It is currently 18:53 Pacific Time on
Tue Jan 28 2003.
Currently in Saint Claire, it is
clear outside. The temperature is 47 degrees Fahrenheit (8 degrees
Celsius). The wind is currently coming in from the north at 6 mph. The
barometric pressure reading is 30.22 and rising, and the relative
humidity is 83 percent. The dewpoint is 42 degrees Fahrenheit (5
degrees Celsius.)
Currently the moon is in the waning
Crescent Moon phase (27% full).
Storeroom
A large, cold storeroom. Rows of
empty metal shelves are bolted to the concrete floor, and light's
provided by a few naked light bulbs hanging from the ceiling. There's a
bare mattress on the floor, along with a caged iguana and some of
Cassiel's other things -- clothes, blankets, a pillow, and the like.
There's a bathroom at one end of the storeroom, but the water's been
turned off. The single door leading out is usually locked, and has a
bolt on the outside to secure it further.
Cassiel's Elder, teacher, and captor arrives as he always does --
announced by the scraping sound of the metal bolt sliding back and the
turn of the lock, and carrying food. Nonperishable stuff this time, in
cans. He got her a hotplate a week or so ago, but the accomodations in
general remain... primitive. Urban primitive, but still primitive.
Cassiel is sitting on the mattress, where she usually is, reading a
book with Zilla stretched out across her lap. At the sound of the door
opening she peers up, grunts something that may or may not be a
greeting, and returns to her book.
Salem arches an eyebrow, then closes the door behind him. "Hello to
you, too." He sets down the plastic grocery bag of canned food --
beefaroni and soup. Then he stands over her, arms folded.
Cassiel looks up again, this time actually setting the book aside on
the bed next to her. "What brings you by today, besides to drop off
more food and stuff," she replies, letting one hand run down the
iguana's side as it naps.
"A bit of history," Salem says evenly. He settles down crosslegged on
the bare floor nearby, elbows resting on his thighs and fingers folded
together in front of him. "Who we are, both as a people and,
specifically, as a tribe."
Cassiel ohs. "So storytime then. Haven't had one of those in a bit."
She grabs a piece of scrap paper serving as a placemarker nearby, then
puts it in her book and closes it. "Tell on. I'm listening."
Salem nods, then begins. "I've already told you about the Triat," he
says, taking a bottle of water from the grocery bag and unscrewing the
top. "And how it went bad, as far as we know. This takes place much
afterward, when the world was recognizably our world, but still
primitive. Before the first city, before the rise of human
civilization. Do you remember the Imperigium?"
Cassiel squints her eyes a little bit, biting the tip of her tongue as
she think. "Was that the thing when the Garou were wiping out stuff,
like humans?" she asks, still not sure of the answer.
"Humans, specifically," Salem says with a faint grimace. "'Culling the
herds,' they called it. Keeping the population down. It was ended by
the efforts of the Children of Gaia, the Black Furies, and the
Stargazers. We didn't exist then, not yet." He takes a sip of water.
"Afterward, the Garou faded into the background. The elders set down
the law of the Veil, and humanity started the process of forgetting we
existed... and they started building cities. The first city."
Cassiel hrms. "If we didn't exist then, then what were we? Just
tribeless Garou, wandering aimlessly?" She tilts her head, folding her
hands into her lap as she continues to listen.
"We were part of other tribes," Salem says. "Our tribe begins, though,
soon after the Impergium ended. The elders of the Garou Nation charged
a number of Garou to form a pack whose purpose was to watch over
humanity. To keep an eye on them. They did the same for the wolves,
but, mm. Wolves don't do very much." He smiles thinly, just for a
moment. "They called this pack the Warders of Man."
Cassiel stretches out on the mattress after placing Zilla next to her.
"So did we come from that pack? I can't imagine how a pack, if it had
members from other tribes in it, would decide to renounce their
original tribe and decide to live with humans."
