Books are a uniquely portable magic. - Stephen King (Axel)
Posted: 16 Jun 2014, 05:06
<------The following transcript was a live chat role-play------->
<Axel Rosen> Though he hasn’t been the the bookstore in some time, there is something that draws him there at least once a season. With summer just around the corner, he feels that he should probably go and check out what books have been released that are the advertised ones at the front of the store. Having not fed, his eyes are like two pool of oil that have been poured into either eye socket and solidified in his head. So he reaches from his bed and grabs a pair of sunglasses, tinted as if they were going to be used to weld. The lenses are so dark it’s nearly impossible to see his eyes, not to mention his hues match the tent. The maggots beneath his skin, ever restless creatures - eating, moving, squirming, are just as in motion to day as they were yesterday. This is the reason that he wears long sleeves and jackets, it’s just more obvious as the temperature rises as to how odd that it is. The leather jacket is good enough, pulling it over a shirt that has a half-rotten body on it. Long pants and boots are just what he throws on afterwards.
The short trek from the apartment to the motorcycle is just a transition from his apartment to the vessel that will grant him voyage to the store he intends to foray. The engine moans as he revs it up and begins to drive in the direction of the local book store. The dismount is smooth, seamless and fluid as he makes his way to the door, helmet under his arm. Walking through the set of double doors, he looks around. The advertised books are things that teenage girls would read. Nothing for an educated mind, just some self help books, ‘do it yourself’ books. There are some various books with the words ‘for dummies’ at the end of title. How those books became so popular is beyond him. He ignores all these titles, because he doesn’t need help, doesn’t want to build anything, isn’t dumb, and isn’t a fourteen year old girl that reads Vampire Academy.
Instead of stopping at those books, he makes a line for the corner of the suspense horror. Marketing is a wondrous thing, as it must have told the people in charge of organization that putting the occult books next to occult horror and suspense horror was a great idea.Axel wouldn’t disagree. He had dabbled with rituals once upon a time, but when he became a vampire he realized that what mortals call magic is just a mockery of what true rituals are. He has long since forgone the idea of summoning spirits. There are a few books with his name on the side, being that he’s a published writer, albeit not an extremely popular one. Before he died, Axel had written several short stories that are culminated into one small book now. Taking a moment, to be the egotistical person that he is, Axel pulls a copy of his work from one of the shelves and sits near the occult section. The book he pulled leaves a hole between two spines in the ‘occult horror’ section.
Thumbing through the pages he’s not sure if he can remember the last time that he actually sat down and wrote a story or a poem. Sure there was the impromptu poem that he recited and still recites when working with swords and things, but other than that he hasn’t put pen to paper in a while. Every so often, Axel peeks up, looking briefly from behind his sunglasses to the ‘do it yourself’ section, not sure if he should just go over there and start reading up on more metal working. Perhaps it would give him a better understanding of the skill as a whole. Maybe even read up on the history of smithing items from scratch so that he can shape iron into steel and them make blades from nothing rather than melting down old blades to make new ones.
Platinum blond is the only way to describe the view that keeps getting stuck into his field of vision though. Looking across the occult section, she sits reading a book about spirits. That’s what it looks like at least, a book about contacting the dead. He cannot see her face. He could use his powers to see through her eyes and read what she’s reading but not only is that an invasion of privacy of someone that isn’t on his **** list, but it’s also kind of a petty way to get an ice breaker. Though, he’s a pretty decent looking guy, he thinks, perhaps she’ll just come over here. It hasn’t been the first time that he’s been approached. Axel rather prefers being the ‘black’ pieces in the flirting chess game. He likes for others to go first so that he can assess them, then make a move based upon that analysis. He keeps eye contact on her for a little while before going back to reading the stories he has written.
<Liese> A mass of platinum blonde hair had taken over the crown of her head, bundled up and secured with a black elastic. She hadn’t yet found a place to stay in Harper Rock, and Liese had taken to showering at the local Boys and Girls Club facilities in order to stay clean. Unfortunately, that left little opportunity for primping, straightening, or otherwise styling her hair. The blonde, with tendrils frizzed and ruined from years of bleach assault, had her nose in a book, with thick, black-framed glasses perched delicately on the tip of said nose. She was reading to herself, as she often did, mumbling aloud the arcane theories and suggestions of the ritual book she’d picked out. It might have been better if she’d been a library that was thousands of years old and had books from the origin of magick, but in lieu of that this bookstore was her home. She arrived every day, just after breakfast, and left late in the evening. She was lucky, really, that the bookstores stayed open so late. There was too much information to devour, too much theory, the requirement to study and understand incantations, ingredients, and itemized lists. Speaking the words aloud gave Liese a better chance to memorize the information, because she was rapidly running out of money and space in her backpack with which to store her books.
