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#and my moms boss has decided thats not enough of an emergency
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mars-the-4th-planet · 4 years
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MisterCrimeBoks8 is gay and does crimes.
It was a quiet, uneventful day at the California State Library. A small out of the way place to look at books and movies, and maybe play Carmen Santiago on the boxy computers. A nice place to be, for sure. Isaac Munger from the Isaac Munger show sat on the couch with his girlfriend Ko from the Ko Sho. She was not wearing a wife leash today, but how much trouble could she get up to sitting on the couch with her Box? Ko was content having Box read BNHA manga today. But on the north facing side there was a large glass door, and through that door prepared to ruin everyones day was... Yes, Mister Crime Boks 8.
MisterCrimeBoks8 was an illegal man, who looked very similar to Isaac Munger. Not that most would know because he was wearing a crime mask and a hoodie. In his hand he carried a 1979 Authentic Knife. Sharp on both sides of the blade and short enough to hide, it was perfect for carrying around in secret.
Instead of opening the door, he dramatically decided to kick it in. But his foot bounced off as the glass was quite thicc. So he picked up a loose bricc and smashed it like an absolute dicc.
With the glass door shattered in pieces he walked in, now having gotten everyones attention. He almost casually strolled up to the woman behind the checkout desk and demanded: "Give me your money!"
The desk lady looked at him confused. "Huh? Sir this is a library."
"Money! NOW!"
The librarian shrugged and handed him a tin can with 1.65$ in late fees. "Here you go I guess?"
"teh fuck is this?"
The desk lady cringed at his use of "teh"
"Dude, why are you trying to rob a library? Ever heard of a bank?" Jukebox asked, while his girlfriend glared as MisterCrimeBoks8.
"I tried the bank first. They shot at me and instead of getting money they just gave me more debt."
"I See."
The desk lady sighed. "You got your money, please leave before you break something else."
MisterCrimeBoks8 pointed his knife at her. "Oh God why does he have a knife?!" Someone shouted from the back.
"Give me the biggest book you have!" He demanded.
"I wish you let me carry my knives around..." mumbled ko sadly. "Maybe I could fight him..."
"No ko," box whispered. "I would not want to risk you getting hurt. I would take the knife and fight him myself anyway. You know the rules, no wife leash in public means no knives in public."
Ko pouted.
The desk lady handed MisterCrimeBoks8 a Bible. "Is this big enough?"
"No! You can get these for free, why would I want that? Get me the biggest VALUBLE book you have!"
The desk lady waved over her assistant librarian, a young woman training to become a desk lady. Sort of like an apprentice. She was not used to robberies because this was her first one, and she shook a little from nerves.
"This bastard wants a valuable book to steal."
The assistant nodded and handed him her diary.
MisterCrimeBoks8 growled like an animal which made everyone cringe and tossed it in the trash. "I said a BIG ONE!"
"D-Do you want a g-guide on how to... Um... Live a life that is more likely to have an autobiography about i-it?" She asked nervously, presenting a large unwieldy book. "It cost us a lot..."
"Hmm... Yes. That sounds valuable." He said, not knowing it was a stupid book that the library considered a waste of shelf space because no one ever wanted to read it. They had not even bought the thing, it had just been dropped off in the book return one day without any library sticker. The only other books that had been dropped off this way were the twenty-five bibles the library was trying to get rid of.
"But I also want money! You! Dumbass!" He marched up to Isaac Munger and brandished his knife. "Give me money!"
Ko jumped into jukebox protectively. "No! Dont rob my boyfriend!"
He pointed the tip of the knife at her. "Move or I will stab."
"Nope. IM A GIRL DOING NOTHING TO YOU SO YOU CANT HURT ME HA!" Ko pointed out and laughed.
"Ah, but you see..." His eye did an anime twinkle. "I am gay, so the 'you cant hurt girls when it is not self defense' rule does not apply to me."
"Dammit! Thats how the law works!" Isaac Munger exclaimed from under Ko.
Ko continued to use her body as a shield regardless. She closed her eyes and winced in anticipation.
"It sure is." Came a voice from over by the smashed door.
MisterCrimeBoks8 backed away from the two, and turned to look. It was Justin Case! And four policemen!
"This library has an automatic emergency alarm door. It was sounded to us as soon as you broke it, idiot American!" Justin Case laughed. He was aiming a four-barrel shotgun at MisterCrimeBoks8 and each police officer was also pointing a pistol at his chest.
"I suggest you lay your knife down and surrender."
"Never!" Justin Case raised his arm with the knife ready to throw it. "I will kill the librarian unless you drop you weapons and leave!"
Ko and Jukebox tackled him from behind and together they were able to wrestle him down. The police came over and took over restraining him and began dragging him away for a good whooping as usual in Californian law, since their policy was to rough up prisoners before taking them to jail so it would look like there was more resistance.
"Yay, we did it!" Ko said cheerfully.
"No, I did it. Good job to me. Another case solved by Justin Case!" Justin Case began puffing on a pipe and began to cough before throwing it away. "Never mind, I look cool enough already that I dont need to destroy my lungs."
"Hey! Did he take this?" One officer said holding up the stolen book.
"Yes but you can keep it." The desk lady smiled.
"Sweet, I always wanted an autobiography." The officer replied.
"Mom- I mean, Miss Klobuchar, did I do good in that robbery?" The assistant librarian asked.
"Yes you did. I will send a letter of recommendation to the higher ups so you may become a full librarian soon!"
The assistant librarian squealed and hugged her boss happily.
"What a good outcome for everyone except MisterCrimeBoks8. Wait... I didnt get anything! And they call this a happy ending..." Jukebox grumbled a bit.
