Fiction

Tuesday Tales: Relocated

I’ve decided to move the Tuesday Tales series over to Ideology of Madness. I think there’s a wider audience for the fantasy/horror genre there, and the darkness of AAD seemed a bit out of place here.

Site navigation is different at IoM, but on the front page there’s a “Columns” drop-down menu. Select “Tuesday Tales” and it’ll take you straight to The Perils Of Casey.

If you were enjoying the story, do follow it there. It is one crazy thrill ride once it gets rolling.

Categories: Austin After Dark, Fiction, Gaming, Role-Playing Games, Tuesday Tales, vampires | Leave a comment

Tuesday Tales: Life’s Little Surprises, Part 3

What Is This?

Part 1

Part 2

PART 3:

Story, Setting and Brandon Falco: Aron Head.
Casey Gavin: Me

**********

Falco’s words sank in slowly. He wanted to come with her…wanted to take her somewhere.

That was not going to happen.

Casey scrambled for the truck door and her keys at the same time, panic making her clumsy. The one thought in her mind was leaving this whole mess behind, preferably in one piece.

Concern etched Falco’s face.  He made no further moves. He only said, “I won’t force my assistance on you, Casey, but you’re safer with me than without.”

She slammed the truck door, slid the lock firmly home. Turned the key in the ignition…it chugged to life on the third try. Only after those things were accomplished did she roll the window down about five inches and face him again. “Safer from what? What the hell is happening here?” She tried to sound strong, in control, but to her own ears her voice sounded scared and angry and unsteady.

“These two are…were members of a coven of vampires. I sense that this exchange was observed. Their survivors will come looking for you. Forgive me, Casey, but I have not made things easier for you by dispatching your assailants. You’ve seen that I can handle them. As resourceful as you are, you cannot. Not yet, anyway. Come with me. Let us at least…discuss your options.” Concern was apparent on his face.

With the steel solidity of the truck door between them, Casey’s natural composure was beginning to return. “No offense, Mr. Falco,” she said steadily in her rural drawl, “But from what I’ve seen tonight, you look more dangerous than anything else that might be out there.”

“That’s fair,” he said in a calming voice. “You’re right to be wary. But your experience of me should communicate to you that I’ve never wished you harm. If I had, I certainly could have by now.” He gestured to the decapitated bodies lying about.

She didn’t look at them. She was pretty sure they’d be haunting her nightmares for weeks to come; she didn’t need to see them again.

It was true though…Mr. Falco had been a regular at The Longhorn for some time. If he wanted…anything from her, he’d had plenty of chances before now. It was obvious that she’d have been no match for him in a struggle. She stared helplessly at him. I can’t read you. I don’t know what you want from me.

She heard a voice in her mind: ::I only want to help::

Casey drew a small, startled gasp. She’d never been able to read Falco — he’d always been closed off to her telepathy. But he’d just read her own thoughts, and sent a response as if there were nothing unusual about it.

That changed things. Didn’t it? She’d never met another telepath before; the chance to finally talk about it with someone who would understand was unexpectedly appealing. She wavered, tempted but cautious. “Tell me why I should trust you.”

“Because…” he sighed, “…A long time ago, I used to be just like you.”

She thought about that for a minute, then reached over and unlocked the passenger side door. “What does that mean, just like me?”

“I could read minds. Most people, anyway. I know what you’re feeling… the wonder of these abilities. They are exhilarating. I can help you develop them, hone them. All you have to do is trust me.”

His offer appealed directly to the sense of excitement that had brought her to Austin in the first place. The desire to develop her telepathy was the whole reason she’d left the quiet ranch life and become a bartender in the city.

Her brain still told her that inviting an obviously practiced killer into her truck in an isolated parking lot at 3am was a bad idea. And yet her gut impulse was to trust him. There was something indefinably reassuring about Falco, in spite of his very disturbing method of dealing with her would-be attackers. After a few minutes’ reflection, she nodded slowly. “Hop in.” She gestured toward the passenger-side door.

He slipped into the passenger seat, with a pleased smile.

“So where are we going?”

“To save a friend’s life.” He motioned for her to drive. As she did so, she sensed… a cloud of power swirling about him. It was almost an audible buzz in her ears. His eyes were closed, deep in concentration. “Make a left here,” he said without looking.

