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5 mos ago
Current Fuck yeah, girlfriend. Sit on that ass! Collect that unemployment check! Have free time 'n shit!
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2 yrs ago
Apologies to all writing partners both current & prospective. Been sick for two weeks straight (and have to go to work regardless). No energy. Can't think straight. Taking a hiatus. Sorry again.
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2 yrs ago
[@Ralt] He's making either a Fallout 4 reference or a S.T.A.L.K.E.R.: Clear Sky reference i can't tell
2 likes
2 yrs ago
"Well EXCUUUUSE ME if my RPs don't have plot, setting, characters, any artistry of language like imagery/symbolism, or any of the things half-decent fiction has! What am I supposed to do, improve?!"
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2 yrs ago
Where's the personality? The flavor? the drama? The struggle? The humanity? The texture of the time and the place in which this conversation is happening? In a word: where's the story?
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By the way, in the first thread, your photo of Emily has 404'd. Who were you using as her faceclaim? @Vampiretwilight
@gorgenmast Yooo fr? What was your username? Were you around when 41 and 42 became the offical RP worlds?
It's not often that I brag about my own accomplishments.low self esteem gang what upBut I'm gonna break character here and say that Gharekh, in just three posts (long ones, but still), is already the cruelest, most insidious, just, source of pure fuckin' evil that I've written to date. Dunno how long it'll last because being an asshole in RP is hard for anybody in the long-term, and because full-blooded sociopaths make for lame rp, but I just finished his "prologue" of sorts and I can't believe how conniving he turned out to be when he's playing with his food.

Please read the posts, I'm gonna be so proud of them for about two more weeks before I go back to hating myself and everything I produce

OK, with that outta the way another person's character who instantly came to mind for me is a peasant girl named Robyn, who was played waaaaaay back in the days of World 41 on RuneScape actually having players, including roleplayers. She's significant to me because I was roleplaying as a warlord/emperor at the time, and my most trustworthy buddy was roleplaying as my spymaster, and my other buddy was rping a bodyguard, and there were tons of knights/sergeants-at-arms, and an incredibly wealthy arms merchant, and my other character was one of the world's most notorious mercenary captains (think Gotz von Berlichingen) and ... in walks this absolute nobody peasant girl, signing up to be a scullery maid in the castle kitchens.

What the fuck was she thinking? That she could be near the story without actually involving herself in it? That's what I thought at first, accepting her purely for the novelty factor, with maybe a good splash of pity thrown in. Not like she could hurt the rp by being so insignificant, so may as well hand out an easy acceptance so everyone feels better, right?

This in itself is already hugely significant for me. In retrospect she had the balls to compete with all these big names and pretty faces in this dynamic story about childish medieval politicking and backstabbing ... as a maid. She had the sheer bravado, swinging between her lady legs, to walk in there and think that her character could compete with ours for spotlight time. And she was also

dead.

Fucking.

Right.

She handled other characters' abuse (often not even intended, they just got arrogant af when the fictional power went to their heads) ultra gracefully as a player, writing out Robyn's little frustrations, her unfulfilled fantasies of revenge, her rivalries with older castle ladies envious of her youth and vitality. She got into horribly awkward shenanigans when she got pressured into agreeing to help babysit a brat prince or two. Through sheer fucking wisdom and force of personality, she became confidant to king and queen and actually mediated their fucking marriage once or twice, and not ONCE did it feel hamfisted or cringey the way someone like Marisha on Critical Role feels cringey when she's obviously trying way too hard to be deep. Robyn hinted to a mercenary in my crew that she wouldn't mind being swept off her feet and going on adventures with him, because kitchen life absolutely blew chunks and she wasn't moving up the ladder like she had hoped, only to have to roleplay having her heart being broken when he either didn't get the hints or didn't reciprocate, fucking somehow. Robyn actively deserved something good to happen to her for making the story objectively better and being a nice person IC but it never happened for purely organic reasons. (Not at all like when a character is specifically designed to be betrayed, shafted, mocked, hurt, and otherwise dumped on, which is when their misfortune feels forced and lazy.) Robyn eventually got framed for something that objectively wasn't really her fault, too. It was a complete accident and she's the one who ended up taking the fall, and the player FUCKING ACCEPTED IT. I was so mad. I was basically kicking out the best roleplayer in the rp for entirely IC reasons. But none of us with a modicum of talent were interested in metagaming. Robyn wouldn't have felt good being saved by a meta anyway, I'm sure.

