Freedom in Doses [RIVER]

For humans to roleplay finding a sire, and becoming a vampire.
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Haylee Rae (DELETED 9724)
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Freedom in Doses [RIVER]

Post by Haylee Rae (DELETED 9724) »

Haylee smoothed her hands over the blue blouse, the crease of the skirt at her waist. What she would have given to be able to have bought new clothes for tonight, but on a student’s budget and her hours at the coffee shop continually undercut, she barely had enough money to feed herself.

The exchange program was something of a rort. She’d applied on a whim, in one of those moments of confidence and freedom; she’d saved enough money to afford the flight, and the rent until she found another job. Since then, she’d had to move into a sharehouse with five other people in order to afford rent, to cut back on costs. For internet, she often bummed off work once her shift was over, or was constantly found at the numerous internet cafes spotted around the city.

The courses were okay but not world class. But who was she kidding? Haylee Rae wasn’t known for thinking things through. On the surface she might appear to be a forward-thinking, reasonable young woman, fuelled by common sense. But underneath the shy exterior was a spontaneous soul who did things without reading the fine print. She’d have been better off going to London or New York – or one of the other, less expensive UK or US states. Canada had appealed to her, however – she liked the cold. She thought the wilderness would provide an inspiring backdrop.

But like everything that Haylee thought would be inspiring, it turned out not to be. Not because the beauty wasn’t there, but because she lacked follow through. The world outside was waiting for her, but instead Haylee holed herself up in her little room, fuming because her housemates made too much noise, earplugs in, doing her best to study but more often than not distracted by Netflix.

Calls home reminded her why she had come, however. She was here for the adventure, for the experience. She was here for the place not so much for the study. She was urged over and over and over to go out, to meet people. Make friends. Have fun. It was repeated so often that finally, eventually, Haylee caved. She downloaded Tinder on her phone and spent a couple of days swiping until she finally started talking to a guy. Henry Knight, his name was. A good name. The kind of name a Rockstar or movie persona should have.

He was charming and they had things in common, or so Haylee thought. Now she was dressed, hoping the humidity would drop and it would get cooler as the sun sunk below the horizon – thus why she wore long sleeves. The outfit wasn’t completely flattering but nor was it a sack. And they were just going for casual drinks, weren’t they? She didn’t have to dress up – though she did pull on a pair of lace-up heels just to make the outfit seem a little more appropriate.

She regretted them as soon as she stepped foot on the pavement. But she wasn’t going to climb all those stairs again to change them, and she would be late if she did. Even now, she thought she was cutting it fine. The city was still new. There was a chance she might get lost.

The bar was called Barcadia and it looked, from the outside, to be a decent kind of place. The people within were dressed nicely – the women were all in cocktail dresses which made Haylee re-think her outfit. But there was nothing she could do about it now. Steeling her nerves and doing her best to quiet the butterflies in her gut, Haylee showed her ID at the door (she looked seventeen but was actually twenty-four) and stepped inside. The music was low, not too overpowering. The place was busy, making Haylee want to run for the hills. But she didn’t. She meandered toward the bar and ordered a cider, before pulling out her phone and messaging Henry.

I’m at the bar, it said. Blue blouse, wild hair. And it was true. Her hair wasn’t contained by ties or plaits. It was loose over her shoulders, dark curls reaching halfway down her back. As soon as she paid for her cider she quickly gulped down half – liquid courage. She was going to need a lot of it.

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River
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Re: Freedom in Doses [RIVER]

Post by River »

Her fingers were steady as she brushed them along the golden trim of The Gilded Cage, the building vibrating beneath her touch. The music was loud; the unstable beat pounding in her skull with enough volume to create a twitch beneath her eye. The assault only worsened when the door swung open as a pair of blondes stumbled out, the scent of watermelon and cheap alcohol clinging to their breath. They were worse for wear, their multi-colored dresses clinging carelessly to their trembling forms. Reaching a hand up, the shadow curled her fingers around the edge of the wall, her nails biting into the off-white stone as the shorter of the two remained in the entrance, allowing the music to drown out her words.