She turned left, thinking hard. It was beginning to sink in that all the things she’d seen Falco do that night were just a highly advanced version of her own fledgeling skills. Convincing someone that they were on fire wasn’t really all that different from convincing them they wanted to go home and sleep off a bellyful of liquor…it was just a different degree of power. With effort, she could lift a book or a baseball telekinetically — it was reasonable to think that someday she might be able to raise a person off the ground with just the power of her mind.

Casey had to admit, there was a certain thrill to the idea.

She glanced over at Falco, his power an almost-visible corona surrounding him, and felt a sudden, intense desire to learn what he knew.

Turning her attention back to the road, she wondered again where they were going. To save a friend’s life, he’d said. She sincerely hoped it wouldn’t involve more beheadings. After several long minutes of silent driving, she said aloud, “I’ve heard of these vampire cults. Pretty strange, aren’t they? I think they watched too many Bela Lugosi flicks when they were kids.”

He sighed, and she felt the cloud of power disperse. He nodded his head with satisfaction, “We’re clear.” He looked about, then: “There are some things you need to accept sooner rather than later. There are fantastic, wonderful, and awful things in this world. Some are dreamlike in their beauty, others are straight out of nightmare. And they are all real. Vampires are real. They are not at all like what you have seen in the cinema. They are as diverse a lot as humanity. There are good ones and bad ones. The two men I killed tonight are bad ones.

“They are real. Wrap your brain around that.”

She kept her eyes glued to the road while he spoke, her hands icy cold on the wheel, the knot back in the pit of her stomach. It was too much to take in all in one night. The very concept of real vampires seemed ludicrous — what was next, werewolves? zombies? — and yet Falco clearly believed what he was saying. Finally she said quietly, “I’ll try. I don’t know.” It was the best she could do at the moment.

He nodded, “I understand… You’re only now glimpsing the veil on the verge of piercing it. It’s a big step.” Silence. Then… “And yes,” he added, “Werewolves and zombies are both real.”

She frowned, more at the discovery that it was a little unnerving having the telepathic tables turned on her than at his implausible statement about werewolves and zombies.

“I’ve been good friends with a lycanthrope or two over the years,” he added. ” Zombies though? Universally, they’re bad news.”

“I’ll bet,” she replied lightly, not wanting to argue the point. But after a minute or two the frown crept back to her brow. Still staring at the road, she asked, “Why can’t I read you? I’ve been trying for a long time — ” she broke off, blushing at her inadvertent admission of interest, then trailed off self-consciously, “…but I’ve never been able to.”

“Because I’m better at this than you,” he laughed. “Eventually you will learn how to shield your mind from others. At first, it will take an effort on your part. But as your skill grows, it will become second nature as it is to me.”

She nodded. That made sense.

He patted her arm reassuringly. “You will learn many, many things, Casey. We will begin your training tomorrow if you like…” Looking at his watch, “Or perhaps I should say later today?”

She glanced at the dashboard clock. “I have to work tomor — tonight. I’m usually heading off to bed about this time.” She was not the slightest bit tired at the moment; adrenaline was still singing through her veins.

“You may want to call in sick tonight,” he suggested. “I’d like to ensure that no one else has your scent.”

A small chill rippled through her, making her shiver. “Those guys…they were just drunk, looking for trouble. You don’t really think someone else is going to come…hunting for me, do you?” An unwanted memory slipped into her mind — her two assailants grinning fiercely, baring unnaturally long canines as they approached her…Whatever those two had been, she had no desire to see anything like them ever again. Falco’s warning about the rest of their “coven” seeking vengeance hadn’t really sunk in at the time, but it was starting to now. It wasn’t a happy feeling.

“Despite what you have seen in the cinema,” he answered, “vampires operate under a strict set of rules… Laws, actually. Each city is governed by a senior vampire, a Prince if you will. The Prince makes the laws and any vampire operating within their city must abide by them or suffer the consequences.”

In spite of her skepticism, she found herself listening raptly. His words created an intriguing image.

