Still the Heart by Ilah Sef

comments to  [EMAIL PROTECTED] (mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED])   

This is mine, I wrote it, but various names  belong to Anne Rice and I won't 
contest her for them.  

Spoilers... The Vampire Chronicles in general. Maybe  QotD, but place and 
time is flexible in the bounds of the current century.  The "R" rating is for 
violence - this one isn't for the squeamish.  

 
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the splinter of an  empty life 



The young ones look at all of the old ones in  silent awe. Look, their 
whispers float one to the other, look,  so old, so ancient... abiding, 
unthirsting. 

Ah,  and there is the truth of the awe. Unthirsting. They, who must  drink 
once or twice a night look in undisguised awe at those who go for  weeks or 
months without the blood, who might go years without the hunt.  They look at 
the 
ancients with shining young eyes and see a foreign  creature, no longer a slave 
to the thirst that beats in their children's  hearts with angry hands. 

So little they know. Or  perhaps not - for in the darkness, in the stillness 
when they gather  together, the young, the newborn, their whispers are still 
of awe but  lower, softer, meant not to ever be heard by those ears they 
discuss.  Look, they breath, hardly daring. Look, the ancient ones.  

So vicious. So violent.  

The tales pass like wildfire, like the whispers of a  furtive classroom of 
mortal children. Have you seen...? Did you  hear...? Atrocities in the modern 
news, the rare and seldom body found  not just drained but wrung dry, crushed 
like a damp rag, heart and organs  ripped forth and squeezed like overripe 
fruit. And then the young ones  gather in darkened corners and whisper to one 
another, each denying  knowledge, each knowing they themselves do not posess 
the 
strength to do  such a thing. They look out into the night around them, 
clustered like  chicks in a nest, and breath the words. The ancient ones...  

The ancient ones, the old ones, the ones who hunt  not for thirst but for 
pleasure. The ones who hunt with the vicious sadism  of a sated cat who now has 
leisure to play with its hapless prey. They say  it of all of us, whether it be 
true or no.  


-------[falling,  softly]
----------[forgotten, fading] 


I am not as old as  some. I can still feel the echo of the true thirst, 
nipping at vein and  plucking at nerve until it drives me forth to the hunt. 
But 
rarely. For  months, the better part of a year, it will leave me in peace. The 
blood is  still sweet but I put it aside long ago and the siren call of longing 
for  pure hedonistic pleasure has little hold over me.  

When I do hunt it is a swift thing - done in an  instant, taking the first 
blackened heart which crosses my path without  remorse or guilt. Leave that to 
the young ones; for myself, the kill is  simply that which must be done and 
there is no sense in prolonging it or  carrying on about it. Done swiftly, done 
neatly, disposed of quickly and  pass on to other things. 

Not now.  


--tinged  with acrid  ash 


There is a reason  not to kill in anger - it is too easy. Too simple to do 
and you may not  know the trap of it until the jaws close about you. It is so 
very easy to  give in to the anger and the sweet pleasure of the blood is like 
a 
reward  for that very lack of control. A very easy solution and it has 
nothing to  do with the true thirst, nothing even with the search for pleasure. 
Only 
 the satiation of an appetite that has naught to do with any real need but  
only with the surcease of control of simple temper.  

There is pleasure in it, certainly. Pleasure in the  snap of bone and the 
sodden give of flesh beneath the hand. Pleasure to  bare fang and feel the fear 
radiate up in waves like heat rising to feed  the flames of the anger that 
demands some satisfaction from someone...  anyone. There are so many ways to 
hunt, 
and we try them all at one time or  another. The breathless shivers of 
seduction; the righteous feast of the  judge; the solemn, quiet passing of the 
one 
who longs for death. The  gentle hunt, the brutal hunt, the quick or slow, calm 
or frantic. It  flavors the blood, reflects our moods and needs.  

Anger is the great equalizer. In the grasp of anger  even the faces of those 
you love best become unbearable, their words  meaningless and washed away in 
the tidal roar of your own heartbeat as it  pulses in your clenched hands. 
Anger is blind and whatever is nearest to  hand - friend, foe, or an unassuming 
wall - are equally likely to be the  recipient of the rage boiling within you. 

I do not  loose my temper. I have spent long years and longer nights making 
that a  reality. I may grow angry but I do not let the anger control me. A man 
is  more than the sum of his emotion, more than a slave to the passion of the  
moment. Anger is naught but a lack of control, and if one can not control  
one's self then how is the man better than the beast?  

And in those rare, hypothetical times when I do  loose control... it is good 
sense and common decency, I think, to remove  myself from the presence of 
those I might hurt with my words or deeds.  

-------the  bite of  a winter  wind 

The hunt is, by nature, violent. No matter how one does it,  no matter how it 
is disguised or what tricks are used it remains, at  heart, nothing more than 
death. It is the hunt. The taking of life; and  whether it is because we are 
damned creatures sentenced to compound our  damnation with the sin of murder; 
or merely because we are faster,  stronger, and it is a part of our nature; we 
are still the predator who  takes his prey. Like one of those television 
programs one may see, when we  step out upon the hunt the world around us 
becomes 
our savannah and we the  sharp toothed crocodile, the snarling lion, the snake 
with the mouse  within its coils. We are the hunters. It is the violence of 
nature and the  very nature of violence. What better outlet, then, for the 
burning rage?  

But anger takes the beauty from the hunt, removes  the last scrap of dignity 
from it. It takes it and twists it, makes it  personal and uncomfortably 
close. 

The anger boils  out with every breath, every gesture, but only in certain 
gestures  may it know the blessed lancing of the fire within. Only the violent  
release will quench the fire. The fear, the screams, the crunch of bone  and 
the give of flesh - these are balm to the madness of the soul. When  you 
finally sink your teeth into the fount of blood it means almost  nothing, for 
this 
was not about the blood. It is merely the dessert, the  icing upon the meal 
already had. To call it animalistic is wrong - animals  do not kill in anger. 
Only men do. And so, even in this, we reaffirm that  we are naught more than 
man, 
nothing more or less. 

----------swirling  in the stillness 

Looking down now at my blood stained hands and spattered  clothes, feeling 
the life surge through my veins even as it drips, drop by  drop to the bloody 
pulp at my feet - now, yes, I feel remorse as I never  do after a clean hunt. 
Not guilt over the taking of a life; that means  little. But disgust at myself 
for the manner of it, for the mess created  and the loss of control. Remorse 
and disgust and sickness. Cursing, I find  a scrap of cloth to wipe the worst 
of 
the blood from my hands and shake  them dry. I can't bring myself to touch 
the blood soaked crumpled remnant,  not even with the toe of a shoe. Bad enough 
to have to shove it by force  of mind into the depths of a garbage heap. It is 
the work of a moment to  kindle a flame in dampened paper and leave it, 
smoldering, a sullen ugly  smoke that should not attract attention until far 
too 
late. A moment and I  begrudge every one of them that I must waste before 
turning to go.  

Still and all, it has done what needed doing. Filled  with life, calm of mind 
and still of heart, I may return to face in  rationality that which temper 
forced me to flee. 

------of the  silenced  heart 

The ancient ones, the young ones say, the old ones,  the ones who hunt not 
for thirst but for pleasure. Who hunt with cruelty  and greed. They say it of 
all of us, whether it be true or no.  

Some truths are better left unexamined, and others  are no sort of truth at 
all. 

End  



 
____________________________________

 (http://www.tc.umn.edu/~pres0049/Storypage.html) 





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