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Let's Play VtM: Night Empire

grotsnik

Arcane
Joined
Jul 11, 2010
Messages
1,671
All-right, so that's:

oscar CA
lac EE
Orgasm AA
Cappenvarra B(A?)
Esquilax EA
Hellraiser EA
Gondolin B(D?)
Kzr30 DE
Omicron BA
Storyfag BA
Excidium CA
Kalin CD
root BE
Sergius AD
Computer Gaming Refugee EA
Kayerts EA
ironyuri E?
Smashing Axe EA
SCO Tactical vote against stupid adventurism

BA's storming ahead, at present. EA takes the crown, through vile flip-floppery.
 

grotsnik

Arcane
Joined
Jul 11, 2010
Messages
1,671
Sorry, CGF, so you did! Your admittedly non-gamechanging vote has been added to the list.
 

Kayerts

Arcane
Joined
Jan 28, 2011
Messages
883
I suspect the Sabbat den is a trap. There's this:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jacob's_Island
Jacob's Island was immortalised by Charles Dickens's novel Oliver Twist, in which the principal villain Bill Sikes meets a nasty end in the mud of 'Folly Ditch'.

Sikes runs to Jacob's Island, where he accidentally hangs himself.

It's a real place, so that's not its only association. But this:

Sommers said:
“I think we can take it,” you interject, “that the Sabbat never considered it more than an off-chance that these raids would kill one of us - really, by sending shovelheads, they were expending the bare minimum of effort. The use of explosives indicates that their primary aim was to cause as much noise and trouble as possible, to embarrass us before the Archon and further disrupt the process of our choosing a new Prince.”

looks like he's projecting the barons' own concerns onto the Sabbat. I.e., I believe the barons care about whether they're embarrassed in front of the Archon, but I'm skeptical about whether the Sabbat is that invested in our prestige. Also, frightening but ineffectual attacks seem like a bad way to sow disunity among the Sabbat's enemies. Terrorism, absent any actual terrifying element, seems more likely to just piss the barons off. Isn't a more probable outcome that the London Camarilla would fall in line, in the face of a common threat? It seems more likely that the attacks had some other purpose, and setting up a trap seems like a plausible one.

The one who greeted us, his name was Ketch, he was...huge, huge...he didn’t say much at all

So they didn't tell the shovelheads anything, but--for no apparent reason--they managed to namedrop a feared leader of the Sabbat in their presence. And since Turcov mentioned rumors of Ketch (and it doesn't seem like Sommers conferred with him about it)?, it seems likely that the shovelheads in other raids got a similar treatment. It seems like they might be being used to leak information to us. The Sabbat has used those methods on Sommers before; remember this?

A slow, almost affectionate smile crawls across Dubrik’s face.

“My dear, stupid girl,” he says, “you really think a Ventrue would trust my information if it came to him gratis?”


If this is a trap and we attempt independent action, Sommers is likely to be known as the uppity new baron who got mauled while trying to be a hero, or the incompetent new baron who led Eda Sly's men to their doom. The archon will not be amused in either case. For that reason, I'm in favor of a version of A) for the first choice in which we inform the other barons who were attacked, but privately, and while voicing our suspicions about the nature of the base. That doesn't embarrass Sly and shows we're a team player, while coincidentally also distributing blame to our teammates.

Re: the second choice, A's lame but probably the smartest move.
 

Esquilax

Arcane
Joined
Dec 7, 2010
Messages
4,833
I'm with Kayerts on this one, flopping my original post.

First choice.

E: Inform the other Barons who were attacked about what we know, wile voicing our suspicions about the nature of the base.
 

ironyuri

Guest
3772125294_3ba781fc7e_o.gif
 

laclongquan

Arcane
Joined
Jan 10, 2007
Messages
1,870,184
Location
Searching for my kidnapped sister
I planned for that eventuality. If it's a trap, we sticking our head in stealthily or anyone else, will get our head cut off easily enough. Which is why we will ask her official and aboveboard. Then we investigate the place in force, of at least two barons, Sommers and Eda Sly, because no way she will let us running around with our troops freely. prolly one or two other barons will get in to share the credits, we shall let them. Camarrilla bond building exercise, hm? If they ambush us, we will have enough force to extract ourselves, and a common cause to go after them in full force. A trap is only a trap until we know it's there.

