Post by Andrei on Jun 13, 2007 15:35:34 GMT
Genesis Retold
According to Caine's own recounting, his mother, Eve, was created to be a help mate to Adam, and had brought the Fruit of the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil to him in her effort to fulfill that duty. She and Adam ate of the Fruit, believing that Knowledge of Good and Evil was Adam's birthright as the first Son of God. Cast from Eden, they lived in its shadow, and Eve soon bore Caine and Abel. Adam gave each of his sons a birthright: to Caine, the knowledge of plants, herbs, and growing things; to Abel, the mastery over animals. When the time came to sacrifice to God, Abel chose the finest among his animals, and Caine his choicest crops. But Caine's crops were not a pure sacrifice, as Caine's ability to grow and harvest them was born of God's curse upon Adam: that he should toil in the dust of the Earth. Abel's mastery over the animals came from God's gift of the same skill to Adam, and this made his sacrifice pure. Caine demanded answers from his father, and from God, but it was Abel who provided the understanding: God would accept no impure sacrifice; only the best of what Caine loved, which was not born of a curse, would be accepted. For Caine, that meant only one thing: his beloved younger brother.
Being cast out by God for doing as he was told caused Caine great bitterness, and he spat upon the Earth, disdaining and forever relinquishing his mastery over plants and herbs. He wandered, alone, heartbroken and in pain, until he found himself in the lands of Nod, east of Eden. There he met Lilith, his father's first wife and created in the same manner as Adam, who was cast from Eden for daring to question God and attempt to claim her birthright, rather than be subservient to Him and Adam. She gave Caine succor and showed him the power she had found, and Caine, desiring that power, fed on Lilith's blood to gain it. He then fled her house rather than battle her rage and continued his journey alone. Among his newfound powers were invincibility against Adam's descendants, great speed and strength, ability to manipulate time, shadows, flesh and mind; these powers would later evolve into the Disciplines which his childer would wield, although with far less potency than Caine possessed.
At this point, Caine was visited by the archangels Michael, Gabriel, and Uriel, each in their turn and offering Caine salvation if he would but seek forgiveness from God for murdering his brother. Caine rejected each offer, feeling that God was a hypocrite and that he was the wronged party; enraged by his lack of humility and the bitter defiance he showed them and God, each angel cursed Caine:
Michael cursed Caine to forever fear fire;
Gabriel cursed him to be unable to dwell in sunlight and to live forever in darkness;
Uriel cursed him threefold: to be neither living nor dead, walking unchanging, undying, in darkness and without hope; to subsist on blood, hungering for it without mercy; and that his children would turn upon each other, so that he must know what it is to condemn his own children as God had done.
When finally Raphael, archangel of healing came to him, he offered a path to redemption called Golconda, on which Caine could find peace if he chose. These curses altered Caine into the first vampire.
Caine's Children
Eventually, Caine's travels led him back to the lands occupied by men, and he found the descendants of his brother Seth. They were attempting to persuade Seth's eldest son, Enosh, to be their king; Enosh, after many refusals, finally agreed to undertake a pilgrimage into the surrounding countryside, where he would meditate on God's will. If it were God's will that he be king over his fellow men, God would reveal it to him and he would obey. During Enosh's meditations, Caine Embraced him and made him his first childe, changing his name to Enoch. Enoch then returned to his tribe and informed them that they would make Caine their ruler, and to pay him homage. Caine accepted their tributes and vowed to be a better ruler over them than God had been over his family.
