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File: NEMESISQUEST.jpg (895 KB, 1320x1320)
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Inhale. Exhale.

You stare at yourself in the bathroom mirror. It's smudged, spattered with god knows what but you still recognize yourself despite all the blood.

Kyle Mercer. 25 years on your way to Hell. Naked, splattered with someone else's blood. Again.

You're trembling, a mixture of nerves and adrenaline. Why? You're sure you're going to find out whether you want to or not. You had been planning on making changes in your life and maybe others. That's why you were going home, right?

You stare into your own pale eyes and see…well, not much. Vitreous orbs, your fleshy windows to the world. You look down at your chest and see your tattoo, directly over your heart. You got it years ago and it meant the world to you but you can't remember when or why.

It was an Ouroboros, black on pale flesh but now streaked with red. You wet your hand in the sink and wash the blood away delicately. The cold water makes you break out in goosebumps. You see the blood on your body is dried. How long have you been standing here? Whose blood do you have on you this time?

You shake your head trying to clear it. "Fuck!" You didn't bother wondering why you couldn't remember anything. It was a consequence of what happened to you when you were younger. The same reason your arms were dotted with circular scars from cigarette burns and small, hard crosses carved into you years ago. It was the same reason the skin across the left side of your face, running down your neck to your shoulder and peck, was shiny and taut. A cruel burn that left those parts of you without feeling. Your long hair only partially conceals the scar tissue.

"You can't desecrate the temple," she'd said. "Only decorate it."

You inhale again, body trembling, and exhale. It's time for a change. You pick up the pill bottle from the sink, uncap it and dump the pills into the toilet. They rattle in with satisfying, porcelain clinks and plops. When you flush you watch a red-blue kaleidoscope of pharmaceuticals tumble to watery oblivion.

You didn't need those anyway. They only slowed you down. Confused you. You look back at yourself in the mirror. You lick your teeth, and taste iron. You feel better already. In fact, you feel Brand New.

What's changed?

>What doesn't kill you
Wounds that incapacitate others don't stop you
>Whispers in the wind
You can catch glimpses into people's thoughts.
>Right behind you
You have a knack for showing up in places you shouldn't be able to get to

All that you have left is whatever is still in your hotel room and of course what's on the bathroom sink in front of you.

>$20
>A .22 pistol
>20 tabs of ecstasy
>>
>>6178360
>Right behind you
>A .22 pistol
>>
>>6178360
>What doesn't kill you
>20 tabs of ecstasy
>>
>>6178360
>What doesn't kill you
>A .22 pistol
Knowing players, those ensure that we'll survive the best
>>
>>6178360
>>What doesn't kill you
>$20
>>
>>6178360
>Right behind you
>A .22 pistol
>>
>What Doesn't kill you
>A .22 pistol

Writing

>>6178368
Bold of you to assume survival is the best possible outcome.
>>
File: Motel.jpg (42 KB, 500x374)
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You scoop water from beneath the running faucet and splash it across your face again and again as if you can wash away what you've become. What you're becoming. You look down at the pink water sloshing in the basin. Sitting on the edge of the sitting beside where your pill bottle had been is a pistol. It was probably about as old as you are. As a .22 it wasn't likely to do much damage unless you hit just right with it.

You pick it up and turn it over in your hands, the diffuse fluorescent light playing off its metallic finish. You consider putting the muzzle to your temple and pulling the trigger but…well, somehow you're not sure that would kill you. "Alright," you say, meeting your mirror's gaze again. "Almost home."

You find jeans wadded up on the shower floor. They're dry enough so you pull them on, tucking the pistol in your back waistband. You take one more steady breath and grip the doorknob back to the hotel room. You know what you'll find even if you don't like it. The metal feels electric in your grip.

You exhale and open the door to reveal a seen of carnage.

"Fuck…"

Well, the good news is that she's definitely dead. No need for a mercy killing tonight. The yellow glow of the motel's sign spills in through the gauzy curtains, lighting everything a sickly gold. Everything but the blood. The bed and its sheets are doused in it, more blood than a human body should really contain, though you're not a doctor or anything.

Still, you've spilled enough that you should be an expert by now

You circle the bed slowly, feet sticking slightly on the tacky floor. Your eyes don't leave the body. She's as naked as you are, face down, toned legs, perky butt, her back oozing blood from a nasty gash by her ribs.

You keep circling until you see her face. Her eyes are glazed, unfocused, jaw slack. Definitely fucking dead. Her neck is torn open, her jugular pumped what life she'd had left onto cheap pillows and sheets. You still taste iron in your mouth.

"Fuck…" You run your hands back through your hair, trying to remain calm. You've had situations like this in the past but…nothing so animalistic. You're going to have to do something about that at some point. The pills didn't work. You'll need a different type of medicine.

One thing at a time. Right now there's a dead chick in your motel room. Who is she? How did she get here? Did she know you?

You look around. Her clothes are neatly folded and siting on the dresser. You rifle quickly through them, searching for anything. Money, ID…anything.

Nothing. No cash, no cards.

You look back at the body, desperately wracking your memory. Why would you pick up a girl while you were on your way home? Surely you knew what a big fucking risk that would have been. Unless this was exactly what you picked her up for…
>>
You shake your head. You're certain you didn't check in here under your real name, with no credit card you'd paid cash. Maybe speed could be your ally. Get packed and get the fuck out of here before anyone knows anything's wrong here. Let housekeeping deal with the rest.

Maybe it would be best to try to get the body out of here…You tug the curtain aside and peak out. Your black AMC Eagle sits just outside the door of the room. The rest of the lot is empty, bathed in shadow. It's late. Late late. No decent people are awake. If you're quick you could probably carry a sheet-wrapped body to your trunk. Maybe you could wiped down enough of this blood that no one would be looking for a murder.

Or maybe that's too much time and too much effort for too little pay off. It wouldn't be too hard to light this place up. You've got some road flares in your car. With some strategically stuffed sheets, maybe a little siphoned gas, you could burn this room to the ground. It would destroy a lot of the evidence. Probably.

>Leave the body and hope for the best
>Smuggle the body to your trunk
>Burn this place down to cover your tracks
>Write in
>>
>>6178397
>Leave the body and hope for the best
>>
>>6178397
>Burn this place down to cover your tracks
Ain’t like we can just leave evidence. Especially when there might be our DNA.
>>
>>6178397
>Smuggle the body to your trunk
>>
>>6178397
>>Burn this place down to cover your tracks
>>
>>6178397
>Leave the body and hope for the best
>>
>>6178397
>Burn this place down to cover your tracks
>>
>>6178397
>Burn this place down to cover your tracks
>>
>Burn this place down

Writing
>>
It's all gotta burn.

You wrap the body up in the bloodstained sheet, tucking it tight. Next anything flammable goes into a pile. Chair, dresser drawers, her clothes, everything that's not yours.

You wash your hands and dress again, T-shirt and then your leather jacket. The chains hanging from the shoulders jingle as you pull it on. The back is emblazoned with one word.

NEMESIS

An old music project, semi-abandoned for reasons that are now all too clear.

Next you tamper with the smoke detector. Standing on tiptoe you twist the plastic assembly and let it drop down from the ceiling, hanging by a wire. You yank out the wire. It lets out a continuous mournful beep as the onboard battery dies.

You shove it under the body to muffle it.

"Okay," you say to yourself, reviewing your handiwork. "Gasoline."

You open the door to the outside, shutting it quickly behind you. The air is cool and still. Silent. Not even traffic on the nearby freeway. Your boots crunch on asphalt as you reach your car.

Like your cigarette burns, the car was something you'd got from Dad. Unlike the burns, Dad never wanted to give you the car.

You open the trunk and produce your siphoning kit and road flare. You give another nervous glance around before setting to work. Your heart beats hard as you siphon out gas into a tiny gas tank. The fumes make your head spin.

Once you have about a half gallon you go back into the room and douse the pile, pouring liberally across the dead woman's wrapped body. Whoever she was she was about to become even less.

You strike the flare. It burns a sparking, flickering pale red. Blood.

You toss the flare onto the bed and the gas spill combusts instantly. You flinch away from the heat, painfully reminded of the source of your own burns.

You cough lightly and watch the fire spread, consuming fabric and wood, now igniting the wallpaper and mattress. Nothing more to do now.

Firelight faintly flickers through the closed curtains as you shut the door behind you. The door to the Eagle creaks open and then slams shut, starting with a roar.

"Just need to get home," you say. You put the car in reverse and are out of the parking lot and onto the road.

You put accelerator to metal. It's only about fifteen minutes later that you look down at the dashboard. Your heart sinks as you see the fuel gauge needle edging E.

"Dammit."

Maybe it would have been wiser to siphon gas from someone who wasn't broke. Well, you have a couple options here. Roselake isn't much further, even on E you should be able to at least get into town if you coast down hills and watch your speed.

You can stop at a quiet parking lot and do the gas siphon trick in your own favor.

Or you can get some gas and cash all at once by knocking over a convenience store. You aren't carrying your .22 for show. Plus you've already got murder on your rap sheet. What's a little larceny?

>Try to coast home
>Stop and siphon gas
>Rob a gas station
>Write in
>>
>>6178587
>Stop and siphon gas
We need to lay low and make distance
>>
>>6178587
>Rob a gas station
I'm down for some larceny
>>
>>6178587
>Stop and siphon gas
As long as we haven’t been caught, we’re still innocent. No need to draw attention to ourselves with armed robbery.
>>
>Stop and siphon gas
>>
>>6178587
>>Stop and siphon gas
>>
>Stop and siphon gas

Writing
>>
You're not going to risk drawing more attention to yourself with a holdup and you're not really all that confident the Eagle can make it the rest of the way. That leaves siphoning.

You cruise the highway towards Lasker City, eyes out for remote parking lots. You pass a biker bar but it's way too lively. Someone would see for sure. Other lots are deserted and empty.

The fuel gauge needle is humping E when you see your chance. You slow down and coast into the gravel lot on the roadside. It's full of parked city work vehicles, mostly semis and bulldozers and shit. Stuff that takes diesel, but there are a handful of pickups too.

You slow to a stop between two and shut off your car, listening to the silence before you get out. With hose and gas can you reach the first truck, open it and start siphoning. You spit out the first of the bitter, burning fluid and stick the hose into the plastic can, listening as it slowly fills. This will take a little to get the gas you need.

You crouch on your haunches, a cold breeze blowing your hair, your eyes fixed on the empty highway. After a minute you hear the gas can is nearly full. You also hear distant sirens, fire trucks probably.

Without a phone or watch you're not really sure how long it's been. Maybe half an hour? Hopefully enough to burn up any trace of what happened in that motel room.

You pull the hose out and pour the cans into your gas tank. It's about half a gallon. It should get you home. If you take more time you could probably get a full tank and not have to worry about gas money for a bit.

Besides, maybe there's something in these trucks? Tools you can use or sell. Maybe some cash.

Or maybe you'd better get the fuck out of here.


>Fill the tank and search the trucks
>Just get home
>Write in
>>
>>6178758
>Just get home
>>
>>6178758
>Just get home
There's no reason to incriminate ourselves. Let's vamoose.
>>
>>6178758
Get the gas, ignore the contents of the trucks.
Resist the urge to pee into the fuel tank of those who have more than you. Undeservingly so.
>>
>>6178758
>Just get home
>>
>Just get home

Writing
>>
"Fuck it," you say, sticking your siphoning kit back into the trunk. You slam it closed and then look at the nearest truck. After a moment you shake your head. If you don't have time to loot then you definitely don't have time to piss on the gas tank. Even if you wanted to.

You climb back in and start it. The needle climbs above E a bit. But not enough to be comfortable with. It'll have to do.

You put the car in drive and pull back onto the freeway, pressing harder on the accelerator, looking to get miles between you and the fire. You get off the freeway before the exit to Lasker City and start onto the winding rural roads you remember. It's weird how quickly things return to you, memories of a childhood spent in suffering.

You flex your grip on the steering wheel, watching the scars stretch on the back of your hand. Every mile you drive shifts your concern from the motel and to home. You haven't been back in five years since you left the first time, what you thought was for good.

The hills rise around you, the endless commercial sprawl and infill of the highway corridor forgotten. The dark, sooty highrises of Lasker City lost in the gloom behind you. The moon climbs above the hills, pale light playing off endless acres of pines. It makes you feel small in a way you don't like. It makes you feel insignificant.

You cross Foster's Bridge. The deep drop off to the creek far below is invisible in the dark. You can feel your anxiety rising as the tires of your Eagle thud back onto solid pavement.
>>
Roselake. Home. Where it all began.

A short distance further down this road will put you in downtown Roselake, such as it is, just beyond that the Lake itself. That's not where you're headed though. You take a left, driving up into the hills, the trees closing in around you. After a few minutes you hit gravel. A few more minutes later and pull off to a driveway beside a dead oak trunk and a mailbox that says MERCER.

Home.

You cruise slowly up the driveway, past an open shed and a closed up tin-sheeted barn. A small, two-story farmhouse sits atop the hill overlooking what were once cow pastures but now are just more dense pinewoods.

You pull in beside an aging Chevy pickup. Like the Eagle, it was once Dad's. You park and shut the car off.

The paint on the house is peeling, flaking away. The wooden floorboards of the porch are warped with age. Drifts of dead leaves have collected in the corners and hollows of this place making it look forgotten, abandoned.

The downstairs is dark, but garish pink light glows from the upper bedroom, your room at one point.

You get out of the car and close the door, not taking your eyes off the house. This place had been a prison for you when you were a kid. You'd swore never to come back. Guess you're not good at promises, huh?

The porch creaks and the screen door squeals on dry hinges as you pull it open. There's no doorbell. You knock twice, hard. Then you wait.

After a moment a light appears downstairs, then a pale, gaunt face appears in the window. Your mom, her light hair tied back severely. Her expression goes from suspicion to shock and then fear when she recognizes you.

She disappears from the window and the lights snap off. You sigh and knock again. You hear a voice, muffled but familiar.

"What the fuck are you doing, mom? Who is it?"

Your sister's voice is unmistakable, a relic of a time you'd done everything you could to forget.

You don't hear your mom's reply, but the light comes back on and the door jerks open. Your sister, Candi Mercer, stands in the open doorway, haloed with light. Her eyes are ringed with kohl, lips painted black. She wears a loose T-shirt and gym shorts. You would assume she was getting ready for bed if not for the makeup.

She has your same pale eyes and blonde hair, though hers is actually shorter than yours, beld haphazardly back from her face with hair ties and clips.

A moment of silence passed as she stares at you in disbelief. A ghost.


>Hey sis, I'm home. Surprise!
>You gonna stand there and stare or let me in?
>Candi. It's been a while.
>Write in
>>
>>6178837
>You gonna stand there and stare or let me in?
Alibis are important.
>>
>>6178837
>You gonna stand there and stare or let me in?
>>
>>6178837
>You gonna stand there and stare or let me in?
>>
>>6178837
>Hey sis, I'm home. Surprise!
classic psycho
>>
>You gonna stand there and stare or let me in?

Writing
>>
You stare back for a moment. "Are you gonna stand there and stare, or are you gonna let me in?" You say finally.

Candi's jaw snaps closed but she doesn't say anything. Instead she steps aside, lifting an arm, beckoning you inside.

You step by her and hear her close the door behind you. Your mom is gone already, vanished back to her room leaving only the lingering skunky odor of marijuana. The living room is virtually unchanged from when you were a kid. A threadbare couch sits against the far wall facing an ancient television set. Beside the couch is a well-worn recliner. Dad's recliner. You half expect to see him sitting there, his face glowing in the ghostly light of the TV, beer can in hand, eyes hard, sharp.

Of course he's not there. Not anymore.

The coffee table has a handful of coasters and a handful of watermarks from glasses which didn't use coasters. The walls are covered in photographs of people, family you assume, though none are of you. There's one of Candi when she was sixteen. Her hair is back in pigtails, braces glittering in her mouth, she wears a Nine Inch Nails shirt.

"Jesus, Kyle," Candi says, looking you over. She seems shaken which is so unlike her that it almost unsettles you. Candi survived everything you did and more. If your presence here startles her… honestly, no clue what that means. Things are worse than you thought maybe.

You look back at her, regarding her silently.

She seems shaken, surprised. "I thought you…" she shakes her head. "Well I guess I'll go make some coffee, huh? I bet we have to do some catching up." She pushes past you and goes to the kitchen. There was enough room that the push was unnecessary, just a little sibling love. You watch her pass, unwelcome memories surfacing unbidden.

It will make you stronger.
It's okay. I'll show you.
We can do this.

She smells sweet, like perfume. She never smelled like that before you left. You see her through the open door of the kitchen, flitting from cabinet to counter, dragging out the accoutrements to make a low quality cup of instant coffee.

"Sure," you say.

You leave the living room, walking slowly, your footsteps squeaking floorboards. The smell of this place is eerily familiar. Somehow it's like you never left. The musk of your mom's weed, the sickly sweet tobacco smell of Dad's cigarettes, it's all here still, all these years later. You cross through the entry hall and stop in the doorway of the dining room. It's small, dark, mostly taken up with an old piano and a tiny table. A shotgun hangs on the wall here, double barrel. God knows if it has shells in it or not. You hope you won't have to find out.

Your eyes fix on the door to Dad's room. Really your mom's room now, but…it will always be Dad's room in your mind. It's closed, the soft sounds of the 700 Club coming from beyond. Flickering television light shines from beneath the door. You won't go in there.
>>
You return to the hall and start up the stairs. There's a single door here, once your room- Candi's room too you suppose. It glows with the same eerie pink light you saw from outside. Once at the top of the stairs you seize the door handle and stop. Someone, probably Candi, has scored the wood here with a knife or a hatchet. A deeply carved equilateral triangle marks the door here, like a child's depiction of a mountain. This was new. Dad would never have allowed this. No one would have dared.

The meaning eludes you. Candi being Candi probably.

You push the door open and are bathed in neon pink. The room beyond isn't yours anymore, that's for sure. You step inside slowly, scanning everything. The bunk bed is gone, replaced by a large, queen size bed on a metal bed frame wrapped in LED lights. The wall above the bed has a pentagram marked on it in black spray paint from floor to ceiling. Across the wall are more lights, pink, the source of the glow. They wrap and cascade down the wall.

On the opposite wall is a small desk, a gaming chair, a laptop and a webcam affixed to a tripod with a circular halo light mounted on it. A streaming set up. A large, pink vibrator sitting on the desk tells you what you need to know about what sort of content Candi is making here.

The corners of the room, invisible from the camera's perspective, are full of heaps of dirty clothes. A mix of Candi's usually dark attire, more casual clothes, and less decent things. Lingerie, harnesses, costumes, a panoply of debauchery.

"Coffee's ready," Candi says, standing behind you.

You look back at her, her expression is blank, unreadable. It's no surprise, hiding her true feelings was something she got good at when Dad was alive. Maybe the reason why her body is unblemished and yours is a road map of pain.

"It's downstairs," she says, glancing with casual indifference at the vibrator and then back to you.


>What did you do with my stuff?
>Camming? Really Candi? Is this what you've been doing?
>Thanks. (Go downstairs)
>Write in
>>
>>6178936
>What did you do with my stuff?
>>
>>6178936
>What did you do with my stuff?
There's no malice, just curiosity.
>>
>>6178936
>What did you do with my stuff?
>>
>What did you do with my stuff?"

Writing
>>
You take another look around the room before looking back at your sister. "So what did you do with my stuff?"

Candi stares at you before folding her arms over her chest. "What did I do with your stuff? Kyle…what the fuck are you talking about?" She blurts. "You've been gone for five years. And now you show up, walk in like nothing happened and want your stuff?" She closes her eyes and sighs. "I don't know. There's probably a box of tiddie mags and knives and rat skulls or whatever out in the shed." When she opens her eyes again they seem to glitter. She smirks, her expression changing like a mask. "Unless you miss our old bunk bed. Sorry, had to sell that one, hun."

"I noticed." You look back at the bed. "Well…let's get that coffee. We'll catch up." When you turn back around Candi is closer, nearly chest to chest with you.

She leans in slightly and you feel her breath on your neck, hot. She sniffs once, lays a hand on your chest and looks up into your eyes. "You smell like blood, Kyle. Again." She smiles, pearly whites peeking from behind lush, black lips. "I wonder why." She pulls away before you can answer. "I'm sure you'll tell me when you're ready." She walks out of the room, leaving you momentarily at a loss behind her. It's like you never even left.

You follow after her, closing the bedroom door behind you, blocking out that lustful pink light. "You haven't changed," you say.

"No?" She glances back at you as the two of you descend the stairs. "And how would you know? You've only just met me."

"Ha."

She walks through the dark living room and into the kitchen, pulling out a chair at the table. Two mugs of coffee steam on the counter. Cindy's is a novelty mug. It has a muscular Indian in a feathered headdress on it. When it gets hot his loincloth disappears.

Yours is white ceramic and lacks any nudity, tasteful or otherwise.

You sit opposite her and she sips the coffee, wincing. "Wow this is bad."

You sip and likewise wince. "Yeah."

Regardless of how hot it is or how bad it is, she drinks. She keeps her gaze fixed on you, staring at you over the mug. She's waiting for you. She finally sets it down. "So. You're back."

"I'm back," you say.

"For how long?" The question is tight, bitter.

You don't answer. You can't because you really don't know.

"Hm." She sips again, looking away.

"Alright. So what then? Why did you come back?" Her eyes are wide, unguarded, unjudging. She's not often like this. You both developed methods to survive what you went through. Her scars are on the inside, her defense mechanisms much more nuanced than yours, less visceral. For Candi to be open is an exceptional act of bravery on her part. Maybe she deserves an honest answer. Or at least part of one,


>I have to a score to settle
>I need to fix what's wrong with me
>I came back for you
>>
>>6179033
>I have to a score to settle
Punished Kyle.
>>
>>6179033
>I need to fix what's wrong with me
>>
>>6179033
>I have to a score to settle
>>
>>6179033
>I need to fix what's wrong with me
Love me some atonement.
>>
Going to let this vote run another eight hours or so. Then we'll see what motivates you.
>>
>>6179033
>I need to fix what's wrong with me
>>
>>6179033
>I came back for you
>>
>>6179033
>>I came back for you
>>
>>6179033
>>I need to fix what's wrong with me
I sense some incestuous sexual tension in here
>>
>I need to fix what's wrong with me

Writing
>>
You look away from her, staring unfocused at the tabletop. "There's something wrong with me, Candi. It's…it hasn't stopped since that night. It's gotten worse."

Surprise flashes across her features swiftly hidden and replaced with concern. "Worse?"

You nod. "I…I can't remember things. Things I should. I wake up places and…"

"Are you hurting people?" She asks.

You think of the girl in the motel. You think of the others. You think of the blood. You nod.

"I came here to fix it. To…to find out what's going on and fix it," you say. "I've tried pills and…" you shake your head. "I'm all fucked up."

Candi's fingers brush across your cheek, gently guiding your attention back to her. "There's nothing wrong with you, Kyle." She gives you a patient smile, her fingertips on your dead skin. "I like you just the way you are."

You pull away, leaning back out of her reach. You can't meet her gaze. "It wasn't supposed to keep happening. What if I hurt someone important? Someone I care about?"

Candi's expression flashes sour, her lower lip pouting out. "Hey, good thing you came back to me," she says. "Otherwise you might have hurt someone you care about!"

"I'm not going to hurt you," you say in disgust.

"No? Why not? Is something wrong with me?" Candi blurts the question.

"No! Fuck, what's the matter with you?" you spit back.

She blinks and the anger is gone. She sighs softly. "I'm sorry. I…there's a lot going on right now and…" she sighs again, rubbing her face, careful not to smudge her lipstick or eye shadow. "Listen, you can stay here. Obviously you can stay here, Kyle. This is your home. Always. As far as what's going on with you…I'll look into it, okay? In the meantime…I don't know, go talk to Ralphie about something to help you sleep. All we've got is Mom's shitty skunk weed," she says bitterly.

Ralphie. A name from your past. A weasley kid blessed with the knowledge of marijuana cultivation. Maybe he'd have something to help you.

"Ralphie's still around?" you ask.

Candi nods but looks distracted. "Who isn't? Kyle, you really think anyone leaves Roselake?"

"I did."

"You did," she agrees with a saccharin smile. "And look where you are now. Right back where you left me."

Silence lapses. Candi stares at her empty Indian mug and then looks at the clock on the microwave. "It's getting late. Where are you sleeping?"

The bunk bed is gone of course, but there's room enough in Candi's new bed. She's a small sleeper. That or the couch in the living room. It's lumpy and smells like ass, but you'll be alone. If that's what you want. Dad's room is out of the question. Even if you made Mom sleep on the couch you won't go in there, certainly won't sleep there.


>I can sleep with you
>I'll sleep on the couch
>Write in
>>
>>6179304
>I can sleep with you
>>
>>6179304
Damn, Punished Kyle is a no-go.
>I'll sleep on the couch
Best to avoid awkwardness.
>>
>>6179304
>>I can sleep with you
>>
>>6179304
>I can sleep with you

LET'S GOOOOOO
>>
>I can sleep with you

Writing
>>
"I was planning on sleeping with you," you say.

Candi blinks a few times at you. At first you think she's batting her eyelashes but then you realize she's just surprised. "Really? You're sure? You wouldn't rather sleep in your car? It's supposed to stay above freezing tonight."

"Ha."

Candi shrugs. "Yeah that's fine. If you want. I just hope you're not still a bed hog."

"It was a twin mattress," you say. "There wasn't even enough room on it for just me."

"Suuure." She grins but then freezes, suddenly looking horrified. "Oh shit. What time is it?" She looks at the microwave clock and takes out her phone.

"What?" you ask. "Why? What is it?"

She types a bit and shakes her head. "I had a stream scheduled tonight but…I guess I'll reschedule. Yeah, it'll be fine."

You don't really know how you feel about that so you say nothing.

Candi types a bit more. "Yeah, I'll just do something tomorrow instead. No biggie."

Again, you respond with uncertain silence.

She looks up at you and then wrinkles her nose. "Just go shower first. You smell like blood."

"I thought you liked the smell of blood," you say, smirking.

She looks at you dubiously. "Sometimes. But I don't need it in my bed. Just go clean up, okay?"

"Sure." You dump your coffee and put the mug in the sink before going into the hall bathroom. The trashcan here is overflowing with wadded tissues and makeup removal pads. A clothes hamper is heaped high with more of Candi's shit. The sink is crowded with makeup in all its forms. You shove it aside and hear a few bottles drop to the floor but nothing shatters. You undress, folding your clothes up and setting them by the sink, finally resting your .22 on top.

You stare at your reflection again. Home. Full circle. You made it. You just hope Candi can help you. You sniff the back of your hand, smelling only skin. How the hell can Candi smell blood on you? Is t really that bad? Maybe she was fucking with you.

You sigh and put it out of mind. You shower, mindful of the phalanx of hygiene products that litter the tub. Plastic product bottles, lotion, shampoo, conditioner, exfoliating pads, back scrubber, loofa, razors, god, how much shit does one chick need?
>>
Clean enough, you pull on boxers and head upstairs. The pink light is off. Moonlight comes in through the window, the only light in the room.

Candi's eyes shine in the dark. She lays in bed, half under the covers which she pulls aside for you.

You cross the room and lay beside her. She throws the sheets over you and curls up beside you, resting her head on your chest. "I'm glad you're back." You can't see her clearly but you feel her fingernail trailing the path of scars across your skin. "I thought you were gone for good," she says. "I thought you…" she trails off. "You're always welcome here, Kyle. I mean…with me. There will be a spot here until the day I die." She shifts slightly, looking up at you. "I'll never forget what you did for me."

You can see it in your mind's eye, the memory floating through the murk of your thoughts up to the surface. Candi's fingers interlaced, her nails painted black. You see her eyes closed, brow furrowed in concentration. She opens her eyes and looks at you. She nods. We can do this.


>We took care of each other. You looked out for me too.
>I'd rather not think about it at all. The past is behind me.
>Say nothing
>Write in
>>
>>6179408
>Damn, Punished Kyle is a no-go.
Don't worry. There will be plenty of opportunities to exercise violence against those who deserve it and maybe those who don't.
>>
>>6179588
I FUCKING LOVE VIOLENCE. I LOVE HURTING PEOPLE. I LOVE CAUSING EXTREME PHYSICAL TRAUMA. I LOVE UTILIZING VARIOUS OBJECTS TO LETHAL RESULT.

>t. what Candi probably wishes Kyle would say
>>
>>6179587
>We took care of each other. You looked out for me too.
>>
>>6179587
Say nothing
>>
>>6179602
Just because she (sometimes) likes the smell of blood you assume she must also like drawing blood?

That's a bold assumption, Anon.
>>
>>6179587
>I'm glad to be back, too.
>>
>>6179587
>We took care of each other. You looked out for me too.
>>
>We took care of each other. You looked out for me too.

Writing
>>
"We took care of each other," you say, staring at the ceiling, lost in darkness above you. "You looked out for me too." You remember Candi getting Dad off your case more than once. It wasn't any easier for her than you. It took guts and more than that it took love.

"Mm," Candi hums happily. "What else are big sisters for? But still…you're the strong one, Kyle. You always were."

You're not sure if that's really true or not. You saw what Dad did to Candi night after night. Thinking about it sets your teeth on edge, makes your pulse quicken. But it's over now. You try to relax, focus on your breathing, focusing on the weight of Candi's head on your chest, her arm across you. You did what you had to do to survive."

You're not sure if that's really true or not.

It will make you stronger.

Candi nuzzles into the side of your neck, her face against your scar. "Goodnight, Kyle."

"Night." You close your eyes and breathe easy.
>>
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When you open your eyes again it's still dark. Sort of. It's night but everything looks… You sit up in bed. Everything is grainy, stark, a blood black negative. Your first instinct is to exclaim, say something like "What the fuck" or "Huh?" but a second, older, far stronger instinct overcomes you, an instinct that tells you to stay silent and very very still. You're in danger. It's a sensation you haven't felt since you were a child here, but its unmistakable.

You look around, head turning slowly. Candi's room is as it should be, aside from looking like you're staring at it through a fucked up red filter. Her computer is powered down, accent lights off. Candi herself sleeps curled in a ball beside you, knees to her chest, eyes closed. Her chest rises and falls softly.

"Candi." You speak softly, calmly. Not quite a whisper.

She doesn't stir.

"Candi," you repeat. You touch her shoulder.

"Mmmm," her brow furrows and she holds herself tighter, like she's having a bad dream. She's cold to the touch. Or maybe you're cold. Either way, something is wrong and she's not waking up. She's not a heavy sleeper. You're considering trying again anyway when you realize that the scars on your arms, some of them anyway, the important ones, are glowing.

The light is cold, white, dim, but its there. You hold up your forearm and marvel at the strange, angular paths. The cigarette burns and random slashes are there like normal, dull red like the rest of your flesh in this strange redness, but the special ones are all lit up.

Again, you resist the urge to say something about this out loud. That feeling of danger is only growing stronger.

You slide silently from bed, bare feet on cold wood. Dull light comes from the window. You go to it, staying in the shadows and peer out. You see the car and truck parked out front, the yard is as it was when you got here, the woods pressing in from all sides, all bathed in grainy crimson. There's no moon and no stars but somehow you can tell it's night.

You cross the room, moving past Candi's streaming set up to a second window looking toward the side of the house. You see more woods of course, blanketing the hills of what could laughably be called the Mercer Farm. You stop and squint slightly, surprised to see another pale white glow, this one tinting the horizon. Something deep in the woods, beyond the hills, is glowing very brightly. You don't have the faintest idea what that could be or what's even out there. Exploring the woods was always more Candi's thing.
>>
You freeze, your heart skips a beat when you realize there's a woman standing at the edge of the woods.

She's stark naked, almost a hundred yards away. Her hair blows softly. Despite the distance, despite the dark, you recognize her. Its the woman from the motel. The woman you killed. She's staring back at you, her eyes shining in the red night. Although you should be hidden in shadow you're certain she can see you.

A chill runs up your spine but she doesn't move, only stands and stares.

Something else darts through the hellish red woods behind her, something bigger, something crueler. You catch half a glimpse of a pale flank and powerful limbs before it's gone, circling toward the front of the house. The sense of being in danger has amplified now, growing beyond an uncomfortable tickle. Now it's the voice of a terrified little boy screaming in your head to GET OUT GET OUT GET OUT.

You ignore the voice and hurry to the front window again, trying to get a glimpse of the pale thing out there. You stare into the yard, watching tall grass blow in the breeze. The pines sway as one. Whatever it is, you don't see it anymore, but you know it's still out there. Somehow you know it's still out there and it's trying to get in here.

You look back at Candi. She turns in her sleep, whimpering softly. A nightmare for sure.

There's nothing to fight with in this room except your fists and teeth and you aren't sure those will work on whatever you saw. There are two guns in this house. A shotgun in the dining room and your .22 pistol.

The .22 is farther away in the bathroom in the downstairs hall. The shotgun is much closer in the den, but you're not actually sure if it's loaded.

>Go downstairs and get the shotgun
>Go downstairs and get your pistol
>Try harder to wake up Candi
>Write in
>>
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I'll let voting continue to 3:00PM UTC or until there's a clear consensus if that comes sooner. I'll try to stick closer to a schedule going forward. Expect updates every day.

I'll try to update by the following times at least if I don't get a clear consensus before that.

3:00 PM UTC
12:00 Midnight UTC
4:00 AM UTC

Happy hunting.
>>
>>6179837
>Try harder to wake up Candi
We wake her up. She wakes us up. No more scary things in the woods.
>>
>>6179837
>Try harder to wake up Candi
Hoo boy here we go
>>
>>6179837
>>Try harder to wake up Candi
>>
>Try harder to wake up Candi

Writing
>>
"Candi. Candi." You say her name forcefully, louder. "Candi!" You shake her by the shoulders. Panic edges into your words. You're alone. You're scared and your sister isn't here to help you.

"Shit." Enough of this. You rip the sheets off her and roll her onto her back. She loosens her grip on her legs and lays flat. Her chest rises and falls steadily.

You take her by the chin and turn her head, getting the angle right. Then you slap her across the face.

She grimaces and murmurs. "Nn-no."

You didn't want to do it but you also know Candi can take it.

"Candi! Wake up." You slap your sister again. Hard. Her head jerks to the side with the impact, hair tossing. Your palm stings from the strike.

You see a single tear run down her cheeks. Her lower lip trembles. "Dad…please."

She's not getting up.

Your sense of danger is becoming panic. That thing could already be in the house. Your pad silently over to the bedroom door and press your ear to it. You faintly hear…a voice? It sounds like a man repeating something. It sounds familiar to you but it also sounds unnatural. Like a recording. You can't make it out.


>Try to barricade the bedroom door
>Escape out the window
>Go for a gun downstairs
>Write in
>>
>>6180024
>Go for a gun downstairs
The shotgun
>>
>>6180024
>Go for a gun downstairs
>>
>>6180024
>Go for a gun downstairs

Time to gun for it
>>
>>6180024
Ah shit it's over, if we hear the fucker outside the bedroom door it's definitely in here, going outside might instantly kill us
Or I'm getting psy-oped and delaying to get the gun even more will end up with us killed
>Try to barricade the bedroom door
While the fucked up pentagram and strange triangle on the doorframe unnerve me and I probably wouldn't have voted to sleep in here, maybe it's doing something. There's also a tripod in here we can use for... staving off death by a few seconds. I'm also fine with going to get the gun however, this is a tough spot
>>
>Go for a gun

Writing
>>
Your anxiety is nearing full blown panic. You're not afraid of much, but this is something you don't know how to handle. It's a dream, right? It's got to be just a fucked up weird dream. If this is a dream then it can't hurt you.

You turn the knob and pull the door open. The entry way is empty, dark. Well, dark except for the light from the carved triangle in Candi's door. You turn and look at it curiously. It's glowing, light emanating from the scratches in the wood. It glows like your important scars do, like the light coming from deep in the woods. Does this light have something to do with Candi?

You hear that voice again and steel yourself to fight. It's repeating. Again and again. It sounds like it's coming from downstairs. You turn back and pick up Candi's tripod, yanking the cords out of the back of the webcam. It will have to do until you can get the shotgun.

You start down the stairs. Like Candi you learned years ago how to move silently. It was never good enough though, and it doesn't seem to be good enough now. Wood creaks beneath your feet, your breath comes fast and loud. You hold the tripod like a spear in front of yourself.

Finally you reach the hall and look around.

The bathroom door is closed but the dining room is closer anyway. The voice is coming from the dining room but you recognize the sound now. It's the television, muffled but audible, coming from Dad's room.

You slink around the corner and into the dining room. Grainy red light spills in from the windows here. The shotgun hangs where it always has. A faint flickering red comes from under Dad's door. The TV blaring. The 700 Club.

"JESUS IS HERE. HALLELUJAH. JESUS IS HERE. HALLELUJAH."

You lick dry lips and force yourself closer. You circle the dining room table and put down the tripod quietly. You reach up and gently lift the shotgun off the mount. It's heavy, familiar. The last time you held this… Best not to think about that.

You slide the lever over and break open the action, relieved to see two shells in the chamber. Loaded, but just two shots. You close it again as quietly as you can.

"JESUS IS HERE. HALLELUJAH. JESUS IS HERE. HALLELUJAH."

You hear another sound coming from Dad's door, muffled sobbing. It's mom. She's crying beneath the sound of the TV.

You're not going in there.
>>
You back away from Dad's door and back into the hallway. Shotgun at the ready you look into the living room. Nothing. You pull back and see a flash of white at the top of the stairs. You whip and take aim in time to see something big disappear into Candi's room. A huge, muscled, naked form.

Your heart is trying to escape your chest, pounding hard. Candi. Candi!

Before you can hesitate you start up the stairs, taking them two at a time, not daring to look away from her doorway.

You slide through the light from the triangle and press your back to the wall by the door frame. You can hear the thing sliding and trotting through Candi's room. You swallow and risk a peak.

It's there. Huge, pale, back rippling with muscle. Its the size of a man–no, bigger. It moves on all fours like a bear or a hyena or a wolf. Where a man would have fingers it has hooked claws which leave scratches in the wood. Its hands are the size of catcher's mitts. The shoulders taper to a thick, muscular neck and a wolfish, equine face. It has saucer-sized eyes, black ringed with white. They wheel crazily in its head, looking everywhere at once. It has a mane of black hair running down its back.

You can only stare, frozen in horror as it circles the perimeter of the bedroom leaving a thick trail of saliva drooling from its jaws. It sniffs around her computer, sniffs the vibrator on the desk, sniffs a clothes pile, working its way steadily closer to the bed.

You've got to to something. You only have two shells.

>Shoot it in the back
>Make a noise, try to lure it into an ambush
>Write in
>>
>>6180104
Somehow I don't think it's smart to fire shotgun shells in Candi's general direction while trying to take down this guy, that's just begging for the wake up and realize we killed our sister revelation
>Make a noise, try to lure it into an ambush
>>
>>6180104
>Make a noise, try to lure it into an ambush
>Stomp hard on a creaking plank, hell, maybe even scream for it to come running, we know it's fast so we should not get that surprised by it.
The ambush should be at the end of the stares where we can have a clear way to run, if we do it on the stairs that fucker is going to trample and catch us in a neat corridor. If he's the one tight in the stairs and we have space to run, we're at an advantage.
>>
>>6180104
>Make a noise, try to lure it into an ambush
Just in case we’re sleepwalking and already running around with a loaded shotgun like a maniac.
>>
>Make a noise, try to lure it into an ambush

Writing
>>
Silently, you duck back around the corner. You ready the gun and click the safety off. In that moment you hesitate. What if this is real? Or real enough? What if this is all your fucked up brain hallucinating and you're about to put two holes into your sister or something?

You hear the thing snuffling loudly in Candi's room and the heavy squeak of her bed frame as it gets onto the bed with her. Dream or not this feels pretty fucking real and you don't know what will happen to your sister if you do nothing.

You push hard on the floor with your foot, feeling a board yield slightly. When you take your weight off it the board squeaks loud and slow.

The snuffling stops. You hear her bed frame creak as weight leaves it.

You lift the shotgun to your shoulder, both barrels pointing at the door frame. You know that thing is fast. You probably have just one shot here, both barrels at close range the second you see it appear and god help you if this is real somehow.

Your hear beats out half seconds. You hear nothing. You see nothing. Then its head appears.

The thing slides around the corner with fluid smoothness. Its wide, horrible eyes are both fixed on you, huge and unblinking as it slides smoothly into view. Fangs drip saliva. It's smiling at you.

You don't scream though you want to. Instead you pull both triggers at the same time.

Roll 1d6
I need three rolls looking for 5 or 6.
More hits is more good.
>>
Rolled 6 (1d6)

>>6180125
Damn I fucking hope that's not our sister looking out to see what the creaking was, but considering we chose the option that wasn't shooting her in the bed I'll place some trust in qm to not bullshit us
>>
Rolled 4 (1d6)

>>6180125

>>6180129
I for one welcome dumping a hot bunch of shots into our sister. Wait a second
>>
Rolled 6 (1d6)

>>6180125
ANOTHER 6 OR A 5 BABY, LET'S GO
>>
>6,4,6

Kyle is a pretty good shot! Let's see how that plays out.

Writing.
>>
>>6180148
let's gooooooooo two 6's for two shells
>>
The shotgun roars just like it did the last time you used it. A double blast of buckshot rips into the thing's face, pulping eyes, skin, teeth, and jaws into a spray of blood that splatters the far wall. It falls lifeless to the ground and you open your eyes.

The sunlight, real sunlight, comes in through Candi's bedroom window. You blink. Nothing is red.

You sit up and look at Candi, knowing somehow what you'll see.

Your sister lies beside you, curled around herself, her makeup from last night is smudged around her eyes. She wakes up and looks up at you, blinking blearily. "Kyle?" She relaxes slightly, looking relieved. "I thought maybe that was a dream…"

You relax. Your sister isn't dead. You look around. The tripod and camera are where they were when you went to bed. Maybe it really was a dream…

"No such luck," you say to her.

She laughs softly and rolls onto her back. "Mm." She stretches, arching her back and reaching out to her sides, her arm lays across your chest. Her shirt slides up exposing a pale, smooth stomach. You can read the tattoo on her ribs.

Find what you love
And let it kill you

"Had a bad dream I think," she says. "Something about Dad." Candi frowns slightly. "But I can't remember."

"I had weird dreams too," you say, watching as she gets out of bed. You wonder how much of her dream about Dad has to do with your dream.

"Yeah. I guess that shouldn't be a surprise for us. For you being back here." Candi peels off her shirt and tosses it into the nearest pile and opens her dresser drawer, rifling around for a bra and another shirt. She stops and looks back over her shoulder at you. "What, are you just going to watch?"

You sigh and roll onto your back, staring at the ceiling as Candi dresses.

"I've got a lot of shit I've got to do today," she says. "I need to run my stream tonight and I need–fuck. Are we out of groceries? What days is it?"

You look over at her. "Sunday I think."

"Fuck. Yeah, we'll have to go shopping probably. Oh! I can send you." She smiles deviously at you. Now Candi wears just a bra and panties. You blink, surprised when you see another tattoo on her chest. "Is that an Ouroboros?"

She smiles at you, confused. "Yes? Why?"

"I didn't know you had one too…"

Candi tilts her head. "Seriously? Kyle we got it together after…you know."

Why don't you remember that?

"Why? When did you think you got yours?"

You shake your head.

Candi frowns sympathetically at you. "Wow. You really don't remember shit, huh?"

You shake your head again.

"Poor thing." She pulls on a tank top marked prominently with an image of Baphomet. "We'll get it figured out. I'm sure it will all come back to you whether you want it to or not. Now I've got to go shave and get ready for tonight. Go see if Mom will make breakfast or something."

>So is this what you do now? Camming?
>What's with the triangle on your door anyway?
>I dreamed there was a monster in here hunting us. I tried to wake you up.
>Write in
>>
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>>6180148
>>6180129
That’s it right there.
>>6180174
>I dreamed there was a monster in here hunting us. I tried to wake you up.
>>
>>6180174
>What's with the triangle on your door anyway?
>>
>>6180176
>Sleep
Kyle's on that sigma grindset
>>
>>6180174
All this devil shit is freakin me out Candi
>What's with the triangle on your door anyway?
Also let's take a look and see if ol' shotgun really does have two shells eventually
>>
>>6180174
>What's with the triangle on your door anyway?
If the girl we killed is some kind of Witch (like maybe our sister is) and she placed a curse on us because we killed her, better if we try and understand this dream magic bullshit

>>6180176
Born to fuck our sister, forced to grind
>>
>What's with the triangle on your door anyway?

Writing
>>
You get out of bed and look around on the floor for your pants. Right. Your clothes are in the bathroom downstairs still with your gun. You open her bedroom door and stare at the triangle here. You can't shake the eerie sensation that dream left you with. "Candi."

"Hm?" She's pulling on pants, wiggling them up her thighs and buttoning them. "What?"

"What's with this triangle?" You point.

She comes over and looks at it. "Oh. It's a protection symbol." She studies it for a second. "When you left and it was just me…" she hesitates. "Well I didn't like being on my own here so I made some changes."

"Protection symbol?"

"Yeah," she says. "Something I learned. You have one."

You look at her. "What?"

She reaches and you takes you by the wrist, lifting your left forearm. "See?"

Sure enough, among the other scars, partly obscured by the burn on your left side is an equilateral triangle. When you see it, you remember.

Candi's eyes are red from crying. You sit on the lower bunk facing her. You're mostly numb to it all. Your heart would break if you let yourself feel everything so instead you just stare back at her. You know why she was crying. She was with Dad.

Candi smiles at you. It's a sad, pathetic thing that doesn't quite reach her eyes. She's just trying to look okay. She's hold your left arm by the wrist. "Here," she says, flicking open a butterfly knife with expert precision.

You watch the steel flash as the blade flies out. The handle is decorated with jeweled hearts. You stay still, her grip on your wrist is firm but gentle to ensure you don't flinch away.

"It will make you stronger," she says, looking into your eyes.

You nod.

Candi traces three lines of fire across the bare skin of your arm, enclosing some of Dad's cigarette burns and parallel razor slashes.

You clench your teeth hard, determined not to cry out or pull away. You can't show Candi any weakness. You need to show her that you are strong, as strong as she thinks you can be.

She gives you a sympathetic smile, this one more genuine. In a minute it's over, leaving a bloody triangle carved into your arm.

Your hand trembles slightly and blood drips down onto your sheets.

Candi is quick to cover her work with a paper towel. The white quickly soaks red. She presses gently. "It will make you stronger," she repeats, a tear running down her cheek. "And then when you're strong enough you can prot-"
>>
"It's just a little superstition I guess," Candi says with a shrug. "I dunno. Look, shoo. I've got to start doing my hair and stuff. It's going to take all day. Just … stay out of trouble okay?"

"Alright," you say, still staring at the mark on your arm. It must have been glowing with the rest of the marks Candi put on you. You pad downstairs and into the bathroom. Your stuff is all still here. You tug on your jeans and stick your pistol back in the waistband. You'll have to wash your stuff soon and get your other clothes out of the car. It'll be nice to have a place to do laundry for free at least.

You leave the bathroom and start for the kitchen and then stop, looking toward the dining room. Out of curiosity you walk in and over to the shotgun. It still hangs on the wall, exactly where you last saw it. You take it down and break it open.

Two shells, both fired. You extract them and take a closer look. Green plastic with brass caps, each with a single dent in the back where they had been struck by the firing pin. Where these the shells spent yesterday? Or did they get used last night?

You close the gun and hang it back up before continuing into the kitchen.

Mom is here. She slides four pieces of white bread into the toaster and pulls the handle down. She turns around and catches a glimpse of you and jumps, her eyes go wide. Just as quickly as she panics she reigns herself in, raising her arms semi-defensively.

She looks like she did last night, maybe less stoned. Tired, afraid, washed out like a photograph left in the sun for a decade.

"Kyle," she blurts. "I…hello…there's breakfast." She gestures to some scrambled eggs cooking in the pan and the soon-to-be toast.