And dont draw too much comparison between our ambush and this supposedly ambush. For one thing, ours got a real bait you can sink fangs into: a valuable organic worm weapon. They wanted to get it for real so they deployed full force, and therefore get trapped. For another, we have the luxury of time and location to prepare the trap fully, since it's in Camarilla territory. This trap? This supposedly trap? At best they get a quick window to set explosive. It's in hostile territory, and their own force in disarray.

That's why unless we dont touch the place, we NEED to get official permission from the landlady, just so she can send her own alongside us. And if some other barons also get the data from the prisoner and want to horn in, let them.
 

SCO

Arcane
In My Safe Space
Joined
Feb 3, 2009
Messages
16,320
Shadorwun: Hong Kong
Bomb laclongquan

whatever, i'm voting against this stupid adventurism, chalk me up for whatever gets the most votes against.
 

Smashing Axe

Arcane
Patron
Joined
Dec 29, 2011
Messages
2,835
Divinity: Original Sin
If this is a trap and we attempt independent action, Sommers is likely to be known as the uppity new baron who got mauled while trying to be a hero, or the incompetent new baron who led Eda Sly's men to their doom. The archon will not be amused in either case. For that reason, I'm in favor of a version of A) for the first choice in which we inform the other barons who were attacked, but privately, and while voicing our suspicions about the nature of the base. That doesn't embarrass Sly and shows we're a team player, while coincidentally also distributing blame to our teammates.

Fully support this. E A
 

Hellraiser

Arcane
Joined
Apr 22, 2007
Messages
11,773
Location
Danzig, Potato-Hitman Commonwealth
I'm flip-flopping my first vote to E) Inform the other Barons who were attacked about what we know, wile voicing our suspicions about the nature of the base.

EA is the best choice in this situation, oh the horror. Origin is clearly the work of kindred :troll:
 

Kz3r0

Arcane
Joined
May 28, 2008
Messages
27,026
Grotsnick writes wonderful Malks, I find criminal wasting this opportunity with the looney queen, you are not gamers.
 

Esquilax

Arcane
Joined
Dec 7, 2010
Messages
4,833
Bro, while I agree with you that his malks are magnificent, the roleplayer in me demands that we act like the Ventrue Sommers is and not get ourselves involved in a potentially spectacular disaster.

Agreed, the Malkavian characters in this fine saga have managed to tread that fine line of disturbing/dark humor without ever stepping into the abyss of just being in the story for the sake of cheap laughs. And a few of them, like Bob Griddle's seer, have been just plain scary and fucked-up. Hey, whatever happened to Old Rabies?


“Tell me, Daniel,” Eames calls, before you can reach the study door. “What do you make of her?”

You freeze.

A low, prolonged titter.

And the Malkavian whispers, in a rhythmic monotone, dripping with disdain,

“Why, Regentia, it’s a pretty little cunt, that bows and asks, ‘pretty please’. A nervous, pretty little cunt, lying all the while. Is it frightened of you, I wonder? Or frightened of something worse?”

You turn back, slowly, to face him. Old Rabies licks his lips, savouring the moment, and continues,

“No – I have it. Frightened because it dreams of…something. Happy dreams, happy hopes, keeping it afloat, but it fears the night it’ll all come undone. Because it’s too clever to believe in its dream whole-hearted, but it’s too stupid to stop dreaming. They say a rat that’s buried knows it will suffocate, but it scrabbles away, right to the end. Do I have you right, little cunt?”

Holding his gaze, you whisper, holding back your anger and shock,

“You don’t know anything about me, lunatic.”

