Plot:Viral Vampire Video/NPCs
Contents
Deputy Daniels
Deputy Sheriff Jeffrey Daniels is a professional survivor: disciplined, observant, and acutely aware of the political weight carried by every word he speaks. Sent from Los Angeles under the authority of its Court, Daniels operates with a measured restraint that borders on deliberate opacity. He does not grandstand or posture; instead, he gathers facts quietly, tolerates discomfort, and accepts reprimand without defensiveness. His failure to announce himself upon entering Prospect was not arrogance but calculation — a belief that secrecy was safer than ceremony when hostile forces might be listening.
Marcus Avery
Marcus Avery was a 19-year-old media student at Prospect University, the kind of clever but anxious kid who threw himself into creative projects to feel like he mattered. He found a battered “hunter’s journal” near an abandoned church on the west side and, assuming it was fiction or part of an RPG, used it as inspiration for a staged Halloween vampire attack video. With two friends, a phone camera, and some surprisingly solid editing skills, he scrubbed the metadata and posted it anonymously, never expecting it to go viral. When it did, he panicked — convinced strangers were following him, watching him, tracking his movements — and retreated to his dorm room in Weaver Hall. Before he could explain himself fully or hand over the journal, Marcus was shot through his fourth-floor window by an unseen sniper, leaving behind a mystery far bigger than the prank he thought he was pulling.]
Username: Augur_1837
- Account Age: 4 years
- Karma: Medium-high (lots of posting, lots of arguments)
- Bio: “Media is a puzzle. Everything means something. Follow the patterns, not the lies.”
Augur_1837 is exactly the kind of online theorist who makes entire subreddits groan when he shows up — obsessive, deeply convinced that every piece of media is a coded message, and absolutely certain that he sees patterns everyone else misses. His posting history is a mix of breakdowns of movie trailers, predictions about unreleased shows based on filming permits, and long threads about “hidden triangles” in advertising campaigns. With recent events he's started connecting the dots in new and possibly dangerous ways.
| Groups |
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The Order of St. Michael
The Order of St. Michael is a militant hunter group rooted in religious fanaticism, operating through small, semi-autonomous cells rather than a centralized hierarchy. In Prospect, the Order is linked to the hunter’s journal discovered by Marcus Avery, the use of Sacred Heart Church as a safehouse, and known operatives including Cedric and Father Calder. One member was killed and decapitated near the railyard under circumstances suggesting the hunters themselves have become targets, either of Kindred retaliation or a third, unknown force. The Order favors faith-driven doctrine, meticulous surveillance, and sanctified locations over overt modern tactics, documenting vampire activity in detailed field journals that can circulate beyond their control. Deputy Sheriff Jeffrey Daniels is not affiliated but is a documented rival due to prior clashes with the group in Los Angeles. Their presence in Prospect indicates a focused investigation rather than random violence, marking the city as an active point of interest for organized, ideologically motivated hunters rather than isolated zealots.
The Anubis Group
The Anubis Group is a shadowy, highly resourced organization whose mission and ultimate goals remain unknown, but whose operational footprint in Prospect is unmistakably modern and methodical. The Group is consistently linked to unmarked black vans used for rapid deployment and containment, low-visibility surveillance drones monitoring key locations, and a professional-grade sniper responsible for the assassination of Marcus Avery. Unlike ideological hunter sects, the Anubis Group appears clinical and results-driven, favoring deniable assets, дистан access kills, and technological oversight rather than faith or spectacle. Most concerning is their apparent connection to the hybrid creatures encountered in the city—at least one of which was retrieved by its creators after engagement—suggesting Anubis may be conducting live-field testing or controlled releases of experimental entities. Whether operating as a private security firm, a covert research arm, or a mercenary proxy for outside interests, the Anubis Group represents an organized, well-funded threat whose activities imply planning, escalation, and a willingness to operate openly enough to intimidate, but indirectly enough to remain officially invisible.