>I can see that
>Thanks
>Boo!
>Write in
>>
>>6180241
>Thanks
Alright, the bedroom is the safest place in the house, noted, good thing we didn't sleep on the couch probably, then we wouldn't have double triangle protection (maybe that triangle carved in is what makes us hard to kill)
Shells were used, something definitely happened
And thanks for breakfast mom
>>
>>6180241
>>Thanks
>>
>>6180241
>Thanks
>>
>Thanks

Writing
>>
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"Thanks," you say, not failing to note the total terror in her eyes and the fact that she doesn't look away from you. You look at the eggs. "You're gonna burn them."

Her eyes dart to the pan. "O-oh." She takes a half step away from you and continues cooking, stirring, flipping, and folding. "Pepper?" She asks.

"Sure." You move away from her and sit at the kitchen table as you watch her cook. You wonder why she sticks around here. Maybe she's just too scared to leave. Sure as shit she doesn't want to be here. You have absolutely no positive memories of your mother. The best thing you can say about her is that she never hurt you. She also never helped you or even acknowledged what Dad was doing to you and Candi. She kept herself sedated on cheap weed, kitschy bible shit, and "family values" TV.

"So, Kyle. Um…" Her hands shake as she scrapes some eggs onto a plate. "Did you sleep okay?"

"Yep."

She glances at you. "I know … uh…C-Candi has been saying how she wished you were around."

"Yeah?"

"Y-yep!"

Her pathetic attempt at a cheery "Domestic" voice is grating. Phony. Your mom doesn't give a shit. This is her version of the survival mechanisms you and Candi developed. While you got strong and Candi got good at hiding herself, Mom has always been a sycophant. A people pleaser. You could tell her to eat shit and die right now and she wouldn't bat an eye.

"She's a busy gal!" Mom says as she keeps cooking for a minute. "So …h-how long are you staying?" She tries to sound casual. She tries so hard to sound casual that it's incredibly forced.

"Not sure," you say, watching as she puts the plate in front of you along with two slices of buttered toast. "For a while."

"Oh."
>>
You eat and leave Mom fidgeting nervously beside you.

Candi flits into the kitchen her hair clipped up again, in the process of being…whatever the hell she was going to do to it. "Shut the fuck up, Mom. Jesus. Go take a hit or something you're stressing everyone out."

Mom smiles nervously at Candi. "What?" she says.

Candi rolls her eyes. "Where's the syrup?" She opens the fridge, bending at the waist to peer inside.

You wrinkle your nose in distaste as your sister's peculiar habit of putting maple syrup on her scrambled eggs.

"I …uh…I think we're out dear." Mom says.

"Oh for fuck's sake." Candi closes the fridge hard enough to rattle the accumulated stack of flashlights and spare dishes on top of the fridge. She sighs. "God dammit." She presses her palms to her eyes.

Mom chews her lip nervously, eyes darting around looking for an escape.

"Forget it," Candi says finally. "Worry about it later. I don't have time." She seems to realize you exist and looks at you again. "Maybe you can go pick up some syrup and shit from the store after you eat?"

"I don't have any money," you say.

Candi's expression turns sour. "No mon-" she stops mid-word, turns, and walks out of the kitchen.

You watch her go and then return to eating your breakfast. As far as eggs and toast goes it's pretty good. "It's good," you say to your Mom.

"Oh. Th-thank you, Kyle." Mom doesn't sit or join you. She just stands by the stove watching.

You chew and swallow before washing everything down with a glass of milk. "Mom."

She jumps. "Yes?"

"Have you guys used that shotgun for anything?" You look at her.

Mom's eyes, already wide, get wider still. "Shotgun?" She says like she's never heard of the word. "Oh, no. Heavens no."

"Squirrel shooting? An intruder? Anything?" you press.

"N-no! Nothing. I don't touch it and Candi doesn't either," she says.

You believe her. That meant the last time it was used was when you used it before you left.

"Hm. Mom?"

"Yes?"

"Do you know if anything is out in the woods out past the hills?" You ask, thinking of the glow you saw in your dream.

"In the woods?" She thinks. "No, I don't think so. Maybe Grandpa's mine but I've never seen it. I don't go out in the woods."

"Grandpa's Mine?"

"Your grandfather thought there was coal in these hills," she says. "Your Da–" she stops, terror spreading across her face as you look up at her. "I-I heard that he built a mine. A explorer mine or something."

"Hm." You finish your breakfast just in time for Candi to return.

She angrily thrusts a handful of bills at you. "This is all the cash we've got, Kyle," she says. Her eyes narrow at you. "So if you're going to fucking skip town, this is your best chance. Otherwise, when you get around to it I would really appreciate it if you could go grab some food."


>I'm not going to skip town, Candi
>Why can't Mom go do it?
>What's gotten into you? I said I'm here to help
>Write in
>>
>>6180315
>I deserve that. Uhhh. You got a list for me, you know how I am?
>>
>>6180317
>Alright, alright, I hear ya
Acting casual is the best way to defuse
Alright we got three sub-objectives- find weedfarmer bro, investigate mine, and buy food
And get gasoline I guess so we can actually drive places
We definitely shot dad with the shotgun
>>
>>6180328
Actually we need to check out the shed for our old stuff too/first probably
>>
Man, Candi REALLY likes syrup huh? gahdamn
>>
>>6180317
>I'm not going to skip town, Candi
>>
>>6180325
>>6180328
>>6180355


Writing
>>
You take the money and the harsh words. "I deserve that."

"No shit," Candi says, folding her arms and staring at you defiantly.

"I hear you, really," you say. "But I'm not going to skip town. I'm here."

"You're here because–" she freezes, jaw clicking shut. "Forget it. Fine." She relaxes a little but now she won't look at you. She's pouting. "Just get the groceries and…and come back. Okay?"

"You got a list?" you ask. "You know how I am."

"Yeah," She says. "I sure do." She moves to the fridge and snatches a piece of paper out from under a magnet. "This is it."

You take the list and review it. "Bread, milk eggs–" you stop and look up at her. "Tampons?"

"Regulars," she says. "Look, I'm low okay?"

"Jesus," you shake your head. "Fine. Whatever."

"And to be honest it's the fucking least you could do," she says, narrow her eyes and setting her jaw.

Mom hovers on the edge of your conversation looking increasingly uncomfortable. She tugs at her dress with fidgety hands.

"I know," you say. "I know. Look I… I'll get everything okay?"

Her mask of defiance slips enough that you see a glimpse of concern beneath. "Fine," she says again, relaxing again. "I've got to get ready. You still know the way?"

"Paul's?" you ask.

"It's the closest."

"Yeah, I know the way."

"Okay," Candi says. "See you when you get back." She leaves without a second glance. You hear the bathroom door close and the shower start up.

You give Mom a glance but she's turned away, cleaning dishes.

Time to go.

You pull on your jacket and step outside into the cool autumn air. The sky is a brilliant turquoise, the pines a verdant green. There's one thing to do before you go. You start down the gravel road, rock crunching beneath you as you make your way to the shed.

It smells like motor oil. There's a metal john boat up on saw horses with the bottom completely rusted out. The engine on the back is gone though the mount remains. You feel like there used to be a motor on it before you left. Everything else here is junk. Dry rotted tire tubes, some loose rebar and crumbled cinder blocks, a plow, disc, and mower attachment for a tractor that you don't have. These were probably too cumbersome for anyone to sell off so remain to rust away to nothing.

You definitely don't see any boxes, your stuff or otherwise.
>>
Maybe Candi meant the barn. You look warily toward the windowless, sheet metal building near the house. You have no great desire to go to the barn but… you walk over, alone with your thoughts for a minute before you haul open the door and step into the dark and gloom.

The air is stale, thick with dust and the mildly sweet smell of decaying hay. The sides of the barn are lined with stalls where cows were supposed to be milked. The center path is a cement block dotted with support beams.

You walk over to the nearest one and see it peppered with a fist-sized spread of buckshot at about eye level. The wood here is stained a faint purple. The rough edges of the holes has been sanded down.

The memory is faint still. Candi's fingers interlaced, her nails painted black, her back against the beam. Her eyes are closed, brow furrowed. She opens them and your pale blue-green eyes meet hers.

You move forward and touch the support beam. Your fingers trail over the splintered buckshot holes and the stain. Rather than blood it smells slightly of bleach. You smile at this abortive cleanup job. You have to wonder what a crime scene investigator might see if they ever came to this place.

Looking around you see that many of the other wooden support beams here are dotted with strange carvings, shapes, symbols, runes. You see circles, spirals, crosses triangles and other, stranger, more complex figures. You recognize some of them from the scars on your arms. Candi has been busy.

You detour to the milking stall beside the damaged beam. The ground here is charred black. You see more old blood stains on the wall. Small puddles of melted wax surround the burn mark here. You stare at it a long time but the memory won't come. Not yet.

You turn your back on it, giving one more look around this place. You wonder if it glows in your dreams. Then you see a tumbled of old cardboard boxes. One has your name on it.

Kyle
>>
You open the box and find it. Your stuff. Such as it is. You dig through slowly and carefully. Candi was partly right anyway. The first thing is a stack of girlie magazines, mostly Hustler. Not having internet growing up was hard on you. You put these off to the side, now that you're here you don't think you'll need them.

A hunting knife is next, the blade nearly as long as your forearm. It fits in your boot so you tuck it there.

You pull out a rusty BB gun. The action doesn't open and you have no BBs. It goes with the magazines. A wadded ball of some clothes, most of this stuff should still fit you. Beneath all of that you find a smaller box full of CDs and USB drives. The CDs are 50/50 your projects and other artists. You browse through and find yourself smiling at the memories. Below even that, at the bottom of the box, is an old laptop. Your laptop.

God knows if it still runs, even if it does it runs like shit. But it's how you were able to do music production when you were in high school. You were shit at it then but you got a little better after you left home. It could be useful. Maybe.

You put the shit you want back in the box and leave this place, walking back to the house. The box goes in your trunk beside your siphoning kit and you climb into the Eagle. It starts with a grumble. The fuel needle hovers in the lower quadrant still. Your pilfered gasoline won't hold out forever but it will get you to Paul's and back easy.

You back away from the house, noting that Candi's pink lights are on again, shining like a debaucherous beacon from her bedroom window. You pull onto the driveway and start for town.

In most places Paul's would be considered a gas station or a convenience store. On the outskirts of Roselake Paul's was more like an outpost of civilization. You pull into the lot and park carefully between two pickup trucks and get out. It's busy. There are at least three other people here shopping. You grab a basket from beside the door and follow Candi's list, diligently tallying the total in your head and keeping an eye on the cash she gave you.

People in the store give you side glances as you pass them in the small aisles. Maybe they remember you from your time here. Or maybe you're just a burned guy in a leather jacket that says "NEMESIS". That might stand out.

You finish shopping, stuffing Candi's tampons into the basket and review your funds again. You've ended with a small surplus, about $50. You could always bring it back to Candi like a good boy, but generally speaking you're not the good boy type. You're more of a pragmatist.

Glancing around you see a few more things you could use with that money.


>Gas up the Eagle
>Buy a prepaid cellphone
>Get some more shotgun shells and .22 ammo
>Save the cash for something else
>Write in
>>
>>6180470
>Save the cash for something else
>>
>>6180470
>Get some more shotgun shells and .22 ammo
>>
>>6180470
>Gas up the Eagle
>Some shotgun shells
We still got some .22 ammo since we didn't use any last night, and now with the knife we'll have more options
That cellphone option sticks out to me for some reason, good way of calling home and all that, but it's also probably gonna ring during the worst time or we'll get schizo calls that make us think something is happen when in reality nothing is, so I think it's fine without it
If Paul's is really ripping us off on shotgun shells or gas pricing I'm okay with just half a tank and the shells, but the car needs some gas for it to be useful (also we can always siphon gas out of our on car for useful things like setting stuff on fire)
>>
Though if we need a tiebreak by some hours, I'll change my vote to the shells and .22 ammo
>>
>>6180470
>>Gas up the Eagle
>Get some more shotgun shells and .22 ammo
If we cant half and half it, gas it up is my first.
>>
Running behind today. Will hold voting open for the next 1.5 hours
>>
>Shotgun shells and Gasoline

Great album name

Writing
>>
You grab a case of double-ought buck on your way to the register. Better to have it and not need it than need it and not have it.

You wait in line behind an old timer in a Carhartt jacket who gives you a couple sidelong glances. You ignore him and study magazines for sale.

"That will be twenty one oh two."

It's a voice you recognize, a voice from your past. You look up and see Annie Liddell behind the counter looking more or less how you remember her from school. Long black hair, razor-sharp bangs, green eyes.

[i]Stop it! Don't hurt him![/i]

Shit, Candi was right. No one gets out of Roselake. If anyone was going to make it you would have expected it would be Annie. Smart, pretty, easy to get along with. Hell, the fact that she got all with you said it all.

Back when you thought you might someday have a shot at a normal life you most often imagined having that normal life with Annie. It was stupid of course. Normal isn't in the cards for you, but it was nice to dream, at least for a while until things got really bad. Until you went all in.

Your heart is beating hard as you consider how best to handle this unexpected social obstacle.

The last time you saw Annie was…

You remember the crunch of bone, hot blood on your fingers. The dull wet thud of a skull against rock. Again and again.

This might be a little awkward.

The old timer finishes his purchase, grabs his shit and moves. Your turn.


>Hey Annie, it's been a while
>Pretend not to recognize her
>Write in
>>
>>6180694
>Pretend not to recognize her
>But don't play dumb, if she recognizes us or tells us something, we say Hi Annie
>>
>>6180694
>Hey Annie, it's been a while
>>
>>6180694
>Hey Annie, it's been a while
Wtf are we afraid of?
>>
>>6180723
Presumably her freaking out and someone calling the cops thinking Kevin is being an asshole. Or, y'know, feels. Kevin is very clearly one of us.
>>
>>6180694
>>Hey Annie, it's been a while
>>
>Hey Annie, it's been a while

Writing
>>
You move up and set your basket down by the register, watching as Annie starts pulling out items and scanning them

"Hello, how's it going," she says automatically, not looking up.

"Hi Annie," you say.

She looks up, confused. Her eyes widen slightly as she sees who it is. You watch her eyes trail up your body, linger on the scar on your face and finally fix on your eyes.

"Kyle," she says, her hands freeze mid action.

You smile at her as naturally as you can. You think you pass. "It's been a while."

"Wow," she says, blinking and breaking free of her paralysis. "Yeah. It has. God, how are you?"

You've been better but you say "fine," anyway. "How about you?"

"I…just keeping busy." She looks like she's seen a ghost, like she can't quite believe this is real. At least she's not reaching for a gun under the counter, backing away, or screaming though there's a part of you that wonders if maybe she should. "What are you doing here?" She asks, resuming her work, beeping each item and bagging it quickly.

"Visiting home," you say, watching her work. "I didn't know you worked here."

She scans the milk carton and then a package of ramen. "Yeah, just part time." She picks up the box of shells, hesitates for a split second and then scans it. She doesn't look up at you. "I'm going to school here."

"That's great," you say, feeling genuinely pleased. There's still hope for her to get out of here.

"Yeah," she says. "Right now biology but I'm going for this veterinarian thing if I can get into it. Horses."

"I've heard it's good money," you say.

"Um. What about you? School? Working?"

You keep smiling at her. "I'm in between things right now."

She laughs, it's tight, a little nervous but doesn't seem forced. "That sounds like you." She glances at you quickly, maybe seeing if that offended you. It didn't. She picks up the tampon box and again hesitates before scanning it. "So are you...staying with your sister?"

You almost say "no those are for me." Instead you say. "Yeah."

"How's she doing? I haven't really seen her much since graduation."

"Doesn't she come in here?" You ask.

Annie looks up at you. "I…don't know actually. Usually it's your mom. I guess Candi's busy working." There's an unspoken question there about what it is that your sister does for a living in a town this small.

You leave it unanswered. "Before I forget, can you put twenty bucks on pump two?"

"Sure," she says, keying the register. She reads out your total and you hand over the cash. As she counts it out she says, "So do you still make music?"

Another one of those forgotten dreams. Funny how "music producer" is a normal aspiration compared to "psycho killer". You're a pretty okay drummer last time you tried your hand at it and you're halfway decent at guitar and synths. You'll never be famous, not even if you tried, but you used to hope you could get some fans.


>Sometimes
>No, not anymore
>Sure, when I get the time
>Write in
>>
>>6180737
>Sure, when I get the time
>>
>>6180737
>No, not anymore
>>
>>6180737
>Not really. They hiring here?

Retail is... something.
>>
>>6180737
>>Sure, when I get the time
>>
>>6180737
>No, not anymore
>>
>No, not anymore

Writing
>>
>>6180827
It's a tie? And I vote for
>Sure, when I get the time
>>
>>6180828
No, not anymore and Not really are along the same vein of no we don't do music now
>>
"No, not anymore," you say. It lost a lot of its luster over the years.

"Aw, that's too bad," Annie says, frowning slightly. "I always liked your stuff when you let me listen in school."

You remember sitting side by side with Annie on the bus to school sharing a pair of headphones, each of you using one earbud to listen to whatever slop you'd thrown together with fruity loops. You did a lot of work using the school's wifi after class if you thought you could get away with coming home late. Every minute you weren't at home was another minute Candi was alone with Dad.

"Yeah?" you say, smiling genuinely at her. "It wasn't good."

"I didn't say it was good, I said I liked it," she laughs. The sound instantly takes you back. The way she covers her mouth, hand just under her nose. It's familiar. Warm. "It was weird," she says with a disarming smile.

"Weird?"

"Yeah, lots of quotes and stuff."

"Samples," you say.

"Yeah. Old movies. I dunno. It was cool." She seems to come back to herself, withdrawing a little. "Well, they do shows sometimes at the university. Maybe come by and check it out. Maybe you could start back up."

"I might," you say. "Speaking of, are you hiring by any chance? I'm in the market."

"Oh," she says, frowning. "No. Sorry. My uncle owns this place. Paul. That's how I got the job but I don't think we're hiring."

"No problem," you say. You aren't sure you really wanted the job anyway. Maybe a job is something to consider more seriously, or at least a way to get money. You sense that Candi isn't exactly thrilled about paying your way.
>>
Annie falls silent. Her green eyes dart quickly in thought. "So," she says. "Who all knows you're back?"

"You," you say. "And my sister."

You see her thinking. "So you haven't seen Chip or anyone?" She asks, voice barely above a whisper.

Chip. The name spikes your heartbeat. Chip was one major obstacle in your life that you were more than happy to have left behind in Roselake. Chip, among other things, was Annie's boyfriend. Or he had been. It really shouldn't surprise you that he's still here, his dad owns damn near half the town. You don't let any of your feelings effect your expression, your smile remains fixed. Annie knows full well exactly how you and Chip got along, or how you didn't.

Stop it! Don't hurt him!

If you weren't catching beatings from Dad at home then it was from Chip at school.

"Nope," you say. "You two still together?" You wonder how it would feel to put your hunting knife through Chip's throat and watch him drown in his own blood.

"It's…complicated," she says, followed by nervous laugh.

With Chip you're not surprised.

"He's working for his dad now," she says. "He's changed a lot since he was a kid but…" she trails off, remembering that she's talking to the person her boyfriend used to torment. "I know he was…" she trials off again, unsure how to proceed. "He was a dick to you," she says finally. "But he was going through a lot back then. He was just a kid…" she trails off.


>I was just a kid going through a lot too.
>It's water under the bridge.
>You should cut him loose. He's a waste of space.
>Write in
>>
>>6180828

2 "Sure"s and 3 "No"s, sorry.

I went with "no". If your vote hadn't tied everything up I would have counted it. I'd rather just move on for now, you can always get back into music production if that comes up.
>>
>>6180856
>Sure.
End the conversation and move on, we've got things to do and monsters to hunt
We don't need pity from her, forgiving him by proxy is cringe, and trying to convince our old one-sided crush to break up with him now years later is ultra cringe
>>
>>6180830
>>6180858
Fair enough.

>>6180856
>I was just a kid going through a lot too.
The reaction should be a lot more cynical and dismissive if Kyle didn't do as Chip did but we're finding out the backstory as we go so idk maybe he was the same way, maybe he wasn't.
>>
>>6180856
>I was just a kid going through a lot too.
>>
>>6180869
Yeah we should just kiss his frontal lobe with an icepick.
>>
>>6180869
Hmm it doesn't strike me as asking for pity, more to say that she's just making excuses but I do like your "Sure" response as it doesn't even dignify her copium with a real answer.

>>6180870
Im switching to
>Sure.
>>
>>6180856
>It's water under the bridge.
Looking forward to seeing what you cook up. Uni sounds interesting
>>
>Sure
Writing
>>
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You can't believe the shit coming out of her mouth. Just a kid? What the fuck did she think you were? As if you didn't have your own shit going on. "Sure." One word, cold as ice.

Annie stares at you as if expecting more. She nods once to herself. "Anyway it really is good to see you again. Maybe we can catch up at some point," she says.

"Sure," you say again. "Give me a call if you feel like it."

"What's your number?" she asks, taking out her phone.

"It's the same. My house."

"Oh." She makes a show of tapping through her phone. "I don't have that one."

Of course she doesn't. Why would she? You recite it from memory, ready to get out of here

"Cool," she puts her phone back, glancing over as someone else gets in line behind you. "Well it was really great seeing you, Kyle. Say 'hi' to your sister for me."

You have more to say. A lot more. But now isn't the time or the place. Knowing that she's partly free of Chip is nice, but knowing that she's still completely delusional about him isn't. Maybe psychos are just Annie's type. "Later."

You collect your stuff and leave the store. You watch the road as you gas your Eagle. Once the pump stops you return the nozzle and climb in. Since you don't have any cash for drugs right now hitting up Ralphie seems pointless. Whether or not you end up actually paying for the drugs you should at least be able to show some money if called on.
>>
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Your drive home without incident, pine woods and run down homes flashing by on the road. After parking in front of the house you carry the groceries in and put them away. The entire downstairs is humid and the shower is still running. Who knows how long Candi has been at it but you can hear her music pulsing from a shitty Bluetooth speaker in there.

Last on your list is the shotgun shells. You set the box down on the dining room table beside a dusty nativity scene. You pop the spent shells out and slide in fresh ones before closing the gun and returning it. You consider keeping it closer at hand but decide you don't want to leave it floating around the house. It feels right somehow to leave it here.

No sign of mom, probably locked away again. Just as well. You go sit on the couch in the living room and stare at the dead television listening to Candi's muffled music. Talking with Annie reminded you that you're going to need to bring in some income, at least something to keep Candi off your back about it. You imagine she'll demand you get a job soon enough anyway.

The problem is you're not exactly eminently employable. You look like death metal Frankenstein, have no college degree, and no employment history. Really as far as real jobs go there's only one option in town: the lumber mill. They hire anyone, even Dad worked for the mill. Steady hours, decent pay, but it will take up a lot of your free time. Assuming they hire you you'll basically only be free nights and weekends.

You could always look around for music gigs. You could probably make a hundred bucks or so a week playing for dive bar bands or something. It wouldn't be much cash but you'd have plenty of free time to get other shit done.

Option three is going to Lasker City for some breaking and entering. You've got the skill set and the lack of moral fiber necessary for that sort of thing. You might not make too much but who knows, you could get a good haul. Another upside is that you set your own hours. Plus, it's fun.

>Plan to apply at the lumber mill
>Plan to look for band gigs
>Plan to do some larceny in Lasker City
>Write in
>>
>>6180931
What a chunky car. I love it.
>>
>>6180933
Interesting, looks like we're in this for the long haul
>Plan to apply at the lumber mill
>>
>>6180933
Larceny just has too many variables to be sustainable.
>Plan to apply at the lumber mill
>Plan to look for band gigs
Former during the day and latter during nights and weekends, I don't know what good things one would do with free time in this place anyway. If there is something to do then just give up a music gig.
>>
>>6180933
>Plan to apply at the lumber mill
What would free time even be for? Making music? I guess exploring the town but it seems like Kyle already knows a lot of what's going on
>>
>>6180940
>>6180943
Why not work night gigs for extra cash?
>>
>>6180953
I like having prep time at home for fucked up dream night monsters
>>
>>6180955
Well, how exactly will we prep for things when reality gets so trippy? Only thing that has proven it's worth is a gun so let's get more money to get more gun.
>>
>Plan to apply at the lumber mill

Writing

>Free time
Getting high, sibling bonding with Candi,winning Annie over, hunting/killing, fighting the nightmares, unraveling mysteries, exploring the depths of the human condition, generalized mischief. Etc.
>>
>>6180957
Being at home when reality gets trippy is better than coming home late and realizing the monster is already in there
We can also carve more triangles, set up barricades, unravel some mysteries, etc
>>
>>6180961
But hasn't it only started when we go to sleep? How would we explain the barricades to Candi? I still think we should take night gigs when we have to come up with something to do.
>>
>>6180959
We YEARN for the mill.
>>
As sick as you are of following in Dad's footsteps it seems like this is yet another fated step. The lumber mill is just tough to beat. You're also thinking about what you'll do if you have another of those nightmares. Maybe you could prepare somehow, assuming things in real life effect the dream.

What the fuck are you saying? It's just a dream. You're over thinking it.

You get off the couch and walk to the kitchen, pulling open the fridge to scan the shelves. There's a couple bottles of Budweiser in the back. You pull one out and thump the cap off on the counter top. Oh, that fucked the laminate. You stare at the blemish and then shrug, taking a sip.

You wander out of the living room and back into the entry hall. Maybe you could barricade doors…or maybe you could carve more weird-ass runes into things, assuming that even does anything. How would you even explain that to Candi? You look down at the floorboards by the stairs and freeze.

A scratch.

Your heart beats harder as you stare at the shallow gouge in the wood. It looks like… you move closer, nursing your beer as you study it. You crouch down and touch it, feeling the rough edge of the wood. It looks like a claw mark… You look up the stairs, scanning for more. You don't see any but… You touch it again. That's real. Real as you are anyway. You don't think that was there yesterday, at least not before you went to bed. The bathroom door comes open and you jump slightly.

A wave of steam rolls out, surrounding Candi for an instance as she leans out, wrapped only in a beige towel. "Hey," she says. "You're back." The Ouroboros peeks out above the edge of her towel.

"I've been back a while," you say. "You've been in there for at least an hour. I got your tampons."

She rolls her eyes. "I don't need them now. God." She looks at you crouching on the floor. "What are you doing? Hey, is that my beer?"

You shrug and take another swig.

She sighs. "Okay, question. Which do you like. Blue?" She holds out a narrow strand of hair on the left side of her head now dyed a pastel blue. "Or pink?" Sure enough, she has a pastel pink streak on the other side.


>Blue
>Pink
>I like your hair the way it is
>Write in
>>
>>6180975
>I like your hair the way it is
Was dad blonde?
>>
>>6180975
>Eh, I like your hair the way it is. By the way, what the fuck's up with this clawmark here

>>6180967
Fair
It's not like we're locked out of them though, now it's just opt-in instead of opt-out
>>
>>6180977
Mom is blonde and Dad was blonde, yes.
>>
>>6180975
>"Your hair > Blue hair > Pink hair"

>>6180978
I prefer "Was this here last night?" Calling it a clawmark might come across as too schizo.
>>
>>6180975
>I like your hair the way it is
>>
>>6180975
Pink.
>>
>>6180975
Kevin, have you considered that maybe trusting the research of a heavily abused teenage girl on the basis of protection symbols might be a bad idea? For all we know these goofy triangles call the bad juju. We need a second opinion. We must ask another formerly teenage abused girl about rune-ology.
>>
>>6180982
Yeah, don't mind that, as long as we bring it up and subtly start cluing her in

>>6180985
Damn you right, what if the triangles are the things fucking us up
>>
Triangle on the doorway did jackshit to the monster just going through after all
>>
>I like your hair the way it is
+
>Was this scratch here before?

Writing
>>
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"I like your hair the way it is," you say, looking back at the floor. "Was this here yesterday?" you ask. "This scratch." You put your hand beside it so she can see it better.

Candi stares down at you, her eyes flicking to the gouge and back to you, mouth slightly open in disbelief. Finally she says, "Kyle, what the fuck are you talking about? A scratch? Really?"

"Was it here yesterday?" You press.

"What, are you fucking tearing up my floors? Jesus, I don't know! Maybe! I ask about my hair and all you care about is the stupid fucking floor? God. Get a grip. Go get some fucking wood filler and fix it or something. Be a man," she huffs.

Great, you pissed her off.

"Relax," you say. Your reply comes automatically.

"I'm trying to relax," she says, holding her hands up like she can't even. "I'm trying to get ready. I'm trying to do so much stuff right now. Sorry that I'm not worried about a scratch on the floor.

You roll your eyes and sip your beer again. Although maybe she's right. Maybe you're being schizo. You're not the most reliable of narrators after all. "Forget it."

"Oh, are you sure?" Candi asks sarcastically. "You want me to forget it?"

You glare up at her silently. "Candi," you say, tone oozing glacial patience. "I said I like your hair like it is. It's nice. Blonde looks good on you. Is that what you want to hear?"

"Something like that," she sniffs with mock indignation.

"So don't waste your time coloring it. Leave it as is."

Candi surprises you by crouching down beside you, studying the scratch. She puts her arms around her knees, holding the towel in place. "Did you do this? For real."

You shake your head.

"So what is it?"

"Was it here yesterday?" you ask again.

She looks at you, expression unreadable. "No? I don't think so."

You stare at each other. You're trying to figure out what she's thinking. Is she really still upset about your relative lack of reaction to her hair? Or was that an act to get more attention? Is she staring at you wondering something similar?

"Why?" She asks.

You shake your head and stand back up, offering a hand to her. She takes it and gets back to her feet, adjusting her towel again.

"Just wondering," you say.

"Kyle, what's going on?"

You shake your head again. "Not sure yet. Nothing to worry about." Maybe that second part was a lie, but the first one wasn't.

She looks at you dubiously. You see worry in her expression, maybe a hint of fear. You can't tell if she thinks you're going nuts or is genuinely worried about something else.


>Tell me about that triangle. Where did you learn about that?
>Seriously, your hair looks great. I like it.
>You'd better finish getting ready
>Write in
>>
>>6181003
>Tell me about that triangle. Where did you learn about that?
She's dealing with a lot. Talk about something that calms her
Quick updates OP, are you doing this daily? Looking forward to it regardless
>>
>>6181003
>Seriously, your hair looks great. I like it. ...Don't worry about the scratch, if I find out something concrete I'll let you know.
For the same reasoning as anon above, freaking her out now won't help too much
>>
>>6181008
>Quick updates OP, are you doing this daily?
I sure am, though this is my last update for the next ten hours or so. I'm trying to get a post made every time there's a clear consensus (typically three votes in favor) to keep the pace moving.

I'm also trying to make good progress before I inevitably get burned out and have to take breaks.

Glad you're enjoying it. I wanted to write something Different. I wasn't sure if would strike a cord with people. I'm still not sure, we're just scratching the surface.
>>
>>6181013
Nice glad to hear it, keep up the good work. I'll be around to read while you still write
What other quests have you written? I'll check out the QST archive tomorrow
>>
>>6181019
As Nemesis? This is my first. My older quests have been nothing like this one. Fresh start.
>>
>>6181003
>Seriously, your hair looks great. I like it.
guys it was just a dream don't worry about it
>>
>>6181003
>Tell me about that triangle. Where did you learn about that?
>>
>>6181003
>Tell me about that triangle. Where did you learn about that?
>>
>>6181003
>>Seriously, your hair looks great. I like it.
>>
>>6181003
>>Seriously, your hair looks great. I like it.
caress her hair for good measure
>>
Nemesis time, bitches. Let's go.

>Your hair looks great

Writing

But because it was so close and I'm just a nice guy I'll throw the triangle anons a bone
>>
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"Seriously, your hair looks great," you say, the sentiment genuine. Before you can think, before you can stop yourself, you reach out and brush her hair back gingerly, taking a strand between your fingers. It's automatic. Her hair is fine, soft, freshly conditioned. "I like it," you say as you feel it.

Candi watches you without expression. Her expression doesn't change, she doesn't lean into your touch and she doesn't pull away. She meets your eyes again. Her eyes look so much like yours.

She smiles slowly, lips peeling back. "You know just what to say, Kyle." She caresses your cheek, trailing her nails over your skin. She stands on her tiptoes and plants a soft kiss on your jaw. When she pulls back she's grinning even wider, eyes sparkling. What is she thinking? Who the fuck knows.

She turns away. "Now I need to finish getting ready. I still have to shave."

What the hell has she been doing this whole time? How fucking long can it possibly take for one girl to get ready?

"Before I forget," you say. "I wanted to tell you I'm going to be going for a job at the mill."

She looks back at you, surprised.

"I figured since I'm staying here now the extra cash would be good."

She smiles again and it reaches her eyes. "Aw. Thanks. I appreciate it. Best brother ever." Maybe that last part is a bit of hyperbole. You're not even sure you qualify as an "Okay" brother.

"Thanks. Also, I wanted to ask, where did you learn about this triangle protection stuff?"

Her expression changes, flashing from bliss to fake in an instant. She's on guard now for some reason. You can't read her anymore but you can tell she's wary. "Oh, some book."

"A book?" you press.

"Yeah, books and stuff. I found this book in the woods forever ago. Well…part of a book."

"In the woods?" you say, dubious.

"Yes," she presses. "Out past the pines. Now I've got to finish getting ready unless you want to help me shave." She sticks her tongue out at you.

"Pass," you say. You're not sure you should be allowed your sister with razors, safety or otherwise.

Candi laughs and disappears back into the bathroom. A moment later her music starts up.

Book? Past the pines?

You think of the glow from your dream. If the symbols Candi has been carving glow and whatever is out in the woods glows…well it stands to reason those things are connected. But it's still just a dream, right?

Too much to think about on just one beer. You get another, drinking and thinking as Candi continues getting ready. About an hour later she finally emerges, now wearing gym shorts and an over sized T-shirt. You see that she left her hair blonde in accordance with your wishes. You're not really surprised but you're a little touched.
>>
"Annie says 'hi', by the way," you call from the couch.

"Annie? Oh. Chip's girlfriend." Her tone is neutral. Too neutral? Hard to tell with Candi. "You see her at Paul's?"

"Yeah. She says you don't stop by."

"I send mom," she says with a shrug. "Gives her something to do."

"Do you ever get outside?" you ask. You're not sure it's healthy for Candi to spend all her time in this place.

"When I need to. Why would I? I don't have any friends and this place is like hell."

"Be friends with Annie," you suggest.

Candi laughs and goes upstairs. She doesn't elaborate.

The day passes. Finally, out of desperation you put on TV and cycle aimlessly through the same few channels of nothing. It's edging into late afternoon when Candi shouts from upstairs. "Kyle!"

Your heart skips a beat. You're off the couch and up the stairs before you even consider going for the shotgun. No time to turn back now. You throw open her bedroom door and freeze.

Candi is at her computer looking horrified. The first thing that you notice is how little she's wearing. Black latex underwear and a black, strappy body harness. All her tattoos are visible like this. The outfit is topped off with a pair of pink, plastic devil horns. She looks at you. "Kyle!"

"What?" you blurt, moving closer, looking around for…what? Monsters? Come on.

"My fucking webcam isn't working!" she says, panic edging her voice. "It's like it's unplugged. Look!" She clicks rapidly through an interface you barely understand, cycling overlays and shit until she gets a black screen.

No Input detected. Please connect camera.

You look at the webcam and pick up the tripod like a neanderthal, examining the back. It's still firmly plugged in. You unplug and plug in again.

"Jesus Christ, I already tried that!" she says, angrily. "Did you fuck with it?"

"No," you say. Well… sort of. But not in reality. You remember ripping the cables out of the back in your dream. Your pulse quickens and it has nothing to do with what Candi is wearing. Well, almost nothing.

"My stream is in like an hour!" she says. She sounds on the verge of tears. "Oh my god. Fuck. Okay, I need a new webcam." She looks at you pleadingly. "Can you run to the mall and get me one? Please? Just like this one." She holds up the non-functional webcam.

"I don't have any—" She slides an envelope stuffed with cash out of her desk and takes out some money.

"I thought you said we didn't have any more cash," you say, startled.

"It's for the bills, shitbird," she blurts, stuffing the envelope back. She holds the cash out at you. "Please go get me another camera. I can't go like this!" she gestures to her outfit.


>Alright, I'll go
>So just don't do the show tonight
>Write in
>>
>>6181224
>Alright, I'll go
It's obviously important to her, if we want her to stop streaming Kyle is gonna have to step up and make money. Lumber yard also gives us a chance to explore the woods hopefully
Gotta do this fast though this sounds time sensetive
>>
>>6181224
>Sure! Uhhh but first did you try updating the drivers, like Windows update or the manufacturer's website?
>>
>>6181224
>Alright, I'll go.

>>6181226
I would vote toin character question if it wasn't a software problem were it not for the fact that everything is lining up to show that objects impacted by action in the dream maintain those impacts in real life.

Though perhaps it could be justified as "just making sure".
>>
>>6181224
>Alright, I'll go
>>
>>6181250
He has music software experience and sn old laptop. I'm just guessing that he might not be totally airheaded in this area. Maybe Im wrong.
>>
>>6181257
No, I agree with you but first the spent shotgun shells then the claw mark on the stairs and now this? Once is an anomaly, twice is a coincidence but thrice is a pattern. But like I said, you could reason that Kyle would check if it's a software problem "just to make sure".
>>
>Alright, I'll go

Writing
>>
"Alright. I'll go, chill." You study the webcam. "Try to update the drivers and everything while I'm gone." Somehow you doubt that will work but it won't hurt to try.

"Yeah," Candi says. She relaxes her shoulders, looking relieved. "I'll try. Thank you, Kyle."

"Sure." You're out the door in a hurry and off. Good thing you put gas in the Eagle otherwise this might be more dicey. The mall isn't exactly close. It sits in a sort of dead zone about halfway between Roselake and Lasker City, out of the hills but not quite into the urban sprawl.

Roselake Mall was a commercial mecca when it was built. Now it's like basically every other mall on the planet: Dying. Somehow it shambles along, not quite dead and definitely not quite alive. You pull into the huge parking lot, cruising by endless empty rows. A handful of cars are parked here, clustered mostly around the entrances of the department stores, the ones that are still open.

The mall is sort of laid out like a star, spokes radiating from a central hub. The exterior crooks of these spokes are taken up with dumpsters, loading docks, and garbage. It looks like maybe a homeless encampment has been set up in one. Great.

You park by the Sears and get out. This place was never a part of your childhood, but a lot of the other kids in your school would come here to hang out. Dad wouldn't let you or Candi be away that long.

You walk inside, the automatic doors obligingly slide open.
>>
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Sears is empty. Almost empty. There are clothes racks and things for sale but they're patchy, half-stocked. Shelves are more often bare than not. Soft muzak echoes faintly. You don't see any people.

You pass through the Sears without seeing another soul. Inside the mall proper there are two levels. The upper level looks down from an upper gallery on the lower, edges railed with glass. Many of the shops here are shuttered and dark. In fact, it looks like nothing in this spoke is open. Your boot falls echo on the tile, mingling with the faint music. You pass by an arcade. Of the two dozen or so machines inside, at least a third of them are unplugged. The attract loops play endlessly for no one. The carpet is dingy and dusted with crumbs and trash. There's no one inside.

"Nemesis."

You stop and the hair on the back of your neck stands up. You turn toward the voice, staring into the gloom of a darkened clothing store. The shutter isn't down. The store front is just open but it's obviously derelict.

"Nemesis," the voice hisses again mockingly. You haven't been called that since you killed Dad.

You open your mouth to challenge the voice when you lose the words. A figure steps smoothly out from the shadows. Human. Sort of. It wears a rotted band T-shirt and shredded blue jeans. It has no face, just a pillar of flesh for a head, dotted with crevices and darkened maws. Eyes? Mouths? Something else?

It croaks, long and slow and steps forward again, body shuddering. Wide, fleshy webbed feet press onto the cold tile of the floor. It drips with water, trailing clots of string algae from its limbs. Its hands hook into wicked claws which drip more fetid water. The flesh pillar sways side to side as it sweeps the air. It's searching for you.

You look both ways down the empty concourse of the mall. You are utterly alone. You and this thing.

"Nemesis," it croaks again, somehow detecting you. It lowers it shoulders and charges at you, webbed feet slapping the floor.


>Draw your knife and fight
>Draw your .22 and shoot it
>Run
>Write in
>>
>>6181264
>>Draw your .22 and shoot it
>>
>>6181264
>Draw your knife and fight
>If there are some clothes racks near, grab it and make it trample and fall with it, then go for a stab

We're not on a dream, so I don't want to bring cops in this shit unless we REALLY need to, lol
>>
>>6181264
>Run
Iiiieeee!
>>
>>6181264
I feel conflicted, is this real or a hallucination? If it's real, how will we deal with the body? If it's a hallucination, would we be attacking nothing or someone?

>Run
Play it safe I guess.
>>
>>6181293
>tfw it's just a guy who read keyshaugn's jacket and is trying to get his attention
>>
>>6181264
>Run
>>
>Run

Writing
>>
Is this real? It sure as shit feels real. You turn and run, slipping on the tile. You almost fall on your face, catch your self with your hands and push off, boots squeaking, that thing thumping toward you closer and closer, croaking and howling. If it catches you…

You've got to get away from it.

Roll 1d6
I need three rolls looking for 5 or 6.
>>
Rolled 1 (1d6)

>>6181322
Schizophrenic episodes are well known for being very obviously fake to the people having them. Poor Kelvin bucks that trend.
>>
Rolled 1 (1d6)

>>6181322
Look at this 6.
>>6181324
Checked.
>>
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>>6181334
Oh boy.
>>
Rolled 6 (1d6)

>>6181334
>>6181324
Noo not like this!
>>
>>6181340
>Schizophrenia averted
>>
>1
>1
>6

Writing
>>
You get your feet back under you and get some traction just as a claw cleaves the air behind you. You almost slip again but manage to keep running, just in time to collide with an old standing marquee which crashes to the ground, sending you staggering.

The thing is right behind you, croaking and swiping as it stumbles after you.

A claw brushes your back, cutting through your leather jacket like tissue paper and trailing fire down your back. You grind your teeth, feet slipping. You hit the ground and roll, clambering back to your feet again. You feel your blood running down your back. The pain, somehow, is tremendous, but it doesn't slow you down. You feel like it might have cut all the way to the bone.

Red flashes at the edges of your vision. You feel a growing blood lust within you, your hands are shaking, jaw clenched so hard that your head hurts. You feel an overwhelming desire to kill.

This is not normal.

You channel this deadly energy into running, legs pumping. You see the light of the central skylight of the mall's hub ahead. The thudding of webbed feet behind you grows softer, duller, more distant as the monster falls behind,

Finally you emerge into the central atrium. Escalators, a movie theater, shitty modern art, an empty food court, a fountain that's switched off. Silence

You look back. The monster is gone. You stand there panting. Your hand automatically goes to your back, feeling your jacket. It's seamless. No rip, no raw flesh, no blood. You're fine.

Soft muzak plays through the mall. In fact, you see a man and woman walking along on the upper level. Everything seems normal.

Almost everything. You feel…tremendously blue balled. Frustrated. Angry. You realize that your hands are still shaking. You shove them into your jacket pockets, trying to make them be still. Your breath comes slow and hard. You desperately want blood.
>>
You don't have time to worry about it, you have to get this camera and get the fuck out of here. You walk fast, not looking up. In the sadly run down electronic store you stalk the aisles, grinding your teeth until you find the right thing. You grab the box off the shelf and return to checkout.

"Find everything okay?" the cashier asks.

You remain silent.

She shifts uncomfortably and scans the barcode and reads the price. You put a handful of bills on the counter, working your jaw back and forth, feeling your teeth rubbing on each other. Your vision is tinted red and you can smell blood. Her blood. You look up, giving her a hooded look.

She flinches and looks away, counting your change while you stare at her.

"H-here. Nice day." She jams your receipt into a bag and almost shoves it at you. You take the bag and walk out, still thinking about what it would feel like to cut her open, how it would make this feeling go away.

Fuck, you just need to get home.

You take a different way out, not daring to retrace your steps. You're approaching a Nordstroms when you see him.

Chip catches sight of you as he comes out of the store, the same moment as you see him. He's surprised at first, seems like everyone is. But then he sneers, his eyes cold and hard.

"Holy shit," he says. He's not alone, but he never was, he has a friend with him, some other guy. Both of them wear suits like they're on their way to a fucking board meeting. Or a funeral.

"It's Kyle Mercer," Chip says. He starts walking toward you. "Roselake's prodigal son, home again, huh?"

You stop and stare. Your breath comes slow and and steady, your eyes tracking him.

"The psycho," he grins, but it turns bitter, angry. He points at your chest, moving forward aggressively, flanked by his friend. "You know, you're real fucking lucky that Ken pulled through."

Oh yeah, that. You can almost feel Ken's skull fracturing in your grip again as you thrust it against rock. It was one of the more satisfying moments of your youth. You can't say he didn't deserve it. He definitely did.

"A guy like you belongs in jail," Chip says. You find it hard to disagree. "If Ken had died you'd be facing life. My dad should never have covered for you."

You still don't say anything. You're imagining your teeth sinking into his throat, how good it would feel to drink his blood.

"Nothing to say?" Chip's friend adds.


>{I'm going to cut you both a new smile}
>I've got nothing to say to you.
>Ken wouldn't be a zombie now if he wasn't an asshole first.
>>
>>6181389
>I've got nothing to say to you.

Too many witnesses.
>>
>>6181389
>No
As nice as it would be to settle old scores, it is preferable to do so while minimizing the risk of getting caught. Think of peace Kyle... serenity now!
>>
I for one welcome the future parking lot showdown. With complementary tire irons and chunks of concrete.
>>
>>6181389
Kens a much nicer guy these days.
>>
>>6181410
I feel it'll be more kidnapping and torture in the woods than parking lot showdown.
>>
>>6181422
I bet this noodledick never goes anywhere alone enough to kidnap. Probably brings his asspals in to take a piss, too.
>>
>>6181425
Most people are alone at one point or another in their day, this asshole is not the exception. Those previously mentioned burglary skills could come in handy.
>>
>>6181389
>I've got nothing to say to you.
>>
>I've got nothing to say to you.

Writing

>>6181419
I fuckin laughed

>>6181410
Showdowns are for cowboys. You're more of a gut em and skin em type of guy.
>>
"I've got nothing to say to you." The words are a struggle. You are moving beyond them. There's an animal rage gnawing at the back of your mind, clawing, scratching, burning, burrowing. It's going to get out.

"You know, man," Chip says. "It's a good thing your dad decided to fuck up your face instead of your sister's." He leans slightly closer. "That would have been a real shame. I like the way she looks."

Everything is red now. Your chest burns with rage and hate. You're so hungry. Chip is so close you can almost hear his heart beating, his blood wooshing around in his veins for now. All you can think of is different ways to take him apart.

You hear Ken's skull give way as you bash his head against the rock one final time. His insane screaming becoming a gurgling sigh.

You feel the gasoline ignite and flames consume your left side. You feel the skin on your face charring. You feel yourself screaming and screaming and screaming.

You feel the hunting knife so very close. You just need to kill. You're beyond words. Whatever is wrong with you is now VERY wrong with you. If you don't leave now then Chip and his friend are both going to die right here and right now.


>{Cut his face off}
>{Gut him like an animal}
>Say nothing and leave
>>
>>6181475
>Say nothing and leave
"Kill me."
"Later."
>>
>>6181427
Maybe we can steal his shoes, too. Bet he owns some designer Nikes or something.

>>6181469
>You're more of a gut em and skin em type of guy.
Hey cowboys do that too. Though usually it is followed up by eating which uh. Keenan has never like actually eaten anyone, right?

