You Can't Call it Stalking [Closed]
Posted: 13 Feb 2015, 11:36
--The following transcript was a live chat roleplay--
<Courtney> You can't call it stalking. I mean, you can call it that. Stalking, but that was the nature of Courtney's business. He took appointments, sure, for extra money. He had around fifty thousand in the bank, at the moment. Hopefully, he'd be putting it toward a real house, soon, not the dilapidated trailer he'd been staying in. But, back to the 'stalking', and why you couldn't really call it that. He was involving himself in something he didn't really need -- or desire -- to be involved in. He'd been going through his files. He had no friends to keep him company, had nobody to talk to, except his cat. Rachel was discarded during the move. Orchids were temperamental plants, anyways, he'd told himself. A lie. If he'd wanted her to survive, she would have. If. But you couldn't really call what Courtney was doing stalking, not in the 'I know who I'm tailing' way. He just followed the patterns. He was a blind finger, tracing over things that happened, like they were the lines of a fine mandala, or the nooks and crannies of a maze. He pushed himself along those lines quietly, steadily. Veil Towers, with its shined floors, its fire-eyed elevators, its housed Damned. Courtney stood outside, looking up at the windows, wondering which window housed whatever fucked-off asshole was responsible for arson and homicide. He wasn't supposed to be an investigator. Investigative work wasn't really his job. Mostly, he worked in testimony, but he wasn't really 'working' at the moment, more trying to entertain himself through the mires of his hopeless depressive onslaught. He ashed his cigarette. The ashes caught the light, fluttered, licked up against the asphalt. And Courtney wasn't really stalking anybody. He took another drag from his cigarette, ashed it, again, before pinching of ember. Hand in his pocket, he strode through the door to Veil Towers, where those shined floors butted up against his clean-but-old, hemp loafers. He smelled like a cigarette.
<Jesse Fforde> Jesse is careful in his meanderings. At least, he thinks he's careful, but sometimes passion and desire and addiction all mesh together so that one makes mistakes without realising it. If Jesse has made mistakes, he certainly doesn't recognise them. His life is easy, breezy. There's no reason for doubt or worry that some smartass is going to find him. In Jesse's mind, fire ruins all. Turns everything to ash, so that there are no leads to follow. He always wears his hood, his gloves, his shoes with no prints. But, still--maybe there are ways. Veil Towers is where Jesse can be found most often, if not at Larch Court. Veil Towers is where he and his lover go to ravish each other--no surface in that clean white apartment hasn't been touched by their love or their passion. The apartment exists to save the other members of Fforde from overhearing, or walking in on something they'd prefer not to see. It is a private place, and one that others may know about, but they do not have keys. Grey has gone to work, however, and though the two have been exchanging picture messages, Jesse knows he can't stay at home all night doing nothing. Yeah, he'd been sketching, and the charcoal is stuck under his nails and has dug into the wrinkles of his knuckles, but he'd been distracted, and unable to sketch anything of any use in his line of work. So he has decided to go out--maybe to hunt. Maybe not. Maybe he'll go to the Caverns. Maybe he'll go the Eyrie and see who he can find. Maybe he'll just go to Larch Court and catch up with the other members of his small coterie. He doesn't really know where he's going as he rides the elevator down to the lobby, pulling the leather jacket over the long-sleeved, eroded-looking cardigan. There are boots on his feet and weapons concealed cleverly beneath said clothing; his jeans are denim, but they are dark and tight. Hair is slicked over his head, all to one side. Oiled, like some kind of upper-class hooligan. When the elevator doors open, the keys of his bike jangle in his grasp as he twirls them. His boots clap against the hard floor of the lobby. Sharp, blue eyes glance left and right--only to notice a familiar face. Jesse pauses. His brow arches, and his head cants to the side. Curious.