Whatever she had said caused her partner to laugh, the sound shrill and garbled, like a broken fire-alarm that refused to shut off. Her arm trembled from the strength it took to stop from lashing out. She hated this place – she absolutely loathed it. It was too loud, too crowded, and too… desperate. The pungent aroma of alcohol, stale cigarettes and sweat permeated the air, threatening to choke her every time she dared to step foot through the glass doors. How could no one else sense the depravity? No one else is as fucked up as you, Danika, that inner voice chided, the snide tone setting her teeth on edge. From the moment she had been torn from the realm, the voice had grown in power. It had once been a small whisper, an inkling of a persona in the back of her mind – and now it consumed her.

Running her free hand through her tangled, unkempt hair, she narrowed her eyes as the door finally swung shut, siphoning the poor choice in music back into the den of the lonely. Had she been another vampire, one that was normal, one that craved human blood, she would have pushed from the wall and followed the stumbling pair to their car. Fortunately for them, the moment they stepped from the cracked pavement and onto the black asphalt, they were no longer her concern. The sound of their heels echoing off the walls grew quieter as they staggered further down the street, finally offering her a moment of silence as she pulled her cell from the front pocket of her sweatshirt.

The device, though extravagant in size, only held two contacts, making it easy to select the one she was searching for. When her childe’s name populated on the screen, she slid her thumb over the message icon and quickly typed out her text. I’m leaving. I’ll see you later. It was simple, sweet, and it would probably create a thousand questions from the golden haired stripper the moment she received it. Not wanting to deal with the onslaught of emotion, she powered the device down and dropped it back into her pocket as she pushed from the wall. She had no reason to be there – Jasmine was safe within the pulsating walls. No one would be stupid – or destructive – enough to venture inside.

It’s not like she needed you there, anyway. You’re useless, remember?

Gritting her teeth, she swallowed a growl as the voice came to life inside her skull. The soft tone was too familiar, and she refused to put a name to it. She refused to make it a reality. With a sigh, she pressed the heel of her hand to her brow as she turned the corner and stepped into blissful silence. It was on the streets – well, beneath them – that she thrived. There was no sound, no light. Within the sewer tunnels, she was completely alone. Of course, it wasn’t as if she weren’t now. After two years of being undead, two years under Roderic’s wing, she was still invisible. It was a curse that she would forever have.

It was a cure that she finally, fully, accepted.

As she walked, she realized she had no true destination in mind. Her only thought had been to put as much distance between her and Jasmine’s club as she could. When she realized she could breathe in the night’s air without choking on the fumes of alcohol, she began to slow. There was beauty in the streets at night, one that she had missed when she was trapped within the shadow’s cold embrace. She had thought she would never see it again, and now, she took the time to appreciate it. The stores were lit with bright, flashing lights, the warmth of the glow from the windows creating an almost ethereal appearance as she watched the employees bustle around. Some were closing up – while others were just getting started. It was Barcadia that drew her in, the sign brightly lit, calling to her like a moth to a flame. She hadn’t an idea why she stepped to the entrance, or why she put her hand to the door.

She had even less explanation for why she allowed herself to push it open, especially when she caught sight of the women with their dresses clinging to their curves. It was in this moment, when she stepped across the threshold, that she was once again accepting of her invisibility. No one looked her way, not even as she stepped to the bar, her hood drawn over her head, to blend in with the shadows. No one offered her a menu, or a drink. They walked around her, their eyes straight ahead, as if even daring to look in her direction would force them to strike up conversation. No one wanted to admit that she was alive, that she was real. No one bothered to think of her at all. Instead, they continued about their business, their heads held high, hands gripping trays and purses a little tighter, though they couldn’t bring themselves to question why. Dropping her elbows onto the counter, she tilted her head to watch the crowd, interest sparking in her mismatched gaze as she drank in the scene before her.

There was one girl, her hair a wild mess, her clothes almost as out of place as her own, that caught her eye. Something about her drew her in. There was purity about her, as if she had been touched by an angel. She could already see the innocence in her eyes, the way her hands nervously twitched as she sat her phone aside. It was enough to almost pull her from her chair, but the moment her sneaker touched the tile, the voice started to laugh, her soft tone turning bitter.