His wild, raw eyes widen, as if with excitement. He’s leaning forward in his chair.

“I know everything about you, little cunt,” he hisses. “Whether you hide it from them or from yourself, you can’t conceal it from Old Rabies – it’s in the nervousness of your step as you walked in through the door, the way your fingers play at your sleeve, the twitch of your cheek as you whimper, ‘Yes, Regentia’-”

That being said, as entertaining as the Queen is, I think she's far more entertaining when she's making Turcov's life miserable rather than ours.
 

laclongquan

Arcane
Joined
Jan 10, 2007
Messages
1,870,184
Location
Searching for my kidnapped sister
I am rethink my direction of the first option:

3 Ventrue Baron and one Tremere Regent were attack. Of the 3, one is a malcontent, one is the strongest of Ventrue but not strong enough to elevate himself to the Princeship, and one is a newcomer widely hated among the powerbrokers. The Tremere is not better, as themselves coming under close scrutiny these past weeks.

The pack of shovelheads is cheap to gather. The misinformation can be easily in use. The Camarilla also is boiling in a suspicion cloud and pointing fingers left and right. If there's another witchhunt happen and paralyzed the barons, the Sabbat could recover quick.

The location, if it's true and not a fake lead, is of limited utility. The ambush is frankly of not any credibility.

I change my vote of first option to *E* Announce the intelligence you torture out of your prisoner, invite other barons to share what data they gather, suggest that the intel is of suspicious quality, that they could be a trap to discredit and sow discontent among others.

This is no longer an attempt to forge ally out of Eda, but a preventative measure to counter the divide-and-conquer tactic. True Camarrilla for the win!
 

grotsnik

Arcane
Joined
Jul 11, 2010
Messages
1,671
...Why the gif spam, yuri?

Hey, whatever happened to Old Rabies?

Turcov kicked him back out of the city, along with the rest of Eames' closest hangers-on. I'd quite like to bring him back at some point, but I couldn't really figure out a use for him other than 'Guy with Tourette's, stands in the corner and insults people'.
 

ironyuri

Guest
...Why the gif spam, yuri?

Hey, whatever happened to Old Rabies?

Turcov kicked him back out of the city, along with the rest of Eames' closest hangers-on. I'd quite like to bring him back at some point, but I couldn't really figure out a use for him other than 'Guy with Tourette's, stands in the corner and insults people'.

I don't have any energy to get involved in discussion, but I just want my bros to know I'm here, appreciating the grotsnik.

Also, Ricky Ricardo is a direct response to laclongquan. He got some 'splainin to do.
 
Joined
Mar 9, 2012
Messages
382
Project: Eternity
After dozens of frantic, scheming posts I am starting to lose track of which underhanded manipulation is which. With that said, I generally find that I agree with Esqualix and since I was not entirely in favor of "B", it was the best of a not ideal list. The clever reasoning has easily flipped me.

Flipping to "EA", Clearly the best choice.
 

laclongquan

Arcane
Joined
Jan 10, 2007
Messages
1,870,184
Location
Searching for my kidnapped sister
It's bloody easy for some "evidence" being left behind in that nest. I fear that more than an ambush. This could might well trigger a witch hunt. All I am saying.

The targeted Barons are suggestive. The circumstance is dangerous. We all have a Damocles' sword hanging above our head.
 

SCO

Arcane
In My Safe Space
Joined
Feb 3, 2009
Messages
16,320
Shadorwun: Hong Kong
I don't have any energy to get involved in discussion, but I just want my bros to know I'm here, appreciating the grotsnik.

Also, Ricky Ricardo is a direct response to laclongquan. He got some 'splainin to do.

It's very simple - he's trying to 'use' (waste) the team for a while.

BTW; since the Sabbat doesn't give much of a shit about humans the bomb is probably going off anyway.
To be truly effective they probably have some kind of monitoring on the building; there are probably scouts in the outlying buildings, maybe little havens on the basements.

