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Roles Reversed [BJORN]

Posted: 26 Aug 2017, 10:48
by Lancaster
‹Freddie› There wasn't much for Freddie to do, and nothing much he HAD to do. It was as if there were some creature in his head doing the account keeping, filing different things in different directions, knowing exactly what its vessel needed and didn't. Access to a bank account was vital for proper living, and so Freddie had access to a bank account. Although he had learned his real name when he'd rediscovered said bank account, however, it was a name, over time, that he had again forgotten -- like Lancaster d'Artois was some kid from school that he'd only ever known at a distance, had never met, and had no reason to remember. The account Freddie had access to continued to grow, and then decrease, fluctuating like any business account might. But it always took two steps forward and one step back. Every time he looked, there was more there than there was the week before. Freddie had become a kind-of trust fund leech, using the money not for extravagance but to just... live. Like now, he found himself in an out-of-the-way pub, simply enjoying the atmosphere. It was quiet, and he played a game of pool by himself, a bottle of ice-cold beer nearby. It was his second of the night, and probably his last.


‹Bjorn› Bjørn threw his head back just as the manila folder came down—hard. He flinched, unprepared for the assault on his face, and haphazardly caught the folder before its contents spilled over him. Roxette walked out the office laughing at his expense, and he couldn’t bring himself to care. On any other day he might have threatened with a lawsuit for insubordination, wailed about assault or whatever other ******** he could make up on the spot, but his mood didn’t cater to their blossoming camaraderie tonight. No, he was bordering livid.

Usually this would fall under her duties, but she’d made too good an argument against doing it. In fact, she’d made more than one, pinning Bjørn with a task he wasn’t looking forward to, at all. Still, it was better than taking any of the guys’ places behind the counter, forced to serve the bustling Saturday crown for hours on end. No, he much preferred to drive across town and pick up the stock. Which is what he did. All the way to Gulls-*******-borough.

Leaving the car parked across the mouth of an alleyway, Bjørn took the manila folder and made for the establishment’s front door. In nearly two years of living in Harper Rock, he’d never been into the country pub. According to Roxette, they were expecting him. All he had to do was rock up to the bar and show them the paperwork, which was exactly what he was doing when the unexpected veered him off path.

He slammed the folder onto the green felt, blocking the shot.


‹Freddie› The gangly vampire was doing quite well, even if he only had himself for competition. He was practicing his game, and his aim, though given how well he started he assumed he’d done a lot of practice in the past. The cue was smooth in his grip, manhandled by hundreds of people before him, no doubt. He’s started by sinking all the smalls, and had now moved on to the bigs – he had only three left on the table, along with the black eight ball. A glance was spared for the space behind him, to make sure he wasn’t going to inadvertently whack some other punter with the tail end of the cue – or his skinny backside. The stick was drawn back, focus steady upon the white ball and its planned trajectory when…

… Freddie looked up at the man who’d slammed his paperwork down on the pool table, blocking his shot. As soon as his cool blues absorbed the angry visage of the paperwork’s owner, a knife-like pain seared through his frontal lobe, causing him to hiss and pull up. The cue was released, the smooth wooden stick rolling from the table and clattering to the floor.

“Something I can help you with…?” he asked, one eye squinted and a hand pressed to his temple, as if that might somehow keep his skull from falling apart.


‹Bjorn› There was no means of anchoring oneself in this storm. A rush of far too many emotions set ablaze his insides like an expanding pool of effervescent lava - incomprehensible and immeasurable. Fury. Frustration. Confusion. Anger. Hurt. Indignation. Humiliation. Rage. It seared every fibre of his being, consuming him. The sheer intensity of it left him powerless, unable to contain his wrath.

The telepath’s face dropped at the man’s reaction, his left brow arched high. For a moment, he looked as though he’d only just been released from a dream, a sleepwalker rousing to find himself already on his feet. Every storm was preceded by an eerie calm. Elliot’s question was just the spark that ignited the flame.

Without any consideration for their surroundings, the patrons, or the consequences, Bjørn exploded like a shrapnel bomb. The wood splintered under the force of his grip as he sent the pool table tumbling to the side. The resin balls clattered to the floor, along with the papers. The beer bottle smashed against the floor.

