Ken came to speak with Miro one day and sat down across from him. From the other side of the chair, he could hear a page being turned, he knew right away that little Ann was sitting next to Miro reading her favorite book again.
"My lord, it seems like many of the town's residents don't believe in magic around here. Save for a few including those associated with your son." Ken said to Miro as he heard Miro start to claw at his chair at the mention of his son.
"Forgive me for asking this my lord, but Duncan, Cassidy, Natalia, and myself have all been contributing to your current quest but I have yet to hear anything noteworthy of little Ann's foray against these wizards. What exactly is she contributing?!" Ken shouted as he pounded his fist down into the arm of his chair as he suddenly heard little Ann's book close and felt a knife at his chin.
"Ann, it's okay. I think it's time we tell Ken a little story." Miro said as Ken felt the knife pull away from his chin.
"Once upon a time, near the beginning of the twentieth century, I was searching the lands for potential new vampires to serve me. As it happened, I came to a town where I found many dead or dying. I had wondered what could have befallen this town, was it a plague? Was there a gang that had come by and killed the townsfolk? A trail of blood led me to a school house where a teacher's neck had been snapped just outside the school and inside the school room, I saw a little girl sitting in the middle of her dead classmates. Some of her classmates had been stabbed, others mutilated, some even looked like their limbs had been chewed off. What was she doing in that moment that I saw her? Reading, just as she is now. She was reading 'Anne of Green Gables', she covered the 'e' at the end of the title to tell me of her name. Did she hesitate or show fear when I asked her if she wanted to be a vampire? No. After I explained to her what I would do and what she would be able to do as a vampire, she walked up to me and leaned her neck out so I would bite her."
"I knew she was brutal, but even I'm shocked by that story." Ken said.
"Yes. So when little Ann isn't reading or at my side Ken, she is doing something very important."