Ko kissed him.
">_<" he could only blush in response.
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Bonds 1.6 - After coffee, want to grab some pizza?
Just a FYI, my cellphone flipped the fuck out when selecting the text, so it decided to show right in my face one thing I didnt want to see: I know now that by the ending of this chapter there will be nothing within something. I'm hoping it isnt something that is going to be built through the entire thing, and just a last time development. Sorry for that.
I paced.  The Demesnes text in hand, I walked from one end of the living room to the other, then walked back.
Another trip back and forth, and I stopped by the window, using the edge of the book to push the curtain back.  It was dusk outside, just past sunset, day two, and some of the locals had emerged.
If I didn’t know better, I might have thought the locals were trying to put pressure on me.  Men and women, some children, simply staking out the perimeter of the fence.  Some of them paced like I was doing, like tigers in their cell, while others were patient, smoking or holding phones to their ears.  A number of the ‘children’ were standing on the short stone wall, hands wrapped around the metal curls and spikes of the railing, eyes on the house.  Some talked, others were silent.
Most were normal enough I wouldn’t have looked twice.  A handful weren’t.  One little boy, separate from the others, kept scratching at his head, face, neck and arms, his fingers coming away black with his own blood, or so it appeared in the gloom.  I could see the gouge marks, dark lines cut into his skin, he would turn away, and they would be gone the next time I got a chance to see.  There was a woman with hair, hat and coat covering much of her face, but when I did get a glimpse, I saw only vague, black smudges where her eyes and mouth should be.  She held a cigarette up near her face, but never inhaled from it.  The others seemed rather intent on avoiding her, giving her a wide berth as she paced.
Gore doesn't do anything for me, put scratching/itchyness is somehow more creepy. Maybe it has to do with the feeling of helplessness. Wounds, blood, missing limbs, its somehow fine, maybe manageable or expected depending on the setting. But self inflicted madness-inducing itchyness? Something you can't get OUT of you? Thats what does it for me in the creepyness scale.
A car passed down the length of the road.  I tried to use the headlights to get a better look at the things, but the headlights revealed a mostly empty sidewalk, no Others but a small group of the ‘children’ that had hopped down from the fence and were simply walking as a group, heads covered by hats and hoods, hardly worthy of a glance.
My eyes had to adjust from focusing on the headlights.  The Others appeared from dark spots, and stepped out from behind the pillars that framed the gate.
I let the curtain drop, then resumed the pacing.  I’d read the same page five or six times.
“You’re making me nervous,” Rose said, startling me.  “You’ve been pacing the entire time I’ve been gone?”
Her hair was wet.  She’d left to go shower, but she still wore the same clothes as before.  Apparently she had running water, on her side.  That was interesting, considering there wasn’t necessarily anything for the pipes to connect to.
“I’m nervous,” I said.  “I ordered pizza, but I didn’t think they’d come crawling out of the woodwork like this.  There’s a good ten or so out there.”
“Why did you order pizza?” she asked.
“Because I’m hungry?”  I responded.  “There’s nothing more than the most basic stuff in the kitchen, I’m going to go crazy or get sick living off flour tortillas, canned beans and tuna, and since I’ve got to figure out a way to keep myself supplied, I might as well start sooner than later.”
“Pizza isn’t supplies.”
“Pizza is a way of testing the waters,” I said.  “Will anyone in this town do business with me?  If I can’t order a pizza, I might have trouble getting groceries delivered.  If I can’t get groceries delivered, then I need to find a reliable, safe way of going outside.”
“So you put a pizza guy in the line of fire?”
“There wasn’t a line of fire when I called,” I said.  I looked outside again.  “It’s hard to keep track of time.  My sleep schedule’s all over the place, my eating schedule’s off track, and the days are short.  It’s dangerous, and it’s going to fuck me up.  Need to get back in the habit of sleeping at night and eating on time.  As is, I didn’t figure it would get dark so soon, and I didn’t figure they’d appear like this.”
“I know,” she said.  “Except I don’t even have the physical needs to gauge by, and it’s awfully dark in here.”
I peeked outside.
Two Others had joined the group.  One was very talkative, engaging with the eyeless, mouthless woman who had the cigarette, even venturing into the four or five foot bubble of personal space around her that the rest seemed to be respecting.
I reached for the phone.  Mind changed.
“Bell Pizza.  What can I do you for?”
“I’d like to cancel my order,” I said.
“You’ve already paid for your order.  The food is made and is on its way.  We can’t provide a refund.”
“It’s fine.  Keep the money.  Just call back the delivery guy so he doesn’t waste his time.”
There was a pause.
“I’m sorry.  We can’t refund your pizza, because we already prepared it.  It should be there in ten minutes or less.”
He was feigning ignorance, with a touch of a bad accent, but he couldn’t hide the smugness.
“You’re being intentionally dense,” I said.
The guy on the other end hung up.
“Fuck,” I said.
# I'm having weird flashbacks of RE4. But every villager is out to get you psychologically and the bosses are staring at you from the window and you cant do shit about it. Really like the alien-ness (?) Of the situation here. Never read something like thia.
“So… now what?” Rose asked.
“I don’t know,” I said.  “I doubt he’ll give me a fair hearing if I call back.  I don’t really know what to expect, here.  Even reading up on the basics, it doesn’t get into much depth about this.”
Rose nodded, “Essentials and Famulus were more focused on Other-practitioner relationships than general Other-human relationships.”
I could see her fidgeting.  I leaned forward.  “Earlier, you said you were nervous.  How does that work?  You don’t breathe any harder, since you don’t breathe.  Does your heartbeat pick up?  Does your body flood with the stress hormones, making you fidget?”
