Horatio
Horatio Ballard
Mental characteristics
Personal history
Horatio Ballard was born as a son of an Albany businessman and legislator. He moved to Chicago during the Civil War to join his uncle who was selling meat to the Union army. The years following the Civil War were known as the "Gilded Age" and were boom times for America's industrial barons. The age included the rise of Rockefellers and Vanderbilts, all who were poised to milk the government for money while the nation was being rebuilt. None of Chicago's financial cutthroats could compare to Ballard in pure ruthlessness and guile, however, qualities that were matched only by his appetite for huge quantities of gourmet food.
When his uncle died during the Great Chicago Fire, he became the sole owner of one of Chicago's largest construction companies and one of its most influential citizens. Rebuilding of Chicago after the fire made him richer still, and his investments spanned the entire financial structure of United States. His only interests besides money seemed to be the incredible banquets he organised for himself.
Then he suffered his first heart attack. Now acutely aware of his own mortality, he started spending huge sums of money in legitimate medical research. After the second heart attack, he started showering money on any quack who could promise him any kind of hope for continued life. Then a weird little man came to him with tales about immortal vampires. Ballard came more intrigued when this man showed him a staked immobile corpse with rock-hard skin, claiming to have found it on a rooftop. Ballard bought the corpse, and then accompanied by armed guards whose silence he could buy, he removed the stake. The pitiful creature could barely move or speak, but it told him about vampires in exchange for a little blood. The creature told how a vampire called Lodin had just become prince of the city, and left him staked on a rooftop for his support of the previous prince.
Leaving his prisoner staked again, Ballard then sought out this "Lodin", and with the help of his considerable resources, quickly located him. When Lodin awoke from his daysleep in his haven, he found the room full of armed guards and Ballard holding a wooden stake over his heart. Ballard told the prince that his only hope was cooperation. Laughing, Lodin threw Ballard's massively obese body across the room and dispatched all of the guards in a flash of violence. Despite several guns and shotguns being fired, Lodin appeared completely unharmed. Ballard broke down and started begging for mercy, crying that he would give Lodin money, blood, power, anything for his life. Lodin considered for a moment and then decided that the man's resources could prove useful. And so Lodin Embraced Ballard (using the man's wrist since his neck was nowhere to be found).
Ballard is a business shark of the highest order who controls most of Chicago's white collar businesses, its industry, and has considerable influence on its law firms and bankers. Ballard's Ventrue feeding restriction is that he can only feed on the members of his own family.
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