Salem says. "I'm getting to that." He frowns faintly. "You must
understand, the Garou were very, mm, feral in those days. Tooth and
nail and whatever Gifts given to them by Gaia. Powers from nature, from
animals, from the spirits and their ancestors... not from humanity. The
Warders of Man, as they watched humanity, saw them do things they
hadn't thought of before. What humans lacked in physical prowess they
made up for in inventiveness. The Warders of Man became... fascinated,
and started copying the humans' inventions, sometimes improving them
with the use of spirits. The bow and arrow, for example... we learned
that from humanity. The pack grew larger was use of such weapons became
more popular, and the pack became... not a tribe, really, but a society
of like-minded Garou. But they still did not live in the cities. Not
yet." He takes another sip of water before continuing.
Cassiel ohs. "All right. Guess that makes some sense. I think. But
wouldn't we have been creative enough to do all that stuff on our own,
or were we content to just use fangs, claws, and that sort of thing?"
Salem's smile is thin and humorless. "The Garou Nation was _quite_
content with their natural weapons and their traditions. It was a
simpler world. Less complex. They could afford to be lax and lazy. But
several, wolf-born most likely, and they were much more numerous then,
likely the controlling force in the Nation, started to feel threatened
by the Warders of Man and thought about disbanding them and reinstating
the Impergium long enough to destroy the first city and the humans
within it. The Warders responded by moving into the city and breeding
with the humans there so they could claim them as kinfolk. To protect
them." His mouth thins. "I apologize if this all sounds a bit rough and
vague, but we have nothing from that time but oral tradition, and our
tribe isn't much on oral tradition. Still, it was around the time that
we started living within the city walls, living as _humans_ do, mind
you, not as street scum or beggers the way the Bone Gnawers did, that
we stopped being a pack or a society and started being considered a
tribe. A small tribe, granted, but still a tribe."
Cassiel shakes her head and waves a hand in the air. "Eh, I've read
stories that were more boring and vague. You're doing fine." She folds
her arms and rests her head on them, glancing up occasionally. "So why
didn't the Gnawers just join with us and make one tribe that way? Or
were they happy living like that? I can't imagine why someone would be,
but hey. That's just my opinion. I like having four walls around me and
food every day."
"Better to ask one yourself," Salem says dryly. "Many Bone Gnawers are
simply unable. They are, quite bluntly, the dregs of Garou society. Any
Garou that can't hack it anywhere else ends up in the Gnawers. Or
dead." He pauses a beat. "There was a time, in the early twentieth
century, when there was talk of our tribes merging, but that fell apart
when the Great Depression hit, and we've since gone seperate ways.
Different philosophies. The Bone Gnawers, and their totem, the Rat,
believe in survival at all costs. Ours, Cockroach, believes in survival
and adaptability. Bone Gnawers are the champions of trash. We Glass
Walkers are the champions of the city."
Cassiel nods a bit. "Ahhh. Following you now. Do you think there would
ever be a time where the two might actually become one tribe? Like,
after the Apocalypse or whatever? I doubt there'll be many cities left
after that happens."
Salem considers this, lips thinned. He shrugs. "Hard to say what will
happen after something like that. We may. Then again, the Bone Gnawers
may join the rest of the Nation in celebrating the destruction of human
civilization, while _we_ are set to the task of helping build it back
up." He exhales a sharp breath. "That is, if there's anything left to
rebuild. Our primary duty is to Gaia and prtecting Her."
"That's gotta be a tough decision. Help Gaia, or help the people you've
lived with your entire life, and who are pretty much the skeleton of
your tribe." Cass shakes her head. "Of course, it seems nothing about
this protecting Gaia deal is ever an easy decision."
Salem's eyes narrow. "There is no decision to make, Cassiel. By helping
humanity, by keeping the city clean and fighting the Wyrm within it,
you help Gaia. The city is of Gaia. Humans are of Gaia. The ferals and
the Luddites out in the woods and in the gutters will disagree with
you, but that's what separates them from us."
Cassiel bites her lip, but doesn't vocally give a reply. She just nods
instead and rolls onto her side, waiting for Salem to continue.
"The real war is here," Salem continues, tapping the concrete floor
between them. "The caern is out there in the woods, and that needs
protecting too... as does the land surrounding it. I've done my time
out there to help guard it, as will you when the time comes, but the
city is our home. You understand?"