She shifted, the delicate fibres on the back of her neck prickling, and she lifted her head, licking her lips and looking around the store through the lenses of her reading glasses. Occasionally, she would get these feelings, this intuition that all in Harper Rock was not as it seemed. With a small shiver, she robbed a hand over her shoulder and arm, as if to protect herself against the goosebumps that found their way over her skin. Though she only wore a thin pair of black leggings, and a loose, flowing tank top, she’d not felt cold until just a moment ago. Liese clicked her tongue against her teeth and gave the bookstore another suspicious stare, her brows knit and arched low over her own blue and bespectacled eyes. It was really weird. Shaking off the strange emotion, she reached over to take a sip of her frozen coffee drink and burrow further between the books she’d stacked and strewn around her, as if a minefield of information might protect her in such a foreign place.
Having been reading for well over twelve hours now, her eyes swam and blurred and she sighed, pinching the bridge of her nose as she flipped the book shut, her thumb holding her place as she considered calling it quits. But she had the insane impression she was onto something, the books claiming there were ritual ingredients in the wilderness surrounding Harper Rock that were native to the area and could channel the town’s rumoured realm shift. If she could just get a list going, and find them, and finally pin down the damn occult specialist at the university… she grumbled to herself, and a puff of air tossed her bangs up toward the sky. She’d tried for weeks now to make an appointment during his office hours, to discuss the possibility for a successful seance. It was impossible. He was always traveling, giving lectures, or hired on private jobs for spirit cleansings and demon reports. That Liese felt her own personal mission trumped each of these was no surprise. She was dogged in her determination to find her lover, and without the mentorship of the occult specialist, these books, and this bookstore, was all she had.
Pushing up off of the floor, she drained the rest of her blended mocha and brushed carpet lint off of her ***, the leggings having clung tight to the curve of her rump. She had a love-hate relationship with her ***, really. It took up far too much of her bodily mass, but it was nicely toned and pretty sexy for a white girl. She stretched, arching her back and throwing her arms up over her head, and strode barefoot for the recycling bin, having shed her shoes about eight hours ago when she was sure the bookstore staff had forgotten her presence.
The tingling at the back of her neck returned as she approached the bin, and she turned, staring over her shoulder. Her gun was in her backpack, all the way back by her books, and they’d never let her return to research if she shot up the place. But if self defense was required, Liese would do what she had to. She was scrappy, having done cheerleading in high school, flexible and acrobatic, and despite the fact that her manicure was dull and chipped, she was certain she could gouge an eye out if the occasion required it. She tossed her empty cup in the bin and folded her arms across her chest, stock-still, listening, before she convinced herself that she was being irrationally sensitive and shrugged. The bookstore was nearly quiet, anyway. Most people had already purchased their novels and gone home. What was there really to worry about?
<Axel Rosen> The woman wanders about, her movement is what catches his eyes this time. He’s reading into the words that he’s written as if they were a map to the things that he has in his dream scape. The very things that he could control at some point if he could just find the key to controlling them. He looks her over again. This time he pays special attention to her body and face. Her belongings aren’t really heeded any mind in the way they just linger on the other side of the room. Usually he’d go over to her, introduce himself at this point but he watches a bit more carefully. An idea occurs to him as she turns around to come back toward her stuff, that he could start a conversation without actually having to speak to her vocally. He looks over to her, grinning at the thought, then dumps his face back into the book.
After a few pages of ‘reading’, Axel reaches out to the woman with his mind, making sure that he does it as subtly as possible - ”What are you reading”, the words would appear to come from very close to her, but no one is over there. She’d have to assume that he asked the question but how did he do it would be the better question. If she’s in the occult section though, perhaps she’s like Ursula who studies the same kinds of things. It’s the reason that Axel had to turn that childe. She was poking her nose in places that it shouldn’t have been. It’s funny how each of his childer were turned. The first was an accident, a happy one though. She caught him feeding and he panicked. The second was poking her nose about in crypts where vampires lived, and he couldn’t have that. He tried to warn her several times, but finally had to kill her. She asked to be turned as an alternative to death. Paige, being his fine-cast apprentice, was molded from Paladin steel. She was melted down and reshaped to believe that vampires truly are the most powerful force in the world. She, in the end, begged to be turned despite her teachings to hate them. All rather different to how Axel was turned.
