The words she heard were impossible, rooting her bare feet to the half-frozen road as she listened, struggling to understand. So many voices. Tongues all at once familiar, and yet beyond her comprehension, shifted until at last she understood. The fading light grew brighter, touching her skin with a warmth that drove away the weariness that she had long ignored. Her tattered shoes lay neatly beside her, pitiable companions that could go no further, and do nothing more than bear silent witness.
Stone’s Throw loomed before her.
She knew nothing of it, save that she saw a place shrouded in strange shadows, mournful shapes that she couldn’t explain, but saw, even in the twilight. The forest shrouded with dying leaves seemed an ill omen, accompanied by warnings whispered on each cold gust of wind. The autumn morning, aglow with the light of the rising sun, met her much diminished, stripped of all warmth and welcome. Driven by her purpose, time faded from her thoughts, the ever-changing voices guided her, beseeching her to continue onwards. Nourished her beyond hunger and the many other pitiful, insistent demands made by her flesh. It was always there. Always with her. With each breath that she took. It was real, more real than world around her. Her own personal kismit.
A name, just a name, but a name was a start.
Marion.
The name meant nothing to her. No memories sprung up from the depths of her awareness and she felt no pang of emotion. But there was power in a name. Power that most had long since forgotten.
No one had said her job would be easy. She knew this and she accepted it.
The ethereal voice comforted her, by word and presence. She believed, but it was a relief to know that she had not lost her way along the journey. Boston was just another memory now, a brief moment of respite before duty roused her. They’d soon forget her. The case had fallen apart without the bodies. No one had any desire to remember. She was a problem, an inconvenience that all desired to bury before the flurries of the first winter snow arrived. To do anything else, meant that they might stumble upon the truth, the truth that horrors resided amongst them, that the world was not, and had never been, as they perceived it.
She forgave them. The truth of their own inadequacies, the weakness that adorned them, basking them in the soft glow of mundane sin, would permit them little else.
Jordan closed her eyes, her arms falling to her sides, palms open to the sky. The voice overwhelmed her, hidden meaning ringing like a great bell, booming louder than any noise around her, each thundering strike so perfect, so pure that it pained her to hear them.
ALL POINTS BULLETIN (APB) Agency: Boston Police Department – Major Crimes Division Date/Time Issued: 21:14 hrs, Tuesday, March 18 Case # BPD-MCD-24-7714 Status: ACTIVE | HIGH PRIORITY SUBJECT: Armed and Dangerous – Wanted for Questioning in Assault, Homicide, Use of a Deadly Weapon, and Resisting Arrest NAME: Unknown SEX: Female AGE: Estimated mid–20s ETHNICITY: Unknown SKIN COLOR: Light brown HEIGHT: approx. 5'7" BUILD: Slender, athletic HAIR: Black, straight, shoulder-length EYES: Dark brown DISTINGUISHING FEATURES: None
LAST KNOWN CLOTHING:
Black hoodie
Blue jeans
Black sneakers
LAST KNOWN LOCATION: Roxbury — on Dudley Street, close to Nubian Square. The suspect fled on foot eastbound toward the rail corridor after responding officers attempted to detain her.
WEAPONS:
Sword
THREAT ASSESSMENT: Armed and highly dangerous. Suspect has attacked multiple civilians and officers. Exercise extreme caution; do not approach alone.
DIRECTIVES: All units maintain heightened awareness. Report sightings immediately to Command Channel 7. Civilians should avoid the South Boston Waterfront area and report any suspicious activity to 911. SWAT is on route.
CONTACT: Detective Sarah McKinley – Major Crimes Division Secure Line: 617-555-0198 Email: sarah.mckinley@bpd.gov
Officer Kolawski rubbed his face wearily, wishing that he hadn’t let his wife convince him to quit smoking, again. He was forty seven. His back hurt. His knees hurt. His good knee hurt almost as much as his bad knee. The knee a two hundred fifty pound perp had landed on back in 2007. He’d PT-ed away the limp, but it still clicked every other step he took. Eight more years. Eight more years he told himself. Then he’d hang it up, sell his house, and move to Florida with his old lady. Being a cop was a family vocation. His father had been a cop. His grandfather had been a cop. A Kolawski had been a cop for as long as there had been a Kolawski in Boston. That’s what they said at least. Most days he liked the job. He had the touch, the gift of gab, that ability to talk down a perp waving a gun around that meant other cops saw him as some sort of hero. But there were days, days like this where all 29 years of being a beat cop hit him like a pile of bricks. Pain punched into his chest, spreading out towards his arm, and he felt like he couldn’t breathe.
The coffee sitting on the dashboard steamed. But he couldn’t drink it, he knew if he tried he’d choke on it. The adrenaline had barely faded, and for all that he tried, his legs shook uncontrollably, tapping out some slow beat. He cast a quick look in the rear view mirror, the finger tips of his right hand brushing over the Glock holstered at his right hip.
She smiled back at him. She’d watched him since they’d tossed her in the back of the cruiser. Five hours. Five hours they’d been after her. Chasing every purported sighting. Running her down like some rabid dog. McDonnell and Rodriguez weren't too banged, thank god. A broken shoulder, a broken nose, two bruised egos, not bad considering how things had gone down. It had taken an entire squad to take her down. She was tough, tough in a way that didn’t make sense. They hadn’t bothered to clean the blood off of her face. Her right eye was swollen shut, Solomon had clocked her with his collapsible baton. The tasers hadn’t done much, she’d kept fighting. Kicking and screaming as they piled on top of her trying to get the cuffs on.