Also in retrospect, she could be one of the direct inspirations for my writing style today, because I too have gravitated more toward "plain," unimportant, unspecial characters over the years, wanting them to shine for their writing, not for how uber ultra cool and powerful they are. Robyn was whistling that tune before the germ of the kernel of the idea was even planted in my head.

So she never owned land, she never made it rich, and she ultimately walked out of the story with a completely undeserved reputation (IC) as a jealous bimbo, a furious temper, and a criminal. But she's one of the brief presences in one of my earliest decent-ish RP experiences that I will absolutely never forget. And I probably owe her a lot.
Dezeric woke to screaming. In the slippery confusion of that limbo state, snatched back into the world and yet still half-dreaming, he might have thought them the screams of the beggars, watching his body fall slack in the battle against his nameless, faceless foe, gaunt and ashen-grey. Or they were his own screams, a triumph from which his waking had wrested him, because a dream must always end before its most climactic moment. But—no. Across the room the window started coming into focus: latched, but spilling new dawn light onto the hardwood floor, shutters thrown ajar. Splayed over the shoulders of a chair he saw the cloak and robe he had worn just one night prior, still smattered with salt and smirch. On the dresser: bottles of perfume and gin, shapes he could count and colors he could sort from his five paces. Dezeric recognized their bedchamber and the realness of it. He was, most assuredly, awake. And yet the screams persisted.

"Adrie?" he wheezed over a parched tongue. "Adrie, what's wrong?"

"Oh my God," she was saying, again and again, "oh my God, oh my God."

He moved to comfort her, at first ignoring the pang in his side. But as the pain grew too great to ignore, seizing in his muscles, even radiating through the hipbone itself, he collapsed again into their bedding, unable to support his own weight as it knotted at his flank and screamed. And as Dezeric gripped the spot and winced, he discovered the subject of his wife's horror. He touched the side of his stomach and he felt wet. He pulled his hand away; it was smeared with black, clumps of black; and stripes of grey-orange-green. Looking down, he saw a tear in his linen shirt, its edges dark and flaking; and underneath, jewels of pus and dried weep, shards of rancid amber clinging to a slash of black skin, black veins, black tissue.

Dezeric hadn't the time to even wonder where he had obtained such an injury. First of all, he knew precisely where. Second, the blood pooled in his head, quick and sizzling, and he lost his purchase on the room and its orientations. Whisky came up hot and sour, soon followed by last evening's sausages and pickled cabbage leaves. Adrie, his darling Adrie, leapt from her footing in alarm, but had at least shut up for a second. Now he could only hear the blood in his ears and his own retching and the splatter against the blanket. It was almost peaceful.

"Will you be all right by yourself? I have to leave if I'm to bring you a doctor."

"Water first," he coughed, blinking to snip the tears from his eyes. "Water." She rambled off to fetch it, and the room continued to swirl. Dezeric anchored his eyes on the paneling of the far wall, a single knot in a single plank, and managed to think a little in the chaos of his fever. When exactly had this happened? He was sure he was not bitten, but something physical must have struck him, some kind of armament; any mere spell would not have left such a small and local wound. Then, was he struck from behind when he went to the fountain? When he passed between the tavern and the neighboring buildings? No, he would have noticed such an attack; in his body, or in that tyrannical atmosphere which followed in the creature's malice and intent. That could only leave—the hunter's eyes went wide.

The sword. That phantom sword was aimed to cut precisely where he had now begun to putrefy. And it was not merely smeared in excrement or dragged over the cadavers of rotting livestock, like soldiers had done in the wars to ensure swift deaths for their enemies, no matter how small the scratches inflicted on the field. These—properties—clung to the sword even as it followed its master into the immaterial.

Dezeric remembered now. He had felt a little numb and tingly, but unharmed, when the sword appeared to have gone right through him—through this exact spot. But of course he would feel no pain when his armor offered the blade no resistance, and when his skin and nerves withered instantly to its touch, as if unnaturally and instantly aged into weeks of post-death.

