Hidden 10 yrs ago 10 yrs ago Post by rtc143
Raw
Avatar of rtc143

rtc143 Memeologist

Member Seen 6 yrs ago

Karram nodded briskly at each quick command Flint flung his way. And within seconds, he was out of the car and headed in the direction of the club, Oakbane now fully drawn and ready for action. As they walked, Karram concentrated on absorbing some of the surrounding nature energy to power up the blade. Could come in handy.

As they reached a closer position, Flint instantly began firing into the club after Gray had created a diversionary explosion. Several vamps came pouring out attempting to deter the ragtag group, and Karram sliced a few of them down with ease before they could reach Flint or anyone else for that matter. Suddenly, a fire storm whizzed over Karram's head and caused more chaos in the club. He noted Rikive pass by holding Parry's limp body. Hopefully he would pull through despite his foolish antics. But nevertheless, Karram couldn't hold onto the thought for long, as a few more enemies ducked under the flames and came near the group. This time thralls.

Karram knocked one down with a rough roundhouse to the face while simultaneously stabbing another through the head. This was quickly descending into a bloody and explosive mess. Soon the mortal world would be alerted their shenanigans, so they needed to get the hell out of here asap! After dealing with the vicious thralls he sprouted his ethereal wings and darted through the club with almost blinding speed to get a quick view of everything happening within. He saw Tony ripping through beings left and right and saw the overall confusion of all the club-goers as well. Some were springing into action in an attempt to defend themselves and the club while others helplessly fell to the ground with fearful expressions on their faces. Karram covered Tony's back for a few seconds, taking down several vampires who threatened to attack him from behind. He could tell Tony's lycan abilities, while powerful, were not going to stand against this large number of vampires for much longer.

Karram zipped back to his previous position, noting that Beth had just landed atop a vampire just in front of Flint. Karram landed and pointed the sword at the grounded being, but looked at Flint. "It appears Tony is at odds with several vampires and thralls within and needs help immediately. Parael and Rikive have made it to safety. So two questions: are you okay and how should we proceed to rescue Tony?"
Hidden 10 yrs ago Post by salamimike
Raw
Avatar of salamimike

salamimike Probably not even real.

Member Seen 2 mos ago

The flames from Flint’s hands extinguished as he moved out of the way of the vamp. Beth had stopped him from being sliced and Karrem was soon next to him, his sword drawn towards the offending vamp. Flint was panting, sweat drenching his face as he gulped in breaths of air, the strain of using his power in such a magnitude. People have asked Flint why he uses guns, he has such raw magical ability that can do much more destruction. His answer was simple and always the same.

“I could walk to work, but I use my car every day. Same thing”

“Where taking this one “ Flint told Karrem, nodding to Kaori as he scooped up his tommy gun and shoved it into his inside jacket, when he removed his hand from within, he now held a small yellow firearm looking device. “Use this on her, it’s a Taser just place it against her and squeeze the trigger. Just make sure you aren’t touching her...” He said this to either of the allies in front of him. He wiped the sweat off his brow and turned around back to the fight. “Get her to the van then cover our escape, I’ll go help Tony” He said this all in front of Kaori, knowing there was little she could do against the ghost and fairy.

Still panting, Flint began to walk towards where Tony fought. It was chaos around him but it seemed many people where pre-occupied. A vampire spotted Flint and was soon rushing towards him. Flint focused and splayed his hands towards the creature, air began to rush into the vamps mouth and it soon exited violently outwards, exploding the chest and lower jaw of the blood sucker. The husk collapsed as Flint continued, performing the party trick a few more times before he began to sway, the exhaustion was soon getting to him but he had to keep fighting. He removed his revolver from its shoulder holster and fired it rapidly at anything that came close. He barely made it to where Tony was slaughtering when he fell against the wall, his gun empty.

“Not yet…. Not… yet” He mumbled through gritted teeth. He eyes fluttering to stay conscious.
Hidden 10 yrs ago 10 yrs ago Post by HeySeuss
Raw
GM
Avatar of HeySeuss

HeySeuss DJ Hot Carl

Member Seen 2 mos ago

Tony was being overcome quickly; a vampire took a while to heal wounds if inflicted, though it was hard to really inflict the wounds because they were fast and strong. A lycanthrope, by contrast was faster, stronger and healed rapidly enough to stay in a fight, unless the wounds came faster than the healing. Give a lycanthrope wounds in beast form, put them down and they got back up once they were able to heal it.

But shoot them with silver and it was all over, the silver had to come out before they could do any of that. They were weak as a mortal once it happened, with the silver burning into them, disrupting the uneasy spirit barely contained in the weak flesh.

The best werewolf hunters of the ancient era used slings, because they understood that a ball from a sling, a silver ball whirled around on a rope and then released expertly, was the best way to embed silver into the werecreatures while making it very hard for them to extract it. Arrows could be pulled out, swords tended to stay in the hands of users. So on and so forth.

But firearms came along and made it possible to put silver into werecreatures with more ease than a sling, which took such immense skill that it was reserved for a few people who did it from a very young age. A firearm was a weapon a peasant could employ with a small bit of training. It's why the armies issued them. And as more weapons were made, faster loading, more accurate, longer range, the werecreatures became easier to kill; aim a silver bullet for the skull and take them out in one shot. Silver bullet to anywhere that entailed an instant fatality was bound to finish the were fast, if the bullet wasn't pulled out.

Or you shot the were and followed it up with a fast attack to rip them to shreds when they were writhing around or otherwise distracted by the silver. It burned like nothing else, even when it came out.

In the era of rapid fire ballistic weaponry, it was even worse, if one was willing to spend on such rounds. Hunters did, for example; facing multiple baddies, they might load silver, magnesium based tracer and steel-jacketed hollowpoints, the lead exposed, figuring that the mix of rounds gave them a fair chance of engaging different types of supernatural bad. Silver, fire, iron and, of course, lead. Shotguns were popular too -- #4 buck had 41 pellets; if they were silver, it was impossible to dig them all out of a werewolf and get them back into the fight fast. More was better; double-ought buck was a thing for mortals putting down mortals, but some hunters going after weres specifically loaded birdshot, just to have a huge number of small silver pellets going into a werecreature.

It's why lycanthropes adapted and learned to fight in ambush, to get the hell away from anything that smelled like silver. They were cautious as a result of the way much of their own society figured out how to fight them and turned modernity against them.

In any case, it was also why some smart vampire grabbed a shotgun that was there in case of an emergency and shot Tony in the fucking back with it.

And it's why he went down with something like just seven 21 grain pellets in his shoulder, but it was enough to turn a rampaging were-lion, tearing through, holding his own, into a vanilla mortal black man in a lot of pain just like that.
Hidden 10 yrs ago Post by teapotshark
Raw
Avatar of teapotshark

teapotshark

Member Seen 8 yrs ago

Beth remained crouched on the floor by the tackled vamp with a hand on its chest to keep it down. Her ethereal boots, the very same she died in, met the edge of a puddle of blood spanning from the door to halfway across the club. Celestial and vampire intermingling. She pulled her eyes away from the vicious battle when Karram's sword appeared above her captured vamp. That helped.

