Here is my tribute to  dear Uncle on his 1,919th "re-birthday". 
Standard disclaimers:  nobody here belongs to me and nobody's gonna pay me 
for writing this--it's  a labor of love. Permission to archive on 
www.fkfanfic.com and  pretty much everywhere else, just let me know, 'kay? 
Note: the abbreviation  'CE' stands for Christian Era and is the accepted 
alternative to AD (Anno  Domini). Rome was sacked by barbarians on August 24th, 
410  CE.




By the Light of Burning Cities 
By Molly  Schneider 
Copyright  1998 
August 24, 410  CE 
He stood unnoticed as  the barbarians streamed around him. From all quarters 
came random crashes and  the crackling of uncontrollable fires; above it all 
the women's screams  rose to the heavens. A city being sacked was a noisy 
thing, and the sacking  of this, the city of all cities, was a cataclysm. 
One stinking brute  nearly ran into him as he staggered by, drunk and 
clutching his sack of  looted gold. By the time he'd passed, Lucius was on 
the other side of the  street. He supposed he should go, but instead he 
moved like a pale  wraith along the streets he knew by heart, analyzing his 
feelings. Anger?  Surprisingly, not much: Rome had grown weak, and the weak 
succumb to the strong.  That was a lesson Rome herself had dealt out--how 
many times?--over the  millennium of her existence. Grief? Indeed. Unlike 
the Greeks, who thought  only their own ideas were worth anything, Rome had 
had the cleverness to  borrow and improve upon any worthy thing it had come 
across. By doing so, it  had become the world's greatest empire. 
The Empire had survived  as long as it had because it never gave much weight 
to the ephemeral. Rome  concentrated on building roads and cities, navies 
and armies. Let the  people--Roman and conquered alike--think what they 
wanted. As long as they  didn't get in Rome's way, Rome didn't care. 
With a quirk of an  eyebrow and a slight shrug, Lucius blamed the fall of 
Rome on Constantine,  who had put the ideas of a crucified Jewish carpenter 
over the importance of  roads and armies. He turned his steps toward the 
Tullianum. At least  nobody was looking for loot in the bowels of the old 
prison. 
He awoke the next  evening in blessed darkness and quiet; it lasted until he 
reached the outermost  passage. The chorus tonight was not screams of 
terror, but wails of  grief, punctuated now and again by drunken laughter. 
Making his way along  the edge of the Forum he came to the Golden Milestone. 
The gold had of course  been stripped off, but he traced the names of the 
farflung cities of the  Empire with his cool fingers. All roads lead to 
Rome, he mused, and now  all roads lead away. 
The acrid smell of  smoke and ash was in his nostrils as he left. 
He did not look  back. 





 
____________________________________

All roads led away from  Rome, and he wandered them as he chose. The wars 
and political intrigues  he dabbled in were nothing to him, just games for 
mortals such as he had  been and was no longer. What stirred his senses and 
fired his imagination  was the sheer vitality and complexity of the world, 
natural and mortal  alike. Why did this flowering shrub grow here and not 
there? What accounted  for the differences between Mongol and Celt, Ethiope 
and Egyptian? Why did  the Greeks shiver in their chitons and the Bedouin 
cover themselves in  woollen robes? 
The fledglings he made  were few, and fewer still survived. It was difficult 
to judge how the  conversion would change the ones he chose to bring across. 
Some went mad and had  to be destroyed, some he lost interest in and they 
passed from each  other's lives. 
One night he followed a  princess. At least, she ought to have been a 
princess, by the way  she carried herself. He would have taken the whore, 
but there was something  in that carriage. . .he followed her for many 
nights. This time he  had chosen well. She was charming and lovely and a 
perfectly ruthless  killer. For a hundred years they travelled in a 
companionship that  warmed his heart as nothing had before. 
Then the lightning  struck his heart, and nothing would ever be the same 
again. 
The young man was  beautiful, yes. Ah, but more, so much more than that! 
He *was* fire, golden  and glowing. And as this Nicholas listened to what 
Lucien told him about  what he was and what Nicholas could be, those sensuous 
lips parted in wonder  and the celestial blue eyes fixed on him with the rapt 
attention of a  child. 
Lucien damned near  drained him, his blood was so fine. Like the best wine, 
complex yet clear in  its tones, with dark subtleties somewhere just beyond 
reach. He was glad he  stopped in time to bring him across. 
His ensuing Conversion  Days were never dull. Sometimes they were sweet, 
sharing with his two  favorite children the vampire equivalent of cozy 
domesticity. Sometimes  he was alone but peaceful, knowing they would always 
come back to him. And  sometimes he was arguing with Nicholas, not speaking 
with Nicholas, having  knock-down-drag-out fights with Nicholas . . . 
 
____________________________________
Toronto, 1998  CE 
LaCroix smiled gently  at the memories as he affixed the sword pin to his 
shirt collar--a past  present from Nicholas--and shrugged on his jacket. His 
son's golden head poked  in the door. 
"Are you ready yet?  What's taking you so long?" 
"As I've been trying to  tell you for centuries, mon fils, *I* have all the 
time in the  world." 
"That may be true. But  if they have to start the party without you, Janette 
will be in a sulk for  weeks." 
"I would never  disappoint the lovely Janette in such a grave matter as 
this," but he smiled as  he said it, and walked out the door ahead of his 
son. At the foot of the  stairs he paused and looked back. 
"I am very glad you are  *both* here to celebrate with me, Nicholas." 
Nick took his hand and  met his eyes. "I am too," he said. 
FIN 










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