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Arkham, MA

The helicopter set down down on the roof of what was once the Miskatonic University building, but was now the headquarters of SHADE. The gothic flourishes that had adorned the building were preserved during its rebuilding into the most technologically advanced paranormal research facility in the world. Gargoyles guarded each floor, each more grotesque than the next, though Red wouldn’t tell the living ones that. Intricate stone work covered the outside of the building, giving it a castle-like look. But it wasn’t foreboding. No, the look just fit here. Arkham was a place where the paranormal was at home, and the SHADE building was like a beacon drawing goodnatured entities here.

SHADE, and the BPRD before them, had designated Arkham as a safe zone for nonviolent or benevolent paranormal entities. As long as they provided a service to the town, they were welcome here. In turn, the organization protected them from sloppy independent hunters or evil spirits that may have wanted to do them harm. It worked out all around, and thanks to the treaties Arkham was the world’s hub of paranormal knowledge, but legitimate and black market.

Of course, it had been that way for quite a while. Arkham sat on a hotspot of mystical energy. Professor Broom and the BPRD founders believed it was a nexus point of dimensions that caused it to be a spring of occult activity. Dangerous and deadly experiments were the norm for the school and the surrounding areas. It led to the closure of the university, as well as the near desertion of the community. The BPRD came in and reigned things in, but there was still a sinister undercurrent that could bubble up without their constant supervision.

Hellboy stepped out of the chopper with Liz and breathed in the Northeastern air, “Home scary home, Liz.”

“Heads up,” she warned. “Manning.”

Red sighed as he saw SHADE director Tom Manning waddle towards them in a huff. Out of all the human race, Manning was probably the least notable among them. He was balding, but not bald. He was neither thing nor fat, just a sort of pudgy ball of dough that lacked either defining characteristic. He was a pencil pusher and personnel manager who just fell into the job with SHADE. SHIELD was weird. Hellboy knew this going in. They weren’t going to give command to him or one of the other gifted agents. It would have to go to a normie. He understood that. The problem with SHADE was most normies were weirded out by it. Aliens or superpowers they understood. They could see them. Interdimensional insanity gods, hellbeasts, and poltergiests were different. These reminded humans they were mortal, and that their time on this plane of existence was short. Due to that, SHADE nearly always got the short end of the stick when it came to getting a director.

“Well, well,” he smiled and patted Hellboy on the shoulder, “I hear we really busted some heads. Not too much of a problem, I hope.”

Manning was all smiles now, but Hellboy knew the man didn’t care for him at all. The ironic thing about SWORD, SHADE, and SHIELD was the generally didn’t trust the superpowered agents that worked underneath them. More often than not, the agencies kept them around to keep tabs on them rather than to consider them real teammates. Tom put on a good face, but Red knew the truth. The other agents, the ones that went out on missions, knew and respected Hellboy, and he in turn respected them. Hell, he considered some of them friends.

But management was never your friend.

“No problem,” Red shrugged. “Some creep stumbled onto some dream powers. I used one of his targets as bait, pulled him out into our world, and Liz turned him into creep soup.”

“Lit him up like the Fourth of July,” Liz shrugged.

“Great! Abe mentioned something about you thinking this could be part of something bigger?”

Hellboy muttered a curse under his breath. Abe never could keep stuff to himself. The demon had hoped to keep his suspicions from Manning as long as he possibly could. Stuff like “something bigger” or “a larger threat” always sent the higher ups into a tizzy. Red wanted to make sure his suspicions were legitimate before he brought them forward.

He rubbed the back of his neck with his massive red hand, “Yea. Just a theory right now. I’m gonna look into it and get back to you. But first, I could use a beer.”

“Right, sure, I’d say you’ve earned some R&R,” Manning smiled as Red walked away from him, not paying him any mind.

He descended into the hallways of SHADE headquarters, which was nearly always a madhouse. Three ghosts ran down the hall and right through him, chilling him to the bone. Further down the hall he could see a group of human agents attempt to control a slithering mass of tentacles. One of them was being flailed about in the air while others shocked the creature with prongs. Hellboy strolled past and threw a punch with the Right Hand of Doom, striking through to the creature’s center, causing it to go limp. He smiled at the agents and kept on his way.

“Well that was certainly helpful,” a calm, melodious voice said from beside Red. He turned to find Abe Sapien heading towards him. Abe was taller than Hellboy, but skinny as a pole. He was streamlined for travel through water, and his gills and green-blue skin shimmered in the LED lights that lined the hall. “How was your trip?”

“Good. Why’d you tell Manning about my hunch?”

“Well, he is my commanding officer,” Abe fumbled over his words. “Isn’t that what we’re supposed to do with information?”

“Not when he’s going to be a hawk about it now!” Red shook his head. “Come on, I need a beer.”

**********


The Hanged Man

“Ahhhhh,” Hellboy downed the amber liquid, wiped his mouth, and put his glass down on the bar. “Hit me with another one, Igor.”