“That’s a no on every count,” she said.  I turned away from the window to look at her.  She elaborated, “My body’s always the same.  Stable, steady, there, but not doing anything except… I dunno.  Maintaining appearances?”
“But you get nervous.”
“My brain gets nervous,” she said.
“I’m not sure that makes sense, but okay,” I replied.  I looked down at the page I’d been rereading for the past twenty minutes, then tossed the book down onto the coffee table.
“You’re onto Demesnes,” she observed, craning her head to peer down.  “Me too.”
“It’s a fitting thing to read up on, here,” I said.  “Making your own sanctuary, while we have enemies gathering at the gates.  It seems like a pretty simple ritual.”
“Deceptively simple,” Rose said.
“Yeah, deceptively simple,” I agreed.  “You stake out the area, the magical equivalent of drawing out your borders and planting a flag, you say a few words, and you invite anyone, everyone and everything that objects to come and challenge you.  Trial by combat, riddles, placating them with deals, whatever you agree on.  The bigger the area you try to claim, the bigger the invitation you broadcast.  They each get to confront you the once, and the ritual ends when there are no challengers left, or when a set amount of time passes.  Claim a space the size of a closet, maybe get five to ten objections.  Claim a house, get fifty.”
Man did I have this backwards from the reddit. I thought it was a safe spot and that wad it. I'm glad i didn't know the full details though!
“I’m thinking that’s one of the last things we want to do,” Rose said.  “When we have a familiar, and when we have an implement, so we have some ability to fight.”
“Except,” I said, “It’s a bit of a catch-22, isn’t it?  The demesne gives us a steady supply of power, with bigger spaces giving us more power.  It’s a sanctuary, and a place where we can bend the rules in our favor.  Right?  So we need a tool or a familiar to lay claim to as big a space as we can pull off.”
“Yes.”
“But we can’t infuse our tool until we have some power to infuse it with,” I said.  “Except…”
“That power would ideally come from the demesne,” Rose said.
I nodded, “Or the familiar, in terms of strength and shaping how the tool functions.  And we can’t start talking with Others about bringing them on board as a familiar until we have some established power already.”
“Necessitating a tool and a claim to some land,” Rose finished for me.  “Each of the three things requires the two others.”
I nodded.  “Or it necessitates a compromise.  We pick one front, we make it easy, like you suggested, go with the bare minimum.  Do one thing badly, use the leverage we gain to do the next thing in a mediocre way, and then use the two things to do really well with the last ritual.”
My pacing resumed, though I had my hands free, and I could stick them in the pockets of my wool hoodie.
Seems like the sort of thing I would never start at any point. I'm too undecisive when it comes to these things haha. I wonder if theres really no way to turn this situation over. Maybe something at the reunion will happen to make people side with him? Althought that wouldnt fir what we know on how many enemies grandma Rose has accumulated over the years. What to do what to do...
“How do the others do it?” Rose asked.  “The Behaims and the Duchamps?”
“They have backup, I imagine,” I said.  “A mom and dad who are willing to sit in on a meeting with a familiar and vouch for them, or maybe even have a familiar arranged from early on or before the kid is born, things ready-made, a space set aside.”
“Magical trust fund kids,” Rose said.
“Basically,” I said.
“What about the North End Sorcerer?”
“What about him?”
“I take it you didn’t read the little black book from cover to cover?  Look him up.”
I shuffled through the tomes to find where I’d put the book. “I was going to read it later, after the major four were done, before the council meeting.”
“You don’t need to make excuses to me,” Rose said.  She had her own copy.  “Um.  Page thirty-two.”
I opened the tiny book.
Johannes Lillegard, believed to be an adopted name.  Practitioner.  The newest arrival in Jacob’s Bell as of August thirteenth, ‘ought-nine, he arrived at the council meeting of said date.  Johannes appears no older than twenty-five, but all facts suggest he claimed his demesne six or more years ago, a region spanning all of Jacob’s Bell, west and north of the hospital as well as the entire expansion north of the bridge.
I paused in my reading there, to ask, “The bridge?”
“The highway,” Rose said.  “It becomes a bridge where it passes over the marshland here.”
I pictured it, then stopped short.  “Wait, the commercial area north of the highway?  With the train station, the shops-”
“-The condos, the mall, the prefab houses, yes.”
“As his demesne?  The book talks about it in the context of rooms, of houses at the most.”
Rose didn’t reply.  When I glanced her way, she was nodding, a serious look joining the general exhaustion on her face.
“There’s a catch there,” I said.  “A drawback.”
“Oh, right, you’re only partway through,” Rose said.  “Demesnes are like trademarks.  Periodically, people are going to test them.  You need to respond, but you have the home court advantage.  The law’s on your side.  But if you claim something that broad, and if you can’t or don’t defend it when someone else puts one foot over the line, that weakens your stance.  But he’s defending it.”
Look at this guy! How many dozens do you call to attention when you try to claim something that big? I imagined the constant contest for desmenes would be a thing, like a pokemon go gym sort of competition. But good to know you have the advantage at first. Must be scary to get called out for that, the person surely must think they have the upper hand to begin with then. Meaning that they must have information that you are not aware that they have.
“How?”
She pointed back at the little black book.
I read.