“How can you ******* help?”


‹Freddie› The rage hit Freddie before anything else. Raged mixed with everything else, a heady concoction that he could feel from where he stood, emanating from the other man like pure radiation. Freddie could taste it on his tongue like an electric current. It clicked, then. The sudden migraine, the rage. This was a face Freddie should recognise but didn't. Where his mind groped for answers, for a name, for a relationship, it instead kept slamming into walls and locked doors, only exacerbating the stabbing agony in his skull. The pool table toppled and there was a gasp and a shout from somewhere to the left, but Freddie was too nauseous to pay it much mind. "Whoah, mate. Calm down. I don't know who you are, right?" he said, now holding out his hands, placating, resisting the urge to run as far and as fast as he could go.


‹Bjorn› The commotion he’d instigated didn’t hold his attention, the focus of his rage giving him too good a show to look away. Elliot should win a ******* emmy for this performance. It was almost believable.

“Really? That’s what you’re going with?”

Curling his hands at his side into white knuckled fists, Bjørn took a step forward. He furrowed his brow and narrowed his gaze, pouring into Elliot’s mind a barrage of images, sensations, sounds, smells, tastes... He vividly remembered the night they met, when he’d been caught out behind the pub feeding. The memory was laden with confusion, fear, desolation, shame, and every other emotion that had only been further compounded by the sensory overload. The music had been too loud. The crowd too dense. The smells abounding, dizzying. Just remembering them made his balance waver. The man that sat before him then, barely stood before him now. It wasn’t that he wanted to harm Elliot. He wanted to ******* bury him.

Grunting, Bjørn attempted to shake himself off, staggering sideways.

‹Freddie› The last thing the lanky vampire expected was what came next. There was still so much he had yet to learn, his knowledge on vampiric power limited only to what he and Hannah and stumbled across by accident, and the vague and broad explanations that Iris had given them so long ago. It felt like so long ago, anyway. In this new life, Freddie hadn't encountered any other telepaths -- true telepaths, capable of the influx he was now at the receiving end of. The other vampire didn't need to pull out a dagger or a gun to bring Freddie to his knees. As the memory played as if on a movie screen in his own broken mind, that silent and devoted bookkeeper living inside did its best to shut it down, to burn the film, to shove Freddie out the door so he could no longer see. It felt like an axe, now, lodged in his skull. And the axe was being tugged and pulled, its metal grinding against flesh and bone. Stars danced behind Freddie's eyes and he screamed as he went down, knee cracking against hard floor. Without knowing what he was doing, the experience was projected outward, directed straight at the other. "...STOP," he shouted, unaware that he was doing whatever he could, mentally, to force the other to quit.


‹Bjorn› It was only recently that the telepath had discovered his capability of projecting both imagery and memory through the psychic link. There were many other things he could do with his mind, more than he could have ever conceived possible. That said, the psychic door swung both ways.

An ice pick sliced through his frontal lobe. He staggered backwards, unprepared for the force of it. His hands grasped as his forehead. He expected there to be a weapon sticking out from his skull, but there was nothing but skin and the bone beneath. Bjørn cried out, pressing the heels of his palms into his temples. Given the choice, he’d prefer a bullet to the head.

Huffing and puffing, the telepath bent forward and pushed back. He pooled all of his energy into pushing against the pressure and projecting into the world. The pain ebbed, releasing him long enough for him to stumble out of his own projection as the air around him shifted. [You create an illusion of yourself and trap the area with psychic energy.]

Reaching for the nearest thing he could throw, Bjørn swung a half-empty bottle of Heineken in the Allurist’s general direction.


‹Freddie› It wasn't in Freddie's interest to hurt anyone. It never had been, though that wasn't something he knew about himself. For all he knew he could have been an axe murderer in a past life. The imagery ebbed and Freddie pulled in a lungful of stale air, spittle flung from his lips as he let it go, hands digging into the beer-sticky ground as he swayed, there on his hands and knees. When he glanced up to see two of his attacker he just assumed he was seeing double; it was easy to do, given how blurred his vision was due to the tears that had sprung, stinging, to his eyes. He barely had time to stumble away from the makeshift projectile; the bottle smashed nearby, splattering the Allurist's arms with tepid beer and glass. "I didn't forget you on purpose you ******* wanker...!" he shouted, voice cracked and tremulous. "...******* unreasonable millennials," he grunted, then, under his breath as he tried to crawl away, to put some distance between himself and the memories his mind was doing its best to shield him from.