Her eyes darted back to the fight as Flint began to give orders. Any other time, she might have had something to say about that. But today Beth was all too happy to do what he said. She took the taser from his outstretched hand and seized the vampire by the arm. Pulling her to her feet, with a grip tight and threatening to give the vamp a terrible sensation, she made for the door. "Come on," she called when she reached the doorway, sparing Flint and Tony a final glance.

With nauseating horror she watched Flint collapse against a wall, and soon after, Tony felled with what she could only guess were silver bullets. "Get them out of here!" she shouted to Karram, gesturing the the slumped bodies of their allies. This time, her voice bellowed over the din.

Parael was in for the world's greatest ass-kicking should he survive.

Beth raced out of the club then, the captured vampire girl in her hands, and took the quickest route to the van without passing through any buildings. "Stay still and I won't have to hurt you," she muttered to the girl. "And maybe they won't either." She shoved the vampire against the wall opposite the van, not daring to bring her any closer to Parael's body and the blood that surely coated the inside of the van. She pointed the taser at the girl's abdomen with her free hand, and called into the van to Rikive without taking her eyes off the vamp. "Tony and Flint need rescuing! How soon can you get there?"
Hidden 10 yrs ago Post by twave
Raw
Avatar of twave

twave

Member Seen 4 days ago

Well the plan fell apart quickly. watching from the van for a bit Autumn was almost tempted to just leave without them. But that wouldn't help her cause or make any friends, which were in short supply at the moment. With a reluctant sigh the woman grabbed the AK and stepped out of the van First she worked her way through the panicking wave of humans. They really could be in the way at times. But at the same time they gave cover. As vampires began to exit she stayed back and took aim. For her mostly unassuming look she has a good shot. Having practiced with firearms since their invention she had to admire their modern construction. In the beginning one pointed and hoped to hit the target. Advancements like the blunderbuss helped by spraying pellets and shrapnel. But it was hard to beat the satisfaction of a rifled weapon. Aim and fire. Automatic weapons just made missing less of an issue.

Sadly your average bullet was only effective in injuring a vampire for a moment. One would need some more specialized ammunition for that. Surely Gray was prepared for that. But not particularly fond of getting up close in a fight she peppered the vamps from behind most. Perry had been hauled out which meant they just needed to grab a target and go while they had the chance. Or at least that was how things should have went. Tony managed to get himself shot though and he went down.

Apparently Beth was dealing with a vampire as well. It was the one from earlier that she had noted. Hopefully Gray still had the venom she'd given him a long way back. She never did explain where she got it. At the time he knew better than to ask. The taser would be good to get her to stay still and make it easier to poison her. It wouldn't take long for the effects to kick in, a good neurotoxin was great for quick immobilization. "Grey, Beth has our target. Sedate her." She pointed to Kaori as the intended target. Now to save the pyro and lycanthrope.

That was easier said than done. It would require doing more than a human could do given how many were around them. Kneeling down she pulled a small blade she had strapped to her leg. It was a small precaution that alone didn't pose much of a threat. Holding it up she placed it in her mouth and drew it across her shortened fangs. Firing bursts into several other vamps she advanced. When she became the subject of attention she avoided a direct contest and side stepped with inhuman speed. Just a light cut with the blade was all that was needed. Thralls were easy as they were slower and after getting a hit in and backing off they dropped like a rocks. The others took a little while longer but that just meant staying out of reach till it had done its job. There were too many to take them all out, but that wasn't the task at hand. With an opening she grabbed Flint and lurched him over to Tony to grab him as well. Purposely loosing her shoes her feet stuck to the concrete and gave her better traction and leverage to pull them both out. "I swear if that idiot survives I'm going to torture him." Hopefully the others could keep the torrent at bay long enough for them to get in the van and run like hell.
Hidden 10 yrs ago Post by Trinais
Raw
coGM
Avatar of Trinais

Trinais

Member Seen 5 yrs ago

Billy Rikker loved 'Shark Week' because Billy Rikker loved sharks. Whenever that magical week of the year came around, he'd lock himself in his penthouse suite and watch the beloved creatures during all hours of the night and day, and God help whatever sonofabitch disturbed him. See, Billy loved how all sharks had a cool, sleek look to them as they cruised through the water. And being the equivalent of an underwater velociraptor only added to the wow factor. He did feel superior to them in one way, however. Whenever the camera crew dumped chum in the water, the sharks went ape-shit, losing the calm coolness they radiated while cruising the oceans at speed. All of a sudden, they were reduced to mindless savagery. Thrashing in the waves left and right. Feeding so fast they'd never know they'd gotten hooked through the mouth and were being hoisted up into the air where they'd either be gutted and cooked, or tagged and tracked as part of a science project.

'Man,' he'd think to himself, watching the Great White or the sleek Blue getting snagged on a line from the safety of his couch, 'I'm glad I'm smarter than a shark. I'm glad I'd never do something like that.'

So when his brain snapped to with a mouth full of Celestial blood going down, the screams of his exceptionally wealthy human patrons echoing in his ears while his younger vamps lost their shit, his older vamps got roasted by Flint the Mage and Karram the Fairy, the Nordic wench and what smelled like a human turned his front parlor into an abattoir before getting the source of the frenzy out, and Left and Right unloaded shotgun spray on Tony the Tiger, Billy had to whimper a little bit.

See, Billy Rikker liked to play the part of an old Italian Duke who was turned back in the 1600s and Emigrated to the New World. That he was smarter than most and could get shit down with a wave of his hand. Truth was, Billy was less than 80 years old and far from the master politician he claimed to be. He grew up on Camden's East Side and wasn't technically Italian (he was Scottish on his mom's side, and God knew what on his Dad's side courtesy of mom's profession). The only reason people bought into the lie was the fact that Billy popped up out of nowhere and started his own clan on the Dockside. What Billy lacked in political tack, he made up for in threats, a good poker face, and brute force. Nobody in the vampire courts liked Billy because A.) they didn't trust him and B.) they suspected he was a young one.

So here he was, lapping at Celestial blood on the floor with four of his senior vamps, his Thralls getting wasted left and right, and his true vamps behaving like sharks in a documentary after someone spills a gallon of blood in the water.

Billy Rikker would soon have 0 rich humans to give him status, 0 Thralls to do his bidding, and 0 True Vampires to enforce his Will on the rest of the Supernaturals. And his people were about to kill the whole gang of supes Nemsemet wanted more than anything else. And if they died, Billy was stuck in the city like everyone else.

He was boned.

'Wait!' his concious mind wanted him to scream. 'These are the people Nemsemet wants! Everyone stand down! We'll play Let's Make a Deal and I'll finally be Number One in this town! Can't we all just get along?'

His animal instincts kept him lapping at the carpet, trying to get all the blood he could out of the carpet fibers like a fat kid licking spilled ice cream off the floor 'cause he knew he wasn't getting another cone.

Left and Right pumped their shotguns again, ready to blow Tony the Tiger's brains out, but the constant fireballs the Mage was slinging had taken their toll on the glass chandelier above them. The braided Italian rope that held the art piece of blown glass and crystals had started smoldering after the first fireball and Billy's sensitive vampire ears heard the fibers snapping slowly. A stray bullet ricocheted off the wall, caught the fibers, and with a SNAP! the $800,000 piece descended onto his two enforcers, sending a wave of glass shrapnel all across the floor and their shotguns skittering to the front of the club.

