Rage, Rage, Against the Dying of the Light [Closed]

For all descriptive play-by-post roleplay set anywhere in Harper Rock (main city).
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Jesse Fforde
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Rage, Rage, Against the Dying of the Light [Closed]

Post by Jesse Fforde »

Tuesday April 14, 2015


The city sprawled out before him like a languid, sleeping beast. A dragon, capable of chaotic destruction, and all Jesse wanted to do was poke it with a stick. Wake it up. Scream in its ear until it spewed fire and brimstone. Except, Jesse wasn’t much of a screamer. Although plenty of things had changed over the past couple of years, he hadn’t yet developed into a screamer; his tracks had been halted before that was ever allowed to happen.

The Necromancer perched on the limb of a tree, growing halfway up a small hill just beyond the Eastern outskirts of Harper Rock. A tree that was not the Eyrie. A tree that was far away from everything Jesse had grown familiar with, because he needed the distance. The fire had engulfed him to the point that he had been smothered by the smoke without realising it; a frog slowly boiled. Except, the fire wasn’t on the outside. Its flames and sputtering sparks were not seen by anyone else. They were figments of Jesse’s own decaying psyche, the consequences of which caused a rippling wave perhaps felt only by his beloved. His Dove. His precious love. Grey, the gem that he did not deserve, and who in turn did not deserve to be shredded from the inside out by Jesse’s personal wreckages.

A crisp, moist breeze fluttered in the leaves around Jesse; the green was laced with the glinting tears of the dissipated rain. The sky had cleared, somewhat, but the heat was pushed out of the soil, rising and eddying amidst the clinging Winter cool. The bark was rough beneath Jesse’s hands, but the foliage was smooth, leaning toward him like cloying nymphs desperate for his approval. Subconsciously, Jesse’s fingers touched upon the browning leaves and they unfurled. The vampire’s presence in the tree was contradictory; death wafted from him like a bad feeling, his blue eyes burning with cold blue fire and his skin pallid and nearly grey. But the tree itself was luscious and full of life. Much more full of life than its waning, lacklustre contemporaries.

Later, there would be a storm. For now, the air was clear and sickeningly calm. Jesse would prefer the storm, but for now he forced himself to appreciate the time to think. The distance. Except, thinking wasn’t helping.

Memories of recent conversations swirled in his mind, a Neapolitan ice-cream gone bad, sour, growing mould and causing a bitter taste to continually renew upon his tongue. He had to keep swallowing it down and with each bob of that Adam’s Apple, the colder his blue orbs became, the more tense the coiled muscles in his limbs.

If there was such a thing as PMS for vampires, he did have it. Creating new vampires was an addiction akin to those men who lived to procreate, who had wives all over the state who had no idea of each other’s existence. Travelling salesmen. When he went too long, he snapped. He was ashamed of that sensitivity, of the hollowness that existed within him. He knew, now, that it never really went away. It was always there—the depth of it only increased or decreased depending on his progeny. The when and where and how.

They say that vampirism heightens one’s own natural attributes.

Who had he been before? A **** up. A mental basket-case who had a habit of bottling every and all emotions.

Who was he now? Still a **** up. Still a mental basket-case. But a fucked up basket-case who’d grown far too comfortable with his surroundings, and the people in it. A fucked up basket-case who thought he’d found home; who had wrongly assumed that when at home, one could open up.

I have always been depressed, he told himself.

I just never acknowledged it, he frowned.

Maybe he had acknowledged it. It had always been there in his blunt attitude and his aptitude for death. The one childhood loss had fucked him up for life; the negativity consolidating in this living-death. He’d been called a victim. Weak. Irritating. His depression made him look weak, and irritated those who should care.

And this was always where Jesse’s thinking ground to a halt. This man who loathed weakness in himself, and who had, for so long, pushed everyone and everything away so as to never be weak. To never be attached to anything that could be taken away, or anyone who could turn around and betray him, or walk all over him. Attachment. That was where he had gone wrong. Hadn’t he warned himself before? He knew this would be the outcome.