You’re nothing.
No one dares to even look at you. You’re filth.
You’re a disgrace, Danika. She wouldn’t welcome you.
You never should have come back.
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Here comes the darkness, it's eating on my soul

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Haylee Rae (DELETED 9724)
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Re: Freedom in Doses [RIVER]

Post by Haylee Rae (DELETED 9724) »

A minute passed after Haylee had sent the message. And then two. And then five. She slid onto a stool and tapped her foot idly (nervously) on the bottom bar of said stool. She stared first at her arm, at the blouse she wore, the singular threads. Dainty fingers plucked two or three stray strands of dog hair from the mix—and then she realised that the blouse, in this lighting, didn’t really look blue. It looked almost black, it was so dark. Haylee cursed, barely a whisper in the din, and pulled her phone toward her. The screen lit up for the hundredth time as she hesitated, fingers hovering. As always, she overthought every single tiny little action. How stupid would she look if she sent another message to clarify? But she had to, didn’t she? She’d made a mistake.

Sorry. The blouse looks black. Black blouse, wild hair. ;) She sent.

And then she wished she hadn’t. A ******* winky face? Who does that?! She groaned and picked up her glass to take another mouthful but there was none left, only dregs. Leaning forward, Haylee tried to catch the eye of the bartender. Her painted lips parted to call out to him but her voice got stuck. No, she’d wait until he caught her eye. He was down the other end of the bar. While waiting, Haylee caught sight of skin, just a flash of it. A face hidden beneath a hood. A figure, lurking, completely out of place in the bar filled with peacocks and hens. So many bright feathers it was hard to focus. Haylee smiled—it was something she did, on reflex. She smiled to everyone, strangers, even creeps who she shouldn’t encourage. But it was a nervous tic. It quite often disappeared as soon as it came, her eyes immediately downcast as she hurried on. It was the same now. Why smile? Was the hooded person even looking at her? Probably not.

The bartender changed course and headed in Haylee’s direction. She caught his eye; he finished serving his customer before coming back to her.

”Can I have… something stronger? I don’t know uhm… Southern Comfort…? On the rocks,” he said. It had been recommended to her once, when she’d been out with her best friend. He’d moved away the year later. Everyone was always moving away, until Haylee decided to move away. She took that leap. Her Australian twang sounded so wrong here, amongst all the Canadians.

As soon as the drink was delivered, Haylee jumped—there was a hand on her shoulder. She could feel the cold of it through her blouse. Was it really that cold outside? She gasped as she turned; Henry. It had to be. He looked like the picture—through different. People always looked different in real life. Still, those eyes! She grinned, and was glad of the cider that had somewhat dulled her nerves.

”Henry?” she presumed. He nodded.

”That’s me,” he laughed. ”I see you got started without me?” he asked, though there was still laughter in the question.

”Yeah. I ah… drink to keep from being nervous,” she said, cringing as soon as the words spilled from her tongue. Was she supposed to admit that kind of thing? Oh well. Honesty was the best policy. Henry laughed again. She took it as a good sign. ”You’ll have to order two to catch up with me,” she suggested, to which Henry just shook his head.

”No, I don’t really drink,” he said. It should have been the first warning. It should have struck her as strange that he would agree to meet in a bar when he didn’t really drink. It should have been weird that he didn’t order anything—it wasn’t just the alcohol he dismissed.

And she certainly shouldn’t have taken the drink that he bought her while she was away, gone to the toilet. Another Southern Comfort on the rocks – though with rohypnol slipped in on the side.
Last edited by Haylee Rae (DELETED 9724) on 14 Sep 2017, 13:25, edited 1 time in total.
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River
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Re: Freedom in Doses [RIVER]

Post by River »

I thought I loved you, but that’s not the sad part.
You actually thought I loved you.
God, Danika. You were just a means to an end.
Money, Danika, baby. That’s all it was about.
--- And she wasn’t the first.


The ethereal words echoed through her skull, like knives wrapped in satin as they scraped against her brain. Even in death, she was that voice inside of her head, a ghost that lingered just on the edge of her vision, dancing in and out of her peripheral with that familiar crimson smile. Even now, as she watched the wild haired beauty nervously cast her a smile, Addison was there, her laughter sharp against her ear. Look at her, so pure, like a lost little rabbit in a forest of wolves. You’ll ruin her, she taunted, causing the shadow to shift in her seat, her fingers curling until she could feel the bite of her nails.

