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Velya the Vivisector and Elaine Cassidy
Cardinals of the Lands Beyond
Background: A legend even among the Fiends,
few have seen him and fewer still have spoken
with him. Together with Lugoj, Voivode of
Voivodes, he was among those who freed the
childer from the Ancients' bloody shackles. His
command of blood magic rivals even that of the
Tremere Inner Circle. Younger Sabbat call him
"the Flayer," "the Vivisector," and many other
names, but the oldest Fiends of the Sword of
Cain know him simply as Velya.
As one of Sabbat's founders, Velya now serves
as Cardinal, overseeing the reconquest of the
old Tzimisce lands. In that role, he orchestrates
ethnic hatred, channels terrorist purges, and
grinds away the old Iron Curtain until it is no
more than a heap of shattered states and broken
towns. Above all, he prepares and executes potent
Koldunic rites meant to awaken the spirits of the
ancient land and turn them against the hated
Tremere of nearby Vienna. Velya has accepted this
openly political role with reluctance, being far
more interested in the paths of Metamorphosis
than in anything as ephemeral as Jyhad. Yet he
recognizes the necessity of his work, and carries
out his obligations with the meticulous devotion
only an ancient, malignant Fiend can display.
Or so Velya wants you to believe.
Where others see a battlefield between sects,
he sees in Prague an old inheritance waiting to
be reclaimed. The ancient clan lands spread like
a ring of scars around the capital, and whenever
war touches its walls, elders whisper that the
Vivisector has fixed his gaze on it again. For
many Tzimisce, Prague is not merely a disputed
city: it is another piece of the clan's body,
and Velya is the surgeon who decides what is
saved and what is amputated.
The Tremere of Vienna know that weight all too
well. For centuries they have learned to fear
Velya's name as much as that of any member of
their own Inner Circle: beyond the fallen Iron
Curtain stands a Cardinal willing to awaken the
earth itself and hurl it against their Chantry.
In Prague's recent history, every tremor along
the old borders, every provincial purge, and
every uprising of fanatics in forgotten towns may
bear his signature, though he rarely appears in
person.
Before the Nights of White Ash, his influence was
felt as a constant pressure in the background:
Sabbat packs appearing and disappearing according
to patterns no Camarilla elder fully understood,
rural cults suddenly speaking of "the true
flesh," and mutilated ghouls found on the city's
outskirts like surgical warnings left at Prague's
doorstep. The fear became so great that not only
Vassily and Carlak, but princes across the
country, forbade his name from being spoken in
open council, knowing that even rumors of his
presence were enough to spread panic among the
ancillae. For many, Velya was the troubling
explanation behind aberrant experiments
discovered in anonymous basements and small
communities erased from the map leaving nothing
but scars in the earth. That proved a blessing to
the antitribu brotherhoods and packs besieging
the city, unknowingly sheltered by Velya's own
masquerade.
After the Nights of White Ash, the city learned
that the physical absence of a Methuselah does
not mean his withdrawal. Entire cells of the
Sabbat Inquisition claimed to have received
orders encoded in Velya's clinical style,
instructing them which neighborhoods should be
abandoned, which havens should be sacrificed,
and which enemies should be preserved "for future
study." For some Prague Cainites, it was as if a
surgeon had decided to let an infection spread
only so far, observing with interest the way the
city decayed before deciding which parts were
worth rebuilding.
Yet sometimes there are other explanations. The truth is
that the Vivisector is trapped in a terrible
predicament of his own making, one that may soon
lead him where millennia of enemies and dangers
have failed. Velya's greatest delight is also
his greatest misfortune.
A century ago, the Tzimisce fell in love and "married"
one Elaine Cassidy, a ten-year-old girl from
Boston high society. From a distance he watched
Elaine methodically carve out a dominant place in
her neurotic family, reducing her mother to
catatonia, arranging her sister's premature
death, and manipulating her extraordinarily
sensitive brother until he was committed to an
asylum. Velya was enchanted and, supporting the
girl's schemes from afar, saw to it that she
inherited the entire Cassidy fortune. For her
part, the very young and impressionable Elaine
was immediately drawn to the noble,
Mephistophelean vampire as soon as she met him,
and the two monsters were joined in a marriage
of blood.
