Vexation without Explanation
 
The flame of the single  candle was casting dancing shadows on the wall, 
shadows that seemed to be  fantastic, irrational images with a life of their 
own. 
Candlelight was so  vivid, it enchanted the surrounding darkness, gave it a 
certain mystic  atmosphere. The smell of burning wax was pleasant, as was the 
sight of the  candle that grew smaller and smaller, only slowly; it was 
inevitable that  once all the wax was burned, the flame would grow dim and 
finally go 
out.   
I liked to watch the  single spark of light. So small, so insignificant, and 
nevertheless it  could set a building, even a town afire if it was nourished. 
Beautiful,  the way it trembled when my breath disturbed the air; so simple, 
yet  holding such a fascination. But despite all beauty it was still transient, 
 the smallest breeze would extinguish the warmth, the light. And only  
darkness would remain.  
A knock at the door  awakened me from my musings; the sweet moments my mind 
had been allowed to  drift freely were over, as everything came to an end. 
Sighing, I reached  for the quill and a sheet of paper, quickly wrote a few 
lines. 
No need to  let the others know that I had been dreaming, reflecting on the 
passing of  beauty instead of doing my duty in governing the coven. Sometimes I 
was  not sure if the power I had over this flock was worth the life I led; no 
 time to rest, to relax, a constant tension that could never be released.  In 
more than three centuries I had never gone to sleep in the ground, as  so 
many of us had; I had wanted to wait for the right moment, but it had  never 
come.  
Another knock, a little  impatient this time. What did they want now? It had 
better been something  important, it was a rule that I was not to be disturbed 
in my cell if my  presence was not required immediately.  
"Enter," I said, my  voice controlled and calm as usual; never show any 
emotion, for it can be  used as a weapon against you. The door opened, and 
Isabella 
came in  slowly, careful not to look at my face, a habit she had never been 
able to  let go, and which could be annoying sometimes. "What do you want?" She 
 blinked, clearing her throat.  
"A messenger has  arrived." 
"And you are not able  to converse with him alone?" Frowning, I shook my head 
in disapproval.  
Isabella was one in a seemingly endless row of assistants and advisors  I had 
chosen after my dear Allesandra had left to finally rule her own  coven. She 
had to do this through Amadeo, who had had no idea what the  real reason for 
sending him to Paris was at the time he had gone there.  Maybe he had realized 
now that he was a mere tool of her, a marionette  whose strings came together 
in her hands. Clever Allesandra, she was  handling the power that I had given 
to her in form of the coven with ease  and a perfection that was unrivalled by 
the other flocks that were under  the control of Rome. It had probably been 
the best decision of my entire  life to send her to France after the master of 
the Parisian coven had gone  into the fire, for it had turned the former 
opposer of Rome into a willing  follower who obeyed my commands.  
But in sending  Allesandra to the north I had lost a helper whose value I had 
never really  appreciated until she left. She had been my advisor, my 
assistant. And my  friend, perhaps the only true friend I ever had in the 
coven. 
Being the  master automatically brings loneliness, it is necessary to make 
everybody  fear you if you want to stay in control. And so I had tried to find 
a  
replacement for her, but without success. Some of her successors were  
intelligent enough to satisfy me, but the majority simply couldn′t make a  
decision 
themselves. But one thing they all had in common: never did they  last for 
longer 
than a decade until they couldn′t handle the stress  anymore, and went mad or 
faced the dawn.  
Isabella was the best I  had found until now; though she was far from the 
perfection I had known  from Allesandra and also Amadeo. She made the most 
foolish mistakes from  time to time, but she could be trusted to rule the coven 
for 
a short time  if I had to take the young ones to attack a rouge to cool their 
temper.  They never realized that hardly ever they managed to actually kill 
their  prey, it was enough for them to feel superior. Blind fools, so easy to  
control.  
"He brought a rather...  disturbing message from Paris, I thought you would 
want to question him  yourself." A message from Paris?  
"Send him in, I will  talk to him here." She nodded and left, leaving me to 
my thoughts. What  had happened in France? The last letters I had received from 
Allesandra  and Amadeo had been reassuring, no indications that something 
important  was about to happen. Strange, very strange. Maybe the coven had been 
 
attacked by a Child of the Millennia? No, that was unlikely, they hardly  ever 
did such reckless things. Besides no ancient one was in France at the  
moment, I would have known if one had settled there. They avoided the  covens, 
those 
groups of what must seem children to them. How did it feel  to be that old, 
to see the centuries pass? 
Isabella returned,  followed by another vampire; a young man, he could not 
have been older  than twenty when he had been made. A beautiful creature, this 
one, with  brown hair he had tied with a black ribbon, gray eyes that tried to 
avoid  looking into mine. For a moment I wondered if he was the fledgling of  
Allesandra or Amadeo, but dismissed the thought almost immediately.  