His shadow is getting antsy, moving a few paces off of his person and laying near a far shelf. It’s not reading, damn thing can’t really pick anything up. It doesn’t harm anyone like Jesse’s has. It’s more of a trickster. Axel looks at it, giving it a glare from behind his book. The vampire knows now that it’s a curse Jesse, his childer, and himself have picked up from Nix. He’s not sure if they can pass it on anymore, like it seems they have between one another. It doesn’t move, or acknowledge him, obvious it’s bored of this place. Axel’s eyes are pulled however to the girl again. He tilts his head to the side. She can’t be any older than twenty-two. The platinum blond hair looks eerily familiar to him. He can’t seem to place it though, because he knows that he’s never sent anyone that looks like her to the realm out of the eleven people he’s killed. He might get caught staring now, trying to figure out why she looks familiar to him.
<Liese> Having convinced herself that nothing was wrong, she sprawled out on her stomach and reached for the book she’d been holding earlier, kicking her legs up. She let her bare feet kick back and forth, which probably gave the rest of the bookstore a great view of her ***, but considering most of the patrons had left already she felt comfortable enough to stretch out and get comfortable. She stuck her face back in the book, reading to herself for a moment before a voice chimed out from behind her, asking what she was reading. Without looking up, Liese spoke aloud, her eyes still trained on the book. “Three Books of Occult Philosophy, Agrippa.” She reached behind her and scratched over the back of her leg, then her scalp, then turned the page of her book. It wasn’t that she wasn’t interested in making conversation with strangers, but she wasn’t interested in doing anything that took away from her mission to find her former boyfriend.
The question had come from an aisle over, but a few moments of silence had her under the impression that the individual had grown bored of her and walked away to buy his book in peace. Content with this, she pushed her glasses further up her nose and began to read again, following through the theory with her voice hushed and low.
<Axel Rosen> Though he hasn’t been the the bookstore in some time, there is something that draws him there at least once a season. With summer just around the corner, he feels that he should probably go and check out what books have been released that are the advertised ones at the front of the store. Having not fed, his eyes are like two pool of oil that have been poured into either eye socket and solidified in his head. So he reaches from his bed and grabs a pair of sunglasses, tinted as if they were going to be used to weld. The lenses are so dark it’s nearly impossible to see his eyes, not to mention his hues match the tent. The maggots beneath his skin, ever restless creatures - eating, moving, squirming, are just as in motion to day as they were yesterday. This is the reason that he wears long sleeves and jackets, it’s just more obvious as the temperature rises as to how odd that it is. The leather jacket is good enough, pulling it over a shirt that has a half-rotten body on it. Long pants and boots are just what he throws on afterwards.
The short trek from the apartment to the motorcycle is just a transition from his apartment to the vessel that will grant him voyage to the store he intends to foray. The engine moans as he revs it up and begins to drive in the direction of the local book store. The dismount is smooth, seamless and fluid as he makes his way to the door, helmet under his arm. Walking through the set of double doors, he looks around. The advertised books are things that teenage girls would read. Nothing for an educated mind, just some self help books, ‘do it yourself’ books. There are some various books with the words ‘for dummies’ at the end of title. How those books became so popular is beyond him. He ignores all these titles, because he doesn’t need help, doesn’t want to build anything, isn’t dumb, and isn’t a fourteen year old girl that reads Vampire Academy.
Instead of stopping at those books, he makes a line for the corner of the suspense horror. Marketing is a wondrous thing, as it must have told the people in charge of organization that putting the occult books next to occult horror and suspense horror was a great idea.Axel wouldn’t disagree. He had dabbled with rituals once upon a time, but when he became a vampire he realized that what mortals call magic is just a mockery of what true rituals are. He has long since forgone the idea of summoning spirits. There are a few books with his name on the side, being that he’s a published writer, albeit not an extremely popular one. Before he died, Axel had written several short stories that are culminated into one small book now. Taking a moment, to be the egotistical person that he is, Axel pulls a copy of his work from one of the shelves and sits near the occult section. The book he pulled leaves a hole between two spines in the ‘occult horror’ section.