Adrie came with a cup and a pitcher. She saw her husband and saw that something had annealed his gaze in the brief time she was away. He had turned fierce—driven. A glass of smallbeer would not calm it, but she handed it over anyway.

"Do not waste your time with the physicians," Dezeric said after he had washed the sour down his throat. His hands were white on the cup. "I need a priest."

"You need a priest?" Adrie said. She needed only take the soiled cover from the bed and begin to drag it away to punctuate her skepticism, but as she peeled it away from the bed, she also gestured at the discovery which had shaken her into hysterics in the first place: the puddle of weep seeped into the underlinens, yellowish and fetid. Words were not needed.

"A priest," said her husband, again and more assured.

Over the next hour she buzzed about the bedchamber, rearranging, adjusting, stockpiling. She gave Dezeric a bucket beside the chamberpot, and his mother-in-law's good quilt, provided that he promised not to soil it like the first. In turn she promised him fresh milk and wheat porridge when she returned from market. Adrie also left him a bottle of gin on the nightstand, to settle his stomach; and a bowl of water, with towel, for washing up wherever he felt rankest. When she left him she had bundled herself in her stiffest wools and her darkest cloak. Dezeric, meanwhile, first ripped away the quilt, still musty after years of closet hibernation. When the sweat continued trickling through his skin, and his attempts at sleep only ended in an antsy jostling about the tangled sheets, he stood, and threw open the window, and bathed in a jolt of winter breeze. That done, now fresher in body and spirit, he reckoned it couldn't hurt to start, either, on what would no doubt become a gauntlet of treatments. He still had to stake this vampire before it fled the city, if it hadn't fled already, God forbid. So Dezeric took the towel and uncorked the bottle on the nightstand. Shoving the gin-soaked cloth into the gape with no real anticipation or care, he overwhelmed himself with the singeing sensation that flared out from the necrotic flesh. Even when he pulled the cloth away it continued to bubble under the layer of black, though Dezeric could swear it sounded like sizzling when it burned him so. But he readied the towel again, wetting it with a fresh drizzle of gin. This time he bit a corner of the quilt, and counted himself down from five.

By the time Adrie returned, food stuffed under her arms and a stranger in tow, the house was muggy with steam. Dezeric had shut the window and all the doors and started the fireplace on the first floor. He had been heating up stones in the embers, ferrying them up to the bedroom, and dropping them into the bucket, now filled with melted snow from the rain barrel. They hissed and spat and released white plumes into the room, keeping it hot and damp and fragrant. Dezeric had administered a gulp or two of liquor to himself as well, wringing still more sweat from his clammy figure.

But the stranger was fanning his neck with his hat, so Adrie ended this with a brisk push at the window, whereby the steam escaped toward the street in billows. In the room the atmosphere already began to thin. "Why are you out of bed?" she murmured, as if to prove to the other man that it was not her idea, nor her doing.

"I need to be hale again as soon as possible," Dezeric said, though he resigned himself to the bed for now.

"For what? What could be more important than your health?"

"What, indeed?" said the stranger. He set down his bag at the end of the bed. Opening it, he revealed his panoply of blades, forceps, tinctures, measuring devices. "My name is Chalmard. Good morning. Quite a clever way you've got here. You must have a decent store of medical knowledge yourself. You're trying to sweat out your excess humors, yes?"

"Chalmard." Dezeric blinked the fog from his eyes. He peered at the bag's contents, then at his wife. "I'm sorry to have brought you this far out of your way. You have wasted many steps and much of a morning on me."

"Nonsense."

"I speak nothing of the kind. You are a physician, correct? I have surmised that my wound will require the finest in blessings and divine aeonics. It will not be cured by such—pedestrian methods."

Chalmard turned to the woman. "You said his name is Dezeric? Dezeric, sir, since I have come 'this far out of my way,' perhaps I should be allowed to try my pedestrian methods first, before you resort to superstition and charm-clutching."

"I'm fine. Really." Damn it; he was wasting time. Even now that thing slumbered in the dirt somewhere, scheming its evacuation from Ortheoc to plague some other city slum.