Allesandra hadn′t made a fledgling for more than a century, she was too  strong 
to 
still work the Dark Trick. And Amadeo... seldom the coven  masters made 
vampires 
themselves, for such fledglings often became a  source of revolution, of 
danger. They thought that they could succeed  their maker, as mortal 
descendants of 
kings and lords did; very often the  master had to destroy his own children.  
I beckoned Isabella,  who was turning to leave already, that she should stay, 
and looked at the  messenger, which made him radiate nervousness, a feeling I 
often caused in  the younger ones. Useful most of the time, but it could also 
be very  annoying, especially in situations like this, when I did not want to 
waste  time with unnecessary admiration.  
"Who are you?" I asked  him, putting enough disapproval into my voice to let 
him know that he  should have introduced himself. "And who has sent you here?" 
"My name is Jacques,  monsieur," he answered. "Armand has ordered that I 
should bring his  message to you." Armand... I still had to get used to 
Amadeo′s 
new name.  Not really new, he had changed it nearly two centuries ago; but to 
me he  would always be Amadeo. French is such an ugly language.  
"Jacques," I repeated,  carefully pronouncing every syllable, as if I were 
tasting the name. "I  shall remember you. So, what does... Armand have to say 
that is so unusual  that it unsettles my helper in such a way?" I looked at 
Isabella, who was  standing behind and at the right of the French vampire. She 
had 
been  staring at him, probably marveling at his looks; I didn′t bother to 
read  her mind over such trivialities. When she noticed me she reluctantly met  
my eyes, a guilty expression on her face. What a difference to Allesandra,  
never had she been afraid of doing what she pleased. If she had wanted to  look 
at the handsome Jacques, she would have ignored my gaze.  
"Armand bids you  greetings and hopes that you and your coven will always 
be-" I interrupted  him with a dismissive gesture of my hand.  
"Forget the polite  formalities. What does he have to say? My time is 
limited." If Jacques had  not been nervous before, now he certainly was. He 
cleared 
his throat,  entwined his fingers, shuffled his feet; I regretted my words a 
little,  but then again it was expected of me to be harsh. Isabella was 
flustered  as well, it was obvious that she was fond of this young one. For a 
moment  
I considered sending her out of the room, but she could learn from this.   
"I have asked you a  question, Giacomo." Yes, the Italian version of his name 
definitely  sounded better. He started, his eyes dark with tension, 
concentrating on  what he had to say. 
"Armand bade me to tell  you that he fears that Allesandra has gone mad."  
Exhale slowly. Don′t  show the shock. Don′t do anything you wouldn′t do if 
he had told you that  nothing had happened at all. Emotions are not allowed, 
not here, not now.  First finish this, then there will be time to think. 
Isabella was looking at  me now, meeting my eyes, careful not to miss the 
slightest reaction I  showed. I assumed that she wanted to have an indication 
how 
she should  react to this news, if she should be surprised, or indifferent. 
What was  Allesandra to her but a name of ages past? A relic from the beginning 
of  the Children of Darkness, bound to go the way every vampire has to go. 
The  Devil called his children home, everybody knew this.  
"Thank you. Is that all  you have to say?" I fought to keep my voice calm. 
Jacques nodded, and took  an envelope out of his torn, dirty coat.  
"Eleni gave this to me,  she-" I rose my hand, silencing him. 
"Who is Eleni? And is  this of any importance?" Jacques blinked nervously, 
blushing a little.   
"I- I don′t know. She  told me to make sure you got this letter-"  
"Does Armand know of  this? Has he allowed it?" I rose slowly, eyes locked on 
his face,  beckoning Isabella to move away from him. She hurried to follow my 
silent  order, leaving him standing alone before me. Crossing my arms behind 
my  back, I circled him slowly. He didn′t dare to move his head when I left  
his vision and finally stopped behind him. Blood sweat trickling on his  neck, 
I could see it clearly.  
"Answer my question",  the words were barely audible, but I had found out 
long ago that the more  silent I spoke, the more unsettling my voice could be. 
Jacques shifted  nervously, he even trembled slightly. I smiled, knowing that 
he 
didn′t see  that I enjoyed the effect I had on him.  
"Armand doesn′t know,  at least I don′t think so." The words were coming out 
of his mouth fast,  he wished this to end as soon as possible. I shook my 
head; no nerves, the  young ones. No stamina. It was not surprising at all that 
covens broke  apart everywhere.  
"So this Eleni sends  messages behind his back?" 
"Oui." 
"Use a language  everybody understands."  
