Summer lay on the city of Corvus Bay like a wet towel. A heat haze hung across the city, mingling with the smell of hot asphalt, and the emissions of thousands of cars. Only intermittently did relief arrive in the form of the clammy breath of the Atlantic Ocean, telling tales of the far away polar wastes in the barest whisper. This did nothing to stop the frenetic activity of the city: cargo arrived in the port in a ceaseless stream, vanishing onto rail cars or semi trailers or into a hundred other capillaries of commerce. Nor did it stop the relentless grind of the citizens of the City of Crows, lives measured in hourly rates, rent payments, car repairs and, if they were lucky, the occasional moments of joy. And of course nothing stopped the masters of the city, mortal and mundane alike, from enjoying their place at the top of the pyramid.
The Tem Gala was the high point of this order. The bright and beautiful of the mortal and supernatural communities alike. Of course, only the beautiful and photogenic of the supernatural community were invited, only those that could wear a pleasing form were invited, but that did include wizards, fae, vampires, even a few of the more well to do demons. It was a pageant for the haves that the have nots could only watch in flickering LCD.
“And the word is we have a wedding to look forward to!” a reporter in an expensive suit with more expensive cosmetic surgeries gushed. The TV screen showed a red carpet with gold plated posts and red ropes where celebrities were stopped and asked the essential question of ‘who are you wearing’ followed by rather more proforma inquiry of which charities, the ostensible purpose of the night, they were supporting. The woman being asked about her matrimonial plans was declared: “Sophia Tattersol, Philanthropist” by the tape below the interview. She was beautiful in the way that many wealthy people were, though there was a brightness and intelligence to her eyes that animated and elevated her looks. Her dark hair was cut with simplicity that all but screamed money. To the mortals of the city she was merely one of the social elite, to the aware crowd she was sorceress royalty, the daughter and presumptive heir of Edmund Tattersol, the Old Monster himself whose grip on city politics and arcane lore were equally ironclad.
“We are hoping for a fall wedding, here in the city of course,” Sophia gushed to the evident delight of the reporter. A handsome man in an expensive tux stepped into the shot and the camera lit with the frenzy of flash photography as husband and wife-to-be were immortalized in film. Well wife was immortalized, the husband being Mateo Cassalaro, the eldest son of Duke Vitorio Cassalaro, the eldest and most powerful vampire in the city, and thus having already passed beyond the bounds of simple mortality. A union between the two most powerful blocs in the city was a coup that seemed almost impossible after decades of hot and cold conflict in the streets and in the boardroom.
“Well, many happy returns and…” the feed went dead, flickering to static for a second and then to a sterile ‘signal lost’. A few seconds later the shockwave arrived. The top of the Tem tower mushroomed out in a red and orange streaked fireball that rained shattered glass over three city blocks. Car alarms across half the city began to wail and power outages rippled outwards in irregular patterns. Dogs howled and sirens screamed. Not long after that, the phones began to ring…
The Tem Gala was the high point of this order. The bright and beautiful of the mortal and supernatural communities alike. Of course, only the beautiful and photogenic of the supernatural community were invited, only those that could wear a pleasing form were invited, but that did include wizards, fae, vampires, even a few of the more well to do demons. It was a pageant for the haves that the have nots could only watch in flickering LCD.
“And the word is we have a wedding to look forward to!” a reporter in an expensive suit with more expensive cosmetic surgeries gushed. The TV screen showed a red carpet with gold plated posts and red ropes where celebrities were stopped and asked the essential question of ‘who are you wearing’ followed by rather more proforma inquiry of which charities, the ostensible purpose of the night, they were supporting. The woman being asked about her matrimonial plans was declared: “Sophia Tattersol, Philanthropist” by the tape below the interview. She was beautiful in the way that many wealthy people were, though there was a brightness and intelligence to her eyes that animated and elevated her looks. Her dark hair was cut with simplicity that all but screamed money. To the mortals of the city she was merely one of the social elite, to the aware crowd she was sorceress royalty, the daughter and presumptive heir of Edmund Tattersol, the Old Monster himself whose grip on city politics and arcane lore were equally ironclad.
“We are hoping for a fall wedding, here in the city of course,” Sophia gushed to the evident delight of the reporter. A handsome man in an expensive tux stepped into the shot and the camera lit with the frenzy of flash photography as husband and wife-to-be were immortalized in film. Well wife was immortalized, the husband being Mateo Cassalaro, the eldest son of Duke Vitorio Cassalaro, the eldest and most powerful vampire in the city, and thus having already passed beyond the bounds of simple mortality. A union between the two most powerful blocs in the city was a coup that seemed almost impossible after decades of hot and cold conflict in the streets and in the boardroom.
“Well, many happy returns and…” the feed went dead, flickering to static for a second and then to a sterile ‘signal lost’. A few seconds later the shockwave arrived. The top of the Tem tower mushroomed out in a red and orange streaked fireball that rained shattered glass over three city blocks. Car alarms across half the city began to wail and power outages rippled outwards in irregular patterns. Dogs howled and sirens screamed. Not long after that, the phones began to ring…