"At the very least, you will want some extract of breadseed," said the doctor, plucking from his bag a particular vial of brown glass, about the size of a man's thumb, and placing it on the nightstand. "To aid with sleep."

Dezeric eyed the vessel. "Certainly. Thank you."

"May I see the wound?"

Dezeric did not respond, but he did, with some reluctance, roll over, exposing his flank. When the doctor had donned his mask and his watertight gloves, he took a large forceps, and gripped the damp, sticky shirt between its teeth. Dezeric's skin went pimply as raw winter air kissed it; the rest of him shivered along with it. He had spent significant time stoking that fire, moving those roasted stones, bathing in steam.

Chalmard, meanwhile, was practically burying his nose in the necrotic flesh. Either he squinted at it vainly through the foggy lenses of his mask, or he was from one of those quack colleges that had their students tasting urine and pus for the sake of scientific thoroughness. He almost looked to be trying to sniff the laceration through the snout. "Fascinating," said he. "Can you feel this? You said this was magically induced?"

Dezeric looked over to see metal being jammed at the wound. He had not noticed. What he did notice, however, was Adrie's appalled expression. It made him terribly uneasy to think just how badly he must have been worrying her right now. "Yes. A magic blade."

"Fascinating," the doctor said a second time. "Look how abruptly it transitions from living to dead. There is almost no corona, no inflammation. No green at all beyond the site of contact ... and no granulation. A recent wound?"

"Very recent."

"Hmm." The doctor kept prodding. "I wish I could see how it will behave three days from now. Sir Dezeric, may I take some samples of the dead tissue as well?"

"If it won't hurt, cut whatever you like," the patient replied, though with some resignation.

Polished steel glid along the black in Dezeric's side. It snipped flaps of the necrotic tissue and guided it into clear glass vials, which were then cradled back into the medical bag. The doctor rubbed some sort of stinging brown paste over the opening, but did not bandage it, or otherwise cover it whatsoever. As he explained to Adrie, just outside the door:

"Two days from now I will return to treat that wound properly. For now, he needs water, bread, and peaceful, restful sleep."

"Why in two days, doctor?" Adrie replied. "You have seen the state of him. And he hasn't been back for but half a day."

"I will need a day to source leeches for his humor rebalancing, and maggots for debridement."

"Leeches and maggots." Her voice quivered.

"You have trusted modern medicine this far along—smartly. Yes, maggots will devour the dead flesh, and leave the living intact. You can believe in me, my patrons in the city, and indeed, those little, pale feasters."

"Then I have no choice." There was a long pause. "What of your payment?"

"Let's speak of that on the day of treatment. Fare thee well, Adriada, and a pleasure to meet you."

Adrie gave a shaky "goodbye" and disappeared awhile; guiding the good physician to the door, doubtless. When she returned she heaped herself at the corner of the bed, looking terribly pathetic. Anxious, worn-down—in some way, needy. There was something Dezeric needed to tell her before she asked, so as to give her at least a little faith.

"I—" he feigned a weakness in his chest a moment, to buy himself a few more seconds—"I'm sorry for hiding from you. For sneaking off."

"Where have you been going?" Adrie asked weakly. "Who have you so angered that he has struck you with a sword?"

"Listen—I cannot tell you right now."

"Oh my God, Dez."

"I didn't want you to worry. I promise, I will tell you when I am bandaged. When this is over."

There was a heave in her shoulders. Dezeric couldn't hear her, nor see her face—she faced away from him, unable to look at him—but he knew what it meant. And he recognized the inflections when she whimpered, "All right. When it's over."