"Ye- ita est. Litterae  Eleni missus est, quae Armand non sapiens." Hearing 
him talk in Latin was  even worse than his accented Italian. "Iussit aliquem 
quae Romam ferre  tibique tradere." 
"Give it to me then."  Turning slowly to face me, he handed me the letter. 
"Now leave. Isabella,  you will stay with him tonight. Hunt, then return 
immediately. And remove  Renato′s ashes from his coffin, our Giacomo here will 
need a 
place to  sleep." Satisfied I saw him pale; the thought of sleeping in a 
coffin in  which the ashes of the previous inhabitant had still been mere hours 
ago  appeared to have the wanted effect on him. With a little luck he would  
take the hint and not present any trouble. Isabella bowed, her eyes  dancing 
from 
his face to mine, filled with joy now. I would have to do  something about 
this, such clearly visible signs of affection for a mere  messenger weren′t 
appropriate for my assistant. Opening the door, she  left, Jacques following 
her, 
hurrying to get away from me.  
I put the letter on my  desk, not opening it yet. This Eleni amazed me; she 
had to be a rather  self-confident being. Sending messages was a privilege of 
the Coven  Master, and these unwritten rules were hardly ever disobeyed. That 
she had  done it meant that she was either brave or foolish, for the 
punishments  were strict for these offenses. Amadeo should have noticed that 
she was  
corresponding with other vampires. Sighing, I wished that she could be in  my 
Coven and not in the Paris flock. It was a shame to waste good  material, and I 
doubted that Amadeo would use her talents.  
The question that  remained still was why she should send a letter to me. 
There was no  possibility that we had ever met, so there was no reason for her 
to 
 contact me, the leader of another coven. Amadeo would have been the  logical 
choice for her, she should have spoken to him about whatever she  wanted. 
Unless what she had to say was not for him to know, of course.   
Was there a conspiracy  among the Paris Children of Darkness? I didn′t 
believe that, the coven had  always been one of the stablest and safest. 
Compared to 
Rome, where new  ideas and new ways appeared every week, Paris was extremely 
conservative.  To a master who knew the old laws as well as Amadeo, it could 
not possibly  present a problem. Still there had to be something that was kept 
a secret,  and somehow they - whoever they were, for I was sure that Eleni was 
not  alone in whatever she did, or she would have been foolish indeed - had  
decided to involve me. Strange, most strange. 
Maybe Allesandra had  something to do with it. My poor Allesandra, had she 
really gone mad? It  was hard to believe, she had always been rational, even 
though sometimes  stuck in old faiths. Never had she let her emotions and 
beliefs 
control  her, always reasonable, a person I could rely on. Why should she go 
insane  now? She was so old already, older than any other vampire I had ever  
known. For as long as I could remember, she had been there, a constant in  my 
life. Never had I thought that there would be times without her; that  she 
might go mad was something I had never believed. In my memories she  was so 
sober, so intelligent. But if Amadeo said that she was non compos  mentis 
anymore, 
it was certainly true. He had never erred, or lied to me.  His opinion could 
be trusted; but this time I wished he would be proved  wrong.  
She was probably dead  by now.  
Amadeo knew that he had  to lead the old, deranged ones into the fire. Knew 
that this was his duty;  I had taught him this, while Alessandra had been 
sitting next to me... and  now she had fallen victim to the rules, to the laws 
we 
had created  together, the laws that had been revolutionary when we had 
introduced them  to the coven. The Revolution kills her children. 
We had been so similar,  two minds with the same ideas, the same goals. 
Madness had been something  we didn′t expect to strike at us, we had considered 
ourselves too  rational, too intelligent. I had always believed that she and I 
would last  through the ages, that we would not go the way of the others. But 
she had  finally become one of countless vampires who lasted a few centuries 
before  their life was to be ended. Would this happen to me as well? Would I 
too  
become one of the mindless old ones?  
Never, never had  I thought about this possibility. If it happened, the coven 
would kill me,  of course, they knew that they had to do this if they were 
sure that the  master had gone mad. Hadn′t the Parisian flock done the very 
same 
thing  before Allesandra had gone to govern them, and taken Amadeo with her? 
They  would probably not hesitate to force me into the fire, for the Master 
was  only feared and respected, but never loved. I could effortlessly think of  
some who would not mourn my death at all. There would be some theatrical  
sadness, of course, but that would soon be over. I realized that there was  not 
a 
single vampire in the coven who would not be glad when I met my  end. 
