The Cinderella Man
08-01-09, 06:14 PM
Left 4 Dead (The First Wave)
((Open to three))
There was no end to them.
In his right Aicha smoldered like a freshly lit cigar, tireless in this waltz of death and fireworks that overtook the street. She sang her thunderous song over and over again, spewing bullets on the oncoming sacks of flesh that used to be human, but even that wasn’t enough. For every one that she perforated and left bleeding on the pavement, three more popped up, heedless to the fate of their kin. They moved like puppets on a set of strings, languid and clumsy, with a set of eyes that looked at him like a ravenous man would look at a freshly baked roast. Some tripped and fell, some dropped down to feed on the flesh of their fallen brethren, but there was so fucking many of them that it didn’t matter. They were a tide of clammy limbs and gapping maws, ready to sink their teeth into anything juicier than a piece of rock.
It was a little bit like being stuck in a story, Victor thought as he replaced the magazine of his pistol with his eyes on the encroaching mob advancing through the benighted street, the kind that someone told by a campfire in the middle of the night. He didn’t like that thought, though, or the train that carried it. Folk in those stories usually wound up chopped up, torn apart or cooked in a large pot with a bunch of crazies dancing around. And while the ex-boxer didn’t value his life a whole lot these days, he was pretty damn certain that he didn’t want to end up as the main course on a zombie festival in some back alley of the Radasanth’s Slums.
Yes, zombies, that’s what he believed they were called. He didn’t know much about the lore or whatever, but he had overheard enough barroom stories told by adventurers that dealt with monsters and he was pretty sure this is what they talked about. Slow, brainless, hungry, very resistant to damage, check, check, check and check. Now if only he could remember what they had said about killing the goddamned things. Alas, Victor Callahan was a boxer and boxers got hit in the head a lot and thus seldom have a very good memory. Not that he particularly needed the info right now. The fact of the matter was that he didn’t have nearly enough bullets to fight off this rapidly growing stampede (an agonizingly slow stampede, but still). So he ran.
And Victor bloody hated running. It had nothing to do with his hurt pride or male bravado, though. It was simply that he wasn’t built for running. He was always a slugger, a bludgeoner, somebody who relied mostly on his strength to get the job done. As such, he could probably punch a bull in the head and get away with it, but he couldn’t run in a straight line for more than five hundred yards before he was puffing like an overloaded steamboat. So some four hundred paces and a couple of nondescript alleys later, he was standing below one of the street lamps, breathing the fire out of his lungs and staring down the end of a long avenue. It was quiet. Too quiet. It wasn’t that late in the night. There should still be people around, hookers parading their damaged goods, shady hooded creeps with twitchy fingers, and maybe even a patrolman or two that lost his way from the Bazaar District about half a mile north. But there was no one. Only the growing stench of death, the sourly sweet reek of rotting flesh and spilled blood. Something terrible has happened, and it happened fast.
Hours ago he had been in Saddle Ablaze, a puffed up whorehouse that was easy on the eyes and heavy on the wallet. Victor didn’t care much about the money (and didn’t have that much money to care about anyways), but he always seemed to scrounge enough for a brew or three. Combined with the half-naked chicks dancing around and smiling like you’re the last man on earth and they all wanted to procreate, it made all the life’s shit easier to swallow. But somewhere around the third beer things went to hell in a hand basket. He remembered windows being smashed, girls screaming, bloody faces and crooked teeth and Aicha banging her deadly drum and recoiling like an untamed stallion. Five of them made it out of the madness of the bar, a pair of showgirls severely underdressed for what awaited them (Kitty and Amber their names, Victor gave Kitty his coat), the fat barkeep with his club adequately dubbed The Bouncer, a gentleman wearing a suit and sporting a monocle (who pissed his overpaid pants the moment they stepped out of the frying pan of the bar and into the fire of madness outside) and a grizzled old prizefighter. For all he knew, they were all dead now except for him. He saw the barkeep go down and Amber pulled into the darkness and the lanky business man cowering behind some garbage cans, but that was about it. He lost sight of Kitty somewhere between the third and fourth corner they veered around. He missed her. He missed his coat.
He needed some kind of a plan, even he wasn’t thick enough to disregard that little fact. Locking himself up in some house wasn’t a bad idea, but it sounded more like postponing the inevitable and less like a solution. No, he needed to get out of here and fast, needed to get out of Radasanth and keep going east until people around him are eating turnips and not faces. But that wasn’t a feat he could accomplish alone. He needed some support and the nearby barracks of the Radasanth Watch was a good place to start looking for one. Abandoning running for the time being, Victor moved through the streets at a hurried pace, Aicha cocked and ready at his side.
((Yes, the zombie cliché. I just want to kill some stuff and have some brainless fun, so let's for once not worry about extensive storylines and whatnot. Only one thing to keep in mind really. If you go inactive, your character gets left behind. And gets his brainz eated!! ;)))
((Open to three))
There was no end to them.