<Courtney> Regardless of what Jesse thought, he had left a pattern. It goes unknown, to most serial killers. They aren't really introspective creatures -- the homicidal maniac. If they were more introspective, they'd have to deal with all the fucked up **** under that top layer of skin, they'd have to confront their venomous monster, they'd probably run away screaming. Or, maybe, in a more ego-driven murderer's case, they'd start making out with their own reflection. And, regardless of what Jesse thought, fire did not take everything. He should have taken the teeth from the bodies. Courtney had stood over that trailer, when it was time -- that one with the hipsters. He'd seen the teeth, the mottled bones. He'd seen the fat-back stuck to the rib cages and the burned out clothing. He'd inhaled the raw, brutal stench of it all. That was part of his job description. When you find scenes like that, and you're an old woman in stereotypical pink rollers, and you're dialling the handset and you're screaming into it, 'There was a fire; there was a fire. Oh, Jesus, what is this. I think they're dead! I think they're dead,' then you rouse up the police and the fire department and the ambulances and people like Courtney Apple who have to come in and do clean-up with the coroner. He'd put little tags near all the 'evidential' areas. Yellow cards that said things like '1', '2'. Exhibits. Exhibition. Exhibits, like exhibits you see at the local museum. Courtney Apple, museum coordinator. He'd taken photographs. The previous person -- where he'd gotten all the other files from -- was either too weak of stomach for his job, or he'd been eaten by a midnight monstrosity. Neither of which Courtney knew. He hadn't asked, 'What happened to the last guy?' He just went about his job. The guy before him had been somewhat of a hack. The photographs were too sloppy. The evidence wasn't all there. Courtney was more thorough. No stone unturned. Harper Rock was full of villains. Anti-heroes. People who stalked the night. And there was Courtney, stalking the night, too. He couldn't sleep. Something kept itching the back of his throat. Something kept him awake, since... He looked up from his loafers, away from the residents coming off one elevator and toward the resident coming off the next. Something had been itching his throat since Jesse. It was weird, the way the universe worked. His skin burned, when he saw him walking. The hair on his neck stood up. Recognition. Dogged recognition. Maybe Courtney should have trusted his intuition. He broke into a wide smile, was already running the gauntlet of excuses for being in the lobby, just in case the other guy approached.
<Courtney> You can't call it stalking. I mean, you can call it that. Stalking, but that was the nature of Courtney's business. He took appointments, sure, for extra money. He had around fifty thousand in the bank, at the moment. Hopefully, he'd be putting it toward a real house, soon, not the dilapidated trailer he'd been staying in. But, back to the 'stalking', and why you couldn't really call it that. He was involving himself in something he didn't really need -- or desire -- to be involved in. He'd been going through his files. He had no friends to keep him company, had nobody to talk to, except his cat. Rachel was discarded during the move. Orchids were temperamental plants, anyways, he'd told himself. A lie. If he'd wanted her to survive, she would have. If. But you couldn't really call what Courtney was doing stalking, not in the 'I know who I'm tailing' way. He just followed the patterns. He was a blind finger, tracing over things that happened, like they were the lines of a fine mandala, or the nooks and crannies of a maze. He pushed himself along those lines quietly, steadily. Veil Towers, with its shined floors, its fire-eyed elevators, its housed Damned. Courtney stood outside, looking up at the windows, wondering which window housed whatever fucked-off asshole was responsible for arson and homicide. He wasn't supposed to be an investigator. Investigative work wasn't really his job. Mostly, he worked in testimony, but he wasn't really 'working' at the moment, more trying to entertain himself through the mires of his hopeless depressive onslaught. He ashed his cigarette. The ashes caught the light, fluttered, licked up against the asphalt. And Courtney wasn't really stalking anybody. He took another drag from his cigarette, ashed it, again, before pinching of ember. Hand in his pocket, he strode through the door to Veil Towers, where those shined floors butted up against his clean-but-old, hemp loafers. He smelled like a cigarette.
