08-19-2015, 03:27 PM
Part 1
2015 August
Denver, CO
Sam was beginning to realize that if he wanted to avoid his landlord on the first of the month then he either needed to start running from the stairwell to the apartment door or he needed to ward the apartment door right out of recognition.
In the landlord's defense it wasn't as if this particular tenant were here on legal terms but so far as he could tell this particular tenant had submitted an application and a deposit with first month's rent when he moved in three months ago. This particular tenant had. The application had been a forgery and the deposit with first month's rent had been also. Easy enough to conjure up a driver's license or a money order once he got the hang of the program but what he hadn't accounted for was the fact that his paperwork had a tendency to disappear. Same as his face had a tendency to fade from memory.
His landlord couldn't remember his name and even if he had Sam had given him a fake name anyway. No one in the building had done much more than pass him in the hallway and grunt out a cursory greeting or ask him for money if they acknowledged him at all but the landlord came around every month to shake down the folks he didn't trust yet.
The key had just scraped into the lock when from down the corridor came:
"TWO-OH-FIVE. MISTER TWO-OH-FIVE."
Couldn't remember his name or provide an accurate description of the young man but Mr. Kim could remember which room he was in. Sam was not in the mood to stand and have the same conversation he had had the month before with the guy. He grit his teeth and twisted the key back out of the lock and put it into his pocket.
Downstairs a laundromat cranked hot air out into an already hot afternoon and through the open windows crawled the sound of foot traffic. People chattering in English and Spanish and Mandarin Chinese. Sam did not understand the Mandarin but he was working on it. The carpet in the hall was new as of just after the vernal equinox but the stench lingered. He felt the urge to pace back and forth in front of the door before entering. Not sure if he could blame the awareness of the stink of the hall or on the landlord's presence but he forced a smile and turned to face the man anyway.
"Mister Kim," he said. "Hi. I know, I'll have it to you later today."
"Why are you wearing a jacket?" Kim asked. A head shorter than Sam and well into his forties he owned the apartments and the laundromat downstairs. His parents were immigrants and this had been their operation before they died six months apart several years ago. Sam had looked him up before he decided to forge an application. Before they had met the first time. He was a busy man and nothing terrible had popped up but Sam felt better about the entire arrangement knowing the man did not hurt for money. "It's ninety degrees outside, you've got to be broiling."
"I'm fine. I..." Sam cleared his throat. "I run cold."
"Great." Junkie, he didn't say. Sam knew that tone anyway. "So you have the money?"
"Yes, sir, I just need to go to the post office. I'll slide it under the door soon as I have it."
"You'd better get moving," Kim said. Checked his wristwatch. "It's already two o'clock."
"Yes, sir."
"Alright."
The two men stood in the hall with the weight of the moment dispersing. Expectation from one and anticipation in the other. Not until Kim turned and began to walk down the hall towards the next door did Sam release the breath he had been holding. Ran his palms over his hair nervous useless gesture and then he paced.
Four circuits unbroken back and forth in front of the door. No one saw him do this. He preferred for no one to see him do this. Outside on the sidewalk he didn't give himself much choice but neither did the world notice much. Pacing was a quiet form of indulgence and it eased the itching of his madness.
After the fourth circuit he reached into his pocket and removed the key. Unlocked the door. Checked the hallway both directions before he stepped inside and shut the door harder than he meant to.
Behind him the studio apartment yawned. He felt the change in pressure same as he would have passing through an airlock. Safety and solitude their own atmospheric conditions and even in here he had his rituals of approach to perform but once he threw the deadbolt and threaded the chain into its slot he felt a measure of assurance. A sanctum becomes a sanctum through use and effort and this was a poor excuse for a sanctum but he was learning.
Keys he put into a small ceramic bowl filled with loose change and small bottles of hand sanitizer. He plucked up one of the bottles and squeezed gel onto his hands and put the bottle back. Walked from the door to the computer desk rubbing the gel into his skin and thinking. He had not lost track of time. He still had several days to appease Kim. Last month he had not put the money order under his door until the third of the month but Kim had hounded him last month too.