>>6181475
He pushed the sister button. Damn. What a shame. Wonder what kind of tragic "accident" he's going to suffer later. Hopefully one that involves acetone and his eyeballs.
>>
>>6181475
>Say nothing and leave
Wow this guy is a piece of work
>>
>>6181475
>Say nothing and leave

I wanted to say some shit like "Keep your butt-buddy quiet" or something, but seeing that we have two options being violence and the only normal one is leave without saying shit, I mean idk

This retard literally saw us bash the skull of his friends and think is okay to talk someone like that. Even if we look like that mf from Ghost Rider 2, trying to bully a potential serial killer, who is obvious is not mentally well, is even more retarded lmao

AND THIS FUCKASS WEBSITE AGAIN WITH THE TEN-MINUTE WAIT TO POST SOMETHING, JESUS CHRIST
>>
>>6181505
It becomes clear that daddy really is the reason this clown got anywhere in life.
>>
>Say nothing and leave

Writing

>>6181505
>AND THIS FUCKASS WEBSITE AGAIN WITH THE TEN-MINUTE WAIT TO POST SOMETHING, JESUS CHRIST
We all feel your pain
>>
>>6181479
>Keenan has never like actually eaten anyone, right?

Define "Eaten".

In entirety? Not as far as he knows. Maybe he ingested some pieces incidentally. Blood is definitely on the menu though.
>>
Chip is a motherfucker. His time will come. It takes a tremendous force of will not to leap at him like an animal and do to him what you did to Ken.

The way Chip stares at you, smug, defiant, suicidally bold, you almost think he wants you to attack. Maybe he thinks he can take you. Maybe he thinks you wouldn't kill him. Maybe he's a goddam idiot.


You say nothing. You turn to leave.

You turn to leave…

You turn…

You're still standing there, feet firmly planted, hands in your pockets, eyes locked on Chip. It would be so easy, the quiet voice in the back of your head says. There's hardly anyone around. One slash and Chip goes down. Then you run down his little buddy and skewer him a few times. You can drag them both out of here before anyone sees. If you're lucky Chip will live long enough to witness first hand the true depths of the human condition. Not that there's anything human about what you're prepared to do.

And hey, if someone does see then you can just run them down too. You're pretty fast when you're pissed. And you are very, very pissed.

Are there really any witnesses if you kill everyone?

Chip's smile seems to change, twist, it's not cocky anymore, it's bitter and angry. You wonder if he's holding back half as much as you are right now.

You crouch and draw your knife before Chip can react.

Only you don't actually do that. You turn away. Candi is waiting for you.

You walk, threading the needle between Chip and his buddy who only reluctantly steps aside.

"I'm not afraid of you, Mercer," Chip says. "You're a big bitch. Everyone knows it."

You feel Ken's blood soaking your hand as you drive his head against the rock.

"You just try what you did. Just try again you little bitch."

Ken keeps screaming, first in fear, then in pain. Then he forgets how to scream.

You walk into Nordstroms.

"Say 'hi' to your fuckin sister for me!" Chip shouts after you as his friend laughs.

The automatic doors part and you leave the mall behind. The parking lot is deserted, which is just as well because if literally anyone was here you don't think they would be here much longer.

You climb into the Eagle and start it, setting the webcam gently on the seat beside you. You rest your hands on the steering wheel, somewhat alarmed to see them trembling violently. You grip the wheel. Tight. Tighter. Your knuckles turn white. The trembling becomes only a furious quiver. You drive.
>>
It's almost thirty minutes back home even though you drive fast. It's enough time for your human senses to start returning. Your jaw aches from clenching it, your heart is fluttering with unspent adrenaline.Your breathing is shallower, lighter. You shake your head.

"What the fuck." You don't know the last time you felt like that. Whatever happened to day wasn't only because of Chip. You think about that monster, that drowned thing that chased you. Where had it come from? "What the fuck," you say again, louder. You came here to get better. Things seem like they're only getting worse. You only hope Candi can figure out what's happening.

It's getting dark when you get home. You park the car and exhale. Your bloodlust is gone. Mostly. You can feel it as a dull headache at the back of your mind now, a bruise that hasn't quite healed. At least you're no danger to Candi now. Well, no more of a danger than you are normally.

You lift one of your hands, holding your palm level to the ground. The tremble is there, but almost imperceptible. You breathe out slow. That was close. You get out of the car and go inside. Mom is nowhere to be seen so you just head straight upstairs and into the unearthly pink light.

Candi is sitting on the bed fidgeting with the straps of her outfit anxiously when she sees you come in. "Did you get it!? It's almost time…"

You hold the bag out.

She jumps up giddy. "Oh thank you, thank you! Thank you, Kyle!" She puts her arms around you and hugs you tight, her little devil horns poking into your chest. She looks up at you, still holding you, joy replaced with concern. "What's wrong?"

You shake your head.

Say 'hi' to your fuckin sister for me!

You close your eyes and just for a moment you long to sink your teeth into Candi's soft, bared neck. You open them and shake your head. You can't trouble her with what happened at the mall, not right now. Not right before her show. "Go make sure it works," you say.

She breaks the hug and quickly unboxes the camera, squatting down to remove the old one from her tripod and affix the new one. You see she's wearing stiletto heels. You're not sure you've ever seen Candi in stilettos before. She's surprisingly stable in them. "The drivers didn't work either," she says as she works. "Wouldn't detect the device at all. Chinese piece of shit." She plugs the webcam in with a dull click.
>>
Ding

"Eee! It works!" she says. "Fuck yes." Another look back at you as she sits down in her chair. "Thank you, Kyle. Really."

"Sure. Hey, how long is this going to take?" you ask.

"Probably a couple hours," she says. "Depends on tips and stuff. I'll let you know." Her attention drifts back to her laptop. "Oh shit! Okay, shoo! I've got to go live."

You step outside her room and gently close the door.

"Hi everyone! I'm back," Candi says with cheer sweeter than antifreeze. Her voice is only slightly muffled by the door. "Miss me?"

You stare at the crude triangle carved on the door, listening as she puts on music, industrial rock, turned down low. "Oh, you guys like my outfit? Want to see the back?" She giggles.

You hear her laptop ringing like a bell. Tips.

"No!" Candi says playfully. "I will not. That's gross. I don't do butt stuff."


>Go wait in the car until this is over
>Go wait downstairs until this is over
>Sit at the top of the stairs and listen
>Write in
>>
>>6181536
>Write in: Explore the woods
As much as I want to be a peeping tom... Kyle is fucked up enough as it is.
>>
>>6181536
>Write in: Explore the woods

>>6181539
I don't, feels analogous to sitting in the cuck chair.
>>
>>6181389
>Chip's dad covered for us
Hmmm, interesting detail here, when it seems like the son himself wanted us locked up
Also the old webcam is spiritually unplugged lmao, it'll still probably be downstairs when we go back into the dreamscape, along with that giant gash down our back FUCK

>>6181536
>Go wait in the car until this is over
While I also want to explore the woods, it is kinda dark and we also gotta protect the homestead, at least tonight, when it seems like the beast might really want to come out and play, so this at least gives a bit more info on what's happening outside
>>
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>>6181515
Disgusting, however

>>6181542
I think Chip's dad CAN read the writing in the room. He was probably thinking if Kermit got stuck in prison he'd get out and wreak havoc on the town, and specifically, Chip for testifying against him. I bet he was hoping that we'd skip town some day and never come back as long as we got the chance to go, and the more shit held us back from succeeding just enough to have dreams of leaving the less likely it was.

Or maybe Chip's dad just REALLY fucking hated Ken for some reason.
>>
>>6181536
>Write in: Explore the woods
>>
>>6181536
>Sit at the top of the stairs and listen
Better than listening to the house deteriorate and going out in the woods this late is asking for trouble.
>>
>>6181559
>Or maybe Chip's dad just REALLY fucking hated Ken for some reason.

My theory is that Chip's that is the only sympathetic person in this shithole that saw we had a overly fucked abusive that and a junkie mom that are worth shit, so he vouched for us so maybe we could escape and do some shit

That's why Chip brought it up, because surely he's mad his dad sided with us instead of his friend or some shit
>>
>>6181559
Chip's dad knew Ken was the real monster and the mastermind behind everything going wrong with the town as an 8 year old
>>
>>6181565
>Better than listening to the house deteriorate and going out in the woods this late is asking for trouble.
We literally got the tank perk, anon, we could take a walk and come out of it with not so many debilitating or permanent injuries!
>>
>Write in: Explore the woods
>>6181539
>>6181540
>>6181562

Writing

>>6181539
>Kyle is fucked up enough as it is.
You're wrong.

>>6181584
Just to be clear "What doesn't kill you" means if you get your hand cut off you can keep fighting and not be debilitated by pain. It doesn't prevent you from losing your hand,
>>
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You don't want to stay and listen to this. You push open the front door as you hear Candi start to moan. The door closes behind you and you stand in the cool late afternoon. The sun is just dipping down to kiss the horizon in fiery shades of red in the west. Birds call and a cool breeze blows from the east.

You rub your face with your hands, trying to clear your mind. You don't need to think about anything right now, but you are curious what's out in the woods, out beyond the pines. You cross the house's overgrown yard and stop at the edge of the woods.


You used to be scared of them. You stopped being afraid of the dark when Dad started to hurt you. You learned that human monsters are always worse. You step into the woods, dry pine needles muffling your footsteps, and you start walking.

A long time ago, before your time, this used to all be pasture. Your grandpa had initially run a dairy farm here. Sometimes you come across a rotted fence post jutting form the ground or a tangle of wire running in a straight line off into the gloom.

The dairy farm didn't pan out. Apparently there was also some boondoggle with a coal mine. You never knew grandpa, but if he was anything like Dad then things just weren't meant to work out for him.

You pass through a small clearing, the trees overhead are full of crows which caw angrily at you. They flap their wings, hopping from branch to branch as they shout at the intruder. You stare up at them for a minute before continuing on. In the bottom between hills you find a creek trickling along. You stoop down by the water's edge and trail your fingers through it. It's ice cold.

The impulsive part of your brain wants you to bend down and take a drink of this clear, cold water. You don't do that because you know that same part of your brain would be eaten alive by waterborne parasites if you drank creek water.

You step over it and continue on, starting up hill. Behind you the crows take to the sky in a flapping mass, wheeling away.

You try not to think about what Candi is doing right now. Better that you don't. You thought being out here in the woods would make it easier but it doesn't. All you can do is clench your teeth and keep walking. It's more difficult going uphill, but if you have one virtue it's endurance.
>>
You're gonna learn to be strong, boy.

You set your jaw harder as Dad's voice invades your thoughts. You can almost feel his belt across your back or his cigarette cherry on your arm.

This'll make you a man.

Nemesis. It was what Dad called you before you killed him. It was what that monster said too. Sure, it's also emblazoned on the back of your jacket. That one's on you. Why did you even carry on that stupid moniker? Were you proud to be the nemesis of a monster like Dad?

You're almost to the top of the hill. The trees thin out here, the pines growing sparser. Once you crest it you look back the way you've come, surprised to see just how far away the house is now. It's a faint whitish shape against a deep green curtain, topped with an enticing pink light. It makes you think about Candi again.

Instead of dwelling on it you turn away, looking toward where the glow came from in your dreams. From here the ground slopes away into yet more woods. To the left the pines give way to deciduous trees, oak, poplar, elm, maple. It must be over the property line. Mercer farm is almost all younger growth, pines mostly. Dad could have told you whose property was further that way. But you don't have a fucking clue.

To your right the pines continue on, dipping into another bottom and then scaling the side of a steeper hill. The top of that hill rises even higher than this one. You see rocky outcroppings dotting its flank and crest. It's really more of a small mounting.

The light in your dreams came from between the hill you stand on and that one. You're pretty sure of that.

The sun is sinking below the horizon. If you go back home now you can get back before it gets dark. You won't have time to come out here tomorrow though since you'll likely be busy applying at the mill.

>Go left, beyond the pines
>Go right toward the rocky hill
>Go home before it gets dark
>Write in
>>
>>6181612
>Go right toward the rocky hill
See if there's anything at the place where the light came from.
>>
>>6181576
Wouldn't that be a trip. Businessman with a heart of gold? Nuts.

>>6181577
That dastardly fiend. Thank baby Jesus we stopped him when we did.
>>
>>6181611
>running water
It's fiiiiiine, a little sip never hurt anyone (too much)

>>6181612
>Go right toward the rocky hill
In for a penny, in for a pound, let's get our money's worth (though I'm sure our neighbor's property will be important at some point)
>>
>>6181612
>Go home before it gets dark
>>
>>6181612
>Go right toward the rocky hill
>>
>>6181612
>Go right toward the rocky hill
Night hike
>>
>Go right toward the rocky hill

Writing
>>
Going home now just isn't in the cards. You start down the hill, angling right toward the rocky hill. It's after nearly fifteen minutes of walking that you realize the ground between hills is much wider than you initially thought. The pines here are older, taller, more mature. Rather than the scrubby thin ones that blanket the former pastureland you think this place was pines even when grandpa built the farm.

It's also quiet here. No crows, no birds of any sort. No wind. Just the soft crunch or rustle of pine needles. It feels almost detached from time, apart from everything. It would be relaxing if it didn't remind you of a cemetery for some reason.

You spot something tall and white ahead standing out from the surrounding browns and greens. That's gotta be it, right? You deviate slightly and hike over, slowing to a stop at the base of what turns out to be a very old, very dead tree. You recognize it as a birch. Its white bark is dotted with the strange, eye patterns common to Birch trees. More interestingly, this Birch is big, so big that you can't put your arms all the way around it. It also doesn't have a top. The branches are all cut away leaving it as a strange wooden pillar.

Stranger still, the natural bark eyes are joined with dense scrawling of symbols and icons. Someone carved this tree up a long time ago. Triangles, spirals, and runes cover every inch of it. You circle around it, studying it. You're just about to declare it as definitely the source of the dream light when you see another white form further on in the woods, maybe fifty yards distant. It looks like another birch.

When you reach it you see that it is. It's nearly exactly the same, huge, no branches, covered in runes. Then you see a third one. It's a trail curving off into the woods. Without a second thought you start to follow it, going from one tree to the next as the forest around you gets darker and darker.

You don't have a clue who carved these trees, or even who planted them. Now that you think about it, they had to have been planted like this to grow into a curve, right? They're the only birch trees you've found. They have to be old, at least a hundred years old. Had someone planted these a hundred years ago? Why? And why are they all carved up?

You reach your eleventh birch when you make two realizations. One: each tree is fifty or so yards off from the first and curved slightly to the right. You're walking the perimeter of what is likely a very large circle. Two: It's getting very dark and you don't have a flashlight. Or any light.
>>
"Shit." You look up at the purple sky fading toward black. If you don't start back now you're not sure you'll be able to find your way in the pines. Well, the fastest path back is straight across the circle. You deviate ninety degrees to the right and cross into the birch ring.

Darkness falls on you. Within ten minutes it's so dark that you can only see a few yards ahead of yourself at time, pressing blindly through a tangle of pine branches, navigating only by moonlight. Once you reach the small hill again you should be able to see home by Candi's beacon.

You freeze at the sound of crackling twigs. You rest one hand on a pine trunk beside you for balance and peer into the darkness, listening.

There's a sudden flurry of activity ahead, a crash of foliage, the snapping of branches. A deer starts screaming. You didn't know deer could scream until today when you see a deer lifted into the air fifty or so yards ahead of you.

The thing which holds the deer in its jaws is huge, humanoid. You see it silhouetted against the dark sky as it stands up above the surrounding tree cover. It's easily twenty feet tall and covered in long, matted fur. You see it in profile, a skull-like head with branching antlers and long, needle teeth.

You don't even dare to breathe.

The deer in the thing's mouth thrashes weakly, screaming. It's breath fogs the air in the cold. Its blood steams as it cascades down its flank to drip on the forest floor.

The monster bites down and the two deer halves fall away, landing on the ground. As silence falls you hear the fading sounds of a fleeing deer herd. You're now alone in the woods with this thing. It stands there, looking around, not in any particular hurry. It almost seems to be enjoying the view. It turns its head in your direction. You see moonlight shining from within hollow sockets, a pale, eerie glow.

You don't run, you don't even move. There's no possible way you can outrun that thing in the woods in the dark. Besides which it doesn't seem to be hunting you. Just…looking around. It's different from the beastial thing you'd killed in Candi's bedroom and the obsessive pursuit of the ambusher at the mall. This thing almost seems…intelligent?

It sniffs the air and then turns away, disappearing as it stoops back down, lost against the dark background of the trees.

Silence.


>Leave here quickly before it notices you
>Move closer, see if you can learn anything else
>Write in
>>
I'll continue things in ten hours or so.

Thanks for playing!
>>
>>6181655
Silence? No footsteps? If so, then stay still. If not, gtfo.
>>
>>6181659
No footsteps. Just quiet, quiet silence.
>>
>>6181655
Sounds like a wendigo
Thanks for tossing us a bone for going into the woods unprepared, could've easily raised a death flag there
>Stay Still
>>
>>6181655
>going into the circle
Kyle, my friend, you should not have been sleeping during those 'how to not die in horror movie' classes, and without those birch landmarks who knows if the woods will fuck with us
>Stay still for a while, before quietly moving away, and try not to step on any branches
>>
>>6181655
>Leave here quickly before it notices you
Maybe now we’ll err on the side of caution.
>>
>>6181655
>>Leave here quickly before it notices you
>>
>Stay Still

Writing
>>
You don't move an inch. As something of a predator yourself you understand the mindset, the tactics. If this Wendigo thing or whatever it is hunts in the dark then maybe it does so by movement, by sound. It's not crashing around storming through the undergrowth, it's remaining quiet and still. So will you.

Your hunting knife and .22 feel entirely inadequate in this situation but you mentally prepare yourself to draw either. If you're going to be eaten then you're going to make it suck as much as possible.

The night is silent. No owls, no crickets.

You breathe slow in and slow out, eyes wide and unfocused as you slowly scan for movement, your ears attuned for any sound.

Your legs start to cramp up. You endure. You're not sure how long you've been standing motionless in the dark when you start to hear the wet sounds of chewing. The soft tear of raw meat. It's closer than you want it to be, but not right on you.

Whatever it is sounds like it's finally settled in to enjoy its meal. It's a fairly quiet eater. You would have expected grotesque bone crunching and brutish grunts. Instead its more muted, almost restrained.

That might be enough noise for you to slowly start creeping away from here. The pine straw littering the ground should muffle your footsteps and if you're slow you can avoid breaking twigs. You hear another rip of flesh followed by soft chewing.

Time to go. Carefully.

Step by painful step you back away, checking the ground before you move, slowly applying pressure until you're sure there's nothing to make a sound.

Thew chewing stops and so do you. Your heart pounds.

Someone starts humming. It's so jarring that at first you think you're imagining it. No, the chewing has definitely been replaced with soft, melodic humming. It's a familiar tune. As you stand painfully still you find yourself trying to place it.

Ba-dee-ya, say, do you remember.

The title comes to you. September. Earth Wind and Fire.

Someone is humming disco in the dark out here. This wasn't on your bingo card today.


>Get the fuck out of here
>"Who's there?"
>Sneak closer
>Write in
>>
>>6181876
>Stay still. Stay silent.
>>
>>6181876
>Sneak away.
>>
>>6181879
+1
>>
>>6181876
>Sneak away.
How fun, so we aren't the only one
>>
That is a good question. DOES Kel-tec remember the 21st night of September?
>>
>Sneak away

Writing
>>
The humming and occasional meat eating covers your sounds as you gradually slip further and further away. You keep walking as silently as you can for another ten minutes after you stop hearing anything. Only then do you risk moving with more speed. Before long you're going uphill again and reach the crest of the small hill.

You breathe a sigh of relief as you ascend. At the top you look back toward the dark pine woods behind you. The birch ring and whatever you came across within it remain mysteries but at least they're mysteries you walked away from. Maybe you can come back out here when it's daytime, or with a shotgun, or both.

You scan the horizon and swiftly spot the house. You descend again into the woods, grateful for the rising sounds of crickets around you. A breeze stirs the pine bows overhead and you cross over the little creek.

After what must have been hours in the woods you're back home. It's night now. Moonlight bathes the house, making its white exterior look like bone. You kick some mud off your boots and mount the porch and step inside.

It's silent. No music from upstairs. Candi must be finished with her show by now. You start up the stairs, boards creaking.

Candi jumps when you push the door open. "Kyle! Jesus. You scared me," she laughs. She sits at her computer sipping from a water bottle. The computer is off. The room smells like sweat. "Show's over," she says. She's wearing the same outfit as before still, her knees pulled to her chest. "Did you hear anything?"


"No," you lie.

She smirks. "No? Nothing?"

"Nothing," you say.

"So, did you stick around?" She spins the chair in lazy circles.

"I went for a walk."

"A walk?"

"In the woods." Best not to tell her about the monster. That's going to be a difficult conversation you think. You walk past her to sit on the bed, pulling off your boots.

"The woods?" She asks, bewildered. She turns to look out the window at the nighttime landscape, then shrugs. Kyle will be Kyle she supposes. "Sooo…are you going to ask me how the show went?" She asks, eyeing you expectantly.

You weren't planning to. "How did it go?"

She shrugs, feigning apathy. "It was okay. Tips were lighter than I was hoping. I've got to get some more content out for my subscribers next week and then maybe do another show on the weekend." She sighs. "God damn, I'm tired."

You grunt, disinterested, and toss your boots against a far wall.

Candi's expression shifts slightly, her eyes flashing maliciously. She gives you a devilish grin. "Aw, you're not jealous are you?"
>>
Guess you don't have the most healthy familial relations. "Nope."

"No?" She presses, turning the chair around to face you. She crosses her legs, resting her elbow on her knees to stare at you intently.

"No," you say more firmly.

"Good," she says cheerily. "Because you've had something none of them ever will." She takes another sip from her water bottle and caps it before standing up to come sit beside you on the bed.

"I know."

She gives you a serious look. "I meant what I said then. It's just for you."

You're not sure if that's flattering or fucked up…or both.

"Or…" she continues, sounding a little uncertain. "Do you regret that I was your first?" He tone isn't challenging. It's also not remorseful. It's neutral. Factual, just curious, like she can't tell what the correct way to feel about that is.

Oh yeah, that. You lost your virginity to your sister. In a way she lost hers to you too, but that's more complicated. A question for philosophers and scholars.

It's okay. I'll show you. You don't need to be gentle.

You went through a lot together. Surviving Dad wasn't easy and it certainly wasn't fun. You only managed to get through it by working together, all the way to the bloody, bitter end. You protected her when you could and she protected you. It was sort of natural that you two would end up bonding in ways nature hadn't intended. You've never really considered the question before. Do you regret it?

You certainly didn't at the time.


>Yes. It wasn't right.
>No, but that's behind me now
>No, I wouldn't change anything
>Write in
>>
>>6181925
>No, I wouldn't change anything
>>
>>6181925
>No, but that's behind US now. Dad's gone, we'll never have to do that again. But I will always be there for you as your brother.
When the undertones become overt. What in the fuck? My jaw dropped when I read this
>>
>>6181925
>Yes. It wasn't right.
>>
>>6181925
>No, I wouldn't change anything
I had a feeling things would go this way. Oh well, better her than Annie I suppose.

>>6181952
Is it really that surprising?
>>
>>6181925
>No, I wouldn't change anything
Of everything we can regret, I doubt this would crack the top 5.
>>
>>6181925
>>No, I wouldn't change anything
>>
>No, I wouldn't change anything

Writing

>>6181952
>My jaw dropped when I read this
Murder you can accept, but you draw the line at incest?
>>
>>6181974
I draw the line at tax evasion. Even I'm not dumb enough to fuck with the IRS.
>>
>>6181975
I know what I'll be voting for Kyle to do next then.
>>
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>>6181979
>>
You reach up and take her chin in your hand, lifting her face. "No," you say, staring into your sister's eyes. "I wouldn't change anything."

She reaches up and cups your face in her hands lovingly. "You're such a sap," she says then laughs softly.

You don't say anything. You also don't look away from her.

She bites her lower lip. "During the show," she says. "I was thinking of you."

You lean in and lick the side of her neck, long and slow. You're gratified to hear her gasp and see goosebumps break out across her skin. You know it's wrong, but it just feels so right.

"You know my rules," she whispers.

"I do." Your teeth graze her skin and you breathe hard on her.

You feel her tremble. She goes to loop her arms around you but instead you push her down on the bed, pinning her hands above her head.

She's breathing hard, eyes sparkling with excitement. "Don't be gentle."

You almost never are.
>>
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That night you sleep soundly, your demons exorcised on your sister. When you wake up, the morning sun spills in through the curtains across you and Candi in bed together. You look over at her. Her hair is disheveled, makeup streaked by tears. The outfit she had on last night is long gone. Probably unsalvageable. Oh well.

You roll out of bed and start to dress.

"Mmm," Candi stirs.

"Morning."

She gropes blindly with an arm until her fingers brush your scarred back. "Eckfas."

"Coffee?" you ask.

"Mmmm."

"Sure." Really it's the least you can do after last night. You button your jeans and go downstairs barefoot.

Mom is on the couch watching TV and smoking a blunt. She looks at you with hazy red eyes. You see now she wears a heavy crucifix around her neck. She looks…like hell. You imagine she heard everything last night unless she was passed out. Oh well.

You ignore her and she ignores you. Once in the kitchen you start a pot of coffee. Unlike Candi you follow the directions on the can to the letter. While that brews you put on a burner and fry a handful of eggs with some margarine. They're just about done when Candi comes in in her pajamas looking exhausted.

"I'm surprised you're walking straight," you say casually as you serve breakfast.

"Shut up," she says. "Ugh. I'm so tired."

You set a coffee mug in front of her and then serve yourself. The coffee is okay, the eggs are okay. You look up at Candi. "You okay?"

"Mmm."

She's okay too. She sips wearily and squints out the kitchen window. "You going to apply at the mill today?"

"Yeah."

She nods. "Good luck. Try not scare anyone."

You put a terrifying forced smile on your face and she snorts.

"Yeah. Perfect. When you're in town, go ahead and drop this off at the bank." She pulls that thick cash envelope out of her pocket and slides it to you.

"What's this?"

"Our mortgage payment. What else?" Candi says with fatal resignation.

"Mortgage?"

She's awake enough now to give you a nonplussed look. "Yeah, you didn't think Dad owned this place in the clear did you?"

You stare bare, confused. "What are you talking about? A thirty year mortgage? This was Grandpa's farm. How the fuck do we still owe money on it?"

Candi sighs, annoyed at having to explain ancient family history to you. "Grandpa was in debt up to his eyeballs when he died. All this dairy farm shit and whatever. Giant money hole. Dad inherited that debt and now it's on us." She pauses. "Or on me, I guess."

You shake your head. "No, us. Not just you. It's my home too."

She gives you a small, tired smile. One that says "Thanks but we'll see." You guess you deserve the skepticism. She hides the expression the moment you notice it behind a careful mask of nonchalance. "Let me know how it goes with the bank. I'm going to be taking it easy today," she says.

Understandable. "Sure."
>>
You slide the envelope into your jeans pocket. You'll have some free time today after you perform these basic errands. How best to spend it?

Whatever was out in the pines might bear a closer look. You've still got "September" stuck in your head. Maybe if you went back packing twelve gauge heat you might learn more.

You still need to visit with your old friend Ralphie and see if he has some drugs that can help with your problem. You could slip a hundred bucks or so out of the envelope. No harm, you'll pay it back when you get a job.

Candi is looking pretty worn out. Maybe it would be nice to stay home with her and take care of her.

Or maybe you have something more esoteric to get done.

>Go back out to the birch ring but bring the shotgun this time
>Pocket some of the mortgage money and go see Ralphie about some drugs
>Stay home to take care of Candi
>Write in
>>
>>6181987
Siblings by luck, lovers by choice.
>Go back out to the birch ring but bring the shotgun this time
>>
>>6181987
>Go back out to the birch ring but bring the shotgun this time
And extra shells of course.
>>
Damn, things go wild in Roselake Alabama huh

>>6181987
>Go back out to the birch ring but bring the shotgun this time
>>
>>6181987
>Straight to the bank.
>>
I wonder what the woods would buy with a mortgage payment. Probably a book of matches.
>>
>>6182017
This does remind me... QM, have Kyle stash the cash away in the Eagle and not bring it with him into the woods.

>>6182022
I've noticed you never vote, why is that?
>>
>>6182040
Shitposting is my passion. I usually just don't have an opinion on which to vote.
>>
>>6182000
>Roselake Alabama
Kyle and Candi are freaks even by local standards.

>>6182040
>Cash

No worries. You're hitting the bank first.

>>6182045
>Shitposting is my passion.
Man is in it for the love of the game
>>
Also

>Go back out to the birch ring but bring the shotgun this time

Writing
>>
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>>6182054
>Man is in it for the love of the game
It's not about the money, Shitterman. It's about the gets!
>>
You head into town. Actual town, not the decaying mall or Paul's. Roselake is small, scenic, tourist bait. You'd never expect it from the run down farms and backwoods dotting the area, but Roselake is a yuppie paradise waiting to be exploited. The center of old downtown is a trio of churches around a quiet intersection. Shaded, maple-lined avenues and rows of tidy, picturesque houses. There are a couple upstanding bars, a few antique stores, a diner, a post office, everything you'd expect in a wholesome bite of Americana.

The lake itself is a bit further on, only glimpsed sometimes down long avenues. It sparkles blue against the rolling green hills, marred only by an unseemly outbreak of affluenza along its far shore. A gaggle of wealthy people have made the banks of the lake their home. Boating, fishing, and swimming when the weather allowed it.

That was Chip's life. Maybe Annie's too. Not yours.

Your first stop is at the cramped downtown office of the lumber company. A job application is simple enough, just a sheet of paper you fill out. You tick off the boxes for all the entry level roles. Machine operator, maintenance technician, load specialist. Whatever the fuck all that is.

So many weirdos must roll through here that the receptionist doesn't even look at you when you slide the paper into her drop box.

"Thank you. Expect a call within twenty four to forty eight hours."

You say nothing and leave.
>>
Next, the bank. Roselake Savings and Loan sits downtown by the courthouse. You park on the street and go inside, feeling very out of place against the delicate wood paneling and faux marble tile floors. A brief wait in line and you're up next. You slide the envelope to the teller.

"What's the name on the account?" she asks, trying not to stare at your scars.

"Candace Mercer," you guess.

She types a bit. "Mercer?"

"M-E-R-C-E-R."

"Ah. Here. Depositing?"

Why the fuck didn't Candi explain how to do this? "It's for the mortgage."

"Oh, alright." She opens it, swiftly counts the cash twice and bustles off somewhere with it leaving you standing and waiting.

"Nemesis."

Not here. Not now. Your heart starts pumping harder.

"Is that some kind of a band?"

You turn around to see a man and a woman. The woman you're surprised you recognize but the man you don't. He's got to be at least 50 but might be older. Thick, neatly groomed graying hair and a trimmed graying goatee. He's wearing an overcoat and a tweed jacket with a scarf around his neck. He looks like he stepped off the cover of a men's fashion catalog or something.

The woman standing just behind him is Miss Ellen, your old English teacher. She seemed so much older than you when you last saw her, but she can't be older than thirty. She was probably only about your age when she taught you. Her auburn hair is pulled back tight into a stylish bun and she wears glasses with rectangular frames low on her nose. A smart blazer and blouse match with a tight pencil skirt which highlights her hips. She looks like a corporate bimbo. She stares back at you, chewing the inside of her cheek. Anxious?

"Used to be," you say to the man, guarded, trying not to stare at Miss Ellen.

He smiles. "I may not look it but I was a musician once. My son told me you were in town, Mr. Mercer. I thought we might run into each other eventually." He offers his hand. "You probably don't recognize me. It's been so long. I'm Jack Truesdale, Chip's father." The man himself. The baron king of Roselake. Truesdale owns virtually the entire lakefront, plus a number of businesses including, you believe, this very bank. He is a very big fish in a very small pond.

You take his hand and shake instinctively. You're not sure why he thought you might recognize him. So far as you can remember you've never met him. You're at a loss of how to proceed here.

"I was sorry to hear about your dad," Truesdale says.

You feel a chill. How could he know about that? "My Dad?"

Truesdale raises an eyebrow, looking confused. "Ah…he…ran off didn't he?"

Oh right. "Yes."

Truesdale shakes his head. "Shame. Poor Candace up at that little farm all alone."

"Our mom is there."

"Oh is she? That's good."

You're more neutral on the idea. You glance at Miss Ellen again, noticing that in addition to the fine corporate chic she wears, of all things, a yellow smiley face pin on her lapel. Odd.
>>
"I'm just here to make a withdrawal," Truesdale says, gesturing toward another window. "But I couldn't help but say 'hello'. You really should come by and see me." He looks back at Miss Ellen who steps forward swiftly, pulling a business card from somewhere. She offers it to you, face professionally blank. So blank that it almost hurts you.

You take the card.

"Stop by whenever," Truesdale says. "I think we'd have a lot to talk about." He winks and claps you on the shoulder before walking off to an open teller window.

You're still a step or two behind, trying to process what just happened. Miss Ellen is still here.

"Kyle," she comes in with a gentle hug which does nothing to put you more at ease. It's a brief thing, friendly, but with her arms around you for a moment you think of those silly childish fantasies you used to have, when they weren't about Annie they were about Miss Ellen.

More than that, she was maybe the only person who ever tried to help you, not that it did any good.

You remember sitting meekly at her desk after class while she had a heated phone conversation.

No, he has…there are burns! On his arms! It's…

You remember the look of helpless exasperation as the voice on the other side of the phone shut her down.

No, I didn't see anything happen but…it's…this is textbook. If this is happening at home then it looks like abuse. I think…

More despair. You remember her turning to you, sadness in her eyes as she finally asked if you wanted to request a police wellness check.

You could still feel the welts your dad left on your back after the last police wellness check. You'd lied.

I'm fine. I was just playing around with matches.

Miss Ellen breaks the hug after only an instant and a quick glance at Truesdale. "You've grown up so much," she says proudly. "Look at you." She doesn't look at your scars, she looks at your face. She doesn't seem afraid, not of you anyway. "My God. What are you wearing?" She smiles playfully. "I'm sorry, it looks good on you. I just…the last time I saw you you were just a kid."

You were probably eighteen the last time you saw her so technically not a kid, but you understand the sentiment. You finally find your words.
>>
"It's good to see you, Miss Ellen."

She smirks at you dubiously. "It's just 'Ellen', Kyle. I'm not your teacher anymore."

You dumbass. "Right. Ellen." No, that still feels weird. "Are you still teaching?" You can't fathom why she's toadying for Truesdale.

A brief look of sadness flashes across her face. She hesitates. "Ah, no. I work for Mr. Truesdale now." She seems to see your confusion. "Better money. Better hours."

"Sounds like a good deal to me," you say.

She doesn't say anything or react in any way to that and instead moves on."So how are you, Kyle? How's Candace?"

"Fine," you say. You wonder how Ellen would feel about you if you told her Candi was recovering from your night together.

She glances at Truesdale again, making sure he's still busy. "I know Mr. Truesdale said it was a shame your father left but…I'm glad he did. He was the one, wasn't he?" She means the one who was hurting you.

"Yeah," you say, deciding it's the simplest explanation.

She nods stiffly, chewing her lip. "Kyle I…I'm so sorry. I wish…I'm so sorry that I didn't…" she can't bring herself to finish.


>At least you tried
>Why didn't you do more? Obviously something was very wrong.
>I will always be grateful for what you did for me
>Write in
>>
>>6182054
>Kyle and Candi are freaks even by local standards.

>>6182082
>Say nothing.
Silver lining is that her failure meant we had the satisfaction of paying him back ourselves.
>>
>>6182085
Meant to say in response to the "freak" greentext that: Who's the closest to the two of them in freakyness?

Also the reason Im voting to say nothing is that the first response is too pitying, second is moot and the third is irrelevant.
>>
>>6182078
>The center of old downtown is a trio of churches around a quiet intersection
More triangles, huh? Man, what kind of demons did they get stuck here that didn't go to Salem? What a shithole.

But Ms. Ellen is okay. We should endeavor to NOT brutally murder her in a schizofit some time.
>>
>>6182082 #
>You tried, M- Ellen. I learned a lot from you and still wish I could get your advice sometimes.

Let's like, network. Worst case, we eat her or she makes a decent character witness at our trial.
>>
>>6182106
I see your point about making friends but I don't like the meekness of the response you made. How about a simple
>I know.
acknowledgement?
>>
>>6182082
>I know.
>>
>>6182082
>At least you tried
Man, what the fuck did I just read. This shit has Taboo vibes, the TV show with Tom Hardy. He also has a fucked up black magic incest relationship with his sister. Also, the real horror isn't the monsters or the fucked up depths of the human condition, it's actually mortgage payments.
>>
>>6182082
>I know.
>>
>>6182150
>it's actually mortgage payments.
Death price they call it. Damn the French.
>>
>>6182150
>Man, what the fuck did I just read
Welcome to the party.

>>6182088
>Who's the closest to the two of them in freakyness?
Hard to say. Kyle doesn't mingle much with the locals. Ralphie, his dealer, is really the only other person that might qualify that he knows. Unless you consider Chip and his ilk "Freaky". I guess it depends what you're looking for.

I have 2 I knows
>>6182125
>>6182153

And 2 "you tried"s
>>6182106
>>6182150

>>6182121
Are you switching from "Say nothing" to "I know?
>>
>>6182158
Yes, it's why I greentexted.
>>
>>6182160
Sounds good

>I know

Writing
>>
You stare at her for a moment, thinking of all the things you wish she had done and wish she hadn't done. For as much as you suffered you can also see the hurt in her eyes. Hurt for you. "I know." The words come out soft. You don't see any reason to hurt her any more.

Ellen looks like she might say more but Truesdale calls to her. When she turns you notice a small tattoo on the nape of her neck. A small, twisted rune. She definitely didn't have that when you knew her. She looks back at you and gives you a tight smile. "I hope I'll see you soon, Kyle," she says. "Maybe when you come to see Mr. Truesdale." She's already stepping away, moving backward as if pulled by an invisible leash, drawn to Truesdale's side.

"Mr. Mercer, until next time," Truesdale says raising a hand in farewell. "Don't keep me waiting." He grins at you and leaves.

The teller has to say your name twice before you realize she's back. "All finished, Mr. Mercer. The funds were added to your balance."

You nod. "How much do we still owe?"

She types at her keys quickly. "Looks like a little over six hundred fifty. Do you want the exact total?"

"Six hundred fifty," you repeat, your mind not understanding.

"Six hundred fifty thousand dollars," she says with an apologetic smile.

You run that number over in your head as you drive back home. $650,000 was a lifetime of work, multiple lifetimes of work for people like you and Candi. How could Dad have fucked up your finances so badly? How could a destitute, derelict farm be so far in the hole? Even if you sold the land it wouldn't come close to covering that. You shake your head. Numbers were never your thing. All you know is that's an oppressively huge sum for you. A generational debt. Don't they have laws or something against this kind of thing?

You clench your teeth and wring the steering wheel as you drive. It feels like you've walked out of one hell and into another. You shake your head. Whatever happens you'll endure. If you and Candi work together you're sure you'll do okay. At least you have a place to sleep, food to eat, and a warm bed at night.
>>
You arrive back home and waste no time preparing your "expedition" out to the birch ring. The shotgun comes down along with a pocket full of shells. If you have to reload this gun in a hurry you're going to be in bad shape but at least it kicks more than your pissy .22.

You stop by the kitchen and grab a flashlight, just in case, and a candy bar that you tuck in your other pocket. Call it provisions.

You don't hear anything from upstairs and assume Candi is sleeping it off. Good. You really don't want any awkward questions right now.

You start off into the woods, shotgun slung over your shoulder. The walk is a lot easier and more pleasant in the daylight, at least until you descend the other side of the small hill into the pines. That strange, deathly silence permeates everything and makes you uneasy. You keep your eyes open and moving as you walk, spotting one of the birches finally.

You study it closer in the daylight. After a moment you realize you're searching for the shape on Miss Ellen's neck. After a few minutes you don't find it. Maybe just an impulse tattoo. You step back and look at the tree in total. White, scarred, marked with sigils and patterns, it reminds you of your own body.

You've delayed enough. Without any hesitation you step across the threshold and enter the ring.

It's difficult to retrace your steps since you couldn't really see your steps last time. You move slowly and cautiously, listening for humming or crunching or anything else. After half an hour of aimless wandering you reach a clearing in the pines. It's roughly circular and maybe a hundred yards across. You think this was the clearing you almost stumbled into that monster in.

Now with the benefit of daylight you can see that the clearing isn't really entirely clear. It's dotted sparsely with pines and saplings and it's marked by a ring of standing stones. You stare in wonder at them. Each is twice as tall as you, mossy, dark, and angular jutting up from the ground. They dot the perimeter of the clearing with such regularity that they have to have been placed here like the birches.

You step across the perimeter again and unsling your shotgun, resting your fingertip on the first trigger. You feel an awful lot like Elmer Fudd as you try to move quietly into the open.

There's a smaller, denser stone ring closer to the center. They surround a blossoming dogwood tree and a broad, flat stone that lays like an altar or a table.
>>
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"That gun for me?"

You stop in place, eyes scanning the rocky clearing without success. It was a woman's voice, cheery with a bit of a southern twang. You don't see anyone.

She laughs. "Come on a little closer. I don't bite, sugar."

You hesitate and then follow the advice. Why not? You take a few more steps toward the inner stone ring when something crunches under foot. You lift your boot and look down at a moss-covered femur bone. You see now that the ground is strewn with them. You recognize deer, rabbit, cats, and dogs all spread in a broad ring around the inner circle. The bones here are old, yellowed, dry, and partly covered with moss.

Flies buzz around the rear half of the deer you saw last night lying just beyond the inner ring. It lies on top of an aged heap of other deer bones.

"My my my," the woman says. "You've got some big time enemies, baby." Now you see her. A woman, just a human woman, lying on that altar stone on her stomach. She's propped up on her elbows, chin resting on her hands. Her feet kick idly in the air behind her. She's wearing bell-bottom jeans and a short cut denim jacket which exposes the small of her back, the sleeves are lined with long leather fringe. Her hair is long, a soft brown, parted neatly down the middle, curling out at the tips. Her face is partly obscured by over-sized circular glasses, rose tinted. She smiles at you as you see her. "Someone has done some serious work on you." You see her studying you and get the uncomfortable sensation that she's seeing through you. "Who cut you up like that? Come a little closer so I can get a good look at you."

You look down at the bones littering the ground and don't move an inch. "Who are you?"

"Virginia," she says, kicking her legs slowly, playfully.

You glance down at the bones again. You ask maybe the more pressing question. "What are you?"

Her grin widens more than you think should be possible. "Think of me as the lesser evil, darlin." She chuckles darkly. "Now I reckon I'm entitled to some answers of my own." She rolls off the stone and onto her feet. "You're in my parlor now, aren't ya?" She chuckles. "So tell me what you're doing here."


>I'm the guy with the gun. I ask the questions
>I saw a creature here last night. A Wendigo
>Just out for a hike
>Write in
>>
>>6182196
>I came here for answers. Last night, I saw a monster eating that deer right there.
Hope we get some appraisal of what's happening from whatever this being is.
>>
>>6182196
>I saw a creature here last night. A Wendigo
>>
>>6182194
>dogwood tree
Good thing we don't work for the ATF. Shit would have been donezo on sight.

What in the Woodstock Free-lovin' fuck is she? Also why hasn't she updated her digs? Shit was going out 30 years ago. Not many visitors I suppose.
>>
>>6182203
+1
>>
>>6182196
>>I saw a creature here last night. A Wendigo
>>
>>6182196
>>I saw a creature here last night. A Wendigo
>>
The nightmare never stops. Time for more Nemesis.

>I saw a creature here last night. A Wendigo

Writing
>>
"I saw a creature here last night," you say, nodding towards the discarded deer ass nearby. "Eating that deer. A Wendigo."

Virginia cocks her head, confused. "The hell is a Wendigo?"

"It's…" you're…not really totally sure actually. You think it's someone cursed for being a cannibal? Is that right? "It's a monster."

Her eyes go wide in mock terror and she puts her hands on her cheeks. "A monster!? Here!?" She looks around the stone circle.

You don't dignify her mocking tone with an answer.

"Oh no!" She laughs. "How terrifying! Describe it to me," she says with a sly grin.

"You would know it if you saw it," you say.

She goes back to the altar and sits, crossing her legs. "I'm sure I would, sweetie. And you say it was eating that deer right there?" She points at the fly-covered carcass.

"Bit it in half."

"It sounds strong," she says. "Dangerous." She shrugs, her attention going back to you. "I'll let you know if I see anything. So what are you gonna do when you find this Wendigo?" She asks, eyeing your gun. "Shoot it?"

"If I have to."

"Kill or be killed, huh?"

"Something like that."

"Say, you from Roselake?"

"Yeah." The question is a little odd because where the fuck else would you be from to be wandering around out here.

"Hm. Lived here long?"

"Most of my life."

"Most? Hey, that's better than a lot of the yokels around here," she laughs. There's a tense edge to her laugh. "You look a little familiar to me," she says, tapping a fingertip on her lower lip as she studies you. "Reckon I know you from somewhere. Or your kin maybe."

You're pretty certain you've never seen this woman in your life. She looks like she's around your age. Hard to tell from this distance, but with the way she dresses and the way she talks you feel like you would remember her. You don't bother to tell her any of this.

"So you came out here for a Wendigo but you found me instead," Virginia continues. "Ain't that dandy. Reckon we ought to make the best of that little piece of serendipity, don't you?"

"How exactly?"

She gives you a wide grin. You feel alarmingly like an item on the dinner menu when she smiles at you like that.

"You can do me a little favor," she says. "Be neighborly. Hmm?"

"What sort of favor?" You don't really feel good about that idea.
>>
"See these here stones?" She points at some. "I need a big strong, handsome young man to help me knock em down. Break em up. Push em over. I reckon you're just the sort to do it." She flashes a smile at you. "I'd do it myself but I left my tractor and sledge hammer at home. What do you say, honey? Help a pretty lady out?" She bats her eyelashes at you.

You eye the stones. They look ancient. Purpose unclear. Whatever they are, they make you feel uncomfortable being around them. The fact that they're ringed with old bones doesn't help.

"What's in it for me?"

"Oh I will just be ever so grateful!" She says. "You've never had a friend like me before. Promise I'll make it well worth your while." She licks lips.

"I'm going to need to know a little more than nothing," you say, slightly adjusting your grip on the shotgun.

Virginia's attention flicks to the gun and back to you. Her smile has become strained, forced. "Like what, sugar?

"What are these stones? What is this place?"

She sighs and looks away. "An old eyesore. Used to be a time when folks around here weren't quite so keen on church. They had other ways of doing things. Older ways. I reckon you could say it used to be a temple."

"A temple to what?"

"Doesn't really have a name," she says dismissively. "Not anymore. Old timers just called it the Thing in the Woods. Some old superstition. Coal miners and cattle ranchers with a heap of problems and lots of imagination. Now, are you gonna help me out or not?"

You have more questions. Obviously you have more questions. Questions like: What the fuck are you talking about? But Virginia's patience seems pretty worn thin. You don't imagine she'll entertain your interrogation all day. She wants a decision.


>Sure. I guess
>No, I don't trust you
>Write in
>>
>>6182398
>No.
No point in saying we don't trust it out loud. This thing is way too fae like to be trustworthy and all the vagueness is screaming that if we knew what destroying the stone would do we wouldn't want to do it.
>>
>>6182398
>Just leave. No way, fag. Not that we'll tell her that.
>>
>>6182398
>No
This reeks of some conspiracy. And I feel if we bring down the stones, we'll spurn some mystical creature or monster.
>>
>>6182398
No
Yeah not freeing her from her prison
>>
>>6182398
>No
>>
>No

Writing
>>
You look her up and down, looking around at the stones looming over her. You're no idiot, whatever is going on here you aren't about to stick your nose into it. Seems like it's likely to get bitten off. This is place is fucked up, and she's giving off bad vibes which is saying something.

"No."

Her smiling facade breaks in favor of shock with a hint of anger. "Wha-"

You stare blankly back at her.

She sighs and closes her eyes, folding her arms. "Fine. You're a smart kid. I shouldn't ask you to get involved with something you don't understand." She taps her foot in silent thought and finally opens her eyes again. "Tell you what, why don't we start small? See…I'm a little indisposed at the moment. Out of sorts. Tied up as it were." She smiles apologetically. "If you could just bring me a little something, a gift, then I'll do you a big favor. Hmm?" She walks closer, eyes locked on yours, stopping just inside the edge of the innermost stone circle. "I can do stuff for you, baby."