Over time, Caine Embraced other childer, though only two are named specifically: Irad the Strong and Zillah the Beautiful, to accompany Enoch the Wise. Zillah, according to the Book of Nod, was Embraced by Caine to be his wife and companion. A great city was built, named Enoch after Caine's first childe, and there Caine and his childer ruled over the humans and were protected by them. Caine's childer Embraced childer of their own, creating the Third Generation, though how many of these were Embraced is also uncertain. These childer, as well as Caine's childer (the Second Generation), spread out beyond Enoch's territory. Sensing danger on the horizon, Caine forbade his childer and their childer from creating more of their kind, and from declaring themselves the rulers over men. If men wished to declare them rulers and worship them of their own will, that was acceptable; simply establishing rule using their powers was inviting the wrath of God. Caine's childer ignored his edicts, Embracing more childer and setting themselves as ruler-Gods over humans. It is this that Caine says brings the forty days and nights of rain which flooded the world, drowning the humans and forcing the vampires to live beneath the churning, unpredictable waters, feeding on each other in attempts to stay alive. During the flood, Caine's whereabouts are unknown; it is only established that he removed himself from his childer because he knew he could not save them, and he wished them to remember well the lesson he had learned: provoking God's wrath is a costly mistake.
After the floodwaters subsided, those of Caine's childer who survived (called the Antediluvians) began to re-establish themselves, eventually finding descendants of Noah on which to subsist. The Second Generation set themselves as rulers of the Second City (which is not named), but Uriel's curse of strife began to manifest. The Third Generation turned upon the Second; it is generally believed that the Second Generation were destroyed completely, leaving no survivors.
The Curses
When Caine learned, through his own powers of Sight or through other sources, that his childer had been slaughtered by his grand-childer, he came to the Second City in a towering rage. Upon the eleven culprits (or ringleaders, depending on how many Cainites you believe were involved with these events), he cast curses to punish them for the murder of their sires, each fitting the defenses which the individual childer asserted for their behavior. These curses became the defining characteristics of the Toreador, Brujah, Ravnos, Gangrel, Nosferatu, Setite, Ventrue, Cappadocian, Lasombra, Tzimisce, and Malkavian clans. The Assamite clan's progenitor was not cursed, as he did not participate in the Second Generation's slaughter, and he and his childer took upon themselves the responsibility of watching and judging over their cousins to prevent abuse of humans. The Assamite clan's curse of bloodlust was laid upon them by members of the Baali bloodline as vengeance for the Assamite's scourge.
Caine also cast a curse upon Saulot, who became the founder of the Salubri clan, though the curse was not intended as a punishment. Because Saulot had sought to end the slaughter rather than participate in it, he made Saulot the guardian of Raphael's promise of Golconda, and marked him with the Third Eye. He then cast a final curse upon all of his childer: that each generation they Embrace will be weaker than the one before. Caine did this in an attempt to prevent another uprising of childe against sire, and as a warning against the unchecked Embrace of mortals; otherwise, their generations would be so weak as to be barely more than mortals, and Caine would return to deal with his errant childer again.
Note: As each generation of vampires is weaker than the last, so too is the effect of the curses of Caine upon these newer generations. New bloodlines and clans have established themselves over the centuries which Caine did not directly curse; however, as they have evolved, there are Clan/bloodline weaknesses which are inherent, which could be construed as the intention of Caine to curse all descendants of the Antediluvians manifesting itself.
It is thought by some that the curse to 'wear death's countenance for all to know and fear' does not refer to a particular clan, but rather to all of them. Others contend that it refers to the extinct Cappadocian clan.
Speculation
There is no mention in either the Book of Nod or The Erciyes Fragments of how Caine intended to survive the flood; however, there are several scenarios to explain Caine's whereabouts and survival:
He could have hidden himself aboard Noah's ark, and thereby subsisting on the limited supply of blood from the animals and humans on board.
He could have taken shelter with those he calls 'the Wild Ones', or Oberon's children, who exist in the Dreaming, had aided him in the earliest parts of his travels, and were safe from the flood in the fey realm.
He could have used his powers to find a time or place to ride out the flood. The ancient Brujah discipline of Temporis allows the wielder control over time, and all disciplines have root in Caine's powers.
He may have simply waited for the flood to subside, relying on his immortality to save him.