She didn't seem to care, didn't seem bothered by it was once it was all over over. As if wasn't personal, which it wasn't. They kicked the shit out of her, after they cuffed her. You hit a cop, you send one to the hospital, then you got worked over. And they worked her over alright, beat her enough to make the District proud. There wasn't any way to avoid it, no chance to stop it. They had a reputation to maintain. They weren't patrolling Beacon Hill. No, Roxbury was a whole different ball game. Nothing any of them could do about it. Rules were rules, she'd left them with no choice. He didn't like it, of course, but they couldn't let it go. The EMTs had grimaced, he could tell they weren't happy, but they didn't say anything. They knew better. They knew they just had to sign the report saying that she fell, that she rolled out of the cruiser trying to get away, that she tripped on the curb and fell, still cuffed, face first into the pavement.
He didn't feel bad for her.
Three bodies. Some poor schmucks enjoying their drinks in a grimy dive bar. Run through with a sword, a fucking sword. For no reason, for no reason at all. She didn’t know. She hadn’t even talked to them. She’d just walked up to them and started swinging. What a world. Just the wrong place, at the wrong fucking time. He’d seen the blood, on the cheap imported tiles, on the table, all over the chairs, and even on the ceiling. It always amazed him how much a person could bleed. Campbell, his partner, fresh out of the academy, had vomited as he scraped pieces of skin and chips of bone off his shoes. No one laughed. Two of their own had been hurt. And they wanted revenge.
Fucking psycho.
“You good back there?” He finally said, gritting his teeth, trying to summon what little sympathy he could, trying to forget what she’d done.
“I’m fine, Officer Kolawski, thank you.”
“What?”
“That’s your name, isn’t it?”
“How the fuck do you know that?’
She didn’t answer, looking out the driver’s side window, acting as if she didn’t hear him, “I don’t suppose you can loosen these cuffs?”
“Listen, lady, you’re lucky you’re still breathing, after what you did to those men, after you tried to kill those officers.”
“Those were not men. And I’m sorry about your friends, I wasn’t trying to hurt them.”
“You weren’t trying to hurt them?” Kolawski blinked, his mouth agape. He shifted in his seat so he could meet her eyes, “If you weren’t trying to hurt them then you got one hell of—”
He’d only just gotten started on welding her a new asshole when the rookie slammed his fist against the plexiglass separating them from the perp. The rookie's eyes were bulging, spittle leaping off of his lips, he was scared and angry. Running on the same fading fumes that Kolawski was.
“Shut the fuck up! Just shut the fuck up. You think this is some fucking joke? You think anyone buys your crazy act?”
“I’m not crazy,” the woman replied, face twisting in disgust, reacting for the first time, as if she actually cared, looking like he’d slapped her in her face, “I’m not. I’m not crazy.”
“Yeah, whatever, tell that to the judge.”
“I’m not the one you should be worried about, Officer Campbell. We’re on the same side.”
“Yeah, how the fuck do you figure?”
“We’re on the side of good, of course.”
“Great, then why don’t you tell us where you stashed the sword? Save the techs the trouble of looking for it. Maybe we’ll find a nice quiet cell for you.”
“I’m afraid that won’t be possible.”
“Why not?”
“Because it’s not theirs. I’m not giving it to them. Besides, there’s not much use for a Flaming sword any longer is there? I don’t need to wear my Divine armor here. I can tell. You’re good people, you’re good police. I'm safe here.”
Fingers rapped against his window and Kolawski jumped in his seat, before he realized it was another office, standing next to his patrol car, and nodding towards the window. Muttering some half-remembered words in Polish, Kolawski lowered the window.
“Kolawski, man— listen…” The other cop began.
“Yeah, what is it, Arnold?”
“We got a fucking problem.”
“What do you mean we got a fucking problem?”
“The bodies—”
“They’re gone,” the woman said, smiling from the backseat of the cruiser, holding up her hands towards Kolawski, jingling the chain connecting the cuffs cutting into her wrists, “Now, how about you let me go? I don’t have time for this.”
Stepping out of the elevator, Dr. Young juggled her travel mug of green tea, her messenger bag, and a package that had been accidentally delivered to one of her colleagues. She was late, parking had been horrific, and she made three circuits around the neighborhood before a parking spot opened up in one of the daily lots. She barely made it into the waiting room of her private practice, before two cops stopped her. They didn't smile, just asked for her ID, letting her pass only when they had confirmed her credentials. She huffed, readjusting the items she'd lugged with her, swallowing green tea, as she slinked to the receptionists desk.
From behind a computer screen, her administrative assistant popped out, shooting her an apologetic look, “Dr. Young, you’ve got a patient in your office.”
“Do I? Who scheduled them?”
“Umm— Dr. Singh did. He said you owed him a favor. More importantly, he said this is just the sort of case you are interested in.”
“I see, well, what have you got for me, Angela?
“Not much, I’m afraid, the patient hasn’t said much. But you heard about that attack last night by the Waterfront? That was her. Can you believe that—”
Dr. Young raised an eyebrow, she expected her staff to show a bit more discretion and professionalism. She shook her head, cutting her admin off, as she walked to her office. Opening the door, she found an unremarkable woman sitting on a couch placed against one of the walls of the modest office. The cuffs were impossible to miss. Shackles bound her wrists close to her waist, and a chain connected to legcuffs on her ankles. The young woman’s face was a mess, a collection of stitches, gauze, and purple-yellow bruises that made her sick.
The officer sitting across from her simply shrugged, “Cuffs stay on, I stay here.”
“Alright,” Dr. Young stammered, less out of fear, than a growing interest.
Sitting down adjacent to the battered woman, she pulled out a moleskin notebook from her bag, clicking her pen and scribbling some quick notes. Pivoting towards the prisoner, she smiled, “Would you mind answering some questions?”
“Will it get me out of here faster?”
“It might, strictly speaking, it’s not really my call, my job is simply to provide the courts with an assessment of your current psychiatric condition.
“I’m fine.”
“Good, very good, but let’s start with some basics. What’s your name?”
“I’m not sure,” the woman said, sounding sincere, but not particularly concerned, “Jordan sounds good. I like it, let’s go with that. I’m Jordan.”
“You’re not sure?”
“Yes, it’s hard to remember.”