"Like what?"

That grin is back. "All kinds of stuff. I may not look it, but I'm a lady with connections." She spreads her arms as if she's gesturing to a group of friends around her.

"Connections?" you repeat, dubious. "Then get them to help you." You're not falling for a song and dance about nothing. In fact, you really don't see any more reason to hang out here. You turn to leave.

"Hey! Now…now come on, sweetie, don't be that way!" Virginia calls after you. Now you hear a new tone in her voice, desperation. "See, I know you don't trust me. I wouldn't trust me either! But I just met you, honey. Give me a chance. Trust is something we gotta build. Gotta earn."

You stop at the edge of the second circle and look back at her. The despair on her face gives way slightly and you see her grin weakly, hopefully. "I'm not asking for much. Look here, you just bring me something and I do something nice for you. How about…just a pack of cigarettes. Hmm? That's not too much? You just bring me one little pack of smokes and I will show you what I can do. That's a promise."

You stare at her.

Her grin falters, slipping away. "You're all I got," she says, forcing a nervous laugh. "Come on now, don't make me beg."


>Cigarettes? That's it? Fine.
>Forget it. Bye.
>Maybe I want you to beg
>Write in
>>
Rolled 17 (1d100)

>>
>>6182467
>Cigarettes? That's it? Fine.
>>
>>6182467
>"You said that coal miners had problems but theres no coal mines around here. If you'lying about that, then what else are you lying about? Nah, I'm good. Later."
>>
>>6182467
The path to perdition begins with a single step. Let's walk
>Cigarettes? That's it? Fine.
>>
>>6182467
>Give me some answers then.

>>6182479
>>6182482
>>6182492
I'd rather we know what we're dealing with before doing anything for it.
>>
>>6182496
+1
>>
>>6182467
>>Forget it. Bye.
>>
>>6182482
Our grandpa was literally a coal miner. Why vote if you're not actually reading?
>>
>>6182530
You have autism.
We don't know exactly where the mine is. Im squeezing her for info by playing dumb.
>>
>Get the cigs
>>6182479
>>6182492

>Nope. Bye
>>6182482
>>6182524

>More info
>>6182496
>>6182510

Holding a bit longer for tie breaking. I'll roll dice if I have to in an hour
>>
>>6182482
>>6182537
Can you pretty please change your vote? You also want info right?
>>
>>6182560
Okay. I'll change from nope, bye, to more info.
>>
I think IDs are fucked probably form people being on mobile. It seems like the >more info votes have it

Writing
>>
"If you want help then I want more info," you say, not budging.

Virginia looks shocked. "For cigarettes!?"

You say nothing.

"Damn, are you for real, man?" She raises an eyebrow. "Never got someone some smokes as a favor? Hell…" She goes back and sits on the rock again huffily. She stares back at you in silence for a little while. "I don't know what's so complicated about this." She sighs heavily, any hint of desperation wiped away. "Honey, I don't know you from Jack. For all I know you're working for that Thing in the Lake. I'm not about to spill my guts." She shakes her head. Virginia turns away and walks back to the rock where she lays down, fingers interlaced behind her head, staring up at the sky.

"Now there's a Thing in the Lake too?" you ask.

She gives you a hooded glance, the sun flashes off her glasses. "Honey, you have no idea."

"This place isn't a temple, is it? It's a prison."

She laughs humorlessly. "Smart kid. How on earth did you figure that one out?" Sarcasm.

"Why?"

"Why?" She gives you another sharp look. "Cause people don't like what they can't control." Her words are bitter. "Cause I had enemies I didn't know about. Cause Roselake ain't what it seems on the surface. Now buzz off, kid. I made my offer. If you're here to kill me then come on and try it. Otherwise, I'm a patient gal." she turns to look at you one more time. "I'll see you next time, darlin." She looks back and the sky and starts humming to herself. You don't recognize this one.

You stand there another minute to see if she's bluffing but she seems to have already forgotten about you. You snort softly, turn and start walking back for home. It's a long trip through the pines and gives you plenty of time to roll this over in your head.

You get back home and see that more than half the day has passed between sleeping in, your errands in town, and your trip out to Virginia. You could spend the rest of the day with Candi, take that trip out to see Truesdale per his invitation, or get those cigarettes Virginia wanted.


>Spend the rest of the night with Candi
>Go see Truesdale
>Get Virginia the cigarettes
>Write in
>>
>>6182583
Really? A quick rundown into what the fuck is going on is such a big ask? I would've gladly voted to give it the cigarettes had it helped us not be in the dark.

>Go see Truesdale
See what he's about.
>Get Virginia the cigarettes
But not to just straight up give it to her.
>>
>>6182583
>Come clean to Candi about all thos supernatural stuff. Minus any murders on your part.
>>
>>6182592
>Minus any murders on your part.
Why? She likes those parts.
>>
>>6182596
Its embarassing.
>>
>>6182583
>Go see Truesdale
>>
>>6182586
The thing was putting us to the test.
If it has been trapped in there since the fashion made sense, I don't think patience is that much of an issue to it.
It tried to appeal to our stupidity, our sense of camaraderie and our generosity. When we didn't give any ground, it didn't give any either. Now, it's appealing to our sense of "Fuck around" to see what we find out.

>>6182583
Just get her the ciggies, m8
>>
>>6182624
>When we didn't give any ground, it didn't give any either.
The trade offered was a morsel of information in exchange for cigarettes, it wasn't a big ask. My next thought is to try to reason with it again and if that doesn't work then just find out by ourselves because we would also "find out" if we appeased such an opaque being.
>>
>>6182627
And we were just shown that we are so out of our depth that even with the apparent power in balance in our favor, this is as far as the entity is willing to give up for free.

It is asking for a show of goodwill at this point before we continue and it wouldn't kill us to swallow our ego every now and then. Especially given we will force other people to swallow it for us in the near future.

I mean violence. That we will be violent before long.
>>
>>6182631
Fine... I can get behind extending an olive branch. Can you get behind seeing what the deal with Truesdale is? He's up to something and I wanna know what is.
>>
>>6182642
Absolutely

Chaging my vote to "Go get some ciggies in the way to meeting Truesdale."

I think the Bowman Protocol might be involved
>>
>Go see Truesdale
+
>Get some smokes

Writing
>>
You'll put that thing's request for cigarettes on the back burner for now. You're willing to play along if it means maybe getting a better idea of what the fuck is going on around here. But first you want to see Truesdale. Well, first first you need cigarette money. You go upstairs and into Candi's room.

She's asleep in bed curled up on her side. You consider waking her up with a spank but you think she got enough of that last night. Plus she's already waking up. "Mmm? Kyle?" She jerks awake in fright but then relaxes when she sees it's you. "What's up?"

A part of you wants to tell her. Tell her everything. Well, everything except for the killing. She already seems to kind of know about that with the comment about you smelling like blood again but you don't really want to dwell on it. You could look her in the eyes and say: "There's something living in our woods that looks like a crazy bitch who fell off the tail end of Disco and is trapped in a stone circle. Also a Wendigo bit a deer in half and a fleshy monster attacked me at the mall. Also–"

Maybe you'd better not. Yet.

"How are you?" you ask instead seems a fair question. Plus you can't exactly jump straight into asking for favors.

"Still sore…" she says with a pout.

"You told me not to be gentle," you say.

"I know…I always forget how much it hurts." She chuckles softly, almost sounding embarrassed.

"That means it's good pain," you say, looking out her window toward the rocky hill and the stone circle prison hidden among the pines.

"Explain that to me," she says dubiously.

"Good pain is the kind we forget. We're not supposed to remember it."

She props herself up on one arm and gives you a look. "What's got you so fuckin philosophical all of a sudden?"

It's Candi so you don't have to answer her. So you don't.

"You smoke?" you ask instead.

"What? No. I used to vape but—"

Worth a check. You change tactics. "I need some money for the store. I was going to grab some beer."

She looks exasperated. "Kyle we just bought groceries and—"

"You want beer or you want to go dry this week?"

She thinks about it before sighing and laying back in bed. "There's like twenty bucks in my drawer. Just bring back the change, okay? We're already over budget by like a lot."

You take the bill out and pocket it. "I'm going to meet someone," you say. "I'll be back tonight."

"Who?" She asks. "Annie?" Her tone is neutral, just curious.

It's impossible to see past that mask and tell if she's jealous or not. That's a whole fucked up can of worms you're not prepared to deal with at the moment. What's between you and Candi is hard to classify and you aren't interested in trying.

You decide instead to tell her the truth. "I've got a meeting with Mr. Truesdale."

"Chip!?" she blurts in a way that gives you pause.

"No," you say. "His dad."
>>
"Oh." She sits back in bed a bit. "Good. Stay the fuck away from Chip. We don't need more trouble okay? This about a job or something?"

"Maybe."

She lays down again, covering her eyes with the crook of her elbow. "Try not to kill anyone, Kyle. I won't be able to help you if you do."

You weren't expecting she could. You leave, closing the door softly behind you and then you're outside and in the Eagle, off for the lake.

The Lakefront is all manicured lawns, scenic views of crystal water and pristine forest. Most of the houses here are only visible as peaked roofs hidden behind walls and shrubbery. There are long gaps between each house. You guess some of the lawns, pools, and patios hidden behind these walls are as big as your entire property.

The business card Ellen gave you guides you along a serpentine road until you find the numbers you're looking for. The Truesdale Estate. No one told you it was an estate, but you can tell by looking that no one would dare call it a house. The long driveway is dotted with ornamental shade trees terminating at a gate. It rolls open automatically as you approach, saving you an awkward conversation with a talk box or something.

Beyond the gate is an enormous yard dotted with a few fountains. The house is in an contemporary style, nothing noteworthy architecturally. It's nice without being flashy, expensive without being ostentatious. In a word "quality". The driveway splits into a ring that comes right up to the front door. You notice a handful of cars here. You have no idea if they belong to guests, residents, or help, but all of them are clean and nice. Except for yours.

You park the Eagle and get out. You ascend a few brick steps and reach the door. There's a big, old fashioned metal knocker and a much more modern doorbell with an integrated camera. You press it and it "ding-dong"s at you.

A pause of a minute. "Mr. Mercer. You're expected. Come in." Ellen's voice but utterly detached and professional, not the warm, caring woman you remember from your past.

The door opens and you step inside and look up into a face from your past.

Ken.

He's big, bigger than you remembered. Ken wears a white suit that fits a little tight on his broad shoulders. His dark hair is swept back, neatly combed except for a broad scar running from his temple back across the left side of his head. Probably a surgery scar from where you'd broken his skull. He has a jagged matching scar on his right cheek. He wears dark aviator sunglasses even though it's not bright out.

Once the door is open you step inside, staring at him as he stares at you.

You can only faintly see his eyes through the dark lenses. His right eye, the surgery scar-side one, is heavily dilated. The pupil looks enormous. You wonder if that eye still works.
>>
You remember sitting at lunch outside and feeling a stinging slap to the back of your head. The laughter of Chip and his friends.

Nice new scar, retard. What happened this time? Chip voiced the question while Ken slapped the back of your head again.

Slap.

Gonna go crying to Miss Ellen again?

Slap.

Looks like daddy learned how to use fire. Ken's voice this time. Ken's laugh. Ken's mistake.

You were on him like an animal, your teeth sinking into his face. The new scar tissue on your own face stretched painfully as you tore into him. You'd just killed your own father. It was nothing to kill this pissant now.

Ken fought back. He was bigger than you, stronger maybe. But you had a psychotic fury that he was woefully unprepared to deal with. Chip's whole gang was shocked to inaction. They could only watch as you wrestled Ken to the ground and then started smashing his face. You didn't stop until…

The Ken standing in front of you doesn't do anything but stare at you.

You hear the rhythmic click of high heels on tile.

"Mr. Mercer?" Ellen's voice.

You look away from Ken, not feeling the need to confirm your identity to her.

She's still wearing the business attire and that weird smiley face pin. "This way please."

You follow her along an ornate, tiled hallway, deeper into the house. When you reach a broad, curving staircase you follow her up. Your eyes automatically fix on her ass, watching it move in her tight skirt.


>Ken doesn't say much anymore, does he?
>What's with the Smiley Face?
>Stay silent
>Write in
>>
>>6182719
>What's with the Smiley Face?
>>
>>6182719
"I remember when you used to put smiley face stickers on my homework when you feared my parents would beat me up if they knew how badly I was failing. The pin you are wearing reminds me of those."

We getting heavy here and we already saw that we can get through her through her guilt
>>
Man Old Truesdale is doing some dank magic dickery for sure. What are we looking at, chaps? Voodoo? Wicca? Some peyote smoking shit? Dude's got a borderline invalid standing tall and built like a brick shithouse. Ain't normal. Can't be.
>>
>>6182730
Well, that or he just paid for his recovery and now has a very loyal and very indebted lobotomite as his muscle.

Entirely possible that his evil power is just money.
>>
>>6182719
>What's with the Smiley Face?
>>
>>6182737
Dear god, the most fearsome wizard of all, a capitalist.
>>
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>>6182739
>>
>>6182724
>>6182728
>>6182738

>Ask about the smiley

Writing

>>6182744
>>6182737
>>6182739
Dark magic or money? It's weirdly hard to tell sometimes.
>>
Once you reach the top of the stairs and you don't have swinging hips to distract you anymore you move to walk on Ellen's left, presenting the unburned side of your face to her.

She stares straight ahead, lips tight together, focused.

"You used to put smiley stickers on my work, didn't you?" You ask.

"Hm?" The question seems to startle her.

"In school," you say. "You used to put smiley stickers on my homework when I did well."

"Oh," she says. "Yes, I did."

"They always made me happy," you say. A lie, but maybe a useful one. The stickers were empty placations. Probably a way for her to feel like she was doing something helpful. "When my dad would…" you trail off, swallowing. "The stickers were a bright spot on my day." You meet her eye and she looks away quickly.

"I-I'm glad to hear that, Kyle. I know it wasn't much but—"

"Your pin reminds me of them," you say, pointing to the pin.

She covers it reflexively, looking almost embarrassed. She blushes a little, her professional facade cracking. "Oh. It's…" her eyes dart as she thinks of a lie. "It…Mr. Truesdale…ah…he likes it. He told me I should wear more color and…so I wore this. Just an old pin." She smiles at you but it's nervous. She's worried that she's a bad liar and she's right. You believe her that it has something to do with Truesdale but you think he doesn't give a shit about how much color she wears.

Ellen clears her throat and walks faster, the click of her heels picking up tempo. You match pace effortlessly. "It's strange to see you like this, Ellen." The lack of "Miss" still feels wrong. "So professional. It's hard not to still think of you as my teacher."

Her eyes waver but she doesn't look at you. "I'm just doing my job."

You both pass through a broad, open room. You don't really know what it is. In a normal person's house it would be a living room. It seems to take up an entire quarter of this floor. It's mostly dimly lit except for a seating area near broad banks of windows overlooking the lake. There are couches, chairs, coffee tables, a bar, and Chip.

He lies on his back on a couch watching videos on his phone. He still wears a suit but the tie is undone, collar loose. He glances up, gaze going from Ellen to you and back.

Ellen doesn't look at him but she does walk a little faster.

You stare at Chip and consider breaking Candi's request about staying away from him. No. Not just yet. There will be time for that later and you'll make sure there's plenty of time.

Chip returns to his videos, frowning deeply.
>>
Behind him, through the picture windows, is the lake. It's broad, blue, glittering, and beautiful. On the far coast you see downtown Roselake, a little postage stamp of buildings ringed with tiny suburbs in turn wrapped with wilderness. Boats buzz on the lake, the wealthy at play. Framed almost perfectly through the windows are two natural stone pillars jutting from the lake. Each of them has to be twenty or thirty feet tall. They're craggy and mossy, their narrow tops dotted with vines and saplings. They'd look good on a postcard. Or you used to think so. You can't help but remember what that thing in the woods had told you about a Thing in the Lake.

Finally Ellen reaches a set of double doors and pushes them open, leading you inside. "Mr. Mercer here to see you Mr. Truesdale."

The office beyond is big but not cavernous, large enough to be impressive while still feeling intimate. The far wall is a window facing the lake and the walls to your left and right are taken with bookshelves. Truesdale is here seated behind a broad, wooden desk, currently writing in a black, leather-bound notebook.

He doesn't look up. "Thank you, Ellen. Why don't you go get us drinks."

She nods at him, almost a bow, glances at you and then backs out of the room, closing the doors behind her.

Truesdale looks up at you. "I didn't expect you so soon," he says, standing and gesturing you to a seat across from him. He sits back down as you do. "Surprised, but not disappointed."

"I don't like to leave business unfinished," you say. It's true and you expect it's what he wants to hear.

He chuckles. "No, I didn't think you did. Oh!" he makes a show of thumping his forehead with the palm of his hand. "I'm sorry, I didn't ask. You do drink, don't you?"

"When I can help it," you say, putting a smile on your face.

He chuckles. "A man after my own heart. I hope I didn't inconvenience you by calling you up. I didn't want you to think of it as an obligation."

"I have some free time," you say. "I'm in between work."

"Oh?"

You nod. "I'm waiting to hear back from the lumber mill right now. I just got into town a couple days ago."

He opens a drawer and takes out a legal pad. "Say no more. I'll make sure your application gets the right attention."

Ellen returns with a tray bearing two tumblers of what looks like whiskey. She sets it down and you take a glass. Yep, it's whiskey. Not cheap shit either. You drink.

"Ellen, go call Barney at the mill and tell him to make sure there's an opening for a—" he looks at you expectantly and you spread your arms, palms up, a gesture of apathy. You're up for anything.

Truesdale smiles. "An opening. An opening at the mill. I want to make sure we've got work lined up for Kyle here."

Ellen looks at you, hesitating. "Yes. I'll make the call. Will there be anything else?"
>>
Truesdale shakes his head and she leaves. He waits until she's gone before speaking again. "I'd expect to hear back tomorrow." He grins at you. "You know, Mr. Mercer–Kyle–it's funny to me that our lives have intersected before this moment and yet it's only now that we're speaking man to man."

You say nothing, inviting him to continue.

"There was the incident with Mr. Nelson—Ken," He says. "I didn't really know you then, not personally but I took a personal interest in the whole situation."

"Why's that?" you can't restrain your curiosity.

"Frankly—and I hope you don't take this the wrong way—one boy's life was already irrevocably altered by what had happened. I saw no reason to make it two boy's lives. I was young once, believe it or not," he grins slyly. "I was a boy. I made mistake, did things I wasn't proud of. I think that Mr. Nelson was caught up in that lifestyle. I think you were caught up in that as well, by your choice or otherwise. I hoped that I might give you a second chance. A chance to…" he leans back in his chair, staring at the ceiling as he thinks of a word. "A chance to make right. A chance to find yourself. Do you understand?"

You nod once though you're not sure that you do. "Is that why I'm here?" you sip the whiskey again, savoring the warmth that runs down your throat, thinking fondly of Ken's blood.

Truesdale gives you a sheepish grin, like a boy caught with his hand in the cookie jar. "Not quite. In part." He gets up from his chair and walks to the window, looking out on the lake. "It sounds terrible to say it but I asked to see you because I need you. Someone like you."

"Like me how?" You wonder how much Truesdale really knows about people like you.

He sighs. "Frankly, I understand that you could use some money. And I could use someone for a job."

Here it is. "What sort of job?"

He seems startled by your tone. "Nothing illegal. No. Nothing like that." He returns to the desk, standing behind it and facing you, hands clasped behind his back. "It's embarrassing. But I haven't completely outgrown my wild youth. I'm still a man. I think you'll understand."

You wait for him to try to help you understand.

"Valerie Hedgepeth."

The name means nothing to you.
>>
"She lives on the Lakefront," Truesdale explains. "A bit further down, not on the lake itself. She…her and I…" he pauses to consider his words. "We've been seeing one another." When you say nothing he continues. "And I'm worried I might have to break things off. You see, I'm not ready to remarry but I also like a bit of stability in my relationships and I'm worried she might be seeing someone else. Another neighbor. Nathaniel Harper. What I need…all I need is for someone dependable and discerning to confirm if I'm correct or not."

"A spy?"

He shakes his head. "Less dramatic. All I need to know is if he visits with her. Goes to her house. If he's seeing her then I'll just have to call things off." He shrugs and sighs. "I hate to be so clandestine about it but I don't know what else to do. I can't involve my usual people either because I don't need word going around that I'm spying on Valerie." He looks at you. "It should be simple work. Watch her house this weekend and if you see him, just let me know. I'll pay you five hundred dollars," he says. He opens a desk drawer and counts out five twenties. "A down payment." He holds it out to you. "I'll pay the rest when I hear back from you. Will you do it?"

That's enough money to make up the shortfall in the budget this week and then some. That's weed money.


>For five hundred bucks? Sure
>I'm sorry but I'm not in the market for that sort of work right now
>Write in
>>
I'll pick this up in about nine or so hours. Weekend voting tends to run a little slower so unless we get lots of activity expect slightly slower updates.
>>
Funny how Chip keeps his mouth shut here, in his own home. He must have been told we would be here some time. And that he should keep his opinions to himself. Or maybe he's just chicken in front of his daddy.

What an unusual request though. Why not just put a camera up into a tree or something? I guess he just never thought of it. Or it's a set up. THE FEDS!
>>
>>6182765
Nod and reach for the money
Pretend that we know how to count before making intense eye contact with him

"Didn't take you for the kind of person who'd admit defeat, mister. You also don't build a fortune like this without sharp instincts."

Pass the bills between our fingers once or twice more

"Double it. I'll make sure this man realizes that there are more important things than worrying about women."
>>
>>6182765
>For five hundred bucks? Sure
>>
>>6182765
>For five hundred bucks? Sure
>>
>>6182765
>For five hundred bucks? Sure
>>
>For five hundred bucks? Sure

Writing
>>
You eye the money and then reach out to take it from him, swiftly counting the bills in a way that makes you look very mercenary. "Just watch them?" You ask, looking up at him. "Nothing else?"

"Just watch," Truesdale confirms.

"I'm a little surprised," you fold the money and add it to the twenty in your pocket. "You don't seem like the type to admit defeat."

He chuckles. "I know when to call it quits. You don't become successful fighting for lost causes. A little advice for a young guy like you," he says.

"If you want me to do more than watch them…" you say, your tone making your meaning clear.

Truesdale laughs like you're joking. He circles the desk to clap a hand on yout shoulder. "You'd better watch it, Kyle. People might think you're some kind of killer with an attitude like that." He gives you a playful wink. Truesdale reaches down and picks up his whiskey glass raising it to you in a toast.

Dutifully you pick up your own glass and clink it against his.

"To fresh starts," Truesdale says. "To breaking old bonds."

You drink when he does. It's still damn good. When you set the empty tumblr back down Truesdale offers you his hand. You take it and he helps you to your feet, looping an arm over your shoulder and walking you back toward the office door. "I'm very glad you came by, Kyle," he says. He pulls the door open. Ellen is standing here waiting, hands clasped in front of herself.

"A pleasure," you say.

"We'll talk more I'm sure," Truesdale says. "I'll hear from you this weekend." He nods at Ellen and disappears back into his office.
>>
Ellen starts walking, a silent invitation for you to follow. You do.

You pass Chip again. He doesn't even look up at you but you see his brows furrow together in irritation, jaw set tight. If he's unhappy about this situation then it makes you that much happier. Whatever pisses off Chip has to be good.

Ellen clicks down the stairs and you follow. There's no sign of Ken by the front door. Ellen unlocks it and opens it. "Kyle," she says as you're stepping outside. You stop and look at her.

She hesitates visibly, emotions warring within her. Finally she slumps her shoulders in defeat. "Please drive safely."

You study her for a minute. Out of everything that's going on here, Miss Ellen's role in all this is the most opaque to you. She was an English teacher, one that seemed to really care. Now she's…what? A personal assistant dressed to the nines with an out of place smiley pin and tattoo. You can't help but wonder what happened to her.

"Sure."

Back in the Eagle you pull out, careful not to ding any other cars. Now you're back to dealing with that thing in the stone circle. Virginia. Cigarettes it is.
>>
Paul's isn't really on the way but it's close enough. You pull into the lot and go inside. The store is empty except for Annie who's working behind the counter. She smiles at you. "Hey, stranger."

You approach the counter, studying the wall of cigarettes behind her.

"Get me a pack of cigarettes," you say.

Annie looks taken aback but only for a moment. "Sure. What brand?"

Great question. You stand silently. "What's popular?"

"Marlboro," Annie says without missing a beat. "Red or gold."

"What's the difference?"

She gives you a curious look. "Gold is lighter, red is bolder. You taking up smoking, Kyle?"

"It's for someone else."

"Candi?"

Sure, why not. "Yeah. She wants to try."

She looks at you a little strangely. "Well…lights are probably better for a beginner I guess."

Virginia almost certainly isn't a beginner. "Better make it reds then."

She gives you another strange look but takes the pack down.

"Candi prefers things bold," you say. Yeah, that totally sounds natural and not weird as fuck.

Annie just nods and scans the pack. "Anything else?"

You also grab a case of beer since you told Candi you would.

"Any luck with the job hunt?" She asks, trying to inject some cheer into her tone.

"Hope so. I'm expecting a call back tomorrow about the mill."

"That's great!" she says. "I hope it's good news."

You say nothing.

She squirms uncomfortably and reads you the total, taking your money and counting your change. She hands you your bag and the receipt. "See you next time."

"Later." You're still pretty pissed about her putting herself in the middle between you and Chip and doing this "both sides" nonsense. Had she always been this crappy? Were you blinded to her faults by your childish crush? Or has she changed like so much else around here? Something to consider in the future. Right now you're in a hurry to get back out into the woods before it gets dark. You expect tomorrow will be busy.
>>
Back at home you put the beer in the fridge and the extra cash on the dining room table. If Mom takes it she'll regret it and if Candi doesn't find it on her own you can bring it to her tonight and be a big damn hero. First, you have a hike to make. You grab the shotgun (better safe than sorry) and the flashlight again and start your hike out into the woods.

It's becoming a familiar path to you. You're a little worried that the mundanity might dull your sense of danger so you make an extra effort to stay on guard. Why the fuck do weird ass entities have to be imprisoned so far from civilization?

Finally you come back into the clearing after having passed through the birch ring. You move through the outer stone ring and stop at the inner stone ring.

Virginia is here, just as before, now laying in the shadow of the dogwood tree watching the clouds and humming. "Hey there, sugar," he says without enthusiasm or looking at you. "Just can't keep away, can ya?"

In response you take the pack of Marlboro's out of your jacket pocket. "This your brand?"

She looks over and her eyes go wide. She's on her feet in a flash, moving right up to–what you assume–is the limit of her cage, the perimeter of the inner circle. "Oh. Oh! Yes!" her eyes light up with joy and a desperate hunger. "I knew I could count on you, darlin! Oh, I could just kiss you. You don't know how long it's been." She holds out her hand, fingers splayed.


>Give her the cigarettes
>Tell me something first (Write in)
>Write in
>>
>>6182905
>Give her the cigarettes

Whoops no lighter
>>
>>6182905
>Ciggies are on the house, but I'll need to see what your favors can do before I get you a lighter
A gesture of goodwill doesn't hurt, we need all the friends we can get
>>
>>6182905
>Give her the cigarettes
No need to say anything, we've given it what it asked for and it knows what we want.
>>
>>6182916
>>6182922
Watch her light it up with some magic bullshit or something as a powermove.

I do have a question for you two and any other voter. What do you think of the idea of handing them over and try to get a feel for her hand. See if she tries to bite off a finger, grab us by the hand and pull us inside or if the feel of her hand does not match the visual.

Otherwise:

>>6182905
Don't just hand over the cigs. Throw it in the air so it makes a twirl before falling within her catch range.

If she waits for the box to fall into her hands, she's cool. If she catches it, she's EXTRA cool.

Now, if she scampers to grab them, like reaching for them before she is able to casually catch them, we know what this girl desperately craves.
>>
>>6182905
>Give her the cigarettes
Toss them, don’t hand them.
>>
>>6182936
Agreed on all points. You just know a candle flame will spring from her thumb or finger or something, but that's a classic (yep Im a demon or witch or something) move. Heh.
>>
>>6182978
Hot.
>>
>>6182905

>Give her the cigarettes
Definitely toss them in, don't hand them over
>>
>Give her the cigarettes

Writing
>>
>>6183033
Readin ur quest, looks solid my man.
>>
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You toss the pack underhand, sending it sailing through the air.

Her eyes fix on in, gleaming sharply behind her rose glasses. She reaches up for it, hands grasping before it arrives, then catches it like a drowning woman catching a life preserver. She takes a few steps back, grinning triumphantly. "Oh, honey. You don't know how much this means to me." She slides a long fingernail along a seam in the plastic wrap and slices through it, dropping the wrapper to the ground as she opens the box and slides out a cigarette. She places it between her lips and cups her hands around it. You see her press a fingertip to the end. There's a faint flash of light and fire. She puffs, taking a long drag. She backpedals a few more steps and sits down in the shade of the tree before exhaling, blowing a long stream of smoke. "Oooh yeah," she says. "That's good." She grins at you. "Thank you, sugar." The cigarette bobs as she speaks.

You're still impressed about the fire thing but you do your best to hide that. "I asked before but I'll ask again. What are you?"

She chuckles softly, blowing smoke. "You wouldn't understand." She shakes her head. "Honey if I knew just how little you knew about what was going on here then I don't know that I would have talked to you in the first place." She nods at you. "I saw those marks of yours and thought maybe you were savvy. Either you didn't make them or you don't know what they mean. Or maybe both."

You wonder how much Candi understood what she was doing when she did this to you. You wonder how much Virginia understands about what was done to you.

"Try me," you say. "I'm a quick learner."

She chuckles and takes another long drag. She purses her lips at blows a smoke ring. "Damn that's good." She sighs when she sees you waiting for an answer. "Time was I was somebody important around her. Time was folks respected me, came to me for help. Time was–" she pauses to smoke again, closing he eyes and savoring it. "Mmm." She opens her eyes again. "Time was I was just a person like you." She laughs humorlessly. "Living forever ain't such a great deal when you're stuck in a cell. Dig? Kinda becomes a lot like…"

"Hell?"

She gives you a look but continues. "Turns out I had people out to get me, folks I thought I could trust. People who wanted more than I was prepared to give." She stares out at the woods.

"How long have you been out here?" you ask, sensing she's said all she wants to about that.

"Hmm. You know, I left my calendar at home."

"When did you get trapped?"

"November," she says. "1978."

If she's telling the truth and you're right that she's never left then she's been in this ring for almost fifty years. You stare at her, trying to comprehend that. You wonder if she really understands exactly how long she's been in there.

"Why? What year is it?" She asks.

"Not 1978," you say. "And if you're not mortal anymore, what are you?"
>>
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"I'm a Vessel, darlin. Put simple, I'm a container for something bigger, better, stronger. Has a lot of upsides," she says. "I reckon some of the downsides are pretty obvious right now."

"What something? A monster? The Thing in the Woods?"

She shakes her head. "In time." She waves you off with a sweep of her hand. "You want answers then you gotta get on Virginia Time," she laughs. "You know something? You haven't even introduced yourself to me yet." She flashes her teeth. "A lot of folks might think that's rude."

"Kyle," you say. "Mercer."

"Mercer?" Her eyes widen slightly. "You kin to…" she pauses then shakes her head. "There is a resemblance there." She continues smoking. "You make a lady feel old, Kyle," she says with a sigh. "Now come on, tell me about you." She looks you over. "You ain't exactly Dudley Do-Right, are ya."

Who the fuck is Dudley do right?

She notes your confusion and frustration flashes across her face. "I mean you've been through the ringer, haven't you? Someone put the whammy on you big time."

The whammy? You're not sure if she means what Candi did or your Dad's scars. "I've been through the ringer," you agree, but you're not here to be interrogated. Not yet. "You promised me a favor."

"Keep your britches on," she says. "I didn't forget." She puffs a little more then takes the cigarette between two fingers and sits back up. "Like I said, I can do stuff. We'll start small this time, right? Just show you I'm serious." She shakes her head limply, waggling her arms, limbering up. The fringe on her jacket sleeves dances. "Alright." She stops. "We're gonna do something nice for someone you care about. Nothing crazy, just something so you know it was me. Somethin good."

"Like what?"

"Depends on the person it's for. Depends what they want. Somethin to brighten their day. No strings, no monkey's paw shit." She chuckles. "You gotta trust me, alright? You can't trust me to do you a favor then you might as well walk your happy little ass back where you came from or come back and put me down."

You roll your eyes but say nothing.

She grins wider. "Alright then! Now, who we bein nice to?" She tucks the cigarette back in her mouth and rolls up her sleeves.


>Candi
>Annie
>Ellen
>Me
>Write in
>>
>>6183040
Welcome aboard. Hope you don't get filtered. There's a pretty big hurdle early on.
>>
>>6183076
>Our Mom
I mean we ARE experimenting here.
>>
>>6183082
Fuck, was going to say this.
She's close yet expendable enough that we would benefit from her doing better yet not be inconvenienced if she suddenly got "powerful" or became a monster
>>
>>6183088
Hell it might even fix whatever dad did that broke her spirit, assuming she wasnt always a religious hypocrit stoner.
>>
>>6183089
>tfw she gets so high she sees the face of god and decides to clean up her act
That GOOD good kush.
>>
>>6183082
+1
>>
>Mom

Writing
>>
You consider it carefully, thinking over everyone in your life who you wouldn't mind giving something nice to and also wouldn't be too upset if something terrible happened to them instead. One person surfaces above all the others.

"My mom."

"Mama?" Virginia says, sounding a little surprised. "Aw. Well ain't you a peach. Every mom needs a good son to watch out for em. Alright, let me see." She closes her eyes but continues smoking, raising the cigarette to her lips again and again. "And you said no monkey's paw shit?"

"No Monkey's Paw shit," you agree.

"Well that's out…" Virginia mutters. She hums a little and then finally. "Ah. There we go. Should be easy enough…alright. Done." She opens her eyes. "Mama get herself a little present."

You stare at her expectantly. "What?"

Virginia grins cryptically. "Reckon you'll have to go see her and find out. Nothin you'll need to kill with fire or anything." she laughs. "And once you seen what I can do as a little favor maybe you'll be more inclined to help a lady out. Hmm?"

"We'll see," you say. "You can do that from within here still?"

She shrugs. "Just little things, honey. When the cards line up right, yeah. I can nudge, or twist things around a little. Nothing too big."

"But you can't get yourself out of here?"

Her smile freezes and fades. "You reckon I'd still be in here if I could get out on my own?"

"I guess not. So, when do you plan to tell me the whole story?"

"Round the time I decide I can trust you I guess," she says. "Maybe around the time you let me out."

You don't say anything.

"You gonna bring that gun every time you come see me?"

"Until I decide I can trust you, I guess," you say, echoing her.

She chuckles. "Okay okay. That's just how it is then. Look, once you see what mama got and you decide I'm for real, when you come back bring something new."

"New?"

She nods and blows a smoke ring. "I ain't heard a good boogie in years. If you get the time just bring me by some music. A portable 8-track and some tapes will be just fine. Then I can set you up with another favor. Maybe something bigger. We can talk it out later."

You feel like it's a dumb question but you ask anyway. "What kind of music?"

She grins at you. "Disco, baby. Disco! I reckon all the stuff I know is off the charts now so feel free to bring on whatever the newest disco stuff is. I'm sure I'll like it."


>Not sure how to tell you this, but disco is dead
>I think you'll prefer the classic stuff
>I'll see what I can do
>Write in
>>
>>6183132
>Not sure how to tell you this, but disco is dead
>But there were definitely some songs out while you were trapped here, I'll look into it.
Also, she was probably the person who was humming September when we met the Wendigo. The song was released in November of 1978. Probably the latest song she heard before getting trapped.
>>
>>6183132
"That pack of smokes is going to last you? Figured you'd go through it within the day."

>I'll see what I can do
Time to google Italodisco

As we are leaving
"Is my presence here the result of your nudging?"
>>
>>6183132
>I'll see what I can do

There have to be *some* disco songs after 1978, like whatever they played on Soul Train
>>
>>6183132
>I'll see what I can do
>>
>I'll see what I can do

Writing
>>
You've never had to break bad news to someone before on this scale. You hesitate, burdened by the weight of it all. Maybe you can let her down easy, maybe even find new stuff she'll like. "I'll see what I can do," you say finally. Surely there are some disco-adjacent songs post 1978 you can find. Or maybe you just won't bother at all, we'll see how you feel.

She keeps puffing happily, smiling to herself and staring up at the fading light in the sky. For this moment, Virginia seems content. "Run along, baby," she says, vaguely shooing you off. "I'm sure you're just dyin to see what I got your mama. I'll be here when you get back."

You eye the pack of Marlboros lying on her stomach. "Is that pack going to last you? I figure you'd burn through it within a day."

She grins. "Reckon I could. But I figure I better try to pace myself." Her current cigarette is burning down toward the filter. "Seein as how convincing you to get me one pack was like pulling teeth I figure asking for a second one you'll want the blood of my first born." She gives you a sly look. "I don't expect you to start feelin charitable any time soon."

She's right at least in that you're eager to get back home. Firstly because you haven't eaten any thing and secondly because you want to see if Mom's head is spinning around backwards or whatever yet. You turn to go, trudging toward the woods but stop and look back. "Is that why I'm here?" you ask. "Your nudging?"

"I wish I could take credit for that. Just a bit of fortunate happenstance. I don't have the slightest why you were out here hunting wine-dingos or what have you." She waves an arm around eddying the smoke. "Bye for now."

You leave for real.

By the time you reach home you are ravenous, and in the normal way, not the violent way. In the entry hall you hear the faint burble and hiss of a crockpot and are almost overwhelmed with the heady smell of cooking food. There's no sign of Candi or Mom here so you continue on into the kitchen.

Mom is here standing beside a crockpot staring down in slack-jawed disbelief at a card of some kind.

"Mom?" you ask.

She looks up at you, still floored. "I won," she says. You move closer and see she's holding a scratch off lottery ticket. $100 in prize money is waiting to be collected according to the little square she etched out. "I won," she says again, handing it to you.

A hundred bucks is hardly life changing money but Mom is acting like she's been crowned queen. "A hundred dollars?" You ask.

She nods. "I-I've never won anything before." She gives you a faint, timid smile. Her crows feet crinkle around bloodshot eyes. "I can't believe I won."
>>
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"Won what?" Candi asks, coming in behind you, rubbing tired eyes.

Mom's eyes go wider, her elation replaced with nervousness. "I-I was going to tell you," she says, wringing her hands. "I've been- sometimes when I get the groceries- well I'm going to pay you back when-"

Candi sees the card. "You've been playing the lottery!?" she blurts in shock. Your sister snatches the card from Mom. "For a hundred bucks!? Christ, Mom! How much fucking money did you blow on lotto tickets to win this!?"

Mom stammers, her eyes darting between you and Candi. "I-I…i-it wasn't much. They cost five dollars and-"

"So you buy twenty and we're zeroed out," Candi says with an exasperated sigh. "Mom, that's my money you're gambling! You can't just spend it on whatever you want. God…" Candi shakes her head in frustration and passes you the card. "Just cash this out tomorrow. We could use the money." She gives Mom a look. "And no more fucking lotto tickets."


>It's just a lotto ticket, relax
>Here's a hundred bucks, Candi. Let mom keep the ticket
>I'm sure Mom won't do it again. Just be glad we won a $100
>Write in
>>
As a secondary vote, how do the players feel about inducing links to lewds where relevant?

>Yeah, let's see some lewds
>What in god's name is wrong with you?
>>
>>6183230
>I'm sure Mom won't do it again. Just be glad we won a $100
The first statement is a declaration not a hope. What is a hope is that the money she spent on lotto tickets is less or equal to $100.
>>
>>6183234
>Yeah, let's see some lewds
Someone needs to push the envelope around here, plenty of quest cut to black but few do the opposite. Actually, it`s rather fitting for a quest dealing with such fucked up people.
>>
>>6183230
>I'm sure Mom won't do it again. Just be glad we won a $100
>>6183234
>Yeah, let's see some lewds
>>
>>6183230
>Here's a hundred bucks, Candi. Let mom keep the ticket

Lewds?
Only if its incestuous! Woo hoo!
>>
A fat hundo? Come on, Virgin A, that could have been a coincidence.
>>
>>6183254
I agree with this anon. Most definitely a coincidence and mom could still sprout a proboscis.

>>6183230
>I'm sure Mom won't do it again. Just be glad we won a $100

Too tired to let this shit escalate

>>6183234
I'm fine either way, leaning to yes.
>>
File: Spoiler Image (2.42 MB, 1024x1024)
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2.42 MB PNG
>Yeah, let's see some lewds
>>6181985
>>6181985
>>6181985
https://rentry.co/98qwypq4

Feedback welcome. I'm not a lewdsmith.

>>6183238
>Someone needs to push the envelope around here
Thanks for making me feel like an artiste instead of a smut peddler.


>I'm sure Mom won't do it again. Just be glad we won a $100
Writing


I'm curious if the AI character portraits are adding anything for anyone or if it's just distracting.
>>
>>6183299
I believe you're being facetious but I'll say this anyway, you don't need to be an artiste to push the envelope just be unusual and contrarian.

>I'm curious if the AI character portraits are adding anything for anyone or if it's just distracting.
It's alright as a placeholder and visual aid. I like this one >>6183230 better since the AI sloppiness is less pronounced.
>>
"I'm sure Mom won't do it again," you say, giving Mom a hard look.

She shrinks away from you, wrapping her arms around herself protectively. You can almost see her shiver.

"Just be glad we won a hundred bucks," you tell your sister. Which reminds you. "Did you get the money I left?"

"No?" She gives Mom a suspicious look, eyes narrowing.

"I-It's on the fridge," Mom says quickly, indicating where she'd stuck it in place with a magnet. "I didn't take any…"

Candi takes the money down and quickly counts it. "A hundred bucks?" She looks up at you. "How?"

"Job for Truesdale. Just a down payment."

She looks uncertain. "I don't know about this, Kyle. I don't like working for them…" She looks genuinely bothered by the idea, nervous almost.

"Money is money," you say. "I don't know why you care." You take a seat at the table as Mom starts serving dinner, laying out bowls and ladling in chicken-potato soup.

"Cause they're scum," Candi says firmly. "Chip and his dad." She barely veils her contempt as she says the name.

"Truesdale seems okay," you say. Your stomach growls loudly as Mom serves you.

"Well he's not. If he were okay he wouldn't allow us to be underwater on the mortgage." Candi digs around in the fridge and takes out two beers, giving you one.

You pop the cap off on the edge of the table, scratching the wood. "It's just business."

"That's what they always say," Candi grumbles bitterly as she sits down. "God," she winces. "My ass still hurts." She gives you a dirty look which you choose to ignore. Candi never seemed to grasp the consequences of her actions.

Mom makes sure you're both served before pouring herself a bowl and sitting at the end of the table eating quietly. She seems determined to ignore her daughter's words. At the very least, they don't register in her expression.

"And where have you been all day?" Candi presses. "Aren't you supposed to take care of me or something?"

You shrug. "Am I?"

Candi gawks at you. The nerve.

Instead of justifying yourself you take a sip of your beer. "Went for a hike."

"Again?" She says, incredulous. Then she looks at you differently. You see suspicion flash briefly across her features and like that it's gone, hidden away. Candi stirs her soup around a bit and takes a bite. "What are you doing out there, building a fort?"


>I went for a hike to clear my head
>There's a stone circle in the woods, did you know that?
>Want to tell me where you learned all this occult shit?
>Write in
>>
>>6183317
>Facetious
Only a little. I do genuinely appreciate the sentiment. Makes me feel like what I am writing is landing the way I want it to.

>you don't need to be an artiste to push the envelope just be unusual and contrarian
Well said. I like this. I can be unusual and contrarian
>>
>>6183330
>"What are you doing out there, building a fort?"
Hey forts are fucking rad. Tch. Girls. They just don't get it.
>>
>>6183330
>Want to tell me where you learned all this occult shit?
>>
>>6183330
>There's a stone circle in the woods, did you know that?
Being cryptic is fun. She wouldn't believe the real reason anyway.
>Want to tell me where you learned all this occult shit?
Change the topic to something we need to know about.

>>6183331
You're welcome.
>>
>>6183330
>Want to tell me where you learned all this occult shit?
>>
>>6183330
>Want to tell me where you learned all this occult shit?

(Facetious)"We could get closer, learn together."
As if they didn't just fuck
>>
>>6183330
>Want to tell me where you learned all this occult shit?
Ask about our marking specifically
>>
>>6183330
Aw, sorry mom, should've let you at least be happy for the price of some ciggies
>There's a stone circle in the woods, did you know that?
Let's not be too antagonistic to our only (true) allies
>>
>Want to tell me where you learned all this occult shit?

Writing
>>
You hit her back with a shit-eating grin. "Do you want to tell me where you learned all this occult shit?"

Candi is taken aback. "Wh- I told you! It was in a book I found." Her tone is defensive, on edge.

"Out past the pines," you say, not bothering to hide your skepticism.

Her eyes flash with anger. "Yes! God, you think I'd make that up?"

"You just found a book in the woods and it told you 'go carve some triangles into your brother'?" You say, planting an elbow on the table to point at her with your spoon. "Is that what it said?"

Her face turns red with fury. "No, that's not what it said, you dickbag!"

You're pushing her too hard. As much as you want to pick her up by the neck, put her against the wall, and demand answers, you don't think you'll have much success with that method. You keep your tone civil but don't relent. "But something gave you the idea, right?"

She glowers at you, studying you, searching your eyes for…something. Is she trying to determine how much you already know? Or maybe she's trying to see what you're getting at. Maybe she thinks you blame her for what happened to you.

"Yeah," she says finally. "My psycho Dad was going to fucking kill you. That's what gave me the idea. So sorry I saved your fucking life."

You remember lying on the ground, vision fading, life leaving you. You remember blinding pain. You remember Candi, fingers interlaced, nails black, eyes closed. You remember Dad— You shake your head. No use rehashing it.

Now it's your turn to glower at her. "That's not what I'm saying. That's not what I meant."

"No?" There's a challenging edge to her voice. She's daring you to say what she's thinking. That you blame her for it.

"No," you say firmly, choking down your impulsive outburst of anger. God only knows where things would end up with Candi if you let your anger run away with you. "No," you say again softly, forcing yourself to meet her intense gaze. "No. What you did…you saved me."

She doesn't relax. Instead she continues to study you warily, like a wounded predator. You've got to be careful about that stuff.

"W-we don't need to fight," Mom whispers.

"Shut up, Mom," Candi snaps, not taking her eyes off you. They shine with unshed tears.

You try a different tactic. "I was in the woods because I was looking for the place where you found that book," you say.

She blinks in surprise. "You…were?"

You nod, the lie comes easily. "I saw the marks in the barn."

Mom stiffens at the mention of the place. She knows what happened there, what had been happening there. You ignore her.

"They're like the ones in your room. My arms," you continue. "And…I think it has something to do with what's happening with me."
>>
The anger in Candi's eyes, the hurt, all melts away to be replaced with concern. Concern for you, for her brother. "I just did what it said," she whispers.

"I'm worried that what you did to me…didn't stop," you say, calmly, clearly. A statement of fact.

It breaks her. Candi's lower lip quivers, it's the only warning you have before a single tear rolls down her cheek. She gets up in a hurry, pushing back from the table and rushing from the kitchen. You hear her pound up the steps and slam the door to her bedroom.

You lean back in your chair, staring at your sister's empty seat for a minute. You look at Mom and see her fear. She thinks you're going to take it out on her. What would be the point?

You plop your spoon back in your bowl and leave it for Mom to clean up. You walk to the hallway and look upstairs toward Candi's door. You don't hear anything. She's probably crying. You sigh. You don't blame her for what happened to you. But she blames herself. It's a weight she has to bear. One more weight atop the crushing pile she carries.

