What? I summarized Carlisle’s turning in chapter 19. His dad had it in for witches, werewolves, and vampires, and got Carlisle to help kill members of that reference class. Now, werewolves and vampires are damn hard to take down, and I never said Carlisle killed any of those, but there are some vulnerable witches in the world. Carlisle did corner a vampire, who turned Carlisle, killed two others, kidnapped a fourth guy, and then got away.
I was under the impression that Carlisle’s dad’s organization was capable of taking on vampires—it makes much more sense to say that they had ambitions, but that they couldn’t without a great deal of luck.
Carlisle’s dad was painted as a fanatic who wasn’t careful about sorting real vampires (witches, werewolves) from fake vampires (witches, werewolves). He probably offed somebody with porphyria at least once, and some mentally ill folks, and some real witches. Carlisle was more careful and found an actual vampire but couldn’t kill it.
Well, he was trying, anyway.
...interesting!
What? I summarized Carlisle’s turning in chapter 19. His dad had it in for witches, werewolves, and vampires, and got Carlisle to help kill members of that reference class. Now, werewolves and vampires are damn hard to take down, and I never said Carlisle killed any of those, but there are some vulnerable witches in the world. Carlisle did corner a vampire, who turned Carlisle, killed two others, kidnapped a fourth guy, and then got away.
I was under the impression that Carlisle’s dad’s organization was capable of taking on vampires—it makes much more sense to say that they had ambitions, but that they couldn’t without a great deal of luck.
Carlisle’s dad was painted as a fanatic who wasn’t careful about sorting real vampires (witches, werewolves) from fake vampires (witches, werewolves). He probably offed somebody with porphyria at least once, and some mentally ill folks, and some real witches. Carlisle was more careful and found an actual vampire but couldn’t kill it.