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Since the close of the Middle Ages, the dangerous
pavanne danced by Camarilla and Sabbat has shaped the face
ofKindred society. The bloody conflict has broken millions
of human lives and shaped the secret history of cities across
the world. Of course, there are some clans thar watch both
sects leap at one another's throats in the name of the Jyhad
- and prefer to have none of that, thank you very much.
Although they certainly have the pedigree of true clans
(as opposed to the mongrel bloodlines that occasionally
surface) , the four independent clans share a powerful disinclination
to "take sides" in the Jyhad. Of course, some
of the younger members of each clan can be found in both
Camarilla and Sabbat. However, the elders of the independent
clans plot toward their own inscrutable purposes, purposes
that would be delayed by such nonsense as sect allegiance.
It would be foolish to assume that the average member of
an unaligned clan is somehow possessed of an absolute allegiance
to her clan's ideal. Like all other Kindred, the independents
are vampires first and clan members second. Most of these
Cainites are concerned with their personal goals first and
foremost, whether or not they coincide with ( or serve)
those of their clans. This fact serves only to aggravate
outside observers further; an independent vampire is often
a true wild card, with neither sect politics nor clan law
as a guideline for predicting her behavior.
And yet, rumor has it that the elders of the independent
clans are awake in greater numbers than those of any other
bloodline. One clan has thrown off an ancient spell that
kept it in check, presumably due to the direct intervention
of its forebears. Another, the youngest of the clans, allegedly
has enjoyed the unceasing patronage of its founder since
the Renaissance. The terrible and merciless Methuselahs
of a third are said to be throwing off the earth of the
ages and summoning their childer to them. And the fourth.
. . But despite such talk, the childer of each independent
clan continue their activities as if all is well, offering
as much loyalty to their clans as they did before. If they
are indeed pawns of their Antediluvian sires, they are apparently
ignorant of the fact - or worse, fully cognizant, and quite
acquiescent.
THE UNALIGNED CLANS
The four independent clans have little in common, save their
disdain for sects. Each pursues its own goals, and each
defines its role in the Jyhad differently. Diffident even
to each other, they keep their own laws amid the Camarilla's
T raditions and the Sabbat's chaos.
The Assamites are a predatory
clan of vampires based in the Middle East. For ages, they
have served as independent contractors, assassins for hire
to any who provided them with blood. Now, with an ancient
curse lifted again, they are proving themselves enemies
of all clans as they seek to slake their bottomless thirst
for Cainite vitae. Of all the independents, the Assamites
are most feared by the others. Their role in the Jyhad,
formerly that of mercenaries alone, has abruptly changed.
None can say where the Assamites' loyalty will lie in the
next decade or so - or how their new practices will alter
the Jyhad itself.
The Followers of Set
disdain sects for different reasons. They claim to be heirs
to a tradition far older than both Camarilla and Sabbat,
and scorn the idea of setting aside their hereditary tasks
for a passing fad of mere centuries or so. The tenets of
the clan's shadowy faith allegedly date back to the first
nights of civilization, and this ancient pedigree takes
precedence over matters of mere politics. The "Setites,"
as they also call themselves, aren't above playing a fairly
mercenary role between the two sects. The clan offers hoarded
knowledge and sinister favors to any vampire for a price.
Many elders of other clans look askance on the Setites'
bartering; it seems all too possible that with every deal
struck, the Clan of the Serpent takes another step to whatever
goal its Antediluvian founder has set for it.
The Giovanni are as much a
family as they are a clan; the majority of their neonates
are Embraced from clan members' mortal descendants. The
insular Necromancers avidly pursue two goals: accumulating
material wealth and power, and learning the secrets of Death
itself. The Giovanni, frankly, see no need for sects. They
effectively police their own ranks, and managed to survive
the Inquisition quietly, without requiring the help of other
Kindred. They have all the allies they need in the form
of their family, and can sternly enforce such aid when necessary.
All they require is to be left alone to achieve their own
ends - and the prospect of their success is frightening
indeed.
Finally, the Ravnos are
driven by a clanwide compulsion for larceny and deception,
as well as a powerful wanderlust. These masters of illusion,
primarily of Indian and Gypsy stock, owe allegiance to themselves
first, their clan second, and to no one else at all. Certainly
the most loosely organized of the unaligned clans, the nomadic
Ravnos are scattered across the world. They travel freely
between Camarilla and Sabbat territory, for most princes
have learned that it is more trouble to attempt to keep
a Ravnos from one's city than to wait for the wastrel vampire
to become bored and move on.
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