If you want to try to turn the scheme, maybe a 'anonymous tip' to the bomb london police authority? Supported by the 'top secret assault squad' for the 'suspected terror cells'

That is if one of the barons is actually competent at intelligence gathering :roll:

Or you can play this shit for political advantage. Leak that info to the biggest ambitious moron out-there; setting him up to get the 'glory' and to be 'an hero'.


Which might indeed be the plan. Do we even know if this was actually sabbat initiated? No, really - think about it. It can be either a manufactured crisis or a double cross too.
 

grotsnik

Arcane
Joined
Jul 11, 2010
Messages
1,671
Chapter 7: Poor Silly Half-Brained Things




“Jacob’s Island,” Turcov mutters, tugging at the curtains. “The Sabbat are getting back in touch with ancient history - indulging in the Vaulderie in the ruins of their old strongholds. It’s a symbolic gesture to the packs, I assume. Evidence that they seriously intend to reclaim past triumphs. They’ll be cropping up in the Devil’s Acre or Cripplegate before we know it.”

The drawing room is almost empty. The Pell-Mell Queen was the last to leave, snatching Earl Godrick by the hand and dragging the doddering Ventrue out into the night, protesting, to waltz with her upon the pavement.

Eda Sly has not said a word since you announced to the little group the results of your interrogation, but sits, eyes on the carpet, mouth pursed. It’s difficult to tell if she appreciates your discretion. Shaul Artzi is pacing up and down close to the doorway, clearly nervous.
“I rather think Lambeth is more of a concern,” he says, after a moment. “Don’t you, Turcov? The Sabbat have always craved the mysteries of Lambeth - they’ve had their greedy eyes on it since Ashmole passed away, and it’s on the dangerous side of the river, close to their dens. I’ve often suggested to you the possibility of creating a new chantry on the northern banks, perhaps close to St. Paul’s or even-”
“Artzi-”
“I apologise for even raising the subject, I understand that the Tremere must be seen to be given short shrift for the present time, not to be granted any favours, a kind of ritual stockading for the benefit of the rabble, but if we at least began to plan-”
“Artzi, even if it was a serious priority for me, in the midst of chaos and city-wide violence, to indulge your desire to move the seat of your clan in London to a nicer neighbourhood, I could not consider it. The creation of a new chantry is a matter for a Prince. Do you understand? None of us can begin to move forward until we have a Prince, and it’s damned unlikely that we’ll get one while the Sabbat and bloody hunters are running about thumbing their noses at us.”
Artzi looks a little hurt and prods his round spectacles back up against the bridge of his nose.

Eda Sly looks up.
“It will be my responsibility,” she says, with a certain amount of determination, “to investigate this den of the Sabbat. Assuming Somerset’s information is accurate, they have taken a step into my territory. A step they shall most surely regret.”
Behind her, Turcov makes a face.
“I would advise you, Eda,” he says, “to place watchers to ensure that the building has been cleared out, and perhaps to lay traps to dissuade the Sabbat from returning. It seems highly likely that they will be long gone, and that they will have left some nasty surprises for any Camarilla investigator attempting to track them. If you must send somebody, send a ghoul.”
Her hideously sharp cheekbones pucker as she inhales.
“Well, how kind of you, Turcov,” she snaps, without turning to face him, “to advise me on my business in my own native city. How very, very kind of you. I suppose all of you Russians live in fear of the common rabble. After all, they ransacked your palaces and sent you scurrying away, as meek as mice. In my city, however, we are accustomed to being a little more bold."
Turcov takes a deep breath. He hisses at her, with a quiet, burning wrath that cuts through the sudden silence,
What did you just say to me?