What if they heard of  Allesandra′s madness? She had been the one vampire 
older than me, apart  from the Children of the Millennia, who were considered 
insane anyway. And  now she had been forced into the fire. What if they 
realized 
that insanity  could serve as a reason to kill me? I couldn′t imagine that 
they would  hesitate a second if they thought of this. The only thing that 
would 
keep  them from liquidating me would be the resulting power struggles. I knew  
that there were a few in my flock who considered themselves worthy  
successors; especially Isabella was regarded as the logical choice for the  
future 
ruler. But no matter who would annihilate me, the outcome would be  fights for 
the 
power. And as long as they dreaded this more than they  wished me dead, I was 
safe. 
Not a very assuring  position, when I thought about it.  
I sat down, lighted  another candle - I liked the smell of beeswax, it always 
reminded me of  great churches - and read the letter. Eleni′s handwriting was 
 old-fashioned, and her style simple, but it was a great comfort to read a  
letter that was not full of humble phrases. 
Monsieur, 
this I write to you  on behalf of Our Old Mother. Many of our flock say that 
she has gone mad,  and that she should be lead into the bonfires. But she 
herself claims to  be in perfect health. This is what has kept Our Master from 
burning her.  She has come to me and told me to write this letter to you, which 
I 
would  not do if it was not for her. I know that it is against the rules, and 
 that I deserve severe punishment for breaking them. But Our Old Mother  says 
that I must not worry about it. She also says that you must not tell  Our 
Master of it. 
I stopped after reading  those few lines; Eleni had said so much without 
knowing it! What a relief  it was to read that Allesandra, for the Old Mother 
could only be her, was  still alive! Apparently her power over Amadeo was 
greater 
than I had  thought; if another vampire had been supposed to be mad, he would 
have  been burned immediately, no matter how much he denied his  insanity. 
She says that she  has seen the errors in the Old Ways, things I cannot bring 
myself to write  for I will surely burn in Hell if I do. The Devil′s Road is 
the term she  uses to describe them, and she says that you will know what she 
means. She  repeats over and over that we should walk it. It disturbs Our 
Master  greatly when she says these things, and he tries to silence her. I fear 
 
that she has truly gone mad. It will only be a matter of time until Our  Master 
sends her into the fire. He says that it might pass. But I think he  does not 
believe it.  
She also says that  the one who brings this letter to you is ambitious. She 
says he has the  strength to lead, and that you must take care of him. 
The letter was not  signed, which was common for written communication among 
our kind. I hid  it among the other papers that had accumulated on my desk; 
the next time I  went to hunt I would dispose of it in the Tiber. 
So Allesandra was still  alive. Maybe mad, but alive. Closing my eyes, I 
leaned back in my chair,  allowing myself a few moments of relief to hear that 
she 
had not turned  into ashes by now. Amadeo was apparently still dependent on 
her, or he  would not have hesitated to lead her into the fire.  
This could become a  problem, I realized, if he did not want to see that her 
advise and  suggestions could not be trusted anymore. He had never learned to 
lead his  group alone, he had been trained to serve as a facade for 
Allesandra. Now  he would have to take over, I could not simply replace him 
without 
having  a plausible reason. And I knew that he could not do it. Never had I 
taught 
 him the little tricks that were necessary to stay in power and alive, he  
would probably not survive the next year. Why did this have to happen now,  
when 
I had not one in my coven I could send to Paris when he was gone? I  would 
lose my influence on the city, and also on the rest of France.  Allesandra, why 
did this have to happen now? Why couldn′t you wait for a  few more years to 
walk the Devil′s Road? 
The Devil′s Road. She  had used this term to describe progress, 
modernization, but this was the  first time that she used it in a positive 
sense. Whenever 
we had talked  about it, she had insisted that changes could only mean 
downfall, had  dismissed revolutionary ideas as potentially dangerous. And now 
she  
suddenly tried to convert her coven to the new ways. I had never expected  to 
hear something like that from her; she had always been of the opinion  that 
changes were for other people.  
I assumed that Amadeo  had continued to govern the coven according to the old 
rules I had taught  him two centuries ago. It was hard to understand that 
they had not at all  adapted to the new times, something my flock had done 
automatically. Paris  was a cultural center, that the coven had retreated so 
far 
from the mortal  world around them was unusual. Groups in cities as reactionary 
and at the  same time revolutionary as Paris, like Vienna or London, had 
changed their  ways without any problems, even though their leaders had hardly 
Amadeo
′s  experience. Had he become too good for the game? He knew all the rules,  
every inch of the terrain, and still, or maybe because of that, he was  lost.  
Lost in a game he knew  too well, the game of power and influence we all 
played, with our lives at  stake. There was no such thing as a second place, it 
was all or nothing.  And if you lost, it was over. Forever.  
And the winner was  trapped in the game, had no possibility to escape. In the 
end, he had lost  as well. There were no winners in this game, only losers 
who struggled  longer than others. I had struggled for 350 years; maybe it was 
finally  time to let go. 
The End  






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