"Uh-huh," the cub replies softly. "But I have to admit, that's quite a
bit of things to protect for a tribe. Most just have one or the other,
but we have to somehow balance the two. I guess, after time it just
becomes second nature, but it seems like a lot to me."
Salem gives the cub a faint smile. "You're young," he says, taking
another swallow of water. "Plus, I'm giving you the broad philosophies.
The grand scheme, the wide picture. Practically speaking... you do what
you can, with what skills you have. After you finish this stage of your
life, your cubhood, and get through your Rite of Passage, you'll join
other Garou in a pack. Between pack and Sept, you'll do fine."
Cassiel smirks. "Yeah, yeah. I doubt I'm gonna get out of this place
anytime soon, and I bet leaving this cub stage or whatever is even
further off. No hurry though, I guess."
Salem considers her thoughtfully, his eyes slightly narrowed. "The
former will take place before the latter. You won't be in here for
_too_ much longer, I don't imagine."
Cassiel quirks a brow, and doesn't look all that convinced. "Sure. And
I'm gonna sprout wings and be the first flying Garou. I'll even put on
a superhero costume and patrol the city while I'm at it."
Salem frowns. "Do you know _why_ I had you locked in here, Cassiel?"
Cassiel shakes her head. "Probably because you didn't want a cub
wandering the streets by themselves? Or maybe you enjoy this sort of
thing. I dunno."
"Not just a cub, but a doubting cub who I was not certain wouldn't
simply run off to the police. Or the media." The older Glass Walker
gives the younger one a wry half-smile. "When I'm convinced you're
ready, we'll move you somewhere else. Without locked doors. Consider
this part to be boot camp. You won't spend your whole cubhood locked up
in isolation."
Cassiel ughs. "Boot camp. That makes it sound even more fun," she
comments as she rolls her eyes. "But how will I be able to convince
you? I mean, I haven't tried to get away yet, and I've been pretty good
about being locked away in this box with no contact whatsoever to the
outside world. And I won't even start on the new music I'm probably
missing..."
Salem screws the top back on the bottle of water and pushes to his
feet. "Where would you go, if I opened the door and let you out right
now?" The mismatched eyes study her intently.
Cassiel sits up and shrugs. "Maybe back to my apartment? To actually
get registered for school like I was supposed to, and to definately
call my mom and let her know I'm okay. She's probably having a fit
right now." She picks up the ignana and puts him back in her lap. "If
you're worried about me contacting the media or police, don't be. I
don't like narcs, and reporters annoy me. Besides, I don't want to be
known as 'that crazy chick' for the rest of my life."
"And when people ask where you've been? When your mother wants to know
why you went missing?" Salem's gaze remains steady on the girl.
Cassiel stares back. "They'll think I was out partying, scanning the
local music circuit for new stuff. I've done it before. And my mom
would just think I was being irresponsible. I'm a young adult, we do
that sort of thing. I know my brother did."
Salem holds the gaze as he slips the plastic 16oz bottle into one of
the big side pockets of his coat. "All right. Go on, then." Without
looking away from her, he steps back and to the side, freeing the path
toward the unlocked door. "Take what you can carry, and you can pick up
the rest tomorrow or whenver you wish. The neighborhood's poor, but
there's a bus stop down at the corner."
Cassiel warily eyes the Walker, then shakes her head. "I won't leave
tonight. I'll wait until morning, that way you can lead me to my car,
and I can drive it back here to get my stuff. No sense in rushing. I've
been here this long, another night won't kill me."
Salem nods. "Fair enough. Get some sleep, then. I'll come by in the
morning and bring a box or two."
Cassiel manages a bit of a smile, then curls up on the mattress. "See
you then. Unless you 'accidentally' forget or something."
"I always forget on purpose," Salem retorts, with arch humor. He heads
for the door. "Good night, Cassiel." He leaves... and for once, does
not lock the door behind him. Isn't trust sweet?
Cassiel just shakes her head as Salem exits. She's still not sure what
to make of the odd fellow...