Fantasy RP Love at First Bite (Snipehunt)

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The first frost of the season had finally arrived, but Lumia did not mind. She had been born on a winter day such as this, but that had been several hundred years ago now. Unlike traditional vampires, where you were bitten, turned and sired -- her family had been one of the lucky few to actually have children, which previously seemed biologically impossible.

But on the rare occasion it did happen— a woman such as Lumia existed. She was currently in her mid 20s, and had slowed down aging once she reached this point. Her father and mother were permanently stuck in their late 30s and early 40s, so it was assumed that Lumia, upon reaching her mid thirties would be forever frozen in time.

She didn’t quite mind this though, over each century she found herself enjoying the advancements in technology and thankfully since the world had been familiar with the supernatural for quite some time now, it hadn’t been uncommon for her to remain in one place anymore.

It also hadn’t been uncommon for supernatural families to know one another. Different classes existed just like with the mortal world—those who thought they were better than other supernaturals — ‘purists’ so to speak.
And these lineages saw themselves above the rest, those known in high society. There are the ‘pure’ covens, mages and vampires alike. And then there are lycans - or more commonly known as werewolves, who also had their own packs and ‘purebreds’.

There are also the lower class supernatural families, who were more accepting of mixing bloodlines, and were more open minded. These families were obviously looked down upon by the upper classes, but most of them didn’t care and paid the uppers no mind.

Except for one family.

Amongst the ‘pure’ families was one such mage lineage, and they seemed to actually care for the lower classes— or at least did not seem to be disgusted by them like the other purists were. It was seen that they had done a bunch of work in different charities, gave back to their communities and treated their supernatural and lower class staff that they hired fairly and equally. It was also no secret that the head of the family, who had been alive for a very long time was wanting to retire and choose a new head mage— or less commonly known as a high priest or priestess.

Witches and Warlocks— now known as mages, lived very very long lives. With modern technology and advances in science in medicine, it was made more possible than the simple anti aging spells one caster would use.

And of course this family used it to its full advantage. For there had been talks of the successor, and one candidate was the daughter who was well renowned and refined amongst other witches— coveted by those for her beauty and power. But behind closed doors, the public was not aware that she actually detested her family’s morals. She knew if she became the high priestess, she would fire the loyal staff who had been working for her family for ages, and replace them with more competent staff, ones she would personally hand pick. She wouldn’t be like her non magical brother and propose more ‘fairness’ as there truly was no fairness in this world, and their line was something that shouldn’t be tainted.

Speaking of, she absolutely hated that her non magical, older brother was also a candidate to become the head mage. It was absurd, that he— was to be considered head mage — when he didn’t even have powers?

She knew that their family company used modern science with their magical ingredients to advance technology but Gwenevere hated that fact. That wasn’t the ‘right’ way, and she saw it as a disgrace to the traditional ways a witch would work. What use were their grimoires then, nothing more than
fancy paper weights?!

And to make matters worse, Gwenevere worked with her magicless brother. And although she was the president of the company currently, he was head manager of a smaller sub division. Still, it made her skin crawl just thinking about all the low class hires he was screening. Equality this, equality that. But, she knew she would have to convince her father someway to make her high priestess without alluding to the fact that she stood against the family’s morals—if he found out, it would be her downfall.


Lumia sat there in the waiting room, waiting her turn to be called back. Her father had set up this job interview for her at the company of the famous mage lineage — the same one that Gwenevere and her brother were working at.

For as old as she was, Lumia was more than well versed in several degrees and had bachelors and masters in pretty much everything she found interesting — and could afford. But even supernatural economies had their ups and downs in the job market and being laid off from her previous long time job hurt her terribly. Her family had been of lower class simply due to the fact that she was a born vampire and not a ‘true’ vampire. For years they had been ostracized from her father’s original coven simply for having a child, which was looked down upon heavily in the vampire community. The women there weren’t desiring to be a mother or have a family — they were there to be forever young and party all the time.

Yet her father had made friends with the head mage, and the head mage of this particular family she was about to work for— or at least she hoped she could— she knew him to be very kind.

When she was growing up, she hadn’t known the head mage all too well — at least to what she could remember, but on the few parties she had been invited to alongside her parents when she became older, she had remembered both of the mage siblings that were their father’s pride and joy. She also remembered that she tried befriending the sister Gwenevere, but it didn’t seem as if the friendship was genuine. So of course, it wasn’t something she would pursue.

Lumia hadn’t seen much of the older male sibling during the few times she had been over. The only interactions she had were brief in passing, a quick and curt hello, and then watching him being moved by both of his parents to other matters were the common things she’d seen from him. When they became older, he then had always seemed engrossed in his work whenever she had been over, or highly distracted. But Lumia didn’t think ill of the brother in the slightest.

She also knew he would be the one conducting her interview at the present moment. So, for the time being she looked down to her hands. Fidgeting with a sunlight ring on her finger, she glanced up and around the office. She currently was wearing a dark wine red sweater, a black corduroy skirt with opaque tights and matching black knee high boots. Dressed for a winter’s day, although she never got ‘cold’. She hoped she wasn’t underdressed and she also hoped as extensive as her resume was, she wouldn’t be turned away. She knew they were family friends but that didn’t mean she’d be turn down for someone who wasn’t.