The windows in the unit faced the parking lot in the back of the building and he kept them closed. Same as the stench of new carpet assailed him so did fresh asphalt and burnt tire rubber and hot garbage and human vomit come in through the window. He could imagine the particles of other people's carelessness floating in on a breeze. Easier to keep the windows shut and run an air conditioner. The air conditioner was broken when he found it in the closet but a bit of jury-rigging fixed it. Now it churned and occasionally dripped water onto the floor. He used it to water his cactus. The cactus didn't give a shit from where the water came.
All of the windows were closed up tight and with the exception of the one housing the air conditioner the shades were drawn down tight too. No sunlight came in and when the earth's rotation took away daylight he turned on a floor lamp tucked in the corner where the living area gave way to the kitchen. The only other furniture in the unit was an air mattress he had stolen from a big box store and a bookcase he had made out of cinder blocks and lengths of wood. Those he had not stolen. Not technically. The construction site where he had found them had stood abandoned for weeks.
Before he sat down at the desk he turned on the television occupying the middle run of the bookcase. It didn't boast the strongest reception but it picked up local news and the anchors' voices provided a white noise for him to ignore as he worked. The desk itself was two desks he wrangled together. With all the monitors running the room behind him glowed in the pale light.
On one of the screens he had left open a series of programs he was writing. They would test the strength of the local Gauntlet and locate spirits in the area. Thus far he had only encountered spirits on the Digital Web and they had ignored him. It felt to him like walking as a ghost among survivors. Easy to lose track of time on the Digital Web and easier still when he was in pursuit of new knowledge.
He preferred not to use the Digital Web to crack into the cosmos and make it do what he wanted it to do. It was a greater challenge to do it here in the apartment.
On another screen ran the Dark Net. Email notifications popped up with such random regularity that Sam had learned long ago to ignore them until he was ready to respond. He glimpsed his inbox as he plugged his phone into its charger and set it aside and then he awakened the middle console.
He pulled a length of scrap paper out of a desk drawer and set it on the table. Eyeballed its measurements and weight and began to type on the keyboard. Focus on the clicking of the letters rather than the newscasters' banter. They were talking about an upcoming exhibit at the Botanic Gardens laughing and he wasn't listening. Maybe he should have been listening.
At first the effect began to take shape as if it would then take hold. Plain white paper began to take on the coloration and watermarking of a money order. But then he hit the wrong keystroke. Changed the wrong element in the paper. It ignited in blue flame and Sam did not have time to react to the paper's combustion because something inside his head popped and white pain rang in his ears.
Though he cried out nothing came of it. His neighbors made more noise than he ever could and it was the middle of the day besides. Sam put a hand over his eyes like that would keep his brains inside his skull and when he took his hand away and looked at the room the spirits of stolen time swarmed on the wall behind the computer desk wispy smoke and faraway lighthouse bright coiling up towards the ceiling roiling and roiling like the paper had caught the entire desk. He shook his head and the fire went out and
came a voice from behind him the echo of a door closed and he jumped to his feet and turned around to face the door and he felt then strong as he'd ever felt anything in his life that if he went to the door whoever was behind the door would throw it open and that would be the end of all of this he might've left a window open he went into the kitchen to check they could not come in through the fire escape and the newscaster on the television laughed
and he could mutter shut up shut up shut up all he wanted but the devil in the box wouldn't listen anyway and he did not want to touch the blinds to check the fire escape so he stood in the kitchen listening to the water drip sense into a small pool at his feet and when he glanced down he saw the pool glowing red glanced up again
and he veered away from the window walked back into the den and the presence behind the door grew heavy pregnant aware of him he held his breath and he knew it was aware of him and when he reached out to turn off the monitor the red dripped from his palm made a new pool by the bookcase and he put his finger beneath his nose to test the flow
another voice and he slapped off the television with a stained hand went into the bathroom threw on the light the echo of a closing door bounding after him
"Oh my god, stop. Sam, your hands are bleeding, stop."