“That’s ok, and how old are you Jordan?”
“Twenty three? Twenty five. I’m not really sure. There are so many details. There’s so much time to remember, you know? To be honest, it’s all been a bit fuzzy since I came back.”
“I see, you came back, so you’re from Boston then? Do you have any family here that we could—”
“No, I’m not from here. At least, I don’t think so.”
“Ok, then what do you mean? You said you came back?
“Of course, I’ve been here before. Well, maybe not here, not exactly. I was dead. I’m not sure how long. But now I’m back.”
“You were dead?” Dr. Young asked, keeping her features steady, her thoughts coolly detached. Outrageous claims were not novel in her line of work. There were three separate “God with a capital G” that she was already treating.
“That’s what they told me.”
“Who’s they?”
“I don’t know. I haven’t had a chance to ask them. I don’t think we’re supposed to talk about them. Not yet.”
Dr. Young shifted in her chair, resting her arm on her leg, tapping the pen against her lips as she thought, “That’s fine, we can revisit that later, I want you to be comfortable. If you’re not from here, then what brings you to Boston?”
“Oh, that’s easy, I’m here to Smite all the enemies of good, the abominations that threaten the lives of the innocent. I am…I am the sword.”
“I’m sorry, what?”
The woman looked around, as if trying to make sure no one was listening. She grinned, offering a smile that suggested a shared understanding of some great mystery. Leaning in, she somehow managed to reach with her hands, clasping Dr. Young’s hands in between her own. Her voice came in a low whisper, ”The Edge Of The Other Side Is Time.”
Dr. Young flinched as the cop jumped to his feet, shoving the patient back, away from the doctor as he tapped the yellow-black taser he carried.
Dr. Young raised her hands placatingly, “Woah, woah, it’s alright, it’s ok, we’re fine. Right, Jordan? You’re not going to do that again? Are you?”
“No.”
Smoothing down her skirt, Dr. Young pretended to look at her notes, “Do you know what that means?”
“Do you know what that means?”
“No,” the woman said frowning, “I was hoping you would.”
“It sounds like a riddle.”
“Shit, I never liked riddles. I prefer solving problems directly.”
“Problems? Is that what happened last night? You ran into a problem?”
“YES! I knew you’d understand.”
“Ah, of course. But perhaps you can elaborate?”
“My superiors told me where they were. What those men really were. Beneath the masks they wore. It had to be done.”
“What had to be done?”
The woman crossed her arms, “We all know.”
“Did they…your superiors, I mean, did they make you do it?”
“Not exactly, but orders are orders. Can’t exactly tell them no, can I?”
“Who?”
“My boss?”
“Do you know who they are? Can you tell me something about them.”
“No, look, I told you,I already told you,” the woman said, growing agitated, “I’m not supposed to tell you about them. They’re not here. They’re somewhere else. I don’t know where, I just know it’s somewhere beyond this place.”
“Are you saying you are taking orders sent to you by some Boss from Beyond?”
“Yes, that sounds about right.”
They called him the Swede. Had called him that for at least a decade, ignoring that he had never left Boston, and that his family had come across on a steamer from Hamburg.
He was a frequent flier. He’d been in and out of the hospital since the early 90s. It felt like home. Sometimes he was crazy, when he forgot the meds or decided to stop taking them. But often he just wanted some food and a warm bed. When he felt the hunger growing, when the weather turned against him, he’d go to some bus stop and start screaming. Schizophrenia his files said, diagnosed decades earlier, a hopeless case everyone said. His parents had wept, mourning him as dead when they were told. He didn’t care, his brother hadn’t abandoned him, Karl still showed up when they called him, still held his hand as they tried to cajole him into taking his meds. They couldn’t see. Maybe they didn’t want to. The monsters lurking in the shadows. The horrors that had taken up residence in the sewers. But he knew. He always knew, he knew what he’d seen.
The newcomer was strange. Strange even for the involuntary psych ward. She seemed almost normal. If you didn't ask her the right questions. If you didn't listen. He thought she might have been another suicide. Some young thing unprepared for the cruelty of the world. Some addict burning through her soul. But then he’d heard the stories. She’d killed three men, they said, with a sword. But somehow they couldn’t prove it. It didn’t make any sense, he’d thought, not that anyone was asking him. Not that anyone really cared.
Still, he couldn’t square the rumors he’d heard with the woman who sat quietly coloring at the end of the table.
“Jordan,” he began, coughing to get her attention.
“Stefan?” She said, brown eyes looking up from her art. He could feel her gaze move over him, flickering flames that he swore singed his hair, and left his skin tingling from the warmth.
“The orderly said you did something. They said you helped save Thomas.”
“It wasn’t his time.”
“I don’t think he agreed, considering he tried to turn his artery into a canal.”
“He was in distress. This place does not agree with him.”
“Doesn’t agree with a lot of people, I suppose.”
“So it seems.”
“What’d you do to him? Sounded like he was a goner before you showed up?”
“I blessed him. I healed his wounds with my hands. To Lay On Hands is no small matter, but to save a life, one must take some chances.”
“This about your mission?”
“Of course, Stefan, that’s why I’m here. That’s why they sent me back.”
The Swede didn’t say anything right away. He simply waited, stroking his unkempt beard, scratching at the fleas he imagined were gnawing at his flesh and drinking his blood. Rising slowly, carefully, as if he was facing some spotted leopard, he picked up his chair, and moved it closer to her.
“Look, Jordan, I’m crazy. I know that. I’m as crazy as they come. But do you have any idea how crazy you sound right now? When you talk like that? You’re what, on a mission from God?”
“Stefan, please. You know I’m not crazy. You’ve seen them too, the creatures people pretend aren't real.”
“Sure, I’ve seen things. But you’re not going to get out of here if you keep saying shit like that. They’re just gonna give you more meds. Don’t you see how they look at you? Dr. Young is convinced you are knee-deep in psychotic break.”