It shouldn’t have been this way. She never should have come back from the dead, but Jasmine had been persistent. Even as a wraith, the blonde hadn’t let her out of her sight. She had been there for every mood, every shift in her demeanor. While she had pulled the darkness in and wrapped it around her like a comforting blanket, Jasmine had repelled it. Every smile, ever musical laugh she made had chased away the demons, until it had been just the two of them. She loves you, you know. What do you see when you look at her, Danika? You can’t see past me, can you? The words continued to haunt her, and as she brought her hand up to her clutch the sides of her skull, she hissed out a sharp breath.

The sound was enough to alert the bartender, his quizzical gaze snapping towards her, though even as she sat there, her shoulders hunched and strands of black slipping from beneath her hood, he overlooked her. She wasn’t there – she had never been there. She was just another statistic, another soul lost to the shadows that she had become the moment Obsession had taken her life. She was nothing. She had always been nothing. She didn’t need Addison in her ear, chirping away like a broken record, reminding her of all the horrible things that she had done, of her worthlessness. It was engraved in her very soul, as tattered and ripped apart as it was. Oh, look. Here comes another wolf…

The soft voice was filled with delight, a glee that reminded her of a psychopath instead of the woman that she had once loved. It was enough to tear her gaze from the black blood that barely made it to the surface, mismatched eyes finding the wild haired beauty with ease. She hadn’t had to ask who. She knew that in this fucked up world, the one person that would be targeted would be the angel in the corner. The second she found her, she wanted to stand, to curl her fingers around the man’s wrist and shatter every bone in his arm. She knew the moment that she saw him, his smile too sure, his eyes too bright. Yet, something held her in place, a metaphysical force keeping her in her seat, even as she watched the woman stand. The second her back was turned, his fingers were opened, and the liquid spun as he dispersed the drug. Just watch. What else could you do for her, Danika?

Gritting her teeth, she curled her hands against the edge of the counter, her body frozen – and her glare focused on the drugged glass. She would watch. She would wait – and then should would kill.
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Here comes the darkness, it's eating on my soul

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Haylee Rae (DELETED 9724)
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Re: Freedom in Doses [RIVER]

Post by Haylee Rae (DELETED 9724) »

The alcohol had already started to have an effect. There were those who said Southern Comfort wasn’t a real drink, but Haylee wasn’t learned in the ways of drinking. She didn’t know the difference between her whiskies and rums. She only really knew that wine was red or white and that she preferred Merlot over the rest. Beer? There’d only been a couple of times she’d tried beer and it hadn’t been to her liking.

In the bathroom, Haylee’s head was not yet spinning but she could feel the numbness in her gums, that slight promise that the alcohol was starting to take effect. One or two more and she’d open like a flower; she could talk all night with the right amount of alcohol.

So when she returned to the bar to find that Henry had ordered her another drink, she was pleased. She took it without a second thought, always trusting others even when she shouldn’t. Haylee Rae was as naïve as they came, her smile easy upon her lips and the nervousness obvious as the curtain of her wild hair often fell to hide her face.

That second drink worked so quickly, however, that Haylee didn’t have the time to catch up. She didn’t have the wits to wonder how it could have worked so fast. The ice was only just beginning to melt in her glass when her head began to spin at an alarming rate. She laughed, completely uninhibited. Her body was like that of a ragdoll. When she slipped from her stool and had to be caught by Henry she shrieked with laughter, and was far too far gone to realise how cold his skin was. When she looked up at him all she could see was the handsome man who should have wanted nothing to do with her; all she could feel was the heat pulsing in her cheeks, even her ears glowing a fiery red as she wondered how she must look. Why was he even interested?

It blew her mind when he asked if she wanted to get out of there. No man had ever propositioned her. Had she been in her right mind, if she knew exactly what was going on and what he had given to her, she might have told him that he didn’t need the drug. It was laughable how easily she might have gone with him without it.

