Get up...get up, you stupid piece of... What did you do that for? What's wrong with you? Didn't you hear a word he said? All of you! You think there's someone just going to drop money on you?! Money they could use?! Well, there ain't people like that. There's just people like me.

Jayne ,'Jaynestown'


Sang Sacré

The fictional Buffista City. With a variety of neighborhoods, climates, and an Evil Genius or two, Sang Sacre is where we'd all live if it were real. Jump in -- find a neighborhood, start a parade, become a superhero. It's what you make it.

History. Map.


Aeshma - Apr 05, 2004 8:13:40 am PDT #806 of 1100

So this is a spring fling. It's simply appalling, laughter, dancing, and not a sign of misery anywhere. A colorfully attaired female spins by and showers me in cloud of glittering dust. Whatever the spell was, it must have not been cast properly since not a single one of my contingent counter spells was activated. I examine the glittering dust and discover that's it's just glitter. Wonderful, now I'm a necromancer covered in glitter, at least there are no demons about to witness this.

A hand grabs my shoulder and my decay is halfway out of it's scabbard before I realize it's just a man dressed in a white sheet offering me a glass of wine. I take the wine and the man fades into the crowd. The wine is excellent, maybe this celebration isn't so terrible after all.


Aeshma - Apr 05, 2004 10:40:32 am PDT #807 of 1100

I spy a beautiful woman laughing with her friends a little ways away, and make my way through the revelry. People dance away from my path or just happen to walk or shift away unaware of the enchantments that parts the crowd. I tap on her shoulder and ask for a dance, I don't know whether she would have refused or accepted, but she hesitates as she looks into the darkness of my eyes and it is too late for the dance has begun.

With the first twirl her outfit transforms into black and long complete with black lace gloves, a vast improvement. As the dance continues, the bright light of day gives way to shadow taking the crowd with it. The dance itself is ancient and formal something from my long past that she executes perfectly without any hint of the next step in her mind. As the pace increases, I become aware of how alive she is, I feel her heartbeat, her breath, the warmth of her touch. We continue to dance alone in the shadow.

Now she takes the lead in this dance she doesn't know, her face a picture of joy. We do longer dance alone for the misty specters of the dead have joined in, drawn by her light. She twirls away and finds a new partner among the dead, lost in this dance that has no end. I watch as she dances ever more quickly and the light around her fades, her form fading amongst the dancers.

Perhaps, it's her beauty or perhaps some strange mood that overtakes me, I do not know. I walk to her, the dead parting before me. She is almost gone as I take her hand and draw her to me, stopping the dance. The daylight and crowd blink back into existence as I lower the limp form to the ground. She gasps as her body starts to draw breath once again, but I am gone before she opens her eyes. I blame my weakness on this season of Spring.


Connie Neil - Apr 05, 2004 7:19:28 pm PDT #808 of 1100
brillig

I can go a long time between reminding myself that the lucious Bob is, strictly speaking, a corpse. Oh, sure, there's no heartbeat under my ear when I'm getting comfy and going to sleep, and he's better than an air conditioner on hot summer nights, but that generally gets filed under the "That's just Bob" file in my head.

But in the middle of the springtime revelry, he suddenly stiffens and spins, scanning the room. There's a look on his face I haven't seen in a very long time: the look of a hunter, of something to be wary of. Worse, there's another element to the look: fear. The only thing that normally scares Bob is when I'm leaning over bridges and precipices. Something about me not being able to fly and being unlikely to learn in the few seconds between falling and splatting.

It takes me a moment to clear my throat. "What's wrong?"

"Death is walking here." And, damn, his voice is different, too. And I just saw fang.

I start to offer to leave, but he's gone into the crowd. Hunting death. And, again, it takes a moment for the dichotomy to sink in: Death is hunting death.

I need more food.


Am-Chau Yarkona - Apr 06, 2004 3:45:21 am PDT #809 of 1100
I bop to Wittgenstein. -- Nutty

Helpfully, they've labelled the dips which have actual blood in them.


Connie Neil - Apr 06, 2004 5:00:28 am PDT #810 of 1100
brillig

the dips with actual blood

Isn't that many of the attendees? t rimshot


Aeshma - Apr 06, 2004 10:12:23 am PDT #811 of 1100

Purple, red, yellow, white, and a hundred shades in between assault me as a pass a flower bed in the town center where the party rages on. I draw decay and plunge the blade into the soil. Even as a draw the blade back out, petals are wilting and falling to the ground, mold grows on the leaves as they to fall to the earth, and finally all that is left are twisted brown stems, infested with fungus. The dead plants help to lift my spirits, and make me realize that a snack would be appreciated.

As I head to the buffet table I notice a vampire on the hunt, taking advantage of dusk. Undead at a spring festival, as logical as a necromancer at a spring festival I suppose. The companion he has left behind, however, is quite alive. Interesting, that the living should be partnered with the dead. I wonder what facisnation with death has brought her to the vampire.

Ah, it appears that she is making her way to the buffet table as well. Perhaps the time has arrived for another dance.


Connie Neil - Apr 06, 2004 11:01:29 am PDT #812 of 1100
brillig

eep


Connie Neil - Apr 06, 2004 2:19:16 pm PDT #813 of 1100
brillig

Something on the buffet table must be going bad. I'm getting the very faintest of scents of decay. Everything looks fine, though. And when did we start having problems with the power grid? The lights seem to be going dimmer.

It takes the cold breeze dancing on the back of my neck to tell me that it's not the power and it's not some potato salad that's been out in the sun too long. Something is behind me. If I don't turn around, perhaps it will pass by.

No, of course I turn.

I can't get a good look at it--him? The face shifts from skeletal to decaying to coldly handsome to things that simply don't register. My heart seems to be having a hard time doing its job. The animal sub-brain is yelling to run, but this creature projects an air of unescapability, the kind of inevitabiltity that kills the leaves in autumn, crumples flowers after they've bloomed, and closes the eyes of people at the end of their days.

It holds out its hand to me. Goddess, is it really time? Right now?


Aeshma - Apr 07, 2004 5:43:31 am PDT #814 of 1100

She takes my hand in the reflexive way they all do and we start the dance. Bystanders and dancers melt away as we follow the steps of an ancient dance from another time and place. Her clothing transforms into something more to my taste, a long formal dress dark as the heart of night. Shadows gather around us as the crowd begins to fade.

For the bystanders part, they see a woman dressed in black go limp in my arms, perhaps from too much to drink. For us, we continue to dance alone in the shadow, but another crowd will be joining us soon.


Connie Neil - Apr 08, 2004 4:45:29 am PDT #815 of 1100
brillig

He wields the power of death and decay, but he is not Death. Death would have better fashion sense.

I try to yell for Bob, for anyone, but I'm beyond using what breath is left to me for anything other than life. I don't think that's going to be a problem much longer.