In conversation with Aimon Behaim and Sandra Duchamp, we mutually agreed that Johannes must have claimed the territory prior to the expansion appearing, though we’re unsure of when this might have been, for none of us to hear the claim or be able to respond to it, nor how he was able to do this at what might have been the age of thirteen or fourteen.  Mara has declined to answer any questions, being more taciturn than her usual,
Johannes seems to bear harsh wounds, no doubt tying back to his ambitious claim, with no use of one eye, one hand and one leg, though the tissues appear undamaged.  He bears a set of antique pipes as his implement, and has a Gatekeeper of the Seventh Ring (ref Astral Bodies: vol 3, and Prime Movers) as his familiar, named Faysal Anwar, which takes the form of a rather large Afghan Hound.
Note: Johannes has made his second appearance at council meetings, February sixth, year two thousand and ten.  Occasion to expand my notes.  Arrogant, and justified in it.  Enigmatic.  He spends almost all of his time within his demesne, stepping outside only to defend his claim and attend occasional meetings.  This makes gathering information hard.  Favors manipulation of space.
Note: Touching up all of my notes, for my soon-to-be heiress.  He is a manipulator, content to bait people and lure them to their doom.  Fitting, given the implement of choice.  He safeguards his demesne by making it a fiefdom, with neighborhoods held by Others and a handful of lesser practitioners.  Stay clear, this is a threat you do not need to face down.
I looked up at Rose.  “He’s powerful, then.”
She said, “He doesn’t have a family.  He had nothing given to him in advance, as far as we know.  But he managed something.”
“Okay,” I said.  “So there are obviously other options.  Approached directly, the situation is filled with contradictions and obstacles, but maybe there’s an oblique answer, like Johannes found?”
So there was NO response. Even more intriguing than him just being powerful. He exploited something, found his loophole and only then became powerful. He is the king from the visions right? I’m pretty sure he is. Wasn’t the city twisted in his "kingdom" though? Hm. He was the one that seemed the most nice towards Blake in those visions. What are his motives then? Helping Blake, befriending him or just taking over enough so that he himself has access to the ‘literal’ nukes?
“Like what I was talking about with the witch hunters,” Rose said.
That again.  I shook my head.
“You’re refusing my ideas too fast,” she said, and the emotion in her voice caught me off guard.  She was irritated, upset.  “Have you even read up on witch hunting, Blake?”
“No,” I said.  “Have you?”
“I can’t.  I need you to rotate the mirror in the study.  Damn it, listen, there are things we can learn to do that don’t rely on familiar, implement or demesne.  Like Laird’s shamanism.”
“Okay,” I said.  “I’m very on board with that.”
“But you aren’t on board with getting the protections witch hunters have?  If anything’s going to get us killed, it’s a knee-jerk reactions and making stupid assumptions.”
“It’s not that I don’t like the idea of protection,” I said.  “But when someone says ‘witch hunter’, it makes me think of hunting things.  Fighting, instead of defense.  And I think that any of those protections we might use as practitioners are going to be found in books for practitioners.  It’s hard enough without overcomplicating it, sifting through all the stuff we can’t use for some tidbits we could find elsewhere.  Can we compromise?  Maybe focus on getting this wizardry crap down, and we’ll look at the witch huntery stuff later, as the side project it is?”
Thats the problem right there isnt it? You cant go on the defensive in this situation, Blake is still holding out to some hope. He is the outside element being thrown into a volatile situation. I already see the escalation coming from miles away.
When I looked at Rose, she was frowning, eyebrows knit.  tapping her hand on some surface in front of her.
We were similar in other ways.  Prone to anger.  But something told me that Rose wasn’t one to actually show or exercise that anger.
Something to watch for, if she was bottling up her stress.  What outlets did she have to vent it, and how would she react if she couldn’t?
“Fine,” she said, in that way that girls were so very good at.  She took a deep breath, then sighed.  Purely for effect, I imagined.  Calmer, she said, “We shelve that idea.  We can use trickery, deception, manipulation, to get our foot in the door, get one of the three major things we need.”
“Agreed,” I said.  “Harder than it sounds, because Others are naturally deceptive and are probably looking out for those tricks.”
“What else?  We could try marshaling forces, like he is.  We need a good rapport with Others to figure out who we might pick for a familiar, right?”
“There’s a problem with that,” I said.  I reached for the mirror, then stopped.  “May I?”
“Yes.”
I lifted the mirror from where I’d hooked it onto the bookcase, then carried it to the window, pushing the curtains apart.  I set the bottom end of the mirror on the windowsill.
There were five more Others than before.  All clustered around the fence.  The rest were still there.  Waiting.
Rose was turned away from me, so I couldn’t see her, and she was silent, leaving me to stand there, presenting our situation.
“That’s the issue, right now.  That’s the biggest complication we’re facing with the rituals, with life in general.  Someone’s done the equivalent of putting a price out on our head, or they said that the usual rules for going after someone in an inhabited area are on hold, for me, or for us,” I said, my voice low.  “We can’t conduct any rituals, because those guys are waiting to fuck us up.”
“That-” Rose started.
Nooo dont get interrupted. I need that knowledge. She recognized someone or something didnt she? I love how her psychology and just how she works in general is being this build-up mystery that is probably going to blow up in my face when she suddenly vanishes forever out of nowhere in a critical momment or something.
She stopped short as a car appeared, parking at the far end of the street, a sign perched on top.
This time, seeing the vehicle approach, I could see how the Others moved out of the way of the headlights.  Stepping literally into shadows, or stepping to a position where they were out of sight.  In the latter case, it looked like they were stepping out of my field of view, to where the fence or columns on either side of the gate were blocking my view, but I felt like they were doing it for everyone that might be looking.  Finding a universal blind spot.
A guy stepped out of the car, holding the insulated bag with the pizza inside.  He crossed the street, and approached the gate.
“Stop him, Blake,” Rose said.
“I want to, but how?”
“I don’t know.  Shout?”
