It wasn't exactly what she'd asked for, but any victory was a victory...any means by which their individual unlives could become a little more tolerable was a service in the name of the grand, shared Requiem of the Dead. The Church of the Damned insisted that the Children of the Night were God's excoriating lash, the first of them created to send the pious to the gates of eternity and to create a hell on Earth for the wicked.
That was pure bullshit of course; their existences were a result of something real and provable, even if it wasn't scientific the way the mortals understood it. The Blood could be tasted...it could be harvested from the living and it could work wonders. It was water for their fields, sealant in the brickwork of their carefully constructed post-mortem lives, the very reason and drive behind their parasitic existences.
In the modern era, thanks to the miracles of refrigeration and plastic vacuum-sealing, The Blood could be neatly packaged and distributed like culture, religion, and sex in this late-capitalist world she'd once struggled fruitlessly against. Neat, perfect little IV bags of ruby-red lifeforce, sitting in stacked beer coolers, had been delivered to the dockyard at precisely the moment the Overseers had promised.
Things didn't seem so bad. In fact, her mood had been quite elevated lately from her usual state of grim, ultra-focused determination - a corpse miming Lenin - to something approaching the enthusiasm she remembered when she could feel the sun on her flesh, before smartphones were a fad. As far as the analytical part of her mind could decipher, there were three reasons for this.
The first, the most visceral and obvious, was the Lupine blood running through her veins. She hadn't felt truly warm in over a decade and ever since she'd started drinking from the werewolf, it felt like she had been thawed from a long winter. It was apparent in the smooth, vital speed of her movements and the ease with which the blush of life rose forth, even solely in the presence of her fellow Kindred.
The second, she knew, was because of the victory she'd secured in the name of the Syndicate. The crate had been marked specifically with their sigil, lowered by a crane-rope over the side of a speedboat onto the dock by the anonymous, enslaved humans that worked for the Ancient Dead. While their tithes hadn't changed, and the "process of redistributing feeding grounds was underway" (how much process could there be? Paperwork was an extraneity and danger for their kind) this proved to be a creative solution to a convoluted problem. The blood may have been cold, but the cells were still alive and tasted just fine to the tongue. It meant less time needed to be spent in the face of danger scrounging the troughs, risking an unwanted opiate rush or Prey turning on the Predator. Hunting was dangerous.
The third was something she didn't necessarily want to acknowledge, but realistically had no choice - the...four, five encounters she'd had with Mizrah in those motel rooms, once at his apartment, had been good. Really good. To her surprise every time, he fucked her amazingly, which was unusual because the sensation of a man thrusting into her was usually not one that she relished...but that was because she'd rarely liked the men thrusting into her. She wouldn't admit to liking him - he was brash, confrontational, cocky and arrogant - but it would be a lie to say he wasn't charming, surprisingly well-read, and warm-hearted. Even when she'd been sharp with him, trying to ward him away from the inevitable danger their union and dalliance represented, he was reeling her back in with his warmth and irrepressible humor. Most other vampires could be serious downers, and even though there'd been a girl she cared about that once made her laugh...well, that was a long time ago. It was different too, having these feelings for a man...but he wasn't just a man.
He was a dangerous thing, a human mind spread like a thin layer of olive oil over a hot, cast-iron surface of animal instinct and danger. There was no doubt, she was partially drawn to that dangerous side of his, and loved the way his powerful body overwhelmed hers...how she enjoyed having to work to fit him inside of her, and those piercings! A rare, incredible find indeed. She involuntarily squeezed her thighs together as she offered a pair of blood-filled IV bags to Samara. The young, skinny little stripling took them with hunger that was all too familiar to her and nearly dropped them onto the concrete dock - the sound of alarm that escaped her throat moved Monroe's thoughts from the debauchery she'd been engaging in.
Carter's hand shot out, snagging an IV sac from sliding to a watery fate and handing it back to the little kindred, who took it greedily and pulled it to her chest. In her wide brimmed hat, ankle-length moss-green woolen coat and drawn, round-eyed face, Samara reminded Monroe of a character from a Charles Dickens novel. "Thank you Carter...dunno what you said or gave, but you're saving us from some bleak shit," came her hissy little whisper of a voice.
There were three of them down here on the pier - William with his fishy, discomfiting demeanor and Melinda in her perfect suit coat and skirt worked at her side, under the garish floodlights that Harlowe had installed on the warehouse's tin roof. It wasn't like they couldn't see in the dark, but the light made everyone here feel just a bit more normal, everything considered.
Samara lingered...Monroe suspected that she'd been taken by her Sire when she was little more than eighteen years old, caught in a body that was at the end of adolescence but hadn't yet fully entered adulthood. She supposed she should feel fortunate that she'd been swallowed by the Dark in her late 20s. Will noticed; despite his fearsome exterior, cloaked in obscuring sweaters and oversized pants from judgmental, fearful eyes, the Nosferatu had somehow stayed the kindest and most sensitive among them, and gave her a spare nod. We'll take care of things here. It wasn't like there was a lot to be done...there were only thirty three other Kindred besides Monroe who were part of the Syndicate, and this victory had turned them from a rowdy crowd into something surprisingly organized, patient even.
How willing they were to fall-in for the thing they all craved.
Melinda's clarion, southern belle voice rang out when she received the look from William. "Alright ya'll, chairwoman's got business, split yerselves between me and Will and keep it orderly-like." There was a chorus of grumbling but the pale blonde beauty patiently herded the Dead with a resigned ease that Monroe had yet to develop...maybe never would; Melinda's Venture lineage made it easy for her to command obedience, if not to inspire.
"Come on Sam." Monroe's tone was soft as she led the rail-thin little Gangrel back up the pier, away from prying ears and eyes - maybe Samara felt less self-conscious in front of the Syndicate's leader because she jabbed her fangs through the plastic, sucking the cold blood from the bag and giving a shuddery little sigh of relief. She watched as Samara's big pupils dilated so wide they consumed the whites of her eyes, her veins showing through the flesh of her neck and wrists as they pumped new vitae through her body.
"What's on your mind, kid?" she prompted the rail-thin vampire, whose unnatural gaze seemed to...come back, flickering Monroe's way. Gulping down the last of the bag, leaving it clean and clear, she fingered the other IV sac like it was filled with hundred dollar bills.
"Ssso, you remember that problem I had?" Samara began - at some point the bag of blood disappeared either up a sleeve or into a coat pocket - "you know the one." She made what the Brujah might describe as a 'creepy-crawly' motion with her hands. "Did you make any headway on it with the lords and ladies?"