Artzi interjects, unnecessarily loudly, giving you a nervous, pleading look that indicates he'd very much like you to help him stop all hell from breaking loose,
“And what about this Ketch, eh? Why’s his name cropping up again all of a sudden? I thought that wretch had left London for good.”
"I'd heard he was confined to Amen Court," you add, "an act of penance on account of his failures."
“The headsman has never been reliable,” Turcov murmurs. He unclenches his fists and, slowly, draws his gaze away from Eda Sly. “Perhaps their new leader made him an offer that pleased him. Perhaps he has his own plans. Chuzhaya dusha potyomki...”
“Speaking of unreliable,” you venture, “what of the Pell-Mell Queen’s request?”
Turcov clasps his hands behind his back and returns his attention to the windows.
“We can’t stop her from prating,” he says. “She’ll have the damn Stone, and she can make her prophecies whenever she likes, but I’ll not be there to see it. You may all do as you wish, but nothing that comes out of that Malkavian’s mouth has ever led to any good, and I suggest all of us stay well out of it. In the meantime...I shall consult with the Sheriff, and we shall begin to co-ordinate efforts towards a raid upon the Sabbat. I’ll be in contact with each of you once we have settled on the likeliest location and a plan of attack. Please see yourselves out - not you, Sommers. You stay.”

Eda Sly glances sharply from Turcov to you as she leaves the room; Artzi, on his part, keeps his head bowed and pretends to be intently polishing his spectacles. The door slams behind the pair of them.

“Tell me, Anthony,” Turcov says, turning back to face you,“Should Eda send one of her prized lieutenants charging into Jacob’s Island and the poor bastard ends up dead, or worse, in the hands of the Sabbat...do you think she’ll try to pretend it never happened, or will she merely blame you for telling her what she should have already known?”
“She should have the sense,” you respond, “to be prudent when it comes to investigating this matter. She's certainly old enough not to do anything foolish."
“You mustn’t put too much faith in age. I understand it’s been drilled into you, but...”
He falls silent for a moment, his fingers tapping at the back of the sofa, before continuing,
“When my sire offered me the Embrace, he told me that I would never grow old. Just another great lie amongst many. The fact that we do not age physically does not mean that we cannot fall behind the times. Mithras grew old, or, at least, he grew isolated, out-of-touch, and wayward; he refused to engage with the living city of the present, and his isolation diminished him. And Eda, on her part, has for a very long time allowed her pride and bitterness to cut her off from the real politics of the here-and-now - our true lifeblood, our damned ambrosia, only stuff that matters. Our Ventrue blood urges us to build palaces, and our palaces, in turn, swallow us up.”
“At times even I catch sight of my reflection,” he adds, tilting his head thoughtfully, “and, mistakenly, I think there are new wrinkles across my forehead and white amongst the grey hairs. I feel too old to look so young. And the world, curse it, will go ahead and change without even having the decency to ask our permission first.”
He’s staring into thin air.

After a few seconds, you feel yourself obliged to prompt,
“Rodyon, was there something you wanted to talk to me about?”
The old Ventrue’s eyes settle on you.
“Something that struck me,” he says, “as you were suggesting to the others that the Sabbat hoped to disrupt our political process with their operations against us. It simply wasn’t right. Not that I blame you for it - you haven’t been amongst us for long enough to see the patterns, that they’ve done this before. And Eda wouldn't think of it, because her head’s filled with thoughts of, fuck knows how, becoming Prince and running me out of town on a rail, and Godrick loses himself in his childer and his outdated obsessions with that ridiculous Taurien Club of his, and Artzi simply wants to be closer to the Centrepoint tower so he can dredge up more material for his experiments, and even I was too concerned with Iacomo and who’ll be sitting in Knightsbridge by the end of the year for it to occur to me...that they’ve done this before.
“Provocation tactics. The year I arrived in London, with my sire, the Sabbat had already attacked several of the city barons. The Camarilla sat on its hands - less because of prudence, I seem to recall, than because Mithras was near-unreachable and the chain of command stalled. So the Sabbat turned their attention to the Kine instead. Random attacks in the open, forcing us to expend our resources on hushing them up, horrid acts of violence; we were fortunate, at least, that we could chalk the mutilated bodies up to the biplane bombings. Finally, there was the Silvertown explosion. At last Lady Anne threw up her hands and sent a hefty expeditionary force down into the sewers to find their damned court. The Sabbat was, of course, waiting exactly for that; they’d been crafting vozhd for some time. Vozhd can be tackled, of course, with the right weaponry, but in those days...and in the cramped underground...we should have seen it coming, of course, but there was nothing else to be done by that stage. Anne had to try and put a stop to them, in order to protect the Masquerade, and in consequence the Sabbat gained more ground that night than they had in the previous decade.
“I simply wonder,” he murmurs, stroking at his chin, “whether we’ve all been so obsessed with who takes the crown that we’ve missed something. Something important.”