And Billy Rikker, Number Two Vampire in the City, aspiring lord of Camden, and sycophant to the all-powerful Nemsemet, kept licking the blood out of the carpet.

===================================================

"It's simple, man. I saw them do it on Mythbusters. You take some iron poles, and then you weave duct tape over it like cloth until you get a boat that floats."

"Parry, you sank in Central Park. You're not a professional."

Parry held up a finger, taking another hit from the bong. He exhaled away from Cymriel's non-face. "Says you. I'm a professional Celestial. Means I can do almost anything I set my mind to."

"Tragically, it seems absolute power corrupted your brain into thinking so."

"Nah, that was the cocaine and moonshine I did in the '20s." Parry smiled, giggling as he remembered all the flappers and booze he'd chased back then. Oh man, and the time Flint had busted into the wrong speakeasy with a trench sweeper- that'd be in his brain for eternity. Nothing like looking for a kidnapping victim only to find oneself in the ONLY gay speakeasy in the whole goddamn city.

"And yet you never went the full length. Most Celestials that go AWOL go Demon right away. You didn't." Cymriel folded hands black as twilight over the empty bag of Funions. "I wonder why?"

"There are some lines even I won't cross," Parry mumbled, stuffing the bowl for another hit.

"Clearly."

They sat in silence for what felt like eternity. Parry stuffing the bowl some more. Cymriel folding his hands, staring at Parry. Parry lighting the bowl. Cymriel Staring. Parry taking one hit. Cymriel staring. Two hits. Staring. Three hits. Staring.

"What?" Parry asked. "You want some? Or are you going to ask the question?"

Cymriel waved his hand, declining the glass pipe. But he did ask "Why did you run?"

Parry rolled his eyes and reached into the never-ending bag of Cool Ranch goodness. "It's the motherfucking Shore, Cymriel. You can look into my brain, so you tell me."

"I don't have the slightest interest in looking through your mind. I'm quite certain it'd drive me mad."

"Then let me put two-and-two together for you," the Celestial quipped. And he looked into Cymriel's eyes. Really looked. And gave his partner-in-divinity the whole story in fast forward.

"The Children's Crusade."

"The motherfucking Children's Crusade." Parry took another hit, trying to get the buzz to wipe away that slasher-snuff mind film he'd replayed in Cym's head.

"Kid's die all the time, Parry. They die all the time today."

That got a reaction. Parry was suddenly on his feet, screaming as he pitched the bong into the ocean- over the protests of Michael Jackson, Caterpillar Pryor and the White Rabbit.

"It wasn't the fucking dying! I got used to that! It was the ones that didn't die! The ones that trusted we were looking out for them, that had all the faith they were doing good, and we stood by and watched as the adults took them and sold them into slavery in lands far away. And we fucking WATCHED!"

"We don't take sides with the humans, Parry. Only when demons are involved. It wasn't our fight."

"Fuck you and your rule book, Cym. You got your answer. Now send me back or don't."

"I can't send you back as you are. You'll be eaten alive by the vamps within seconds. You'll need a Dawn Blade."

Parry twirled his finger in the air. "Whoop-de-doo. Guess I'm dead then. Open the gates and let's see what I get."

"See, that's the thing. I can't open the gates for you either. For anyone."

"The fuck you talking about, Cym?"

Cymriel swept a hand over the table. "Nemsemet hasn't just locked off the city to magic. He's locked the Nether. Everyone and everything that dies there stays on The Shore. de Lacy is two dimensions over and I'd much rather be here with you, the guy who shoved six centuries of a double workload on me. The guy had control issues that extended beyond the boardroom and into the bedroom."

"Really?" Michael Jackson asked.

"No, I'm not sending you to his Shore, Parry. We're talking business right now." Cym folded his hands onto the table, spared a glance at the three hallucinated companions, and with a gust of wind scattered their forms into grains of sand which fell to the beach. "Now that I have your undivided attention."

"You have half of my attention," Parry replied. His bong was suddenly in his hand again, loaded and ready to fire. His fingers snapped, forming a flame that hovered just above the bowl. "So if the blockade extends to the Nether and I need a Dawn Blade, a Celestial weapon forged from a dying star, and mine is in the wreckage of the daycare center, how do you propose to get me back in one piece?"

"You know that diaper bag of yours? The one with a portal to the Nether in it?"

"Yeah, my-" Parry stopped. Narrowed his eyes at Cymriel. "That's not public knowledge. If you knew about the portal spell, you'd have been able to track me down and pull me back."

"Please. When you tried to shove the tiger kitten inside, it got pretty obvious."

"You've seen Shounen-Ai? Where is she? I haven't been able to pull her back since '97!"

"Uriael and Basliel love little Shuyin."

"Her name is Shounen-Ai!"

"Whatever. Shounen-Ai is fine. But more to the point, you've got a single conduit from The Shore to the material world." Cym stood, brushed the Funion crumbs off his black robe, and unclipped the sword at his own hip before tossing it on the table. "So since I'm stuck here with you, have a gift. From me to you. For old times sake. And keeping in the spirit of things, let's go Blue Chips and Red Chips." Parry's hand retracted from the bag of Cool Ranch Doritos as it foil packaging resealed. A bag of Fire Red chips likewise sealed up and floated across the munchie table to him. "Blue Chips, you stay here, get toasted, and leave your friends to fight the vampires and Nemsemet on their own. Eat the Red Chips, I give you my wings and sword, send you back, and wait here in your place. Your friends and pretty soon the whole supernatural population of Camden will know what you are, so your vacation will be over. And when Nemsemet is dealt with or you're dead, you come back to work. Does that seem-"

Parry was gone by the time Cym stopped talking. The bong on the chair and the Fire Red bag ripped open. Cym's sword and his wings were likewise gone. Despite his best efforts, Cym actually felt surprised that Parry, selfish asshole that he was, hadn't stopped to think whether or not he wanted to go back into the fight and sacrifice his anonymity and life of hedonism for a few friends in a jam. He'd stuck it to Cym for so long, and Parry and Cym went back millenia.

And now Cym was stuck on Parry's Shore, with nowhere to be and nothing to do until Nemsemet's spell was broken.

"Well fuck," Cym said, grabbing the bong in one hand and lighting the bowl with the other. And then getting a mouth full of bong water.

===================================================

Parry snapped to in the back of the van, pale as hell, probably weak from blood loss, with Rikive standing over him and four bullets extracted onto the floor.

"Aw, lovely! I missed you so much!" Parry leaned forward and tackled Rikive in a hug before planting a kiss on her cheek. "Gimme two seconds lovely, gotta take care of business, then we'll talk."

Parry the mage rolled to his side, reached into his diaper bag that was still hanging from one hip, and fished around for a few seconds. Cymriel's sword was the first thing that popped into his hand, on top of the pile of stuffed animals, toys, tech trinkets, doodads and diapers. So when Parry pulled the beaten iron longsword from the bag and sprouted a set of six wings with eyes glowing like the cores of Blue Giant stars, turned to Rikive, and put one hand on the van's back door, said "I smoked weed with Michael Jackson. And it. Was. AWESOME!" he didn't take time to gauge the reaction of the Norse demi-goddess and the pantsuit-wearing supernatural lawyer.