‹Bjorn› Bjørn came to stand with his feet shoulder width apart, a metre behind his decoy. He cradled his head in his left hand, casting a glance about the emptied establishment. This wasn’t the habitual way in which fights progressed, not in his playbook anyway. Then again, he rarely picked a fight with someone, let alone in such a crowded place. His usual opponents were generally somethings, and to be hunted in empty sewers or warehouses.

“The **** you mean you forgot?”

Dropping his hand to his side, the telepath reached into his pocket for his phone. Roxette would need to be kept in the loop, and if he was booked overnight, he’d have no access to a phone.


‹Freddie› Freddie groaned. The place had emptied, alright, and he wondered if police had been called. If anyone had been called. How long did they have? Anyway, no one had picked Freddie as a vampire, yet; the guy did really well at playing human, and no one was every any the wiser. He hadn't done anything to outwardly give it away, either. Although he had some idea that he was behind the pain inflicted on the other, he didn't know how he'd done it, and was ninety percent certain it wasn't a visual display. The other had flipped a heavy table with ease, however. Or maybe no one saw how that had happened and regular police had been called to deal with a regular bar brawl. "Please tell me you're smart enough to know the meaning of 'forgot'," Freddie croaked. "Forgot. As in, I don't remember. I'm supposed to remember you, aren't I? Or are you just ******* insane?" he spat. He had found a bar stool and was doing his best to haul his tall frame to his feet, already eyeing off the whiskey behind the counter.


‹Bjorn› And what was he supposed to do with that? Scrubbing at his face, Bjørn singlehandedly scrolled through his phone and typed a quick message to Elliot’s thrall. Found him. Whether he was talking about Axl, their boss, or some else was for Roxette to figure out. The clock was ticking, and there was little doubt in his scrambled mind that the cops would be here. The question was, on a Saturday night, would that be sooner or later?

“How long have you been back? Actually, don’t answer that. I’ll ******* tear your head off if it’s as long as I think it is. I guess you also forgot that you’ve got businesses to run? A ******* faction that… well, whatever, it doesn’t matter anymore. You--”

The anger, indignation, hurt-- it bubbled uncomfortably in his chest. “You’re a sack of ****, Elliot. Thought you might have been fucknig killed or something. What the **** have you been doing then? Didn’t look like you were trying to remember.”

Re: Roles Reversed [BJORN]

Posted: 26 Aug 2017, 10:49
by Bjorn
‹Freddie› The Allurist's head was still throbbing. Alcohol probably wouldn't help with anything, but still -- a long arm reached over the short counter and swiped a three-quarters-full bottle from the back wall. He was hovering near the corner of the bar, so it wasn't so hard to do. The guy who owned this pub really should keep that shelf empty. He unscrewed the lid and there was a metallic clang as Freddie dropped it, opting to swig the fuel straight from the bottle. "Yes," he said once the bottom of the bottle hit the counter. "I can't answer any of your questions. I don't even remember my own name," he said. He couldn't say that he'd tried, that he'd found his own name several times -- because he'd forgotten each and every incident. "So please, if you'd stop insulting me, maybe you could enlighten me?" he growled.


‹Bjorn› Revisiting that life altering moment forced Bjørn to reconsider his relationship with Elliot Lancaster. For all his frustration and anger, he found himself incapable of denying his continued admiration and affection. Even after all these months, even without knowing whether the man was still alive, he’d done his best to ensure the allurist’s legacy was upheld. And he remembered just how peeved Elliot had been when he’d found the fledging feeding behind his bar, and how generous he’d been in spite of it. Drawing a deep breath into his lungs and exhaling just as thoroughly, the telepath cast a glance at the entrance. He could hear the murmur of a gathering crowd, though the sirens had not yet reached his ears.