Amanita grabbed his wrists and held them apart until he jerked them out of her grip. That was six months ago. Sam stared at her and then he reached behind her to close the door again.
The dying lightbulb flickered overhead and burned on for the time being.
---
Sam @ 1:16AM
ALRIGHT. matter/prime: gotta pay the rent. vulgar = diff 6. only thing he has going for him here is he's taking his time.
Roll: 2 d10 TN5 (6, 8) ( success x 2 )
Sam @ 1:16AM
extension +1
Roll: 2 d10 TN6 (1, 4) ( botch x 1 )
Sam @ 1:16AM
YOU MADE THIS SO EASY SAMIR THANK YOU.
Sam @ 1:23AM
Intelligence + Enigmas: A WILD PRONE TO QUIET APPEARS.
... which he can't even roll bc I didn't give him Enigmas OH MY GOD SAM I'M SO SORRY YOU'RE GOING INTO QUIET OVER FOUR POINTS OF PARADOX YOUR LIFE SUCKS SO HARD.
Sam @ 1:25AM
Paradox: BASHING TIME.
Roll: 4 d10 TN6 (7, 8, 8, 9) ( success x 4 )
Sam @ 1:25AM
... are you serious. SOAK.
Roll: 4 d10 TN6 (1, 4, 7, 7) ( success x 2 )
Jacqui!
3:29 LOL
3:29 Poor Samir!
3:30 Also did you need me to yell WITNESSED cuz I can
2015 August
Denver, CO
Sam was beginning to realize that if he wanted to avoid his landlord on the first of the month then he either needed to start running from the stairwell to the apartment door or he needed to ward the apartment door right out of recognition.
In the landlord's defense it wasn't as if this particular tenant were here on legal terms but so far as he could tell this particular tenant had submitted an application and a deposit with first month's rent when he moved in three months ago. This particular tenant had. The application had been a forgery and the deposit with first month's rent had been also. Easy enough to conjure up a driver's license or a money order once he got the hang of the program but what he hadn't accounted for was the fact that his paperwork had a tendency to disappear. Same as his face had a tendency to fade from memory.
His landlord couldn't remember his name and even if he had Sam had given him a fake name anyway. No one in the building had done much more than pass him in the hallway and grunt out a cursory greeting or ask him for money if they acknowledged him at all but the landlord came around every month to shake down the folks he didn't trust yet.
The key had just scraped into the lock when from down the corridor came:
"TWO-OH-FIVE. MISTER TWO-OH-FIVE."
Couldn't remember his name or provide an accurate description of the young man but Mr. Kim could remember which room he was in. Sam was not in the mood to stand and have the same conversation he had had the month before with the guy. He grit his teeth and twisted the key back out of the lock and put it into his pocket.
Downstairs a laundromat cranked hot air out into an already hot afternoon and through the open windows crawled the sound of foot traffic. People chattering in English and Spanish and Mandarin Chinese. Sam did not understand the Mandarin but he was working on it. The carpet in the hall was new as of just after the vernal equinox but the stench lingered. He felt the urge to pace back and forth in front of the door before entering. Not sure if he could blame the awareness of the stink of the hall or on the landlord's presence but he forced a smile and turned to face the man anyway.
"Mister Kim," he said. "Hi. I know, I'll have it to you later today."
"Why are you wearing a jacket?" Kim asked. A head shorter than Sam and well into his forties he owned the apartments and the laundromat downstairs. His parents were immigrants and this had been their operation before they died six months apart several years ago. Sam had looked him up before he decided to forge an application. Before they had met the first time. He was a busy man and nothing terrible had popped up but Sam felt better about the entire arrangement knowing the man did not hurt for money. "It's ninety degrees outside, you've got to be broiling."