He just burst out of the van with a flaming sword, screaming "THRILLER TIME TO-NIGHT!" in a shriek and made a bee-line for the melee, swinging a sword that cut into vampire thralls like they were vegetables and vampires like they were mortal.
Hidden 10 yrs ago 10 yrs ago Post by rtc143
Raw
Avatar of rtc143

rtc143 Memeologist

Member Seen 6 yrs ago

Karram watched as Beth took the object from Flint's possession and began escorting their new vampire friend to the van nearby. Karram followed at a quick pace, keeping an eye out for any danger up ahead. But as usual, things never go as planned. Beth noticed before he did, but her expression caused Karram to look back. Flint was down and Tony was shot. Fucking fuck... Karram thought.

"Get them out of here!" Beth shouted at Karram. Karram noted Autumn heading that way as well. But he didn't hesitate. Wings spread again, he darted through the bastards in the club and landed near Flint and Tony just as Autumn reached them as well. He nodded at her as she grabbed them up. Karram slammed the ground, causing several root systems to split through the floor and ensnare two vampire attackers going after Autumn and her baggage. Karram backpedaled from there, covering Autumn's back as she ran towards the vehicles outside.

Of course that's when he witnessed a shining winged Parry slicing through thralls and vamps like butter screaming some nonsense about thriller...? Karram was happy he was okay and totally... well... un-surprised to see him acting in this fashion.
Hidden 10 yrs ago Post by KuroTenshi
Raw

KuroTenshi

Member Seen 1 yr ago

His heart wasn't beating, he wasn't breathing anymore. Panic swept through her as she pressed her hands tighter against his chest over his heart after closing the bullet and bite wounds. She pushed her healing energy into his heart in pulses, similar to the defibrillator's human used to restart a heart. Come on, come on! She could sense that the damage to the tissue was being repaired, but his heart was silent.

Rikive swore in frustration when she heard Beth call out to her from outside of the van. Parael's heart still wasn't beating. Her other comrades needed her, but Parael...

Gritting her teeth and shutting her eyes tight, she slowly pulled her hands away. It was too late. She pressed her blood covered hand against her eyes, taking in a deep shuddering breath to try and pull herself together. There was still a battle raging, other's that were still alive needed her help.

She should have gone in after him right away...

"Aw, lovely! I missed you so much!" The sound of Parael's voice made her snap her head up, her pale green eyes wide when the slender man tackled her in a hug. She was completely stunned and speechless, she had been so sure that he was dead. Gone forever!

Relief and joy quickly replaced her surprise and she was about to hug Parael back when he pulled away from her. She watched him dig around in his diaper bag in confusion. As he pulled forth the iron sword and six wings emerged behind him, her mouth dropped open in shock.

Parael...had come out of retirement!?

Rikive stared up at him with wide eyes, the power radiating from him reminding her of her mother's people. She smiled before laughing at his departing words, more from sheer relief that he was alive and still the same as before. Except for, of course, the wings.

She picked up her own sword and sheath, following him out of the back of the van and looking at Beth with the vampire. It seemed like she had their new 'friend' under control. "Get her in the van, I'll help get the others." She said before heading back toward the club.

With Parael providing cover and a suitable distraction, Rikive located the downed Flint and Tony being dragged out by Autumn. Karram was also helping to cover her back with what few people were focusing on them as they retreated. She sheathed her sword and crouched down to pull one of Tony's arm's over her shoulder as he was the most obviously injured. She could help walk him out while healing him. She didn't know what was wrong with Flint.

She pressed one hand against Tony's bleeding back as she stood, using it to start healing him. The mist like magic flowed into his skin from her hand, spreading through his back and starting to push the buckshot out while healing the damage it caused. "Can you two carry Flint between you and get him to his car? Parael is providing us," She ducked when a head flew over hers. "Cover."
Hidden 10 yrs ago 10 yrs ago Post by Necrophage
Raw
Avatar of Necrophage

Necrophage

Member Seen 2 yrs ago

This whole thing was absolute chaos. These morons had the organization of domesticated cows. The only real reason they were getting this far was because of their inherent powers. Gray shook his head slightly as he listened to August. Surely she was thinking the same thing.

Slipping a hand to another pouch he pulled out a small push-syringe of a dark muddled liquid and approached their captive. "Hold her steady. I don't want to miss or this will hurt more than it needs to."
Hidden 10 yrs ago 10 yrs ago Post by Exie
Raw
Avatar of Exie

Exie

Member Seen 8 yrs ago

Kaori felt a force hit her out of thin air. It was enough to knock her to the floor onto her back, her blade escaping her grasp. Her glowing eyes blinked, looking up at the face of a plain looking girl. Briefly, Kaori considered the multiple ways she could punish her for getting in her way: a bullet to the belly, the blade through the chest, or a bite to her unprotected neck. But the exchange that occurred in the next moments made her pause. They were discussing her kidnapping, she realized, as a taser changed hands. It didn't frighten or concern her as much as it confused her. From the scent of these three creatures - and the unmistakable stench of wild cat in the air - she could tell that this was little more than a rebel group of misplaced beings. But she couldn't fathom what logic would prompt them to attack a vampire coven with no real knowledge or organization, and then try to take one home. Idiocy.

The girl tried to pull Kaori to her feet. Like hell you're taking me anywhere... But she stood. Even she, a creature of chaos, could feel the turmoil around her getting out of hand. There was gunfire, and a seemingly continuous low rumble of growls and snarls. It wouldn't end, not when these attackers were so clearly outnumbered and unprepared, yet annoyingly persistent. It would be destruction, if not within, then when another group of Nemsemet's vampire subordinates caught word.

She needed to leave.

She allowed herself to be lead from the building by a pair of insignificant hands around her wrists. Not particularly strong, she noted. Yet, the girl handled her unnecessarily roughly, seeing as she hadn't made an effort to resist just yet. Kaori felt a sense of rage building, desperate to snap and tear her captor down. Wait, she reminded herself. Acting now would only invite the reciprocation of her whole party. Despite how capable she believed herself to be, it would be more difficult to escape multiples versus just one. Also, she had no way of knowing exactly what form of creatures accompanied her, or their strength.

She found herself pressed to a wall with the dinky device pressed against her abdomen. This seemed to be as far as the girl was going to take her for now. This would have to do. "Tony and Flint need rescuing! How soon can you get there?" the plain girl said. Kaori noted how her eyes never left her face. She couldn't help but spread her lips in an amused grin. Her face wasn't where the danger was.

"Hold her steady. I don't want to miss or this will hurt more than it needs to." Her eyes darted to the voice. That scent. A low rumble rolled in her chest. She knew that scent. She took a second, maybe two, to take in the closer view of what must have been a hunter. He didn't look strong, not particularly intimidating. Yet somehow, he had stolen her kill once. In a way, that made it more offensive.

She also caught the glint of a strange syringe in his hand. Not good. She didn't need to know what was in it to decide that she didn't want it in her body.

The girl had 'secured' the vampires wrists with her own hands. What happened next took place in seconds. Kaori took hold of the girls wrist which had been vulnerable just by being so close to her grasp. She tugged her forward with a sharp jerk, turning in the same movement to rotate and deliver a kick to the back of her knees. The force should be enough to knock the girl from her feet and send her crashing into the wall.

