http://embalmyweather.livejournal.com/ (
embalmyweather.livejournal.com) wrote in
tampered2010-07-20 02:20 pm
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WHEN: grave-digging event.
RATING: PG-15 (?)
SUMMARY: The Keeper's words for the Keeper's coin.
NOTE: an individual thread per trade, please!No need to confuse the Keeper...
RATING: PG-15 (?)
SUMMARY: The Keeper's words for the Keeper's coin.
NOTE: an individual thread per trade, please!

Kamishiro Tsurugi
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...Where... No. Why am I here? I thought I was killed.
[Tsurugi turns to look at his surrounding, but sees nothing. Nothing at all.]
Huh... It appears I stand on top of being dead alone.
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"Ain't alone, boy, though them rules be saying there should only be one, and you don't mind me, now, but I'm thinking... you're not it."
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Who... What are you? ...Wait, thinking? I'm not what?
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The Keeper pauses in his step, turning sharply to stare when a insignificant bit of wax splotches from his candle. Tiny sound, really. Doesn't take more. "Don't make them how they used to. Don't make you lot how they used to."
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I'm not sure about your candles, but I'm not human.... I haven't been for awhile. That's why I'm not the same as the lot you remember.
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But he doesn't, not really, not for a short while. The candle's light catches his eye, and he remembers hunger. The point, of course. His head snaps back to his prey of the hour, "You're here to die."
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I'm already dead. I died twice before I ever came to the City. So, I don't see how I'm here to die, when death has already taken me.
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Are you saying that you're what lets the dead "live" here in the City?
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[backdated to Thursday-ish?]
Waking up in a subterranean chamber didn't surprise Justin nearly as much as it should have. It was a kinder awakening than the one the City had treated him to the other time he had died.
Somewhat disoriented and more than a little afraid that a nightmarish mob of ghouls would appear at any second to rip him apart again, he sat up and surveyed the chamber.]
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He hadn't stirred awake and alive for their like in many moons, and he made no plans for a habit. Humans could wait on him. His regular visitors could wait on anything, really, without complaint: the mutilated half-corpses strung against his tables, chopped limbs littered on the floor, strips of human skin cleaned and dyed and drying to cover patches on his blood. Little by way of blood. The Keeper - too tall to be a ghost, too thin and pruned and wrinkled to be one of them - the Keeper never liked blood. He'd drowned once, and the signs still showed, and there'd been no blood. No need for it in his trade.
...no need for humans, either. He shot the waking boy a sharp look, inching by so bony fingers could reach to hover over Justin's ankle.
"Needs more gutting, if they're moving by the time them's here. Needs more throttling, like," the Keeper's strong, white teeth show in a plastic smile, "like chicken. You need your neck wrung again? Eh?"
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"No--no thank you," he replied hoarsely. "Once was enough."
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His hand withdrew from the leg, dancing against the wall behind him now. "Ain't was your time, but them's how you wanted it."
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He watched the thing's movements, trying to place it--categorize it, label it, anything. Maybe it was one of the deities. It's lack of clarity certainly made him think of the other powers in the City. "Who are you?"
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Choices, choices. He slipped his hands in his pockets - dark robes over a well worn suit, nothing fancy here - rocking slightly back and forth. Thinking, "Mind, boy, it ain't be much mattering who I am and who you is, and what's going on. We're on a schedule. You'll have to die now, beg pardon. Any favourite ways to get it done with? Got me... got me some good knives. You a noose fellow?"
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Justin decided to take his chance with the corpse-like entity before him.
"Why do I have to die?" he asked, skipping over the man's inquiry as to his preferred method of execution. "We could--do you... do you make deals?"
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"Deals, eh? Taking me for one of them bankers?" He pointed his thin hand up, waving enthusiastically towards the ceiling, "They don't be knowing much, bit of bartering... you think I'm them? You think? What do you give them, eh? The - " He spat on the ground, "The smugglers."
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"The deities?" Of course the deities. The bankers, loaners, collectors, and jailers of the City. Justin wasn't sure if he was relieved or alarmed by this affirmation of his suspicions--that this was one of the other powers. "No, I don't--I don't think you're one of them. Sorry." He inched backwards until the cavern wall was flush against his back. It wouldn't save him if this entity wanted to kill him, of course, but it made him feel slightly safer. "I give them as little as possible."
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All of them did, came with the new feeding. Back in the old days, fat came with fat and more fat, and some oil, and that broke their fast, gave them luncheon, and supper too. Now, sugars and salts and troubles sewing. Damned industry. "So what'll you give me, eh?"
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He scratched his head slowly, almost surprised at his own dalliance.
Yes, that was it. Men scratched their heads when they meant to show thought, yes, most definitely. Though damn the Keeper if he knew why. "That good by you?"
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