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Drabbles and thoughts at an all time low. 90% off. Get them today!

So, this is where I post random crap that can't go into RPs since it's getting tiring to navigate through the storage bunker. Some of these things might get more thoughts. Others might not. Will intermittently update this thread as I go along.

REFRACTED UNIVERSE

fandom: marvel

down came the rain - vignette 1

heir to heaven [COMING SOON]

lonely man [COMING SOON]

job hunting [COMING SOON]

The Book of Blade

fandom: the blade fandom

The Ice Locker
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Down Came The Rain

bomb_bag_Man: Happening tonight

Front_Line_452: Took your sweet time, kid. Was figuring out if you were still alive after the incident last Tuesday

bomb_bag_Man: fine

Front_Line_452: understatement

bomb_bag_Man: look, can we talk about what you need from me

Front_Line_452: you get the dirt on roxxon, I put the good word up to my boss to stop running headlines about u

bomb_bag_Man: u can’t do more?

Front_Line: murder isn’t something that goes away in news cycles

Front_Line: especially the murder of a war vet and his wife

Front_Line_452: but they’re mosquitoes, kid, their MO

bomb_bag_Man: don’t have to remind me about it

bomb_bag_man: just be there when it happens




It’s eight when Hobart Brown finally comes back home to the smell of microwaved Chinese food and rat shit in his apartment. His arms and legs feel ten pounds heavier and dropping his cleaner’s pack, half-full of dank grey water, doesn’t help. Ever since he took the window cleaning contract at Roxxon, sleepless nights and instant coffee packs have become a new reality for him.

Ben was where he was usually, lazing on the couch, arms outstretched. His skin was sallow and his chin was horribly tangled and mussed with a stubble. The guy had insisted on closing all the blinds and making sure the windows were closed, mentioning some kind of sensitivity to light. His job involved prowling around at night all the time so it wasn’t all off-putting to him. The red tinted sunglasses covering his eyes didn’t reassure Hob that he was some kind of Nosferatu, waiting to suck out his blood at night.

However, as quiet and mysterious as the guy was, he paid his rent on time. Plus, he did all of the cooking and whipped him up a stack of bonafide east-side wheatcakes one morning when he was late to work. He always did his laundry, did his share of the chores, never left garbage like his prior roommates and was all around a pretty swell guy. His dad taught him to never ask unnecessary questions and Hob wasn’t the landlord. If there weren’t any problems, then, he didn’t need to create any problems.

“ Hey.” Ben craned his neck and lifted his arm, something silver glinting in the faint light. “Found that key you were looking for. It was under the couch.”

“ God, thanks, man. “ Hob said in audible relief “ Owe you a solid for this.”

He reached his hand out to touch Ben’s shoulder in gratitude. Ben fidgeted as soon as his fingers neared his shoulder. Shit, he should have remembered. Another one of his quirks. One time, he had brushed the man’s shoulder and the man leapt to the other side of the room. It reminded Hob of all the times he had played with magnets in physics class, when the two opposite ends were against each other. Him and Ben were like that. Hob had learnt to accept it quickly, thoug. He’d written it off as probably something to do with his health condition.

“Sorry, it’s just –“

“ It’s fine. It’s fine,” Ben said, breath slightly quick. Hob walked to the kitchen counter, opening the fridge. Before then, it

“ Sure I can’t ask you to stay on for another month?,” Hob asked quietly, not wanting to let any sense of desperation probe into the question. His contract with Roxxon was soon due to expire and finding another high-paying contract to keep up with the rising rent was a bitch. The news about Stark Robotics developing another new automated gizmo to replace window washers was only the salt in the wound. His dad wouldn’t stop crowing about that any time soon whenever he went for family's gatherings at Ira's place.

“ Sorry, Hob. The gig’s on the West Side. It’d take two hours for me to reach work and….” Ben’s voice stumbled and a note of something entered it. Sympathy? “If you need an extension…..”

So, it was sympathy. Something about Ben’s tone made Hob’s gut coil in anger. It wasn’t ill-meaning but he had heard it a dozen times at family dinners and catch-up with friends. A storm of good lucks, sorries and that sucks rolled into one pile of fetid uselessness. He was the blue-collar worker of his family, the one still working 8 to 8’s while everyone worked a classical 9 to 5.

“ Nah, it’s fine. Don’t worry about it.”

The small apartment became silent, punctuated by the sound of Hob scraping his spoon against the rim of his cereal-filled bowl and the television. He only paid half-attention to the news as he stared at the hundreds of unread messages on his OsPhone. Water bills, loans, college applications, a dozen small knives hovering over his head everyday. His eyes flicked back to the newscaster who was reporting something about the anniversary dinner that were holding for the Fisk Foundation. The titular man himself was there as well and Hob often found it surprising that the podium didn't immediately collapse under his immense weight.

"Say, how’s the traffic near Roxxon Plaza looking?”

“Crazy. Out of staters are funneling out this weekend.” Hob said absentmindedly. “Cops are having a headache with this new vigilante out there. You oughta be careful out there.”

“ I’m sure I’ll be fine.”
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The vampire is a creature of habit.