With a fling of a hand, she send a small blade slicing through the air towards the hunter with the syringe. It was well aimed, but she suspected he would find a way to dodge it.

Kaori was gone before she could find out. She took a few running strides down the sidewalk, and made a sharp turn into a shady looking ally way. From there, she lauched herself up, gripping the lower rungs of a fire-escape ladder. She climbed - or sprung - upwards until she hit the roof. She took off, her speed paying off as she hopped from one roof-top to the next, clearing about three before the attackers below should have a chance to respond.
Hidden 10 yrs ago Post by Necrophage
Raw
Avatar of Necrophage

Necrophage

Member Seen 2 yrs ago

The hidden blade that flew at Gray's face was a bit of a surprise. He twisted to the side and deflected it by raising his right arm. It scratched at his armored forearm before clattering to the ground.

She was fast and strong, quickly breaking the hold Beth had on her and slipping away into the darkness. Leave it to the disembodied spirit to hold someone down! Catch her or subdue the would-be lord surrounded by his minions? Gray took the easier option. He didn't have time to retrieve his shotgun if he wanted to catch her which alone would be a tricky feat. Instead he picked up the gym bag that still lay close on the ground and started sprinting after her. It was a good thing he wasn't a particularly big guy because that would make running a lot harder.

Scaling the fire escape to follow her on the roof was not a feasible option. Plus it led right into any trap she could lay. Gray ran through the alleys below trying to head her off from the ground. This was unfamiliar terrain, he was disadvantaged but it would be better than trying to out-climb something as feral as a vampire. He slowed his pace in order to listen to the movements above. These buildings were thankfully only a few stories high so he could still hear footsteps as she ran atop the roofs. If she got any further away he might lose her. Good thing the block was about to end. Hope she can't leap fifty feet or this would be one hell of a chase.
Hidden 10 yrs ago Post by Trinais
Raw
coGM
Avatar of Trinais

Trinais

Member Seen 5 yrs ago

The sword was fucking heavy. Much heavier than his own back at the (ruined) Daycare, so Parry's slices and dices among the vamps in the front lobby were much slower than he was used to. A Dawn Blade was a Dawn Blade to a Celestial, but they were unique snowflake weapons, made by the higher ups for each foot soldier. Plus this was Cymriel's sword, Cymriel's wings he was using. Kind of like borrowing your buddy's gun for the evening. If the police traced the serial number without looking at the prints, well, Cym would be up the Creek and Parry would be facing consequences for how he used it.

Ducking, weaving, and parrying was the name of the game then. The maitre'd vampire, Jean, took one look at Parry in the fight and booked it for the kitchen- and Parry let him go. When one of the higher vamps took a swipe at him, Parry went ahead and gave the guy a once-through the arm at the wrist. The vamp's hand dropped to the floor, but Parry didn't follow through, too busy making his way through the melee toward the head snake.

Billy Rikker was on his hands and knees near the back of the foyer, licking Celestial blood out of the carpet with some of his senior vamps.

This whole thing needed to end. Billy had a hundred Thralls and easily half as many pure-vamps in his service, but that number could be cut in half from the wounded and dead they'd piled up. Problem was, Parry knew Billy had more muscle than this and the group only got this far by surprise alone. They needed a bargaining chip to get out of this mess.

"Tony!" Parry yelled, pointing at the head Vamp with his free hand. Hopefully the were-Tiger would get the message over the melee. They needed a hostage to get out of here alive. Or an opportunity to cut the head off this snake. Billy had clout over a lot of the supernaturals in the East Side. A few shifter packs, a witch coven, even a minor fae court. They probably wouldn't throw in with Tony just because Billy was dead or captured, but they might reconsider their loyalties after their leashes were cut.

Parry, meanwhile, let Autumn and Gray (YUMMY!) book it for the vamp that had run out the front door. Parry was content to let them go for her, unfurling his wings fully to block the Entrance/Exit doors so the horde didn't follow them out into the streets.
Hidden 10 yrs ago 10 yrs ago Post by teapotshark
Raw
Avatar of teapotshark

teapotshark

Member Seen 8 yrs ago

On instinct Beth flickered in and out of tangibility to avoid the swipe of a blade and in an attempt to seize hold of the vampire girl again. The first proved successful, but the girl managed to slip away before Beth could solidify her hand, and sped off down the street via the rooftops. Beth's hand slammed against the brick wall; she felt only an opposing force.

Her speed was nothing compared to a vampire, even one so young, and the farther she went from the club, the less she knew of her allies' fate. But with so many of them busy, and their mission still fruitless, she took chase alongside the hunter.

Unlike Gray, she knew the layout of this town so well she could draw a better map than Google if she wanted.

She dashed through alleys and office blocks, taking as many natural and supernatural shortcuts as she was privy to, until she caught sight of the vampire once again. The long line of buildings came short there; this was their best opportunity. Beth scanned the street around her for something useful and, finding only trash cans, garbage and broken pieces of glass, sent it all flying towards the vampire. The trash cans went first, a trail of garbage left in the air. She applied as much telekinetic force to the throw that she hoped it would knock the bitch off her feet.

The glass went next, and Beth aimed low. Vampires endured the worst but she only hoped to subdue the girl. "If you have anything useful in that bag of yours, now is the time!" she shouted across the alley to Gray. It would take the both of them, and perhaps another if anyone had bothered to follow them, to take and keep the vampire down. She spared him a brief look, and began to consider throwing him onto the roof.

The idea was too good to waste time debating. Beth manipulated the energies around Gray, picked him up of the ground as a means of warning him, before tossing him onto the roof in front of the vampire. It would be a rocky landing, but she got him there.
Hidden 10 yrs ago Post by rtc143
Raw
Avatar of rtc143

rtc143 Memeologist

Member Seen 6 yrs ago

Could any aspect of this mission go as planned? The thought made Karram's head ache like before. The winged angel version of Parael was flying around wielding god knows what kind of mystical blade, Flint and Tony were down for the count, and now the vampire hostage was on the run. Karram wanted to face-palm but felt it better to tag along with Beth and Gray as they pursued their desired target. The vampire was skilled and experienced. But Karram calculated that the three of them together would be enough to capture her, so long as no additional surprises sprang out of nowhere.

Karram watched as Beth manipulated trash cans and bottles and glass pieces, hurling them at the roof runner with great precision. Then she yelled at Gray and sent him flying onto a rooftop nearer to their target. "I'll back him up!" Karram spread his ethereal wings and zipped past Beth heading upward to assist Gray as he landed. By darting to the vampire's rear, he and Gray would have her flanked. As he flew, he drew his dagger and prepared to throw it to the side of the vamp's feet to hopefully halt her from changing course.

With that, he reached the target and aimed the dagger at her feet. He stopped on a dime, hovering a few feet back from her. Karram noted a nearby tree on the street corner at the end of the rooftop. Could be a useful tactic if she attempts to run again... he thought to himself before turning his attention back to the female vampire. His sword was drawn still and he wore a determined expression as he stared at her back.

