her shoulder comfortingly. “If you can speak in front of Congress and convince them to create an entire bureau that they really didn’t want to create, you can deal with a little appreciation, Dara. It’s only one night and then you can disappear back into your office until it’s time to make the announcement about SRI and the Bureau.”
“Gee thanks ever so,” she said drily. She spent a great deal of time trying to avoid thinking about the upcoming merger because it had Anthony’s fingerprints all over it.
As she started to drain her glass, the caller boomed out, “Mrs. Patricia Redding and Mr. Anthony Caldwell.” Athdara choked on her cocktail as she swung around to stare toward the entrance. Just walking through the doorway was a rather attractive, willowy blonde woman in a dazzling gold and blue gown. Athdara’s attention though was riveted on the tall man next to her. Anthony Caldwell hadn’t changed a bit, as might be expected, still incredibly tall, dark blonde hair which just touched the top of his shirt collar. He’d been stunning in evening clothes in the 1800’s, but in the modern equivalent, the tuxedo, he was breath-taking. Wide shoulders that made no secret of the strength he had even were he not a vampire tapering down to a trim waist, he radiated power, control and above all arrogance – at least to her, then and now. His most incredible feature, the one that still haunted her dreams occasionally she’d deny it to her permanent grave, were his eyes. Brown so dark they frequently appeared black, it had felt as if he could see straight into someone’s head or even down to their soul. In retrospect, Athdara acknowledged, he probably could and did, damn him.
Even across the ballroom from him, she felt tendrils of lust curl through her belly, and despised herself for feeling any sense of attraction for the murderous bastard. A great deal of practice at being in the public eye kept any sign of her feelings from her face after the initial shock wore off. However, before she could look away, return her focus to Grant, Anthony’s head turned in her direction and their eyes met. Separated by the length of the room, it was still like a punch to the gut to look at him. He gave an enigmatic smile and before she could block the contact, his thoughts had touched hers. Hello love.
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