I strode to the front door, hauled it open, and bellowed, “Hey!”
Others appeared from the shadows by the gate, a ‘child’ with his back to the stone column, glancing my way.  Further down the street, I could see the faceless woman with the cigarette appear behind the delivery guy.
He didn’t stop walking.  When he shouted back, I couldn’t make out the words.
“Stop!  I don’t want it!  Go back to the car!”  I hollered.
Again, I couldn’t make out his reply.
I watched as the Others closed in.
I never thought I'd read a scary pizza delivery before.
The ‘little boy’ who’d been scratching himself walked down the street, so short I could barely make him out over the stone wall which bordered the property.
He approached the delivery man head on, not moving out of the way.  When it looked like they might collide, the ‘boy’ hopped up onto the short stone wall.  His hand around the man’s wrist.
A moment later, so fast I couldn’t see it, the boy slammed the delivery guy’s hand down on the railing.  The man screamed, dropping the pizza, hand impaled on the spiked railing that ran along the top of the short wall.  He tried to pull it free, but the ‘boy’ still had a grip on his wrist.
“Hey!”  I shouted.  I stepped out onto the porch.
NO DONT
A girl hopped up, using the man’s knee as a foothold, grabbing the delivery man by the jaw.  She was more monkey than child as she swung up onto the wall.  The momentum of the swing brought his head down and forward, driving it into the top of the railing.
I could hear the sound it made on impact, which said a lot, considering how I hadn’t been able to hear his words.  There was no saying how much was the upper row of teeth breaking on impact with the railing, or the sound of the jaw breaking as it was wrenched down with a sudden weight of the not-little-girl.
The girl let go, walking along the top of the railing, her arms extended to either side, pigtails swinging, the grin the only part of her I could make out beneath the winter clothes, too wide, filled with very white teeth that didn’t match each other.
I could hear his continued screams, now more strangled than they’d been.
I felt cold, paralyzed.  Had I just killed a man, simply by inviting him here?
The faceless woman caught up to him.  Her free hand reached into the back of his head, and I could make out the fingers reaching out the front, moving just beneath the skin, closing together into a fist over one of his eyes.  She moved her hand, leaving the skin bound shut in a knot of flesh, and she closed the other eye in the same manner.
Another movement, nearer the mouth and throat, and the screams were cut off.
Knitting, molding his flesh, almost casually.
My concern was no longer that I’d killed the man.  My concern was that he might live.
“Blake!”  Rose’s voice, from the living room.  “You have to help him!”
No he absolutely does not. Ge the fuck back inside. Dont be a hero. Call the police????(actually maybe don’t???). I mean, Timecop cant be happy his turf is being messed with by people he has not assingned.
I took a step forward, then stopped as the faceless woman continued her work.  Her fingers wriggled and crawled across the man’s scalp, just beneath his skin, burying his hair, reaching down to cover his ears.  Trapping him in his own skin, so his own flesh was a hood over his face.
“Blake!”
I thought back to one idle thought I’d had in the past hours.
The house was a sanctuary against Other and practitioner both.
I glanced around me, then very carefully took a step back through the door, past the threshold and into the house.
Laird had come to the front door.
“He’s dying!”
There were rules.  I couldn’t know which ones still held, here, which ones the locals had called off, while I was a problem.  But there were rules.
I remained where I was, watching.
She held the cigarette aloft, poised as if she might take a puff at any moment, while her other hand pulled free, then plunged into his chest cavity.
The muffled grunts and violent jerks he made in response were worse than the screams.
The talkative one kept chattering, nonstop, the ‘children’ making little sounds of amusement, laughing and cooing.  The others who’d joined in seemed content to watch, standing silently on the fringes.
I watched a car appear, traveling down the street from the opposite direction the delivery guy had come.  The talkative one practically leaped, taking hold of the faceless woman.  His momentum turned her around, and he leaned forward, simultaneously leaning her back, so they were pressed together, their bodies covering their victim.  I could see the talkative one’s face stop an inch from the smudged blur of hers.
The car passed, the headlights illuminating what the people in the car would see as two embraced lovers, kissing at the side of the street.  The remainder were hidden.  I watched as the car reached the end of the road, stopping at a stop sign.
“Blake, salt is a purifying material, cleansing.  It can work against certain Others,” Rose said.  “There’s a ton in the study, if you can’t find any in the kitchen.  Go and throw it at them!”
I didn’t move.
“Blake!  Please!”  She sounded desperate, now.
Make a salt gun. Slingshot the salt. Do not get close. Please Rose stop being so emotional. I do want to know of Blake has a plan, its looking increasingly like he has a plan. Is this deceitful? Not actually happening? The pizza guy over the phone seemed amused by the possibility of this happebing. Maybe its just to fuck with his head and its all going to be reversed soon, memories of the pain and all for the poor delivery guy. That would make much more contextual sense.
The car turned and disappeared out of sight.  The two Others broke apart, and the faceless woman clawed at the talkative one.  Vicious, angry, almost feral.  He gave her only laughs in response, as he ducked out of the way.
The faceless woman gave up and turned back to her victim.  I could see where she’d reached through his chest to grip the railing, fixing him to the metal.
Rose was screaming, now.  “Damn you, Blake!  Damn you!  God!  Fuck!”
She hit the mirror.
The noise Rose was making seemed to get attention.  The talkative one looked up at me.
I slowly shook my head.  I felt physically ill, all expression and utterances choked from me by the feeling of my heart in my throat.
But there was no fucking way I was going out there.
The talkative one said something to the others.
I saw the delivery guy lurch, tearing free in a mess of blood and ripped skin.  His dislocated jaw hung down his teeth a bloody ruin.