“I’m just waiting. When the time comes, I'll walk right through those doors," she said gesturing at the series of locked, ID-keyed doors that kept the patients from leaving.
“Waiting, what are you waiting for?”
“For my ride.”
“Your ride to where?”
“Stone’s Throw," Jordan said, pointing to the West. "That’s where I need to go next. That’s where I’m needed. There’s someone I have to find. One of the other hunters has a crucial role to play in events to come. I must prepare them for their role, and protect them at any cost.”
Name: Jordan Age: 25 Pronouns: She/Her Hunter Type: The Divine Look: • Marked by Divinity (looks remarkably unremarkable, possessing an ambiguous ethnicity, and a face that looks like the most recent result of long running project to create some mythical average face) • Placid eyes (there’s something very calming about her eyes) • Casual Clothes (wears unassuming clothes that help her avoid notice )
Divine special: When you spend a point of Luck, you get word your Mission requires something difficult that must be done. By you. Urgently
Gear: Flaming sword (3-harm hand fire holy) Divine armour (1-armour holy)
Mission: One of the other hunters has a crucial role to play in events to come. You must prepare them for their role, and protect them at any cost.
Unique Moves: Boss from Beyond: At the beginning of each mystery, roll +Weird. On a 10+, your Superiors ask you to do something simple. On a 7-9, they ask you to do something complicated or difficult. In either case, you get to ask them one of the questions from the investigate a mystery move right now. On amiss, you are required to do something terrible. If you do not accomplish what they’ve ordered, you cannot use this move again until you have made up for your failure.
Smite: Your body and divine weapon always count as a weakness against the monsters you fight. Your unarmed attacks are 2-harm intimate hand messy.
Lay On Hands: Your touch can heal injury and disease. When you lay your hands on someone hurt, roll +Cool. On a 10+, heal 2 harm or an illness, plus they’re stabilized. On a 7-9, you can heal the harm or illness as on a 10+, but you take it into yourself. On a miss, your aura causes them extra harm.
Following some other fun ideas, here's my sheet. Hopefully the slightly different approach proves fruitful, but if not, I had fun in the attempt.
I, I am the sword I am the word of the Lord
I, I am the sword I bring the fear of the Lord
I, I am the sword I do the work of the Lord
ALL POINTS BULLETIN (APB) Agency: Boston Police Department – Major Crimes Division Date/Time Issued: 21:14 hrs, Tuesday, March 18 Case # BPD-MCD-24-7714 Status: ACTIVE | HIGH PRIORITY SUBJECT: Armed and Dangerous – Wanted for Questioning in Assault, Homicide, Use of a Deadly Weapon, and Resisting Arrest NAME: Unknown SEX: Female AGE: Estimated mid–20s ETHNICITY: Unknown SKIN COLOR: Light brown HEIGHT: approx. 5'7" BUILD: Slender, athletic HAIR: Black, straight, shoulder-length EYES: Dark brown DISTINGUISHING FEATURES: None
LAST KNOWN CLOTHING:
Black hoodie
Blue jeans
Black sneakers
LAST KNOWN LOCATION: Roxbury — on Dudley Street, close to Nubian Square. The suspect fled on foot eastbound toward the rail corridor after responding officers attempted to detain her.
WEAPONS:
Sword
THREAT ASSESSMENT: Armed and highly dangerous. Suspect has attacked multiple civilians and officers. Exercise extreme caution; do not approach alone.
DIRECTIVES: All units maintain heightened awareness. Report sightings immediately to Command Channel 7. Civilians should avoid the South Boston Waterfront area and report any suspicious activity to 911. SWAT is on route.
CONTACT: Detective Sarah McKinley – Major Crimes Division Secure Line: 617-555-0198 Email: sarah.mckinley@bpd.gov
Officer Kolawski rubbed his face wearily, wishing that he hadn’t let his wife convince him to quit smoking, again. He was forty seven. His back hurt. His knees hurt. His good knee hurt almost as much as his bad knee. The knee a two hundred fifty pound perp had landed on back in 2007. He’d PT-ed away the limp, but it still clicked every other step he took. Eight more years. Eight more years he told himself. Then he’d hang it up, sell his house, and move to Florida with his old lady. Being a cop was a family vocation. His father had been a cop. His grandfather had been a cop. A Kolawski had been a cop for as long as there had been a Kolawski in Boston. That’s what they said at least. Most days he liked the job. He had the touch, the gift of gab, that ability to talk down a perp waving a gun around that meant other cops saw him as some sort of hero. But there were days, days like this where all 29 years of being a beat cop hit him like a pile of bricks. Pain punched into his chest, spreading out towards his arm, and he felt like he couldn’t breathe.
The coffee sitting on the dashboard steamed. But he couldn’t drink it, he knew if he tried he’d choke on it. The adrenaline had barely faded, and for all that he tried, his legs shook uncontrollably, tapping out some slow beat. He cast a quick look in the rear view mirror, the finger tips of his right hand brushing over the Glock holstered at his right hip.
She smiled back at him. She’d watched him since they’d tossed her in the back of the cruiser. Five hours. Five hours they’d been after her. Chasing every purported sighting. Running her down like some rabid dog. McDonnell and Rodriguez weren't too banged, thank god. A broken shoulder, a broken nose, two bruised egos, not bad considering how things had gone down. It had taken an entire squad to take her down. She was tough, tough in a way that didn’t make sense. They hadn’t bothered to clean the blood off of her face. Her right eye was swollen shut, Solomon had clocked her with his collapsible baton. The tasers hadn’t done much, she’d kept fighting. Kicking and screaming as they piled on top of her trying to get the cuffs on.