“You own a bar. That’s where we met… a while back, when I was just getting into this whole vampire shtick. You helped me out, and things were good until you left to Australia, never to be heard from again. It’s been months, and I’ll to fill you in and all, but we can’t do it here. I’ve uh, I’ve got this tome you gave me… We can take this conversation to a place where the cops won’t come looking.” As he spoke, he walked around the mess, tipping the table back to its rightful spot. It slammed back into place, partially damaged.


‹Freddie› "Whatever you reckon, mate," Freddie said, agreeing to whatever it was that the guy wanted them to do. Freddie wasn't too concerned about the cops, confidence he'd be able to... well, maybe talk his way out of it. The inability to lie generally came with complications. That he'd been in Australia was news to Freddie. All of it was news to Freddie. "I dunno what a tome is, but go for your life," he said, almost reluctantly. He'd helped someone out. Which meant he was once someone who knew things. And now he barely knew anything. It was sobering.


‹Bjorn› The telepath made quick work of gathering the scattered payment slips. It’d be no good leaving behind documents that traced back to Lancaster’s. He hadn’t identified himself to the employees of this pub, and with some luck, they wouldn’t suspect him anything other than a disgruntled acquaintance of Elliot’s.

Sidestepping his decoy, Bjørn made for the bar. He motioned for the allurist to follow into the back room, and gave no warning when he kicked down the door labelled [Manager]. He drew his gun from his hidden shoulder holster as he crossed the threshold, and took aim. Across the top shelf of the empty room was the security camera set-up. He fired the gun until the magazine clicked, leaving behind a smoking pile of whirring metal and broken glass. It’d take weeks to salvage any footage that might remain.


‹Freddie› Head still pounding, Freddie followed the other into the manager's office. A wary glance was spared for the decoy; it had none of the other's rage. It was just... blank. It was unnerving. The gunshots only compounded the headache, though Freddie understood the reasoning. It wasn't something he'd have thought of. "...done this before?" he asked distractedly -- he was still holding the bottle of whiskey in his hand. It didn't cross his mind that going...wherever it was the guy suggested they go might make everything ten times worse. Freddie wasn't in the thinking mood.


‹Bjorn› Had he done this before? More times than he’d ever admit to other. All he gave by way of an answer was a noncommittal grunt as he holstered the gun. In exchange, he pulled from his inner pocket the palm-sized tome. Tucking the paperwork under his arm, he offered Elliot his freed hand, simultaneously thumbing the thin pages with the other until familiar fae runes came into view. He’d memorised long ago the words, but the magic didn’t work if he didn’t physically hold the tome. Bjørn had heard of this working for others, but would be trying it for the very first time himself. Make this work, he thought to himself, realising that if it didn’t, he’d be leaving Elliot is one hell of a sticky situation.

“Hold on.”



‹Freddie› Absently, Freddie wondered what his relationship was to this guy had been, beyond that first night. The memory was like splinters in his mind, still, slowly being picked apart and shredded. He felt like he wanted to throw up, but took the guy's hand. Wherever they were going there might be somewhere to sit, to lay it off. A strange sensation took over his body and, when next he opened his eyes well... everything was familiar. Everything. So familiar it was painful, agonizing even. "Oh my *******... jesus christ, where did you bring me?!" he wailed. He squeezed his eyes shut and stumbled backward, heels of his palms pressed into his eye sockets.


‹Bjorn› Relinquishing Elliot’s hand upon landing in the familiar hallway of the Den, the telepath pocketed the tome. He was about to call the elevator when the wail paralysed him, his brows furrowing as confusion and worry settled across his expression. “This is-- hey, hey, what’s wrong?” Bjørn tentatively reached for the other’s shoulder, not wanting the man to stumble too far backwards as to step into the traps he himself had once set off. “What’s going on, what’s happening?” He glanced around the hall in search of something that might trigger such a reaction.


‹Freddie› This was the kind of agony Freddie had avoided. All those time he took the long way around places, all those times he got an inkling of a headache when wandering the city he'd go a different way. Now, he felt like he was in a nest of hornets, and he was exactly where he shouldn't be. "I feel wrong. This feels wrong. I shouldn't be here," the words crawled from his throat. He couldn't put into words exactly what it was he felt, or why. "Somewhere else," he gasped. "We need to go somewhere else. Please?"