*

In the nights coming up to the Queen’s ‘Babbling Seance’, as it comes to be known amongst the rabble of the city, you hear nothing more from Turcov, or the Sabbat, for that matter. A few prominent Kindred, including Eda Sly herself, venture into the Queen’s sea of black circus tents, set up on the barren plains of Hyde Park, presumably to curry favour; she’s scowling when she leaves. You’re accepted, much to Humphrey’s delight, onto the board of his bank, and immediately receive an impressive and utterly unearned signing bonus, as well as invitations to a dozen other social occasions.

Archon Iacomo, you hear, visits Weep-Not Sorley and gives him a dressing-down that leaves the old Nosferatu trembling with fury. Frank Biggs calls you immediately afterwards to tell you that he’s found Sorley’s refusal to play a team game in recent months ‘absolutely reprehensible’ and that he has half a mind to say as much to the Archon before the next Baron’s Council. He then immediately asks for your reassurance that your involvement with the West End banks won’t result in a conflict of interests with his own people in the Docklands, which you gladly give.

And before you know it, the night arrives, and once again you’re stepping past the doorman into the Pleasure ‘N’ Pain, weaving your way through the shimmering dancefloor and obscene bass-driven beat towards the back rooms, where the Queen and her lunatic prophecy await.

*

The stage is empty. Usually, when the Camarilla gathers, there’s a sense of tension in the air, both because the news is so often dire and because the assembled Kindred tend to be too busy coldly watching their enemies than greeting their friends. Tonight there’s more of a carnival atmosphere; though, of course, that’s probably because of the Malkavians. You never knew your city held so many madmen. The hall is thick with guttural laughter and the excitable whisperings of the certifiable insane. And amongst them, you note, are Brujah and Nosferatu, the occasional Gangrel - the rabble of London, out in force. The few Ventrue and Tremere that have come stand nervously, alone and aloof, as their lowly brethren banter and yell friendly abuse at one another. Turcov is, as promised, nowhere to be seen.

“Busy, isn’t it?” someone says.
Andre Carabas, arms neatly folded, is standing beside you.
“So many Malks,” you reply. “Where the hell did they come from? Have the gates of Bedlam opened?”
“They’re here to see the Queen,” says Carabas. “Some of them have come down from Bristol or Birmingham, I believe - I know for a fact that Turcov’s been driven half-mad himself tonight giving them all permission to enter London. Their madness, uh, ‘network’...well, it exerts a pull on them, I believe. They like to be close to her.”
You glance across at him. His thin face is marked by a sneer of disdain.
“And why are you here?” you ask. “You didn’t seem particularly enamoured by the Queen when she presented herself to us.”
“I’m here to see what happens, the same as you. It seems to me that the Queen has already made up her mind to say whatever she thinks will shock us the most. I dread to think what that is, but I’ll be fascinated to observe it first-hand - ah.”