Every single time he sunk into the despair of thinking that his depression should be taken seriously, he reminded himself that that’s how a victim would think. Right? That was weak. To say it out loud would be an irritant. To voice this failing would be the worst kind of axe settled against the skin of his neck. He wouldn’t do it.

Not even to himself.

It had been there for days, the sick realisation that he had gone too far. He cared too much. The storm came early—at least in Jesse’s mind. The rough gust of barbed and electrified clarity pushed him from his perch so he landed near soundlessly in the grass.

There was only one person, now, who he’d let inside. Only one person who would see him for who he truly was; the entire package. And even then, even now, even with that one person, he would require distance. Just as he required distance, now. And he would never tell her, either, this shameful secret. It would be locked away in a special box, never to broken.

The weapons were holstered beneath his jacket. The destination? Jesse didn’t know. But he craved blood. Blood, fire, and brimstone.
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Clover
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Re: Rage, Rage, Against the Dying of the Light [Closed]

Post by Clover »

Quiet. Silence. Clover needed that more than anything, more than she needed the loot from her most recent run. She had jugs of chemicals and spools of wire, but she also had a few holes in her midsection and a target on her back. Clover couldn’t explain her urges for breaking and entering: She had enough money to take care of herself and she had enough parts to make her crafts. No, it wasn’t that she couldn’t explain, just that she wouldn’t. She would justify her behavior by saying she needed the items for herself or for someone else. Then again, how long had it been since someone showed concern for her mistakes?

With the sewer entrance directly ahead, Clover slid her arms from the straps of her backpack and dropped it on the ground. She leaned over and rested her hands on her knees, her chest rising and falling to show her level of exertion. Breathing made no difference to her lungs, to living or dying, but just the action stretched her muscles, expanding her wounded chest and gut. The few people wandering the streets turned to stare at her, whether they were curious or concerned. They watched as she clutched at her stomach and hissed in pain, but they kept going.

Black blood clung to her hands and her forearms. The strange substance stuck to her skin just as it stuck to her white tanktop. She’d seen her blood so many times, but the sight of the substance still amazed her and unnerved her. Before her blood had the chance to disperse and fade into nothingness, she felt a hand close around her shoulder. An old woman asked if Clover needed any help, any sort of help at all. For the first time since she could remember, Clover hated the woman’s show of kindness. Clover shrugged the hand off her shoulder and leaned down further to grab the top strap of her backpack.

The old woman kept talking, but Clover kept walking. She didn’t want the help. The old woman couldn’t offer the kind of help Clover needed at that moment. Halfway through the district, without a shop in sight, Clover stopped and opened the flap of the backpack. She dumped the contents on the ground, scattering the chemicals, the wire reels, and the tools across the concrete. None of it was worth the exertion. None of it was worth the blood.

She wanted to find a cop, any cop, and take a few more bullets. She wanted to feel something more than she felt at that moment. The confusion. The jealousy. The mistrust. The few words that replayed over and over in her mind were harmless, all too meaningless, but they made her so uncomfortable. Was she being manipulated at that very moment? Were they all being manipulated? And what was she doing? What was she doing?

She didn’t know.

Clo grabbed her black jean jacket from amongst the discarded objects and slid her arms through the sleeves. Nothing could cover all the holes in her shirt or the fact that parts of her body were gone, but the jacket served as a distraction. Some of her injuries were shielded from prying eyes. And she hadn’t forgotten about the human blood that flecked her tanktop. Maybe that had been the reason the people avoided her.

She turned away from the collection of junk and made her way down the street, disappearing into shadows and surfacing from shadows. Her head bowed, she thought back to her own admissions. She wanted to explore new ways of hunting. The night seemed perfect. The timing was never better. A couple walked past on her right side: They were both wearing the same color of shirt, something from the local university, and they held hands. A man almost bumped into her as he hurried past: He had a skateboard tucked under his left arm, but he wore a bright red polo.