She didn't seem to care, didn't seem bothered by it was once it was all over over. As if wasn't personal, which it wasn't. They kicked the shit out of her, after they cuffed her. You hit a cop, you send one to the hospital, then you got worked over. And they worked her over alright, beat her enough to make the District proud. There wasn't any way to avoid it, no chance to stop it. They had a reputation to maintain. They weren't patrolling Beacon Hill. No, Roxbury was a whole different ball game. Nothing any of them could do about it. Rules were rules, she'd left them with no choice. He didn't like it, of course, but they couldn't let it go. The EMTs had grimaced, he could tell they weren't happy, but they didn't say anything. They knew better. They knew they just had to sign the report saying that she fell, that she rolled out of the cruiser trying to get away, that she tripped on the curb and fell, still cuffed, face first into the pavement.
He didn't feel bad for her.
Three bodies. Some poor schmucks enjoying their drinks in a grimy dive bar. Run through with a sword, a fucking sword. For no reason, for no reason at all. She didn’t know. She hadn’t even talked to them. She’d just walked up to them and started swinging. What a world. Just the wrong place, at the wrong fucking time. He’d seen the blood, on the cheap imported tiles, on the table, all over the chairs, and even on the ceiling. It always amazed him how much a person could bleed. Campbell, his partner, fresh out of the academy, had vomited as he scraped pieces of skin and chips of bone off his shoes. No one laughed. Two of their own had been hurt. And they wanted revenge.
Fucking psycho.
“You good back there?” He finally said, gritting his teeth, trying to summon what little sympathy he could, trying to forget what she’d done.
“I’m fine, Officer Kolawski, thank you.”
“What?”
“That’s your name, isn’t it?”
“How the fuck do you know that?’
She didn’t answer, looking out the driver’s side window, acting as if she didn’t hear him, “I don’t suppose you can loosen these cuffs?”
“Listen, lady, you’re lucky you’re still breathing, after what you did to those men, after you tried to kill those officers.”
“Those were not men. And I’m sorry about your friends, I wasn’t trying to hurt them.”
“You weren’t trying to hurt them?” Kolawski blinked, his mouth agape. He shifted in his seat so he could meet her eyes, “If you weren’t trying to hurt them then you got one hell of—”
He’d only just gotten started on welding her a new asshole when the rookie slammed his fist against the plexiglass separating them from the perp. The rookie's eyes were bulging, spittle leaping off of his lips, he was scared and angry. Running on the same fading fumes that Kolawski was.
“Shut the fuck up! Just shut the fuck up. You think this is some fucking joke? You think anyone buys your crazy act?”
“I’m not crazy,” the woman replied, face twisting in disgust, reacting for the first time, as if she actually cared, looking like he’d slapped her in her face, “I’m not. I’m not crazy.”
“Yeah, whatever, tell that to the judge.”
“I’m not the one you should be worried about, Officer Campbell. We’re on the same side.”
“Yeah, how the fuck do you figure?”
“We’re on the side of good, of course.”
“Great, then why don’t you tell us where you stashed the sword? Save the techs the trouble of looking for it. Maybe we’ll find a nice quiet cell for you.”
“I’m afraid that won’t be possible.”
“Why not?”
“Because it’s not theirs. I’m not giving it to them. Besides, there’s not much use for a Flaming sword any longer is there? I don’t need to wear my Divine armor here. I can tell. You’re good people, you’re good police. I'm safe here.”
Fingers rapped against his window and Kolawski jumped in his seat, before he realized it was another office, standing next to his patrol car, and nodding towards the window. Muttering some half-remembered words in Polish, Kolawski lowered the window.
“Kolawski, man— listen…” The other cop began.
“Yeah, what is it, Arnold?”
“We got a fucking problem.”
“What do you mean we got a fucking problem?”
“The bodies—”
“They’re gone,” the woman said, smiling from the backseat of the cruiser, holding up her hands towards Kolawski, jingling the chain connecting the cuffs cutting into her wrists, “Now, how about you let me go? I don’t have time for this.”
Stepping out of the elevator, Dr. Young juggled her travel mug of green tea, her messenger bag, and a package that had been accidentally delivered to one of her colleagues. She was late, parking had been horrific, and she made three circuits around the neighborhood before a parking spot opened up in one of the daily lots. She barely made it into the waiting room of her private practice, before two cops stopped her. They didn't smile, just asked for her ID, letting her pass only when they had confirmed her credentials. She huffed, readjusting the items she'd lugged with her, swallowing green tea, as she slinked to the receptionists desk.
From behind a computer screen, her administrative assistant popped out, shooting her an apologetic look, “Dr. Young, you’ve got a patient in your office.”
“Do I? Who scheduled them?”
“Umm— Dr. Singh did. He said you owed him a favor. More importantly, he said this is just the sort of case you are interested in.”
“I see, well, what have you got for me, Angela?
“Not much, I’m afraid, the patient hasn’t said much. But you heard about that attack last night by the Waterfront? That was her. Can you believe that—”
Dr. Young raised an eyebrow, she expected her staff to show a bit more discretion and professionalism. She shook her head, cutting her admin off, as she walked to her office. Opening the door, she found an unremarkable woman sitting on a couch placed against one of the walls of the modest office. The cuffs were impossible to miss. Shackles bound her wrists close to her waist, and a chain connected to legcuffs on her ankles. The young woman’s face was a mess, a collection of stitches, gauze, and purple-yellow bruises that made her sick.
The officer sitting across from her simply shrugged, “Cuffs stay on, I stay here.”
“Alright,” Dr. Young stammered, less out of fear, than a growing interest.
Sitting down adjacent to the battered woman, she pulled out a moleskin notebook from her bag, clicking her pen and scribbling some quick notes. Pivoting towards the prisoner, she smiled, “Would you mind answering some questions?”
“Will it get me out of here faster?”
“It might, strictly speaking, it’s not really my call, my job is simply to provide the courts with an assessment of your current psychiatric condition.
“I’m fine.”
“Good, very good, but let’s start with some basics. What’s your name?”
“I’m not sure,” the woman said, sounding sincere, but not particularly concerned, “Jordan sounds good. I like it, let’s go with that. I’m Jordan.”