The lights are dimmed. A slow drum-beat begins from somewhere in the rafters. The assembled Kindred fall silent.
The Pell-Mell Queen enters through the double doors; on either side, her acrobats march, their faces painted with bloody tears and bruised lips, holding their Chinese lanterns aloft. The crowd parts to let her pass.
She’s holding something large and wrapped in silk, cradling it in her arms like a great lumpen baby. You have to stand on your tip-toes to make out the London Stone, pocked, eroded limestone. As the Queen cradles it, she hisses, in a sing-song stage whisper, the familiar refrain,
“Wood and stone will fall away, fall away, fall away, wood and stone will fall away, my fair lady-”

She climbs the steps to the stage, walks to the very centre, and, with an air of absolute concentration, drops the London Stone. It lands with a smack, wobbles, and lays still.
There’s one audible cry of outrage, then an outburst of murmuring. A couple of Kindred laugh.
“The stone altar of Brutus,” the Queen calls, silencing the hubbub. “It was upon this hunk of rock that our hallowed ancestor, consecrating the birth of a new land, performed the ancient sacrifices of blood. He drew the lines of hill, valley, and spring, marking the boundaries of London that great Mithras built upon, the sites for the dark chapels of Erkenwald. Tonight we pay homage to these, our great fathers.”
She sits on the Stone, a little fussily, drawing her skirts around her. More laughter, this time; a few Brujah begin to applaud.
“Fucking hell, it’s pantomime stuff,” Carabas mutters, from beside you.
The Queen frowns.
“Tonight,” she says, raising her arms, “this city is in turmoil. Mithras is lost, and we have no Prince to watch over us. I am come to bring counsel from the darkness, reason from the madness. I shall speak to the past, and the past shall answer for our future. Someone in this room has their legs crossed. Please uncross them - done? Good; we can begin. Thank you.”

The acrobats dim their lanterns. The Queen is sitting, alone, in a pool of light in the centre of darkness.
She lowers her head. Her lips begin to move, first slowly and in silence, and then more loudly and with an ever-increasing speed until the gibberish is a siren wail-
“-terema-suremi-ki-si-janda-o-et-tera-o-te-tre-e-o-te-o-rasau-relidzi-quaquaqua-si-kajanda-te-o-tre-o-te-the-plains-in-the-mountains-by-the-seas-the-great-deeps-the-great-cold-sea-in-the-abode-of-stones-kera-ba-who-comes-knocking-biabi-ba-tru-who-is-this-I-hear-knocking-who-comes-knocking-”
A thump, that seems to come out of from somewhere just behind your left shoulder. Another, louder thump. All around you, Kindred are glancing about, looking to see where the sound is coming from. The Queen’s voice is shifting, taking on a cracked, itching, child-like tone,
“-it-is-I-who-comes-knocking-of-quick-breath-and-cold-fingers-back-to-the-Quick-back-to-the-world-bloodsuckers-fucking-cunts-fucking-bloodsuckers-let-me-loose-let-me-loose-I-must-be-loosed-round-and-round-the-garden-like-a-teddy-bear-”
“Pathetic,” Carabas mutters. He puts his hands to his mouth and calls, audibly, “Ask it if there’s a John in the audience!”
He is ignored. The Queen is on her feet, head still bowed, arms clasped around her like a straitjacket, shivering,
“-the-babble-the-babble-calls-the-babble-o-te-o-etera-o-te-o-tre-otetotera-father-dark-father-from-out-of-the-dark-no-father-from-out-of-the-dark-no-no-no-”
Someone shouts,
“No! Not him! Not him, Queen! Send him back! Send him back!”
And, you sense, for the first time, fear is rippling through the crowd.
“-dark-father-no-no-e-otera-blood-blood-must-prevail-dark-father-no-father-no-father-no-father-no-no-NO-”

The Queen’s head jolts up. Her eyes are pure milky-white. A trickle of blood dribbles down from out of her left nostril. She convulses, once, twice. In front of you, a large Brujah turns, pushes you to one side, and hurries out of the room. It takes a moment for you to recognise him as one of Robert Griddle’s young acolytes.
A voice emerges from out of the Queen’s mouth, though her lips are barely moving. A deep, bass voice, with whispering echoes that seem to wriggle out from the blackest corners of the room,
A broken hall, a bloodied crown.
A London Bridge come tumbling down.
A Prince will rise, a city falls,
A bloodied crown, a broken hall-

All around the room, swaying as if in a blissful trance, ignorant of the panic all around them, the Malkavians add their voices, soft and rapturous, to the chant,
A broken hall, a bloodied crown-”
And the deep voice seems to grow louder, ever louder, filling the room, to a shriek that surely must pierce through the ceiling and into the club above,
A broken hall, a bloodied crown,
A London Bridge come tumbling down-”

Something creaks, and snaps. The great spotlight above shatters, spraying glass across the stage, plunging the room into darkness.