Because exact numbers of the Second Generation have never been confirmed, it is impossible to establish with any certainty that the Second Generation was truly annihilated. Cainite historians have tentatively traced the thirteen major clans back to thirteen members of the Third Generation, and those thirteen in turn to the three members of the Second Generation who were named: Irad, Zillah, and Enoch. It is speculated, however, that there were as many as 100 members of the Second Generation who survived the Great Flood, and therefore the accuracy of these findings is highly suspect. Those few of the Third Generation who have survived are said to be in torpor, and even those of the Fourth or Fifth Generation who are old enough to remember the Cursing of the Clans do not know for sure how many childer Caine directly Embraced. For their own peace of mind, they assert that the Second Generation was completely wiped out.
Since the cursing of the clans, there has been rampant speculation and great superstition regarding Caine's return to the World of Darkness. It is said that Caine will return during the vampiric Armageddon known as Gehenna, during which the surviving Antediluvians will rise from their long torpors and feed on the blood of their subsequent generations. It is during this time that Caine will battle with Lilith, visit final punishment upon those of his childer who remain, and destroy them utterly.
There is also great speculation that Caine has, over the centuries, Embraced other direct childer, unaffected by the curses he laid upon the Antediluvians.
Many among the Camarilla contend that Caine no longer exists, or has lapsed into torpor and is no longer a threat. Still others believe that Caine wanders endlessly, appearing occasionally among Cainite society; more often, he moves unseen and unknown, keeping watch over his childer for signs that he must once again curtail their activities.
Some believe that Abel, loving his brother despite what came to pass, foreswore his place in Heaven and that his spirit travels with Caine. Others have refined this theory to speculate that Abel is in fact a wraith, at times comforting Caine and at others tormenting him.
The idea that Caine may have found Golconda and that this is the reason for his long absence from Cainite society is largely considered a fairy tale; Caine's anger and guilt, compounded by eons, would make it nearly impossible for him to achieve the inner peace necessary to achieve Raphael's promised salvation.
According to Caine's own recounting, his mother, Eve, was created to be a help mate to Adam, and had brought the Fruit of the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil to him in her effort to fulfill that duty. She and Adam ate of the Fruit, believing that Knowledge of Good and Evil was Adam's birthright as the first Son of God. Cast from Eden, they lived in its shadow, and Eve soon bore Caine and Abel. Adam gave each of his sons a birthright: to Caine, the knowledge of plants, herbs, and growing things; to Abel, the mastery over animals. When the time came to sacrifice to God, Abel chose the finest among his animals, and Caine his choicest crops. But Caine's crops were not a pure sacrifice, as Caine's ability to grow and harvest them was born of God's curse upon Adam: that he should toil in the dust of the Earth. Abel's mastery over the animals came from God's gift of the same skill to Adam, and this made his sacrifice pure. Caine demanded answers from his father, and from God, but it was Abel who provided the understanding: God would accept no impure sacrifice; only the best of what Caine loved, which was not born of a curse, would be accepted. For Caine, that meant only one thing: his beloved younger brother.
Being cast out by God for doing as he was told caused Caine great bitterness, and he spat upon the Earth, disdaining and forever relinquishing his mastery over plants and herbs. He wandered, alone, heartbroken and in pain, until he found himself in the lands of Nod, east of Eden. There he met Lilith, his father's first wife and created in the same manner as Adam, who was cast from Eden for daring to question God and attempt to claim her birthright, rather than be subservient to Him and Adam. She gave Caine succor and showed him the power she had found, and Caine, desiring that power, fed on Lilith's blood to gain it. He then fled her house rather than battle her rage and continued his journey alone. Among his newfound powers were invincibility against Adam's descendants, great speed and strength, ability to manipulate time, shadows, flesh and mind; these powers would later evolve into the Disciplines which his childer would wield, although with far less potency than Caine possessed.
