|
Post by Triton Woodholm on Mar 10, 2009 12:21:39 GMT -6
For as long as anyone can remember the slayers, the vampires and the werewolves have always been enemies -- never making peace with the other. But with time comes change, right? Would they become allies in a time of need? Or would each race have to fend for themselves?
In recent years with the amazing technological advances of the world, a well-funded group of slayers have discovered that vampires and werewolves are the result of a mutated virus transferred to humans through biting, scratching or exchange of bodily fluids. With this knowledge these slayers have developed a cure.
The "cure" is said to suppress the Lycanthropy of the werewolves into near permanent dormancy and completely rid vampires of their Porphyric Hemophilia. However, it is highly experimental as no vampire or werewolf is willing to be tested. The slayer community is thrilled with the news of this drug, whether it works or not.
As a highly experimental drug with unknown side effects, the few that have been injected have not survived. But the idea that the abominations could be saved, motivates the groups to keep trying. Some say that the most powerful of the creatures of the night could handle it. Though no one knows for certain.
Obviously this is a threat to the "abominations". There are few (among both races) that were changed against their wills. Few that would be willing to give up immortality, heightened strength and senses, POWER... who would even consider helping these particularly annoying humans.
Slayers are special sorts of mortals, hardly stupid or oblivious to these creatures and always cautious. They know their enemies will not be in the dark forever and when they find out about the "cure" all hell will break loose. If ever the two races worked together, there would be no stopping them.
So... will the vampires and werewolves finally put aside their differences, working together to annihilate the human threat? Or will they be blinded by their hatred, fated to forever exist in the stories of old?
|
|