We can do this


>Break the door down and make her talk to you
>Try to talk to her through the door
>Leave her alone
>Write in
>>
>>6183458
>Try to talk to her through the door
Probably should tell her more about the weird stuff happening
>>
>>6183458
>Try to talk to her through the door
>>
Maybe we should be looking for a book. Maybe the Unsexed one in the woods knows about it. Loathe as I am to trust a consort of the devile.
>>
>>6183458
>Sing "You Are My Sunshine" to her through the door.
>>
>>6183506
+1 if we actually know the song
>>
>>6183458
>Try to talk to her through the door
Try to get her to open the door so we can reassure her physically. That isn't a euphemism, a hug is better than words right now.

>>6183506
>>6183569
Too sappy in my opinion.
>>
>Try to talk to her through the door

Writing.

>>6183506
You'd have better luck singing "Closer". It would be more accurate too.
>>
You walk up the stairs and stop at the door. You reach for the knob but stop yourself. Instead you tap on it with a finger, just loud enough to make a sound. You don't hear anything. With a sigh you turn and lean your back against the door. The latch rattles as you put your weight on it.

"I don't blame you," you say, loud enough that your sister can hear you through the door. "You saved my life. You made me stronger. You did exactly what you wanted to do, exactly what I needed you to do," you say. "If you hadn't…" you can only imagine what would have happened next.

You stare at the the grungy, faded wallpaper. "Candi, open the door," you say. The words are soft, but it's still a command.

"No."

At least she's talking.

"I need your help, Candi," you say. "You're the only one who knows what's happening to me. I…things are getting worse and…" should you tell her? About the monsters? About Virginia? Better not for now. Stick to what she knows. "I hurt people," you say. "And I think I'm going to hurt more people unless I can find out what's happening."

"I can't help you." Her voice is muted, muffled by her pillow.

You clench your jaw and hope that's not fucking true. If she can't help you then why the fuck did you come back here? Even as you think it there's a part of you that rejects this. You abandoned her. After everything she did for you you still abandoned her. It wasn't right and now that you're here you feel obligated to help, at least for now.

"I think you can," you say. "Come on. Open the door. Please?"

After a long silence she says, "It's unlocked."

You turn the knob and it yields. The door comes open.

Candi is a small lump in the bed, buried beneath her covers, only heir hair is visible as a messy poof. You approach slowly and sit beside her as the bedframe creaks. You rest a hand on her arm and feel her tense up, pulling tighter into a ball.

"Candi–"

"I didn't want to hurt you," she sniffs. "I…I didn't know what else to do, Kyle."

It's just not getting through her head. "I don't blame you," you say again, more forcefully this time. "Candi, you did what you had to do. We both did. We just did what we had to do."

She shifts, a pale blue eye peeking out from beneath the covers. Her eyes are red from crying. "I never wanted to hurt you…"

You rub her arm.

"The book is in my dresser," she sniffs, burying her face again. "What's left of it…maybe you can understand it better than I did."

You keep rubbing her. "Doubt it. You were always the smart one."

Silence. Sniffling.
>>
You reach over and slide the dresser drawer open. There, beside a vibrator, is a handful of books, most are esoteric philosophy and sociology books, a book of poetry, House of Leaves, Helter Skelter. You shift them around and finally see the book you're looking for. It's not much of a book. It like a school notebook, spiral bound. It's edges are singed by fire, the cover is faded pink and cracked with age. It has no title, instead it's dotted with painted on flowers which are starting to flake off.

"Where did you get it?" you ask.

"A house," she whispers hoarsely. "There's an old house beyond the pines. I used to go there when I didn't…when Dad…" She chokes a little.

When she left you to dad, when she couldn't take any more.

"I found it," she says. "I don't know who wrote it."

You flip it open and one of the pages crumbles. Many more are missing. Those which aren't gone are often illegible, whatever was written here has been washed away by exposure to moisture. Some pages are full of neat, flowing handwriting and diagrams. Symbols. You keep turning, enthralled, until you see a prominent triangle, etched neatly in pen along with a partly lost caption.

-he sign of the protec-

Each face of the triangle is dotted with tiny runes, almost completely illegible with how small they are. A piece of the page flakes off in your hands as you try to make sense of it. You suddenly remember that you're supposed to be here to comfort Candi. Or were you just here for the book?

Either way, you set it down and turn your attention back to her, rubbing her arm softly.

"Do we have any weed?" She says, still sniffling.

"No."

She shifts, curling tighter. "Why did you leave, Kyle?" she whispers the question so quietly you almost don't hear it, like she's afraid to even voice it. "Why did you leave me here?" she says, more firmly. "Why did you leave me here all alone?"

You feel like she deserves to know the truth. At the very least you know she'll see through any lie.


>I had to get away from what happened here.
>I was afraid I might hurt you.
>I wanted a shot at a normal life.
>Write in
>>
>>6183771
>I had to get away from what happened here.
>I was afraid I might hurt you.
These sound true. This freakster and a normal life? Not so much.
>>
>>6183751
Not "Freak on a leash"?
>>
>>6183777
I can see it too. But Candi is more of a Nine Inch Nails girl.
>>
>>6183771
>I was afraid I might hurt you.
>>
>>6183771
>I was afraid I might hurt you.
>>
>>6183771
>I had to get away from what happened here.
I'm sorry I abandoned you. I'm here now and I'll be here for as long as you need me.
>>
>>6183771
>>I was afraid I might hurt you.
>>
>I was afraid I might hurt you.

Writing
>>
You give her the truth. "I couldn't stay here any more," you say. "I was losing control, slipping away. I was worried I might hurt you."

She looks up at you, her eyes glistening with tears but her expression determined. "Then hurt me if you need to. I've never stopped you from hurting me before, have I?"

The words startle you. She doesn't know what she's saying.

You shake your head. "I like you too much to do that," you say which is mostly true. "And I mean more than just hurting you."

She's undeterred. "Then kill me."

You don't have the slightest clue what to say to that.

"If that's what you have to do then do it." She looks away from you. "If I'm dead then at least it's over…it's better than being alone."

You lean down, laying gently on top of her, slipping your arms beneath the covers to wrap them around her. She's hot to the touch, her skin soft. She melts into your embrace. "I don't want to kill you," you whisper.

"I trust you," she says. The words are painful to you. They're exactly what you don't want to hear. "I trust you," she repeats. If she trusts you then that means you can fail her. Her life is in your hands. Something delicate, fragile, something waiting to be crushed.

You hold her tight. She's the only person you have in the world. She's the only person who knows you–the real you–and she didn't look away. Having this much power over her is almost intoxicating. At the very least it's alarming. You'd promised Candi you would protect her. You'd killed Dad to save her. You would do it all over again if you had to.

You left because you thought you were better alone. You thought you could learn to deal with what you'd become and for a time you could. It was only when your days become amnesiatic hazes and your nights became sporadic orgies of violence and hunger that you realized you were going to lose yourself completely if you didn't do something. You still don't know if coming back here was the right decision but there's a strange sort of morbid comfort in knowing that even if you do destroy yourself you won't be alone.

"I'll be here," you say. "I'll be here as long as you need me." You hope that's true.

"I never won't need you," she says, sniffling.

You stay with her until you feel her cry herself to sleep and her silent shivering stops. You have a long day ahead of you tomorrow. You slowly and silently slip off your boots and nestle into bed beside her. Tomorrow is a new day.
>>
You are Kyle Mercer. Twenty five years spent alternately causing or receiving pain, but a hell of a lot more of the latter than the former and you have to say you've come to believe that it really is better to give than to receive. A thin sliver of mirror reflects your dark visage back at you from between a shelf full of cheap liquor. Your eyes are shadowed with fatigue, pale, sharp, cold.

The bar you sit at is typical of your life experience. There are a thousand like them scattered throughout the forgotten places of America. Quiet rock music grinds out of a speaker somewhere, unidentifiable, unremarkable.

You rap the bar top and get a refill on your whiskey from a woman in a tank top who looks like she'd just as soon shoot you as look at you. You sip, grimacing as it burns your throat, and watch the TV above the bar. Wars, riots, poverty, crime.

"Patrón," a woman says to the bartender, sitting at the bar beside you.

You give her a look just in time for her to look at you. Her face remains neutral but she tucks a strand of long, blonde hair behind her ear. "Hey." A quick flash of a polite smile.

You smile back. She reminds you of your sister a little bit. Longer hair, taller. She's wearing tight jeans and a black Harley Davidson T-shirt. Probably a few years older than you. "Hey."

She gets her shot of tequila and downs it before signalling for another.

Your attention is already back on the TV. It's hard to care. Hard to give a shit about any of it.

The woman beside you makes a disgusted sound, sitting back slightly on her seat. "They're acting like the world's ending."

You chuckle. "You don't think so?"

She turns slightly again, looking you over quickly, making an evaluation. "Do you?"

You laugh and sip your whiskey again. "I think it already did."

This makes her smile. "Sally."

"Kyle." You shake her hand, short and firm. Professional. "Travelling?"

"Yeah," she says. "I'm roadtripping."

"Oh?"

"Crosscountry. Going by bike."

"Bike," you repeat, sounding impressed, hoping this comes out as a normal way to continue this conversation. "That's exciting." You look at her shirt. "Harley?"

Sally laughs again. "How could you tell?"

You smile back. You like her. She's not weirded out by your scars or even really noticing them. That's always a plus in your book. It helps that she's easy on the eyes. "Going anywhere in particular?"

"Away," she says. "Out. Just…going." She gestures her hand zooming away.

"Escaping?" You ask, the world a half-joke.

"Sort of. I was married. It went bad and…" she catches her self and shakes her head. "God. Listen to me. TMI, am I right?"

"Nah. That's what shitty dive bars are for, right? Telling strangers shit you wouldn't tell anyone else."

This seems to relax her a little. That or the tequila. She downs her second shot and makes a face, jerking her head. "Wew! Yeah. Yeah, I guess so. Well, what about you?" She asks. "Travelling?"

You give her a big smile. "I'm going home."
>>
You're pretty thoroughly buzzed by the time your money runs out. Patrón ain't cheap, but Sally certainly appreciated it. As you talked trough the night she did exactly what you thought she should, she opened up. She told you about her shitty husband, her controlling parents, her divorce, the life she was leaving behind and the life she was looking forward to.

In a way it reminds you of your first few days on the road, playing gigs for beer money as you crawled from one truckstop town to the next. It wasn't much of a way to live but compared to being beaten every night and watching Dad slowly destroy your sister it wasn't so bad. Plus the mobile life had plenty of advantages, nothing to tie you down and no strings.

"Kyle," Sally says, slapping her shot glass down to the bar, empty. "Can you do me a favor?"

"Sure," you say.

"I'm not far from here but…I really shouldn't drive like this. Can you take me back to my place?"

You might be a decent looking guy were it not for the burn on your face though it could be worse. All things considered it's remarkable how much it healed up. Your left eye is completely intact when it could be a milky, shrivelled marble. Still, it doesn't do you any favors when it comes to picking up women. Not to say you can't do it or you haven't done it. You can still pull, just much less frequently than if you didn't look like you do. Fortunately some ladies like the scars. It feels dangerous, mysterious. Sexy. All that being said, you recognize The Look. Sally's had enough tequila and enough emotional venting to want to take you home.

"What about your bike?" you ask.

"Maybe you can bring me to pick it up tomorrow," she says with a sly grin.

The drive is short. Her motel is practically next door. At least this will save you from having to pay for a place to sleep tonight. You were planning on just sleeping it off in your Eagle and continuing on to Roselake in the morning but a warm bed sounds better.

You park where she directs you to and follow her into her room. It takes her two attempts to get her keycard to swipe. She laughs and gives you a tipsy grin. "Normally pretty good about getting it in." She laughs harder at her own wit.

You smile back, hoping that's true. The door to the room closes behind you. Everything here is dingy, cheap, bathed in yellow from the motel sign outside.

Sally starts undressing. Her Harley Davidson T-comes off first. She folds it and puts it on the dresser. She doesn't wear a bra. You watch her slide down her jeans and fold these next. She pauses and looks over her shoulder at you. "Can you close the curtains?"

"Sure." You turn and tug the curtains closed, blotting out most–but not all of the light coming in. Your head buzzes with booze and your own animal excitement. You'd been dreading going back home, this chance encounter certainly sweetens things. But…
>>
You stop. You feel something wash over you from head to toe like being slowly dunked in ice water only you don't feel cold, you don't shiver. You realize in that moment that you felt some aspect of you leave. It's like the inverse of becoming self aware. You can feel your awareness cut out like a cop switching off his body cam. It's a strange sensation, stranger still when you realize you must have experienced this before but, of course, can't remember. It feels weirdly liberating knowing that you'll never remember anything you do here.

The coldness is replaced a moment later by a rising heat that spreads from your heart beat by beat. Fire and hunger filling your veins. Through a gap in the curtains you see your own reflection staring back at you, ghostly and faint against the city lights through the window. Your eyes are wide, afraid, shocked. You smile at yourself and turn around.

Sally's turned to face you but her uncertain grin falters when she sees your face. Something in her brain which hadn't worked properly in the bar was suddenly coming to life. An ancient sense telling her that she has made a big mistake. Her instincts telling her that she's in mortal danger.


>{Kill her with your teeth}
>{Kill her with your hands}
>{Kill her by bashing her brains out}
>>
>>6184029
Damn alright we really doin this huh
>{Kill her with your hands}
>>
>>6184029
>{Kill her with your teeth}

sluuuuurp
>>
Rolled 2 (1d2)

>>6184029
The motel woman... her death is a canon event so which way will it go?
>1.{Kill her with your teeth}
>2.{Kill her by bashing her brains out}
>>
>>6184034
>>6184035
Perfectly balanced votes of murder, as all things should be
>>
>>6184029
Hands. We are not animals, we use hands.
>>
>{Kill her with your hands}
>>6184033
>>6184039


Writing
>>
She's already changed her mind. She's changed her mind and regrets every choice that led to this final moment. But it's too late for her. You're on her before she can scream. Your hands loop around her neck just under the shelf of her jaw. You squeeze and squeeze and squeeze. Your thumbs crush into the soft spots by her windpipe. It's the fastest way to do it. Mostly painless, far from terrorless.

Sally's feet leave the ground as your momentum carries her backward and onto the bed. You quickly straddle her, never losing your grip, not even for a second. She grabs your wrists, nails drawing blood as she tries to pull you off. The pain is nothing to you. She kicks hard but can't quite get and leverage as you press her into the bed and throttle her. A blood vessel bursts in her eye as she gasps mutely. She can't scream, but she's trying to.

You lick your lips and sweat drips from your face and onto hers. THe muscles in your arm strain as you use every ounce of strength you have to murder her.

She stops trying to get your hands off from around her neck and instead starts hitting you in the face. The first blow is strong, your head rocks to the side and you see stars. You taste your own blood, but that's not the blood you want to taste. Her second blow is weaker. The third hardly a slap.

She goes limp eventually. You keep squeezing, eyes on the clock, ticking off another sixty seconds just to ensure she's really dead. When you let go your hands ache but you don't care. You stand up from the bed panting and look at her dead body. Well… you pull off your shirt. Time for the part you're really looking forward to.

After it's all over you stand in the bathroom, listening to the fluorescent lights buzzing. You're naked and splattered with someone else's blood. Again.

You're trembling, a mixture of nerves and adrenaline. You stare into your own eyes and see nothing but vitreous orbs, fleshy windows to the world. You look down at your chest and see your tattoo, directly over your heart. The Ourouboros, a snake devouring itself. It's glowing faintly.
>>
You blink. Awareness returning to you, hunger satiated. Now all you feel is regret. "God," you say, burying your face in your hands and taking in a shuddering breath. "God, why." You didn't want to do that. You certainly didn't want to remember it. A quiet voice in the recesses of your mind tells you not to sweat it because really it was her fault. She took a psycho home. What did she think was going to happen? Who even cares anyway? What was her name? I've already forgotten.

You turn on the sink and splash cold water on your face. Your .22 sits on the sink beside you. You consider putting the muzzle to your temple and pulling the trigger but you're not sure that would really kill you.

Your jaw aches and you taste iron. You look up, expecting to see yourself in the mirror but…it's empty.

In a flash your guilt and self pity is gone, replaced with cold terror. You look around the bathroom and realize that everything is tinted a deep, blood black red. Grainy. Unreal. You pick up the pistol and open the bathroom door slowly, unveiling a scene of carnage. You can tell, even with the blood filter, that this room is soaked in vital fluid. It's what isn't here that scares you.

Sally's body is gone.

Your heart starts beating hard. You are in serious danger. The exterior door to the motel is open, light from the motel's sign spilling into the room.


>Lock yourself in the bathroom until you wake up
>Get to the Eagle, you just have to to get home
>Use the .22 to "Wake up"
>Write in
>>
>>6184051
>Lock yourself in the bathroom until you wake up
Avoids shooting or running someone over in our sleep.
>>
Oh oh I LOVE hide and seek, Sally.
>>
>>6184051
>Lock yourself in the bathroom until you wake up
GOTTA GET A GRIP.
>>
>>6184051
Don't know the right answer, all I know is I'm not going out like a lil bitch
>Get to the Eagle, you just have to to get home
>>
>>6184051
You sure we can't set the whole thing on fire? Could be our calling card.
>>
>>6184066
Set the motel on fire? You're welcome to try. You'd need to go siphon some gas first.
>>
>>6184066
We'll sound like a bad wrestling promotion second fiddle Heel.
>Kyle "The Burninator" Mercer
Pretty cool.
>>
>Lock yourself in the bathroom until you wake up

Writing
>>
"Fuck this." You retreat into the bathroom, closing and locking the door. "This isn't even real…this isn't real." You rub your face and pace back and forth in the tiny bathroom, breathing hard. The tile is slick and cold on your bare feet.

You can still taste Sally's blood. Hot, salty, bitter. You feel it inside of you, making you stronger. Making you more resilient. That quiet voice in the back of your mind wants more. It always does.

You rub your temples with your fingers, trying to ignore the ache in your hands from crushing Sally's windpipe. "Not real."

"Then why does it feel so real?" Sally whispers on the other side of the door.

You take a step back and pick up the .22, pointing it at the door, hand shaking hard.

You hear a dull, slow, scratching sound as she drags her nails down the door from top to bottom. "Feels pretty real to me," she whispers. Her voice sounds off, wet. You don't like it.

"Fuck off," you say with all the bravado you can muster.

Something heavy slams into the door and it jolts in its hinges.

"Fuck off!" You shout.

It slams into the door again and you hear the cheap plywood crack. A third hit partially wrenches the hinges from the wall. A screw flies out to spin on the floor like a spent shell casing.

You back up, gun still pointing at the door until your heels strike the edge of the tub and you nearly fall in. You catch the shower curtain and stay upright. You clench your jaw. You're not going to beg for mercy or forgiveness, if you're going to die then you're going to die like a man.

Nothing happens. Breath rushes in and out of your lungs as you try to slow your heart rate. This gun has no stopping power at all. If you're going to kill her with it then you're going to need to be precise. Nothing short of a headshot will do and even then you're not certain it will cut it.

The door explodes open, breaking in two as something spindly and splayed open like a dissected cadaver comes racing in. You catch a glimpse of teeth-like ribs, dangling organs and raw, bloody meat before it's on top of you. You start firing.

I'm changing dice rolls slightly. Figuring out the right probabilities and stuff.

Roll 1d6
I need three rolls looking for 4, 5, or 6.

0 hits == crit fail
1 hit == fail
2 hit == success
3 hit == crit success
>>
Rolled 5 (1d6)

>>6184132
Oh boy
>>
Rolled 5 (1d6)

>>6184132
BLAM!
>>
Rolled 1 (1d6)

>>6184132
>>
>>6184133
>>6184134
>>6184137
5
5
1

Success

Writing
>>
You start firing.

Somewhat ironically, it was Dad who taught you how to shoot a gun. He considered it an important part of "making you a man." No doubt it came in handy before, and it comes in handy now. You squeeze off one aimed shot followed by a second partially aimed shot as you flinch away from the monster. Every other shot you fire blindly into the seething mass of vivisected humanity attacking you.

The pops of the .22 are barely audible over its hideous mewling and gurgling. A rib-tooth spears into your thigh and you cry out, firing wildly into it until the magazine runs dry.

The Sally-thing recoils away, thrashing in pain on the blood-slick floor of the bathroom. Her sobs and moans are disturbingly human, but nothing else is.Her body has been twisted and distorted into a spindly, spiderlike thing. You can't even see a head, just limbs, bare skin, and a split open midsection. The sight of it combined with the lingering taste of blood–her blood–makes you feel sick.

You must have hit something important, or at least painful, she rolls around aimlessly, limbs flailing. You leap over her and land wrong. Your fleet slip in her blood and you bang your elbow against the sink before you scramble out of the bathroom. Back on your feet in the motel room you look around for something–anything to fight with. You feet squish in the blood-soaked carpet.

By their nature motels are transient places, everything possible has been bolted down. Except maybe the TV. A big-ass old CRT television sits on the dresser facing the bed. You drop that on the Sally-thing while it's down like this and maybe you can finish it off. Assuming it doesn't get back up.

Otherwise the door is open, you can make a run for it, get in the Eagle and go, or siphon out some gas to try to burn it. Again, assuming it doesn't get up before then.


>Try to kill it with the TV
>Get the fuck out of here in the Eagle
>Lock it in the room and siphon gas to burn it
>Write in
>>
>>6184151
>Try to kill it with the TV
Now that's a metal way to finish it, after it stops moving we can burn it like we did in reality
>>
>>6184151
Motels are transient to their people, the building and decor are stuck in time.

A CRT? Those things have a lot of charge in them, even while disconnected. Not that we would know, unless we messed about in the past with those while at a junkyard or something.

It will still give the thing a nasty shock
>>
>>6184151
Man CRT TVs are awesome. Weigh a ton and built like brick shithouses. Some of them are dense enough to stop a 9mil. Drop that on someone's spine edge first. Big ouchie. THROW IT edge first on it, welcome to crawl city. Kyle's a strong guy, right? He should start working out more. So he can throw bigger TVs. It's too bad modern LED TVs and shit need to be upwards of 80 inches to weigh a hundred or so pounds. So inconvenient if you need to hit something with it.
>>
>>6184164
>Motels are transient to their people, the building and decor are stuck in time.
Too true.

Chalking this as a vote for TV.
>>
Rolled 5 (1d6)

>>6184132
Come on RNGsus, you can do it
>>
>>6184167
Ye

>>6184166
Makes them easier to throw longer distances. If you make them spin a bit, you can catch them while they are trying to evade to the side.
>>
>>6184168
lmaoooo
>>
>>6184166
>Kyle's a strong guy, right
He sure is. Been working at that his whole life.

>>6184168
We appreciate the enthusiasm though.
>>
>>6184169
Maybe we should bolt a trailer onto the Eagle and fill it with TVs. We need to explore tactical television combat.

>>6184168
>>6184170
He's a little confused but he got the spirit.

>>6184171
>Been working at that his whole life.
Now he's even getting reps in during his sleeping hours, too. What a man. Radical.
>>
>>6184151
>Get the fuck out of here in the Eagle
>>
>>6184172
Cathode Ray tube flail
>>
>>6184178
The fact that shit will get in your lungs and eyes when it inevitably cracks, splinters and shatters is horrifying. Fucking GLASS grenades. Microfragmentation is so in right now.
>>
>>6184187
Could always go for the Nailgun+Sledgehammer combo.
Something people don't know is that the front of the nailgun has to be pressed for it to "shoot" the nail forward like a gun would.

Suuure, you could get around that security feature. Oooor, you could lean into it and make a hammer that spikes the target when you hit them.
>>
>>6184201
There are a lot of very interesting things you can make from a single trip to a hardware store. Hopefully Kyle's chemistry teacher was half as good as Ms. E was as an english teacher. Pool cleaning supplies and fertilizer.
>>
>>6184207
It's about getting what won't get the cops called on us, given that we look like what a school shooter pictures themselves as.
>>
>>6184210
All we need is a haircut. And maybe some foundation. Actually a ski mask would probably unironically make Kyle look less suspicious.
>>
>>6184213
We don't sell out
>>
>>6184219
What if Candi wants to cut Kyle's hair?
>>
>>6184151
>Try to kill it with the TV
>>
>>6184151
>>Lock it in the room and siphon gas to burn it
>>
>>6184268
>What if Candi wants to cut Kyle's hair?
What if Kyle wants to cut Candi?

>Try to kill it with the TV
Writing
>>
You lunge at the TV and pick it up. Oh, this is a beast. An absolute bitch of a machine. You feel a painful twinge in your back and the muscles in your arms strain as you lift it. It's got to weigh a hundred pounds. Sure feels like it.

The cord yanks free of the wall as you walk to the bathroom, teeth set tight as you lift the TV up over your head. The thing that was Sally writhes on the ground pitifully. It'd be better if you killed it.

Sweat runs down your back and face as you brace yourself, careful not to slip on the blood. One shot. Here goes.

Roll 1d6
I need three rolls looking for 4, 5, or 6.

You need two to pass.
>>
Rolled 4 (1d6)

>>6184479
>>
Rolled 1 (1d6)

>>6184479
>>
Rolled 1 (1d6)

>>6184479
>>
>>6184487
>>6184491
>>6184497

4
1
1

Writing
>>
You stand, panting, shaking with exertion over what had been Sally. Looking at what she's become makes you nauseous. Her body is broken, torn, writhing, slathered in blood. She's begging for a mercy kill. You raise the TV and she grabs your ankle.

You cry out as broken, needle-sharp fingernails tear into your leg. Your balance is going. You angle yourself and drop the TV on her with a crash of plastic and glass as you fall to the floor.

Sally-thing twitches, convulsing, screaming. Her grip on your leg tightens. Her blood gushes freely across the floor and you can hear and feel her shattered bones grinding. Something smells like cooking meat too.

But it doesn't matter, she has you. She has you and she's not letting go. Her fingers sink into your skin and then your bone. You scream as she drags herself heavily toward you, sliding the broken TV along with her.

Splintered hands grab at you, clawing their way up your body as you try to fend them off. It's no good. They wrap around your neck and constrict. Squeezing and squeezing and squeezing. You feel your trachea crumple shut. Your head pulses with blood, you can't breathe but worse than that, you feel fluid filling your lungs. Blood.

The Sally thing pulls itself onto you, the weight of her body crushing you. You scream. You try to scream anyway.
>>
You open your eyes and suck in a desperate, panicked breath. You're alive. More than alive. You feel great. Too great.

A cold breeze tousles your hair and numbs your cheeks. Your fingers ache. You realize your mouth is full of blood. You swallow it instinctively and feel a sick warmth radiate through you. You feel the blood making you stronger. Just like Sally's blood did that night in the motel.

Full realization hits you. You're not dreaming anymore. "Candi," you blurt, eyes darting in a panic, knowing what you expect to find lying beside you. Only you're not lying down. You're not in bed either. You're outside standing in the crook between the spokes of the mall.

You look up at the sunny sky. It's early morning. You look down. You're clothed and standing over a dead man laying on the pavement, his throat torn out, blood spilling onto the pavement, spreading out from his corpse. It nearly reaches your boots before you take an automatic step back.

"Wha?" You touch your face and your hand comes away bloody. Mostly because your hands are already bloody, but also because your face is covered in blood from the nose down, dripping onto your shirt. I guess you're a messy eater.

"Fuck," you say as you stare at the dead man.

You look around again to be sure no one is anywhere near you. You're outside but out of sight of the parking lot standing near a makeshift shelter–a neon green tent covered in broken down cardboard.

The dead guy you don't know, not personally anyway. After having gotten to know Sally you consider it a blessing to not know who this guy is. He's a bit older than you, maybe mid thirties, wearing lots of warm layers now soaked through with his blood. He stares at the sky, mouth agape, not moving.

Not good. Not again.

You take another look around. No cameras, no witnesses. Small favors. This could have been worse. Much worse.

"Shit," you whisper.

There's also the matter of the blood you just swallowed. You feel it sloshing thickly in your stomach, it's warmth not fading but only seeming to grow, filling you. Making you stronger.


>Make them forget
Witnesses somehow struggle to identify you. You aren't invisible but you are very forgettable.
>Make them disappear
Fingerprints, DNA, hair follicle analysis, whatever. You leave no forensics despite the mess. Whatever gets left behind is untraceable. Ruined.
>Make a clean getaway
You can usually be gone from a scene well before anyone else can arrive to stop you or ask uncomfortable questions.
>>
>>6184512
>Make a clean getaway
>>
>>6184512
>Make them disappear
This is the most useful since all the kills have been incredibly messy. "Make them forget" would be my next pick since it's useful in more than just murder.
>>
Ah dang. Hepatitis.
>>
>>6184512
>Make them forget
This is our biggest weakness at the moment. We are too memorable.
>>
>>6184670
Dude, if we don't take make them disappear, how are we going to clean up this crime scene?
>>
>>6184672
That's a problem for whoever resembles whoever is on the cameras. Which isn't us.
>>
>>6184672
>how are we going to clean up this crime scene?
A problem great, demented minds have long struggled with.
>>
>>6184675
1. Don`t think there are cameras in this defunct parking lot.
2. "Fingerprints, DNA, hair follicle analysis, whatever." do you want the police collecting our information?

Like I said, Make them forget is great but make them disappear is necessary. We got lucky with the motel but we won't always be so fortunate, like right now for example.
>>
>>6184677
>but we won't always be so fortunate
Truly. For our daddy was no senator.
>>
>>6184512
>>Make them disappear
>>
>>6184512
>Make them disappear
you there qm?
>>
>>6184723
>you there qm?
Always. Had an obligation. Let's continue.


>Make them disappear

Writing
>>
You feel inherently that nothing here will tie you directly to this crime. Fingerprints, bootprints, skin cells, whatever. Of course there has been a murder here and once (and if) that's discovered then the people who enforce the law will be looking for a murderer. It will mean more scrutiny, more attention and more effort invested in finding you. At least you did this at the mall and not in Roselak itself. With some luck they'll be looking for junkies on the fringes of Lasker City.

Assuming no one sees you leaving this place then any evidence the police might gather would be circumstantial at best.

You consider searching the dead guy for money or drugs or something but you don't see the point. It's clear he has nothing or he wouldn't be living behind a semi-derelict mall. Taking a few steps away to think you look yourself over. You're pretty messy. Blood on your face, blood on your hands, splashes on your jacket, shirt, jeans. They'll wash out with a little patience and some work with a toothbrush, but you really probably don't want to get seen like this. Without a watch or a phone you have no idea what time it is but looking up at the sky you're guessing it's before nine AM. It's around the time mall employees (those few who remain) start showing up and old-ass retirees with nothing better to do come to walk and shit. Pretty soon regular customers will get here. Not many, but some. Enough to be risky to deal with.

Probably best not to stay long.

You turn to leave but stop and look back at the crime scene. If you hide or obscure what happened here you might actually do yourself a favor. Sure, they can't directly link this murder to you right now, but you get too many of these under your belt and you might make a pattern, enough links in a chain to bind you with. If you get rid of what little evidence there is then they may not be able to tell exactly what happened, at least not for a long time. Or even better yet, they may not ever discover a crime took place here.

You can take the body with you to dump somewhere else later or you can try immolating it to obliterate any physical evidence like cause of death.


>Wrap the body in the tent and drag it to your car.
>Siphon some gas in the parking lot and burn the body in a dumpster
>Fuck it, leave it to ruin someone's day and get out of here.
>Write in
>>
>>6184730
>Siphon some gas in the parking lot and burn the body in a dumpster
Plus see if there are any clothes we can take, pants being the most desirable. Being shirtless in stinky pants is better than being in blood soaked clothes.
>>
>>6184730
>Siphon some gas in the parking lot and burn the body in a dumpster
>>
>>6184730
>>Wrap the body in the tent and drag it to your car.
>>
>Siphon some gas in the parking lot and burn the body in a dumpster

Writing
>>
>>6184760
I implied it but I hope if you do write that we found pants, that we throw the blood soaked cloathes into the fire.
>>
First you strip off your shirt and toss it into the dumpster you've selected to be your pyre. It's stacked with cardboard and what looks like a broken down wooden pallet. Should burn good. You eye the dead guy's pants, they're soaked through with blood from lying in it. Your jeans aren't great, but they're better than his. Your jacket is non-negotiable, it stays. It's basically a personality trait at this point. You take it off and roll it into a ball as you walk back to the parking lot. You're happy to see the Eagle here, there was a part of you worried that maybe you walked all the way to the mall. That would have made for an awkward getaway. You open the trunk and chuck your jacket in and take the siphon kit and a road flare out. It's second nature now.

It's pretty cold to be walking around here with no shirt and no jacket, but it just makes you look hardcore. Not that there's anyone out here to see you.

A old Lincoln sedan is parked a short distance away. Your target. You crouch beside it, pop the gas cap, and get siphoning. With your back against the metal flank of the car you keep a close look out. You're not really sure what you'll do if you encounter someone out here who has questions you can't answer. Kill them you guess.

After painful minutes the can is full. You drop the hose off in your trunk and continue back into the loading dock area. The dead guy is pretty heavy but you manage, lifting him from beneath the arms and then flipping him into the dumpster. He lands hard on all the crap in there and you start dousing him. The scent of gasoline fills your nose but you don't stop until the can is empty. You throw a few more broken down boxes in on top of him and then light the road flare. It hisses and sparks.

You sigh, trying to shake a persistent feeling of deja vu as you use the flare to ignite the fire. It wooshes to life as the gasoline catches, rapidly spreading to the boxes and scrap wood inside. You know it won't burn the body down to ashes but it should render him unidentifiable and destroy any indication of cause of death. You hope.

You walk a short distance with the sputtering flare and toss it into a different dumpster. As you do so you realize that you've created an MO for yourself. Burning corpses with gasoline and road flares. You need to switch things up probably. Even if they don't identify the body they'll likely tie it to the other mysterious corpse fire. Oh well.

Thinking about it makes your stomach tense with anxious fear but you swallow it down. Sally and this guy aren't the first two people you've killed and they're likely far from the last. You've gotten away with it so far.

Smoke curls up from the dumpster fire, rising above the mall. Time to go.
>>
You hurry back to the Eagle and get in, adjusting the mirror to look at yourself, shirtless and scarred. In a way the scars work for you here. Anyone who sees you like this will probably be too busy staring at your body to notice the spatter of red on your jeans. Or your hands. Or your face. Fuck it.

You stare the car and grimace as you see how low your gas is. You were a busy boy while you were asleep. You're pretty sure you have enough gas to get home. You hope. If you'd thought about it you would have siphoned some more for the car before starting the fire but right now you just need to get away from here.

You start the car and go, heading toward Lasker City before doubling back on back roads for Roselake, just in case.

The drive gives you plenty of time to think. You're wondering if you need to find some other outlets for this bloodlust, something more controlled and less risky. You're also wondering if killing that guy has something to do with your dream. If that monster had killed you at home would it be Candi's body you woke up over? But if that were the case, why didn't you kill Candi last night? You were sleeping right beside her when you had that dream. That quiet voice that lurks in the dark pars of your mind speaks up. Who says you didn't kill Candi last night?

A cold sweat breaks out across your forehead and you put the accelerator down more, fuel gauge be damned.

There's no police or paramedics at home when you pull up. The truck is here and all is quiet. You get out and go inside, taking your bloody jacket with you. Your heart is hammering as you open the door.

Candi sits on the floor in the hallway wearing a Playboy bunny outfit complete with fluffy cotton tail and ears. She's holding a camera at arms length taking a selfie but she stops and looks over at you when you come in. "Where the fuck were you this morning?" she asks, lowering the camera. "And where's your—" she stops, seeing your expression. "What happened?" she asks, suddenly concerned, though she doesn't get up.

"Can't you smell the blood?" you blurt back. You drop your jacket to the floor and unbutton your jeans. "Had a bad night," you say, in no mood as you step out of them. Your boxers go next and now you're nude beside a pile of bloody clothes in the hallway. You'll have to burn them probably, again, except for the jacket. It's ride or die.

Candi stares at the clothes, her mouth an "O" of surprise. "Again?" she asks like you told her you wet the bed.

"Again. Figure out what to do about this shit," you say, gesturing vaguely to your clothes. The floor will need to be mopped too. The blood on your hands and face has become tacky, half-dry.

"The mill called too," Candi says, following you to the bathroom. "They said they were offering you a role. I told them you were out but would go by later."

You have more important concerns right now than some phony job. "Gee, thanks." You turn on the shower, setting it as hot as you can tolerate.
>>
"Mom!" Candi turns her head shouts back into the house, an edge in her tone.

Mom appears reluctantly in the doorway and sees you. Her apprehension flickers to fear and then resignation.

"Go put all those clothes in a bag," Candi says, gesturing to the mess. "And start mopping the floor. Make sure you use plenty of bleach."

Mom disappears to go do domestic shit.

"Gee thanks. You're a real help," you say, stepping into the stream of hot water, watching it turn pink as it swirls around your feet.

Candi ignores your sarcasm. "So who was it?" The question is surprisingly neutral, distracted. She's transfixed by you. She keeps looking you over from head to toe and back again, awestruck by…well…you assume the blood. Who knows with her.

"Some homeless guy I think," you say, squirting a generous amount of body wash into your hand. It smells like lavender. You start scrubbing. "I don't know. It was at the mall."

"The mall? Did anyone see you?" she asks.

"No. I don't think so."

"You don't think so?" She's momentarily drawn from her daze by your uncertainty.

"I don't remember any of it but I was alone when it was over," you say.

"Mmm." She doesn't seem too concerned actually. "I didn't even hear you get up this morning. Or last night."

That in itself was noteworthy. Candi was a light sleeper. You run your hands through your hair and they come back pink. With a frustrated growl you squirt a dollop of shampoo on your hand and start lathering up. You look over and see Candi, looking ridiculous in her costume, standing and staring at you still.


>Make yourself useful and go scrub down the Eagle interior
>Grab me some clean clothes
>If you're going to stand there you might as well get in here and help me clean up (Lewd)
>Write in
>>
>>6184803
>Grab me some clean clothes then get in here and help me clean up (Lewd)
Gonna need a change of clothes for afterwards anyway. Then scrub the eagle together! Wholesome activities all around.
>>
>>6184803
>If you're going to stand there you might as well get in here and help me clean up (Lewd)
The others can (and definitely will) get done later.
>>
>>6184803
>If you're going to stand there you might as well get in here and help me clean up (Lewd)
Are you ready. . . To make some REALLY BAD CHOICES?
>>
>>6184803
>>If you're going to stand there you might as well get in here and help me clean up (Lewd)
>>
>Absolute Degeneracy

Writing
>>
Consider the vote locked. The update will probably be in a couple of hours. I hope to update soon.
>>
Although…the more you look at her the less ridiculous you think your sister's costume is. You like the way it showcases her long, pale legs. You like how it hugs her hips and waist. You like…

"If you're just going to stand there you might as well help me." The words come without really thinking about it

Candi blinks, surprised. But then it's gone and she's grinning as she sees your intent. Her eyes glance downward at you and she bites her lip in a way that tells you she's yours. "You're a dirty boy, Kyle."

You say nothing. It's true.

Candi reaches around to undo the zipper on the back. "Ears on or off?" She asks.

"On." Obviously.

***

Afterwards you're both totally clean. No blood or anything else. Candi is blow drying her hair and brushing it out, eyes locked on herself in the mirror.

"You're going to be late if you don't get going," she says. "Do you really want to set a bad example on your first day?"

You spank her and she squeaks in surprise, giving you an unhappy look. "Ow."

The Eagle still needs a good wipe down. You don't really trust Mom with the car. Maybe that's sexist. But Candi's right, you don't really have time to do that.

You walk out of the bathroom, past Mom scrubbing the floor, and head upstairs. Your clothes–both the old ones from highschool and the new ones you brought with you here–are all washed and sitting in a messy pile on the bed. Either Candi did you a favor or she made Mom do you a favor. Either way it was thoughtful.

You grab something that probably won't get you fired. With your normal jacket out of action for the moment you fish an old woodland camo army coat out of the pile. You used to wear this in school, you thought it made you look cool.

You think it still does. You pull it on and go back downstairs. Candi is in the doorway, naked, toweling her hair dry and ignoring Mom. "Try not to kill anyone at work," she says.


>Kiss for luck?
>While I'm gone, clean the car
>We can clean the car when I come back
>Write in
>>
>>6185063
>While I'm gone, please clean the car
Then give her a kiss goodbye. How lovely...
>>
>>6185063
>We can clean the car when I come back
We can afford some niceness
>>
>>6185063
>While I'm gone, clean the car
>>
>>6185063
>While I'm gone, please clean the car.

Its one thing to be a psycho killer but rude? Nah.
>>
>While I'm gone, please clean the car

Writing
>>
"Yeah," you say, knowing better than to promise against murder. You allow yourself another moment studying her body before spring the question. "Can you clean the car while I'm gone?"

Candi huffs. "What? No. I have to get ready all over again and finish the shoot! Do you know how long it takes to–"

You hit her with your secret weapon. "Please?"

Candi is left speechless for a second. She turns her head away and crosses her arms. "You are just…ugh. Fine."

"Thanks. Be sure not to fuck up the leather." The sound of her indignation is music to your ears but you know you can do better than that. You reach out and stroke her cheek. "Be back later."

You feel gratified to see her shiver slightly, but she makes a show of pouting still. Her silence is deafening as you leave. You step over the wet spot Mom is currently scrubbing, and then out onto the porch. You haven't driven the pickup in a long time but it's just like you remember except for a tube of lipstick in the cupholder. You climb into it and sweep some empty McDonald's cups off the bench seat and start it. Unlike the Eagle it has plenty of gas.

You start off for the mill, weaving along backcountry roads before reaching it. A large gravel lot serves as parking beside a singlewide trailer office and a large warehouse building.

As you get out of the truck you hear that buzz of saws and rumble of diesel engines. A sprawling lumber yard behind the warehouse is stacked high with hundreds of pine trees brought in from the surrounding area to be processed here. The parking lot is full of beaters and worn out pickups so your truck fits right in. You don't bother to lock it.

You enter the office and a whirlwind of HR bullshit. You fill out forms, answer basic questions, watch an ancient VHS safety training video which showcases all of the incredibly hilarious and painful ways you can be maimed or killed on the job site.

They take your photo and give you a badge to clip onto your belt before sending you to the warehouse for on the job training.

The warehouse is loud, full of the sound of keening saws and clattering machinery.

Your trainer is Hunter. A forty something who looks closer to fifty something. His Carhartt jacket is lightly grease stained, face heavily lined. He smells like cigarettes.

He looks surprised when he sees you. "Whoa. Looks like you got into a fight with a deep fryer, kid."


>I can give you something to match
>Say nothing
>You should see the other guy
>Write in
>>
>>6185205
>You should see the other guy
Funny in more ways than one.
>>
>>6185205
>Yeeeeeep.
>>
>>6185205
>You should see the other guy
>>
>>6185205
>You should see the other guy
>>
>You should see the other guy

Writing
>>
"You should see the other guy."

Hunter barks out laughter. "Hey, you're alright, kid. Don't listen to what they say about you." Without any more preamble he leads you to a wicked piece of machinery. "Alright, this bad bitch is going to be your best friend until you get a better job or she takes something from you that you're not ready to part with. So listen up."

And like that you are instructed in the operation of a big ass saw to split logs.

It's arduous, dull work which could kill you if you're not careful so you can't even really zone out. At least it pays.

The saw is generally too noisy for conversation so you work alone. At the end of your shift Hunter walks with you back to the parking lot. "Same shit tomorrow, kid. Maybe you'll earn a new scar." He barks again at his own wit.

"Fingers crossed," you say which only heightens his laughter.

The sun is gone over the horizon by the time you're back in the truck, a cold breeze blowing through the lot. You breathe easy. Big day today. Got a job, showered with your sister, and killed a man in cold blood. Not in that order of course. All that's left now is to wind down the day. You can cash out Mom's lotto ticket on the way home and of course burn your bloody clothes when you get there, but you've got a few hours of free time otherwise.


>Cash out Mom's lotto ticket and go see Ralphie about some drugs
>Spend the rest of the night at home with Candi
>Look into getting some "new" Disco for Virginia to listen to
>Write in
>>
>>6185239
>Cash out Mom's lotto ticket and look into getting some "new" Disco for Virginia to listen to
>>
>>6185239
Swipe some cigs from some loggerhead round who is too tired from a lot day to notice, then go get some Disco
>>
>>6185239
>Cash out Mom's lotto ticket and go see Ralphie about some drugs
Just wanna make sure that this lotto ticket’s actually legit before seeing Virginia again.
>>
>>6185241
>>6185244
>>6185260
Sorry, mistake in my post.

No matter which option you pick you are cashing the ticket on your way home.

Choice should be
>Drugs
>Candi
>Disco
>>
>>6185262
Well in that case,
>Disco
>>
>>6185241
>>6185244
>>6185267

>Disco
>>
>>6185271
Writing, in case that's not clear.
>>
Before you go, you glance into a couple of trucks as you walk by until you see one with some cigs. You open the door, grab them, and close the door then keep walking. No one freaks out or starts yelling. You just keep getting away with it.

You get in the truck, tucking the smokes in your jacket pocket and go.

You stop at Paul's. It's jumping tonight, there are four other pickups here, old timers chatting outside. They fall silent and watch you enter the place, craning their necks to see you as you enter.

Pretty typical old timer behavior.

Annie isn't working so you cash the ticket without small talk or awkward questions. To your surprise you get handed five twenties.

"Nice work," the lady behind the counter says. Probably not Paul. "Wanna roll it over on some more tickets?" The way she says it suggests that this is a common use for lottery winnings around here.

"No thanks."

Back in the truck, you go home.

The blood stain on the hall floor is gone. Your bagged clothes sit by the door. You can burn those later tonight. You find Candi upstairs on her computer. She's editing photos of herself in the bunny suit in various poses. She gives you a cold look. "I cleaned your stupid car for you."

"Thanks." You take out your box of shit and hook up your laptop to charge it and get online. You've got disco to track down.

Candi scoffs at your lukewarm response and returns to her own work.

It's pretty simple for you to start ripping songs. You grab a few songs from '79 and '80 as well as some newer stuff. Best not to go too new, you think. Some Italodisco will round it out.

Playing it for her will be a challenge. Obviously you don't have an 8-track player. You also don't have a phone. You turn to Candi. "Do you have your old mp3 player?"

She gives you another annoyed look, still pouting. "What?"

You repeat the question verbatim.

"Why do you need an MP3 player?"

"So I can listen to something that's not country or classic rock when I drive to work," you say.

This satisfies her and she shrugs, passing over the ancient device. You can hook it up to her Bluetooth speaker and now you have a portable music solution. You try to remember to buy Candi a new speaker when you get paid.

After filling it with Disco and Disco derivatives you think you're as prepared as you can be for the woman in the woods. You look up and see that it's fully night now.

Night in the woods last time was pretty harrowing. Virginia didn't really seem too troubled by the thing you saw out there though. In fact she mocked you about it and didn't seem entirely sure what you were talking about. The question is if you brave the dark to go visit Virginia or if you wait until the weekend. It's going to be dark whenever you get home on the weekday.

"What's today?"

"Tuesday. God," Candi mutters helpfully.


>Virginia can waist until the weekend
>Who's afraid of the dark? I'm going now
>Write in
>>
>>6185283
>Virginia can waist until the weekend
Spend some time with Candi instead. The way we've been rolling, I don't want to snap a twig and get mauled to death.
>>
>>6185283
>Virginia can waist until the weekend
>>
>>6185283
>Virginia can waist until the weekend
>>
>Virginia can waist until the weekend

Writing
>>
Songs and cigarettes collected, you power down the laptop and tuck it away. Virginia said she was a patient woman, might as well put that to the test. Plus she's been alone out there for like fifty years. A couple more days won't hurt her. Probably.

You look back at Candi. She sits in her gamer chair, knees to her chest. She wears pink pajamas dotted with skulls. The top is slightly too small for her. Her sleeves only come halfway past her elbows and you can see her back dimples. Her hair is tied back into a short pony tail except for a few stray locks. Her attention is fixed firmly on her computer as she goes through her photos, her eyes glowing with reflected computer light as she focuses. She deletes some, applies filters to others, making the imperfect perfect.

Candi turns and is startled to find you staring at her. "Jesus. See something you like?" She asks sarcastically, returning to her work.