He laughed, and it wasn’t a human sound.
When he joined the ‘children’ in cavorting about, I allowed myself to believe it.  He wasn’t human.  He had never been.
An Other, joining the faceless woman in some psychological warfare.
I could hear them laughing, in the two or so seconds it took me to slam the door.
“It was a trick?” Rose asked, as I crossed the room to where I’d left the mirror in the window.  “They-”
I saw a movement immediately before Rose shrieked.  I grabbed the mirror, pulling it away from the window.
The little ‘girl’ with the toothy mouth and the pigtails peeking out from a hat that hid her eyes, hair and ears had appeared just outside the window.  She now scratched at the glass with long fingernails.
“They wanted me outside,” I said.  “The house is a sanctuary, the property isn’t.  Staying behind the railing like they were, it was meant to mislead us.  I might have fallen for it, if Laird hadn’t come all the way to the front door.”
“They’re clever.”
“The book warned us they were.”
“How sure were you?” she asked.  “That he wasn’t human?”
I didn’t answer.  Rose was staring at me, and I avoided her gaze.
Others were scratching and tapping on windows, now.  I heard a scrabbling, as if something was on the porch overhang.
“God,” Rose said.
“This is what Molly was dealing with,” I said, quiet.  My heart was still pounding, my mouth so dry I needed to try three times before I could speak again, but the fear and helplessness were disappearing.  I clenched my fist.  “All on her lonesome.  Hearing things just outside the house, all night.  Nowhere good to go for help.”
“We’re not in a great place either,” Rose said.
“No.  But we have each other,” I said.  “You had my back last night, with Padraic.  I might not have made it home in one piece without that.  Thank you, by the way, if I haven’t already said.”
“You have, twice, but it’s okay.  We’re figuring this out.”
I nodded.  My thoughts were going a mile a minute, but I had trouble saying just what the destinations were.
“What are you thinking?” Rose asked.
“I’m thinking…” I said, trying to sum it up.  “I think we’re almost ready.”
“Ready?”
“We’ve seen what kind of games the practitioners will play.  We’ve seen how the Others function, in part.  We have a sense of what we need to accomplish, and an abstract sense of how.  And maybe it helps a little that I’m a bit scared and a lot angry.”
“You want to awaken,” she said.
I nodded.  “Before the council meeting tomorrow.  Getting a familiar, the tool, and the demesne is something that can wait.”
“Yeah,” she agreed.  “I think we should.  You want to do it now, or do you need to eat first?”
“Two things, first,” I said.  “Eating isn’t one of them.”
I dialed the pizza place again.
“Bell Pizza, what can I do you for?”
“Hi-”
“No,” he said.  “Not doing business with you.”
“It’s about the pizza guy.”
“We never sent anyone.  I asked a driver if he wanted to go, he said he wasn’t delivering to a haunted house.”
The irony being this house was maybe the least haunted locale in Jacob’s Bell.
“I say it isn’t haunted, but it’s owned by you fucks, isn’t it?”
“One of us,” I replied.
“You’re Assholes, all of you, holding all the rest of us back.  You know my brother bought a place here, because this place was supposed to grow?  Except you’re not selling, and it’s losing value every year, needing more repairs.  You-”
These townies are both assholes and fucking stupid. You dont invest in something that is not 100% sure and then blame other people on it. Seriously, goddamn. You were a shit investor, get over it. "How could that rich fanily not sell their mansion, that money was MINE! :(" fuck off. The way these many people are interested in it, it would just end up being communism and everyone getting just a crumb of the pie.
“I just wanted to check the pizza guy wasn’t going to show,” I said, but he was talking over me.
“-off on the power, I think, bullies.  Knowing you’re driving the rest of us into ruin.  You want a fucking pizza?”
“I changed my mind a while ago, remember?”
“Fuck you.  Fuck yourself!  I already talked to the other pizza place.  Don’t expect a thing, until you’ve sold that place.  Fuck you.”
“Fine,” I said.  “It’s just pizza.”
But he’d already hung up.
It’s just pizza, I told myself.
“Fuck,” I said, as my annoyance bubbled to the surface.
“You can’t be surprised.  I mean, you knew people hated you here.”
“The woman at the coffee place was surprisingly respectful of the idea that I might be in mourning,” I said.
“Being a decent person and hating our guts isn’t mutually exclusive,” Rose said.
“Fuck,” I said again, still annoyed.
“It can’t be that big a deal, compared to what just happened outside.”
“You took a shower just a bit ago,” I said.
“Yeah?”
“Sorry to ask, but do you even get dirty, on that side?”
“No,” she said.  “Pretty sure I don’t.  Some dust, but I don’t sweat.”
“I’m guessing you needed to shower to enjoy a mundane comfort,” I said.  “Feel a bit more human.”
“Alright,” Rose said.  “Point taken.  Sorry about your pizza.”
I shrugged.
“I could do with more human comforts myself,” she said.
I nodded, “Something to figure out.  I’ll help any way I can.  But first-”
“Awakening,” Rose said.
I nodded.  “Meet you in the study.”
I took the stairs two at a time.
I’d opened the second secret door on the second floor, which made for a quicker arrival at the lower floor.  The room was far darker without the sunlight from above.
I twisted the knobs of the two lamps that sat on and beside the desk, respectively.  When the room was still too dark around the edges, I lit the oil lamps at the edges.  Each lamp illuminated a slice of the bookcases, cabinets or shelves to either side of them.  Where the lettering on books had been done in foil or a reflective material, the lamplight caught it, highlighting the scripts in a soft orange-yellow, while the books themselves remained dark.