At this point, Caine was visited by the archangels Michael, Gabriel, and Uriel, each in their turn and offering Caine salvation if he would but seek forgiveness from God for murdering his brother. Caine rejected each offer, feeling that God was a hypocrite and that he was the wronged party; enraged by his lack of humility and the bitter defiance he showed them and God, each angel cursed Caine:
Michael cursed Caine to forever fear fire;
Gabriel cursed him to be unable to dwell in sunlight and to live forever in darkness;
Uriel cursed him threefold: to be neither living nor dead, walking unchanging, undying, in darkness and without hope; to subsist on blood, hungering for it without mercy; and that his children would turn upon each other, so that he must know what it is to condemn his own children as God had done.
When finally Raphael, archangel of healing came to him, he offered a path to redemption called Golconda, on which Caine could find peace if he chose. These curses altered Caine into the first vampire.
Caine's Children
Eventually, Caine's travels led him back to the lands occupied by men, and he found the descendants of his brother Seth. They were attempting to persuade Seth's eldest son, Enosh, to be their king; Enosh, after many refusals, finally agreed to undertake a pilgrimage into the surrounding countryside, where he would meditate on God's will. If it were God's will that he be king over his fellow men, God would reveal it to him and he would obey. During Enosh's meditations, Caine Embraced him and made him his first childe, changing his name to Enoch. Enoch then returned to his tribe and informed them that they would make Caine their ruler, and to pay him homage. Caine accepted their tributes and vowed to be a better ruler over them than God had been over his family.
Over time, Caine Embraced other childer, though only two are named specifically: Irad the Strong and Zillah the Beautiful, to accompany Enoch the Wise. Zillah, according to the Book of Nod, was Embraced by Caine to be his wife and companion. A great city was built, named Enoch after Caine's first childe, and there Caine and his childer ruled over the humans and were protected by them. Caine's childer Embraced childer of their own, creating the Third Generation, though how many of these were Embraced is also uncertain. These childer, as well as Caine's childer (the Second Generation), spread out beyond Enoch's territory. Sensing danger on the horizon, Caine forbade his childer and their childer from creating more of their kind, and from declaring themselves the rulers over men. If men wished to declare them rulers and worship them of their own will, that was acceptable; simply establishing rule using their powers was inviting the wrath of God. Caine's childer ignored his edicts, Embracing more childer and setting themselves as ruler-Gods over humans. It is this that Caine says brings the forty days and nights of rain which flooded the world, drowning the humans and forcing the vampires to live beneath the churning, unpredictable waters, feeding on each other in attempts to stay alive. During the flood, Caine's whereabouts are unknown; it is only established that he removed himself from his childer because he knew he could not save them, and he wished them to remember well the lesson he had learned: provoking God's wrath is a costly mistake.
After the floodwaters subsided, those of Caine's childer who survived (called the Antediluvians) began to re-establish themselves, eventually finding descendants of Noah on which to subsist. The Second Generation set themselves as rulers of the Second City (which is not named), but Uriel's curse of strife began to manifest. The Third Generation turned upon the Second; it is generally believed that the Second Generation were destroyed completely, leaving no survivors.
The Curses
When Caine learned, through his own powers of Sight or through other sources, that his childer had been slaughtered by his grand-childer, he came to the Second City in a towering rage. Upon the eleven culprits (or ringleaders, depending on how many Cainites you believe were involved with these events), he cast curses to punish them for the murder of their sires, each fitting the defenses which the individual childer asserted for their behavior. These curses became the defining characteristics of the Toreador, Brujah, Ravnos, Gangrel, Nosferatu, Setite, Ventrue, Cappadocian, Lasombra, Tzimisce, and Malkavian clans. The Assamite clan's progenitor was not cursed, as he did not participate in the Second Generation's slaughter, and he and his childer took upon themselves the responsibility of watching and judging over their cousins to prevent abuse of humans. The Assamite clan's curse of bloodlust was laid upon them by members of the Baali bloodline as vengeance for the Assamite's scourge.