You should probably throw her a bone, you've been pretty distant from her aside from when you've been giving your sister a bone. You don't think Candi would ever throw you out but best not to take chances. After all, she's your best bet of figuring our what happened to you.

"Sure do," you say.

Candi rolls her eyes. She doesn't even look at you.

Come to think of it, Candi doesn't exactly seem in a hurry to help you.

There's nothing wrong with you, Kyle. I like you just the way you are.

You can't help but wonder if she has any intention to help you at all. Did she know this would happen when she made you strong enough to kill Dad? Did she suspect? You look toward the book sitting on her nightstand. That mysterious handmade journal seems like the blueprint Candi followed when she worked on you.

You can't desecrate the temple. Only decorate it. Candi's words as she traced a razor blade between your shoulders. Every line, every curve was fire and agony. Her words? Words from the book?

She looks at you again. "What?"


>Tell me about that book. How did you know what to do?
>How did your pictures turn out? Any keepers?
>I'm just thinking how lucky I am to have a sister like you
>Write in
>>
>>6185363
>Just thinking
I don't really like any of these.
1. Too touchy
2. Too irrelevant
3. Too sappy
At least if she asks "About what?". Kyle can say "You asked." in response to any potential complaints.
>>
>>6185365
+1
>>
>>6185363
>Chicken butt.
*giggles*
>>
>Just thinking
>>6185365
>>6185370

Writing
>>
"Just thinking," you say.

"Don't strain yourself," Candi says.

You snort and finally turn away from her. You head back downstairs and grab the bag of clothes before you forget and grab a lighter from the kitchen. Outside you get a rusted shovel from the barn and dig a shallow burn pit near the edge of the woods and dump the clothes in. Some scraps of paper and cardboard from the barn go in next and you light it up. You stand by the sputtering fire, turning it occasionally with the shovel handle and feeding in more sticks to keep it going.

Shirt and jeans burn away to nothing as you watch. The orange gold of the fire reminds you of the day you got burned. You don't really remember the pain so much anymore. You remember the smell of gasoline, that greasy feeling as it splashed across your face. You remember Candi sobbing. The hiss of a match and then–that golden light.

You close your eyes and let the warmth from the fire wash over you. You breathe in deeply, tasting smoke. When you exhale you can see your breath. You're stronger now than you were. Stronger today than you were yesterday. Stronger by far than the day you killed Dad.

Eventually the fire sputters out. You sift through the warm ashes and pluck out the button and zipper from your jeans before covering the ashes with dirt and tamping it down with the shovel blade.

You toss the metal bits into the toilet and flush.

It's Tuesday night. This weekend, Saturday morning, you'll go see Virginia and bring her the cigarettes and music. You wonder what she's doing right now. Sitting alone, smoking one of her last cigarettes and watching the moon rise maybe. Humming disco in the dark.

Work pays weekly so you'll get your first check friday which is nice. Candi will probably appreciate it. At the least you can pay back some of the debt you've incurred borrowing money from your sister.

You also promised Truesdale you'd watch Valerie Hedgepeth's house this weekend. Shouldn't be a problem to do that after you visit with Virginia. It doesn't exactly add up. Seems like a ridiculously easy job to pay a stranger five hundred bucks to do. You're sure there's more to it, but what exactly remains to be seen. Plus you have to figure out where this bitch even lives and what everyone involved looks like so you can identify them. You'll check with Truesdale before you start the stakeout.

You still haven't met with Ralphie yet, your old high school buddy. He's got the hookup for getting good weed in this town, maybe stronger stuff. You have a hundred bucks eating a hole in your pocket, might be good to stop by tomorrow after work and see what he has. Unless you'd rather save the cash.


>I'll go see Ralphie after work tomorrow
>I'd rather save the cash for something else
>Any other plans for the week? (Write in)
>>
Thanks for playing everyone. Will continue in about ten hours.
>>
>>6185433
>I'd rather save the cash for something else
>>
>>6185433
>>Any other plans for the week?
>Stash Gym bag with hygiene stuff and spare clothes in the trunk along with contractor bags, and Car Cleaning supplies. Should make cleanup easier. Stash covid masks and dust masks around the car.
>>
>>6185433
No to drugs! Unless we're the ones selling them. Most money should go to paying off the mortgage or buying stuff that will reduce spending in the long run.

>>6185450
Good ideas which I support. What are the masks for? Concealing our identity I imagine but why all around the car?
>>
>>6185666
>No to drugs!
Anon literally saying "I want more schizophrenic episodes in public.". Got balls at least.
>>
>>6185684
What? Do schizo episodes get better with drugs? I think it'd quite the opposite.
>>
>>6185685
Drugs and medicines are synonyms, man.
>>
>>6185688
Now I think you're fucking with me but I'll answer anyway:

That's pure pedantry... the town drug dealer ain't gonna be selling antipsychotics.
>>
>>6185692
It's not pedantry, it's a fact. They used to use heroin as a muscle relaxer. Cocaine was a cough medicine. There is medical fentanyl today. And how dare you doubt the plug. Ralphie is cool, man. He'll hook us up.
>>
>>6185694
It being a fact is a part of what makes it pedantry, it's something that is technically correct but entirely irrelevant.

Yes drugs and medicine are technically synonyms but the former has two different definitions and the one meaning "a substance taken for its narcotic or stimulant effects." is not a synonym and would not help us at all.

I am more confident than before that this is bait but Im a sucker for arguing.
>>
>>6185700
They STILL use amphetamines in the medical field. Medical meth has never gone out of style.
>>
>>6185666
Why around the car?That an excellent question. We appear to be host to a vampiric spirit that takes over when we kill. This way the spirit has easy access to the masks, even if it is fairly careless. Maybe I'm going overboard?
>>
>>6185692
Get some rufphanoyl and LSD for kidnaping and making our hippie forest spirit lady happy and some good weed. Mom's smoking that Mexican dehydrated smuggled shit when Cali bid is available? Shameful!
>>
>I'd rather save the cash for something else
>>6185445
>>6185666

>>6185450
>Murder kit
Noted. This can be done.

>>6185725
Is this a vote to buy drugs?

Updates will be slow today. Sorry guys.
>>
>>6185725
Me.
>>6185746
Sorry. Nope. Just discussing future plans. I voted the Gym Bag, Car Cleaning Kit, Contractor Bags, and Disguise Masks write in.
>>
>>6185778
Thanks, Anon

>Save the cash

Locked in and writing. It'll probably be a hot minute
>>
>>6184797
Almost caught up, had a fun thought on this.

I can see the Twin Peaks investigator making his file on Kyle now as he sips that Roselake coffee.

"Agent Walker. Alabama Arsonist, Rosedale Reaver. Probably male, strong enough to throw the second victim in the dumpster. What look like marks on the bones. A knife? A meat tenderizer?...Could be animal teeth...The amount of blood on the asphalt from the second victim tells me this was either a very long or very gruesome affair. Perhaps both. Two victims burned. Suspect MO has targeted people that won't be missed, that he can overpower, where he has access to fuel. Distance and time between the victims implies he has transportation, and both sites were near major roads. Possibly traveling somewhere. A possible fascination or emotional connection with fire, but not with Arson. The second killing could have been bigger, something to catch on the greater homeless dwellings, but it didn't. This was for convenience and speed. Hes not proud of these killings, hes not showing them off. But hes not taking them or more pliable victims somewhere more secluded out here in the countryside. Is it done in the heat of the moment? Emotionally unstable, and gets messy enough for a lot of blood. If he was planning he could take the mess somewhere easy to clean up. Likes it sloppy?"
>>
As much as you would like to get a little high, you aren't exactly sure it will help. It will definitely make you feel better though and you know Candi would appreciate it. Plus maybe you can get some hardcore shit to keep you asleep all night. Ah well, you'll want to build up some more cash reserves first before you consider smoking it away.

While you're being productive you also decide to add a murder kit to the Eagle. A musty gym bag from the closet gets packed with a few basic cleaning items, some trash bags, a gallon of bleach and a scrubbing brush. A basic change of clothes goes in too. A few dust masks round it out in case you need to try to hide your face.

It could prove handy if you get up to your usual late night shenanigans again.

After you stuff the bag in the trunk you turn around to see Candi watching you from the doorway of the house. "What's that for?"

"Emergencies," you say as you come back inside.

"Planning on killing more people?" The question is neutral. Well…it sounds neutral. After your intimate conversation in the shower you wonder if Candi has more of an interest in it than she lets on.

You could ask her but you'd rather not piss her off right now. You're trying to get back on her good side. Time for you to use another secret weapon. Praise. "The Eagle looks great. Good job cleaning it."

"It's fucking better," she grumbles. "I was crawling around on the floors, head down in the footwells, jammed in the back, under the seat. All the cleaning stuff made my head hurt."

"Poor thing." You loop an arm around her neck and pull her into a loose headlock as she squirms and makes weak noises of protest. You playfully rub your hand through her hair, messing it up.

"Kyle, stooop," she whines so you let her go. "You're such a jerk." Except you can see her trying not to smile.

In this moment of sibling camaraderie, you resort to the Old Words. "I know you are, but what am I?"

This unexpectedly childish response makes Candi laugh. It's loose, free, genuine. That kind of laugh was so rare when you were kids, almost non-existent by the time you both decided to kill Dad. It was that laugh you most desperately wanted to hear again when you pulled the trigger.

"Idiot," she says, still grinning despite her best efforts.

You smile back at her, satisfied. Maybe for the first time outside of fleeting moments of physical pleasure, you're really glad to be home.
>>
You sleep that night and do not dream. When you wake up, Candi is sleeping on your chest.

You slip out of bed to her murmured goodbye, dress, and return to your Mistress: The Saw.

Hunter shoots the shit with you for a while outside the mill, rambling on about the good old days. It's nice to feel normal for a while.

You top off your truck with gas on your way home and have dinner with Candi and Mom.

It's a pleasant routine, or at least not awful. It's the sort of stability you didn't have when you lived on the road for the last five years.

You do it again on Thursday but the beginning of that pattern is interrupted early on Friday morning.

You're in the bathroom brushing your teeth when you hear a heavy knock on the front door. You lean back slightly so you can see through the cracked bathroom door. Your heart beats harder as Candi trots over and opens it. You can't see who it is but you hear your sister gasp in surprise.

"What the fuck are you doing here?" Candi blurts. She sounds supremely pissed off.

Your heart beats harder still as she backs up, retreating as Chip steps into your house, grinning down at her.

"I'm not here for you," he says. "I'm here for your brother."

You step from the bathroom and automatically start moving towards Chip. To his credit, he doesn't flinch or flee, just stands there in a nice button up and slacks looking supremely punchable.

"Ah, Kyle, just the man I wanted to see."

You decide not to kill him and at least hear what he has to say.

"Relax, big man," he says, eyeing your tensed fists. "We're on the same team today." He holds out a manilla folder. "Information about the job my dad gave you."

You take it from him and open it. There are some labelled photographs inside. Pictures of people, pictures of a house, pictures of cars, an address. Valerie Hedgepeth and Nathaniel Harper. Your targets.

"He said you'll know what it's all for." The thinly-veiled bitterness in Chip's voice is music to your ears.

You slip the photos back inside and wordlessly hand the envelope to Candi who accepts it. She stands beside and behind you, glaring silently at Chip.

Chip's implacable smile returns as he tucks his hands into his pockets. He smiles first at Candi and then at you. "Let's talk, Mercer." He nods his head for you to follow and moves out onto the porch.

You look at Candi who shakes her head subtly, her eyes reflecting…fear? However much you may dislike Chip, you certainly don't fear him anymore.
>>
You follow him onto the porch and close the door behind you.

He stands by the edge, hands resting on the wooden railing. He brushes some flakes of paint away and looks towards the barn and the woods beyond. "Nice place." Deadpan.

He looks at you and, for once, isn't smiling. He also isn't seething with rage. He's uncharacteristically reserved, straight faced. He looks you up and down, measuring you. "We've got history," he says.

"Understatement."

He snorts. "I haven't forgotten what you did to Ken and…" he trails off, shakes his head. "Look, since you're working for my Dad now, let's drop this schoolyard bullshit. I'm sure we've got a lot in common." That phony grin returns. "We'd do better working together. Who knows, maybe I've got jobs for you too. So?"

He waits expectantly for an answer.

It would be supremely funny to tell him to eat shit and die. Probably even funnier to see his expression as you rip out his intestines. Of course, there might be something to work with or for him. After all, how sweet would it be to gain his trust only to betray it?


>Get off my property
>I'm willing to put the past behind me
>Depends on the work. Maybe.
>Write in
>>
>>6185807
This was a lot of fun to read. Thanks for sharing! Let's hope Agent Walker remains a figment of your imagination.

>A possible fascination or emotional connection with fire, but not with Arson.

Because I think he has a pretty good read on Kyle.
>>
>>6185816
>Depends on the work.
We'll still disappear him eventually but if he offers us good deals then I say we take them.

>>6185807
>>6185820
Hopefully this backwater has no such ace detective.
>>
>>6185816
>I'm willing to put the past behind me
>>
>>6185816
>Depends on the work.
Also I know you guys want to be cautious but I do want to go back out there at night and see if the beast is still there now that Virginia knows of us
>>
>>6185820
>>6185821
Glad ya liked it. I should hope he doesn't appear out of the dreams. Unless hes thick in the voodoo like Kyle he would probably die, either to Kyle or to the other town wackos when he notices them too.
>>
>>6185816
>Maybe you're right about us having more in common. Do you remember where this feud between us even started? Before Ken.
>>
>>6185826
If he's got a glock and suit he's got level 2 plot armor. If he's got a 1911 and a brown trenchcoat he's got level 3 plot armor. He'd probably be fine.
>>
>Depends on the work.
>>6185821
>>6185825

Writing
>>
Chip will get exactly what he has coming. If you make some cash off him before then then that's just icing on the cake.

"Depends on the work," you say.

Chip chuckles but it's tense, tight, almost hostile. It's the laugh version of "This Fucking Guy." He shakes his head at you. "I'm not going to make you start stripping. I think I can find something for better a guy like you. You got a phone?"

"No."

"Maaan," he sighs. "Get a fucking phone. You've got money now, right? So use it. Or borrow Candi's. Whatever. I'll call when I've got something for you."

You don't bother to point out that you didn't agree to anything yet. "Sure. But I think you might be right."

Chip looks confused. "About what?"

"Having stuff in common," you say, giving him a vicious grin.

He scowls at you. "If you want to work for me Mercer then you're going to have to start with letting go of what was past. That's history." Chip steps off your porch without a backwards glance. "Till then." He climbs into his car, a canary yellow sports car. It starts with a lewd purr and then pulls slowly away, looking entirely out of place on your overgrown gravel drive.

You watch him go until he vanishes out of sight. You unclench your fist and feel the fury inside you eb like the tide. Once you're certain you aren't going to hurt anyone you go back inside.

"What did he want?" Candi asks, her eyes wide with worry. "Please God tell me you didn't agree to work for him."

You give her a look. "I thought you would be excited about more money."

Your sister sighs and rubs her face. "But not from him. He's bad news, Kyle."

"So am I." You walk past her. "I'm not afraid of him and you shouldn't be either. Things are different now than when we were kids." You look back at her but she's looking away, out the window, rubbing her arm anxiously.

"Yeah…"

"I'm going to be late for work." You take your keys and ID badge down from where they hang by the door and leave.

Work is unremarkable except you're starting to enjoy spending time with the Saw. She's needy and temperamental, but so is Candi and you like her okay. Plus the Saw cuts through shit. Let's see your sister do that.

That night Candi curls against you silently, gripping you tight as if you might slip away. She doesn't say anything but she doesn't need to.

You sleep dreamlessly. A blessing.
>>
Saturday morning you wake up early and slide out of bed to go make breakfast. Mom beat you to the punch. The kitchen stinks of shitty weed. She takes tiny hits off a roach held in a metal clip as she cooks pancakes.

"Oh, good morning Kyle," she says dreamily, already toasted beyond salvaging.

"Morning."

Candi joins you a few minutes later, yawning and stretching in ways that cause your eyes to linger on her. "I've got to do a show tonight," she says. "I was supposed to do it yesterday but I put it off."

"Great. Have fun."

"It's going to run late," she says with a warning look. "I need to make up the tips."

You shrug, not letting any hint of jealousy show in your expression. It would actually be super weird and unhealthy if you were jealous of your sister fucking herself on camera for strangers. Truly maladjusted behavior. "I've got shit to do tonight," you say, thinking of Valerie Hedgepeth.

"Right," Candi says, sounding resigned.

"Maybe we can all have dinner together," Mom suggests sounding really spaced out.

"Shut up Mom," Candi sighs.

"Alright."

Candi gives you a look of concern. "Kyle, when you have some time…maybe we can talk about what's going on with you. Maybe I can see if I can help." The offer sounds half-hearted, reluctant, but still genuine. She always wants to please you.

"Maybe," you agree, rising from the table. "I've got to get going."

"Yeah," Candi says, looking at the time. "I need to start getting ready too."

You leave without a goodbye, gathering up your offering to the one in the woods. MP3 player, bluetooth speaker, disco, and cigarettes. The hike passes uneventfully and you finally enter the old Pines and find the stone circle bathed in morning light.

As expected, Virginia is here. She jumps to her feet when she sees you. "Almost thought you forgot about me, sugar," she says, her voice thick with artificial cheer. There's a slightly bitter edge beneath it. You're surprised to discover that Virginia has changed clothes.

"What are you wearing?" you ask, confused.

She wears tight gold lamé pants which flare out at the ankles, and a white fur coat open at the front. And that's all. A strip of bare skin runs down from her neck, across her sternum and all the way to her navel. She still has on the rose-tinted glasses. Those are ubiquitous. Lastly you see she has a single cigarette tucked behind her ear.
>>
"What do you mean?" she asks. She looks down at her outfit and strikes a daring pose. "You like it?"

"You changed clothes…"

"So did you, honey but you don't see me actin weird about it." She puts her hands on her hips. "A girl's got to treat herself. You got me a little somethin so I got myself a little somethin." Her lips par in a coy smile. "How'd mama like her present?"

"The lotto ticket?" you ask.

Virginia nods enthusiastically.

"It wasn't exactly jaw-dropping."

Virginia looks annoyed. "Hey now, for a pack of cigarettes? What'd you want? A color TV? Ferrari?"

You stop a short distance from the inner stone ring, unsling the shotgun you brought along and rest it on one of the outer stones. "I was expecting something a bit more dramatic."

Virginia laughs coldly. "Hell, you told me 'no monkey's paw shit'." Her lips skin back from her teeth, light flashing form her glasses. "I don't think you woulda been too happy if I gave mama what she really wanted."

You hadn't really considered what Mom's true desires might be. Maybe you'd rather not know.

"But now you see what I can do for you," Virginia says. "So…back for more?"

"What else can you do?"

"Oh. I can do a lot, honey. Even more with your help." She looks you over. "Reckon I could fix some of that on you. If you were a lady I would offer to increase your bust. For a fella though maybe uhh…" She glances at your crotch and gives you a sly look. "Maybe get you packing more heat. If you can dream it then I can do it! All that changes is the price tag, darlin."

You start unpacking, setting the bluetooth speaker down on the grass and taking out the pack of cigarettes you took from the lumber mill.

You see Virginia's eyes lock hungrily onto them. "You brought something for lil' ol' me?"

"Music and smokes," you say. Better deal with the cigarettes first and save the best for last.


>Here, the cigarettes are a gift
>I want another favor like last time but not for Mom
>These are going to cost you. No small fry shit.
>Write in
>>
I for one look forward to the day we get to have a dramatic thunderstorm fistfight with a demon-possessed Chip in the town square with nothing but our bad attitude and the power of God and sisterfucking on our side. Naturally we will never step foot in any local churches because I am damn sure every single one of them is twisted as all fuck and infested with evil.
>>
>>6185937
>Here, the cigarettes are a gift
>>
>>6185937
>Here, the cigarettes are a gift
No need for anything in return, there's nothing we want right now.
Should definitely talk about the lapses in conciousness though, see what she tells us
>>
>>6185937
>Here, the cigarettes are a gift
>>
>>6185937
Throw the cigs at her. See if she still goes for them as desperately as before.
It's not about holding her over her head for tricks, it's about knowing how much control we can exert on her.

Just make an Obama's "Not bad" face at her, nudge our head towards our crotch and add "Never had a woman complain about the size before."
>>
>>6185937
>Here, the cigarettes are a gift
>>
>>6185937
>Here, the cigarettes are a gift

Question and answers instead of favors? I'll just go through some thoughts.

She says she can 'fix some of that on you' so I guess she means the magic shit Candi carved. Unless she just meant like, fixing the face burn scar. All the other scars. That would probably help with not being spotted for all the murdering and whatnot. Call it makeup and facial cream. If anyone asks. I suppose Kyle could have genuinely tried to do that, if it wasn't expensive. Make his own metal band face paint, Indian war paint. A mask. He can't control himself but apparently the demon inside knows how to drive the Eagle, so who knows.

She said there was something inside of her. What's inside of Kyle. It came from her notebook.

The spiral notebook with all the magic shit and the floral pattern has gotta be hers. So she had that cabin Candi talked about. Might be worth a look.

Which would mean this lady carved the runes in the white trees. Or she learned from the same source. Or she's much older even if she makes herself look like a hippie free love girl.

Presumably Kyles Dad would have been like 10 when Virginia was imprisoned here. Didn't seem to have enough luck to have been trading favors like Kyle either. So she must have known the Grandfather. No mention of the Grandmother? Just not important, or some kind of forget me voodoo like Kyle has. Or could Virginia be his grandmother as a twist.

I wonder if the Grandfather was buying cattle for the 'dairy farm' but actually just sacrificing cattle at this altar with Virginia for favors. Except he didn't ask for money.
>>
>Here, the cigarettes are a gift

Writing

>>6186087
Welcome to now. Glad to see you caught up and the incest didn't filter you.
>>
>>6185937
>Here, the cigarettes are a gift

To make up for our attitude. Wonder what info about what we got going on we can get. Or help covering our tracks.
>>
You hold the pack up so she can see what it is and then lob it through the air. Instead of spastically leaping for it like last time she holds up a single hand and catches it. She doesn't even break eye contact with you.

"Newports," she says. "Not my brand, but it's the thought that counts, ain't it?" She takes one out and lights it in her usual way, giving a few grateful puffs before returning her attention to you. "Alright, who we helping today?"

"It's a gift," you say. "I don't need anything for it."

Virginia looks slightly taken aback before she flashes a toothy smile. "Well ain't you a peach."

"You can really make my dick bigger?" you ask, more curious than interested.

She chuckles softly. "Sure, darlin. If that's what you want."

You can't help but look impressed. "Never had anyone complain about the size before."

Virginia gives you a knowing look, eyes flicking from your crotch to your face. "No, I don't expect you have. Maybe you're more self-confident than most guys," she teases. "I think most fellas would say you can't go too big." She snickers again, blowing smoke. "But I guess you ain't like most fellas."

"Guess not." You study her for a second. "Maybe you can answer some questions for me."

"I'm sure I can," she says, sitting on the altar and crossing her legs. "Shoot."

"You said you can fix me."

"Don't all women think that?" She teases. "No, honey. I mean that nasty burn on your face." She gestures with her cigarette. "Sloppy. I could make it go away."

Truthfully you aren't sure if you want that. It feels part of you in a way. A reminder. "What about the other scars?"


She puffs on her cigarette silently. "What about em?"

"Can you 'fix' them?"

More silent contemplation. "I don't like messing with other people's work, darlin," she says, levity gone, looking very, very serious. "Now just who did all that anyway? Was that you?"

"I'm a collaborative work," you say without missing a beat.

She chuckles. "Looks like they didn't have a clue what they were doing but…hell, I guess it got the job done, right?" She winks at you and puffs on her cigarette.

"Why don't you tell me more about what they did," you suggest.

She looks a little surprised, wary. "Oh hellfire," she says. "You really don't have a clue, do you?" She sighs and blows a stream of smoke. "Honey, who did this? Was it you?"

You shake your head, not quite ready to sell out your sister.

Virginia sighs and moves up to the edge of her cell. She beckons you closer with a finger.

You move a bit closer, staying out of arm's reach.

"Take off your shirt," she says and you do so. No reason not to. You toss jacket and shirt to the grass by the shotgun and look at her expectantly.

She twirls her finger, mimes spinning.

You spin slowly for her as she studies you, feeling like meat on a spit.
>>
"Oh sugar," she says, going back to sit on her altar. "I think they did the same thing to you that I did to me. Tried to anyway."

"A vessel."

She lifts a hand, palm down, and tilts it side to side. Sort of. "More like an invitation. An unlocked door. You see, I gave myself over completely. I embraced the Other and welcomed it it. You just got your locks knocked out."

You feel a slight chill. "Why?"

She takes a drag and shrugs. "Hard to say. You looking to get something out of it? Power? Life?"

You think of burning pain and golden light. "Something like that."

"Well there you go."

"So…there's something in me?" you ask.

"Could be," she says. "When it wants to be. When it can. When your defenses are down or when you're somewhere the Veil is weak. Ever feel like a passenger in your own body?"

You're not sure that's the best analogy. You do the things you do, even when you don't remember them. "Sort of."

"Hmm. Well, it's tough to read," she says, gesturing to your scar work. "Call it…sloppy handwriting." She laughs but you don't. "Oh, lighten up, honey." Her cigarette is burnt down to the filter. She stubs it out on the altar rock and lights another. "Oh damnation," she says with a sigh. "I just have to know. Are you kin to Evan Mercer?"

You don't know the name. "I don't know who that is."

"Hm."

"Did you know him?"

"Used to," she says, expression unreadable. She locks eyes with the bluetooth speaker. "Now, what the hell is that thing?"

You look back at it. "Music."

Her eyes widen slightly. "Music?" She whispers. "For me? Can I give a listen?"

You're pretty certain Virginia can do more for you. More "Favors". This might be good leverage to get more. Of course, you could always just give her the music and then threaten to take it away if she doesn't cooperate. Otherwise maybe you have something else you want to ask her.


>Sure
>I want to talk payment first
>If you tell me something else (Write in)
>>
>>6184803
>>6184803
>>6184803

https://rentry.co/zeyvkh39

Sibling bonding and the importance of good hygiene.
>>
>>6186209
>Sure

A long term business relationship requires some trust.
>>
>>6186209
First
"I take it you have marks like these too. In cursive probably."


"What does it take? You know, for you to make someone win the lotto. I'm sure there is a price. I don't buy that you wouldn't have a cult around you performing small miracles that wouldn't have gotten you out by now if you could hand off hundos freely."
>>
>>6186209
Hmmm. I ain't sure just how charitable we ought to be to this witch.

>Sure
Ask her about this Evan Mercer.

>>6186213
Ery noice
>>
>>6186215
>>6186218
>>6186231

Writing

>>6186231
>Ery noice
Thanks Anon, I aim to try.
>>
You nod but don't hit play just yet. "I take it you have marks like these too. In cursive probably."

She lowers her glasses to look straight at you. "Why? You want to see em?" She cackles, then shakes her head. "I used to. Not anymore. Not really. Not now that I became what I am. I sort of moved beyond that."

You guess if she can change her clothes at will that maybe she can change her appearance to. That's an interesting thought, you wonder what the limitations of that are.

"So what does it take?" You ask. "You know, for you to make someone win the lotto. I'm sure there's a price. I don't buy that you wouldn't have a cult around you performing small miracles that wouldn't have gotten you out by now if you could hand out hundos freely."

Her eyes keep flicking to the speaker impatiently. She sighs and adjusts her glasses again. "Yes, there's a cost but I'm the one payin it right now. You're a smart little puppy, aint ya? You could call it a cult, and yes, I had one. Had." She emphasizes the past tense word. "Maybe you and me get close and work together we might change that." There's a seductive undertone to her words, an air of hopefulness. "But you're being a little too literal, sugar. I didn't make your mama win the lottery. She was already playing the lottery. I just gave her what she wanted. If I had to conjure the money out of nothing it woulda been a lot more involved."


"A hundred bucks?"

"A win," Virginia says with excess patience. "Your mama wanted to win something. Anything. It aint about snapping my fingers and making you rich. Not necessarily. It's about giving you what you want."

"What if I want to be rich?"

She shakes her head. "No one wants to be rich, baby. They want to be important, or powerful, or comfortable, or happy, or free. Rich is a means to an end. I can see what people want and I can tap into that." She says this smugly, like she's bragging.

"So what do I want?"

She gives you another look, eyes glittering behind rose-pink filters. "I'm not sure you know yourself, darlin. But I'm sure we're gonna find out."

Her excitement is infectious, you can't help but return her smile.

"Now…about that music," she says, leaning forward slightly.

You reach for the speaker. "Sure. Oh, one more thing. Who was Evan Mercer to you?"

She slumps back, giving you an unamused look. "He was a neighbor. A friend. He was a true believer," she says. She nods back the way you came. "His farm is just over yonder. He bought this land from my folks. Reckon that was…" she sits back, looking at the sky. "Hell, has to be about twenty years ago now," she says, sounding both shocked and impressed. "You know, the first year was the hardest, darlin, but the next ten weren't any better." She laughs, it's humorless with an alarming edge of insanity. "Mmm." Her manic laughter dies down. "Say, what year is it? You never told me. "
>>
You have the troubling realization that Virginia's sense of time is completely fucked if she thinks it hasn't been more than twenty years. You tuck that away. It could be useful later or at the very least it's not something you want to touch right now. "Let's get to the music," you say. "I know you've waited long enough."

"Yeah, yeah!" She says, pumping her arms excitedly as she leans forward.

You press play and turn it up. Disco is unleashed on the woods.

Virginia jumps to her feet, her mouth forming a surprised O. She gasps sharply and stares at the speaker, frozen. Then her eyes seem to light up, she grins. "Damnation," she whispers, her eyes closing. She lifts her hands as if feeling the groove. "Damnation," she says again, bobbing her head along. "Oh honey, you are just the sweetest thing. What is this? This song?"

"It's from '79," you say. "You just missed it. 'Boogie Wonderland'' by–"

"Earth Wind and Fire," she finishes. "I'd recognize them even after a hundred years. Oh hellfire…I really did miss out." Then she falls silent and lets her body do the talking. She dances. She dances in a way you haven't seen before in person. She sways her hips, rolls her head, and seems to glide around the stone circle. It's a pretty bizarre image although there's an undeniable grace to her movements. She looks happy.

After a couple of minutes she opens her eyes and beckons you with a curled finger. "Come dance with me, sugar. Let's groove."


>No thanks
>Sure
>How about I dance on this side of the stones
>write in
>>
>>6186289
>How about I dance on this side of the stones
>>
>>6186289
>How about I dance on this side of the stones
>>
The dance of our people involves incredibly strong neck muscles, stomping, and wrestling moves.
>>
>>6186289
>>Sure
Is it a bad idea? Yes. Do I want to see if Kyle's thing is stronger than her Thing if she tries to get inside or use some voodoo or some kind of encounter? Yes.

Kind of odd that she didn't pay any attention to the ouroboros tattoo when that was glowing faintly during/post one of Kyle's episodes. Perhaps by itself its not magic, but with everything else it somehow just works to summon something. Helps its an old symbol too.

Oh right I guess should have asked if NEMESIS means anything to her.

Then about the fleshy faceless watery moss lake monster in the mall, the mall I imagine is owned by Trusdale. Curious if that name gets a reaction, probably after we work out the favor.

Then just some thoughts I had written down.

Virginia asks Kyle to get her some smokes and talks about there being something in the lake. Probably something evil. Trusdale owns all the lakefront property, is the baron of Roselake, and for some reason came to Kyle's defense when he crushed Ken's head with a rock.

Virginia sees Kyle and sees hes deep in the voodoo. Trusdale probably saw that as well after Kyle broke Ken's skull open, as Kyle had already been burned, been marked by Candi, and killed his father. I guess Trusdale respects anyone who is deep in the voodoo, or thinks he can use him.

Miss Ellen has a strange tattoo that didn't match anything in the woods. Its probably some kind of Lake magic tattoo instead that Trusdale got put on her. I wonder if they can be removed or written over so she can be saved from whatever unpleasant fate awaits her.

The Barn with all its protective circles and shit would be a good place to fight anything spooky that comes for Kyle? Kyle should sleep with the shotgun? Sleep in the barn?

Did Ellen sell herself to Trsudale for Kyle's sake in the Ken incident?
>>
>>6186289
>No thanks
Don't accuse her by implication and don't join the prisoner inside their prison cell.
>>
>>6186289
She doesn't have a troubled sense of time. She just measures time like a millennial and thinks 1985 was 20 years ago.

No, that's the same thing. Moving on!

>Sure
You know what? Sure. Step in confidently. It's time we made an unintelligent choice. We are a young man with bad impulse control, fucking our sister, an implied drug addiction problem and we can't control killing people.
It's time we did riskier stuff without being cornered.

Still, our version of a dance is the Shepard Shuffle.
>>
>>6186326
It might only glow to us, the tattoo, I mean.

Yes, we should namedrop Truesdale at some point. Some other names too to see what reaction we get out of her. It might be that she has been faking her reactions all along for the sake of the long con, but I don't mind being strung along for now if that's the case.

>>6186288
QM, didja have to add my godawful run on sentence as it was? lol
That was a hard read and I have no one else to blame.
>>
>>6186355
Would Kyle use a run on sentence? Lets ask Miss Ellen.
>>
>How about I dance on this side of the stones
>>6186305
>>6186304

>Sure
>>6186353
>>6186326

Going to hold a bit longer for a tiebreaker. I really hate to flip a coin but I will if I have to.

>>6186355
>run on sentence
We're all here to suffer together

>>6186356
>Lets ask Miss Ellen.
She would be deeply disappointed.
>>
>>6186370
>sure
>>
>sure

Writing
>>
>>6186376
I got a bad feeling about this...
>>
>>6186386
Ripped limb from limb you say?
>>
You've never "grooved" before. You've certainly never boogied. But you hadn't done a lot of things until you did them for the first time. Your sister comes to mind. What's the point of living if you're not careening from one impulsive decision to another?

You snort. "Sure."

Virginia's grin grows even wider and she waves you closer as if drawing you in with her hands, reeling in a fish.

You move all the way up to the edge of the stone circle and stop, glancing up at the imposing rocks around you, suddenly wondering if this snare works on mortals too.

"Oh, don't worry darlin," Virginia she says, seeing where your thoughts took you. "This cage is just for me. Promise. Cross my heart and hope to die." She traces a fingernail across the bare skin of her chest and then holds a hand out for you.

Fuck it. You reach across the barrier and take her hand. There's a pop, a connection, like pressing your hand to a switched off CRT monitor or a jolt of static electricity and then…well…that's it. Nothing happens. She grips your hand. Her skin is warm and soft. Smiling like a maniac she pulls you–gently–into the ring and you allow her to.

Now you're face to face with Virginia. She smells like cigarettes and–somehow–vaguely like flowers although that might just be the dogwood. You aren't going to be pulling any "Saturday Night Fever" shit but you give it a go, bobbing along, awkward white-boy dancing as Virginia cuts loose.

She laughs playfully at your restrained funkiness. "Aw come on, baby, shake that booty."

You're not about to shake your booty but you mirror her a little bit. You're a musician for godsake, you're not entirely without rhythm. The track changes. Heart of Glass - Blondie.

She turns around, dancing with her back to you, not quite grinding–you're not even sure they'd invented that in 1978–but it's intimate. She flashes a smile over her shoulder. "Oh I like this one."

You get the impression she's going to like all of them.

This goes on for a few more tracks, disco dancing in the stone circle with Virgina. Her joy doesn't let up even slightly. Song after song she squeals with excitement. "You sure know how to pick em!" she says.
>>
After what feels like an hour of dancing you're a lot more loose and limber, but you're also pretty tired. You're also starting to realize that you're standing in what's basically a prison cell with someone or something you don't fully understand. It makes you think about Sally and the look she gave you before you–

You back out of the circle when the next song ends, not giving yourself enough time t think about it or giving Virginia any time to react or stop you.

She looks up and you see reality crash over her like a bucket of ice water. That smile falters. "Aw, all danced out, honey?" she asks, her chipper tone sounding a little more forced that before.

"For now," you say, going back to your stuff by the outer rock ring. You pull your shirt and jacket back on. "I'm not used to dancing."


"You'll get used to it when we do it more," she says in a way that makes you think she doesn't really believe that. "Well…thanks for dancing with me, honey. I haven't got down in ages."

You turn the music down a bit, low enough that you can talk over. You see her eye the speaker fearfully, worried you'll take the music away you guess.

"I'm sorry I can't stay all day," you say. "I've got a job later today. I'm working for Jack Truesdale."

"Jack Truesdale?" she says, cocking her head slightly. It seems she doesn't know him. He would have been a young man when she was alive if you clocked his age properly.

You nod. "He's a big wig in Roselake."

"I know the Truesdales," she says. "Or I did. Don't know Jack." She looks troubled by that. The passage of time seems to be weighing on her. She's probably starting to question exactly how long she's been in here.

Best to move on. "I have another question for you."

She looks at you, waiting patiently.

"Does the word 'Nemesis' mean anything to you."

You see recognition on her face. A slight tightening of her jaw, her eyebrows raising slightly. "I know the word," she says.

"It was my band," you say. "Because someone called me that once." Well, more than once now.

"Oh?"

"What does it mean?"

"Who called you that?" she asks, tone neutral, curious, guarded.

"Doesn't matter," you say.

Virginia smiles coldly. "Oh, but it does, baby. It matters a lot."

You purse your lips, weighing the pros and cons of being honest to her. Fuck it. "My Dad."

She looks surprised and makes no attempt to hide it. "Your…oh…" her eyes dart to your scars again. "Oh, baby, I'm sorry."

"What does it mean?" you press.

She hesitates, doing some thinking of her own. "It means that you and your daddy weren't on great terms. It means…was he the one that did this to you?" she asks.
>>
"What does it mean?" you turn the music off.

Virginia jumps slightly, startled. She blinks a few times behind her glasses. That shock, sympathy, and surprise fade away, replaced with another sly grin. "Nemesis is just a cute little word for something like a Vessel gone wrong. But it's got more baggage to it than that," she says. She sits back down on the altar and sparks up another Newport. "Think about it like a poisoned well. So either your daddy was just being an asshole or…" she eyes your scars again. "Or maybe he saw you for what you are."

You don't like that implication. You don't like it at all. But at least it makes certain elements of your past–things you'd tried to forget–make a bit more sense. You turn the music back on and see Virginia's shoulders relax slightly. "Thank you."

"Don't mention it," she says, sounding restrained. "Now I think it's time for my part of the deal."

"The music and cigarettes were a gift," you say.

"Yes, and I was raised that you always pay people back. So I'm paying you back. What I can do is pretty limited seeing as how I'm locked in this damn ring." She gestures to it like she's showing off a fancy house. "But I got a little magic up my sleeves." She shimmies in her fur coat for emphasis.

"Like what?"

"Like a favor for someone," she says like she's already explained this. Oh wait, she did. "Or something special for you. Or maybe some information, I can try to see something you don't know. Information about someone." She leans back and blows a smoke ring into the sky before bullseyeing it with another smaller one. "Just don't expect nothin crazy, sugar. I'm not made of miracles. My window to the world's tighter than…" she trails off with a knowing smirk. "Well…it's pretty damn small."

Each of these choices will branch out with a more detailed array of options, this is just the gist for starters.


>A favor for someone
>Something for me
>Learn about someone
>Write in
>>
>>6186393
>>6186395
>>6186396
That went... surprisingly well. Consider me convinced, this witch might not be so bad after all.

>>6186326
Im willing to follow your lead since you've made some great calls and I don't have any strong thoughts on this matter. What say you?
>>
>>6186407
>That went... surprisingly well. Consider me convinced, this witch might not be so bad after all.
That's how they get ya. She's got a demon inner lad. She's already aware she can play the long game so long as she can hook us. Don't fall for it. She already gave us soul aids by grabbing us. Now it'll get into Candi. Quick, go chug some holy water.
>>
>>6186396
Well hey it turned out alright. Well if I think what Kyle would really want? For the Eagle to never run out of gas. Maybe save on maintenance and oil changes too while we're at it.

>>6186407
Thanks, but it takes me a while to think on these things sometimes.

If we put the favor towards Candi, I figure she probably gets a shit ton of tips or something. Thats money, she won't have to do shows for a while, and have time to work on the book and the magic runes to fix us. If thats even possible. Also she'd be in a good mood.

Towards Kyle idk, theres so much fucked up shit about his situation anything good would be putting corks in a sinking ship. Atleast if he was stronger or had more powers to avoid getting caught thats always good. Unless its more like a one-time get out of jail free card of good fortune.

Something for Miss Ellen? Annie? Could Virginia in fact put Bad Luck on someone we really hate? Learn about Grandpa? About the thing inside Kyle? About the giant monster Kyle saw that night exploring out here?
>>
Hmmm learn if Trusdale is planning to fuck us over with this weird spying job?
>>
>>6186407
>>6186418

For this vote you can also just focus categorically. I'll have a second vote after this one for specifics

So if you vote to help yourself, the next vote will be some options to do that, for example.

Not sure if that makes this choice easier.
>>
>>6186396
>Learn about someone
Knowledge is something we lack right now.
>>
I wonder, we've got a Woods-Thing and a Lake-Thing. Is there a third Place-Thing? Is there a Thing for each of the Churches in town? Does Truesdale have weird fish-sex with the Lake-Thing? Is there perchance a Cloud-Thing?
>>
>>6186445
A rock thing in grandpas coal mine
>>
>>6186450
Woods-Thing, Lake-Thing, and Cave-Thing. The three members of hit new pop band Thing-a-ma-jig. Mine-Thing has been copywritten by the videogame QuarryBuild. Damn that dev, Cutout.
>>
I'm going to close the vote soon.

Currently we have one vote for
>Learn about someone
>>
>>6186396
>>6186463
>Learn about someone
Sure, learn about Truesdale. What's his deal?
>>
>>6186471
>+1
Yeah no way this guy is as benevolent as he puts on.
>>
>>6186475
If it turns out that Old Truesdale genuinely IS the only good person in Roselake I'll cry laughing.
>tfw ms. e is actually possessed and he keeps her reigned in
>tfw ken was braindead but he used magic hoodoo to give him brain function back
>tfw valerie is consorting with the lake thing and he wants evidence before he acts
>tfw his son's a fucking shitheel and he's just been cleaning up after chip his entire life
>tfw he knows kintaro has botched demon-itis and he's trying to build enough trust to help us plug the hole that lets demons in
Tremendously funny.
>>
>>6186411
>Now it'll get into Candi.
>Implying Candi doesn't already have soul aids.

Also, serves you right for not using protection.

>Learn about Truesdale
Writing (expect delays. Going to be a bit)
>>
>>6186502
Candi is a synonym roll. She can't possibly be bad. My siscon MC tells me she's great!
>>
"I want to learn more about Truesdale," you say. You're certain there's something more to him. No man with that kind of swing can be as clean as he acts.

"Jack Truesdale," Virginia says, confirming the name.

You nod.

She takes another drag on her cigarette. "Alright. I'll see. Not easy when I'm cooped up here." She closes her eyes and sits, her cigarette burning away between her fingers. "Rich man," she says.

You suspect it's a question so you answer. "Yeah. That's him."

"He's hired you for a job. A job to spy on someone. Someone he doesn't trust. Someone close to him." Her voice is tense but distant. It sounds like she's concentrating.


Nothing you don't know so far. "His girlfriend," you say.

Virginia scrunches her face slightly, eyes still closed. "No…not really. Well…oh…damn," she chuckles. "Sometimes they make love, if you call it that, but that's not what she is to him. She's more like…a business partner."

"Business partner?" you say.

"Shh."

Oh. You shut up.

"Hmm." VIrginia puffs on her cigarette, eyes still closed. "He doesn't love her. But they're close. They aren't friends. The sex was convenient but more than that. More than physical. Sealing a covenant. A partnership. Hmmm." She takes another drag. "This job doesn't matter to him. Not really. He already knows the answer. He knows she's betrayed him, but it's a test." She furrows her brow. You see her eyes darting behind closed lids. Suddenly they snap open, locked directly on you. "It's a test for you."


"For me?"

She nods and resumes smoking. "Can't say more. I can't see much. Like peeping through a keyhole, but whatever he's got you doin ain't what it seems. He wants to see how much he can trust you. See if you're reliable."

"And you don't know him?"

She shrugs. "Couldn't see him. Just hints of his intent. Vibrations in the threads."

You think you understand what she means. You envision a spiderweb with a fly caught in it, vibrating the whole structure with Virginia as the spider in the center. "Why is he testing me?"

"I guess he wants to see if he can work with you, darlin," she says. "What all have you got yourself wrapped up in?"

"Just work," you say.

"Work," she repeats, eyes half-lidded as she stares at you. It's like she's staring through you. Almost like you're talking to someone else. "You've got the smell of blood on you, Kyle. The kind of work you do ain't the type you file taxes on, is it?"

You don't say anything.

"Mm. Well. A rich man like that don't want nothing from no one less than him unless it's to keep his hands clean. Man like that'll chew you up and spit out."

"I've got bills to pay," you say indifferently. "My hands are already dirty. If I have a soul then it's not getting any cleaner."

She gives you a sharp smile but says nothing else.
>>
"And you can't tell anything else about him?" You press, trying to gauge her honesty.

She studies you right back unflinchingly. "I'm workin with what I got. You want me to weave straw into gold then you have to get me straw, baby."

"Meaning?"

"Meaning if you want miracles then you gotta loosen these chains at least." She becomes a little more animated, hopping up again and casually flicking her butt off into a nearby pile of mossy bones as she walks up to the edge of her cage. "I showed you that I ain't gonna hurt you. I showed you that I'm a good girl who's got no business bein locked up like some kinda animal. Oh, I know you got more questions about me. I got lots more questions about you too, sugar, but you think you can do business with Truesdale so maybe you can do business with me too." She lowers her glasses and you meet her sharp, clear eyes. "Think about it, I could be your lightning in a bottle. I ain't asking for anything you ain't prepared to give. Maybe we start small, just little things like we've been doin. You bring me things, help me loosen these chains just a little and I give you more of what you want." Her smile spreads from ear to ear as she talks, working up to her crescendo. "You can be my boogie man and I can be your dis-co queen." She shakes her hips at each syllable as she sings it out. "So what do you say, honey?"

She's right that you have more questions. You still don't know exactly what she did to end up locked up in this place. You aren't quite sure you buy her line that she didn't deserve it. She seems a little too…intense to be completely innocent. But she's right that you could probably say the same thing about Truesdale. You danced with her, held her hand, were close enough to kiss her and she didn't lay a finger on you. So maybe she's not going to skin you alive and eat your bones but that doesn't mean you're going to let your guard down completely, but maybe you can set the tone for future work together.


>Sure. I'm your boogie man.
>No offense, but you're entirely too freaky for any partnership. It's going to take a lot more time.
>You've got it all wrong. We're not partners. You work for me. I'm holding the keys, remember?
>Write in
>>
>>6186572
>you're a Vessel, a force of nature. Someone contained you. Why?
>I'm going to corroborate this somehow. If what I find matches up with your story and you were wrongfully imprisoned, I will free you. Until then, enjoy the music player
>>
>>6186572
"Before I give you my answer, be truthful with me. Had I moved that stone you told me about the first day we met, what would have happened to me? You know I was up to no good around here, So I can stomach if you thought I was a passing lamb you could feast on before you saw any kind of potential in me."

Also
>"I'll be your Boogie man thing."
Kyle does not understand the pun with "Boogie man" and just assumes she means the monster and not the music style.
>>
>>6186589
>Booger man
>>
>>6186589
>Kyle does not understand the pun with "Boogie man"
Virginia is only referencing the song. The double meaning is entirely coincidental. Probably.

Kyle knows of the Rob Zombie version. He's picking up what she's putting down.

>>6186593
I'm counting this as a vote. Sorry.
>>
File: 1695963186397276.gif (1.77 MB, 498x498)
1.77 MB
1.77 MB GIF
>>6186606
>I'm counting this as a vote. Sorry.
>>
>>6186588
+1
>>
>Not boogie
>>6186588
>>6186589
>>6186642


Writing
>>
You have entirely too many questions to just be agreeing to be someone's "Boogie Man".

