As a rabid fan of Emily Short’s Galatea, I squeed uncontrollably at Bella pretending to be a statue in a shipping crate.
It occurs to me that Antarctica would be a ridiculously well-suited place to establish a long-term vegetarian vampire settlement, once that community grew to about a hundred or so. It’s very well-separated from any human settlement and likely to remain so for a long time, so it’s safe for newborns, unlikely to invite accidents, and little chance of needing to move. It’s totally habitable to vampires, and there’s plenty of local fauna to munch on. If the politics with the Volturi could be worked out, it could become feasible to start turning people systematically.
I may be very late in answering this and it may also be a rhetorical question, but no, as far as I know there aren’t ever many humans living on Antarctica, although I’m quite sure there’s almost always scientists present. They certainly wouldn’t be hard to avoid, but if newborns are supposed to train to abstain there it’s not a stretch to imagine someone who knows where the human settlement is managing to slip away from supervision and kill them, which would lead to more humans coming to investigate.
Chapter 32.
As a rabid fan of Emily Short’s Galatea, I squeed uncontrollably at Bella pretending to be a statue in a shipping crate.
It occurs to me that Antarctica would be a ridiculously well-suited place to establish a long-term vegetarian vampire settlement, once that community grew to about a hundred or so. It’s very well-separated from any human settlement and likely to remain so for a long time, so it’s safe for newborns, unlikely to invite accidents, and little chance of needing to move. It’s totally habitable to vampires, and there’s plenty of local fauna to munch on. If the politics with the Volturi could be worked out, it could become feasible to start turning people systematically.
I fear for the poor scientists drilling ice cores and studying other things on Antarctica should this happen.
Are there many of those? Would they be hard to avoid?
Or to turn?
I may be very late in answering this and it may also be a rhetorical question, but no, as far as I know there aren’t ever many humans living on Antarctica, although I’m quite sure there’s almost always scientists present. They certainly wouldn’t be hard to avoid, but if newborns are supposed to train to abstain there it’s not a stretch to imagine someone who knows where the human settlement is managing to slip away from supervision and kill them, which would lead to more humans coming to investigate.