‹Bjorn› The telepath couldn’t sense anything wrong with where they stood -- it looked as it always had. Yet, he couldn’t ignore the other’s pleas. Setting the paperwork onto the floor, he stepped around Elliot and pushed open the hidden door. It lead to a darkened hallway, which in turn would lead them into the Sanctuary’s lobby. “This way...” He held the door open, spine pressed against the threshold. Leading the way and bring up the rear were difficult to simultaneously do. For once, he wished his abilities could produce comfort rather pain, or something other than bolster his own strength... It occurred to him then, though he had no idea whether it would work, to use one of his few positive powers on the other. [You use your gifts to inspire your target, making them temporarily stronger.]


‹Freddie› It disheartened the Allurist that he could be so battered by something that was invisible, something that he couldn't figure out. It was a defense mechanism, the way his body and his mind wanted to reject everything that was so familiar about this place. He should have wanted to explore, he should have been happy that someone had stumbled across him -- that his absence could have made someone so ******* furious. There would have been no fury if there'd been no care. If Freddie had meant nothing to anyone there'd have been nothing. It only raised more questions than answers, and when an exit was offered the Allurist took it, lurching out into the darkened hallway and feeling his way along the walls until there was light. And even out in the lobby of what looked like an apartment building, the pressure was less. Still there, but less. Somewhere in the middle he pulled in a deep breath and he thought it was the expansion of his lungs that allowed him to move forward and stay focused, it didn't occur to him that it was something else. Out on the street he moved like a magnet pushed away from an opposing force; he went where his body took him, stumbling and striding in equal parts until the familiar places got further away -- and he could finally breathe easy.


‹Bjorn› It was easier to follow Elliot; easier to reach out and stop him if need be, rather than keep assuring himself he was leading them the right way. What haunted the allurist evaded him, and so he cautiously followed with his watchful gaze never leading the man’s back. In no time, they were walking out onto the road. The distance between them and Sanctuary grew, and grew, and grew. Bjørn wondered whether they were going somewhere specific. Long legs made it easy to keep the pace, his hands finding his pockets as he peered curiously at Elliot’s profile. “Do you know where we’re going, or...? I ask cuz I live back down that way...”


‹Freddie› As the voice cut through the sound of Freddie's footsteps scuffing the pavement, he slowed a little. He looked around; he tried to find something familiar. New familiar, not old familiar. They'd crossed a bridge and had headed into the suburb north of Wickbridge. "If I keep walking I'll figure it out," he said, feeling, somehow, like he should head East. It sounded as if the other was suggesting they go to his place, however, and Freddie cleared his throat. "...have I been there before?" he asked, wary. He understood, now. Even being in the other's presence was still... disconcerting. The migraine still lingered, but was slowly giving up its persistence. "What's your name, even?"


‹Bjorn› “Ah...” he replied quietly, brow furrowing. It was a bit like watching a crash in slow motion, discomforting and mildly discouraging. He was completely out of his depth, faced with a beast he couldn’t beat with gun, sword, or magic. Scratching at the back of his nape, he chose to drop the matter. He’d learn more about Elliot’s circumstance if he tagged along. There was a part of him still expecting the Australian to drop the mask and admit to pulling the younger vampire’s leg. “Name’s Bjørn.” Dropping his hand back into his pocket, he frowned at the sidewalk. What did Elliot go by if he didn’t remember his own name?


‹Freddie› It wasn't your normal meet and greet. Bjorn. A name that caused Freddie's eye to twitch, like someone had twisted a nail in his frontal lobe. Would he remember any of this tomorrow night? He couldn't exactly say 'nice to meet you' if they'd already met. There were sirens to their left, and it didn't even click that they were only a few blocks from where they'd caused a ruckus. "I uhm. I call myself Freddie," he said. He could try to explain, but he didn't know how. Not really. "Have called myself Freddie for... a few months," how long had it been? He hadn't been counting. "I'm n--I am sorry. If I ... left you with issues. I just..." he stopped, sighed. Something was holding him back. There was a question on the tip of his tongue but said tongue grew heavy, unwieldy. If Bjorn had an answer to the question, it would surely lead to more pain.


