~~Antoinette~~
She felt it the moment she and Samantha stepped up to the comely home. Cold, in the bones, an unnatural sensation that pulsed through her being. Her Beast recognized it, and its instincts kicked in, growling and snarling at the invisible waves of murder and anger that radiated from the house. It did not like being so close to such an aura; Kindred were masters of controlling kine, but had no talents whatsoever that allowed them to manipulate creatures of ephemera, spirit or ghost.
Antoinette had spent centuries learning to affect ephemera and the beings composed of it, largely in an effort to expand her control of everything. One more tool in her kit, to enact her goals on the world. But ephemera and ephemeral beings refused to be cooperative. Every scrap of knowledge she had discovered was uncovered through painful trial and error. The trouble with being a pioneer, was how little help there was to be found, even among colleagues.
Much of her knowledge pointed to the same conclusion: avoid entities made of this strange material. They were beyond the control of vampires, except through strange rituals and ornate symbols hundreds of years of experimentation barely lent meaning to. Tonight, she needed the help of such a frustrating entity, and she was not sure if it could be garnered.
Samantha opened the door, and Antoinette smiled as she followed her in. Best to be pleasant and polite when dealing with ghosts.
"It's... it's not much, I know, but--"
Antoinette held up a hand. "Come now Samantha, I am not so disconnected from reality that I do not understand the trials of a normal citizen. I know the price of eggs."
That, apparently, shocked Samantha, and she glanced at the likely empty fridge before blinking at her. "You do?"
"Of course. It pays to be economically aware of both the grand, and the petite."
"Oh. I... I'm kinda surprised. You're a billionaire." Smiling sheepishly, Samantha slid off her shoes on a mat beside the door, and stepped into her kitchen. Antoinette did the same. "You don't have to--"
"Neither do you. This is no longer your home."
"I... guess you're right."
"But it is your daughter's home." Antoinette set a hand on her childe's shoulder, offered her a reassuring nod, and a gentle kiss on the forehead. "Now, by all means, show me the house that was once your home."
Samantha beamed. Undoubtedly the woman delighted in the idea of showing her home to others, with inevitable joy over showing the rooms and bedrooms where Mary and Jack grew up.
And show she did. Antoinette could see Samantha felt slightly uncomfortable walking through her old home wearing a suit and skirt, and doubly so with her sire at her back. But a moment later, she fell into what must have been a routine, something she perhaps once had before Jack disappeared from her life. Did she have a book club? Did other women visit, drink wine and share stories? Perhaps after James died, she looked for solace in friends. Perhaps, after Jack died, she found solace only in the arms of her daughter.
The daughter who had died, and come back to her. The daughter she could not let go of.
Samantha showed her the kitchen, and the living room and its expensive couches. She showed her downstairs, the family room, with its large television and guest bedroom. She showed her the basement, and the 'movie' room James had built. Every minute, she spoke of memories, of her family, of the friends that once visited her and her husband. She spoke of the people who visited when James died, friendships rekindled. She spoke of the people who disappeared, when Jack died, people who could not be near her due to her broken state of mind.
They came to the bedrooms on the top floor, and Samantha sighed softly as she opened the door to Mary's bedroom. Cold. So terribly cold.
"If it wasn't for Mary," she continued, "I'd... I don't know." With heavier sigh, she moved over to Mary's quaint little vanity desk, and stared into the mirror. "Mary, are you there honey? It's Mom."
No answer, but the temperature in the room did lower. If Antoinette Blushed Life, her breath surely would have been visible in the air.
Samantha traced her fingers along the desk, scooped up a bright blue bracelet, and smiled at it as she plucked it experimentally, its elastic nature gently snapping back against her. "This is Antoinette, my... my sire. Sire and childe, the vampire thing. She's the one who saved me. Well, Jack saved me, really, and Antoinette turned me so I wouldn't die in... in that hospital bed." After several moments of painful silence, she sat on the edge of the colorful bed, and smiled up at Antoinette. A weak smile. "And that's good! It'd probably be very awkward if Jack sired me."
"And painful," Antoinette whispered, "for your son, I mean. It comes at no small sacrifice to create a childe." With a smile to match Samantha's, Antoinette sat down beside her on the edge of the bed. The very act earned a startled stare from the woman, as if Antoinette would not dare set her derriere on a simple woman's simple bed. Silly woman.
"It does?"
"Oui. As you know, the Beast itches to escape at all times. It is nothing more than a hungry animal, and understands little of the Masquerade or the Danse Macabre. And... when a Kindred does something that is, perhaps, rather animal and mindless, from wanton slaughter, to spreading the disease of vampirism, the Beast grows stronger, while the humanity in a vampire grows weaker."
Samantha stared at her all the more, like she had just admitted to murder. "You... hurt yourself, to embrace me?"
"Ben oui, and I am glad I did."
"But, you didn't even know me!"
"But I knew Jack, young Kindred, and I knew him well. As did Julias, a man I..." Antoinette sighed, reached out, and pat her young childe on the shoulder. Mentioning Julias was a mistake. Her poor childe instantly devolved into a pit of sadness and misery, and she looked down at the floor as guilt washed over her. "Come now, Samantha. Do not blame yourself for Julias's death. Does Beatrice blame you?"
"No... Sometimes she looks at me, and I can tell she's thinking about what it'd be like if Julias hadn't saved me. But she's never been angry with me."