She slept on the first floor that night—to avoid the infections in the sheets, and other things, too. After the blanket was washed, the firewood cut, the corns pounded into flour, the suppers cooked, she spent the remainder of her day tending to her husband and ensuring his comfort. It was a dirty move, nursing him despite how he had hurt her. Now he couldn't sleep again, too wracked with the day's regrets. Dezeric looked over at the nightstand. The vial hadn't moved. Why would it? That dirty drug interested neither of them. But now he had nothing to do but puke, shit, and fester, and its temptations beckoned, and his curiosity answered. He had napped once in the afternoon, but now that he had, he was anxious again, eager to spend energy he didn't possess. He had nothing to do but wait for sleep again; to become so exhausted in his boredom that it would come for him by force. Given the circumstance, it could not hurt to sedate himself just a little, barely enough to doze off on. He didn't know how much that was, but he would know it when he felt it, like with liquor. So he uncorked the bottles and took a sniff, ready for acrid, biting vapors to flood his nostrils. Instead it smelled sweet, chocolatey, slightly floral, like walking past the best baking stalls at market in the spring. If it tasted like it smelled then he would not even need the gin, though a gulp of that never left his nerves any more frayed and stiff than without, either. Feeling brave, Dezeric sipped the breadseed straight from the narrow neck of the vial. The smell had been deceptive after all; it tasted bitter, like burnt paper or some-such. He needed the liquor to wash it down.

The breadseed's effect, however, came nearly instantaneously. He was moving forward despite still laying in bed; he drifted closer and closer to the wall and yet never quite reached it. The whole world slowed. His body deepened, numbed, like a hundred thousand slashes from that magical black sword. For a time Dezeric had to focus on not dying, like if he stopped concentrating for even a second then his consciousness would slip from his body and be unable to return. But when he let go of this worry, he understood all at once how an opium den could come to be. Nothing in the world seemed more important now than laying there wrapped up in a cocoon of utter and unbreakable peace. There was no wondering how someone carrying great aches in his body or great aches in his soul could feel so loved by the bitter, milky liquid in the jar. Dezeric scarcely cared that he had betrayed his wife, or that she had found out, or that she genuinely thought he could die before the physician Chalmard returned with his quack cures. Dezeric had been right to think it a dangerous thing, such blissful apathy. He didn't even care when, following the lull of his head toward the window, he saw, staring back at him, two round, blinking, green reflections.
He did not care for a time, but then he saw the punchline. He started to cackle.

"You can't enter," he slurred to the shape in the window.

The shape jimmied its long, talon-like fingernails into the crack under the window.

"You don't have permission," Dezeric said, his whole lung's-ful spent on giggling.

Click. Somehow the lock on the window—the one inside the room—had come undone. The hinges creaked. The sounds of the city outside came into full sensation, crisper now that they were not muffled behind a sheet of glass. Dezeric watched a single leg, knobby and spider-thin, plant its foot upon his floor, by the puke bucket. He was terribly confused. Had Adrie given the shape permission to be here? Had the shape disguised itself as a human doctor, met Adrie in town, and tricked her into leading it here? He was wearing a wide-brimmed hat; to protect himself from the sun? Or was it simply parked under a tent when it wrought the fateful words from her lips at market?

A clawed hand steadied itself on the windowpane. The shape swung its head into the room, those locks of hair swaying limply, sticking to each other and the grease that made them shimmer. Behind this head, a narrow bosom wriggled through.

"You don't get to be here," Dezeric said.

Lastly the second leg landed beside its twin, such that the shape could finally stand upright. It was wearing thieves' clothes, dark and loose, and its ashy skin blurred in the darkness as well. It shambled toward the lamp on the dresser, which Adrie had left lit as a nightlight. It crouched, seemingly staring into the flame a moment, mesmerized by it, swaying to its flicker; a little fleck of the sunrises it had forsworn so many years ago.

There was a nauseating wet smacking sound as the vampire opened its mouth.

"Come for me whenever you like, you parathite," it said.

It turned back to Dezeric. Its eyes weren't catching the light in green angles anymore.

"Come and get your revenge. I'll be ready."

They were bottomless and empty, like a starless sky.

"Do you hear me out there, you gutht of thtinking breethe? I'll be ready."

Dezeric laid in bed staring, glaring at the lantern. It had to topple over somehow, or suck the vampire's face into its bowl, where the flames would catch that oily hair and then spread to the rest of it, too. The vampire watched him back, seeming to have noticed this effort. It had certainly noticed the irony.

"You thaid thomething elthe ath well," it said. Its fingers picked at the lantern hinge, swinging open its little door. It knitted its lips, gave a gust of breath, and blew out the ivory candle inside. Shadows consumed the bedchamber. "Thtand and die with dignity. Or ... can't you, now?"