‹Bjorn› Casting a glance over Elliot’s shoulder, the telepath sought any sign of trouble. It was unlikely that they’d get tracked this far east, but he certainly didn’t like that they were back on this side of the river. The country pub was just a hop and a skip away from where they were headed, on the opposite side of Gullsborough. He’d hoped to place as much space between them and danger as physically possible, but in blindly following the allurist, he wasn’t able to ensure their safety.

Freddy. It was wrong, so wrong. He did his best to iron out his expression before glancing towards Elliot. This situation was bringing back feelings of confusion and associated powerlessness that he’d strived to overcome for the better part of a year. Being back here, in a different situation, with the same person... It was becoming too much for him to process.

The apology -- he refused to acknowledge it.
How could Elliot apologise for something he didn’t remember?
“Was it an accident? How did you lose your memory?”


‹Freddie› Freddie shoved his hands into his pockets. His stride took them parallel to the pub they'd previously visited, before taking them past it. Things were starting to look ... well, familiar. The good familiar. The comforting familiar. The soothing familiar that would take him home. Home. Did it really mean anything? "If I remembered, I'd tell you," he said with a shrug. It was a relief, that Bjorn had asked that question, so similar to the one that he couldn't ask himself. Bjorn did not know, then. It was a question he no longer felt obligated to ask.

Re: Roles Reversed [BJORN]

Posted: 26 Aug 2017, 15:13
by Bjorn
At this point, Bjørn didn’t know what to say. He willed the pavement to give him all the answers he needed. It didn’t yield to his stare, only crunching beneath his shifting weight. Heaving a heavy sigh, he frowned, watching his feet move in and out of his field of vision with every step he took.

He twitched involuntarily as the device in his pocket vibrated, his telepathic mind affected by the signal. (The worst thing was microwaves. If he stood too close to them when they were on, his brain turned to mush.)

Fishing the phone out of his back pocket, he opened Roxette’s reply: ——— FOUND WHO?

Though tempted to simply take a photo — as it’d be worth a thousand words— and send it, Bjørn opted against it for many reasons. Whatever was going on, he wanted to make sense of it before bringing her into the fold. When he’d sent the message, he hadn’t known just how bad things were.

——— NVM ORDER NEW STOCK. SMTHN CAME UP.

Looking up from his phone, the telepath realised that they were nearing Bullwood Station and HR General. He peered at Elliot, curious. He watched the man out the corner of his eye for many more beats, the gears of his exhausted mind creaking inefficiently. What were they doing here?

Without glancing back at the screen, he hit send and cleared his throat.

“Why here?”

Re: Roles Reversed [BJORN]

Posted: 02 Sep 2017, 06:10
by Lancaster
Yes, Freddie thought. Why here? It was a now question. A question pertaining to the near past and not a past that he could no longer remember—a past his mind had sabotaged him into forgetting. Continued to sabotage, really, unbeknownst to the tall vampire. It was as if there was a rope tied around his brain, causing pressure. And the more they moved away from Freddie’s forgotten past, the less the topic was prolonged, the looser the rope was tied.

”This is where I live,” he said, mindful of the one walking beside him and that the word ‘home’ might be prickly. ”Or—hereabouts. Just a little further,” he said. ”It’s where Hannah lives, anyway,” he said. Now that he’d mentioned Hannah, he felt like he should explain. Hannah. He wondered if she was still at work.

”Hannah helped me get back up on my feet,” he said. He left it at that, for now. Bjorn was still, for all intents and purposes, a stranger to Feddie. To Elliot Lancaster, no. But to Freddie—he thought it would be inappropriate to reveal exactly who Hannah was to him. The words would have got stuck in his throat, regardless. Even now, they were blocked—Bjorn would know who else Freddie had left behind. And Freddie didn’t know whether he was ready to know if he had a girlfriend waiting for him. A wife. A significant other of some description. So he didn’t ask.

He asked nothing, although he knew he should. Like a dog cowed by a whip, he didn’t want to risk the migraine.

Or so he told himself.