Name: Lumia Elin
Age: Appearance 28 years, actual age…a lady never tells, but several centuries old.
Race: Vampire (born)
Height: just short of 5’4
Appearance: 1772000973050.jpeg her eyes are a very dark and deep ruby red. Her eyes can sometimes— well, they appear to become pinker in hue when she’s excited about something.
Background: explained above
Likes/dislikes: She prefers rainy/cloudy days to sunny ones, for obvious reasons. Is usually found frequenting a favorite coffee shop of hers and is also commonly found at the nearest museum, says she sees things she used to use / own. Loves history and watching all the ‘conspiracy theories’ about back then. She is not fond of water— especially deep pools or any large bodies of water. She cannot swim, nor does she wish to learn. Floods do worry her, especially in storms, but she has avoided many and aim to continue to do so.
She is soft spoken, yet passionate on what she likes. She believes all creatures big or small deserve to take up space and will help even the tiniest of creatures. She refuses to drink blood from animals and has resorted to drinking synthetic blood. She found human blood wasn’t to her liking as most mortal blood contained some sort of vervain (an herb that is harmful to vampires like wolfsbane is to werewolves) and typically burned her mouth when feeding.

@Snipehunt
 
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The life of a member of magical high society was always, ultimately, one of privilege, and Tristan had always tried to remain thankful for the opportunities afforded to him due to his status as the eldest son in an especially legendary lineage like the Shepards. However, those same privileges did sour when it came to his own personal... 'health condition' was the usual term for it in mixed company.

Simply put, for as long as he could remember, no matter what remedy or professional had tried to work on him, Tristan could not do magic. Sure, there was magic in his blood, quite a lot in fact, and would normally be seen as a sign of good fortune. Yet there was something blocking his ability to manipulate magical energy, both his own and the passive energy around him. Such conditions weren't uncommon, but their sources varied wildly and as such a single catch-all cure was all but impossible. To a prominent family, especially for one of their potential heirs, this was an unforgivable omen.

That's not to say that his parents treated him poorly. They did not hate their child, but they did underestimate him, and chose to lie to those outside of their circle and tell stories of his 'chronic illness' keeping him from public life. He was labeled the 'weaker' child, and from that grew a not insignificant amount of spite in the otherwise kind boy. Instead of his family to rely on, so busy with business that he was locked out from, he instead was left in the care of their servants. By adulthood, he'd grown a much tighter bond with the siren who had watched over him since infancy than the human woman who truly birthed him, and in turn, he built up a growing loyalty to those who worked under his family.

As he grew, he learned that there was much in the magical world worth learning about that didn't always require magic, or ways in which he could incorporate magical theory into emerging technology. Such concepts were often brushed off, needless theories for a society of people who could just conjure whatever they desired themselves (and damn anyone who couldn't, the weaklings). But Tristan not only saw how those below him could benefit, he himself could use such progress in his own life.

Such determination served him well once he left school, and in time, his parents found themselves surprised by his drive, and slowly began to treat him more as a proper heir rather than their poor, sickly offspring. And that was where he found himself now, tugging at his crimson tie as he watched the snow fall outside his office building, going over the questions he had prepped for his next new hire as he walked into the room and froze-

"Lumia?" He asked, shocked. Tristan had been told that the interview was with someone he'd known before, but seeing the vampire had been a shock. Granted, he didn't know much about her, only snippets from his younger years, the young boy swiftly avoiding the gaze of the beautiful woman, or his parents ushering him away from the 'lesser' creatures, or all manner of almost misses. But he'd be a fool to forget a face like that, he was sure.

The man drew a hand through his hair as he made his way to the desk, sitting across from her. "Are you here for the position...?" He asked, just to confirm, his sharp features turning soft with pleasant surprise.

Name: Tristan Shepard
Age: 29
Race: Human
Height: 5'9"
Appearance: 5d092354884e647f2a1cc6ca0717b183.png
Background: The magicless child of the family, elder brother of Gwenevere. His status as a non-mage is a family secret. Despite this, he has worked tirelessly to help the family's legacy through technological advancements to assist in making sure their companies can keep up in the modern world.
Likes: Coffee, magical creatures, stories
Dislikes: Stubbornness about 'tradition', spicy food, swimming
 
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Lumia heard her name and her eyes fluttered forward to focus in on Tristan. She subconsciously felt a tightening in her chest whenever she looked at him, but at this moment chose to ignore it. She stood up from her chair and walked into his office after she had been called, and then sat down in the chair across from his desk. She knew he seemed surprised at her presence so she shyly remarked, “Yes— my father thinks that I can be one of your supernatural analysts,” she trailed off and her hands were neatly placed on her properly crossed legs while she sat in the chair.