Virginia sees your hesitation and tempers her glee, waiting patiently for a response, smile slowly fading.

"You're a Vessel," you say. "As far as I can tell you're basically a force of nature, and someone contained you. Why?"

Virginia sighs and looks defeated. She turns away from you and rests her back against the inside of the standing stone. "You want the honest truth, baby? I don't know. I don't know why but I can guess. I was betrayed. Day of my Becoming and I was betrayed if you can believe it." She lapses into silence before raising her arms to the sky, as if gesturing at the futility of it all. "Imagine you win the lottery, kid, and then get mugged for the ticket just when you're walking out of the store. No," she says. "Worse than that. You get locked in solitary for a decade or two." She lights another cigarette, her face hidden from you. "We had it all. We had everything. True believers. The Old Ways were back and we were riding high."

You stand and wait as Virginia lapses into silence again. When she speaks again it's a name.

"John Karlsson. John Karlsson did this to me. And if I ever find that infernal son of a bitch I'll…" she clenches a fist, her voice wavering dangerously, like dark static breaking into a radio broadcast. She unclenches the fist and slides down the rock to sit on her heels. "You want to know why? Jealousy. Greed. Lust for power. Plain and simple. Karlsson wanted what I got or…maybe didn't want me to have it. I don't know." She hangs her head, arms resting across her knees, cigarette smoldering away. "I thought I could trust him. I thought we were all gonna play ball. You want more answers you're gonna have to talk to him I guess." She brings the cigarette to her lips, hesitates, and then crushes the cherry between her fingertips and flicks it away. "But I reckon when he finds out I'm still rotting away in this ring, trying to worm my way free he'll come back and finish the job." Silence. "Maybe that'd just be better."

You don't know any Karlsson. Sounds Swedish and you know there were a lot of Swedish immigrants to this area, coal miners before the mines around here ran dry. It's good odds that Karlsson ran out when the coal did.

She doesn't say anything else.
>>
"Virginia."

She turns slightly to look at you and you toss her the MP3 player. She catches it and looks at it, puzzled.

"I'm going to corroborate this somehow," you say. "And if what I find matches your story and you were wrongfully imprisoned then I will free you. Until then–" you nod at the player. "Enjoy the music."

She gives you a tight smile. "Hope I see you again real soon, Kyle." She doesn't sound hopeful.

You turn to leave, make a few paces and stop. "Virginia?"

"Hm?"

"Be honest with me," you say, glancing back. "If I'd moved those stones, broken the ring for you that first time we met, what would have happened to me?"

She keeps that tight smile frozen on her face. "Reckon I would have kissed you," she says.

You snort and her grin widens a little bit.

"Bye, Boogie Man," she says as you leave.

You have someone to stalk. By the time you get back home you've done your best to put Virginia out of mind. Back at the house you hear the shower running. No music this time since you stole Candi's bluetooth speaker. She'll probably yell at you about that when she realizes it's gone and not just lost.

You sit on the couch and open the envelope Chip gave you to study it more carefully. The first photo falls out. Valerie Hedgepeth. It's a professional headshot, something she posed for. Work? Family? You're not sure. She's middle-aged, good looking, slightly tanned with her dark hair well styled. Should be easy to identify.

Next is a photo of Nathaniel Harper, also middle aged, also good looking. Black hair cut short, graying at the temples, clean shaven. He wears a business suit and a serious expression. Looks like a work photo.

There's two pictures of cars. A Cadillac SUV - Valerie and a sporty BMW - Nathan.

Last, a photo of Valerie's house. Mediterranean style, wrought iron fence surrounding a big grassy yard with a couple flowering trees out front. Behind the house a wooded hill rises up, looming over it. It's two stories, big like the yard, attached garage. Pretty typical nouveau riche palace type shit.

On the back is an address. You know it. Pretty secluded as far as the suburbs go. Should be no issue for you to park nearby and walk through the woods to find a vantage point. Assuming that's how you want to go about things. All you're supposed to do is let Truesdale know if you see Nathanial stop by Valerie's house.


>Invite Candi to come along on the stakeout
>Go to Valerie's place and find a quiet place to watch her house
>Go to Truesdale's house first to discuss something (Write in)
>Write in
>>
>>6186796
>Invite Candi to come along on the stakeout
>>
>>6186796
>Invite Candi to come along on the stakeout
Go on a stalking date. Im not comitted to this but I find it funny so Im voting for it.
>>
>>6186796
>Go to Valerie's place and find a quiet place to watch her house

Truesdale is watching.
>>
>>6186859
That does bring up a good point, is he just waiting to see if we deliver or does he have someone watching us? I doubt it but it'd be good to be on the lookout for a tail.
>>
>>6186796
>Invite Candi to come along on the stakeout
Maybe she'll notice something Kyle would overlook
>>
>>6186953
>OwO what's this? t. Candi, probably
>>
>>6186796
>Invite Candi to come along on the stakeout
Time to hang out with the sis.
Promise her a fancy dinner at the Darby's on the way back home. The Bacon Elucidator comes in gold wrapping. Very fancy.
>>
>>6186863
My guess is that there is more than simply watching what happens. If what Virginia said is true, she might be into this occult shit and the test is if we can survive whatever she put into place to deal with peeping toms like us
>>
>Take your sister on a date to spy on a rich lady

Writing
>>
>>6187029
And now Truesdale will have even more interest in Candi. Alas!
>>
>>6187029
Sounds like a fun weekend
>>
You're waiting to ambush your sister when she comes out of the bathroom.

"Aah!" She jumps in fright and then glares at you as she pushes past. "Asshole…Hey, have you seen my blueto–" She stops, turning back to look at you curiously. "Why do you smell like cigarettes?"

The nose on this girl is unreal. Oh, actually you do kinda smell like smoke. "I was at Paul's." That's not really an answer and it's definitely a lie but it at least muddies the waters. Except that Candi looks completely unconvinced. She can see right through you.

"Uh huh. Look, have you seen my speaker? I thought I was going to die of boredom in there."

"Nope," you say. You're on a roll with these lies. At this one she seems to buy.

Candi starts up the stairs, wrapped in a towel. You follow close behind her. When she enters the bedroom she notices, giving you a nonplussed look. "Kyle, I really don't have time. Seriously I have to do my hair still."

You look at the end table clock and see it's barely past noon. "When are you streaming?"

"I start at seven."

"That's hours from now, you'll be fine."

She shakes her head, sitting at her computer and turning on the webcam. "You really don't get it." She takes out her makeup kit and leans in close to the camera, using the screen of her laptop as a mirror as she starts applying mascara.

You're not dismayed and go sit on the the desk beside her. "Come on. We should catch up. I'm going to be doing some errands today. Come along with me."

You see her hesitate. She looks up at you warily. "Errands?"

"A little stakeout job for Truesdale. You'll love it."

She wrinkles her nose. "What makes you think I'd love anything about that?"

"Because it will be just you and me."

She puts down her makeup wand and sits back to look at you. "I'm not doing going to do anything with you, Kyle." She means sex. "I won't have time to get ready again because I promise you will ruin my makeup."

You think that's a compliment but your whole dynamic is pretty fucked up so you're really not sure. "Won't do anything you don't want to do," you say. You like to leave your options open. You almost follow up with a "Cross my heart and hope to die" but that makes you think of Virginia.

"And I have to get ready before we can go so I can go straight to camming when we get home."

"Fine."


"And I can't be late! Seven."

"Seven."

She stares. "And I'm not getting out of the car. And I want fast food. Drive thru. You order."

"Okay."

"And you owe me!"

"Didn't realize my sister's time was so expensive," you say before realizing that's dangerously close to a jab about prostitution.

It's clear Candi is thinking the same thing since she glowers back at you, unamused. Better recover quickly.
>>
"That's all fine," you say. "I just want to spend some time with my sister. You're why I came back after all and we've hardly done anything together except…"

"Yeah," she says in a tone that says 'I noticed that.' She sighs. "Okay. Fine. Give me…like an hour, okay?"

"Sure."

Just under an hour later she comes downstairs, hair tied up in pigtails, makeup on point. More interestingly she's wearing a black and pink cheerleader uniform for "Hell High" which you're pretty sure isn't a real school. Even if it was, Candi is definitely too old to attend. She sits on the steps and pulls on a pair of white sneakers. "And I don't want to hear shit about what I'm wearing." She stands back up and takes your camo jacket off a hook on the wall and pulls it on. It's so big on her that it covers everything but the bottom edge of her skirt.

"Wasn't going to say anything," you say as you hold the door open for her.

"Sure."

You both get into the Eagle and you start it up.

"McDonalds," she says, putting her feet up on the dashboard and taking out her phone, slouching down in the seat and tapping away.

You start driving. You're going to have a lot of time to kill.


>Do you like camming?
>Why are you so against me working with Truesdale?
>What's with all the carvings in the barn?
>Write in
>>
>>6187049
>Why are you so against me working with Truesdale?
On topic and opens up conversation. The first and last are awkward in differnt ways so unless someone offers a better option as a write-in, this is what I'll go with.
>>
>>6187051
>The first and last are awkward

What's wrong, anon? Don't you want to rip that band-aid off and see the scab underneath?
>>
>>6187052
I do but this is supposed to be the fun and relationship building time, not the horrible truths time.
>>
>>6187049
>Why are you so against me working with Truesdale?
>>
>>6187049
>Soooo... $5 meal deal?
>>
>>6187107
>Crunchwrap supreme?
>Kyle, it's McDonalds.
>Right, shit. McCrunchwrap supreme?
>>
>>6187107
This is me.
>>6187130
>Unironically changing to this.+1
>>
>>6187052
The first option is a typo

>>6187130
This but when she gives us the silent angry look we try to recover with "Crunchwrap McSupreme?"
>>
>McCrunchwrap supreme
Somehow.

Writing
>>
>>6187158
I would like to apologize. My shitposting appears to be gaining memetohazard qualities.
>>
>>6187152
>The first option is a typo
Just got this. That's lewd. This is a God-affirming Christian quest, anon.
>>
>>6187163
We'll get her saying "Oh god!" all night long, alright
>>
>>6187161
I like to imagine a very tired graveyard shift worker going to a Taco Bell to get you a Crunchwrap Supreme, come back, wrap it in a random McDonalds wrapped and hand it to us, all with the same dead expression.
>>
>>6187170
>"I've been here for nine hours and someone pissed in the ball pit. There haven't been any kids in here today, either. You want fries with that?"
There has never been an employee more done with it.
>>
You drive in silence, Candi tapping away at her phone.

"Crunchwrap supreme?" you say.

Candi doesn't even look up from her phone. "It's McDonalds."

"Right. Shit." Pause for effect. "McCrunchwrap Supreme."

Candi snorts and gives you a look.

"Crunchwrap McSupreme?" you try.

She finally breaks and laughs. "You're so retarded."

"I work with what I was given." You don't fail to notice the warm smile Candi gives you, her eyes lingering on you. "I missed this side of you," she says. "You know…you being happy." She sounds relieved almost.

You don't recall really ever being truly happy. You have a few moments of your past, fleeting glimpses, hints of happiness, but they were always stolen or corrupted. Maybe your first truly happy moment was when you killed Dad. The unbridled joy you'd felt then was something that you'd never experienced before or since. You don't say any of this to Candi. "Yeah. I know what you mean. Like hearing you laugh."

You give her a quick glance. Her smile is already starting to fade, crushed out of her by reality until only a glimmer remains. "Yeah." She puts her phone into her jacket pocket and watches the countryside go by.

You reach Roselake itself after a few minutes, inching along quiet suburban streets, stopping at stop signs, following the rules of the road. It's sprinkling a little bit, the sky gray and overcast.

"I love this car, you know," Candi says. "I was pissed when you took it." Her tone is neutral, conversational.

"Yeah?"

She laughs softly. "Yeah. I hate that stupid truck. I always felt like a dumb redneck going into town or going to work."

"Work?"

"Yeah, before I started camming," she says, apparently not interested in talking about it. "It's this left," she says, pointing at an intersection.

"Right." You click on the signal and turn pulling into the McDonalds parking lot and then into the drive thru line. "I don't like driving the truck either. That's why I took the Eagle."

"I'm just glad your dumb ass didn't sell it," she says playfully.

"Nah. I might have killed Dad just for this car."

She laughs but stifles herself, looking suddenly uncomfortable. You recall that murdering your parent is a crime no matter how much of a shitbag they were. Disposing a corpse and lying about it are also crimes. Probably best to keep that little tidbit under your belt and not drop it conversationally in line at a McDonalds drive thru.

"What do you want?" you ask, looking over the menu and concluding it's exactly the same as the last time you went to McDonalds.

"Ten piece nuggie. Small. And uh…idk. Coke I guess. And an ice cream."

"The machine is going to be broke," you say.

"Just ask," she sighs.

When it's your turn to order you order dutifully. Big Mac for you, nuggs for your sister. "And a vanilla ice cream."
>>
Long pause. You're fucked. You give Candi a look that says "you're fucked" or "I told you so" or "why do you persist in trying in the Sisyphean task of getting ice cream from a McDonalds you stupid bitch?"

Candi doesn't get your look or doesn't notice it. Or ignores you. She's pretty good at that.

"Uh sorry the machine is down right now," the speaker buzzes semi-incomprehensibly.

"Oh the machine is down," you say with mock surprise, giving Candi another look that she doggedly ignores. "Alright. Forget the ice cream then."

You get a total and get instructions to pull forward to the first window where you pay. At the second window you stop and start getting your food from a bored looking guy around your age. You see recognition on his face when he notices you but you don't have a clue who he is. It's a consequence of being very memorable and also not very social.

"Hey," Candi says, suddenly half-crawling into your lap so she can look into the drive thru window. "When is your machine going to–Lawrence?"

The guy at the window looks surprised. "Oh wow, Hey, Candi." Now he has to fess up to knowing you. "I thought that was you, Kyle."

You give a little nod.

"Wow, it's been a while," he says, grinning at Candi. "How've you been? Still rattling around Roselake?"

She flashes a smile. "You know how it is around here. Regular roach motel."

He laughs. "Tell me about it."

"I can't believe I haven't seen you here before," she says.

"Normally work morning shift," he says. "Openings."

"Oh I'm too much of a night owl for that," Candi lies. She lies. She's not a night owl. She's in bed by midnight every night. She's just too lazy to get out of the house before noon probably. That's not the same thing as being a night owl. This matters because it means Candi is lying to save face. Lying to impress someone.

You give Lawrence a glance, trying to place him in your dim, addled memories of high school. Handsome guy, man bun, big smile. No burn scars. He was probably in Candi's grade. You don't know him well enough to say anything else about him

"So what have you been up to lately?" he presses, handing over a single drink. He's delaying. "Working or anything?"

"I do work from home stuff," Candi says. "It's super boring." Another lie. It comes easily, naturally. "So are you going to school?" She's still leaning over your lap to talk to this guy.

"Night school," he says. "I'm working on pre-law." He shrugs. "Fuck knows if it'll go anywhere."


>Can we get our food please?
>Say nothing
>Spank Candi to end this conversation
>Write in
>>
It's a damn good thing Kemosabe isn't the jealous type. So nice that he doesn't feel a bitter sort of bile in the pit of his stomach when his sister so much as smiles at someone else. Fantastic that he isn't the type to fantasize about flaying someone alive over the idea that they are friendly with his sis.
>>
>>6187188
>Right on, man.
This dude's trying.
>>
>>6187188
"Hey, that's great, buddy!"

Our face contorts into a friendly smile against our best nature. It still a convincing smile, but it doesn't fit.

"Maybe you'll break the town curse and go out there into the big world."

Far, far away from here.
>>
>>6187208
+1
>>
>>6187188
>Best of luck man. Hopefully you beat the town curse.
No need to be venomous to the dude.
>>
>>6187208
>>6187209
>>6187230
>>6187486

Writing
>>
You feel compelled to say something. "Right on. Best of luck, man." The smile you force onto your face feels natural enough. It might even fool Candi.

Lawrence glances at you uncertainly.

"Hopefully you'll beat the town curse and get out into the world," you add, part of you hoping wherever he ends up is far away from Roselake.

"Thanks," Lawrence says before he's back on Candi. "You still painting?"

"Nah. I gave that up," she says.

"Aw, why? You were so good." He hands you your second drink. There are still two bags of food to go.

Candi laughs and wags her hips slightly, still leaning across you. "Ah. I don't know. That was just shit for school I was never really into it. But thanks."

He hands over the first bag of food. "They were always great. I loved seeing what you painted." He pauses as he gathers his courage. Here it comes. "Listen, we should totally catch up," he says finally. Maybe you could give me your number and we could go get some coffee or something sometime."

Candi gives you a sidelong glance, trying to quickly read your expression but you keep it neutral, relaxed. "Yeah, you can text me." She recites her phone number to him, giving him time to input it into his phone.

You keep cool. Really you don't think you should be venomous to this guy.

But I do. I absolutely think you should be. After all, you know exactly what he wants from your sister. He wants the same thing all the goons and creeps online want. The same thing Dad wanted. That's why he doesn't give a shit about talking to you. That's why he's laser focused on her.

You feel it creep slowly over you, like a shadow spreading from a dark corner, like ice water running in your veins. Your heart starts to beat harder. It beats for blood. Insatiable rage and ravenous hunger compete within you as the moral, thinking, judging part of your mind starts slipping away, sinking beneath the tide of cold hate.

You wonder where Lawrence lives. You wonder when he gets off work. You wonder who would miss him. You wonder if his blood would be the kind Candi would prefer to lick off you.
>>
"Right Kyle?" Candi nudges you.

"Yeah," you say, not really sure what the question was.

"Cool. Just let me know. I'm always down to jam," Lawrence says but there's a nervous edge in his tone.

Oh. Music.

You think you could probably reach out into the drive thru window and catch him by the collar of his polo shirt. Your knife comes out of your boot quickly and easily and it goes into his neck just the same way.

You try not to let your hands shake as Lawrence hands you the last bag. "Sorry again about the ice cream," he says. "Maybe next time. I'll text you."

"Alright, see ya," Candi says.

Finally, mercifully, you drive, easing down on the accelerator although you want to floor it. You take slow, measured breaths even though your heart is pounding against your rib cage, threatening to escape.

"Are you alright?" Candi asks after a few minutes of silent driving. You hear the genuine concern in her voice.

"Yep." You're getting more alright. You keep thinking about the taste of blood but it gets more and more faint, slowly being replaced by a more natural hunger for french fries and burger. You take a sip from your drink, eyes on the road. "Lawrence an old friend?" you ask, trying to sound natural, trying not to sound jealous.

"We had art class together," Candi says, munching her fries. "He asked me to prom my senior year."

You don't remember Candi going to prom. "Why didn't you go?"

"Dad," she says.

Right.

"And it doesn't really matter," she says, resting her chin on her hand as he looks out the window. "He'd freak out if he knew anything about me. What I do, what happened." She doesn't say "You" but you know she thinks it.


>You never know. Maybe give him a chance.
>Anyone who really loves you won't care about any of that.
>You'll always have me.
>Write in
>>
>>6187547
>You never know. Maybe give him a chance
> We can't let what Dad did to us hold us back from living a better life. I say that because I got so jealous while he was talking to you I almost killed him
>>
>>6187547
>You never know. Maybe give him a chance.
>>
>>6187547
>You'll always have me.
No, no getting too normal now. Being freaks is the whole appeal.
>>
>>6187547
>"He seems alright but if I'm being honest, I want to *sluuurps strawberry milkshake* kill him and drink his blood. No homo, I swear. I guess I've got big brother protectiveness in me even though I'm younger."

She's the one person wecan just be ourselves around.
>>
Sorry for the lack of updates. I've been swamped today with other work. I hope to get another update up in a couple hours.

Thanks for your patience.
>>
>>6187659
I blame Richard Nixon for this.
>>
>>6187598
Fuck it, this anon has my vote
>>
>>6187659
I hope you don't consider the current vote situation a tie because I think a compromise between joking around and being serious is acceptable. If you must have uniformity than I'd rather we joke around than be a normie.
>>
Okay, I'm back. So sorry. Let's get back to being freaks.

>You never know. Maybe give him a chance
>>6187561
>>6187586

>You'll always have me.
>>6187588

>*sluuurps strawberry milkshake*
>>6187598
>>6187691


>>6187694
>a tie
A little bit, but I agree. I think I can amalgamate something out of this.

Writing
>>
"He seems alright," you say. "You never know. Maybe give him a chance."

Candi looks surprised by your answer, but you can't tell if she's happily surprised or disappointed, just surprised.

"We can't let what Dad did to us hold us back," you say. "That bastard is dead and gone. He can't control us anymore." You reach over and pick up your soda with one hand while you keep your other on the wheel. "But if I'm being honest—" you pause to take a long sip from your drink. Ah. Refreshing. "I really think I want to kill him and drink his blood." You shrug.

Candi's jaw drops and she stares at you with blank shock for a moment before she covers her mouth and laughs. It's a hard, full bodied laugh. She nearly spills her fries before she manages to put them back in the bag. "What? Why? Are you serious?" Her questions come rapid fire, her voice high with shock and amusement.

"Yes," you say, slurping your drink again. "And I guess because i'm jealous." You glance over at her and she stops laughing.

She looks back at you with a disarming innocence.

"Because I promised to protect you," you say. "And I meant it. No matter how unlovable you feel, or how fucked up…you'll always have me."

Candi is at a loss for words. "Kyle…wh–....I…would you really kill him?" She raises a curious eyebrow, studying you intently. Reading you.

"Sure," you say. "Maybe." You look back at the road. "Probably. Could be fun. I've killed better people for less."

"You are…" she trails off, blinking a lot. "You're ridiculous," she finally says, shaking her head. "I thought you came here to get better."

"And I thought you said there was nothing wrong with me."

"That doesn't mean kill every guy who's nice to me." Her tone is shockingly light. As if you are mildly inconveniencing her rather than systematically murdering anyone who might try to take her away from you. "God."

"No," you agree. "Only the ones that flirt with you."

She laughs. "He was not flirting."

Oh Candi. So naive. "Guys flirt in ways besides tipping big," you say. Oh. Again with the prostitution jabs. Probably need to cool it with those. Fortunately she either doesn't notice or doesn't care.

"Yeah well…" She pops another fry in her mouth, chews and swallows before sipping her Coke. She gives you a sidelong glance. "You really think Lawrence was flirting with me?" She sounds optimistic, flattered.
>>
"It's like you want to see me come home covered in his blood."

She laughs again. You really can't tell if that's because she thinks you're joking or because she's deeply fucked up. But…you could take a guess. She grins at you showing lots of teeth, leaning forward in her seat until she's only a foot or so away from you. Then she gnashes down on a fry and laughs again, sitting back in her seat again. "And you don't need to worry. You'll always have me too," she says, nomming a couple more fries.

You'll have to take comfort in that for now. You leave town and start heading toward the lake itself. Candi finishes off her fries and starts in on her chicken nuggets. "So what's this job?"

"Stakeout. I've got to let Truesdale know if his girlfriend is cheating on him with some other asshole." You remember what Virginia said about Valerie not being his girlfriend but you see no reason to muddy the waters with Candi. Keep it simple.

"Uh-huh," she says, sounding dubious. "Why the fuck is he paying you to do that? Can't he just get Chip to do it or something?" She says the name with such malevolence it almost surprises you.

"He said he doesn't want to be connected to it."

"Meaning if you get arrested for being a creep he doesn't go down with you."

You don't think Truesdale would hang you out to dry over something like a simple stalking charge or whatever. After all, he covered for you when you veggified Ken. You don't bother telling Candi that though since you feel like she wouldn't agree or understand. Somehow she seems to hate the Truesdales even more than you do. At lease she's more open about it.

You wind through the lakefront neighborhoods and finally reach Valerie's place. The street is quiet, a couple of cars are parked here and there. You should be able to park without too much attention, but if you really want to go incognito you'll have to park a couple blocks away and walk out into the woods to spy on them. Less chance of getting spotted, but if you do get caught it will be much harder to explain. Plus you don't think Candi will be happy about having to wade out into the forest while dressed like a football harlot.


>We'll park on the street and watch from here
>We'll park a block away and go into the woods
>Write in
>>
Eyy! there's the freakyness I read this quest for.
>>6187721
>We'll park on the street and watch from here
Be sure to get a good spot. Discreet but with a good angle.
>>
>>6187721
>We'll park a block away and go into the woods

*sigh* Lets show our work.
>>
>>6187721
>We'll park on the street and watch from here
>>
>Park on the street
>>6187725
>>6187735

Writing
>>
You pull into a spot behind a large SUV, partially out of view but where you have a clear line of sight to Valerie's McMansion. Should you be thinking of her as Valerie? Seems kind of intimate for someone you don't know. Hedgepeth? Feels too cold. Besides, aren't you supposed to be intimate with people you're stalking? Does this even qualify as stalking?

Candi sips her soda loudly, down to the ice. She looks at you expectantly.

You keep your eyes on the house.

Sipppppp. "So," Candi says. "Is this the plan?"

"Is what the plan?"

"Sit in silence and watch the house?"

"Sure. I told you it was a stakeout."


"Oh." Pause. "I thought you were fucking with me. I thought this was going to be exciting."

You give your sister a look, raising your eyebrow.

She shrugs and sips again. Sippppppp.

You sigh and start in on your food, unwrapping the Big Mac and taking a bite. You alternate between the burger and handfuls of fries. Biting, chewing, swallowing, washing it down with sips of your drink.

"You always eat like that?"

"Like what?" you ask.

"Switching back and forth."

"It's a more varied flavor profile," you say. "A more efficient way to eat."

Candi laughs. It's a mocking, condescending laugh. "What? Bro, you're literally adulterating all the flavors. How are you going to enjoy one when you're busy stuffing the other in your mouth."

You give your sister another look.

"You gotta stick with one. Eat the fries first. They go cold and mushy first. A lukewarm burger is passable. Cold fries are–"

"Candi, what the fuck are you talking about?" you say, cutting her unhinged Ted Talk short. "It's McDonalds, okay? I was fucking around about the flavor profile. It's hot and greasy. That's it. Let me enjoy it."

"So sensitive. So touchy." She reaches out and taps the tip of your nose before laughing again. She leans her seat back and puts her feet back up on the dashboard, showing off her calves. "God, I can't believe you got jealous over Lawrence."

You chew in silence, ignoring your sister's legs.

She puts on a high falsetto, clasping her hands in front of her chest. "Oooh, Lawrence. You're sooo dreamy."

Why the fuck did you even consider opening up to your sister?

"Come give me a big kiss, Laaawrence." She cackles madly. "Loverboy Laaawrence."

"Enough."

Candi pouts her lower lip at you but her eyes still glitter mischievously. "You know you missed me."
>>
"Starting to remember why I left."

She punches your arm. Actually kind of hard. That hurt. You give her a warning look but she ignores it, looking out the window again. "I'm still pissed at you for doing that by the way. Very fucked up. Very uncool."

"I know," you say. Really it's completely indefensible what you did. You know that now. Hindsight makes it obvious. But…why did you stay away so long then? If this really was just to protect your sister from you then why did you leave? And why the fuck are you back? It's not like you've done any significant work on self-improvement. In fact it feels like things have only gotten worse. Are you even actually planning on trying to fix yourself? Maybe Candi is right. Maybe there's nothing wrong with you. Maybe you like the way you are.

Candi's needling has you thinking about Lawrence all over again though. Candi's number in his phone, his opening invitation for "Coffee or something."

That dark chill rolls through your body again as you imagine Lawrence's blood dripping from your chin. You imagine your hands around Candi's throat watching as her eyes roll back and— You shake your head. You really gotta focus on this job. If it really is a test then maybe you're being watched and maybe you gotta make a good impression.

You sense that Candi is going to start venting at you again if you don't do something interesting. Plus you're supposed to be out here bonding or whatever. Maybe it's time for a wildcard topic.


>Annie mentioned that they do music shows at the University, we should go some time
>You know if you need any male talent for your streaming I can help
>So do you have a TikTok? Any social media? How do you advertise?
>Literally talk about anything else (Write in)
>>
You know, Kip has missing time. He probably didn't even realize he was gone for as long as he was until just recently. It's not just memory problems. It's a bit deeper than that. Schizophrenia and dementia both target the same parts of the brain, don't they? Could be catching a double feature there. Very unlucky.
>>
>>6187822
>"There's at least one monster in the woods, by the way. Saw it eat a deer. We should get you a concealed carry pistol. Any preferences?"
>>
>>6187822
>there's a creature in the woods. I gave it a pack of cigarettes and it made mom win that scratch off
>>
>>6187831
This but adding "The monster thinks I have a big penis too. I'd take you to meet her but she seems the manipulative kind."
>>
>>6187828
+1
>>
>>6187822
Uhhh... this is tough. Talk about that dream we had and how it lined up with a bunch of things in the real world?
>>
>>6187828
>>6187831
>>6187842
>>6187855
>>6188014

Votes locked in

Writing
>>
"I saw a monster in the woods," you say casually. This is probably the best way to bring this up.

"Oh yeah?" Candi doesn't sound very impressed.

"Yeah. Big. Hairy. Teeth longer than your arm," you say. "Saw it eat a deer."

"Wow, a whole entire deer?" Candi says, not believing you but willing to play along.

You nod anyway. "The front half anyway. We should probably get you a gun. Any preferences?"

"I want an Uzi nine millimeter," Candi says, miming holding a submachine gun. "Eh-eh-eh-eh-eh-eh!!" She pretends to spray Valerie's house with lead. "Or a Mac-10 if they don't have Uzis."

"I don't think they'll let me buy either."

"I'm pretty sure they don't let people like you buy guns at all," she says, apparently refusing to take this seriously. Although she has a point. In fact, you don't really remember how you got your .22. Did you take it from home when you left? Did you buy it? Had it come from somewhere else? It makes your head hurt trying to fill in those gaps.

Well…while you're at it. "There's something else in the woods too. Another creature or monster or something."

Candi finally gives you a bewildered look, her brow furrowed. She doesn't get this bit you're doing.

"I gave it a pack of cigarettes and it made Mom win that scratch off," you say.

"What?" She asks, sounding confused and annoyed.

"It thinks I've got a big cock too. I'd take you to meet her but she seems the manipulative sort."

Candi snorts. "Her? Kyle, what the hell are you talking about? Did you score some good shit from Ralphie and not tell me?"

"I'm being completely serious," you say.

She stares at you. "A monster in the woods that ate a deer thinks you've got a big dick so you gave her cigarettes and she made Mom win a scratch off ticket."

When she says it back like that it sounds a little erratic. Better set the record straight. "No, it's two different monsters." That's not really better.

"Uh-huh. And you're going to buy me an Uzi to shoot them with? Wow. You're the best brother ever."

"I've been having these weird dreams too," you say. Telling the truth like this is kind of cathartic. You wonder why you don't do it more. Oh right. The murders. Maybe some truths are better left untold. "Dreams about monsters and my past and sometimes things in the dream line up with reality."

"That's how dreams typically work," Candi says. "But tell me more." She slides down in the seat a little further which makes her skirt reveal another inch or so of thigh.

You almost start to tell her about Sally but…somehow you don't really want to. "Like in one dream I ripped the cables out of your webcam and then it was broken when I woke up."

"Hm. That's weird."

"And all the symbols you made were glowing. The triangles and stuff. On the door and my scars."

"Uh huh."

"And the woods too."

"The woods?"

"Yeah. I think out where Virginia is."

She blinks at you, that name seems to register with her. "Virginia?" She sounds genuinely confused.

"Her name is Virginia."
>>
Candi stares at you. She's trying to read your expression, see why you're lying. Except of course you aren't. This only seems to confuse her more.

"Do you know her?" you press.

"What? You mean Virginia Stevenson?" She asks.

"Who?"

"That crazy lady who killed all those people?" Candi says as if you should know this. Maybe you should. "Don't you know anything?"

That sounds like the Virginia you know somehow. "I guess not. What do you know about her?"

Candi stares at you for a little while then laughs and shakes her head. "I don't know. Go read a book or something, damn. Or go ask her yourself since you're besties. You're so weird." She reaches out and sets her empty soda back in the cup holder. As she does so you notice two, parallel scars running down her inner arm, wrist to elbow. They're almost invisible, white lines on pale skin, clearly old.

You blink. When had she gotten those? When had Candi tried to kill herself? You wrack your memory but don't recall anything like that. Of course that doesn't say much. You've forgotten a lot.


She sits back in her seat. "Anyway, when are you going to see Ralphie? I already told you we're completely out of weed and I'm not smoking Mom's shit. I'm afraid I'll start buying Bibles for kids in El Salvador or something if I do."

"I haven't felt like it," you say, guessing that you've moved on from the very real facts about monsters in the woods.

"Why not? It might help with some of these uh…" she gestures around vaguely. "Experiences you've been having. Might chill you out."

"It might make them worse."

She gives you a skeptical look and then laughs. "Wow. Uh okay Scruff McGruff. Are we just saying 'no' now?"

You set your jaw. "Plus it's a waste of cash. We need the money."

"You sister needs to not lose her fucking mind," she says. "One of us has to stay sane. Fine. Whatever. I'll go and get some myself. Jesus."


>I really did talk with Virginia in the woods. She's trapped in a stone circle out there.
>When did you get those scars?
>If you're going to buy weed, please don't blow all our money
>Write in
>>
>>6188160
>When did you get those scars?
>>
>>6188160
>When did you get those scars?
>>
>>6188160
>>When did you get those scars?
>>
>When did you get those scars?
>>6188170
>>6188186
>>6188201
>>
"Hey," you say, pointing at her wrist. "When did you get those scars?"

Candi looks confused again. She extends her arms so the sleeves roll up and reveals four scars, two on each arm. Long, shaky tracks. They're only visible from the right angle as light plays off the thin lines of taut skin. "What, these?"

You nod.

"You seriously don't remember?" She almost seems offended.

You shake your head.

"Wow…" She pulls her sleeves back down and sits back in the seat to think for a moment. "That's…they're from the day we killed Dad," she says. "And you really don't remember?"

"I don't remember a lot of that," you say truthfully.

She studies your face again. "I envy you," she says finally. "I remember everything. I wish I could forget." Another pause. "They're…I had to. It was for you."

That clears up nothing at all except maybe shedding some more light on why Candi is so fucked up. Sometimes you feel like she got it worse than you did. Most times actually. She always says you were the strong one but she lived for years with a Dad who preyed on her, who used her. The man who was supposed to protect her at all costs was destroying her piece by piece. Over time something in Candi broke, something you don't think will ever be whole again. For her sake you wish she could undo all of that but…as awful as it sounds, you like her this way. She's the way you've always known her. She's your sister, the most important person in the world to you. It's almost refreshing to have someone who's just as fucked up as you are, someone who loves you for it. You feel guilty just thinking it.

"I'm sorry," you say, meaning it.

She reaches out and touches your cheek, meeting your eyes. She gives you a smile. It's a brave smile. The sort of smile she'd give you after Dad was finished with her and you felt only weak and empty, unable to save her. "It's okay," she says. "I'm not mad at you. I understand. Kyle, I'm glad you don't remember. I just…it's hard to believe."

"It's the truth," you say.

"The scars are nothing," she says. "I'm fine. Fine now. You protected me. That's what matters."

That much you're sure of. You reach out and touch her cheek. Her skin is warm against your cold fingers. Her smiles becomes more genuine.
>>
You see a car pulling into the driveway. "Shit." You forget Candi in an instant, leaning forward to see better. It's that fuckass sporty BMW that Valerie's boyfriend(?) has. "That's gotta be him."

Candi looks too. "Ooh. It's happening." She takes her feet off the dashboard and sits up straighter. You have to push her back in her chair so you can see around her. "What now?" she looks at you.

You don't need to consult the photographs. Nathaniel Harper gets out. He wears khaki shorts and a pink polo, looks like he's ready to go boating or some shit. He closes the door, locks the car, glances casually around and starts up the walkway to the door.

Valerie opens it and greets him halfway. She extends a hand and they shake. It's friendly. He pats her on the shoulder and then loops an arm around her waist. He says something to her, his face close to her ear and she laughs.

"They're definitely fucking," Candi says. You don't need her unusually keen readings of people to figure that one out. "And he's good."

"How can you tell?"

"A girl who accepts a fucking handshake from her fuckboy? That dude is laying serious pipe."

You snort but keep watching them as they disappear inside the house and close the door. Well. Mission accomplished. You can tell Truesdale they met.

"What now?" Candi asks.


>I drop you off at home. I have to meet with Truesdale
>We go see Truesdale and tell him the news
>Want to see if we can sneak inside and learn a little more?
>Write in
>>
>>6188211
The gambler in me wants to go in so bad... what to do, what to do...
>>
>>6188211
>>I drop you off at home. I have to meet with Truesdale
>>
>>6188211
>>6188217
Fuck it man
>Want to see if we can sneak inside and learn a little more?
Maybe we can yoink some goodies too
>>
>>6188211
>Want to see if we can sneak inside and learn a little more?
If this is a test, then we should be trying to pass with flying colors.
>>
>>6188252
You'd think passing an observation test would be best exemplified by, you know, observing. Usually if you want to observe something you don't want it to notice you're watching. But maybe I'm crazy.
>>
>>6188257
Considering Kyle’s ability to somehow not get caught in the most red-handed crime scenes possible, I think we stand a better chance than usual of not being seen spying on them up close.
>>
>>6188269
>kim with his hand in the cookie jar
>"Huh, that's weird, my cookie jar is floating. I'll have to put heavier cookies in it later."
I wonder how red his hand scan get before he's noticed.
>>
>Y'all Consider a Impromptu Sibling Home Invasion a Date?
>>6188252
>>6188244

Writing
>>
"Want to have a little fun?" You ask.

Candi raises an eyebrow curiously.

"Let's sneak in and see what we can learn."

"What?"

You ignore her and get out of the car.

"What? Kyle, are you serious?" Your sister gets out too, following you around to the trunk. "You want to break in?"

"Sure," you say. "Well, no. Sneak in. I doubt it's locked in the middle of the day." You open the trunk and toss your incredibly distinctive leather jacket into the trunk and take out one of the dust masks and put it on before offering one to Candi. "You should come. It'll be fun."

Candi isn't having it. "Kyle, I'm dressed like a fucking cheerleader." She gestures at herself. But you really can't tell. The oversized camo jacket covers everything still except for the barest edge of her skirt.

"Yeah, it's cute. They'll never expect it."

Candi stares at you in disbelief before a grin creeps across her face. "God. You're crazy. Okay. Let's fucking do it." She reaches into the trunk and grabs your tire iron and another mask. She puts the mask on and notes you staring at the tire iron skeptically. "Just in case," she says.

A part of you wonders if this is a Very Bad Idea. Another part of you thinks it could be Very Fun. Really, who's to say which is right? Besides, you've done worse. You close the trunk and check both ways down the street.

The Hedgepeth residence sits on a big lot surrounded by a six foot wrought iron fence. You can climb it pretty easily and you can boost Candi over. Hell, you could probably throw her over if you have to. Outside of the fence the house is flanked on both sides by thin strips of trees. You could probably use these to circle around to the back and see what your options are there.

At the front there's the front door which Valerie and Nathaniel went in through. There's also a garage which seems to have its own door on the side. No telling if either of those are locked. You don't see any cameras and mercifully the front doorbell seems to just be a normal doorbell, no smart doorbell bullshit. The front of the house is lined with windows but the curtains are drawn so you really can't see much from the street. The windows you would guess are probably locked. You could break one out but that wouldn't be very sneaky now would it?

There's no one on the street and the neighbors houses are out of sight. So far so good.


>Hop the fence and try the front door
>Hop the fence and try the garage side door
>Sneak through the woods and see what the backside of the house looks like.
>Write in
>>
>>6188295
>Sneak through the woods and see what the backside of the house looks like.
Not only lessens the chance of getting spotted by neighbours but might give us a view into the house.
>>
>>6188295
>>Hop the fence and try the garage side door
>>
>>6188295
>Sneak through the woods and see what the backside of the house looks like.
>>
>>6188257
From what Virginia said, this is more of a test of how we handle ourselves.
If we just take a picture of the affair taking place and come back, we either don't pass as we lacked the initiative he was looking for or we end up stuck with the menial jobs that a guy who sticks to the letter of the mission would get.

My take, at least.

>>6188295
>Sneak through the woods and see what the backside of the house looks like
We are kin to the woods.
>>
>>6188295
>Sneak through the woods and see what the backside of the house looks like.
>>
>Woods mode
>>6188304
>>6188316
>>6188325
>>
Writing
>>
"This way." You cross the street quickly, Candi hurrying along behind you. In seconds you're across and into the woods, creeping through carefully, branches crackling, leaves crunching underfoot.

"Ugh…dammit. Kyyyle…" Candi whines.

You look back as your sister struggles through a thicket.

"I'm gonna get all dirty…" she looks at you helplessly and bats her eyes. "Carry me?"

Holy shit is she for real? You sigh and go back, turning around and crouching down. "Jump on."


She hops and hooks her legs around you and you stand up. You put your hands under her knees while she loops her arms around your neck, her chin resting on your shoulder. "If I'm late to my stream I'm going to kick your ass," she says, her breath tickling your ear.

"You're not going to be late." You forge ahead, stepping over a couple fallen trees and ducking under a branch, careful not to hit Candi with it. Finally you start nearing the end of these woods. More accurately, you're coming up on where they merge into the rolling hills and the woods stretching up to the crest and beyond.

The Hedgepeth house has a large backyard likewise fenced off. There's a firepit and an inground pool which is steaming slightly. Presumably it's heated. The air smells faintly of chlorine. The rear of the house blends into a patio with a grill and some chairs.

"Okay. Put me down."

Right. You squat and your sister hops off, brushing off her coat and skirt. "This is so fucking stupid," she mutters. She still has the tire iron clenched in one hand.

You continue studying the rear of the house. The upper story windows are dark or curtained off. Can't really see anything. The lower floor is much more visible given how many big ass windows there are. You see into the kitchen and living room. Empty. Hard to tell but beyond them you see a door and some stairs going up. Nothing stirs.

You won't be able to see anything from out here. You'll have to go inside if you want to learn anything of value.

This is probably the best place to enter anyway. You really don't see a reason to go back to the front of the house. At worse it's no different. You start forward but Candi catches your sleeve. "Wait. What do we do if they see us?"

"They won't see us," you say. But if they do…you'll figure something out. One thing at a time.

You exit the woods and approach the fence, watching the house carefully.

Candi comes to stand next to you. She chews her lip nervously, eyes darting.

You consider asking if she wants to go wait in the car but you know she'll just get pissed for calling her a baby. You kneel down and interlace your fingers as a step for her. "You first. I'll boost you over."
>>
"What if they have a dog?" She whispers, glancing around the yard nervously.

"Make friends with it."

"What if it's mean?" she presses.

"Then I guess I'll kill it. Come on, let's go."

Candi hesitates but finally grabs the fence and steps into your hand. You lift her up effortlessly and she lifts a leg up over the fence. "Shit, my skirt." She fumbles around with it, trying not to get it caught on the fence spikes. As she does you look up. Haven't seen this pair of underwear before. Doesn't leave much to the imagination, not that you're complaining. Finally Candi slips over the fence and drops awkwardly down on the other side.

You're over a heartbeat later, lifting yourself up and climbing over. After you land beside her you lead her up to the back door. Your heart isn't beating fast, but it is beating hard and steady. Surprisingly you're really not nervous so much as eager. You peer in through the rear windows into a finely decorated house. You see plush leather couches, a huge TV, crystal picture frames, a Thomas Kincaid painting on the wall.

You turn the handle. Unlocked. Ladies first, you gesture Candi inside and close the door behind you softly. No alarms go off. No dogs bark. No one screams. You listen intently but hear nothing but the AC running.

There are stairs going up to the second floor, there's a darkened hall leading to another section of the house and there's a door at the base of the stairs which presumably leads to a basement.


>Go upstairs
>Go down the hall
>Go to the basement
>Write in
>>
>>6188348
>"I'm gonna get all dirty…" she looks at you helplessly and bats her eyes. "Carry me?"
Doesn't she want the genuine article grass-stains on her knees to really sell that naughty cheerleader vibe? Such lacking dedication.
>>
>>6188349
>Go to the basement
Reckon this is where interesting stuff is hidden in.
>>
>>6188349
>Go down the hall
Let’s not get ourselves trapped in anywhere just yet.
>>
>>6188354
I just imagine them both of them after this mission. Candi on her knees and holding onto a rope or a hose while Kyle drags her around as if she was on a sled to get those real grass stains. It's almost wholesome.

>>6188349
Kincaid painting. A classic.

>Try to listen for any sex music or the sound of sex itself.
You just know these two got right into it.
>>
>>6188371
>"Look at them playing outside. Still kids after all."
>meanwhile outside
>"Hey Kyle, is this enough to make it look like I sucked off the entire football team or just the coach?"
Very wholesome.
>>
>>6188349
I thought about listening for them >>6188371 so Im fine with that as a preliminary action if it does anything but I interpreted "You listen intently but hear nothing but the AC running." as QM preempting that suggestion.
>>
>>6188375
>>6188378
>QM preempting that suggestion
Correct. There's nothing to hear right here.
>>
>>6188371
Meant to @ this one.
>>
>>6188381
Then I change my vote to heading for the basement. That's the most sound-proofed place in a house aside from the streaming room.

Holy shit! This one might be a rival to Candi, one of those "dommy mommy" streamers. We have to fuck up her equipment.
>>
File: 1711296604988781.gif (1.19 MB, 488x200)
1.19 MB
1.19 MB GIF
>>6188386
>This one might be a rival to Candi, one of those "dommy mommy" streamers. We have to fuck up her equipment.
>>
>>6188349
>Go to the basement
We know they are fucking so maybe rob her house.
>>
>>Go to the basement
>>6188361
>>6188386
>>6188394

Writing
>>
You listen for what feels like a few minutes but nothing changes.

"Kyle?"

You hold up a hand for silence. It's like she's never broken and entered before. You gesture for Candi to follow and try the basement door. It opens soundlessly and you see a flight of stairs leading down. Down you go. The stairs squeak a little so you have to go slowly. Once at the bottom you see that it's a furnished basement. Carpeted floors, painted walls, furniture, everything. It's also quiet down here. Not promising but you search anyway.

You move through a small sitting area. There's a couch beneath a few tiny windows high up on the wall and a big screen TV here. The TV is too big to fit out those windows unfortunately. At the far end of this room is a gun safe. You try the handle and frown. Locked.

Candi fans out, looking around the room, presumably for stuff to steal but so far nothing really valuable and portable stands out. There's a bar here, like the kind you sit at and serve drinks. Maybe you could steal some booze.

Candi looks behind the bar and then circles around to open a closet door. "Yo…" she says.
>>
You come over. The closet has a vacuum cleaner in it. It also has a wooden door on the back wall. The door has been crudely painted a solid red with thick brush strokes. There's a keypad lock on the door but the door is ajar. You hear nothing. Darkness beyond.

Candi looks at you uncertainly and you move past her to push the door slowly open.

You step into the room beyond, groping the wall to find a light switch. You flick it on and a single naked bulb hanging in the middle of the room snaps on. The floor is bare cement. The walls appear to be drywall but it's hard to tell since everything is painted black. It makes the room seem bigger but also somehow more claustrophobic.

It's not really accurate to say everything is painted black. The floor is marked with a series of white circles which form a large ring. Each circle has a rune painted in it, runes you don't recognize.

The far wall has a simple wooden altar, stained purple from dried blood. It's ringed with half-melted candles. The wall it sits against gives you pause. Two red vertical lines are painted over a graceful red curve. It's unmistakably a smiley face. The simplistic face is ringed with more strange runes. You find you recognize the one at the top of the ring, it's the same one on the back of Miss Ellen's neck.

"What the fuck," Candi says, walking the perimeter of the room and studying everything.

A camera sits on a tripod in the corner nearby. You approach and check it to see that the memory card slot is empty. No record of whatever happens here.

Candi reaches the altar and picks up a very old dagger. You see it's dripping wet. Water. The blade shines but it's marked with more of those runes. She looks at you, bewildered, and sets it back down in the water-filled tray she took it from.