Dezeric couldn't see it anymore, and that alarmed him well enough. Worse, however, was the silence. He could not hear its breathing, nor its footsteps. He could not hear the floorboards creaking as it, without question, meandered toward him. He could not hear Adrie downstairs.

"Adrie?" he murmured. He tried again to call her name, mustering any and all strength the opium allowed him to muster. "Adrie, help me. No ... no, Adrie, call out to me. Just let me know that you're safe. Please."

Another metal let out a different soft click. Steel slid against steel; a magical sword released from the only scabbard which could contain it without rotting away to its touch. These Dezeric could hear, and they filled him with dread. The opium haze was betraying him now. It nibbled at the inside of his skull, then filled those pocks with doubts. He was imagining terrors which weren't there, and stretching the dimensions of the terrors which undoubtedly were.

"Vampire," Dezeric called out, "where is she? What have you done with her?"

There was a breath in the dark. Perhaps it contemplated answering. But no answer arrived to meet these questions in the inky room.

"Then, at least tell me this," Dezeric croaked: "Is she still alive? Did you leave her be?"

That wet, squelching sound, of the vampire's lips parting around its incisors, thick and blunted like a rat's, too long for its mouth. Warm, damp breath tickled Dezeric's ear, and a pointed tongue shoved itself into the hole. Its breath smelled so thickly of rot Dezeric should have instantly retched up his half-bowl of porridge. Instead, nothing.

"My gift to you, hunter: you will die wondering."

All along his stomach the man in the bed felt numb, prickled by tiny spines as the flesh melted away. The sword made no sound and neither did its victim, unconcerned with death when it was this painless—this easy. But that was the scariest thing of all, Dezeric realized. The sword butterflied him, and the long, dull teeth began to gnaw at the black jelly which had formed there of his pluck, yet he could not bring himself to give another goddamn. He tried to fight and he failed. He tried to rid the land of its greatest and most wicked scourge and he failed. He tried to be a good husband and ...

But it didn't hurt. Not the necrotic jelly and not the living flesh underneath. Not the spongy belly or the firm, callused heart propped over it. Nothing hurt anymore; the booze and the opium had seen to that. Dezeric had woken to screams. And he fell asleep, one final time, in the coldest, deepest silence he had ever known.
I don't do fandom either. I meant the general idea of a Wild Westy desert (with a pinch of Dune), or of a windblown rust-bucket planet, either inhabited by mutants and vampires.
I don't exactly have a clear idea yet, but I was thinking something along the lines of: humanity is near extinction and vampires rule the world (or what's left of it).

Not sure how well this fits into Cyberpunk, but if there's maybe a Vampire Hunter D or Battle Angel Alita aesthetic going on somewhere, with scroungers and scrappers living on an apocalyptic junkyard planet, then I'm all over that.

Also not sure what's up with the sudden inundation of vampire games but I dig it
@Myrna Minkoff
you're in the club now lmao
What clan(s) are you interested in playing and what clan(s) would you consider from a prospective partner?

The Tenement District. The rest of Ortheoc wanted nothing better than to forget the existence of this cesspit; this memory of their failings, this afterimage of their avarice. Reflected in the gaunt face of a panhandler they saw their own apathy for The Other. In the flights of crows and vultures they were reminded of their own fear of death, the only collector they could not bribe away with gold or sex or a favor at court. Would that these hypocrites could cut the decrepit apartments from the skyline, like cutting a cancerous growth; or scrub the stench, as with some stinging balm smeared over a streak of gangrene; simply discard somehow this collection of outcasts and untouchables. Here, nonetheless, stood "The Seeds," the hardy weed of Ortheoc, mocking the gardens with all their ritual and pomp. Here, a museum to the true humanity of the city masters: bodies in the street, unpaved mud, rain-rotted domiciles.