The Hanged Man was the definition of a dive bar. Uneven stools were saddled up to a bar that had seen better days. A few dark booths with melting candles lined the back wall, and a pinball machine Red insisted on bringing in was the only electric illumination in the place. Everything else was either candle lit or came from the fireplace in the back end which emitted an unnatural green glow from a purple flame. Behind the bar were rows and rows of bottles, each one dustier than the next. Where some bars would have a mirror behind their stock, Igor’s bottles seemed to reach on into infinity. It was a place where the human agents and paranormal citizens of Arkham came to congregate.

It may have been weird, but it was Arkham.

“Sure thing,” the hunchbacked bartender hobbled over and scooped up the glass to pour another ale. Not only was he one hell of a bartender, but Igor had his ear to the ground. He always knew what was going on around town, and more often than not picked up a clue here or there. “So this Krueger guy was a real piece of work.”

“Wacko thought he could get in my head. Me!” Red laughed and took a sip of the fresh beer.

“But he was powerful?” a gruff voice to Hellboy’s left asked. There sat the half decayed visage of Frankenstein’s Monster, or Frank for short. His purplish grey skin was taught against his misshapen skull, the bolts sticking awkwardly out of his neck. Frank was like a big brother to Red, if he was being honest. He had been around for far longer, and knew more about Earth and the human’s reaction to the paranormal than anyone. Frank mentored Hellboy on how to behave in the field, and how to really fight against their enemies. He was an invaluable member of Red’s Creature Commandos. “More powerful than he should have been?”

“Way more,” the demon nodded. “Ghosts and poltergeists can be nasty, but Krueger was something else.”

“My research says only beings with incredible power can give human spirits dominion over dreams,” Abe added in. “And even then, that’s usually affixed to one person or family. To have free reign over an entire town means-”

“Means something nasty wanted to have some fun,” Red cut his friend off. “Whoever this was, they had to get something out of Springwood, but what?”

“Blood?” Frank suggested. “Could have needed a sacrifice.”

“Murder scenes don’t back that up,” Hellboy shook his head. “Nothing was taken or collected, and nothing ritualistic.”

“Maybe souls?” Igor shrugged.

“Didn’t seem like it,” Red shook his head. “He was just killing them.”

“That’s because it was fear they were collecting!” a booming voice echoed through the bar, startling the patrons and bartender alike. A golden light exploded through the bar from the back of the house, and a shining ankh appeared before them. From inside it stepped the most powerful sorcerer known to Earth.



Doctor Fate had come to Arkham.

“Fear was their desire, as it remains,” the sorcerer warned. “We are under an attack I am only now beginning to understand, Hellboy. Gather your SHADE. We must act quickly.”
Need to read through everything, but might jump in.

(Also, hi Shape)
Terribly behind. Hellboy may be up tonight. Others probably Wednesday
<Snipped quote by BlackSam3091>

Guys, look what I found in a few seconds.


Google is our friend.

Also, I'm drunk, so no posting tonight. Tomorrow tho. Tomorrow there shall be posting
Expect another Hellboy post, as well as Nomad and (depending on approval) Lex posts this weekend. Need to get moving on my Hellboy arc and explain what was really going on in Springwood.


Steam sprayed into Hellboy’s face as he wandered carefully through the boiler room from hell, all the time Freddy’s maniacal laugh echoed around him. So far the fiend wasn’t attacking and seemed content on taunting the demon. That told Hellboy that the man was a freaking moron. Red wasn’t the teenagers and kids Krueger was used to tormenting. He was a goddamned demon. He wasn’t scared of simple mind games. He ate cretins like Freddy Krueger for breakfast, and the dream slasher would discover that soon enough. He had tried to use Red’s father and friends against him. That wasn’t something that could slide.

“I can taste your fear, Hellboy,” Krueger cackled. “It’s like seasoning for the kill.”

“Must be your breath backing up, Fred,” Hellboy chuckled. “Only thing I’m scared of is catching a view of that jacked up face of yours.”

“You wound me, demon,” Freddy mocked emotional pain. “Let me return the favor!”

Five pipes exploded off the wall, spraying a torrent of heated gas at Hellboy. The rusted iron of the pipes twisted and groaned, forming Krueger’s gloved hand as they swiped towards the paranormal investigator. Red slid out of the way, but not before the blades sliced across his jacked, ripping the old leather, “This was my favorite jacket! If that happened in the real world, I’m gonna hurt you more than I thought.”

“I’d like to see you try, child,” a familiar voice said behind him. He spun around to find Rasputin staring back. The Russian mystic smiled grotesquely at the demon, making Hellboy’s blood boil. He knew it was another one of Freddy’s disguises, but Rasputin’s visage was something he was never comfortable seeing. It was him that brought Hellboy to Earth. He tried to bring about the end of the world using Red’s right hand. But worst of all he killed Professor Broom. “Surprised to see me.”

“Krueger,” Hellboy snarled, “shut the hell up.”

