mbrogio was a young adventurer. Born and raised in Italy, he had
always longed to travel to Greece to have his fortune told by the Oracle
of Delphi. When he was an adult, he got on a boat and sailed to the
western edge of Greece, near Astakos. He traveled east until he
eventually reached the city of Delphi.
Delphi was home to a great temple of Apollo,
the sun god. It was also the home of the Pythia, better known as the
Oracles. The Pythia would sit in a chamber within the temple and speak
of prophecies, inspired by Apollo, to those who came to seek the Oracle's wisdom.
When
Ambrogio finally arrived at the temple, he went to speak to the Pythia.
The Pythia, whose words were often cryptic, said only a few words:
"The curse. The moon. The blood will run."
He couldn't sleep
that night. He stayed awake outside of the temple, pondering the meaning
of the Pythia's words. As the sun rose in the morning he realized that
he had not slept. As he walked back toward the town he saw a beautiful
woman dressed in white robes walking to the temple. He ran over to her
and introduced himself.
Her name was Selene, and she was a maiden of the temple. Her sister was the Oracle, and so Selene
tended to the temple and took care of her sister while in her entranced
state.For the next few days every morning Ambrogio met Selene at dawn before she entered the temple. They soon fell in love.
On
his last day in Greece, Ambrogio asked Selene to marry him and return
with him to Italy. She agreed. He said he would make the preparations then meet her at dawn the next morning at their meeting spot outside the temple.Apollo,
the sun god, had been watching. He, himself, had taken a liking to the
beautiful Selene and was enraged that Ambrogio would come to his temple
and take one of his maidens away. At sunset that night, Apollo appeared to Ambrogio and cursed him so that from that day forth a mere touch of Apollo's sunlight would burn Ambrogio's skin.
Ambrogio
was distraught. He was set to leave with Selene in the morning, but he
would not be able to meet her at sunrise as he promised because of the
curse. Having nowhere else to turn, he ran to a cave that led to Hades
for protection. Hades, god of the underworld, listened to his tale and
made him a deal - if he could steal the sliver bow of Artemis and bring
it back, Hades would grant him and Selene protection in the underworld.
The deal specified that Hades would give Ambrogio a magical wooden
bow and 11 arrows to hunt with. He was to offer his hunting trophies to
Artemis
in order to gain her favor and steal her silver bow. As collateral,
Ambrogio had to leave his soul in Hades until he returned with the bow.
Should he return without the silver bow, he would have to live in Hades
forever, never to return to Selene. Having no other choice, Ambrogio
agreed.
He had no way to contact Selene. He had parchments, but
no writing implement, so he took his bow and arrow and killed a swan.
Using its feather as a pen, and its blood as the ink, he wrote her a
note explaining that he could not meet with her but would find a way
for them to be together. He left the note in their meeting place and
ran off to find a place to hide from the sunlight.
Naturally, Selene was devastated when she found the note, but she kept working at the temple as she did not want to anger Apollo
any further. The next morning, Selene went back to the meeting place,
but once again Ambrogio was not there. She saw another piece of
parchment with writing in blood on it. It was a love poem from
Ambrogio.
Before morning for 44 days Ambrogio slew a swan and
used its blood to write Selene a love poem. After draining the blood
and taking a single feather he offered the body of the swan as a tribute
to Artemis, the goddess of hunting and the moon, and also sister to Apollo.
He hoped that even if he could not steal her bow, she would be honored
by the tribute and would be able to convince her brother Apollo to remove the curse.
On the 45th night, Ambrogio had only one arrow left. He shot it at a swan and missed,
the arrow sailing into the distance. He had neither the blood to write
Selene's poem nor the swan to sacrifice to Artemis. He fell to the ground and wept.Seeing how good of a hunter and how dedicated of a follower Ambrogio had been, Artemis came down to him. He begged Artemis to let him borrow her bow and an arrow so he could kill one last bird and leave one final note to Selene.
Artemis
took pity on him and agreed to let him borrow her silver bow and an
arrow. He took the bow, and in desperation, ran to the cave that led to
Hades. Artemis
realized what was happening and cast her own curse on him. The curse
caused all silver burn his skin. Ambrogio dropped the silver bow and
fell to the ground in pain.
Artemis
was furious at his deceit, but he begged her for forgiveness. He
explained the deal he was forced to make with Hades, his curse by Apollo, and his love for Selene. He apologized profusely and swore that he had no other choice.
Artemis
took pity on him again and decided to give him one last chance. She
offered to make him a great hunter, almost as great as she was, with the
speed and strength of a god and fangs with which to drain the blood of
the beasts to write his poems. In exchange for this immortality, he
would have to agree to a deal. He and Selene would have to escape
Apollo's temple and worship only Artemis forever. The catch was that Artemis
was a virgin goddess, and all of her followers had to remain chaste and
unmarried, so Ambrogio was never allowed to touch Selene again. They
could never kiss, never touch, never have children.
Ambrogio
agreed. At least this way he and Selene could be together. He killed
another swan and left Selene a note telling her to meet him on a ship at
the docks. Before dawn the next morning, she saw the note and ran away
before Apollo could notice.
When
Selene arrived at the dock she found Ambrogio's ship and met him down
in the hull. There was a wooden coffin with a note on it, telling her
to order the ship's captain to set sail, and to open the coffin only
after the sun had set. She did as the note said, and after sunset she
opened the coffin to find Ambrogio alive and well.
The couple sailed to Ephesus, where they lived in a cave during the day and worshiped Artemis
at her grand temple every night. They lived happily together for many
years, never touching, never kissing, never having children.
After
a number of years, Ambrogio's immortality allowed him to stay young,
but Selene continued to age as a mortal. She finally fell ill and was
on her deathbed. Ambrogio was distraught, knowing that he would not
join Selene in the afterlife because his soul still resided in Hades.
At night, he went into the woods and found a white swan swimming alone
in a small lake. He killed the swan and offered it to Artemis, begging for her to make Selene immortal so they could stay together forever.
Artemis appeared to him. Thankful for his years of dedication and worship, she made him one last deal. Artemis
told Ambrogio that he could touch Selene just once - to drink her
blood. Doing so would kill her mortal body, but from then on, her blood
mixed with his could create eternal life for any who drink of it. If
he did this, Artemis would see to it that they stayed togetherforever.
Ambrogio wanted to refuse, but after telling Selene what happened,
Selene begged him to do it. After much convincing, he bit her neck and
took her blood into his body. As he set her limp body down, Selene
began to radiate with light, and raise up to the sky. Ambrogio watched
as Selene's glowing spirit lifted to meet Artemis at the moon. When she
arrived, the moon lit up with a brilliant light.Selene became
the goddess of moonlight, and every night she would reach down with her
rays of light to the earth and finally touch her beloved Ambrogio as
well as all of their children - the newly created vampires who carried
the blood of
Ambrogio and Selene, together.
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