"Why don't you stop running, okay?" Karram could see Gray was still holding onto the mystery bag of goodies. Hopefully something in there was strong enough to put their vampire friend here down for a bit. If not, Karram may have to delve into his repertoire of sleep-inducing magic and see if that works.
Hidden 10 yrs ago 10 yrs ago Post by Exie
Raw
Avatar of Exie

Exie

Member Seen 8 yrs ago

Kaori had sprinted from rooftop to rooftop gracefully, like a bird soaring in the air. The darkly colored silk robe she wore trailed behind her in the night like a cape, its floral design catching the glint of moonlight every so often. She gained speed as she went, skipping and leaping over the gaps between buildings until she finally came to the end of the block. She stopped short of the ledge. Looking across the street to the next rooftop, she knew she was unlikely to make a jump that far. It would be foolish to attempt it, and would likely slow her down even more if she tumbled and broke a leg. It would heal, but she didn't have time to wait.

The sound of foot-steps and bated breath alerted her to the pursuit coming up behind her from below. Three pounding heartbeats, she counted. And again, the distinct scent of the hunter who had stolen her prey. Her own pulse pounded in her ears. Long, delicate fingers curled into fists at her sides as she considered the ways she might correct that wrong.

Within the medley of noise in her head, she experienced the unsettling feeling of one sound giving out. It was the same sort of sensation that occurred when one side of a pair of headphones stopped working. She refocused to realize that the running steps below had come to halt. Dammit. I have to keep moving. Just as she began to move towards the ledge, considering swinging down and finding an open window into the building, she caught movement in the corner of her eye.

Kaori swerved to the side instinctually, narrowly avoiding a trash can and a line of randomized junk that had come flying with it. Her eyes darted to the direction it had come from, catching the slightest glint of light on a number of small shards of glass slicing through the air. She hit the ground. Normally, she might try to deflect it, or outrun it. Glass wouldn't kill her. It would, however, permanently damage the robe that had belonged to her deceased mother. Kaori pressed her hand to the back of her head to protect her long hair as well. Her dark locks had suffered enough damage for the night. She felt the slightest pinch when one shard nicked the back of her hand as it sailed by.

She could hear yelling on the street below. She recognized the voice of the plain female, "If you have anything useful in that bag of yours, now is the time!" Kaori stood again, bracing herself for what was to come next. It was a surprise to see the hunter land before her.

"You," she hissed. It was difficult to say what Kaori actually felt concerning the hunter. It was an odd sense of predatory obsession. She was only absently aware of the sound of beating wings behind her. With each breath she took, she was reminded of the night she had first encountered the hunter. She had never forgotten that scent. It nearly pushed her to leap from where she stood to tackle him to the ground.

But she stayed still. They had her flanked. Her narrowed eyes - an unsettling contrast to the smooth femininity of her features - never left the face of the hunter. She studied him, as if she were trying to read a very dense book. "What do you want with me?" she finally asked. In the back of her mind, she contemplated the ways she might escape. Speed, and the nighttime shadow would be on her side. Yet, her curiosity over this brazen human kept her rooted.
Hidden 10 yrs ago Post by Necrophage
Raw
Avatar of Necrophage

Necrophage

Member Seen 2 yrs ago

The feeling of euphoria that came from being lifted off the ground with absolutely no control over your destination was exquisite. Flying through the air after some trash was anything but graceful. He choked off a gasp as he was hurled to the roof of the building from street level. It was like falling in reverse and in this case Gray liked gravity to stay in one direction. He stumbled a landing in his quarry's path. "If you have anything useful in that bag of yours, now is the time!" Apparently this was Beth's idea. Well, better than chasing on the street until he got tired and she escaped. He'd have to explain in vivid details what he thought of being surprised like that though.

Gray's expression went from surprised to a wry smile like the guy at the poker table who just can't help how great his hand is. The gym bag was still clutched in his left hand and slightly unzipped, ready to pull something out of. The vampire's acute sense of smell would tell her that there was a hint of corrosive chemicals in there as well as some metal.

As Karram drew closer from behind he tried to talk her down from running. The vampiress seemed much more interested in Gray, like somehow she knew him and he'd offended her. So he responded to her in kind. "Look I have no idea how you know me but I will answer that question. Sorry to say this is not about you. It's all about your recent neighbor. Calls himself Nemsemet." He prepared to reach into the bag. A feat she more likely would notice as he continued. "We're not in an asking mood. Help us out by coming with us. If not you get to see what's in the bag." And she would get to meet Karram.
Hidden 10 yrs ago Post by twave
Raw
Avatar of twave

twave

Member Seen 4 days ago

"Time to go people!" With the others having run off after the vampire that just left the rest picking up the pieces. As far as their goals were concerned there was no reason to stick around any longer. Hoisting Flint into the van she stole a glance toward the ruined club. Perry was destroying everything in his path, headed toward the gorging Billy. Eliminating him would help cause disarray among the vampires and even help their cause. Nemsemet wouldn't win everything. But this was just a battle, the war was yet to be settled.

Everyone seeming to be busy she took a chance and scooped a spider up from the ground. Whispering something to it she let it loose and ran around to the drivers side of the van. Starting her up Autumn slammed the door and stuck her head out the window. "Please be quick." Ready to go she reached back for her purse. What Gray had was not the only ones available. Sadly not everything she arranged had arrived yet. Since she assumed she would not be leaving anytime soon she had put plans in place to have supplies sent. Had she known more she would have planned for an army.
Hidden 10 yrs ago 10 yrs ago Post by HeySeuss
Raw
GM
Avatar of HeySeuss

HeySeuss DJ Hot Carl

Member Seen 2 mos ago

Silver, in a werecreature, burned like hell. It took time to recover from getting hit by it even when the stuff came out. The disruption of the spirit as well as the physical effect of it lingered after it was pulled out, enough so that one didn't necessarily want to do much. That was why Tony found himself in a van healed but still very much cursing and sore after that. He'd spent much of his existence not getting hit with silver after that first exposure. Contrary to popular perception, and Flint's accusations, he'd managed to live a pretty sedate and quiet life as a werecreature after the Vietnam War, finding ways to channel himself in directions that didn't put him in the way of gunfire.

So much for the quiet days of living out in dignity, now his hometown, Camden, was blowing up and he was getting shot by vampires. He'd spent something like fifty or so years avoiding that precise situation, keeping the beast chained except for field trips out into the wild to hunt and expatiate the roaring predator that shared space with his humanity in a never-ending war for his body. Between the change and the wound he'd sustained -- and damn, that thing still burned, annoyingly -- he looked like a complete mess, which was appropriate wear for this party.

"She's right" he gasped, barely getting his head straight enough to process all the information, "It's time to get the fuck out. This place is about to be crawling now that we've kicked the hornet's nest." The idea of grabbing someone in the know to interrogate them was now out, and it seemed almost pointless to grab the vampire they were about to snap up. Almost. Once he and Autumn were close to the van.

"We gotta bring the van closer to the guys grabbing the vamp and start clearing out before the reinforcements show up. Someone's bound to have called for help with all this," he gestured at the mess of the Rusty Steak Knife, "going on. Some smart vamp probably called help."

Tony groaned a bit as he forced his arm to work and got the door opened, blasting him with the accumulated smell of the air fresheners, incense and other scents Tony had used to avoid being detected as a werecreature -- useless now.

There was an AK in the back of the van that he'd brought along with a consolidated ammo supply, but he left it there untouched for the moment, though he kept his eyes peeled as he crouched in the back, rubbing his shoulder as he took in the devastation.