“You’re not sure?”
“Yes, it’s hard to remember.”
“That’s ok, and how old are you Jordan?”
“Twenty three? Twenty five. I’m not really sure. There are so many details. There’s so much time to remember, you know? To be honest, it’s all been a bit fuzzy since I came back.”
“I see, you came back, so you’re from Boston then? Do you have any family here that we could—”
“No, I’m not from here. At least, I don’t think so.”
“Ok, then what do you mean? You said you came back?
“Of course, I’ve been here before. Well, maybe not here, not exactly. I was dead. I’m not sure how long. But now I’m back.”
“You were dead?” Dr. Young asked, keeping her features steady, her thoughts coolly detached. Outrageous claims were not novel in her line of work. There were three separate “God with a capital G” that she was already treating.
“That’s what they told me.”
“Who’s they?”
“I don’t know. I haven’t had a chance to ask them. I don’t think we’re supposed to talk about them. Not yet.”
Dr. Young shifted in her chair, resting her arm on her leg, tapping the pen against her lips as she thought, “That’s fine, we can revisit that later, I want you to be comfortable. If you’re not from here, then what brings you to Boston?”
“Oh, that’s easy, I’m here to Smite all the enemies of good, the abominations that threaten the lives of the innocent. I am…I am the sword.”
“I’m sorry, what?”
The woman looked around, as if trying to make sure no one was listening. She grinned, offering a smile that suggested a shared understanding of some great mystery. Leaning in, she somehow managed to reach with her hands, clasping Dr. Young’s hands in between her own. Her voice came in a low whisper, ”The Edge Of The Other Side Is Time.”
Dr. Young flinched as the cop jumped to his feet, shoving the patient back, away from the doctor as he tapped the yellow-black taser he carried.
Dr. Young raised her hands placatingly, “Woah, woah, it’s alright, it’s ok, we’re fine. Right, Jordan? You’re not going to do that again? Are you?”
“No.”
Smoothing down her skirt, Dr. Young pretended to look at her notes, “Do you know what that means?”
“Do you know what that means?”
“No,” the woman said frowning, “I was hoping you would.”
“It sounds like a riddle.”
“Shit, I never liked riddles. I prefer solving problems directly.”
“Problems? Is that what happened last night? You ran into a problem?”
“YES! I knew you’d understand.”
“Ah, of course. But perhaps you can elaborate?”
“My superiors told me where they were. What those men really were. Beneath the masks they wore. It had to be done.”
“What had to be done?”
The woman crossed her arms, “We all know.”
“Did they…your superiors, I mean, did they make you do it?”
“Not exactly, but orders are orders. Can’t exactly tell them no, can I?”
“Who?”
“My boss?”
“Do you know who they are? Can you tell me something about them.”
“No, look, I told you,I already told you,” the woman said, growing agitated, “I’m not supposed to tell you about them. They’re not here. They’re somewhere else. I don’t know where, I just know it’s somewhere beyond this place.”
“Are you saying you are taking orders sent to you by some Boss from Beyond?”
“Yes, that sounds about right.”
They called him the Swede. Had called him that for at least a decade, ignoring that he had never left Boston, and that his family had come across on a steamer from Hamburg.
He was a frequent flier. He’d been in and out of the hospital since the early 90s. It felt like home. Sometimes he was crazy, when he forgot the meds or decided to stop taking them. But often he just wanted some food and a warm bed. When he felt the hunger growing, when the weather turned against him, he’d go to some bus stop and start screaming. Schizophrenia his files said, diagnosed decades earlier, a hopeless case everyone said. His parents had wept, mourning him as dead when they were told. He didn’t care, his brother hadn’t abandoned him, Karl still showed up when they called him, still held his hand as they tried to cajole him into taking his meds. They couldn’t see. Maybe they didn’t want to. The monsters lurking in the shadows. The horrors that had taken up residence in the sewers. But he knew. He always knew, he knew what he’d seen.
The newcomer was strange. Strange even for the involuntary psych ward. She seemed almost normal. If you didn't ask her the right questions. If you didn't listen. He thought she might have been another suicide. Some young thing unprepared for the cruelty of the world. Some addict burning through her soul. But then he’d heard the stories. She’d killed three men, they said, with a sword. But somehow they couldn’t prove it. It didn’t make any sense, he’d thought, not that anyone was asking him. Not that anyone really cared.
Still, he couldn’t square the rumors he’d heard with the woman who sat quietly coloring at the end of the table.
“Jordan,” he began, coughing to get her attention.
“Stefan?” She said, brown eyes looking up from her art. He could feel her gaze move over him, flickering flames that he swore singed his hair, and left his skin tingling from the warmth.
“The orderly said you did something. They said you helped save Thomas.”
“It wasn’t his time.”
“I don’t think he agreed, considering he tried to turn his artery into a canal.”
“He was in distress. This place does not agree with him.”
“Doesn’t agree with a lot of people, I suppose.”
“So it seems.”
“What’d you do to him? Sounded like he was a goner before you showed up?”
“I blessed him. I healed his wounds with my hands. To Lay On Hands is no small matter, but to save a life, one must take some chances.”
“This about your mission?”
“Of course, Stefan, that’s why I’m here. That’s why they sent me back.”
The Swede didn’t say anything right away. He simply waited, stroking his unkempt beard, scratching at the fleas he imagined were gnawing at his flesh and drinking his blood. Rising slowly, carefully, as if he was facing some spotted leopard, he picked up his chair, and moved it closer to her.
“Look, Jordan, I’m crazy. I know that. I’m as crazy as they come. But do you have any idea how crazy you sound right now? When you talk like that? You’re what, on a mission from God?”
“Stefan, please. You know I’m not crazy. You’ve seen them too, the creatures people pretend aren't real.”