Being a supernatural analyst wasn’t anything special, anyone could screen a supernatural these days, as the races were commonly known to the mortal realm. But the work she would be able to do was more on the demographic side of things, seeing population numbers rise, fall— what they could do to promote steady population numbers and all of that. There was more to the job than she had read into but she wondered if Tristan would really consider her for the position.

She found it silly, as she had spent most of her life at pretty much every job she could think of. This was the first that her father had truly suggested and thought that she would enjoy it. But truthfully, he had pressured her into this because he knew something she hadn’t, and wanted the record set straight. He hoped that with this job, her and Tristan would be able to uncover the truth behind their inevitable meeting.

Lumia hadn’t known of Tristan’s ‘transgressions’ against his family, nor did she know he was physically inept to produce magic. All she knew of him was from the rumors she had heard, of his ‘chronic illness’. She had often wondered if he was alright, but seeing him now in front of her, physically fit and drastically tall— she hardly could think that he suffered from any chronic illness.

“I understand though,” she said next, her soft features looking slightly troubled. “If you reject my application, I think hiring a family friend in itself wouldn’t be fair in the slightest,” she leaned back a bit in the chair she was sitting and her eyes settled on his face once more. Her eyes were a deep shade of ruby, catching the rays of the sun and glinting ever so prettily.

 
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Tristan folded his arms over the large mahogany table as he watched her approach. This interview had been one he'd had to fight for in a way that had been quite exhausting in hindsight. But such was the way any time he tried to do any sort of hiring or allocation of the company's massive budget, it was as though his family didn't want to spend any of their fortune at all, until the moment he showed results. But how could he show any results withing an analyst to help make a plan!

The man sighed, only now catching he'd gotten trapped in his own thoughts. He pinched the bridge of his nose, then focused on her again. Not an easy task, as looking for too long at the deep crimson of her eyes made his chest feel tighter. He was the one giving the interview, what did he have to be nervous about?

When she tried to counter her own application, one of his eyebrows raised as he leaned against the side of the desk. "That would be a very stupid thing to do. You're more experienced by miles than the rest of the hiring pool. Not hiring you over accusations of nepotism would be short sighted at best." He said, then muttered. "Especially in a field already teeming with it."

The man paused, stretching his back slightly to raise his shoulders. Yes, he was quite fit, he was quite determined about keeping such a physique, too. Despite his 'illness', he was quite able-boded, and intended to remind everyone who treated him as fragile of it at every opportunity. Besides, fitness was one of the few times he could avoid work, and so it became quite a good outlet.

"There is also one other fact that makes you the ideal candidate..." He trailed, unsure if he should even tell her. "Out of every applicant, you're the only non-human that even applied. What good is the word of an analyst if they're so far removed from their own field of study?" It was a stupid reason, sure, and technically a lie. In truth... he didn't like hiring humans at all, if he could avoid it. It was a bias he had no intention of addressing. "Besides, the title 'supernatural analyst' was only half true. In truth, I..."

He looked her up and down, something in his body tensed. "On top of your expected job expectations, you will also be expected to operate as my assistant in business matters. It's a title I expect a certain level of deep trust in... so yes, hiring a family friend would be quite beneficial, wouldn't you agree?"
 
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She was also…going to be his assistant?

Lumia stared at Tristan, quite longer than she would have expected herself to do so. The earlier words that he had spoken about her being the only non human applicant baffled her. Surely there had to have been other applicants like her— there must have. But what he spoke seemed true, and she chose to believe it, despite the confusion of it all.

But she focused on the matter at hand, being his personal assistant meant being up close to him…the thought of being near him made her cheeks flush ever so slightly. She had to admit that he was very physically attractive, yet she knew whatever ‘feelings’ that had suddenly stirred up shouldn’t come in the way of the job duties that would be assigned to her.

She then gave him a polite smile, “Well…I’m assuming from the way you’ve said things, that you’ve thought of this many times before I’ve even submitted my application…” she glanced over at her resume that was laying on his desk.

Then her thoughts trailed back to the times they had spent together before this moment, and although those moments were brief— technically they had grown up around each other, considering how close of friends her father was with his. Which meant he was as old as her, despite having no magic to support his youth— the magical lineage he carried thankfully slowed down time for him as well, essentially making him an ‘immortal’ like her.

“Of course, though — I appreciate your kind words, and the trust that you’ve placed in me. I can promise you that I will not break that trust.” Lumia seemed determined in her words. At first she had been hesitant to even come to this place, and to been put in an application, but to now know the fact he needed someone he could trust working beside him meant that he probably was worried about his own position at the company. There of course had always been a looming threat of his younger sister overshadowing him at any given moment, as it was with any inheritance fight—but Lumia also figured Tristan would be able to hold his own quite well.

“When would you like me to start?” Lumia asked next, shifting in the chair slightly. She knew her resume said availability to start was immediate, as she currently had no other job offerings or any other matters at the time. She wondered exactly what she would do for him, being his personal assistant. She imagined fetching coffee, running menial tasks he didn’t wish to do, but that would be answered later the moment he assigned said tasks to her.

 

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