"Well, so much for a minimal exposure plan that involved quietly grabbing someone for information."

--

"My Lord," he intoned, with that smooth bluegrass, whiskey country accent.

He had the mannerisms of the 19th century southern gentleman and the pedigree as well. It was authentic; sometime during the colonization of North America, a pair of poor Scotch-Irish immigrants, the Gordons, were finally freed of indentured servitude but lacked the resources to establish themselves further east. Due to a lack of funds upon emancipation from servitude in a Virginia plantation near Richmond, they had to find the cheapest, most dangerous frontier and carve themselves a new life from the wilderness of the new world, a pair that loved each other deeply and had the same dream -- a life away from the old world they'd been condemned in by birth. They managed to establish a homestead in Tanasi that prospered over the next century and a half. Angus and Tess were fine, upright folk that had a sense of decency, though it didn't necessarily survive them. They learned to live in harmony as neighbors with the natives they found in the area, for they'd been of modest needs and took little from the land, but subsequent generations of Gordons, starting with their son Joshua, found cause to look down upon their neighbors and drive them out, to covet more land as their farming and horse breeding business flourished, and that streak of ruthlessness was inherited by in Charles Niall "Neal" Gordon. A historian might well say the potential was there in him and was refined during service under no less than William Tecumseh Sherman during the Civil War, because like a number of Tennesseans, he remained loyal to the Union, despite owning some slaves, and learned well the lessons of that bloody era of strife.

He remained in the Cavalry and served in the West after the war, where his uncompromising view of the situation matched that of the men who burned Georgia and the South down in that terrible, destructive march, and his methods were among those adapted by the white men who wished to tame the 'menace' of the people that inhabited the land well before they'd ever seen it -- to cut off their food supply, to dwindle the resources with which they could use to survive, to sap their will to continue the war by bringing them psychological distress. Sherman's lesson -- War is Hell. Sherman once asked Gordon, who'd been an aide of his at one point, what to do about the Indians. He told him, "Kill buffalo."

Sherman later was heard saying that to end the problem, send ten regiments and shoot bison. (He had, needless to say, watched the application of Sherman's methods by airpower, in the 1940's, with particular interest -- he was an avid admirer of Arthur "Bomber" Harris and Curtis LeMay.)

Sometime in the 1870's, after the whole thing was essentially settled, though Custer had gone and gotten himself killed, Major Charles Gordon found himself under the fangs of a simply enchanting woman who found him equally intriguing -- the whiff of blood, the dangerous but debonair mannerisms of the man, the far-seeing, hard eyes that caught and held what they gazed upon. He was already a predator of men, a killer, and that was much to her taste; dashing in the ballroom and uncompromising as a warrior. There was always a use for dangerous minds in the world of vampires, and he'd been useful in subjugating wild supernaturals as he'd been in subjugating wild humans until the work ran out and North America was finally domesticated, mere policework of the sort that others did for the courts, running after wayward individuals, seemed tedious -- he loved more than merely a little action, he relished a war, a contest of wills, the breaking of the opponent. There simply wasn't enough of that to go around and decades went by with very few unruly supernatural populations to suppress, and so much of it was handled through delicate negotiation that made his particular services unwanted. As a servant of the Court, he found little satisfaction in the diplomacy forced upon him -- as the Court started to recognize the autonomy of native populations at the behest of their local supernaturals, who formed Courts and stabilized the post-colonial situation, he resigned from active service in the 1950's.

He still wore a gentleman's mustache and a Vandyke beard, because he'd never quite been able to bring himself to go clean-shaven even in the eras that demanded it, and it seemed that of late the fashion was respectable, though he'd let his hair be trimmed in tune with the human fashions of the day, and he'd given up a gentleman's frock coat for a properly tailored suit done on Savile Row; dark gray, with a window-paned shirt beneath it and a sufficiently floral tie and a complementing pocket square. He looked dapper and little like the blood soaked killer of the Plains Indian Wars that he truly was; likewise, there was a Colt Single Action Army holstered beneath the jacket, because he never quite managed to shed the liking of the gun he'd killed so many braves, their wives and their children with. It wasn't one of the originals, because those took black powder and modern metallurgy and manufacturing was so much better -- trained as an Engineer at West Point, he'd prided himself on maintaining a surprising interest in science that exceeded that of most of his vampire kin. Of course, as he'd point out, most vampires were little more than someone's fucktoy made immortal. He held himself aloof from their sordid little games of running bordellos and gambling houses and nightclubs; he did a respectable business in stocks and bonds, though he considered playing the markets to be little more than a fun gentleman's game that also sustained his quiet penthouse lifestyle that he'd adopted from the Gilded Age, onward, converting the family farm into capital.

The petty little squabbles of the supernatural world bore him, so he stayed out, though in his time he'd made his necessary respects to the court of de Lacy and actually made himself useful as a sort of emissary -- he had a proud and aristocratic bearing that de Lacy had favored, even while dismissing any advice he had to give. Nemsemet, however, had learned of Major Gordon's unique history and seemed genuinely interested in his thoughts; this was not the first time he'd been called to the Elder One's presence and asked for his opinion on a matter.

"I find myself displeased with Billy Rikker. He did not manage to destroy the few enemies I had and he has also taken too much time uniting his own kind." Nemsemet intoned, with a dusty rasp of a voice.

The truth was, it disturbed Charles to even look at Nemsemet, and that was with the old mummy clothed in a voluminous robe that concealed much, and even with a forged metal mask over the face -- nothing in the city had ever seen Nemsemet's face, except for perhaps that fool de Lacy when Nemsemet first rose from the grave dust and destroyed so many of the Court in that first furious assault. No one even knew what happened because, quite frankly, there were no survivors. The old mummy didn't move much; no breathing, no twitches, just unnatural stillness. But the presence filled the room, oppressively so. de Lacy's old receiving chamber had been redecorated in a 'less is more' motif with the banners and historical artifacts removed. The throne remained, but the room was bare stone and lamplight now, for Nemsemet sufficed as impressive in his own right, a figure of dread awe, even simply seated there, deeply within his? its? robes; a simple white linen affair lined with blue, but dark and shadowy nonetheless. It was jarring to note that Nemsemet sat with a leg crossed over another, with a hand disappearing into the cowl of the robe, perhaps propping up his chin. One just didn't associate such incongruously casual body language to such a terrifying thing.

"I understand my Lord, and while it is perhaps a touch untactful to say so, I also felt at the time that it was insufficient merely to 'send a warning' in the form of destroying one house and then backing off. Our friend Billy waited a bit for more to gather there after Augustus' little raid instead of being in a lather to impress you with precipitous action, he might well have been able to actually set up a much better trap and actually kill them rather than let most of them leave through the back door. That would have rooted it out from the outset, but he was impatient."