“Sure, I’ve seen things. But you’re not going to get out of here if you keep saying shit like that. They’re just gonna give you more meds. Don’t you see how they look at you? Dr. Young is convinced you are knee-deep in psychotic break.”
“I’m just waiting. When the time comes, I'll walk right through those doors," she said gesturing at the series of locked, ID-keyed doors that kept the patients from leaving.
“Waiting, what are you waiting for?”
“For my ride.”
“Your ride to where?”
“Stone’s Throw," Jordan said, pointing to the West. "That’s where I need to go next. That’s where I’m needed. There’s someone I have to find. One of the other hunters has a crucial role to play in events to come. I must prepare them for their role, and protect them at any cost.”
Name: Jordan Age: 25 Pronouns: She/Her Hunter Type: The Divine Look: • Marked by Divinity (looks remarkably unremarkable, possessing an ambiguous ethnicity, and a face that looks like the most recent result of long running project to create some mythical average face) • Placid eyes (there’s something very calming about her eyes) • Casual Clothes (wears unassuming clothes that help her avoid notice )
Divine special: When you spend a point of Luck, you get word your Mission requires something difficult that must be done. By you. Urgently
Gear: Flaming sword (3-harm hand fire holy) Divine armour (1-armour holy)
Mission: One of the other hunters has a crucial role to play in events to come. You must prepare them for their role, and protect them at any cost.
Unique Moves: Boss from Beyond: At the beginning of each mystery, roll +Weird. On a 10+, your Superiors ask you to do something simple. On a 7-9, they ask you to do something complicated or difficult. In either case, you get to ask them one of the questions from the investigate a mystery move right now. On amiss, you are required to do something terrible. If you do not accomplish what they’ve ordered, you cannot use this move again until you have made up for your failure.
Smite: Your body and divine weapon always count as a weakness against the monsters you fight. Your unarmed attacks are 2-harm intimate hand messy.
Lay On Hands: Your touch can heal injury and disease. When you lay your hands on someone hurt, roll +Cool. On a 10+, heal 2 harm or an illness, plus they’re stabilized. On a 7-9, you can heal the harm or illness as on a 10+, but you take it into yourself. On a miss, your aura causes them extra harm.
The cash left her hand easily as Teresa exited the cab. The night was spoiled. Ruined by Connie. Wasted by some blood drunk fledglings—the very reason Brace dragged her away from her comfortable haven yet again. Far from things that actually mattered to her. An emptiness tugged at her, the weight of the shotgun she had left in Connie’s beater. She felt weak, naked, like some slithering thing still shedding its skin. Slamming the taxi door shut, she swallowed the curse that darted across her tongue. Anger wouldn’t help, that was always Connie’s mistake, not hers. And he could sort that out on his own.
Makeshift fencing surrounded the camp, bearing strange symbols and signs warning the uninvited and uninitiated. It was clean, organized in ways that suggested a guiding hand, a puppeteer tugging at the strings of the blood filled marionettes that danced with each deft jiggle of the skeletal fingertips that bound them. Teresa didn’t care for most mortals. She held no particular affection for them. She wasn’t interested in their predictable, pointless ways. But Martha was—she’d always been—as long as Teresa had known her. She befriended them. She twisted their senses until they saw just another harmless old lady. It was a good act, useful with the demands of the Beast, for the endless hunger was always swimming, cutting the black waters just beneath the surface of the blackened soul. Teresa’s kind had no such luck, no such talent. The kine could sense something wrong within her. They tasted some invisible malice in the air when she approached them. No matter what she did to assuage them, the threat she posed would stir some hidden instinct within them.
With each step, more of the camp appeared. Tents rose in measured rows, a collection of material and ramshackle engineering. She could hear people talking. Laughing quietly, speaking in low voices as they sat around. But most were, cocooned in their huts of nylon and polyester, stirring occasionally, filling the air with the disgusting sounds of life. Sickness was unavoidable for those that lived on the streets. Stacked on top of one another, they had little choice; they were welcome in very few places. The tourists didn’t want to see them. Even the degenerate gamblers found them depressing. And most of the vampires preferred to feed on healthier humans, victims tasting less of the hard life they lived, of the filth they were forced to crawl through. Animals lingered, moving through the camp, happy for the scraps offered to them, and the warmth of shelter.
A half-cut piece of plywood held up by rusted hinges served as the gate to Martha’s fiefdom. Sitting in the gloom of flickering camp light was an old man lounging in a folding chair, with a dog lounging at his feet, and a bottle of whiskey tucked into the crook of his arm. He noticed her quickly, raising his head as she looked at her. The animal at his feet sniffed the air, ears falling back as it cowered away from her, hiding behind the man and chair.
“Help you?” he said, his voice filling the air with the smell of alcohol.
“I’m here to see Martha. We’re old friends," Teresa said, doing her best to seem human, trying to recall the meekness she remembered from her youth, the anxiety that grasped at her throat, the fear that set her heart beating. She smiled, forcing the expression over her lips, hoping it seemed no more than nerves. She was too well-dressed to belong in the camp. “She sent me a message.”
“Sure don’t look old,” the old man grumbled, throwing his thumb over his shoulder, “She’s at the fire. I’m sure you can find ‘er.”
“Thanks,” Teresa replied. Emotion faded too easily, too quickly from her face as he pointed to the thumb latch of the gate. The less said the better. People usually knew not to ask too many questions, and whatever story she breathed would be wasted on a man who cared so little about her business. She walked into the camp like she had been there before. She had, of course. She was fond of Martha. She had been younger and brasher then, when they’d first met, and still uncertain enough to be dragged along by the waves that inevitably rose in Connie’s wake. Not that Brace had let her escape him. Sometimes she had trouble figuring out who was tasked with watching who—a troubling thought that she buried beneath deeper thoughts. There was trash scattered on the ground. Trash bags formed a small mound, a neat pile of garbage tucked almost out of sight, behind a pair of gratified Jersey barriers. Cans and bottles were visible within large clear plastic bags. Small profits, no doubt, but worthwhile for the denizens of the homeless encampment.
