There are those whom even Caine's monsters do not name lightly.
     In the earliest times, or so it is believed, one of the First Brood stood against the Thirteen.  This fiendish traitor -- eldest childe of an Antediluvian's errant dalliance, lowborn singing slave boy to a protoMesopotamian people, forged an unholy pact with those who dwelt in shadow outside the periphery of this world.  In so doing, the devil-child took on something of the place Beyond, becoming something more -- and less -- than human.  Gathering apostles from the ranks of his brethren, the first shaitan of Baal-called-Destroyer marshaled his armies and laid siege to the Second City; Blood met Blood, as Caine's childer fought one another amidst razed ruins and flame-swept plains.
     At length, it is whispered, the progenitor himself turned his attention to the fray -- a terrible cataclysmic time in which the skies rained fire and wept blood.  The battle ended as abruptly as it had begun; the 12 al'shaitani were put to death, and their demonic hordes were routed.  Of the boy-thing, however, there was no sign, and the horrors that had once paid fealty to his every command were lost to the whispering wings of legend.
     But this legend is fast returning to reality.  The capture and destruction of a cabal of North American infernalists (and subsequent recovery of their blasphemous grimoires) has brought to Kindred attention a looming shadowy truth: The Children of Baal were not wholly extinguished by the Inquisition, as was previously believed.
     The sons of the shaitan are believed to have stemmed from the sands of the Near East, where men and mosters have intermingled through the folk and fables of the region for milliennia.  Their sires knelt at the same shrines and venerated the same dark deities as the warrior philosopher children of Brujah and Haqim; indeed, Cainite lore places the three conjoined bloodlines at the roots of pre-Sumarian culture.  These same tales recount black citadels, fallen stars, comet-crater cities, insect-monsters, foul sorceror-kings and all manner of similar depravaties dating back to the accursed city of Chorazin purportedly laid waste in the Old Testament.
     The Baali are explorers, first and foremost -- students of the uknown, the uknowable, the unspeakable.  Their eyes and ears glean forgotten secrets.  Theirs is the secret song that has echoed through eternity since their nameless progenitor first struck the discordant chord that fractured the wall between worlds.  And theirs are the steady, patient fingers that have picked at the wound ever since.
     Moderns nights find the few remaining Baali in something of a no man's land astride the countless factions peopleing the World of Darkness.  They are dying -- hated, feared, hunted by Camarilla, Sabbat and a host of other fronts, prey to a hundred detractors and divisions from within and without.  They are falling, spiraling into nadir, plagued by some inescapable degeneration of spirit that claims more of their number with every passing night, doomed to a slow, steady passage from magician to monster to memory.  Yet still they toil for the erosion and eventual destruction of this world, to make way for Those Who Wait Beyond.

Quote: The world -- your world -- hangs suspended by the slimmest of threads between the travesty of all that has gone before and the mystery of all that is to come.  Better to spool that thread?  Or to sever it entirely?

Nickname:  Demons

Sect:  The Baali claim no sect, and no sect would have them.  Although the Baali claim to have widely vitiated many vampires to their cause, the truth of the matter seems the opposite -- unless their converts are very skilled at hiding themselves.

Appearance:  Most Ba'al worshippers seem remarkably normal, even sedate, favoring non-descript clothes and subtle manner.  Most are possessed of cautious, cerebral and studious demeanors, although a few have been known to wax loquacious, even eloquent before attentive audiences.  Many acquire and unhealthy fascination involving insects, rodents and other vermin -- an unconscious homage to the "Lord of the Flies".

Haven:  The Children of Ba'al seem drawn to places of antiquity -- libraries, temples, standing stones and long abandoned places of power.  Ancient, indecipherable sigils are found emblazoned upon surrounding grassy plains and rocky outcroppings, nearby children and livestock are stillborn or hideously deformed, and similar omens of ill portent follow in the cultists passage like malign footprints.  Recently, a few Camarilla war Coteries tasked with flushing out and destroying these covens have returned with disturbing tales of Baali breeding and cohabiting in insular "families".  The Demons congregate with ghouls and converts of other clans in orgies of flesh, so the tales say, rekindeling the ancient heresies of blood-sharing and other, less savory practices....

Background:  The Baali embrace conscripts from the ranks of artists, mystics, scholars and a double handful of more utilitarian castes (prostitutes, mercenaries, socialites, etc.).  Some dwindling few fledglings -- most numerous in the Mediterranean and Middle Eastern demesnes -- are born as well as reborn into the line.  Whether culled or educated from promising childhood careers or bred from blood-fed ghoul stock,  these inhuman disciples are groomed for power from infancy and invariably rise to occupy the bloodlines top most tiers.

Disciplines:  Daimoinon, Obfuscate, Presence

Weaknesses:  The Baali fear and are repulsed by religion and the trappings there of, even more so than the rest of the Kindred.  True Faith works at twice its normal efficiency against these creatures; many Baali cannot bear to gaze upon or handle even the most mundane articles of religious paraphernalia, faith-born or otherwise.

Organization:  Only twice in recorded Cainite history have the servants of Those Who Wait Beyond risen to bear their dread lords banner, and both have ended in crushing defeat; they have since been hunted to near extinction.  The remainder have fallen into splintered, fractious subsects.  Indeed, they are nearly as many apparitions and appellations ascribed to the patron of the Baali pantheon as there are worshippers of those apparitions and appellations.  Driven by tradition and the necessities of survival, many of the Baali cling to scattered covens of three to thirteen (rarely  more), led by a handful of shaitan and al'shaitan.  To those outside the covens, the Baali appear like nothing so much as devil-worshippers.  Only those inside the cult -- or who have stolen its secrets without their knowledge -- know the true depths of the Baali philosophy.

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