He reared up with his massive, stone right hand and threw the hardest punch he could at the dream powered villain. It connected, snapping the impostor Rasputin’s head back violently. As the bastard flew through the air he turned back into the form of Freddy Krueger. He slammed against the back of the boiler room before collapsing into a heap. Hellboy leapt towards him, slamming his gigantic fist down on top of him. Red grabbed the throat of his opponent and raised him up, “See, I don’t have training like a lot of those other heroes around Earth. Never needed it. Because I know I can kick the shit out of any dumbass who thinks they have the balls to take over this realm or that. All you creeps are the same. You think you have what it takes. Then I introduce your face to my fist and you go crawling back into the hole you came from. And that’s only if I don’t manage to kill you first.”

Krueger attempted to squirrel his way out of Hellboy’s grip, but he couldn’t. The Right Hand of Doom was too powerful, even for the slasher of nightmares. Still, he was defiant in his defeat, “You think we’re all the same? I’m just the beginning, Hellboy. One of many. Things are in motion that none of you are aware of. And all these innocents you swear to protect? They’re going to drown in insanity and fear.”

“Yea, well, you can watch from hell you jackass,” Hellboy said as the two of them were ripped from the dream world. When they emerged into the shack, Hellboy found it already engulfed in white hot flames. The old, rotted wood crackled like lightning as the fire ripped through it. Krueger clawed desperately at the stone hand that gripped him tightly, sparks flying as metal met rock and mixed with the inferno. Hellboy looked deep into his eyes as the terror gripped Freddy, “Feel that fear? The kind of fear you reveled in when you carved up all those kids? Just like them it’s going to be the last thing you experience. And I’m going to watch every second of it.”

Freddy continued to squirm as the fire ran up his legs and arms before engulfing his entire body. Hellboy’s hand kept him from escaping, and next to the demon stood Liz, fully covered in the same fire that was melting Krueger away before their eyes. As his skin and muscles began to drop off him, Freddy exploded into a ball of magical energy, before his shadowy spirit was sucked into a portal with his final scream following close behind.

“Well that was an interesting one,” Liz said, unimpressed.

Hellboy stepped out of the shack and took a cigar out of his singed pocket, lighting it on the burning shack. He took a few puffs and looked down to find his trench coat shredded from his encounter in the dream world. Hellboy cursed, “Son of a bitch. I should have made him suffer a lot more.”

“Yea, if only we could have taken turns kicking him in the crotch,” Liz agreed. “What he did to these kids...he definitely deserved worse.”

“Speaking of kids, where’s Nancy?” Hellboy asked as Liz motioned over to the right. There, at the edge of the illuminating caused by the burning shack, the silhouette of Nancy Thompson stood out like a sore thumb.

“You know that’s bad for you, right?” she made a motion to the cigar as he sauntered over.

“Kid, I just walked out of a burning building without a scratch,” he chuckled after a drag. “This is the least of my worries.”

Nancy hugged herself and rubbed her shoulders, “He’s gone, right?”

“Spirits are never really gone,” Hellboy smiled warmly and tried to explain. “But he’s been banished to somewhere he can’t get out of easily. It’ll take him a lot of time to get out. You won’t have to worry about him as long as you live.”

“Good,” she said defiantly. “I hope wherever he is, he’s suffering.”

“Kid, he’s got someone shoving red hot pokers where the sun don’t shine as we speak,” Red winked at Nancy.

“Wish it was me,” she snarled.

Hellboy liked the girl. She was a true badass. Reminded him a lot of Liz, if he was telling the truth. He patted her on the shoulder, nearly knocking her over from his strength, “You did good, though. You should come work for us in a few years.”

“Do I get one of those?” she motioned to The Samaritan.

“Only I get one of these,” he nodded. “But you’d get one appropriate to your size. And you’d get to take out creeps like Krueger.”

“Yea,” Nancy smiled. “I think I’ll look into that.”

Red saw the SHADE truck that transports him pulling up to the scene, and he walked towards it. Before being out of earshot, he called to the teen, “You do that. In the meantime, I’ll take care of the things that go bump in the night.”
@HenryJonesJr

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Nah, nah I kid, I kid. I'm in the middle of finishing some paperwork up but when I have a second I'll look it over.
The one thing I will say I'm anticipating, is if we ever get around to 2008.



Oh yea. Imma campaign the hell out of this game!
<Snipped quote by HenryJonesJr>

The Doctor is a key component to time travel or even Booster Gold. It doesn't seem so far fetched to have the Enterprise turn up in space, they just had a cross over with Green Lantern even. With the right CS all of your above points could apply to them as well.


Sure. With far more jumps in logic and smudging of the rules, the same could be applied. I just don't see logic jumps or rules smudging with the Transformers
Well, Gundam and Star Trek don't take place on a present day earth, so they're out. Don't see the problem with The Doctor eithed. I dunno. I don't see an argument, and they ARE an IDW comic which is a company called out in the first post
I guess I'd have to get an explination on why transforming cars don't fit in with men and women who can create solid green light weapons from a ring or aliens that can toss a tank into orbit
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