That was a lesson Hannibal taught him on his first proper hunt. That even monsters still had their routines. If vampires only cared about devouring humankind in the most efficient way possible, most of the country would be overrun in a couple of months by hordes of ghouls and newly Turned. No, instead, they had peeves and wonts about how they went about it. Traditions and rituals were passed down from each new generation of vampire and with every passing century, as humanity progressed, so did their palette. The Nosferati had entire ‘vinyards’ dedicated to fermenting blood into red wine. The Adze preferred congealing the blood into curds. The Yuki Onna adopted the tradition of ikizukiri - drinking humans slowly while they were still alive.

It was that singular characteristic, that weakness which had been exploited by better vampire slayers than him for centuries. So, when the trail led to yet another fishmonger this month, Eric almost could feel Hannibal berating him mentally for not spotting the obvious yet again and believing that vampires were more rational than they actually were.

It was the break of afternoon in New Orleans, when the sun began to nest in the Pontchartrain. Its orange rays bled down the dappled surface, the skyline bruised a hazy violet. It was at this hour when the French Quarter started to become alive, beating with the rhythm of jazz and dance - the oxygen of the Orient pumping and flowing through the streets from Chalamette to Jefferson. Yet, for where the music could not be heard, it casted shadows of silence across the Mississippi, where the brown waters bubbled and festered as it always had throughout the course of its thousand mile journey. And in that silence dwelled the coming night: ravenous in its zest for life.

He’d been tracking a pack of new arrivals for a month now - ten to twenty strong. They’d made their presence on the westside of Uptown, far away from the territories of other sects and the CBD where the NOPD strutted around like flamingos. The scent of the Great Lakes was smeared all over them - alpine smog and the dewy aroma of pine needles that followed in their wake. He pegged them as Krieger - maybe an Anchorite but most Anchorites preferred to stay in their wheat fields and little prariers. He had been watching them for the last few days, under the disguise of plain sight and from a fair distance as they skittered from the Garden District to the Quarter, playing themselves off as tourists. Eventually, that led him to where he was standing right now.

The Trawler was a squat olive drab block in a sparsely populated neighbourhood that was accommodated by overdebted university students and old-timers who were too fond of the past to move on. There was only a single pane of glass for the average onlooker to look at the product inside. Styrofoam boxes laid in an undignified pile near the front door with an overflowing trash bin as its neighbour, bones and fish guts attracting a horde of flies.

The bell jingled, alerting the shopkeeper who was busy wiping the counter with a stained dish cloth as Eric entered the shop.

“ Hey, buddy. Store’s closed. If you have an order, you’ll have to pick it up tomorrow.“ The fishmonger slapped his hand on the counter loudly to catch his attention. Eric ignored it, continuing to parse throughout the store, stopping to look at the rows of redfish and perch that were on display on beds of ice. “ You right in the head, man? If you don’t leave here now, I’m going to have to call the cops on you.”

Eric turned around and lowered his shades to take a better look. He took a look at the plastic name tag on his apron, with “Barry” written in flowery cursive.

“ So, Barry.....” Eric drawled as he walked closer towards Barry who was shrinking with each step he took. “ Would you believe me if I said this was a surprise inspection?”

Barry’s right shoulder shifted, warily reaching his left hand somewhere under the counter. He signed. It always seemed how things always seemed to end in his line of business.

“ Damn. That’s a shame.”

In one swift practiced motion, Barry pulled out the Mossenberg from underneath the register, barrel swiveling towards him. Were he dealing with any common human, the fishmonger would have put him in the morgue by now. Unfortunately for him, dhampir reflexes meant that the shopkeeper was moving like molasses. Eric shot his hand forward towards where Barry gripped the shotgun by the stock and jammed his thumb between the trigger and the index finger. The barrel was aimed at Eric’s forehead but all the fishmonger could feel was his index finger pushing down on the trigger uselessly. Eric ripped itout of the fishmonger’s hand and tossed it away, sending it clattering to the floor. The fishmonger’s face was now paper-white, his body frozen like a statue and paralyzed in fear.

“ I- I - have my rights! I don't know - “

“ Don’t say another word.” Eric lifted the collar of the butcher’s smock upwards to reveal his neck. It was thick, succulent with flowing, rich blood that just begged to be - Eric paused and shook his head as he mustered his concentration, turning his neck to the other side. His nostrils flared in disgust when he saw a cherry-red brand on his collarbone.

“ Now, listen here and listen good, familiar.” He hissed with contempt, the tips of his canines reflected in the fishmonger’s eyes. “ You’re going to walk out of this shop and call emergency services 30 minutes from now. If you dare call the police after I let you go, I will take this shotgun and ram it so far up your ass that you’ll go through puberty again, do I make myself clear?”

“ I had no - you can’t - They’ll hunt me down.” The fishmonger blubbered, eyes fidgeting anxiously. “ They’ll kill me. My master - URK!”

His speech stopped mid-way courtesy of a steel vice grip around his throat . The vampire slayer lifted him up a inch of the ground, his feet dangling uselessly in the air.

“ Only thing you gotta worry ‘bout is me hunting your sorry ass down.” He continued on, impassive to how Barry’s face was slowly becoming more red by the second. “ Now, you promise to not associate yourself with any unholy heathens from now on?”

“ Urgh.”

“ You promise to not seek out immortality through immoral means?”

“ Urghuh.”

“ You promise to pray to your lord and savior, Jesus Christ?”

“ Urgh?”

“ Nah, I’m just shitting you with the last one.” The fishmonger was then unceremoniously dropped to the ground. As he laid on the ground, heaving for precious air, Eric craned his neck down towards him and looked at him as if he were an insect.

“Now, scram. I’ve got work to do. ”
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