But alas, as the centuries passed, Velya had become so
far removed from human needs that he failed to
grasp the child's inherent fragility. Though
Elaine could be one of the liveliest monsters of
her kind, her ten-year-old psyche was barely
capable of facing the horrors of unlife in the
Sabbat. Lacking the resolve even to learn the
rudiments of the Path of Metamorphosis, the girl
spiraled out of control and her soul was lost to
the Beast in the mid-20th century. Aware of what
had happened, yet unable to part from his little
girl and "wife," Velya used his arts to graft his
beloved onto himself until the day he might
somehow "fix" her.
Of course, no vampire trapped by the Beast can be
"fixed," not even by someone as brilliant as the
Vivisector. More than that, the union of Velya
and Elaine has fused their veins and arteries so
that the blood of one flows through the body of
the other. Though this arrangement permanently
reinforces the Blood Bond between them, it also
allows Elaine's unleashed Beast to inflame
Velya's own.
Thus, for the first time in centuries, the Methuselah is
on the verge of losing control. Velya's servants
have already begun to murmur about failed
experiments, neglected duties, and strange lapses
in personality. His control over himself and over
Elaine slips further away with each passing
night, and if he falls, the reconquest of the
Old Clan Lands may fail with him.
In the present nights, many wonder why, if
Velya longs so much for the fall of the Tremere
and the conquest of the city, he still has not
moved all his pieces. He eagerly watches for the
chance to free Prague from its worst enemies and
tear from its entrails secrets worthy of his
scalpel, yet he limits himself to tightening the
board and letting others spill the first blood.
There are border domains where Sabbat packs
attack with almost clinical precision and then
stop abruptly, as if someone were taking notes
on each area's resistance before deciding
whether it deserves a deeper cut. Some believe
he is waiting for the perfect moment to strike
Prague and Vienna at once; others believe his
own inner demons and Elaine's unleashed Beast
are holding him back. The only certainty is
that, as long as his name is still spoken in
whispers, Prague has not yet seen its worst
night.
Image: Individually, both Velya and Elaine are
beautiful creatures; he is well proportioned
and neatly dressed, with a flowing mane of
silver hair; she is a perversely captivating
Nabokovian nymphet, dressed in elegant yet
conservative clothes. Needless to say, the fact
that the two vampires are grafted into one
another, with the stumps of Elaine's legs
attached to Velya's back, makes the being, as a
whole, truly grotesque. Although the Vivisector
does everything he can to keep his distracted,
docile "wife" under control, there are times
when the Beast possesses her, and during those
episodes the girl's perfect childish face turns
into a spasmodic mass of flesh, and she vomits
obscenities from her deformed mouth.
Interpretation Suggestions: As Velya, you are almost too methodical and
dispassionate, frantically trying to compensate
for the madness flooding you through Elaine's
bloodstream. You spend so much time forcing your
Beast into obedience that you have neglected the
basic principles of the Path of Metamorphosis,
which has led you into a downward spiral of
spiritual malaise. As Elaine, you spend most of
your time in a state of dreaming or
semi-consciousness induced by Velya's blood
sorcery. Yet from time to time you break the
spell, and in those moments you combine the
cunning and whim of a maddened child with the
chilling frenzy of a deranged Cainite. You love
your "husband," but all you truly seek is to drag
him into a bestial union with you.
The Traits after the slash "/" belong to
Elaine Cassidy.
Clan:
Tzimisce
Faction:
Sabbat
Sire:
Unknown / Velya
Nature:
Architect/Pervert
Conduct:
Traditionalist/Girl
Generation:
5th/ 6th
Embrace:
Unknown/1890s
Apparent Age:
Mid-forties / 10 years
Physical:
Strength 4, Dexterity 4, Stamina 7
Social:
Charisma 6, Manipulation 6, Appearance 3/7
Mental:
Perception 8, Intelligence 8/4, Cunning 6
Talents:
Alert 6, Dodge 3, Brawl 3, Subterfuge 5
Skills:
Body Alteration 6, Melee 4, Etiquette
5, Subterfuge 5.
Knowledge:
Academics 5, Sciences 7, Linguistics
(numerous European tongues and several forgotten
Old World languages) 6, Occultism 8
Disciplines:
Animalism 8, Auspex 8, Domination 5, Fortitude
4, Koldunic Sorcery 8, Presence 5,
Vicissitude 7.
Koldunic Paths:
Paths of Blood 5, Paths of Fire 5,
Paths of the Spirits 5.
Backgrounds:
Servants 5, Sabbat Position 5, Resources 5.
Virtues:
Conviction 2 (was 5) / Consciousness 0, Instinct
4 / Self-control 0, Courage 2 / 2
Morality:
Path of Metamorphosis 4 (formerly 9) / Humanity
0
Willpower:
5 (previously 10)
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