“Austin’s Prince is fairly particular. There’s no killing in his city without permission. So, either your assailants were poaching on the Prince’s herd…or your name has come up at court.”

Categories: Austin After Dark, Fiction, Gaming, Role-Playing Games, Tuesday Tales, vampires | Leave a comment

Tuesday Tales: Life’s Little Surprises, Part 2

What Is This?

Part 1

CAST OF PART 2:
Casey Gavin: Me
Story, Setting and All Characters Who Are Not Casey: Aron Head.

**********

Casey’s “night” wrapped up just a bit before three a.m.  She had the bar cleaned up and her drawer cashed out.  She and the wait staff all exited together, everyone heading their own ways. Casey stepped around to the back lot, walking through the darkened alleyway and into the lamp light. As she approached her aged truck, she thought about how nice it would be to sleep when she got back to her place. She slipped her key into the lock and was suddenly aware of a presence beside her.

“Hi.” A skinny young man wearing khakis and a purple sweater stood beside her.  She recognized him from earlier in the bar. His burly friend in the jeans and UT sweatshirt stood off to the side. She’d never heard them come up. The skinny one asked, “Suppose you could give us a lift?”

She unlocked the door quickly, but kept her face friendly and her body language casual. “Sorry, guys,” she said lightly as she hopped up into the drafty cab and pulled the door shut…

The skinny guy’s hand darted out seizing the door, preventing her from closing it. “Hey…” he said in a soothing voice, “Don’t get your skirts in a ruffle. Just be neighborly.” His eyes blazed…hungrily at her. She felt… almost… like she wanted to give him and his friend a ride.

Almost.

She wasn’t sure why the idea of giving in to his request was so strangely compelling, but she really did know better than to offer rides to strangers at 3am. She looked back and met his eyes, still not really afraid. She knew how to handle difficult types. “Let go, friend,” she said in the same casual tone, but this time she put a light *push* behind the words.

…And she felt resistance.  Like pushing a brick wall.

A slow smile creased the skinny guy’s face. “What’cha doing there, girl? In my head and all?” His mouth hung open in a fierce grin.  She barely heard him say, “Bet you taste goooood.”

She only barely heard him because she was focused on his vicious fangs.

The burly fellow was baring his canines as well…

Now she was afraid. A cold knot tightened in her stomach as she stared wide-eyed at the two men. She didn’t believe in vampires or supernatural beings in general, but she did tend to believe the evidence of her own eyes…and right now that was telling her she was in a great deal of trouble. She could–maybe–handle the skinny guy, but there was no way she could take on both of them.

With all her might, she tried to pull the truck door out of the grasp of the skinny one, tried to slam it shut.

It didn’t move.  His arm must have been made of steel!

“What do you want?” She tried to keep her voice steady, keep things reasonable, but the question came out in a shaky whisper.

“Trouble.”

Skinny Guy’s head turned to view the speaker, as did Burly Guy.

Brandon Falco stood in the lamplit parking lot, his trenchcoat blowing about him like a cloak, giving him the look of some kind of heroic avenger.

The sense of relief that washed through Casey was almost overwhelming. She slumped back against the truck seat, let out a long, trembling breath.

“Isn’t that what you’re after, boys?  A little trouble?  Because that’s what you’ve found.”

Burly Guy took an aggressive step towards Falco.

Falco shook his head, “Burn.”

Casey sensed tremendous power…

And the Burly Guy screamed, his voice reaching the wailing pitch of a little girl.  He danced as if covered in stinging, biting insects…or… no… as if he was on fire.

Casey stared in fresh disbelief, not quite sure what she was looking at.

Burly Guy dropped to the asphalt, rolling left and right, patting at himself frantically…He sobbed, a tearful, wrenching cry…

Casey’s wide-eyed stare turned from the writhing man on the ground to Mr. Falco, trying to understand what she was seeing.

Falco locked eyes with Skinny Guy, “Leave the girl and you walk out of here undamaged.”

“Oh I’ll leave the girl,” Skinny Guy said, walking towards Falco, “I’ll leave her long enough to deal with you!”

“Mistake.”

Skinny Guy was lifted off his feet and spun about in the air.

Casey was having trouble drawing a breath. She felt like she had stepped into a nightmare, without the benefit of falling asleep first.

