~~Antoinette~~
"Does he speak?"
"No."
Antoinette sighed as she glared at the bound man. Two thralls were seeing to his body, cleaning and maintaining Sándor so he did not drown in his bodily fluids, or die of starvation. An unfortunate consequence of keeping a prisoner alive was handling the frustrating elements of biology.
It was not a process she was unfamiliar with. She kept several prisoners in her tower, after all, emergency sources of blood should she or an ally need them. Dealing with biological functions was a necessity. But, with her prisoners, normally they were of no threat, and could be handled easily. The Begotten, on the other hand, was a dangerous foe, and it paid to be wary with such creatures.
She waited until her thralls were done, before she closed the door of the cell, leaving her and Daniel in the dark with the monster. With a sigh, she turned on the light of her phone, and set it in her breast pocket. Its light was plenty for Kindred to see by, despite the fabric covering it.
Sándor's back, and the symbol carved there, remained unchanged. Frustration coursed through her, and she clenched her fists tight as she glared at the symbol. Natasha was convinced it would heal with time, but without a time frame, the wait was proving infuriating. They needed the knowledge this man could provide to track down and deal with the hunters, and in his current state, he was useless.
"You are still convinced your Auspex cannot unmask the secrets of his mind?"
Daniel nodded, walking around the kneeling creature as he kept his chin between his gloved fingers. "Jack was correct. The seal protects his mind. Only brute force can get through it, and Jack was probably correct about the consequences."
Not only was Jack likely correct about the consequences, he was the only Ventrue in the city strong enough to attempt such a feat. Viktor could have performed such a task, and so could poor Julias, she was sure. In both circumstances, it seemed like Sándor would have been damaged for the experience, and perhaps rendered useless. If Jack attempted to enter the man's mind, he was convinced his curse would rip and tear Sándor's psyche until he was beyond saving.
To know her little Ventrue had been given such power, cursed with it and its baser desires, gnawed at her endlessly. She wanted to help him, save him, free him from his burden. But there was no denying that it was a valuable tool that could spell the end for the hunters, if they could find them. Knowing her love, he would carry his burden, and march into the hunters, wading through fire and bullets until they were defeated.
Defeated, and dead. There was no doubt in her mind that her love would succumb to rage, upon finding the hunters, and that he would destroy everything in his path to exact his revenge. While she could not fault him for that, displays such as his crow summoning at the hospital could not be tolerated. If he brought the eye of the media upon her city a second time with such a reckless display of power, she would be forced to act.
It was difficult to tell, if Jack Terry was someone should could control, if it came to such a circumstance. She was confident that, if she was forced to use might, she could deal with Garry, Maria, and Michael. Jack Terry, on the other hand, was an enigma, now that the curse permeated his being. She could still sense and feel the young Kindred she had first met, but now she could also feel the inflated power his curse provided. Every moment in his presence had her confused, and not sure how to manage the strange presence and its two halves.
Groaning, she shook her head and gestured to the Begotten. "The longer I let this man remain here, the longer he is useless to me. I cannot let this advantage be wasted."
"Agreed, but I don't see any other options. And besides, with him trapped here, he can't help Jeremiah."
That was true. For all the annoyance it brought her that she could not rip information from the prisoner's mind, he also could not help his masters while trapped within her tower. That would have to do for now.
She motioned for her sheriff to follow, and stepped out in the long hallway, deep within her labyrinth of black marble. "Are you excited to see Elaine, old friend?"
That earned a pause from the Mekhet, and she struggled to not chuckle at her friend's discomfort. Earning any reaction from the stone was always something to be cherished.
"Is she here yet?"
"Non. I assume she will arrive within the next few days."
"I... see."
It was too delightful, and she could no longer hold back her chuckles as she started up the stairs. "Daniel, she is a beautiful woman, intelligent, and as devoted to the order as either of us. And she is fun, as devoted to finding joy in our second lives as I ever was. Why do you resist her so?"
The man frowned, but the almost cataclysmic shift of the stars that would lead to a genuine expression on his face, faded away, taking the frown with it, and leaving her with the usual stone face of her friend. As much as she loved Daniel, she could not understand how Elaine could find his concrete-wall personality so enticing. Antoinette trusted him, valued his opinions and wisdom, and enjoyed his company. But she did not wish to smother him with her sexuality, unlike Elaine, who had expressed her desire for Daniel to her on several occasions.
Perhaps she should not have warned Jack of her potential advances? Elaine was difficult to predict. The woman had joined Antoinette on many of her more absurd sexual adventures, while at the same time, had engaged in the occasional, far more reserved relationship.
Thinking of her brought up more than a few wonderful memories, that quickly became bitter. Elaine had joined her several times, when Antoinette dated her childe Tony, and Elaine had long warned her that the man was devolving into a self-involved, destructive twit. Antoinette should have heeded her advice.
"I resist her," he said at last, "because I do not like her. She's... volatile."
Antoinette sighed and shrugged. "It may surprise you to learn that all women are, perhaps, a touch volatile, old friend." Though that was hardly unique to women, it simply manifested differently compared to men. She knew what Daniel meant though, that he preferred predictable interaction, while Elaine had drifted through England hundreds of years ago, whoring herself for coins, purely for the entertainment of it rather than any need to hunt in such a manner. She had a long history of eccentric pursuits and experiences.
Daniel did not care about the woman's sexual exploits, but he did care about calm waters. Antoinette had long been of the mind that the man could do with a few stones tossed into his waters, to stir and add a ripple here or there, but the man was ancient at this point, and would not budge.
"And Athalia?" she said.
Daniel sighed, adjusted his glasses, and waited for the elevator. "What of her?"
"You pursued her once, did you not?"
"That was—"
"Come, Daniel, do not take me for a fool. She trusted you, and only you, before she met Jack Terry. I saw the look on your face, when you escorted her to my ball. You are interested in her."
"I..." He was surprised. Good. It served an elder well to be reminded that they did not know everything, and Daniel had not realized how obvious his interest in unstable Athalia was.
"She is far more volatile than Elaine," she said.
"She's young, and... and her volatility is not a simple state of her personality. It's a result of her circumstance."
"You believe that, were her circumstances more stable, she would be as well?"
"I had hoped, but I guess we'll never know."
She sighed with that, and lowered her head to look at the floor as the two of them stepped onto the elevator. "Indeed."
There was no denying the inevitable reality. The hunters were going to perish eventually, now that they had both lost their enforcer, and their numbers had dwindled to Jack's assaults. It was simply a matter of time before Angela was dead, and Athalia would become more unstable. Would she strive for revenge, or accept her daughter's necessary death? Antoinette struggled to imagine any parent accepting their child's death, no matter if it were deserved.
"I... had planned for another ball," Antoinette said, "but I believe it will be best to wait until the hunter threat is eliminated."
"Athalia will not be invited, I presume."
"I do not believe so, no. My childe knows her by name, and what her daughter has done. Were they to meet, I do not believe it would end well, for either of them." Young as Samantha was, a Daeva was a dangerous creature when strength was the deciding factor. Doubly so, for a mother wronged and robbed of her child.
"Your childe, she... she seems a lot nicer than Tony ever was."
Antoinette smiled at that, and nodded as she touched her lips with a couple fingers. "Not so nice that she would not throw herself at Athalia in a fit of rage, should they ever meet. But yes, Samantha is a breath of fresh air, I must admit. I can now appreciate where my love earned his honest soul."
The doors opened up, and she stepped into her primary meeting room, high in her tower, with Daniel following.
"You think he's being honest?"