In his right Aicha smoldered like a freshly lit cigar, tireless in this waltz of death and fireworks that overtook the street. She sang her thunderous song over and over again, spewing bullets on the oncoming sacks of flesh that used to be human, but even that wasn’t enough. For every one that she perforated and left bleeding on the pavement, three more popped up, heedless to the fate of their kin. They moved like puppets on a set of strings, languid and clumsy, with a set of eyes that looked at him like a ravenous man would look at a freshly baked roast. Some tripped and fell, some dropped down to feed on the flesh of their fallen brethren, but there was so fucking many of them that it didn’t matter. They were a tide of clammy limbs and gapping maws, ready to sink their teeth into anything juicier than a piece of rock.
It was a little bit like being stuck in a story, Victor thought as he replaced the magazine of his pistol with his eyes on the encroaching mob advancing through the benighted street, the kind that someone told by a campfire in the middle of the night. He didn’t like that thought, though, or the train that carried it. Folk in those stories usually wound up chopped up, torn apart or cooked in a large pot with a bunch of crazies dancing around. And while the ex-boxer didn’t value his life a whole lot these days, he was pretty damn certain that he didn’t want to end up as the main course on a zombie festival in some back alley of the Radasanth’s Slums.
Yes, zombies, that’s what he believed they were called. He didn’t know much about the lore or whatever, but he had overheard enough barroom stories told by adventurers that dealt with monsters and he was pretty sure this is what they talked about. Slow, brainless, hungry, very resistant to damage, check, check, check and check. Now if only he could remember what they had said about killing the goddamned things. Alas, Victor Callahan was a boxer and boxers got hit in the head a lot and thus seldom have a very good memory. Not that he particularly needed the info right now. The fact of the matter was that he didn’t have nearly enough bullets to fight off this rapidly growing stampede (an agonizingly slow stampede, but still). So he ran.
And Victor bloody hated running. It had nothing to do with his hurt pride or male bravado, though. It was simply that he wasn’t built for running. He was always a slugger, a bludgeoner, somebody who relied mostly on his strength to get the job done. As such, he could probably punch a bull in the head and get away with it, but he couldn’t run in a straight line for more than five hundred yards before he was puffing like an overloaded steamboat. So some four hundred paces and a couple of nondescript alleys later, he was standing below one of the street lamps, breathing the fire out of his lungs and staring down the end of a long avenue. It was quiet. Too quiet. It wasn’t that late in the night. There should still be people around, hookers parading their damaged goods, shady hooded creeps with twitchy fingers, and maybe even a patrolman or two that lost his way from the Bazaar District about half a mile north. But there was no one. Only the growing stench of death, the sourly sweet reek of rotting flesh and spilled blood. Something terrible has happened, and it happened fast.
Hours ago he had been in Saddle Ablaze, a puffed up whorehouse that was easy on the eyes and heavy on the wallet. Victor didn’t care much about the money (and didn’t have that much money to care about anyways), but he always seemed to scrounge enough for a brew or three. Combined with the half-naked chicks dancing around and smiling like you’re the last man on earth and they all wanted to procreate, it made all the life’s shit easier to swallow. But somewhere around the third beer things went to hell in a hand basket. He remembered windows being smashed, girls screaming, bloody faces and crooked teeth and Aicha banging her deadly drum and recoiling like an untamed stallion. Five of them made it out of the madness of the bar, a pair of showgirls severely underdressed for what awaited them (Kitty and Amber their names, Victor gave Kitty his coat), the fat barkeep with his club adequately dubbed The Bouncer, a gentleman wearing a suit and sporting a monocle (who pissed his overpaid pants the moment they stepped out of the frying pan of the bar and into the fire of madness outside) and a grizzled old prizefighter. For all he knew, they were all dead now except for him. He saw the barkeep go down and Amber pulled into the darkness and the lanky business man cowering behind some garbage cans, but that was about it. He lost sight of Kitty somewhere between the third and fourth corner they veered around. He missed her. He missed his coat.
He needed some kind of a plan, even he wasn’t thick enough to disregard that little fact. Locking himself up in some house wasn’t a bad idea, but it sounded more like postponing the inevitable and less like a solution. No, he needed to get out of here and fast, needed to get out of Radasanth and keep going east until people around him are eating turnips and not faces. But that wasn’t a feat he could accomplish alone. He needed some support and the nearby barracks of the Radasanth Watch was a good place to start looking for one. Abandoning running for the time being, Victor moved through the streets at a hurried pace, Aicha cocked and ready at his side.
((Yes, the zombie cliché. I just want to kill some stuff and have some brainless fun, so let's for once not worry about extensive storylines and whatnot. Only one thing to keep in mind really. If you go inactive, your character gets left behind. And gets his brainz eated!! ;)))