Skinny Guy flailed about, unable to prevent himself from being suspended upside down some five feet off the ground.

“Casey?” Falco asked, “You alright?”

She shrank away from him, her relief forgotten. She wanted to slam the truck door, fire up the engine, lay rubber on the Longhorn parking lot and get the hell out of whatever this was. But she couldn’t seem to move at all. She huddled against the truck seat, paralyzed by fear and confusion.

“Casey,” His voice was reassuring as he dug in his trenchcoat, “Though you might not want to watch this.” He drew a short, broad-bladed sword, which glinted in the lamplight. With a single fluid motion, he swung the blade… relieving the upside down vampire of his head.  Both head and body crumpled to the ground.

Tonight’s experience was taking on the surreal tones of hallucination. Casey wondered if someone slipped something into her soda at some point tonight. That might explain it….

Falco turned, performing the same action on the Burly Guy. Once both vampires were sans heads, he returned the sword to its hiding place within his coat. He walked to her…

She flinched, trying to gather her wits enough to get herself out of this.

“It’ll be okay…” He stopped, eyes flashing to the rooftops and the alleys. “…But I need to get you out of here.  Can you drive?  Or shall I?”

**********

Part 3

Categories: Austin After Dark, Fiction, vampires | Leave a comment

Tuesday Tales: Life’s Little Surprises, Part 1

This is the first installment in a weekly fiction series edited together from my vicarious adventures in play-by-email role-playing games. These stories are NOT CHILD-FRIENDLY. There is violence and adult subject matter and bad language. They’re not for the faint of heart or the easily offended or people who faint at the sight of literary bloodshed. Consider yourself warned.

I think the most challenging part for me will be to break the stories up into bite-size chunks and still make sure something relatively interesting happens in each week’s installment. We’ll see how that works out; some creative editing might be necessary.

This first segment is just introductory stuff. The setting and all the characters except for Casey were written by the GM, Aron. Casey’s dialogue and actions were written by me. Future chapters will include other players’ characters, and I’ll list writing credits as needed. Here’s a picture of Casey:

So without further ado, I give you the Perils of Casey Gavin. Enjoy!

** ** ** ** ** ** **

[Austin, Texas, 1995]

“You’re so hot, you’d make the devil sweat!”

One of the downsides of being a lady bartender Casey Gavin had found is that you became a target for every horny bastard in the place.  At first it’s flattering and an ego boost.  But after awhile you realized that it had a lot more to do with the booze than it did with your charm and personality.

Particularly if you could read minds. Randy men broadcast their intent…she’d often wondered how people failed to hear what she could discern so plainly. There’s nothing flattering or beautiful about being the object of their lust.

The frat guy flashed a lascivious smile as he accepted his beer from her, returning to his friends. She turned to mix martinis for the two women sitting across from her, both well-dressed urban professionals.

Casey liked The Longhorn.  It was a nice neighborhood bar.  She could probably have made better tips at the Nite’s Edge or one of the other cool, Sixth Street bars, but The Longhorn had a nice, friendly feel to it. Nite’s Edge and those other places were cold and loud. Lots of the folks here were like family.

“Good evening, Casey.” Mr. Falco sidled up to his usual place at the bar. He was a fine looking man.  He had to be in his late thirties or so.  He had the look of a fellow who spent a lot of time in the gym.  He was well-groomed, too.  He peeled off his overcoat, laying it on the barstool beside him.  He wore a dark grey business suit with a snazzy red silk tie, made all the more dramatic by his stark white shirt.  His brown hair was worn stylish and short.  “My usual, please.”

“Hi, Mr. Falco,” she said cheerfully in her rural Texas drawl. “Coming right up.” She set a thin cardboard coaster on the bar and a whiskey glass atop that, and pours out a generous amount of Chivas Regal, his preferred brand of scotch.

He kicked back half the glass, and then smiled.  “Makes a body good.” He looked up at the TV, his eyes following the news text crawling beneath video of some golfer.

One of the things that she found so fascinating about Mr. Falco is that she could not read him.  He didn’t broadcast at all.  This was not at all beyond her experience. Some people were naturally closed-off, but they were rare. These were the people that intrigued a telepath…

He smiled her direction, “How’s your day?”

