The Banshee, the Siren, the Succubus, the Incubus, the magician, deities of night, stars, moon, and shadow. These legends were born from the ones humans called vampires. Their voices can control, demand, and arouse those they chose, want, and desire. They manipulate, feed, and copulate as they see fit for their own ends, be they instinctual or thoughtful. They dominate and own what they claim, and though vampires are called vampires by popular vote of humans, they themselves prefer their other, much older name: Nosferatu.
It was into a certain summery night that one sang a song beyond any human measure of comprehensive beauty. Using their godly voices, the Nosferatu summon forth those they would feed upon, those they would manipulate, and those they wish to commune with. However, it was not for any of those reasons that this one sang. He sang not to summon a human to her death, as many others had before he chose her. He was calling forth with his song for a daughter, a Chyld, a newborn of the night kind that would no longer age, never die, and live off of those that were still trapped in the embrace of life and death cycle.
His melody was lonely and longing, sensual and requisite in its demand. (Come to me,) he sang in words that were of a language not known by man, the words rhyming while their meaning did not. (Come and be with me in our corner of eternity. I shall give you what you can only imagine for a fleeting moment as you are now for days on end. Let me birth you, Sire you, and teach you. I will love you, treasure you, pleasure you, and adore you, if only you come to me, my Chyld, my love. Just come to me.)
She had no choice but to obey. Her soul was weak, pure, and unprotected, and her body sought to sate the feelings of heat, longing, and desire his lyrics stirred as they caressed her spirit in obscene ways. She followed the haunting notes carried on the wind. The voice and the music that were meant only for her froze her core yet fired her yearnings, making her both longing and fearful, but unable to resist. She had to go to him. Had to. So she walked down the steps of the back porch and out across the yard on silent, dew dampened bare feet, and into the woods beyond. The wolves howled in welcome to her as she went by, knowing that one of their masters was summoning forth a Chyld to make his own.
(Yes, my Chyld,) the voice continued to sing as he felt her leave the safety that her home gave her. (Feel me now, desire me now, and I will make you my own. Come and call my Sire. Come and love me, and I shall love you. Come to me into the darkness warm and sweet.)
The night was thick and blinding to her weak mortal eyes, yet somehow she knew the way, never tripping, never faltering. The words of the song guided her to place one foot here, and the other foot there, and to angle her slim leg this way while shifting her weight that way for the next odd step.
She longed to be with the one who sang so deeply into her soul. She wanted him like he had never desired any other. She wanted to feel his voice vibrating against her throat as he leaned over her, his body locked in union with hers. Just the thought alone sent fits of aroused urges through her, tightening places and wetting others.
(Yes. Come...!) the voice sang inside of her. (Past the trees. Come to me. Here I am. I wait for you. Come and let me love you, drink of you, and make you my own.)
And then he was there. The singer, the one that had called out to her so intimately, stood in glorious splendor in the shadowed glen where only enough moonlight shown to reveal that he was there, his lips were parted and musical notes flowing forth in eager seductive passion. He wore nothing but the many layered cloak created from a fine filmy material that drifted upwards upon the barest touch of the breeze.
When she had discarded her night gown and panties she couldn't remember, nor did she care. She was finally with the one that had called to her, aroused her, and made her long for him. That, for her, was all that mattered.
(Yes. You've come. I knew that you would, my precious Chyld, my first Chyld,) he sang as he took her night chilled hands into his warm ones, pausing to kiss the petite knuckles of her fingers where they bent into his. He drew her to him both with a gentle tug of his hands and the draw of his voice, which soon became muffled as he brought his lips down to hers. Even without the soundless voice, the soul searching words, the music still hung between them, binding them in a place deep inside her heart. Or his. She couldn't tell which. She was a part of something greater, and as she felt their bare bodies press tight against one another under the shelter of his soft silky cloak the kiss deepened. His song hung like an unspoken promise vibrating up his throat and into her mouth like the sustenance from God. He was all she would ever need, ever want, and ever desire for all eternity. No one had done for her what he did to her body, mind, and soul. No one.