<Jesse Fforde> Jesse is careful in his meanderings. At least, he thinks he's careful, but sometimes passion and desire and addiction all mesh together so that one makes mistakes without realising it. If Jesse has made mistakes, he certainly doesn't recognise them. His life is easy, breezy. There's no reason for doubt or worry that some smartass is going to find him. In Jesse's mind, fire ruins all. Turns everything to ash, so that there are no leads to follow. He always wears his hood, his gloves, his shoes with no prints. But, still--maybe there are ways. Veil Towers is where Jesse can be found most often, if not at Larch Court. Veil Towers is where he and his lover go to ravish each other--no surface in that clean white apartment hasn't been touched by their love or their passion. The apartment exists to save the other members of Fforde from overhearing, or walking in on something they'd prefer not to see. It is a private place, and one that others may know about, but they do not have keys. Grey has gone to work, however, and though the two have been exchanging picture messages, Jesse knows he can't stay at home all night doing nothing. Yeah, he'd been sketching, and the charcoal is stuck under his nails and has dug into the wrinkles of his knuckles, but he'd been distracted, and unable to sketch anything of any use in his line of work. So he has decided to go out--maybe to hunt. Maybe not. Maybe he'll go to the Caverns. Maybe he'll go the Eyrie and see who he can find. Maybe he'll just go to Larch Court and catch up with the other members of his small coterie. He doesn't really know where he's going as he rides the elevator down to the lobby, pulling the leather jacket over the long-sleeved, eroded-looking cardigan. There are boots on his feet and weapons concealed cleverly beneath said clothing; his jeans are denim, but they are dark and tight. Hair is slicked over his head, all to one side. Oiled, like some kind of upper-class hooligan. When the elevator doors open, the keys of his bike jangle in his grasp as he twirls them. His boots clap against the hard floor of the lobby. Sharp, blue eyes glance left and right--only to notice a familiar face. Jesse pauses. His brow arches, and his head cants to the side. Curious.
<Courtney> Regardless of what Jesse thought, he had left a pattern. It goes unknown, to most serial killers. They aren't really introspective creatures -- the homicidal maniac. If they were more introspective, they'd have to deal with all the fucked up **** under that top layer of skin, they'd have to confront their venomous monster, they'd probably run away screaming. Or, maybe, in a more ego-driven murderer's case, they'd start making out with their own reflection. And, regardless of what Jesse thought, fire did not take everything. He should have taken the teeth from the bodies. Courtney had stood over that trailer, when it was time -- that one with the hipsters. He'd seen the teeth, the mottled bones. He'd seen the fat-back stuck to the rib cages and the burned out clothing. He'd inhaled the raw, brutal stench of it all. That was part of his job description. When you find scenes like that, and you're an old woman in stereotypical pink rollers, and you're dialling the handset and you're screaming into it, 'There was a fire; there was a fire. Oh, Jesus, what is this. I think they're dead! I think they're dead,' then you rouse up the police and the fire department and the ambulances and people like Courtney Apple who have to come in and do clean-up with the coroner. He'd put little tags near all the 'evidential' areas. Yellow cards that said things like '1', '2'. Exhibits. Exhibition. Exhibits, like exhibits you see at the local museum. Courtney Apple, museum coordinator. He'd taken photographs. The previous person -- where he'd gotten all the other files from -- was either too weak of stomach for his job, or he'd been eaten by a midnight monstrosity. Neither of which Courtney knew. He hadn't asked, 'What happened to the last guy?' He just went about his job. The guy before him had been somewhat of a hack. The photographs were too sloppy. The evidence wasn't all there. Courtney was more thorough. No stone unturned. Harper Rock was full of villains. Anti-heroes. People who stalked the night. And there was Courtney, stalking the night, too. He couldn't sleep. Something kept itching the back of his throat. Something kept him awake, since... He looked up from his loafers, away from the residents coming off one elevator and toward the resident coming off the next. Something had been itching his throat since Jesse. It was weird, the way the universe worked. His skin burned, when he saw him walking. The hair on his neck stood up. Recognition. Dogged recognition. Maybe Courtney should have trusted his intuition. He broke into a wide smile, was already running the gauntlet of excuses for being in the lobby, just in case the other guy approached.