Thumbing through the pages he’s not sure if he can remember the last time that he actually sat down and wrote a story or a poem. Sure there was the impromptu poem that he recited and still recites when working with swords and things, but other than that he hasn’t put pen to paper in a while. Every so often, Axel peeks up, looking briefly from behind his sunglasses to the ‘do it yourself’ section, not sure if he should just go over there and start reading up on more metal working. Perhaps it would give him a better understanding of the skill as a whole. Maybe even read up on the history of smithing items from scratch so that he can shape iron into steel and them make blades from nothing rather than melting down old blades to make new ones.
Platinum blond is the only way to describe the view that keeps getting stuck into his field of vision though. Looking across the occult section, she sits reading a book about spirits. That’s what it looks like at least, a book about contacting the dead. He cannot see her face. He could use his powers to see through her eyes and read what she’s reading but not only is that an invasion of privacy of someone that isn’t on his **** list, but it’s also kind of a petty way to get an ice breaker. Though, he’s a pretty decent looking guy, he thinks, perhaps she’ll just come over here. It hasn’t been the first time that he’s been approached. Axel rather prefers being the ‘black’ pieces in the flirting chess game. He likes for others to go first so that he can assess them, then make a move based upon that analysis. He keeps eye contact on her for a little while before going back to reading the stories he has written.
<Liese> A mass of platinum blonde hair had taken over the crown of her head, bundled up and secured with a black elastic. She hadn’t yet found a place to stay in Harper Rock, and Liese had taken to showering at the local Boys and Girls Club facilities in order to stay clean. Unfortunately, that left little opportunity for primping, straightening, or otherwise styling her hair. The blonde, with tendrils frizzed and ruined from years of bleach assault, had her nose in a book, with thick, black-framed glasses perched delicately on the tip of said nose. She was reading to herself, as she often did, mumbling aloud the arcane theories and suggestions of the ritual book she’d picked out. It might have been better if she’d been a library that was thousands of years old and had books from the origin of magick, but in lieu of that this bookstore was her home. She arrived every day, just after breakfast, and left late in the evening. She was lucky, really, that the bookstores stayed open so late. There was too much information to devour, too much theory, the requirement to study and understand incantations, ingredients, and itemized lists. Speaking the words aloud gave Liese a better chance to memorize the information, because she was rapidly running out of money and space in her backpack with which to store her books.
She shifted, the delicate fibres on the back of her neck prickling, and she lifted her head, licking her lips and looking around the store through the lenses of her reading glasses. Occasionally, she would get these feelings, this intuition that all in Harper Rock was not as it seemed. With a small shiver, she robbed a hand over her shoulder and arm, as if to protect herself against the goosebumps that found their way over her skin. Though she only wore a thin pair of black leggings, and a loose, flowing tank top, she’d not felt cold until just a moment ago. Liese clicked her tongue against her teeth and gave the bookstore another suspicious stare, her brows knit and arched low over her own blue and bespectacled eyes. It was really weird. Shaking off the strange emotion, she reached over to take a sip of her frozen coffee drink and burrow further between the books she’d stacked and strewn around her, as if a minefield of information might protect her in such a foreign place.
Having been reading for well over twelve hours now, her eyes swam and blurred and she sighed, pinching the bridge of her nose as she flipped the book shut, her thumb holding her place as she considered calling it quits. But she had the insane impression she was onto something, the books claiming there were ritual ingredients in the wilderness surrounding Harper Rock that were native to the area and could channel the town’s rumoured realm shift. If she could just get a list going, and find them, and finally pin down the damn occult specialist at the university… she grumbled to herself, and a puff of air tossed her bangs up toward the sky. She’d tried for weeks now to make an appointment during his office hours, to discuss the possibility for a successful seance. It was impossible. He was always traveling, giving lectures, or hired on private jobs for spirit cleansings and demon reports. That Liese felt her own personal mission trumped each of these was no surprise. She was dogged in her determination to find her lover, and without the mentorship of the occult specialist, these books, and this bookstore, was all she had.