She approached the main fire of the camp. The roaring flame that grew from a stack of burning wooden pallets, bits of paper and scraps heaped on top, reminded her of some funeral pyre of old. What did Martha burn in there, she wondered. Bodies?
She found Martha sitting alone by the fire, a steaming cup held in her hands, a blanket wrapped around her, a shroud protecting her from the encroaching cold. “Beauclerc was busy, then? Please, sit.”
“Just me tonight, Martha,” Teresa replied, claiming a wooden crate as her seat. She didn't try to hide the irritation that tickled her throat, the itchy feeling of anger that burned at the back of her hands. Connie. Connie. Connie. He wasn’t even there. He hadn’t even showed. He'd just raced off to get his rocks off or get ashed trying. She was the one who answered the old hag’s summons. Sulking, Teresa plucked a pack of cigarettes out of her coat and dangled a cigarette towards the fire, waiting for the tip to burn a bright orange before she pulled it back. She took a slow, heavy drag, then puffed out a cloud of smoke as she let her annoyance fade. She looked at Martha—really looked. The elderly vampire seemed worse. More worn and tired than usual. Fresh lines seemed to be carved into her wrinkly skin, tension filling the space around her. Shrugging to herself, Teresa spoke with a subtle hint of kindness in her voice, something that might once have been categorized as affection, when she still walked freely in the sunlight. “You look worse than usual, Martha, trouble in paradise?”
Martha wrinkled her nose at the smell of the cigarettes. “Well, someone is better than no one. A dream. Another dream. Probably who is making your recent mess, Garcia. Tea?”
“No, thanks, can’t stomach it, since the—well you know,” she replied, eyeing Martha curiously. She knew about Martha’s visions. She had relied on them many times. They interested her—the nature of them, and everything about them. Where they came from, how they worked, and what they meant. She tempered her excitement, fighting against the urge to ask too much too soon. It was poor form to play a hand too freely, especially when one didn’t know what cards the other players held. Tossing a broken bit of wood into the fire, Teresa watched it burn, before she continued, “Heard about our mess, did ya? What’s that got to do with your dreams?”
“Not really. Figured you'd be around. You always are,” Martha said, pausing as she recalled the details of the two and the prior encounter, “They hunt my flock. Two of them. Young, hungry, stupid. Stupid enough to strike twice. You know how it is.”
Teresa listened with growing interest, eager for anything to hasten the hunt, any way to find the thrill killer, and nursing the hope that she might discover something greater, “You learn anything about them? A face? A name? Where they’re from?”
“No faces, no names…a girl and a boy, I think. You know it's never that kind or clear. Was all lions and hyena-laughter, and the last time I saw a lion was…the 50s or so. They'll strike my flock again, though.”
Teresa didn’t say anything right away. She didn’t let the disappointment take hold of her. She didn’t snap at Martha like some part of her wanted to, begged her to. Instead, she shifted closer to the fire, took another drag from her cigarette, and focused on the heat that touched her with each breath. Disappointment lingering between her words, softened as it was. “That’s it? That’s all you got? We already know there’s two of them. Does the Savannah theme mean anything?”
“I don't know. Is that what it's called…haven't seen a Savannah in too many years. I don't know. A desert, oasis, heat…the camp, the sick with us all, that's all I'd guess. I can't choose to see more or less, Garcia, “ Martha leaned back in chair, cradling the mug in hands. They sat silently, Teresa patiently waiting until the old woman let out a long exhale, finally deciding to speak, “How many have they taken?”
“Five, that we know of,” Teresa said—not that anyone cared about the number of bodies. But it was drawing unwanted attention. No, what mattered—what always mattered—was that Brace wasn’t happy staring at the growing collection of headlines he had laid out on his desk. And if Brace wasn’t happy, then she and Connie definitely weren’t going to be. “They get any of yours?”
“One. Just one. If there’s anything to trust in the dream, it’s the numbers, and Mark hasn’t shown for some time. I haven’t made much of it. Nothing for the flock to do in this.”
“Not a lot to work with, if I’m being honest, Martha. Any chance you can look a little bit further ahead?”
The old crone paused, fingers caressing the mug rim before another lingering breath moved through her. “You’re right. It’s not much. I’ll just…check and see for something else.”
Teresa waited, eyes alight with curiosity, a greedy glee pushing the corner of her lips into a thin smile. Joy that quickly vanished as Martha folded forward, hands clutching at her eyes and temples, fingers turning white as she pressed her own skull until the brittle bone crackled. She let out a low, pained gasp, her teeth clinching together with a loud clack that caused Teresa to place a hand gently on her shoulder. A useless attempt to stop the shaking—the seizures that wracked Martha’s feeble frame.
“Venice, gondolas and canals and old buildings half-sunk…” Martha said, her voice nothing more than a raspy whisper. Teresa did not move, her hand remaining on the shoulder of the hunched over old woman, who moaned, pain coursing through her from everywhere at once, burning her nerves like a jagged lightening bolt, “I could hear slot machines. Roulette wheels. Old lights that are too bright and glare…a ceiling with a cheap false of…I don’t know. Something old, men naked and posing in a fresco.”
Falling against the back of the chair, she turned towards Teresa with a thin smile—the rictus grin of a corpse—all horror and pain doled out in equal measure. Martha sighed, her tongue moving against the inside of her cheek, the air between them filling with copper taste. Her voice, although weak, rose as she channeled what strength Teresa could still see within her, “Enough for you, I’d think.”
Teresa nodded, smiling fully, truly, as she sensed the snare tightening around the neck of their prey. “There’s only one place in Vegas with decor that ridiculous, that fucking pompous. They’re at the Venetian."
Kicking her feet out, stretching as she , Teresa pulled out her flip phone and keyed in a new number that she had memorized days earlier.
Our friends are staying at the Venetian. They wanted to say hello.