Henry had to hold Haylee up as they made their way out of the bar; a cool breeze meandered down the street and the girl sucked in the fresh air. And when he turned them down a short alleyway, her drunken mind assumed a shortcut. And when he shoved them through a barely functioning door into an abandoned factory floor, she hoped for some kind of candlelit rooftop. A romantic gesture.

There was no romance, however. And nor were they alone. Two other men appeared from the shadows. Virgin blood was a delicacy, it would seem. The girl should have been thankful that they didn’t care to take advantage of her in any other way. Every reaction was on a delay. It wasn’t until she had three sets of fangs sunk deep into her tender flesh that she managed the gurgled scream; one in the flesh of her neck, one in the flesh of her elbow, and the last in the flesh of the opposite wrist. Every struggle, every tug only tore at her skin and caused them all to hold her tighter. Three vampires against one inebriated girl.

There was never any hope.
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River
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Re: Freedom in Doses [RIVER]

Post by River »

Just sit there, baby, and do nothing.
That’s what you’re best at, isn’t it?
Watching it all unfold and doing absolutely nothing.


The counter cracked as her hold tightened, and she quickly began to scrape away the splintered evidence, even as the bartender looking her way with a frown. Her entire form was made of stone, and as he walked closer, her attention remained focused on the curled haired angel. He wouldn’t speak to her – he wouldn’t even know she was there. It never changed. She could have leaped over the bar and shattered every bottle, and he would look through her at the mess and remark about an earthquake. Sure enough, the moment he approached her corner, his fingers running along the shattered marble, he made a sound in his throat and called over his shoulder about firing the janitor.

No one cares about you.
Why would she?


When Haylee stood, so did she, despite the quiet whispers against the shell of her ear. She could feel the touch of the spirit as she ran her fingers through her hair – and she reveled in the sound of annoyance when Addison realized that she couldn’t hurt her. “You don’t control me,” she hissed, her words spoken slow to control the inevitable stutter. It had been Jasmine’s method, her mistake proving useful in a few ways, much to her chagrin. She hated that she had turned the blonde. Every second that she looked into her eyes, she was reminded of her weakness. There was more to it, of course, more than she was willing to admit to herself. If anything Addison said rung with honesty, it was the notion that she ran – even from herself. To voice the thoughts that unfolded in her mind, the put a name to the true reason for her displeasure over Jasmine, would be too much.

None of that mattered then, however, especially when she watched the way the man caught her. Swallowing a snarl, she curled the sleeves of her sweatshirt around her fingers as she quietly followed, her steps unnoticed, even as the man cast a quick and wary glance over his shoulder. You don’t have to do this. Just walk away, Danika, she thought, even as she followed them into the night. Each step sent her instincts on edge, and she had to fight down the urge to act before it was time. She had to have proof, she had to know that the woman was as pure as she seemed to be, that the glow that surrounded her head wasn’t tainted and tarnished. Only then would she save her. It was the light she needed.
Running her fingers through her hair, she pulled the thick, glossy strands into a tight ponytail as she knocked her hood back. As they finally made it to their destination, the building looking as though it hadn’t been touched in years, she closed her eyes. Already, she could feel the sense of urgency, the need to pull back and fade into the shadows. This wasn’t her fight. This wasn’t her problem, and yet, when the door creaked shut behind the pair, she was right there, back to the exit as she watched the other men emerge from the darkness. Watch this, you stupid ****.

They never stood a chance.

The first man dropped instantly, fingers clawing at his throat where his blood sprayed like a broken fountain, coating the floor with a splash of crimson. She had never moved. The blackened blade danced through the air, the next man barely having a chance to pull his fangs from the innocent’s skin before the shadows turned on him. Her attention wavered for a moment as the scent of vampiric blood tantalized her senses, the shadow crafted blade swiping wide, before she managed to reign herself in. Gritting her teeth, she sent the blade back out and watched with a twisted kind of glee as the it cut across his stomach, causing his intestines to spill onto the floor. It was then, when the final man finally noticed his cohorts scrambling from the wild haired beauty that she moved. Stepping from the shadows, she curled her fingers around the hilt of her sword, tanned skin tight against the ivory handle as her mismatched gaze flashed with anger. She didn’t speak, even as they righted themselves, nor did she move – other than to flick her sword, commanding them away from the girl.