She gave him a sunny smile in return, hoping to draw him into conversation. “Oh, you know…the pageant of humanity in all its colorful glory. How about yours?”

He swirled the scotch in his glass, “Just your average day… Little of this, little of that.” He drained the remainder of his glass, setting it down before Casey. “Been a busy day,” he said.  “Getting busier all the time, you know the drill, right?  I can’t remember the last time I got more than four hours of sleep at any one time.  Just like a monkey, y’know?  Too much crap, not enough time?”

“I know just what you mean, Mr. Falco.” She replaced his glass with a clean one, and filled it again with scotch. “Some days it feels like someone left the universe stuck on ‘fast forward.'”

“You’re too young to feel that way, Casey.”

She grinned. “Just too far from home. Things moved along a lot slower back there; I don’t think I’ll ever get used to the big hurry this city’s always in.”

He chuckled, “When I was your age… I felt like I had all the time in the world. Of course…” He winked, “I still do.”

“You’re one of the lucky few, then,” she said cheerfully, wiping down a section of bar with a damp cloth.

“Where are you from?” Then he held his hand up, stopping her.  “Wait.  Let me guess… I’m good at this kind of thing… from your accent…” He tilted his head, “…I would say you grew up amidst the post oak savannas, the broad valleys, and the high rolling prairies of Montague County.  Right?”

Her astonishment was plain on her face. “You ARE good! My family has a ranch outside of Niblock, that’s where I grew up. Quarter Horses and Red Angus cattle. Not much resemblance to Austin, I can tell you.”

He nodded.  “Pretty country.  I particularly enjoy driving through there in the spring.  Wildflowers as far as you can see.  Reminiscent of the Elysian Fields…” He winked, tapping his empty glass.

She served him a fresh scotch. “Where’s that?”

“Faaar away from here,” He quirked a smile, laughing at a joke that only he got.

“I know what you mean,” she laughed. “Sometimes home seems like a million miles away, doesn’t it?”

“Pfah!” He said, dismissing her comment.  “Home is a fluid concept.  It is where you want it to be.” He raised his glass to her, “Life’s too short to be homesick.” He knocked back the remainder of his scotch, then slides the glass back to her.

Another clean glass, another refill of Chivas Regal. “I suppose that’s true,” she smiled.

He sipped at his drink, eyes flicking up to the TV screen. He glanced at his watch, then turned, checking the door as a two men enter. Casey had never seen them before. One was clad in jeans and a UT sweatshirt. He was a big, brawny fellow. The other was smaller, skinny. This one wore khakis and a pullover purple sweater.

Falco’s eyes flicked to Casey and then to his now-empty glass.

This time she hesitated. He didn’t seem to be feeling the effects of all that alcohol, but it had to be adding up by now. “Are you driving tonight, Mr. Falco?” she asked in a friendly tone.

He provided a crooked smile, “Nope.  Why ride when you can walk?” He tapped the glass, “Don’t be stingy now.”

She looked him over carefully. After that much alcohol his mind should have been an open–if somewhat soggy–book, but he was as closed off as ever, and to all appearances still cold sober. She poured him another drink.

“Thank you, Casey.” He smiled, sipping at the scotch.

The newcomers took a seat at one of the tables, and Julie, one of the waitresses came up to take their order. Casey could see them laughing and joking with her.

She noted a frown on Falco’s face as he watched the TV behind the bar. She followed his gaze, but the golf game and stock headlines crawling underneath offered few clues to the frown. Damn inconvenient, not being able to read this fellow. “Who’s winning?”

“Hmmn?” He looked back at her.  “Oh.  The IRS, I suspect.”

The stock report, then. She knew better than to ask him about his finances, so she just nodded sympathetically. “Isn’t that the truth!”

He only nodded, eyes focused on the television.

“Casey!” A balding fellow in his fifties greeted her as he sidled up to the bar.  He thumped the counter-top, “Fat Tire right here and keep ’em coming!”

Randy was another of her regulars.  He was a good guy.  A self-employed electrician, he worked long days and hit the bar with a powerful thirst. He had a good sense of humor and a kind heart. He was easy to read, an open book really.  Randy’d been unlucky in love his whole life.  He married his high school sweetheart who left him after being married for twelve years.  She wanted excitement, not the “mind numbing regularity” of married life.