By the time I’d finished, Rose had lit up the room on her side.  The light from behind her made the edges of her clothes and hair glow.
She held a wrought-iron compass, with a spike in one end and chalk embedded in the other.  I watched as she stabbed the floor, then walked in a circle, using the other arm to draw the wide circle in chalk.
She had the curved ruler that she used to measure the distance, then erased a spot.  She was reaching for the compass again when she looked at me.
As the ins and outs of her existance remain a mystery, I didnt think of the possivility of her doing the ritual too. Or needing to do it in any way. Maybe we can get twice the magic power in one person, but I somehow doubt it. I think what counts for Blake counts for Rose.
“Blake?”
“You’re doing the ritual too?”
“If I can,” she said.  “Aren’t you starting?”
“I said there were two things I needed to do first,” I said.
“Phoning the pizza place and…”
I crossed the room, lifting a book free of a shelf, then walked back into Rose’s field of view.
“No, Blake.”
I hefted the book.  Diabolatry, R.D.T.  The black cover was surprisingly flexible and soft, the lettering on the spine and cover were done in gold, catching the lamplight.
“No,” she said again, as if saying it over and over again with increasing intensity might drive it into my head.
“What was it you said?” I asked.  “Stupid knee-jerk assumptions are going to get us killed?”
“I’m all for stupid knee-jerk assumptions when we’re dealing with that.  Laird said they were the mystical equivalent of nuclear missiles.”
“I’m not proposing we use them.  But I want to know what we’re dealing with.”
“Blake.  You know that moment in the horror movies, where you’re screaming at the actors?  ‘Don’t go up the stairs’, ‘don’t touch the glowing skull’?  Don’t read the book.”
Would reading it be that destructive? Or does it only hold such implications of power that it draws you too much into it. Have you already read the book Rose?
I frowned.
“What are you even thinking?”
“That the things outside were horrifying, the faceless woman, the pseudo-faerie we ran into.  So… why are these things so much worse?  What makes them ‘nuclear’?  We’re walking into that meeting, and I can’t help but think that everyone there is going to know exactly what’s going on here, and we’re going to be in the dark.  We can’t afford to look weak or stupid.”
“We are weak and stupid,” Rose said.  “We’re untrained, ignorant, out of the loop, and we don’t have any of the good stuff that practitioners bring to the table.  No tools, no familiars, no demesnes, no tricks or any of that.
“We can’t afford to let on how badly off we are.  Having one tidbit of info we can allude to, to scare the pants off them if we need it-”
“-Is liable to get us killed,” Rose finished for me.  “I get it, wanting to know just what we’re sitting on, but handling the dangerous goods is not the way to find out.”
I hefted the book, feeling its weight.
“Come on,” she said, lowering her voice to be gentler, “I compromised earlier.  Can you do the same?”
“Damn it,” I said.
“Is that a ‘yes’ damn it or a ‘no’ damn it?”
“Yes,” I said.
I moved to put the book on the bookshelf.  A flap of paper caught on the shelf, keeping me from sliding it into place.
When I pulled the book back, the paper dropped.  Fragments of dry wax and a small key danced across the floor.
Folded into thirds, it had been sealed into an envelope of sorts by wax.  The key had apparently been melted into the wax, only to be freed by the impact.
“Leave it,” Rose said.  “Nothing good comes of that.  Sweep it under the desk, ignore it.  Please?”
“I would,” I said, “But wax makes a seal, and that seal just broke.”
“That’s reaching,” Rose said.
“Okay, maybe,” I said.  “But tell me you can’t imagine a drawing of something coming to life and crawling free of that page.”
“Now you’re being manipulative,” Rose said, “Playing to my paranoia.”
“You didn’t answer the question.”
With the way things work in figurative ways and meanings, yes, that is very plausible, but also what a nice little fuck-up we have stumbled on.
“Yes, I can imagine it.  Yes, are you happy?”
I wasn’t.  I picked up the page.  On the backside, there were only two words.
My heiress.
I turned it around.
My heiress,
If you’ve come this far, there must be a pressing need.  You’ve been driven into a corner, or the situation is otherwise dire.  I imagine time may well be paramount.  Remember that haste makes waste, and you must step with utmost care from this point on.
I’ve left you something, or perhaps it is more correct to say I’ve left you someone.  I refer to him as Barbatorem, making a small joke, as I tend to do, but he is an older one, bearing some status and a few stories from years past, with no name of any meaning that has survived the passage of time.  You should be able to find those stories and notes on that status in Dark Names, p. 38.
You’ll find him waiting in the tower room, which you will need the key to enter.  Staying outside the circle is first in your list of things to keep in mind, which I list here because there are no better places to put the warning.  I should hope such obvious things don’t need to be stated.
Do we have a demon in the attic? I think we have a demon in th attic.
Cast aside all notion of manners.  Do not greet him, do not ever say please or thank him.  Do not ask him if he would or could do something.  Give him no food or succor.  There are older meanings in these things and they will either free him or give him power over you.  Sometimes it is very little power, and sometimes it is all the power he needs to achieve his ends.
Put aside all metal and reflective things before entering the tower room, and ensure the space remains dark.  He exists in a more abstract capacity, whatever physical forms he takes, and if his image is cast in a surface, he will exist in that surface, allowing him to step free of that surface and the confines of the circle.  For these same reasons, do not ever look directly at him, even for a moment, lest he be reflected in your eyes.  Rest assured, he will not ever step free once he dwells there.