Caine also cast a curse upon Saulot, who became the founder of the Salubri clan, though the curse was not intended as a punishment. Because Saulot had sought to end the slaughter rather than participate in it, he made Saulot the guardian of Raphael's promise of Golconda, and marked him with the Third Eye. He then cast a final curse upon all of his childer: that each generation they Embrace will be weaker than the one before. Caine did this in an attempt to prevent another uprising of childe against sire, and as a warning against the unchecked Embrace of mortals; otherwise, their generations would be so weak as to be barely more than mortals, and Caine would return to deal with his errant childer again.
Note: As each generation of vampires is weaker than the last, so too is the effect of the curses of Caine upon these newer generations. New bloodlines and clans have established themselves over the centuries which Caine did not directly curse; however, as they have evolved, there are Clan/bloodline weaknesses which are inherent, which could be construed as the intention of Caine to curse all descendants of the Antediluvians manifesting itself.
It is thought by some that the curse to 'wear death's countenance for all to know and fear' does not refer to a particular clan, but rather to all of them. Others contend that it refers to the extinct Cappadocian clan.
Speculation
There is no mention in either the Book of Nod or The Erciyes Fragments of how Caine intended to survive the flood; however, there are several scenarios to explain Caine's whereabouts and survival:
He could have hidden himself aboard Noah's ark, and thereby subsisting on the limited supply of blood from the animals and humans on board.
He could have taken shelter with those he calls 'the Wild Ones', or Oberon's children, who exist in the Dreaming, had aided him in the earliest parts of his travels, and were safe from the flood in the fey realm.
He could have used his powers to find a time or place to ride out the flood. The ancient Brujah discipline of Temporis allows the wielder control over time, and all disciplines have root in Caine's powers.
He may have simply waited for the flood to subside, relying on his immortality to save him.
Because exact numbers of the Second Generation have never been confirmed, it is impossible to establish with any certainty that the Second Generation was truly annihilated. Cainite historians have tentatively traced the thirteen major clans back to thirteen members of the Third Generation, and those thirteen in turn to the three members of the Second Generation who were named: Irad, Zillah, and Enoch. It is speculated, however, that there were as many as 100 members of the Second Generation who survived the Great Flood, and therefore the accuracy of these findings is highly suspect. Those few of the Third Generation who have survived are said to be in torpor, and even those of the Fourth or Fifth Generation who are old enough to remember the Cursing of the Clans do not know for sure how many childer Caine directly Embraced. For their own peace of mind, they assert that the Second Generation was completely wiped out.
Since the cursing of the clans, there has been rampant speculation and great superstition regarding Caine's return to the World of Darkness. It is said that Caine will return during the vampiric Armageddon known as Gehenna, during which the surviving Antediluvians will rise from their long torpors and feed on the blood of their subsequent generations. It is during this time that Caine will battle with Lilith, visit final punishment upon those of his childer who remain, and destroy them utterly.
There is also great speculation that Caine has, over the centuries, Embraced other direct childer, unaffected by the curses he laid upon the Antediluvians.
Many among the Camarilla contend that Caine no longer exists, or has lapsed into torpor and is no longer a threat. Still others believe that Caine wanders endlessly, appearing occasionally among Cainite society; more often, he moves unseen and unknown, keeping watch over his childer for signs that he must once again curtail their activities.
Some believe that Abel, loving his brother despite what came to pass, foreswore his place in Heaven and that his spirit travels with Caine. Others have refined this theory to speculate that Abel is in fact a wraith, at times comforting Caine and at others tormenting him.
The idea that Caine may have found Golconda and that this is the reason for his long absence from Cainite society is largely considered a fairy tale; Caine's anger and guilt, compounded by eons, would make it nearly impossible for him to achieve the inner peace necessary to achieve Raphael's promised salvation.