Finally, she was noticed.
What a shame she’d be the last thing they remembered.
River Other NPCs/Objects Moderate Physically demanding Slice his throat with shadowstrike Succeeded
River Other NPCs/Objects Moderate Physically demanding eviscerate with shadowstrike Failed
River Other NPCs/Objects Moderate Physically demanding eviscerate with shadowstrike Succeeded
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Here comes the darkness, it's eating on my soul

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Haylee Rae (DELETED 9724)
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Re: Freedom in Doses [RIVER]

Post by Haylee Rae (DELETED 9724) »

The girl had no idea what was going on, except that she was certain she was going to die. Every tug and struggle caused the vampires to tighten their grip, their teeth tearing her tender skin. They didn’t cover her mouth. She’s screamed, but as soon as the first set of fangs had punctured the vein, she felt as if she had been injected with anaesthesia. Her body went slack, her vision blurred, and she hoped that she was calling for help, that she was sobbing, that she was at least trying to save herself.

Whoever said that one’s life flashed before their eyes before they died as a ******* liar. Haylee’s life remained steadfast in her memory, flashes of it nowhere to be seen. She was too busy trying to keep her eyes wide and open, trying to figure out what was happening, trying to turn her sobs into growls of fury.

Sparks danced at the edge of her vision. A pitiful moan mingled in her throat as she fought the inevitable. And then, suddenly, she was dropped. Teeth were wrenched from her skin. Blood poured from the gash on her neck, from the tears in her wrists. But before she could hit the ground she was caught. And not by any saviour. While the scent of blood filled the air—hers, mixed with something other—and two of the men scrambled to regain their wounded senses, the third, unwounded man lifted Haylee roughly, his cold hard fingers digging into her skin, surely bruising. He was using her as a human shield, and all she could do was hang there, limp, feet moving numbly, slowly seeking purchase upon a ground slippery with blood.

In Haylee’s mind, she was struggling hard. In her mind, her fingers were claws and she was actually making her mark as she tried to slip from her captor’s grasp. Instead, her hands were merely caressing the vampire’s skin. A frown etched a deep line between her eyes, eyes that were now hooded but sharp—the look of someone who was trying to very hard to keep their eyes on a single pinprick of light through heavy, dense darkness.

There, in front of her, was a figure. It was so blurred she couldn’t tell whether it was a woman or a man. It was just a dark shadow, but the sight of it instigated a spark of hope in her chest, burgeoning like wildfire.

“You’ll have to kill her if you’re going to kill me!” she heard, the voice booming against her ear. He was pulling her, dragging her backwards, trying to find a way to get his back up against a wall (or maybe even a door to escape through). The other two were unsteady, uncertain. They didn’t want to die. Nor did they want to run. The one whose throat was cut had pulled a gun from somewhere; his finger on the trigger, he squeezed.

Haylee yelped as the crack echoed back to them ten times as loud as the shot itself. Whether he hit his mark or not she could not know; the darkness was getting worse. The wounds too big to heal, too dazed to do much of anything but to just… fight to stay alive.
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River
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Re: Freedom in Doses [RIVER]

Post by River »

Just let her go.
You can’t save her.
You can’t even save yourself.


Her fingers tightened on the blade as she watched the wild haired angel try to fight. There was a spark in her, one that she noticed, even beneath the heavy hood of her lids. She was fighting to stay awake, fighting to stay alive, and the man that held her couldn’t be fucked to respect that. He held her like she was nothing more than a feral kitten, his hand clamped tight around her throat, fingers stained with her blood. He used her as a shield, as if she were nothing more than a ******* piece of meat. Flicking her tongue across a sharpened fang, the shadow watched with disinterest as he spewed his venom, his threat nearly drowned out by the hatred that dripped from the apparition’s haunted voice.