So, no Rose. Cool. But also very cool concept. Having a demon in your eyes doesn't sound pleasing. Was Grandma so rude because she got too used to interacting to being like this? I think thats far-fetched, but a possible theory
He perceives the passage of time differently than we do.  He’ll be content to sit in the circle I drew out until the sun grows cold.  For him, the conversation is ongoing, and you’ll need to see the notes on his page in Dark Names so you can continue from where I, and each member of our line, left off.  Failure to do so may confuse or irritate him.  In any case, you can come and go, and he’ll see no difference in it.  He does not speak, which led me to use the shorthand for gestures you’ll find on the final page of his entry.  Please maintain those notes consistently, for those who come after you.
So, wait, he cant speak, so you use gestures, but you also cant look at him? I'm thinking that I'm missing something.
If you intend to deal with him, use one of the templates outlined in Dark Contracts, which I left to the right of the desk.  Page 15, 17, 29 and 77 are good places to look, if you find yourself in a hurry.  Do not improvise, for words must be chosen with utmost care.  The final third of the book has recommended terminology with examples, which you can insert into the templates as needed.  Do not trust Mr. Beasley or his firm for assistance.  They are, quite naturally, unreliable on this front.
Failing all else, keep your eyes on the painted circle, stay silent, and keep to the contracts found in my books.  You can consult my texts if you have any further questions.  I regret that I am unable to assist you here,
R.D.T.
“What is it?” Rose asked.  “The look on your face scares me.”
The look on my face?  I touched my face.
“You look like someone just died.”
“No,” I said.  “No.”
I moved to put the letter down on the desk, and it slid off.  I picked it up again, tried to put it on the desk, and the corner of the paper caught, bouncing it out of my hand and back onto the floor.
On the third attempt, I turned it over, examining it under the light.  Sky blue ink on white, barely visible, outlining a script that was reminiscent of the rune that Laird had drawn in sugar.
Holding it firmly in both hands, I set it down on the table, pressing it down in place.  It stayed.
A moment later, as I turned to make sure I’d put the book away properly, I generated a brush of air that sent the letter to the floor again.
Once disturbed, apparently, it was insistent on staying disturbed.
Experimentally, I tore it, a little tear to cross the sky blue symbols.  When I put it down this time, it stayed down.
“You’re scaring me, Blake.”
“She left something behind,” I said.
“Something?”
“Something Other.  Fitting to her particular specialty.  It’s upstairs.”
“No.”  Seeing Rose, I had a sense of how I probably looked.
“I need to check,” I said.
There was no argument this time.  Chances were good she was too stunned to say anything.
The black-painted key in hand, I made my way up the ladder, out the door to the top floor, and then up the staircase to the tower room.
I checked everything, then pulled off my sweatshirt, in case the tab on the zipper counted as reflective.  I swept my hands over my entire body to double-check.
The key clicked in the lock.  I let the door swing open.  When I moved my eyes, I did so with care, keeping to the periphery of the room, then inching closer.
The round window jutted out to my right, with a cushioned bench beneath for sitting on.  Once upon a time, it would have been a good spot for reading.  Now, it was shuttered and locked, with old books stacked on the bench like bricks.  A table sat to my left, stacked with papers that were securely weighed down.
The floor… I saw the circle, painted in white.  ‘Circle’ was perhaps an understatement, given the concentric circles and lines that sprawled across the floor, burdened with embellishment, scripts and geometric shapes, as well as other smaller circles hosting more of the same.
It didn’t take long for my eyes to see it.
A pair of shears, no doubt fallen from the table, impaled a line in the innermost circle of the diagram on the floor.
Nothing stood within.
You could have asked me to theorize, but I would NOT have guessed that the empty thing by the end was to be a summoning circle. Are the shears the problem? Interrupting the symbol? Doesnt it count as reflective? Do we have a demon locked in a useless household object, that would be pretty hilarious. 
I’m thankful that this wasn’t build up then, it really was a last time sort of deal. I’m starting to doubt that the meeting will be had in this Arc, unless this is one of the long ones. Maybe two, three more chapters? I just don’t expect it to be resolved in a single chapter and it would be good to end the Arc with it. I still have yet to discover if this story has Interludes, since I don’t know much about Twig in no way whatsoever and how it tells its story. Maybe the Interlude will be happening in the meeting? Getting one more of those famous “alien” perspectives Wildbow is so good at doing, from an Other, seeing everything from its eyes would be really good to have this early on, for perspective. Seeing how they think. But maybe confusing if overdone. Someone who is FRIENDS with Others or who already knows how they work might be best. Maybe the girl with the Other friend with the big smile. My speculation is that the people in the meeting will all gang up on Blake and it’ll be overwhelming, but one of two characters will show no interest in it, or feign it very well. Someone will start a conflict that will overwhelm the rest of the conversation and just unbalance everything, for our character’s luck. 
NEXT TIME: I intended to post this last week, but sleep schedules, finishing up some university day-job before christmas plus getting further on an  Internship selection process I REALLY didn’t expect to get further on got in the way. Then came festivities and you know the rest. I’ll be going on a trip tomorrow, but I felt that I HAD to squeeze this in somewhere. I’ll be back around the 8th, since the process will be back by then. I have NO IDEA what they’ll have me do and how I’ll manage my time then. But I’ll leave this note here for you and for myself to remind all of you: When I figure out whatever battery of tasks these maniacs will have me do in the middle of my vacation, I will schedule my next liveblog. I’ll be doing as always and bringing with me the next chapter (Bonds 1.7) with me on my cellphone, doing notes as I read it, which will be posted as soon as I either finish it or have internet (I’ll be in the middle of the woods, if everything goes right, from the 29th to the 5th). I hope you all had a VERY demon-free Christmas or any other religious or comercial festivities you partake in, and that you have the gayest new year. See you all in 2018!!!
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