“You’re boring!” Randy’s wife screamed at him, her words still echoing sharply through his memories. He’d had difficulty connecting with women since then.  He had a lousy sense of self-esteem. Randy was at ease around Casey, she had that effect on people.

She gave him the beer, and a friendly grin. “How are things in the exciting world of electricity, Randy?”

“Shocking,” He answered with a laugh.  “Shocking!”

She laughed as well. “Always good to get a charge out of your work.”

He chuckled, sipping at his beer.

A few moments later, she turned to see that Mr. Falco had left.  An empty glass atop the edge of several neatly folded bills held the space where had been sitting. She paid his tab, pocketing the generous 30% tip, and wiped the bar clean.

Part 2

Categories: Austin After Dark, Fiction, Role-Playing Games, Tuesday Tales, vampires | Leave a comment

A World Of Darkness

There’s a BUNCH of stuff going on around here, none of which I can write about in my public journal. C’est la vie, apparently.

I hate to see this blog just sit here all neglected, though, so I’ve been thinking I might add a weekly “chapter serial” fiction story feature. I used to be quite the gaming addict back in the day, and play-by-email role-playing games were my drug of choice. My fellow gamers and I wove many a dark and colorful tapestry of mystery, intrigue and adventure, matching our resourcefulness and creative writing skills against the all diabolical challenges the GM sent our way.

Yes, I am an irredeemable geek. That’s beside the point.

I was thinking of taking some of those game stories and posting them here, a little at a time, one day a week. I would begin with “Austin After Dark,” my personal favorite, a chilling tale of vampires and werewolves and Fae and betrayal and murder. Lots and lots of murder. And goblins.

I’ve received permission from Aron Head, the evil genius who ran that game, to publish excerpts here on my blog. I’m thinking “Tuesday Tales” has a nice ring to it.

So…some background. If you’re not familiar with the concept of play-by email role-playing games, it’s fairly simple. Each player creates a character, and then that character goes forth and interacts via group emails in a story setting with the other players’ characters. The Game Master provides the setting and peripheral characters, and supplies a story plot containing challenges for the characters to try to overcome. It’s like Disneyland for creative-writing geeks like me.

“Austin After Dark” is a World Of Darkness rpg. There are stacks and stacks of WoD resource books available to the serious gamer who needs to know his way around this incredibly elaborate fictional universe.

I’ve never read any of them. I knew absolutely nothing about the setting or the rules when I first joined the game. “Tabula rasa” pretty much sums it up. I’d been playing in one of Aron’s other pbem’s at the time, a Star Trek game. Star Trek I know. Every detail of that universe is as comfortable and familiar to me as a well-worn pair of sheepskin slippers. My problem was, the Trek game had gone dormant while Aron focused on another of his pbems which was rocking along like a runaway train just then. I was suffering some serious game withdrawal.

So I figured, maybe I should join this other pbem, this “Austin After Dark” thing, just to pass the time until the Trek game got moving again. Aron and I exchanged a few emails, trying to come up with a game character for me who could fit into the ongoing story even without knowing any more than I did about the hidden underworld of Austin. We came up with Casey Gavin, a rural ranch girl who had developed telepathic and telekinetic powers and had moved to the big city to access a broader range of minds so she could develop her skills. She took a job bartending, the perfect activity for someone who wants to meet a lot of people without having to form any close personal ties.

Most of the stories I post here will be edited to keep the story moving along. Role-playing games sometimes get bogged down in conversations that lead nowhere, character (player) bickering, uninteresting tangents and other nonblogworthy narrative that I’ll be editing out of my weekly series. Also, I will be posting ONLY the events that Casey was directly involved in. If you want to read everyone else’s adventures, go here.

Okay then! Chapter One will hit the blog on Tuesday, and I hope you’ll enjoy reading these stories as much as we enjoyed writing them.

**********

Part 1

Categories: Austin After Dark, Fiction, Friends, Gaming, Life, Role-Playing Games, Tuesday Tales | Tags: , | 1 Comment

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