Dezeric had dressed in mottled browns for his venture into this place: muddy shoes, a moth-eaten cloak, cotton wraps about his neck and legs. But the misfortunes of a Seed dweller were not so easily counterfeited. Layers of sweat and stink had not so permeated his crevices—the armpits, the groin—as to discolor the fabrics through weeks of constant wear. No boils went unlanced on his skin, no warts unburned, til they had grown as large as crabapples. He tiptoed to avoid the lumps and puddles of frozen excrement, not at all like the resigned trudge or the purposeful flutter of the locals. Moreover, although Dezeric swigged whisky straight from a sea-glass bottle (an elegant detail, he thought), his hand didn't shake as he did it; he didn't get the craving pangs of a man whose drink was his only warmth on a night like this one, the howls of winter rasping at his feet, his hands, his nose, his ears. Thankfully, most were huddled in the taverns or around their anemic hearths at this hour, unconcerned with the business of the conspicuous outsider. And the Seeds were not thick with people like they would have been twenty years ago, a natural consequence of the wars, first against the Báthory pretender, then the Futhurlings, then the Carling queen.

What did he even hope to find here? Eyes and teeth—eyes and teeth, and hair, by his contact's description. What a waste of an evening, skulking around glowering at beggars, who often enough didn't even possess those three in the right quantities. But just as Dezeric passed the Bull & Brazen, its hall bright with fire and raucous with laughter, a familiar tension shivered up his spine, and he knew that he could not have come in vain. He was being watched: from the darkness, from a distance, with that intimately predatory intent that could chill an already-icy street.

Despite his trusty instincts, honed over years, the hunter was well out of practice with his profession. He stopped and looked about, trying to pinpoint the source of the dread which crept over his body, but no doubt managing only to let the creature know, wherever it was, that he had noticed its presence. How Master Valnorn would have scolded him for such an amateurish mistake! But this was not a time for reminiscing; Dezeric pushed that thought aside, warming as it was. Now the joy of the hunt had splayed its full grasp over he, who could only push further, deeper into the heart of the noxious aura. The beggars, noticing his frenzy, gave him a wide radius as they passed, wanting no part of whatever sickness, madness, or hysteria had come over this stranger to their territory.

It seemingly led him off to a ruinous square, the fountain empty and crumbling and overgrown with dead lichen. But the oppressive atmosphere thinned as he walked, whereupon he doubled back toward the Bull & Brazen. Dezeric then investigated another direction, behind the tavern, but nearly touched the city wall, and again could feel that he had been driven astray. Was this an aspect of the creature's sorcery? The very same adaptation by which it had eluded the land's cleansing for all this time? The hunter looked into the orangey glow of the windows, then up at the tavern's sign, depicting a horned beast and a human pugilist, both in bombasted trousers, each throwing punches at the other. He did not imagine that a vampire would hide where the locals had lit so many candles and ovens and braziers. The flames were one of its few banes, capable of marring its hideous form with permanent and agonizing damage. Some subspecies even reacted to fire as to the sun itself; doubly cursed were they against the purifying light. But it was near; near enough, in fact, for that to seem the only likelihood, until a bundle of black rags moved in Dezeric's peripherals.

He had thought it a swimming-headed drunkard at first, or even a corpse, that bony framework propped up against the side wall. But at its first twitch he did not even need to see its fangs or the supposed green-glow of its glare to know. Too pale to be human, too thin to be half-orc, and too—aromatic—to be any breed of elf, even those who delved deep in sulfurous caverns and fungal forests. It could be nothing else. The scent of putrefaction was everywhere in the Seeds, diluted to a gentle perfume on the circling winds; but here it clung to this animal, surrounded it. It raped the senses and sent Dezeric heaving to shove his nose into the crook of his elbow, while also drawing his sword. It was no Pthaalma, if the legends were true, but small runic shapes had been cut out of the flats of the blade, then inlaid again in silver. The writing shone black with age and tarnish, standing out against the dull snow-grey of the pitted steel.

"Stand and die with dignity, monster," said the slayer through his cloak, his eyes watering, "or flee, and die in disgrace. It makes no difference to me."

The eyes were not catching the light at the right angle, or the right intensity, to give off that supposed green glint. Thus, Dezeric could only see the vampire's features in their outlines: a narrow chin supporting a long, yearning mouth; a hooked nose with wide, flappy nostrils. A hood concealed its ears but its hair hung in greasy coils. Its lips broke as it moved to speak, revealing incisors as long as fork prongs and as yellow as fried pork fat.

"Monthter?" it lisped, flicking a black tongue through the gap between those knobby teeth. "Do you greet everyone like that? And what have I done to you and yourth, to detherve that epithet, 'monthter'?"