Rooting it out was what Charles liked to do best. "And if I might be so bold as to state, I do not think Billy is prepared to actually wage a war. I understand the negotiations go slowly to get more vampires in the field primarily because he is trying organize it under his control, rather than merely delivering your terms. I do not, of course, blame him for trying to profit from the situation, but I am afraid that his interests are at a detriment to your own at this moment. Billy Rikker did well within the scope of his experience as a gangster," that was delivered with faint scorn, "But warfare takes more than merely on the spot cunning and an eye for personal opportunity, particularly if pursuit of that opportunity endangers the long term goal." That was delivered with the fine diction that was drilled into him in the 19th century boarding school he'd been forced to attend. He could have had it in Latin if Nemsemet preferred, or even Crow, Cree and Lakota were Nemsemet himself able to speak in those languages, for he was a well-educated man and proud of that in this profoundly anti-intellectual era and a natural linguist in an era where rednecks shouted, "Speak Amurikin, galldurnit!"

But what he was really saying was that Billy Rikker was a gutter punk that had no idea what he was doing, because Charles Gordon was not necessarily a subtle man by nature, but he certainly knew how to get a point across without being so crass as to spell it out.

He always thought Rikker was an upstart and it galled him to watch the little guttersnipe rise the way he did, putting on airs. He did well when de Lacy was ruling, but the times had changed and, to Charles' delight, Billy turned out to be unable to adapt to the current situation. By contrast, the new situation excited Charles.

Charles Gordon was a vampire supremacist, unabashed; a twisted interpretation of Darwin's survival of the fittest had always fueled his unsentimental approach to burning hapless civilians out of their cities and hapless natives out of the lands of their ancestors, and he was similarly unbothered with the plight of the average human. A lifetime and then a death spent making prey of others while not particularly worrying about mundane and ungentlemanly things like turning a profit had put him at disadvantage in the world he'd gambled and fought his way through. De Lacy found little use for a man of his talents, and other vampires viewed him as a crazed misanthrope, not one taken seriously in the scheme of the petty politics of the city's vampire. Nemsemet...well, that was different. The old mummy gave him something no one had given Charles Gordon in a long time; a war.

He'd cheered Cecil Rhodes' mercenaries as they subdued spear-wielding natives with Maxim guns in the name of civilization, watched Foch and Haig drive their mass armies of conscripts into the teeth of the German trenches, laughed at Mussolini's invasions of Libya, Ethiopia and Greece, thought that Hitler needed to leave the actual fighting in the hands of a capable staff of bred-for-war Prussian gentlemen, applauded Patton's drive through France with a sense of relish, banged his hand on a desk, breaking it, when he heard news of MacArthur's relief in Korea (and agreed with the sentiment that nuking the Red Chinese was something to hurry up and do now, before they were nuclear capable themselves) and tut-tutted the deplorable mess of the Vietnam War and all the other post-colonial conflicts where the men fighting the savages in the name of civilization missed the point -- and while the feckless press seemed inclined to help put the Amins, the Mugabes and the Ayatollahs in power, people that retarded the march of progress. In Gordon's world, the best way to make a better system was to put aside any lingering sentimentality and, like the engineer he was, create an efficient system that didn't burden itself with petty tribal, or humane for that matter, concerns.

So too with how vampires interacted with society.

"How would you do it, Major?"

"You mean how would I pick up the pieces, my Lord?"

"Yes. Billy Rikker has proven to be a liability."

Major Charles Niall Gordon told Nemsemet.
Hidden 10 yrs ago Post by Trinais
Raw
coGM
Avatar of Trinais

Trinais

Member Seen 5 yrs ago

A Dawn Blade, a weapon forged in the heart of a dying star when the universe was still young, was anathema to vampires. Science would have one believe that they had a severe allergic reaction to UV Radiation. Superstition, that they were so wicked that they could not walk in the presence of the sun without suffering divine wrath.

Whichever was true was irrelevant. A Dawn Blade was coated with UV rays by the process of its creation, and while it had no particular effect on the souls of wicked mortals (only having true supernatural power against Demons) it was really, really fucking sharp. So as Parry cut, dodged and slashed through the crowds of bodies trying to get past his wings and after Tony he had that scene from Kill Bill stuck in his head- the one where The Bride fought the Crazy 88s. Except there were thirty people here and most of them were already in rough shape from the fight to begin with.

A head here, an arm and leg there, and Parry found himself with a straight corridor to Billy Rikker, licking blood out of the carpet while his thralls and vampires started to think twice about losing an arm or two to the guy with wings and glowing eyes.

'Oh shit,' they were probably thinking. 'That's not a wizard...'

So Parry didn't press his luck with the group. He started to lower his sword into a defensive posture and started to take one step toward the prone Vampire lord when he heard the slam of a car door behind him. Tony. Rikive. Flint.

The van.

The whole group was on its last legs because of his fuckup. Yeah, he'd gotten some information from Billy about who Nemsemet wanted but it wasn't worth this mess. He had some work to do in order to make this up to everyone. Decapitating Billy Rikker would take seconds, would render this whole part of the city leaderless, and might open up the opportunity for rebellion. But the sword in his hands wasn't Parry's. It was Cym's. And Cym would be held responsible for how Parry used it. Execution wasn't one thing he wanted to see Cym answer for and would leave the van vulnerable to attack from the vampire brood.

So he might as well start his recompense now.

"Right. You all know what I am," Parry said, backing away, wings still spread to block the doors. "You probably don't know that I can make a small sun in one hand. But I really don't feel like killing everyone in this room right now. So. We'll call it a draw."

Without wasting a breath to see if the vampires pursued or stayed put with their master, Parry ducked and ran out the front doors, his wings retracting into so many ribbons of light, then shrinking into his back. He spared half a second to swipe the dawn blade at the overhanging awning outside the doors, bringing the fabric down to provide a temporary barricade to block line of sight on the van between the restaurant and his getaway vehicle.

Parry ducked into the van's side door, slammed it shut, and said in an innocent and awkward voice, like a kid hiding a new puppy (or in his case, wings, a sword, and a pair of smoldering white eyes) behind his back "So, uhm, what'd I miss? 'cause I got to smoke some primo-weed with the White Rabbit and Michael Jackson!"
Hidden 10 yrs ago Post by KuroTenshi
Raw

KuroTenshi

Member Seen 1 yr ago

As Rikive settled in the back of the van, she began to feel the first curl of exhaustion take over. She had an obscenely high amount of endurance, but after days of no sleeping, fighting and using her magic so heavily; she was ready to sleep for a few hours. So she did not go after the vampire, she would leave that to the others that had given chased, unless she was needed again.

She ran her hands through her tangled chestnut brown hair, now darken with soot from the fire and ash from slain vampires. Likewise her skin was tinged dark with grime, hiding the flush of her skin except where a few beads of sweat had carved their path down her face. Her clothes were absolutely ruined, but she cared little about them. Though it did reinforce her desire to locate proper armor.

She looked to the door when Parael suddenly jumped into the back of the van, as energetic as ever. As though he had not just died because he'd thrown a tantrum and stormed into the club without a solid strategy. "You," She growled at him, her hands clenching in fists. "Do you understand how incredibly stupid, reckless and dangerous that stunt of your's was!?" She yelled at him, raising her clenched hands slightly as though she was about to beat him for his idoicy.

Instead she lunged at him, not to hit him, but to wrap her arms around him in a tight embrace. "Don't ever do that again." She said into his shoulder, her voice tight. As angry as she was that he had gone and made such a mess of everything, it was nothing compared to the relief she felt that he was still alive.
↑ Top
© 2007-2024
BBCode Cheatsheet