While he threatened her, she remained silent, her head tilting. She watched him as a cat would a mouse, the way a predator would its prey before it struck. She wasn’t a confident woman. She didn’t believe herself to be of any interest, nor did she really think herself as a threat. However, there had been a change in her since she had been pulled from the abyss. Darkness had seeped into her mind, crawled its way into her heart, and it was that darkness she pulled on now as she watched girl struggle. She could sense the fight ebbing out of her; smell her blood as it permeated the air. She was fading fast, and if she wanted to save that purity, to keep a hold of it, stake claim to it forever – she had to act fast.

Gone was the taunting glare in her feline eyes. When the crack of the gun echoed off the walls, she didn’t bother to move from the path of the bullet. It slammed into her stomach, cut through her intestines, and exploded from her back. The pain was embraced, even as her flesh started to mend itself back together, even as the ghost gave a haunted, chaotic laugh that edged into a scream of frustration. Still silent, she dashed across the room, her fingers curling around the vampire’s throat. The gun shook in his hand, and when he realized his fatal mistake, he started to fight. He thought she was going to impale him on her blade, and so he lashed out – only to feel her fangs rip through his throat. The acidic taste of his blood danced across her tongue, and as he struggled in her hold, she fed.

It only took a second, and her fangs were soon ripping out his throat before she tossed him aside like he as nothing more than a doll. She thought it a fitting fate, considering what he had done to the woman. His blood dripping from her lips, she dropped her gaze to the man still at her feet before dismissing him. He was inconsequential in this war. Tilting her head, she watched the man back towards the exit, his confidence clear, even as she watched him dispatch one of his men. No words left her tongue, even as she lifted her hand and twist her fingers through the air. At first, he looked at her as if she were insane, and then his body seized up. His steps came to a halt as the rigormortis set in, hand tightening on the girl’s throat. She wasted not a single second, then. Calling the shadows onto herself, she disappeared from sight, only to appear behind the man. Within seconds, she swung her blade – and careful to not arm the girl – severed his head from his shoulders. As it fell to ground with a solid thud, she caught the girl before she hit the ground, arm around her stomach.

Her touch was gentle, despite the violence that coiled within her muscles. She was fading before her eyes, that angelic purity ebbing from her eyes, and there was still one to end. Lifting her glare, she watched the remaining vampire from behind the woman’s mass of curls. Before she had a chance to decide what to do, the shadows came to life and descended on him, darkened tendrils embracing him as he began to scream, the sound haunting, before it soon shut off as a bullet pierced his eye. Dropping the gun to her side, she brushed her hand through the girl’s hair, and without question, sliced the vein on her wrist before forcing it against her lips. She wasn’t going to lose something so pure, despite the bitter insults that were brushing across her ear as the ghost watched her force the curse on another.

She isn’t going to want you.
You’re nothing.
She’s going to hate you.
Kill herself to get away from you.
River Other NPCs/Objects Moderate Physically demanding sever head Succeeded
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Here comes the darkness, it's eating on my soul

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Haylee Rae (DELETED 9724)
Posts: 23
Joined: 20 Aug 2017, 23:19

Re: Freedom in Doses [RIVER]

Post by Haylee Rae (DELETED 9724) »

Haylee wasn’t aware of the storm around her.

Storm. It sounded like a storm. Or was that just the thundering of blood in her ears? Was it just the strain of her veins as they tried to pump what little was leftover? The voices failed to form words; they were just rumbles of bass vibrating through the air. The girl could no longer differentiate between her senses. Sight was gone. She could taste what she could feel and she could smell what she could hear, but she couldn’t smell blood. She could smell something else. Flowers? Lilies. She’d never liked the smell of lilies. It was too overpowering, and they often gave her a migraine. The line was deep between her eyes as her head pounded.

The vertigo was as sudden as a gunshot, taking hold of Haylee as, unbeknownst to her, she was dropped, heading for the ground beside a headless body. Before her bones could collide with hard, dirty cement, however, she was caught. It felt as if she’d fallen into a gentle body of water, and now she was drowning. It was getting harder to hold her eyes open. It felt like they were wide as saucers but the woman who held Haylee would only see a glimpse of the whites through the long lashes. Haylee’s lips parted and closed like a fish on solid ground, gasping for air. Her frail body jolted at the crack of the gunshot, but all the struggle had left her, abandoned her like a master giving up on a lame horse.