"What the fuck is going on here?" she asks quietly.

You can only shake your head.


>We've seen enough. Let's get out of here.
>Let's see if we can find the key for that gun safe down here somewhere.
>Let's get back upstairs and keep searching. Maybe that hallway.
>Write in
>>
>>6188404
>Candi. Take Pictures with your phone. Document everything. I'll keep watch.
>>
>>6188406
+1
>>
>>6188404
Damn what the fuck
>>6188406
+1 to this, then I kinda want to get outta here, this place is giving me some shitty vibes
>>
>Candi. Take Pictures with your phone. Document everything. I'll keep watch.
>>6188406
>>6188407
>>6188420

Writing
>>
>>6188404
>>Let's see if we can find the key for that gun safe down here somewhere.
>>
This place has really bad vibes. Exceedingly bad. Epicly bad. It kind of reminds you of the barn back at the farm except that you kind of like the barn. It's a little spooky but it's the comfy kind of spooky. This feels like you're going to end up on LiveLeak.

"Candi. Take Pictures with your phone. Document everything," you say, giving one more look around. Nope. You still don't like it. "I'll keep watch."

"Right," Candi says, taking her phone out of her jacket pocket. Then you watch in infinite horror as she holds it at arms length, positioning the altar behind her. She sticks out her tongue and takes a selfie. She glances at you as you stare back in shock. "Kidding," she says.

You shake your head and leave the room as she starts taking pictures of everything. You stand just outside, staring at the hall and the stairs leading up, listening intently, hardly breathing.

A minute or two passes.

"Okay," Candi says, emerging from the room. "I think I got–"

You grab her and clap a hand over her mouth. Her eyes go wide.

You hear footsteps overhead, someone walking across the floor above you. No, two people. Sounds like they're going for the basement door. You have maybe a minute. There's not many places to hide down here. You could try to hide behind the bar and pray they don't go back there or maybe you could slip back inside the Black Room. If they do come in there you should be able to ambush them in the dark. You're not really sure what Truesdale will say if you end up fucking up his "girlfriend" and her beau during a home invasion but it's got to be better than what will happen if they catch you here.

The only way you might be able to get out of here before they come in is through the high windows above the couch. That's a gamble. You're pretty sure you can at least get Candi out. Might be harder for you.


>Hide behind the bar
>Hide in the Black Room and lay an ambush just in case
>We're going out the window. Candi first.
>Write in
>>
>>6188434
Ah shit here we go
somehow I feel like shedding blood in the cult room is a bad idea
We could get Candi out and barrel through the two of them/tank the blows
Hiding behind the bar is probably a shitty idea if they're coming down here anyway, but maybe we can pull off some Looney Tunes shit where they go around the bar in one direction while we inch around the bar in the other direction
>>
>>6188434
Is the bar attached to the wall on one end, or is it an island?
>>
>>6188439
I should have been more clear. It's attached at one end in its own alcove. They shouldn't see you back there unless they go behind/"into" the bar.
>>
>>6188434
>Mess up one of the runes, one that will be hard to notice.
>Leave the knife at a place that suggest it has been recently used.
>Hide in the bar.
>Wait until the guy begins questioning whether his paramour is doing rituals with someone else.
>Sneak out while they argue.

So, the ambush thing but with extra steps.
>>
>>6188440
Aight I'm Looney Tuning

>>6188434
>Hide behind the bar
Also we can grab glass cups and smash them over heads and shit
Another possible idea is leave the spooky door open so they get scared and baited into running down there to see if someone's in there, but I'm not voting for it, just throwing it out there as a possibility
>>
For no reason whatsoever:

Operation "Get Lawrence to fuck off for no reason whatsoever."

Plan A:
>We assume this guy is a lech and sees Candi like a piece of meat
>Unlike us
>We go and spy on him
>Take him phone
>Wait until he starts badmouthing Candi
>Turn his phone on
>Call Candi
>Put her on silent so she can hear but won't be heard
Result: Candi thinks it was a twist of fate that he butt-dialed her while talking shit about her and won't realize it was us who set up the whole thing

Plan B:
>Do a solid for Virginia
>A big one
>Ask her to pull some strings to Lawrence goes to college elsewhere that's more fancy with a scholarship
Result: Candi now realizes that this guy put his own future and success way ahead of her. Unlike us. They might remain on speaking terms over long distance but she'll eventually tire of it.

Plan C:
>Same as Plan B but we use Truesdale as the source for the scholarship
Result: Same as Plan B but without using magic.

Hopefully, Candi won't connect these contrivances back to us!
>>
>>6188434
>We're going out the window. Candi first.
If we don’t got time to get ourselves outta there, then hide behind the bar.
>>
>>6188442
>>6188443
>>6188471

Hiding behind bar seems general consensus + distraction in the Black Room

Writing

>>6188467
I love these ideas, anon. I'm sure this will come up in a vote later. Assuming everyone agrees that Lawrence got a go.
>>
You see terror in Candi's eyes. You remove your hand from her mouth and spare a glance at the window. There's no time for that. You've got to be quick. You grab Candi by the arm and pull her back to the bar, pushing her down into cover. She makes herself small, huddling in the corner clutching her tire iron nervously.

You hear the feet reach the basement door and dash back to the Black Room. Sprinting inside, you reach the altar and snatch out the knife. It's cold, wet, and weirdly slick.

You lay it gently down on the floor in the middle of the room and then look at the runes. They're painted on. You don't have time to scuff them. Instead you quickly set a pair of candles down beside the knife and race back out.

You hear feet coming down the basement steps.

"-lucky she didn't hear," a woman says. Valerie you assume.

"Not really my fault," presumably Nathaniel chuckles. "I warned you."

You leave the door to the Black Room wide open and duck behind the bar with Candi. Your crouch in silence, breathing hard through your nose.

You feel Valerie and Nathaniel in the room, their presence fills the place. Your heart beats harder.

"As much as I love these little distractions–"

"Not so little, I think," Nathaniel interjects.

Valerie laughs and you hear them kiss. Her laugh sounds a little strained, like she's just playing along. "Yes, well, it is a distraction. We need to worry about more important things like the future and the Inheritance."

"Of course." Nathaniel sounds slightly annoyed but you can't tell if it's with himself or with her.

"It's obvious now that Truesdale isn't concerned with it. He wants to reap the rewards but not pay the price." As Valerie steers the conversation, she steers them towards the couch. You hear someone–Nathaniel you think–sit down.

"Mhmm."

"I know you can feel it too. It grows impatient. As the Veil weakens it's only going to get worse."

"Right."

You imagine you and Candi rising up from behind this bar to see their shocked faces. Candi grinning as she caves Nathaniel's head in with the tire iron, Valerie screaming as you cut her throat with your hunting knife. You imagine laying Candi down in the spreading pool of blood. Your heart is hammering your ribs now but you hold yourself back. That's not why you're here. You glance at Candi who stares at you in wide-eyed fear.

"Wine?" Valerie says.

"Always."
>>
You hear footsteps approaching and you grip the handle of your knife where it protrudes from your boot. You'll just have to be quick before Nathaniel can get away.

You see a hand reach over the bar top and freeze. You nearly seize her wrist and stand up.

"Is someone there?"

The only reason you don't attack her is because she's not talking to you. Her voice is directed at the open door to the Black Room.

"What?" Nathaniel asks, standing.

"The door…were you in there?"

"When could I possibly have gone in there?"

"I always close it so Jenny doesn't see. What on earth…" The both approach the Black Room and you hear the light turn on. "The knife…"

Now is probably your best chance to get the fuck out of here. You grab Candi's wrist through the sleeve. She's going to have to move when you do, fast and quiet.


Roll 1d6
I need three rolls looking for 4, 5, or 6.

You need two to pass.
>>
Rolled 2 (1d6)

>>6188766
Oh boy!
>>
Rolled 2 (1d6)

>>6188766
>>
Rolled 3 (1d6)

>>6188766
lets go
>>
>Oh no
Writing
>>
You slip out from behind the bar and spare a glance toward the Black Room where you see Nathaniel's back framed against the darkness as he stares inside. You give Candi an urgent shove and the two of you hurry quietly across the furnished basement and reach the steps.

She starts up the steps.

The stairs creak loudly. Too late to stop. You push her to keep going.

"Nathan there's someone–!" Valerie shouts, but you already hear him running after you.

No longer trying to be quiet you shove Candi again even more urgently and now you're both thundering up the steps. She bangs open the door and you slam it shut behind you. There's no lock and nothing nearby to brace it. All you can do is keep going.

Candi runs into the rear French doors, hands slipping off the handle before she gets it open and hurries across onto patio, running running as fast as she can for the far fence and the woods. You're right behind her. Really you could be in front of her but you're just not that kind of brother.

Your breath comes hard and fast, you can hear your sister panting by the time she reaches the fence. The safety of the woods is just in view.

"Shit!" Candi's sneakers slip off the iron bars as she tries to climb. "Ky-!" You grab her by the waist and heave your sister up and over before she can say your name. She squeaks in surprise and grabs at the bars, half climbing and half flipping over. You don't bother to wait for her to land. You hear heavy steps on grass, someone sprinting toward you at full tilt. Your turn to climb.

Roll 1d6+1
I need three rolls looking for 4 or higher.

You need two to pass.
>>
Rolled 4 (1d6)

>>6188782
Spiderman shit time.
>>
Rolled 1 (1d6)

>>6188782
Don't use my name you silly goose
>>
Rolled 2 (1d6)

>>6188782
>>
Including the +1
>5
>2
>3

Writing
>>
Candi lands with a hard grunt, stumbles, and continues running into the woods without looking back. Good girl.

You grab the rails and lift yourself up but your boot, like Candi's shoe, slips on the rungs. You lift and start going up and over when Nathaniel reaches you. He grabs the leg of your jeans and tries to pull you back down. He's surprisingly strong, probably quarterback in high school or some shit.

"Get back here!" He shouts.

You pull harder, unable to make headway as you tug of war with your leg.

"What did you see?" He growls. "What the fuck did you see you little punk!?"

You kick, lashing out with a booted foot and feel it strike something crunchy.

"Ough!" Nathaniel lets go of you and you pull free, hoisting yourself the rest of the way over the fence where you land awkwardly on your side with a woosh of air. You suck in a breath and get back to your feet. Then you make eye contact with Nathaniel.

He's sitting on his ass looking a little dazed. Blood runs down his face from his nose where you kicked him. But he's looking right at you. You have a dust mask on, which is good. But you're still pretty distinct looking, which is bad. You turn and run into the woods, cursing yourself for having looked back. You circle around after you're out of sight, pressing along the side woods back toward the road and the Eagle.

You nearly run into Candi who is coming back toward you. She has the .22 pistol in her hand, she must have gotten it from the car. "I thought–"

You don't slow down, you scoop her up and keep running, carrying her over your shoulder

"Ky–!"

"Shut up," you snap. You halt at the edge of the woods, just on the curb of the road. You look both ways. No one. You cross quickly and throw Candi into the passenger seat before you slide into the driver's seat and close the door.

"Are you okay?" She asks. "I was coming back to save you."

You take the gun out of her hand, carefully, and put it back down on the dashboard. You can still smell Nathaniel's blood. It was hot, alive, full of energy. You look back toward the house. No one is rushing out the front door. Sirens aren't screaming toward you. Yet.

You recap quickly. Nathaniel Harper caught a glimpse of your face. He was pretty shook up after you rocked his shit, but he might have been conscious enough to remember a long haired blond burned guy.

Still, you didn't leave any traces behind and he didn't see Candi's face or anything. Besides, maybe Truesdale will cover for you if the cops get involved again.

But…you could always just make sure no one calls the cops by making sure no one lives to do so. You've already been in once. Going back in force would be easier. Nathaniel's really the only threat, once he's dealt with you can take your time with Valerie. Candi can keep watch.

"Kyle? Are you okay?" Candi repeats. "Are we going? Can we go?" Her voice is nervous, urgent.


>Take Candi home
>Go straight to Truesdale's
>{Stay here. I'll take care of this}
>Write in
>>
>>6188852
>Go straight to Truesdale's
>>
I done went and gone and told y'all. I knew it. Now he's seen our mug. Dang ol' gonna get a posse going. WOE IS KELLOG!
>>
>>6188852
>>Take Candi home
>>
>>6188852
>Take Candi home
She'll miss her stream otherwise.
>>
>>6188852
>>Take Candi home


How far is our home, time-wise? If it's too far might as well risk it and go straigh to Truesdale's.
hmm. I think we fucked the job. The idea was to be stealthy, yeah?

I suppose we have gone "above and beyond", but again, Truesdale already knows the guy would be there, and probably about the occult stuff too. So the only thing we did was alert the target.
>>
>>6188852
>Take Candi home
>>
>>6189006
Truesdale definitely knew they were doing wacky shit behind his back. But I'm sure he'll appreciate knowing what EXACTLY they're doing with the pictures. But he'll probably be upset that we were detected. Fission Mailed.
>>
>>6188852
Damn, if only we had the thing that made us less recognizable lol
Time to get a haircut I think
>Go straight to Truesdale's
>>
>Take Candi home
>>6188955
>>6189004
>>6189006
>>6189017


Writing

>>6189006
>How far is our home, time-wise
About 30 minutes. There's time to get there before the stream.

>>6189022
>Time to get a haircut I think
No way. Your look is i c o n i c
>>
>>6189019

forgot about the photos!

Yeah that gets us something, atleast.
>>
Whatever the fuck is going on in there you're going to put it aside for now. At the moment you need to worry about being a good brother. Sort of.

"Yeah," you say. "We're going." You pull out and away, taking the shortest path to get away from the house without squealing tires or anything. "I promised to make sure you get you home for your stream." You glance at her. "Is your outfit okay?"

Candi stares at you like you're retarded for a second. She unzips the coat and pulls it open, checking herself out. "What about my butt?" She turns slightly in the seat and you look at the skirt. While driving. This is safe.

"Looks good," you say.

"Yeah, I'm okay," she says. She leans back, closes her eyes and lays both her hands on her chest. After a moment your sister laughs. It's the sound of relief. "Damn. I thought I was going to have to kill that guy when I saw him grab you. Woo…wow. That was intense. Fuck."

You keep driving.

"You do that a lot?" She asks, eyes still closed.

"Honestly? Not sure. I don't really remember."

"God. I feel like I need a fucking cigarette," she laughs. "Wow. Well…shit…how the fuck am I going to do my stream? Oh shit, Kyle! Did they see us? What if they fingerprint us or something? Oh fuck…"

Candi is rambling now. You kind of tune her out while she gets it out of her system, alternately gushing about how exciting that was and fretting about how much trouble you guys are going to be in. When she starts winding down you finally intercede.

"Relax. They didn't see you."

"What about you? Kyle, you're the one they're going to care about. What if they connect you to that hobo you killed?"

"We didn't steal anything, break anything, or kill anyone. I don't even know that they'll go to the cops. You really think they want police poking around that freaky fucked up dungeon temple?"

"Yeah," Candi says, nodding. Her chest is rising and falling hard, but softer than it was. "Yeah." She keeps her hands clutched to her chest still though. "Yeah. You're right." A pause. "Maybe I shouldn't do the stream tonight…"

"I thought you said you have to?"

"Fuck. Yes. I do have to. God dammit. I'm going to be so tense." She looks annoyed.

"I think you'll relax once you get into the swing of things."
>>
You leave Roselake behind, carrying on toward your house.

"Hope so," she says finally before falling into uneasy silence. You make the rest of the trip quietly before reaching the house.

"Thanks for coming with me," you say as you pull up. "Despite everything…I had fun."

She seems surprised by this. "Yeah well…I bet you would. It was nice hanging out though. Maybe next time less running in the woods."

"Yeah."

She opens the passenger door. "I've got to touch up." She looks back at you. "Are you coming?"

You shake your head. "I've got to talk to Truesdale."

Candi frowns slightly but doesn't argue. "Just…be careful. Okay?"

You can't even say some shit like 'I always am' because of the whole impromptu home invasion thing. Instead you say: "Hey, let me see your phone." You hold out a hand expectantly.

"What!? Why? No." Candi blurts in rapid succession.

"I need the pictures to show to Truesdale." You wait, hand open and outstretched.

Candi looks at it like it's a venomous snake. She hesitates. "No way."


>What are you hiding? Just give it to me.
>I'm not going to go through it. Please?
>Fine, just be ready to text him the photos tonight, okay?
>Write in
>>
>>6189069
>Lmao just hand it over coward
>>
>>6188852
>Leave Candi home
>Drive back to the mansion
>Try to catch the guy off guard and give him a shake off just so he understands he doesn't actually know what the person who broke in looks like
>>
>>6189069
If Kyle has a phone
>text it to me then
If not and we need the phone
>I'm not going to hang up on Lawrence. I need the photos for evidence. If he calls I'll let him know I'm borrowing your phone for something
If she insists keeping it
>Fine. Be ready to send it tonight
>>
>>6189076
we don't got a phone yeah
>>
>>6189076
+1
>>
>Phone get
>>6189076
>>6189070
>>6189130

Writing
>>
"Don't be a coward, just let me borrow it," you say, already tired of this game.

"No. It's got all my private stuff on it," she says, holding it protectively.

You sigh. "Look, I'm not going to fuck with Lawrence. I need the photos for evidence. If he calls I'll just tell him I'm borrowing your phone."

Candi chews her lip anxiously, eyes flicking to the horizon, seeing that it's getting late. "Ugh. Just…promise me you won't go through it or anything."

"I promise," you say.

"Fine." She hands the phone over but she's really unhappy about it.. "Don't lose it. I really need it. And don't talk to anyone if they text or anything!"

God she's paranoid. "I won't, damn."

"Fine." Candi glances back at the house. "I've got to get ready." Her tone softens a little. "Just…come back soon, okay?"

"Alright," you say. She hurries back into the house and you lay her phone down on the passenger seat. You can already feel it calling to you like the Green Goblin mask. The less she wants you to snoop the more you kind of want to. Surely she knew that. Maybe she wants you to go through her stuff.
>>
You sigh and back out of the driveway before driving toward the Lake. You reach the Truesdale estate and pull up to the automated gate. A CCTV camera is pointed at your car and stares coldly down at you, the lens reflecting the red shades of the sky. You sit for a couple heartbeats until the gate starts to roll open and you drive in. The sun is dipping toward the horizon, burning bloody over the lake as you park and get out. You press the doorbell button and hear Miss Ellen's voice.

"Come in, Mr. Mercer."

You open the door and step inside. No Ken to greet you. No one at all. You look around briefly and then shrug and start up the stairs. You know the way to Truesdale's office.

As you pass through the second floor game room you see Chip sitting on the bar countertop beside one of his buddies, the same guy he was with at the mall. They're both leaning over his phone but look up at you as you come into view. Chip's friend scowls but Chip himself grins at you. "Here for my dad?" he asks.

"Yeah," you say.

Chip jerks his head toward the office. "Go on in."

You do. Everything is lit an eerie orange from the setting sun. Truesdale is hearing sorting through papers on his desk. Looks like property deeds and tax records. He looks up at you and smiles. "Ah, Kyle. Good. Come in, sit down. Would you like another whiskey?"

"Whiskey sounds great," you say, sitting down.

Truesdale presses an intercom button on his desk and it beeps. He keeps smiling at you but it slowly fades out. "Well…I imagine you're here because you have news for me about Valerie. So? Go ahead and break it to me." He takes a slow breath and holds it.

Obviously you're going to break the news about Valerie, assuming it's really news to break. The question is how much to tell him about what you learned and about being spotted.


>Tell him everything about the Black Room and being seen
>Don't tell him about the Black Room, just tell him you were seen
>Don't tell him about the Black Room or being seen
>Write in
>>
>>6189139
>Tell him everything about the Black Room and being seen
If this is a test, he probably knows more than us anyways.
>>
>>6189139
>Tell him everything about the Black Room and being seen
>>
>>6189138
>calling to you like the Green Goblin mask
I can hear the cackle. I can hear DA FOE
>>
>>6189139
>Tell him everything about the Black Room and being seen
>>
Tell him everything about the Black Room and being seen
>>6189143
>>6189145
>>6189177

Writing
>>
If Virginia said this is a test then you want to pass. You suspect that Truesdale knows more than you do about Valerie and whatever she's up to so you see no reason to hold back.

"Valerie and Nathaniel are sleeping together." You almost say "fucking" but decide to be a little more tactful. Classy.

Truesdale exhales slowly and slumps his shoulders. "That's what I was afraid of."

"There's more."

"More?" He raises an eyebrow, looking surprised.

You take out Candi's phone and unlock it, calling up her photo gallery. You bring up the pictures of the Black Room and slide it across the desk to him without comment.

"What's this?" Truesdale takes the phone and studies it, brow furrowed in concentration. You see his eyes flicking back and forth, taking in the image. "What is this?" he says, looking up at you.

"It was in her basement," you say.

"Basement?" He sounds concerned. "What were you…you took this?"

You nod. No reason to complicate it by telling him about Candi being there. "There's others," you say, gesturing for him to swipe through.

He does. Slowly. Carefully studying each picture in turn, not speaking. After five or six of them he says: "Kyle…do you know what any of this is?" It's not rhetorical. It's extremely neutral actually. He's genuinely asking if you have any idea about whatever that room is. It's so neutral that you suspect that he knows more than he's admitting to.

"Not a clue," you say semi-honestly.

He continues on through the pictures, shaking his head. "Kyle…I didn't ask you to sneak into her house. This is…" he stops as he swipes to the last picture, and then he laughs.

You look down and see Candi's selfie, her in front of the altar, tongue out, eyes crossed. Oh god. You should probably say something to explain this but…you're drawing a blank.

"Your sister?" he asks, sliding the phone back.

"Yeah." How embarrassing.

"She's a beautiful girl," he says, smiling faintly. It fades away. "She went with you?"

"I trust her with my life," you say quickly. That doesn't really answer his question but then again the photo kind of speaks for itself.

He takes this in, nods, seems to think about it. "Then I trust her too. Have you spoken to anyone else about this?"

"No." Of course not.

"I think…that's for the best," he says. "This is…unsettling…but not exactly unexpected. I was afraid something like this might be going on."

"Something like what?"

He sighs, staring at his desk. "I won't mince words, Kyle. I'm a wealthy man. My friends are wealthy. Most of the people I spend time with are wealthy. When people want for nothing…well…it's not healthy to have everything you can want. It makes you bored. It makes you want more. Want things you shouldn't."

You say nothing.

"This sort of thing–" he gestures to the phone in your hands. "It's somewhat common here. Housewives and business men playing games. Pretending at greater purpose. Greater meaning. Childish really."
>>
You still say nothing.

"I'm sure it was very off putting to find."

"Yes." That's putting it mildly.

"Try to think of it as the next step up from…" he struggles to think for a second. "Key parties and…swingers clubs. Idle fantasies. Taboo hobbies to pass the time."

You wish you had that kind of free time. "Right." You also don't buy it. Or at least don't buy that everyone thinks it's just a rich person's make believe. Not after your scars and your dreams and Virginia. Not to mention that Valerie seemed to take it seriously. As did Nathaniel. What Truesdale himself really believes remains to be seen. It's not a satisfying explanation, but it seems to be the only one he's giving for now. Guess you better get to the awkward part. You pocket Candi's phone. "One more thing."

Now it's Truesdale's to look at you silently.

"Nathaniel might have seen me," you say. "I went inside to get photos of them in the act–so you could be sure–when I found that place. That room. They heard me and I ran but Nathaniel caught me. I pulled free of him but I think he may have seen me."

Truesdale's expression doesn't change but his eyes widen slightly. "He saw you?"

You nod.

"Oh, Kyle." Truesdale shakes his head and you really feel like you let him down. It's stupid. He's not your fucking Dad. But…you still feel a degree of shame at that disappointed tone. When he looks back up at you he says. "I wish you hadn't put yourself in that position. Even for me. I'm touched but I hate that you're at risk for taking all the blame for this." He stands up and rubs his chin. "It won't look good. Especially not with that death at the mall the other day."

So news must have broken about the guy you murdered. Hopefully no one's connected it to the motel.

"Hmm. What to do?" He looks at you, studying you, thinking. "Your sister was with you so I'm afraid she won't make a very good alibi either."

The door to the office opens and Miss Ellen enters carrying two tumblers of whiskey on a tray. Deja vu. She sets them down and Truesdale snaps his fingers.

"It couldn't have been you because you were out," he says.

"Out?"

"Ellen, can you go bring a car around?" Truesdale says.

She falters as she's straightening up. It's only for an instant. Her face remains unreadable. "Yes, Mr. Truesdale."

"Kyle–I hope you don't see this as an imposition–but I want you to go with Ellen. I know a restaurateur in Lasker City who owes me a favor. The two of you had reservations and spent the evening there so if anything comes of this–if Valerie raises a stink–she won't be able to pin anything on you." He smiles, apparently pleased with himself. "I think that should work. What do you think, Kyle? Dinner?"


>Thank you but I can't, my sister is expecting me home
>Dinner with Ellen in Lasker City? Sure.
>Write in
>>
>>6189202
Okay, decent plan, but
what if he's trying to get us outta here so he can tie up loose ends and get rid of our sister somehow
>>
>>6189202
>Thank you but I can't, my sister is expecting me home
>>
>>6189202
>Dinner with Ellen in Lasker City? Sure.
>>
>>6189202
Oh yeah, if this dude owes him a favor and is gonna be lying about us having been there the whole time already, why not just have the dude say we were there without going through the game
>>
>>6189238
Because then our alibi is backed up by the restaurant staff

>>6189202
>Forced date
Hope Candi can hold the line
>>
>>6189202
>>Dinner with Ellen in Lasker City? Sure.
Have ellen swing by our house too drop off her phone and tell her whats going on.
>>
I'll let this vote run until tomorrow. See you in ~10 hours.
>>
>>6189238
Its a smaller lie if we are actually there and he has plausible deniability if caught lying like "whoops guess I thought he was there earlier, honest mistake"
>>
>Dinner with Ellen in Lasker City? Sure.
>>6189237
>>6189255
>>6189274

Fuck it one more update. Writing
>>
You take the whiskey off the tray and sip, looking from Truesdale to Miss Ellen. Ellen, your old–well, not really that old actually–English teacher turned demure personal assistant going out to dinner with you. You can't say you didn't fantasize about this when you were in school. Well, similar fantasies anyway.

You're a little worried that maybe Truesdale just wants to get you out of the way so he can deal with Candi. Of course, if that happens then at least you know where to stick the knife. You feel your heart beat a little harder at the prospect but you shake your head. Best not to get too worked up before the date. Is this a date? Does it count if it's semi-consensual? Did dragging your sister into someone's basement cult temple dungeon count as a date? Why are you taking the most unlikely of women on the most fucked up of dates? Are you trying to prove something?

"Sure," you say, pushing a natural-ish smile onto your face. "Dinner sounds great."

Ellen smiles back tightly. It doesn't quite reach her eyes. "I'll bring the car to the front and meet you outside," she says. She looks sad. Or … nervous? Hard to tell. She hides it well. But she's definitely feeling something she's not showing.

"Oh," Truesdale says. "Almost forgot." He opens a drawer and unlocks a metal lock box there, counting out bills. "Four hundred. Heck. Five hundred." He hands over the cash as a folded wad. "Count it if you want. I won't mind." He smiles.

Yout don't bother and instead slip it into your jacket pocket. "Thank you."

"Ah, you went above and beyond, Kyle." He drapes an arm around your shoulder and leads you into the hallway outside his office. "Next time just be more careful, huh?" He pats your back and returns to his office. "Come see me soon." When he closes the door you turn around and see Chip look away, he's drinking with his buddy who likewise pretends not to notice you. Honestly it's nice to see Chip looking a little envious.

You walk out and downstairs, not seeing any sign of Miss Ellen. Outside a car is waiting, engine idling, the driver's seat empty. What the hell, you like to drive anyway. You climb into the driver's side and close the door, waiting for your "Date." You sit.

And sit.

And wait.

Only a minute has gone by but it feels like an hour with Candi's phone sitting so innocently in your pocket, heavy with unexplored secrets. What was she so worried about? Nudes? So what? Sexts with Lawrence?

…you could always find out.


>No. I made a promise to her. Ignore the siren call of the phone
>She doesn't ever have to know. Let's snoop through her phone
>Write in
>>
>>6189289
>No. I made a promise to her. Ignore the siren call of the phone
Snooping around is some shit dad would do
You're the goat for the update btw
>>
See you guys tomorrow.
>>
You already know the moment we snoop Ms. E is gonna pop up behind us with the garrote wire (her purse string) and murder us (just happen to see what's on the screen).
>>
>>6189289
>No snoop

Also, make a point of slipping a note to Ellen when we are driving that says "Are you free to talk?"

That way, we can know how free we can be with our words around her and if there are listening devices. Probably in something that has low contrast under a low light, like pencil over paper.

Also, we get to know if she's doing this against her will which is a tangential benefit.
>>
>>6189289
>She doesn't ever have to know. Let's snoop through her phone
What she doesn’t know can’t hurt her. Maybe we’ll find something about those markings she carved into us.
>>
>>6189289
>>No. I made a promise to her. Ignore the siren call of the phone
>>
>>6189289
>She doesn't ever have to know. Let's snoop through her phone
See what's inside. Then jealousy. Then plowing Miss Ellen while jealous and learning more from her on this water thing cult and Trusdale. The drama of it.
>>
>>6189289
>She doesn't ever have to know. Let's snoop through her phone
>>
>>6189290
>You're the goat for the update btw
Thanks, anon. I take any excuse I can to write another update.

>Snoop
>>6189298
>>6189354
>>6189390

>Don't snoop
>>6189290
>>6189294
>>6189342

All tied up. If I don't have a tiebreaker in an hour or so I'll flip a coin.
>>
Rolled 1 (1d2)

>1 Be a good brother
>2 Be a well informed brother

Putting it in the hands of fate and writing
>>
>>6189418
Next time Nemesis. Look at Kyle watching Candi talk to Mister Bun. If he had a fucked up demon mask he would already be talking to the Kyle Thing inside him.
>>
You stare at your sister's phone, imagining the dark and tantalizing secrets it contains. Is Candi embarrassed about something on it? Ashamed? Or maybe she's afraid it would make you kill someone. Maybe it would make you kill her.

Or, you reason, maybe she deserves her privacy and with how Dad treated her it's no wonder she doesn't like the idea of losing control of the few things in her life she can control.

You stick the phone back in your pocket, unsnooped. You're a good brother.

A moment later Ellen opens the driver's side door and startles when she sees you. "Oh…Kyle."

"Get in," you say, gesturing to the passenger seat.

"Mr. Truesdale prefers that I drive," she says, biting her lip.

"I'm not Mr. Truesdale." You give her a patient smile.

Miss Ellen hesitates and glances towards the house before she finally relents, circling around to get in. You watch her skirt ride up her thighs as she slides into the leather seat and buckles in.

"I'm going to stop at my house first," you say, putting the car in drive and pulling out. "I have to drop something off."

"We should really get to the restaurant quickly…"

"It's on the way," you say, which is sort of true. Just not on the fastest way.

"Alright." She doesn't press the argument.

Within a half hour the town car rumbles on gravel as you pull up to your house. "Be right back," you say, getting out. "Don't go anywhere."

Ellen only looks back at you, brow knitted anxiously.

You get out and go inside, moving quickly, aware that the plausibility of your alibi is at stake. Not that the stakes are particularly high, but better not to draw any more attention than you have to.

When you reach Candi's door you don't hear talking, buzzing, or moaning, so you open it.

She gasps in fright then looks annoyed. "God dammit, Kyle! Knock!" She's wearing the cheer uniform sans jacket and sitting at her computer. "Are you…going to watch?" She asks, confused.

"Here to drop off your phone," you say, offering it to her.

She takes it and then looks up into your eyes. You see her boring into you, searching you. After a long moment she looks relieved. Her eyes soften and she smiles slightly. "Thank you." She takes the phone gently from your hand. "So you're not staying?"

You shake your head. "I'm going out for dinner."

"Dinner!?"

"Truesdale's getting me an alibi."

"Are you…you're going to dinner with Truesdale?"

"Miss Ellen."

"Miss– the English teacher?" She asks in disbelief.

"Yeah. Look, I gotta go."

Candi snorts. "And you were worried about Lawry-bear."

You give her a hard look and she giggles.

"Bye, Kyle. I've got a show to put on." She winks at you and wiggles her hips in her seat. You don't say Bye back. You just leave.
>>
On the way out you grab a scrap of paper and a stubby pencil to scrawl a quick note to Miss Ellen. "Are you free to talk?"

Back outside you see that Ellen has taken the driver's seat. You crack a slight smile and get in shotgun. "Before we go," you hand her the note.

She reads it, looks confused, then worried. "Yes?" She says. She doesn't elaborate as she pulls back into the road, driving fast for Lasker City.

There's no music and no talking, just the road noise.


>You know I used to dream about going on a date with you
>I hope this isn't too much trouble for you
>Do you know anything about the Black Room in Valerie Hedgepeth's basement?
>Write in
>>
>>6189434
>You know I used to dream about going on a date with you
>>
>>6189434
>So whats the story behind your tattoo?
>>
>>6189434
>>I hope this isn't too much trouble for you
>>
>>6189434
>So whats the story behind your tattoo?
Three way tie? Let me fix that.
>>
>So whats the story behind your tattoo?
Writing

>>6189512
>Three way tie? Let me fix that.
Bless you. But I'll probably just blend all three a bit here.
>>
You subtly watch Ellen as she drives. Her face seems either permanently neutral or flickering with worry. She doesn't look at you at all and instead focuses on the road, navigating out of the hills and onto the freeway where she accelerates more than you would have expected her to.

"Hope this isn't too much trouble for you," you say.

"Mm? No. No, not at all. I'm happy to help." She keeps her eyes on the road.

"Help me or help Truesdale?" You tease.

The levity of your tone surprises her. You're gratified to see the corner of her mouth curl slightly. The ghost of a smile. "You."

"Do you know what's going on?" You ask.

"Just that you're in some kind of trouble, something you didn't do, and you need an alibi." She says this with such calmness that you have to wonder if she's done this before.

"So where are we going?"

"Martino's. It's an Italian restaurant. The atmosphere is nice."

"You go there often?" You're teasing her again.

Miss Ellen glances at you from the corner of her eye, that faint smile is back. "Sometimes."

"When Truesdale wants you to?"

The file vanishes back to neutrality. "Sometimes."

You both fall silent as you race down the freeway, passing traffic on either side. Damn, Ellen drives like she's being chased. You see the Motel pass on your right. One pair of rooms is blackened and hollowed out, wrapped in police tape. You don't pay it any more mind.

"You know," you say, "when I was a kid I used to dream about taking you out to dinner."

"Really?" She seems genuinely amused. Her eyes are lit up like maybe she might laugh, except she doesn't.

You nod. "Yeah. Don't laugh. Childish fantasy."

"I had no idea," she says. "You hid it well. I guess I spent too much time with you."

"You were always a professional," you say. "I was the one out of line. Funny how life does that."

"Does what?"

"Circles back on itself." You think of the Ouroboros. You think of Candi. "Like a snake eating its own tail."

"Oh," Ellen says with a visible shudder. "I don't like that idea. That's so bleak. So grim."

"Life's not always sunshine and rainbows," you say.

"No," she agrees. "But…" you expect a story you've heard from her before. A story about cherishing the good moments. A story about celebrating life's joys. A story about finding what makes you happy and fighting tooth and nail to hold onto it. Instead she just closes her mouth and keeps driving.

You keep studying her, gaze wandering to the nape of her neck where you can faintly see that tattoo, that hooked symbol, the one from the Black Room.
>>
"That's an interesting tattoo. What's the story behind it?"

"Tattoo?" She says, sounding both alarmed and embarrassed. Ellen reaches back to cover it self-consciously. You now see she has an identical one on her inner wrist. It's small, just the size of a postage stamp, but it's there. "Um." She's preparing to lie. "Just…when I lost my job I decided to live a little. You know. I hadn't really done anything wild since college and a tattoo seemed fun."

"Two tattoos," you say, looking at her wrist.

She sees where your attention is and looks at her own wrist. "A couple," she says, tugging down her sleeve and trying to look busy focusing on the road.


>I saw the same symbol in Valerie's basement. What's it mean?
>I didn't know you lost your job. I thought you just quit. What happened?
>They look good on you. I hope you don't mind me saying so.
>Write in
>>
>>6189534
>I didn't know you lost your job. I thought you just quit. What happened?
>>
>>6189534
> Maybe you can show me them after dinner
Too forward?
>I saw the same symbol in Valerie's basement. What's it mean?
>>
>>6189534
>I didn't know you lost your job. I thought you just quit. What happened?
>I saw the same symbol in Valerie's basement. What's it mean?
>>
>>6189552
>Too forward?

Not sure if this is a real vote or not but if it gets other player support I'll include it. It's a bit forward to toss in with a single vote.
>>
>>6189534
>I didn't know you lost your job. I thought you just quit. What happened?

Lets ease into this. Build trust first.
>>
>I didn't know you lost your job. I thought you just quit. What happened?
>>6189592
>>6189550
>>6189565

Writing
>>
You decide to ease back a little. You don't want to scare Miss Ellen off or get her to clam up. As much as you want to ask to see her other tattoos you keep light. Well, light-ish.

"I thought you quit," you say. "I didn't know you lost your job. What happened?"

"Consequences." She finally laughs. It's hollow, empty, and bitter. Her lips turn down into a slight frown, eyes still in the road as she weaves between a Prius and a tow truck. "Consequences from…" she glances at you, suddenly looking guilty. "From what happened…with Ken."

You're confused. What happened had nothing to do with her. She wasn't even there.

Ellen sees your confusion. "I spoke up for you. After it happened and when they were discussing expulsion and not letting you graduate, I spoke up." She's ranting now. She has more energy now that you've seen all day. "I opened my big mouth and said 'we've' been ignoring this poor boy and what's been done to him all year–all his life! We have to acknowledge that these actions are a product of–'" she falters, realizes who she's ranting to. Her expression falls, anger gone. She looks tired. "A product of what your dad did to you." She sighs. "What none of us stopped."

You say nothing.

"Truesdale also spoke up for you. He's powerful. He has connections. They protected him. No one protected me. They let me go for rocking the boat," she says. Her expression grows cold, her eyes narrowing. It's a look you've never seen on her face before. "I'm not condoning what you did," she blurts self-consciously. "But…it just…none of it seemed fair."

You don't care that she doesn't condone it. You wouldn't take it back even if you could, but you do feel a slight pang of guilt if what you did directly led to your favorite teacher losing her job just because she stood up for you.

"I didn't want you to do that," you say softly. It's the closest you can come to an apology for now.

"I know," she says. "You want to know something, Kyle? I didn't do it for you. Not really. I did it for me. I can't stand to see people be made invisible. Problems swept away." She shakes her head. "I'm sorry. I didn't want to say anything. I told myself I wouldn't tell you because I didn't want you to feel like you were a part of it. What I did was because of me. My choices. I finally stood up and look where it got me." That bitterness is iced with sorrow and thick enough to cut with a knife. "But," she continues, forcing these emotions from her face. "I'd rather not dwell on it."

There's a long silence where you're not sure what to say.
>>
Ellen turns off the freeway and into the urban hell of Lasker City. Well, not quite. She turns into the somewhat tolerable suburban hell of Lasker City. It feels like an endless parking lot. Malls joined to strip malls joined to shopping centers. Lines of chain restaurants stand guard over yet more parking lots. Finally she reaches Martino's and finds an empty spot. "This is it," she says. Any trace of anger or sadness has been expelled. She's wearing her mask again. She takes out her phone and checks it. "Mr. Truesdale says we should go straight in. There's a table in the back for us."


>I hope I'm not under dressed. I don't want to embarrass you since you look so nice
>Ellen, I'm sorry that happened to you but it means a lot to me that you tried. I hold that's worth something
>Offer her your hand. Let's get this date started
>Write in
>>
>>6189630
>Ellen, I'm sorry that happened to you but it means a lot to me that you tried. I hold that's worth something
>>
>>6189626
>Hold that's worth something

Fuck I need to start proofreading my vote options. How embarrassing.
>>
>>6189630
>Say nothing
None of these are compelling actions to me. Though offering a hand is second choice.
>>
>>6189630
>Offer her your hand. Let's get this date started

So my prediction was true she really did get dropped for getting involved in the ken incident.
>>
>>6189630
>Say nothing

We dont owe her but should do something nice anyways. Could ask Virginia for more info about thosr tattoos too.
>>
>>6189639
>>6189667
>>6189700

Going with "say nothing and offer hand" here.

Writing (may be some delay)
>>
You get out of the car and circle around, reaching the driver's side just as Miss Ellen closes her door. You offer her your hand and she looks at it, momentarily taken aback. Gently she rests her hand in your grip. Neither of you speaks as you walk hand in hand with her into the restaurant. It feels strange, a childhood fantasy made real.

A nervous man in a suit waits at the podium by the door. He gives you a strange look as you come it but when he sees Ellen he looks relieved. "Right this way, please," he says. He takes you on a circuitous route through the restaurant, avoiding as many people as possible before you reach a quiet back area.

Ellen lets go of your hand to take a seat opposite you.

The man (Martino?) places two menus in front of you and quickly pours wine, not bothering to let you sniff it or whatever. "Please let me know what I can get you. I'll be back shortly." And then he hurries off.

Ellen studies the menu like this is normal so you do too. When Martino–you assume–returns you both order and he hurries away.

"Seems like a lot of trouble on my account," you say, wondering if this level of subterfuge is really necessary to avoid a criminal trespass charge.

"Mr. Truesdale takes care of his associates," Ellen says, sipping wine and looking around, soaking in the atmosphere.

It's not a bad place. Not garish or tasteless. It has a sort of restrained charm like it's not trying too hard. Totally not your scene. You're more of a "hung over in a Waffle House at 3AM" type of guy than a "Pretty good Italian place" type of guy. "Is that what I am now? Truesdale's associate?" You sip your own wine. Tastes like battery acid, but booze is booze.

You see hesitation on Ellen's face again. She's watching herself, being careful about what she says. She's really not cut out for this type of work. "I suppose so," she says finally. "I'd rather not talk about work actually. I don't get much time away from my job and…I'd like to enjoy this time." She gives you a small, forced smile. You don't know if this is a lie to get you off her case or the truth, but it seems true enough.

You can't help but look her over again. That tight skirt and her low cut blouse would have blown your teenage mind five years ago. You would never have figured her to be the type of woman to dress this way. Not really slutty, but not holding back either. You realize you're staring at her cleavage. When you look up you realize she's staring back at you. Not lustfully, not in horror. It's a gaze devoid of any judgement. She knows you're looking and just doesn't care.

Those tattoos, that smiley face pin on her lapel, this boardroom chic, her cold gaze. It's like she's a different person. It's like the Miss Ellen you knew is trapped somewhere inside whoever this is.

You sip your wine again. "What would you rather talk about?"
>>
"I want to hear about you," she says. A bit of warmth returns to her expression. "Are you still making music?"

You remember staying after school in Miss Ellen's class, using your laptop and some music room equipment and instruments to layer tracks and make songs. You told her you were making an album. She was your English teacher but she always pulled strings to let you work on your music. It had felt so important to you then like it was your ticket out of hell.

"No."

That warmth fades in favor of disappointment. "No? Why not?"

You smile at her, feeling the scar on your face tighten. "Something came up."

She looks flustered and looks away. "I only mean that…you were good. You know I still have a box somewhere with the CD you made at school. Your demo CD."

You'd almost forgotten about it. Heavy guitar riffs, erratic synths and way too many samples. Moody vocals and immature lyrics. You'd be embarrassed about it if you cared about it at all. "You still have that?"

She nods and sips her drink. "Believe it or not but when I was in college your type of music was the stuff I listened to."

"Really?" You can't hide your surprise. This is not a side of your teacher you'd ever seen before. You have a hard time imagining that life for Miss Ellen.

"Yes, really," she says with mock offense. "I used to be cool and hip and 'with it.' I was envious of you–" she backtracks quickly, stammering. "A-about your talent and passion. I was never one to go out on a limb. To be 'extreme.'" She smiles awkwardly. "So I got to live vicariously through you. I was always sure you were going to make it."

And then you shattered Ken's skull.

You finish your wine in two gulps.


>Say nothing
>I guess not everyone's dreams come true
>I'll have to stop by and get a copy of that demo someday
>Write in
>>
>>6189785
>What made you so sure?
That last statement sounds like a lie so I'd like to see her try come up with something on the spot again.
>>
We gotta make more music guys. It gets all the hoes. Even the ones out of our league. Hot for teacher? Nah, Nuclear.
>>
>>6189789
+1
>>
>>What made you so sure?
>>6189789
>>6189825
>>
Make it? She knew you were going to make it? The quiet weird kid from the redneck family? You can put up with a lot of things but empty flattery isn't one of them.

"What made you so sure?" You press, curious to see what else she comes up with on the spot

"You were so driven," her answer is immediate and honest. "I'm sure a lot of kids think they'll start a band and be famous but for you it was more than just…I don't know…an idle fancy. It was more like…a calling."

You're floored by her quick response. You didn't really expect that.

"I was so proud of you when you worked on that album." She smiles. "You put so much effort into it. Heart and soul. I really do still have it. I even listen to it sometimes." Her smile fades a bit. "It's a shame that you don't do it anymore but…I suppose people change. Besides, it wasn't really fair for me to project that on you."

"Your secret desire to be hardcore?" you ask, recovering your wits a bit.

She snorts softly. "Something like that."

Food comes out and it's pretty good. Maybe it makes you a basic bitch but the garlic bread is especially good and Martino keeps it coming. It's got this oil-butter-herb dip for it too. Incredible shit. Next level.

You watch Miss Ellen take a bite of her spaghetti and exhale through her nose blissfully, eyes closed as she chews. "Mmm." She swallows and opens her eyes again, looking momentarily flustered when she realizes you're watching her. "I don't get to eat out much," she says. "So this is a treat for me."

"Really? I would think Truesdale would have you eating filet mignon or something every night."

Her smile flickers but doesn't vanish. "No. No, I have to fend for myself for food. Mostly I pick up fast food on my way home."

So she doesn't live there. That's good to know you suppose. "So how long do you think we have to stay here?" you say. "I hate to keep you up all night."
>>
She finishes chewing another bite. "I think we've covered our bases. It's up to you how long you want to stay. I'm here for as long as you want." It's not flirting so much as it is submission. She doesn't sound excited, doesn't sound resigned. It's just a fact. "Do you have other plans tonight?" she asks.

"No," you say. "I just don't want my sister to worry if I'm out late." Is that weird? Is it weird to be worried about about your sister worrying about you? Part of you doesn't really care if it is. A more practical part of you thinks it's probably not in your best interest to get publicly labled as a sister-fucker.

"I don't know if I've seen Candace since she graduated," Ellen says, stabbing some spaghetti and twirling her fork. "What does she do?"

Monetizes her body and lack of scruples, you think but that doesn't seem like an appropriate answer. You struggle for a moment. "She works remotely," you say. "She's an online freelancer." Nice.

"Oh. Doing what?"

Fuck. "Graphic design." Sure. Why not?

"Oh, that's good. She was very talented too. I can't say that her subjects were always the most pleasant, but she was a skilled artist."

You can't recall a single thing Candi ever drew or painted but Lawrence said basically the same thing. Candi didn't seem too impressed with her own abilities. Somehow you doubt Miss Ellen is trying to seduce your sister so you have to assume that she's actually a pretty good artist. "I'm sure she'd like to hear that," you say. "Maybe I'll bring her by next time I come."

Ellen looks momentarily horrified by this suggestion but buries it quickly. "I'm sure she doesn't even remember me." She returns to eating. "In fact, I'm sure she'd like to get out of this cramped little town. I'm surprised the two of you stayed. Well…that she stayed and you came back." Her words have a serious tone to them, like this is more than just idle chat. "Have you…given any thought to leaving?"


>We're in too much debt to leave
>Actually I'm warming up to this place again. It's home.
>I could say the same about you. Why is it that you stayed after you lost your job? Are you from Roselake?
>Write in
>>
>>6189851
>If I do should I take you with me



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