Pushing up off of the floor, she drained the rest of her blended mocha and brushed carpet lint off of her ***, the leggings having clung tight to the curve of her rump. She had a love-hate relationship with her ***, really. It took up far too much of her bodily mass, but it was nicely toned and pretty sexy for a white girl. She stretched, arching her back and throwing her arms up over her head, and strode barefoot for the recycling bin, having shed her shoes about eight hours ago when she was sure the bookstore staff had forgotten her presence.
The tingling at the back of her neck returned as she approached the bin, and she turned, staring over her shoulder. Her gun was in her backpack, all the way back by her books, and they’d never let her return to research if she shot up the place. But if self defense was required, Liese would do what she had to. She was scrappy, having done cheerleading in high school, flexible and acrobatic, and despite the fact that her manicure was dull and chipped, she was certain she could gouge an eye out if the occasion required it. She tossed her empty cup in the bin and folded her arms across her chest, stock-still, listening, before she convinced herself that she was being irrationally sensitive and shrugged. The bookstore was nearly quiet, anyway. Most people had already purchased their novels and gone home. What was there really to worry about?
<Axel Rosen> The woman wanders about, her movement is what catches his eyes this time. He’s reading into the words that he’s written as if they were a map to the things that he has in his dream scape. The very things that he could control at some point if he could just find the key to controlling them. He looks her over again. This time he pays special attention to her body and face. Her belongings aren’t really heeded any mind in the way they just linger on the other side of the room. Usually he’d go over to her, introduce himself at this point but he watches a bit more carefully. An idea occurs to him as she turns around to come back toward her stuff, that he could start a conversation without actually having to speak to her vocally. He looks over to her, grinning at the thought, then dumps his face back into the book.
After a few pages of ‘reading’, Axel reaches out to the woman with his mind, making sure that he does it as subtly as possible - ”What are you reading”, the words would appear to come from very close to her, but no one is over there. She’d have to assume that he asked the question but how did he do it would be the better question. If she’s in the occult section though, perhaps she’s like Ursula who studies the same kinds of things. It’s the reason that Axel had to turn that childe. She was poking her nose in places that it shouldn’t have been. It’s funny how each of his childer were turned. The first was an accident, a happy one though. She caught him feeding and he panicked. The second was poking her nose about in crypts where vampires lived, and he couldn’t have that. He tried to warn her several times, but finally had to kill her. She asked to be turned as an alternative to death. Paige, being his fine-cast apprentice, was molded from Paladin steel. She was melted down and reshaped to believe that vampires truly are the most powerful force in the world. She, in the end, begged to be turned despite her teachings to hate them. All rather different to how Axel was turned.
His shadow is getting antsy, moving a few paces off of his person and laying near a far shelf. It’s not reading, damn thing can’t really pick anything up. It doesn’t harm anyone like Jesse’s has. It’s more of a trickster. Axel looks at it, giving it a glare from behind his book. The vampire knows now that it’s a curse Jesse, his childer, and himself have picked up from Nix. He’s not sure if they can pass it on anymore, like it seems they have between one another. It doesn’t move, or acknowledge him, obvious it’s bored of this place. Axel’s eyes are pulled however to the girl again. He tilts his head to the side. She can’t be any older than twenty-two. The platinum blond hair looks eerily familiar to him. He can’t seem to place it though, because he knows that he’s never sent anyone that looks like her to the realm out of the eleven people he’s killed. He might get caught staring now, trying to figure out why she looks familiar to him.
<Liese> Having convinced herself that nothing was wrong, she sprawled out on her stomach and reached for the book she’d been holding earlier, kicking her legs up. She let her bare feet kick back and forth, which probably gave the rest of the bookstore a great view of her ***, but considering most of the patrons had left already she felt comfortable enough to stretch out and get comfortable. She stuck her face back in the book, reading to herself for a moment before a voice chimed out from behind her, asking what she was reading. Without looking up, Liese spoke aloud, her eyes still trained on the book. “Three Books of Occult Philosophy, Agrippa.” She reached behind her and scratched over the back of her leg, then her scalp, then turned the page of her book. It wasn’t that she wasn’t interested in making conversation with strangers, but she wasn’t interested in doing anything that took away from her mission to find her former boyfriend.
The question had come from an aisle over, but a few moments of silence had her under the impression that the individual had grown bored of her and walked away to buy his book in peace. Content with this, she pushed her glasses further up her nose and began to read again, following through the theory with her voice hushed and low.