"I'm fine. I..." Sam cleared his throat. "I run cold."
"Great." Junkie, he didn't say. Sam knew that tone anyway. "So you have the money?"
"Yes, sir, I just need to go to the post office. I'll slide it under the door soon as I have it."
"You'd better get moving," Kim said. Checked his wristwatch. "It's already two o'clock."
"Yes, sir."
"Alright."
The two men stood in the hall with the weight of the moment dispersing. Expectation from one and anticipation in the other. Not until Kim turned and began to walk down the hall towards the next door did Sam release the breath he had been holding. Ran his palms over his hair nervous useless gesture and then he paced.
Four circuits unbroken back and forth in front of the door. No one saw him do this. He preferred for no one to see him do this. Outside on the sidewalk he didn't give himself much choice but neither did the world notice much. Pacing was a quiet form of indulgence and it eased the itching of his madness.
After the fourth circuit he reached into his pocket and removed the key. Unlocked the door. Checked the hallway both directions before he stepped inside and shut the door harder than he meant to.
Behind him the studio apartment yawned. He felt the change in pressure same as he would have passing through an airlock. Safety and solitude their own atmospheric conditions and even in here he had his rituals of approach to perform but once he threw the deadbolt and threaded the chain into its slot he felt a measure of assurance. A sanctum becomes a sanctum through use and effort and this was a poor excuse for a sanctum but he was learning.
Keys he put into a small ceramic bowl filled with loose change and small bottles of hand sanitizer. He plucked up one of the bottles and squeezed gel onto his hands and put the bottle back. Walked from the door to the computer desk rubbing the gel into his skin and thinking. He had not lost track of time. He still had several days to appease Kim. Last month he had not put the money order under his door until the third of the month but Kim had hounded him last month too.
The windows in the unit faced the parking lot in the back of the building and he kept them closed. Same as the stench of new carpet assailed him so did fresh asphalt and burnt tire rubber and hot garbage and human vomit come in through the window. He could imagine the particles of other people's carelessness floating in on a breeze. Easier to keep the windows shut and run an air conditioner. The air conditioner was broken when he found it in the closet but a bit of jury-rigging fixed it. Now it churned and occasionally dripped water onto the floor. He used it to water his cactus. The cactus didn't give a shit from where the water came.
All of the windows were closed up tight and with the exception of the one housing the air conditioner the shades were drawn down tight too. No sunlight came in and when the earth's rotation took away daylight he turned on a floor lamp tucked in the corner where the living area gave way to the kitchen. The only other furniture in the unit was an air mattress he had stolen from a big box store and a bookcase he had made out of cinder blocks and lengths of wood. Those he had not stolen. Not technically. The construction site where he had found them had stood abandoned for weeks.
Before he sat down at the desk he turned on the television occupying the middle run of the bookcase. It didn't boast the strongest reception but it picked up local news and the anchors' voices provided a white noise for him to ignore as he worked. The desk itself was two desks he wrangled together. With all the monitors running the room behind him glowed in the pale light.
On one of the screens he had left open a series of programs he was writing. They would test the strength of the local Gauntlet and locate spirits in the area. Thus far he had only encountered spirits on the Digital Web and they had ignored him. It felt to him like walking as a ghost among survivors. Easy to lose track of time on the Digital Web and easier still when he was in pursuit of new knowledge.
He preferred not to use the Digital Web to crack into the cosmos and make it do what he wanted it to do. It was a greater challenge to do it here in the apartment.
On another screen ran the Dark Net. Email notifications popped up with such random regularity that Sam had learned long ago to ignore them until he was ready to respond. He glimpsed his inbox as he plugged his phone into its charger and set it aside and then he awakened the middle console.
He pulled a length of scrap paper out of a desk drawer and set it on the table. Eyeballed its measurements and weight and began to type on the keyboard. Focus on the clicking of the letters rather than the newscasters' banter. They were talking about an upcoming exhibit at the Botanic Gardens laughing and he wasn't listening. Maybe he should have been listening.