Bright Sun Freight
Bright Sun is a small, otherwise unremarkable shipping and logistics firm based out of Laguna Beach whose profile changed abruptly in late 2025, when its funding and operational capacity increased far beyond what its prior business history would justify. While its public-facing activities remain mundane—freight movement, warehousing, and coastal logistics—the scale and timing of the financial influx strongly suggest it is being used as a front organization rather than a legitimate expansion. Bright Sun is considered a likely financial or logistical conduit for either the Anubis Group or the Order of St. Michael, providing deniable transport, asset movement, and material support without drawing immediate scrutiny. Its sudden growth, opaque ownership structure, and overlap with known hunter and hybrid-related activity mark it as a key point of interest in tracing who is funding and enabling hostile operations in the region.
| Locations |
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The "Court" of Los Angeles
or decades, the Court of Los Angeles has been notoriously unstable, marked by fractured authority, disputed claims, and long stretches where “Prince” was more a matter of argument than fact. Rule shifted between influential figures and regional power brokers, but no single regime managed to impose lasting, citywide control; even well-known names such as Don Sebastian Juan Dominguez held influence that was intermittent, localized, or dependent on fragile alliances. This instability fostered a reputation for Los Angeles as a patchwork domain—one where Anarch pressure, population churn, and sheer urban sprawl undermined centralized rule. That pattern is now being challenged by Vannevar Thomas, who has claimed the praxis and begun actively asserting authority through enforcement rather than consensus. His rule is still new and contested, but unlike his predecessors, Vannevar is openly attempting to make the title of Prince mean something again, signaling a shift from tolerated chaos toward imposed order—whether the city will accept that order remains uncertain.
Holland Alley
Holland Alley is a narrow service corridor tucked between two old warehouse-converted offices four blocks north of campus. Since the viral video dropped, the alley has become a pilgrimage point for bored students, influencers, urban explorers, and Fantasy fanboys. The flickering orange streetlamp from the footage still buzzes overhead, turning the place into an accidental landmark. On the south wall, exactly where the camera would've faced, a stark black rectangle of paint has been rolled onto the bricks. Over it, in sweeping white gothic calligraffiti, someone has tagged “Sic Luceat Lux.” Fans claim it’s part of the show’s “symbolic marketing campaign.” Others think it’s an artist’s statement. The Court knows it’s neither — but the more foot traffic gathers here, the worse the Masquerade risk becomes.
Prospect Freight Terminal- East Yard
This isolated stretch of abandoned freight track sits two miles east of the city center, where rusted cars and derelict engines rest like forgotten carcasses. The viral fandom has jokingly dubbed it “The Highlander Railyard” after rumors spread that a sword fight took place here. Mortals have no idea a body was found — decapitated, branded, and ripped open — only that police tape briefly appeared and disappeared within hours. The gravel still holds scuffs from a struggle, and the scent of old iron lingers in the cold air. The small hideout between two freight cars, where the first hunter’s diary was uncovered, remains largely unnoticed except by those with reason to search. If fans ever start poking around here, trouble follows fast.
Echo Bridge
The shootout happened beneath the aging Ramsgate Underpass (aka Echo Bridge), a concrete bridge carrying commuter traffic over a narrow service road. The acoustics amplify every sound, so the gunfire and the inhuman howl that followed were heard from campus to half the southern district. To the public, police have blamed the incident on a “drug-addled transient armed with a weapon.” The reality: officers fired into something that didn’t stay down. The asphalt is still stained where dark fluid hissed on contact. A few bullet impacts remain visible, already photographed and analyzed by amateur sleuths convinced this is part of an elaborate marketing ARG. It’s only a matter of time before people start filming TikToks down here trying to reenact the “zombie shootout.”
Sacred Heart Church
Sacred Heart Church sits forgotten on the west side of Prospect, a deconsecrated Mission-style church boarded up nearly three years ago when the parish dissolved. Its sun-bleached stucco walls and cracked terracotta roof tiles blend into the rundown neighborhood around it, yet the building shows almost no graffiti or vandalism, as if people instinctively avoid it. The old bell tower is rusted shut, the courtyard overgrown, and every entrance has been sealed with warped plywood and rusted nails. Despite its abandonment, the structure feels strangely intact, untouched by the decay that swallowed the surrounding blocks. Local rumor claims the interior is still furnished, as if the congregation simply walked out one afternoon and never returned.