There’s a single moment of absolute confusion; then the Kindred closest to the stage, finding their senses, rush up to help the fallen Queen to her feet.
They have to lift her bodily up; she rests limply in their arms, her eyes returned to their natural pale blue, staring into the thin air, whispering, over and over,
“...bloodied crown...broken hall...”

Near the doorway, a short, bearded Malkavian suffers a manic episode, laughing frantically and scratching with an animal fury at the walls, and has to be physically restrained.

*

Somehow, you find yourself walking out into the cool Soho air alongside Andre Carabas. The pair of you stroll southwards, towards the casinos of Leicester Square, in a thoughtful silence.
“Well, that was dramatic,” he says, after a little while. “What did you make of that?”
You bite down on your lip, considering.

“Once,” you begin, “I met a Malkavian - a pet of the Anarchs, actually - who, it was claimed, had visions of what the future held. Certainly she was very convincing, but it was only later that I began to consider her predictions and whether or not they might have held true. But that does not mean that we should believe in every Malkavian’s babblings without question. We know that the Queen is a trickster. When she began to scream that ghastly rhyme, like so many there, my spirit quailed - but unlike so many there, my reason rebelled. It was all so pat, with that knocking and the business with the spotlight - and she mentioned London Bridge, too, like the rhyme she sang to that damned stone, and the rhyme about, uh, going ‘around the garden’-”
“Like a, ahaha, like a teddy bear.”
“Precisely, like a fucking teddy bear. As if she was thinking in rhymes before the ‘babble’ even began, as if it was only her own thoughts, going around and around in her head, and nobody else’s.”
Carabas nods, approvingly.
“It’s something to bear in mind, isn’t it?” he says. “I mean, what better way to cause a stir? A lot of dark hints that the next Prince of London will be the one to lose London. Suddenly the job’s a poison chalice, and the rabble will look to her to come up with a solution to her prophecy in her next ‘seance’.”

Your phone is humming away from inside your jacket pocket. You bid Carabas good night, part ways, and answer.

William Horn.
“Ahm, Sommers, listen, that business with the, uh, religious fanatics-”
“You’ve found them?”
“Yes - look, we’re all getting rather worried over here. We, er, think we’ve traced them to the residence of the Bishop of, uh, Oxford. The Bishop’s office claim he’s on holiday but, uh, look, we can’t find a trace of him. There’s a suspicion that this might be a hostage situation, er, they seem to be holed up there. Special Branch have been watching the house for the past day, they say the trespassers have automatic weapons. We have troops on stand-by, ready to go in-”
Fuck.
“You were supposed to track them down,” you snap, “and then let me know when you’d found them. Not saddle the fucking cavalry without informing me first.”
“Yes, I know, I know, but they’re, ah, in the Bishop’s palace, old man. It’s being treated as a potential act of terrorism. I cannot conduct an entire surveillance operation by myself, and the officers I put in charge simply deemed it prudent to have an assault force prepared to go in.”

A) Tell him to send them in, but that they will need to be highly trained and prepared for heavy resistance. Better not to give the hunters the benefit of a foe they’re actually prepared for.
B) Have your ghoul squad take out the hunters instead.
C) Tell Horn to do nothing for now, and contact Iacomo about the hunters’ location.
D) Tell Horn to do nothing, but keep watching the house. You may be able to make use of these hunters, now you know where they are...
 

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