At first the effect began to take shape as if it would then take hold. Plain white paper began to take on the coloration and watermarking of a money order. But then he hit the wrong keystroke. Changed the wrong element in the paper. It ignited in blue flame and Sam did not have time to react to the paper's combustion because something inside his head popped and white pain rang in his ears.
Though he cried out nothing came of it. His neighbors made more noise than he ever could and it was the middle of the day besides. Sam put a hand over his eyes like that would keep his brains inside his skull and when he took his hand away and looked at the room the spirits of stolen time swarmed on the wall behind the computer desk wispy smoke and faraway lighthouse bright coiling up towards the ceiling roiling and roiling like the paper had caught the entire desk. He shook his head and the fire went out and
you might not want to say that to the next person you sleep with
came a voice from behind him the echo of a door closed and he jumped to his feet and turned around to face the door and he felt then strong as he'd ever felt anything in his life that if he went to the door whoever was behind the door would throw it open and that would be the end of all of this he might've left a window open he went into the kitchen to check they could not come in through the fire escape and the newscaster on the television laughed
you are the chosen one. jesus is dead. god is dead. slice. slice it. slice your flesh. do you want them to hurt? do you want your brothers and sisters to hurt?
and he could mutter shut up shut up shut up all he wanted but the devil in the box wouldn't listen anyway and he did not want to touch the blinds to check the fire escape so he stood in the kitchen listening to the water drip sense into a small pool at his feet and when he glanced down he saw the pool glowing red glanced up again
hurt yourself. do it. they're coming to kill you. they're going to kill you, sam. sam. sam are you listening to me? samir lakhani. they're coming for you. jump. jump out the window. they're coming. they're coming for you.
and he veered away from the window walked back into the den and the presence behind the door grew heavy pregnant aware of him he held his breath and he knew it was aware of him and when he reached out to turn off the monitor the red dripped from his palm made a new pool by the bookcase and he put his finger beneath his nose to test the flow
you're bleeding. your hands are bleeding.
another voice and he slapped off the television with a stained hand went into the bathroom threw on the light the echo of a closing door bounding after him
"Oh my god, stop. Sam, your hands are bleeding, stop."
Amanita grabbed his wrists and held them apart until he jerked them out of her grip. That was six months ago. Sam stared at her and then he reached behind her to close the door again.
The dying lightbulb flickered overhead and burned on for the time being.
---
Sam @ 1:16AM
ALRIGHT. matter/prime: gotta pay the rent. vulgar = diff 6. only thing he has going for him here is he's taking his time.
Roll: 2 d10 TN5 (6, 8) ( success x 2 )
Sam @ 1:16AM
extension +1
Roll: 2 d10 TN6 (1, 4) ( botch x 1 )
Sam @ 1:16AM
YOU MADE THIS SO EASY SAMIR THANK YOU.
Sam @ 1:23AM
Intelligence + Enigmas: A WILD PRONE TO QUIET APPEARS.
... which he can't even roll bc I didn't give him Enigmas OH MY GOD SAM I'M SO SORRY YOU'RE GOING INTO QUIET OVER FOUR POINTS OF PARADOX YOUR LIFE SUCKS SO HARD.
Sam @ 1:25AM
Paradox: BASHING TIME.
Roll: 4 d10 TN6 (7, 8, 8, 9) ( success x 4 )
Sam @ 1:25AM
... are you serious. SOAK.
Roll: 4 d10 TN6 (1, 4, 7, 7) ( success x 2 )
Jacqui!
3:29 LOL
3:29 Poor Samir!
3:30 Also did you need me to yell WITNESSED cuz I can
Look. I have school. And RP. And all my other time is taken up by sheer, unreasoning panic. I don't have time for Reddit.
-- ixphaelaeon
-- ixphaelaeon