Clover began following the man. She took in the scent of his cologne and the lingering stench of his hair gel. He looked like he didn’t belong and she loved finding pieces of the puzzle that didn’t quite fit. One thing that was unlike the others. As she walked behind him, she used the hair tie on her wrist to pull her brunette locks into a high ponytail. She didn’t want it in the way, not if it gave him the opportunity to use it against her in a fight. She learned her lessons.

When he slowed, she slowed. When he picked up speed, she picked up speed. He was ugly. His scent was a stale mixture of cologne, hair gel, cigarettes, and something else she couldn’t quite identify--he stunk. Nothing about him aroused her in any way. The idea of hurting him appealed to her. The two played the game of cat and mouse for much longer than she anticipated. She gave him more room when she noticed he was intent on getting to the eastern side of the city. She had plenty of time. She had nothing but time.
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Jesse Fforde
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Re: Rage, Rage, Against the Dying of the Light [Closed]

Post by Jesse Fforde »

The city streets thrummed around Jesse and he felt both a part of the scenery, but also apart from it. Something beat in his chest and it was not his heart. The strangled, living version of himself fighting for survival, maybe. The desperate, needy corner of his soul that wanted so much that it could not have, that tried so hard to achieve things that it had never even thought of in the past.

Is it so much to ask for?

His bright eyes devoured the street, dancing over the forms of the meandering humans, their bodies leaving lingering trails of heat behind. He could smell their blood, could almost taste it on his tongue as he imagined it rushing through their veins and causing their cheeks to blush as they took one glance at him and crossed the street to get out of his way.

Irritating. Avoidable. Of course it’s too much to ask for.

The hair dislodged from its gelled shell as he shook his head and huffed, the breath grating from his dry throat in an audible-silent growl. On the opposite edge of the city, in the trees just outside of the pavement and the cement and the man-made edifices, the rain began to fall. A creeping mist, to begin with, but which soon thickened into a deluge, the drops as cold and hard as ice. The leaves shushed and whispered together, but soon enough, when they all joined it, it became a distant stadium roar. The breeze that drifted through the city tasted of impending chaos. The latent energy seeped into Jesse’s skin and ignited frenetic electricity.

Was there a way to be cleansed? To let all the care just slip away like water over oil? Was that what he needed to do? Turn his insides into oil. Yes. Slick as the day he was born, carefree and oblivious. He stood on the street corner and stared. Over the road, there was a restaurant. Its innards were dressed in a warm glow. There was one table left, occupied by a group of people of varying ages. Some of them wore party hats. A cake was brought out on a tray, the candles lit. Everyone was smiling, laughing. The harsh sound of it reached Jesse’s ears, his head cant to the side.

If only the windows weren’t glass.

If only there weren’t that hole right there in the middle of his chest. The one he didn’t know how to fill. That irritating ******* hole.

And what the **** was it, anyway? The laughter and smiling faces disappeared as Jesse stepped off the curb and continued down the street, in the opposite direction. The river was crossed. The crowds got thin. Music was replaced by the static of many different television sets in many different homes. The strong scent of so many mixed nationalities was replaced by home-made roast. Jesse’s feet made no sound as he traversed the pavements, interspersed with grass. Another gust of that electric air. It should have cooled him down, but it only boiled him some more, crawling over his shoulders like a hot rash.

There was a house near the end of a street in an estate that had not yet been finished. Every other house was dark, their lawns forlorn and nostalgic for what they have not yet experienced, the windows dark holes into darker rooms that had never been occupied. Perhaps like that hold in Jesse’s chest. Was it better never to have been occupied, or to have been occupied and to now know what was missing?

Nothing is missing.

His jaw was set. And it was true. He had a lot to be thankful for. He had that one shining bright light that should fill his heart to the brim and exclude all else. He did have that. He would always have that. And why wasn’t it enough? It should be enough…

There was the one house with its blazing lights. Silently, stealthily, Jesse circled the property. Peered in through the windows. Mum was in the kitchen, cleaning the dishes. Dad was in the office, reading by a small fire. Son was in the lounge, watching something on TV. Jesse was in the back door, closing it with the smallest of clicks behind him. Locking it.

He stood.

He waited.

He pondered his next move.
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