When her lips parted, it was to allow the sweet but savoury flow of coppery blood onto her tongue. It didn’t register to begin with. Her arms were slack at her sides, knuckles grazing the ground and fingers curled in like the legs of an ailing spider. Crimson stained her wrists and her neck, bruises blooming where the wounds were too gashed for the magic venom to have healed. Her hair was matted with blood and now dirt and oil as it pooled on the ground, head tilted back and neck exposed as she lay prone, a doll subject to the holder’s whim.

It was only when the blood touched the back of her throat that Haylee reacted. Her tongue undulated by instinct, swallowing what was blocking her airway. The taste was both unpleasant and the best thing she’d ever had the pleasure of consuming. A groan tried to surface, but was cut off as she took a sharp breath through her nose. Again, she swallowed. When her eyes closed, now, it wasn’t death that had claimed her but concentration. Where the blood touched the sides of her throat, as it travelled down the pipes and organs to her stomach, it left behind a warmth, a blooming comfort that could only be compared to the first cup of tea on the first true Winter’s night of the year.

Haylee swallowed until she had the strength to move. She swallowed until she could grab at the source of the blood and hold it to her lips, which closed around the wound of the other’s wrist and sucked. Her tongue pushed at the skin, urging more blood to grace her tongue. It was thicker without oxygen to thin it.

This may as well have been her first meal after weeks of starvation, and she didn’t want to stop. She would have kept going until shoved away were it not for the sharp pain in her gut. It felt like someone had stabbed her with a knife, and Haylee instantly let go, gasping as she curled in on herself – and inadvertently against the body of the woman who’d saved her life.
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River
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Posts: 163
Joined: 05 Nov 2015, 23:01

Re: Freedom in Doses [RIVER]

Post by River »

You’re a disgrace.
How dare you force your disease on her!
Just let her die. She’s just going to hate you, anyway.
Or **** Jasmine.
I bet she’ll **** Jasmine.


The words were a dull roar in the back of her mind as her gloved fingers lifted to run through the angel’s hair, the curls a chaotic mess that enthralled her. She could feel the loss of blood in her system, the way that her body swayed and her mind seemed to be nothing more than a dull haze, but she remained upright. Even when the lithe creature collapsed into her arms, she didn’t falter. She was frozen in place, her body turned to stone, but she didn’t falter. If she fell, she’d drop her. If she’d drop her, she’d hurt her. Would it kill her? In the state she was in, she would surely be injured. She already was…

Of course it would kill her.
You haven’t the slightest idea what you are doing, Danika.
How could you do this to her?


With a slow shake of her head, she glared down at the wild haired beauty and groaned. As much as she hated to admit it, the ghoulish apparition had a point. She had ran into this headfirst. She had been selfish, uncontrolled. She had fucked up – again – only this time, she had wanted her. With Jasmine, it had been different. She had been a fledgling and Jasmine hadn’t been the target. She hadn’t cared what happened to her. She had been perfectly content with leaving her to rot in the alley where she had found her, but with Haylee – she had chosen her. That had to count for something, didn’t it? When she opened her eyes and realized she was alive, that she had been saved, she would understand—who the **** was she kidding? She wouldn’t understand. She could never understand.

Running her fingers through her hair, she clenched her jaw as she dropped her hand to her back pocket, slender digits securing her cell. Without wasting a second, she brought up one of the only two names programmed into her contacts and tapped out a quick message to her partner, hand shaking. She didn’t explain herself; she didn’t say anything more than the address. It was rare that she said more than that to the woman, and it had never failed her in the past. It also didn’t occur to her to think of how she would feel when she finally stumbled upon the scene, to find the girl in her arms. It wasn’t until she felt the faintest of twitches within the woman’s muscles that she realized she hadn’t said a thing.

“I-it w-wi-will be okay,” the woman whispered, mismatched gaze finally dropping to her face to drink in the porcelain features. “We w-will get you tak-taken care of.” Unsure if that was the right thing to say, she quickly went quiet as she felt her phone vibrate in her hand, her partner’s name flashing across the screen. She was close.
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Here comes the darkness, it's eating on my soul

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