"You and your race have sown countless lamentations upon this land. Orphans—widows—fathers bereaved of their sons," the hunter replied. "You have withered crops and poisoned rivers. You have spread plague and terror. You have gamed with human lives in pursuit of vampiric ideals."

"I did all that?" the creature cooed, looking terribly sorry.

"Stand, wretch. Stand and face silver judgment."

"'Wretch' now! And didn't you thay I could choothe?"

Dezeric would not be mocked. "Stand!" he snapped, the rage flung from his lips in a delicate spray.

After, he heard what he could swear was the vampire's sigh, like the gases belched from the stomachs of the freshly dead as their bowels loosened and their insides jellified. It stood with a similar croak; was it struggling to move? Perhaps it had not fed in some time. Dezeric could not bring himself to pity something so ghastly, however.

"So you carry a blade as well," he said, nodding to the black shape at the vampire's waist, curved and wicked. "I could fell you in a proper duel, if you would prefer that over a hunt."

Another sigh. "Don't you think you're enjoying thith a bit too much?" said the vampire. "No, let'th play. I've not had a good hunt in a while."

"With pleasure," Dezeric said, simultaneous to his surprise attack. For a human his step was quick, his lunge deep. But the blade made no purchase as the monster began to blur, and shift. It seemed to draw its sword too, and even swing at its foe, though the weapon dematerialized before the blow landed. A ghostly image of a sickle-sword hit Dezeric's side, where it broke and scattered like a smoke ring. "Hah!" guffawed the hunter, feeling no worse for taking the blow than if he had parried it. In fact, behind his mail shirt and his thick woolen robe, his flank scarcely tingled.

He had to expect as much from such a cowardly race. At first sign of peril they scurried and skittered into their dark corners even in the company of their detestable packs—their "families"—never mind a lone specimen like this one. Dezeric threw open his cloak with a flourish, and reached for one of the glass flasks at his hip. The creature was fully transmuted now into a cloud of mist, silvery-pale, but what would it do, he wondered, when the very air was hostile to its new form? With a swing of his arm he sent the vial flying and then falling in a cacophony of shattered glass as it sundered against the tavern's stone wall. Forth spilled its contents, which stuck to the wall, and trickled down to its base, and sprayed out into the air. The liquid soon started reacting to the atmosphere, crackling with an arcane vitality, almost a life of its own. Sparks took to flames, which shifted from lazy, listless reds to a sharp, baneful yellow-white as they grew hotter, hotter, devouring more and more essence from the nearby air. Finally, the flames fanned out and flapped, mimicking the very phoenix of whose feathers the potion had first been distilled.

But Dezeric was not watching this spectacle. He watched the mist as it attempted to diffuse toward the other end of the alley, the cold end, the dark end, but was snared in flames which were too quick, lashing it and licking at its heel, as one could imagine the mist having a heel while it was in full retreat. Indeed, Dezeric watched as more and more of the mist was kissed with light and heat, until, unable to bear it, the vampire was forced to disperse, and melt down the walls.

The slayer shook the sweat from his brow, and grimaced a triumphant grimace. He had not killed it yet—not until he watched it die with his own eyes—but the pain he had inflicted, the wounds, had to be giving his quarry some serious contemplation and regrets. Moreover, it could not have gone far with such injuries; Dezeric had hoped the fire might force the thing back into its corporeal form, but it mattered not if the final staking and beheading happened that night or the next, in this district or that one. He had already won. It was just a matter of following the stench to the site of Final Death, a site of the vampire's choosing.

He was still chuckling, even as the magic fizzled out and its smoke wisped away toward the moon. "Come for me whenever you like, you parasite," said the hunter. "Come and get your revenge. I'll be ready. Do you hear me out there, you gust of stinking breeze? Come as a wolf, a bat, or whatever you wish. I'll be ready."

There were beggars leering. Dezeric sheathed his sword, and slit a purse full of pennies as he made his way west, back toward the civilized side of town. The coppers spinning across the ground helped most of them to forget what they had just seen.

The hunter himself, however, was slower to forget. In fact, he could not help but feel like that oppressive presence was following him; like it hadn't let up ever since he stepped foot near the Bull & Brazen tavern ...
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