Faust VIII (
necromancynow) wrote in
undergrounds2015-07-17 10:54 am
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Entry tags:
The situation is grave [Open]
A: Faust's clinic, Lambeth:
B: Night visits
Wildcard:
Feel free to make up your own! Faust's been in London for a few years and hands out business cards for his clinic on occasion, so your character may have heard of him by reputation :).
Patients that had other options did not visit Dr. Faust. His bedside manner was impeccable during the day, of course, and his medical knowledge was near-encyclopedic. But often he looked as though he had not slept in days and there was a strange, distant component to his manner that had been present ever since the loss of his wife some years ago. And his touch, even to ordinary patients not overly sensitive to the supernatural, made the flesh crawl in inexplicable fashion.
But of course there were many patients that did not have other options. Faust opened the door to the waiting room, peeking his head through with a mildly encouraging smile. "Next?"
B: Night visits
Faust was out at the graveyard, peering down into a freshly-dug grave in the Earth. Empty, as of yet, but he preferred bodies that had had time to... settle. He looked over his shoulder at the skeleton trailing behind him. It was carrying a shovel and spade.
"Over on the east side, if you please."
Time to do a little grave robbing.
Wildcard:
Feel free to make up your own! Faust's been in London for a few years and hands out business cards for his clinic on occasion, so your character may have heard of him by reputation :).
[ B ]
Not her family's plot, thank goodness, but she stills feel worry for the poor patch so she moves closer to get a better look and--
--Wait. Is that a shovel and a spade in the skeleton's grasp?!
"Excuse me!" Emboldened now, she rushes forward to try and stop the two from whatever on earth they're trying to do because whatever they're trying to do is something she's going to try and stop them from doing. "Can you hear me? Of course they can. Please stop!"
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"Good evening, madam. Is something wrong?" Aside from him being two steps away from disturbing these graves, anyway. The skeleton at his side rattled politely in greeting, performing a little bow in Clara's general direction.
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"I'm not sure of that actually," she admits to him, "Which is why I want to ask what you're trying to do here with your, ahhh, friend."
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That's why he thought Clara was being a bit sharp about his presence: she didn't want him to disturb her grave.
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No! Clara!
"My grave? No, not at all. None of them are mine, it's somewhere here but! That's not the point. Those graves are someone's, period! It's not polite to go snooping at their graves like that." There are some lines when it comes to snooping, she thinks. Graves and bathrooms are some of them in her 'to never peek' list.
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"Polite or not," Faust said, a bit apologetically for Clara's sake, "I'm afraid graves are the only place where I can find my... materials."
What kind of materials...
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She knows it's rude but she can't help but look at his bony buddy, her frown taking on a more sharper quality to it when a rather uncomfortable idea comes to mind. "It isn't the… the occupants themselves, is it?"
Please tell her that it isn't. Because that'll be more than rude, for sure. It's possibly illegal, whatever this is?
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And things that grew under the earth. Things that liked the cool damp.
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"And tonight? You're looking for the moss and fungus around there, I take it?"
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"But what are you doing here? Guarding the graves?" A bit of a complication, Clara's presence. But ghosts could always be....
...dealt with.
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His question makes her think for a second, wondering if she should be honest or lie but she never did like lying so the truth it is. "Not really? I visit here and tend to the graves, yes, but most of the time I visit my own lot nearby. I just think it's a little bit depressing that someone's grave has to be treated like this is all. Isn't there some other way to get the items without--"
Digging things up?
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"I personally find it rather soothing work. Repetitive, but satisfying. Every once in a while, you find a surprise. ...But no. Not all things come easily. Especially not the materials I need."
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It's rather clear that he's going to push through with this no matter how much she tries to needle or explain and there's not much Clara can really do to stop him. Not if she wants to be kept in one piece, that is. Best she can do, maybe, is watch over him and make sure nothing bad happens to them. She would hate for Henrique's job to get more complicated.
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B
He didn't seem afraid or disgusted or anything that one might expect, but he is curious. Although Balem looked human enough, in the dark of night the starlight glinted off his eyes and made them shine, almost like a cat's.
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"Oh... forgive my manners. I didn't know we had company." Faust removed the wide-brimmed hat he wore -- the night air got a little chilly at times -- and gave Balem a little bow.
"I don't think we've met. My name is Faust."
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Fake name, enough of a tell for those in the know that he was fae. But given the walking skeleton, Balem assumed that this man had plenty of contact with the supernatural world already.
"Is this a hobby of yours?" he said, referring to the apparent grave-robbing going on.
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Not the skeleton's though; it had graduated right on to doing the graveyard shuffle over to a tombstone, where it began to pick at the hard earth.
"I suppose congratulations are in order. I heard that you and your friends have expanded their territory a bit." He was just guessing, but it seemed reasonable that Balem could be fae. Not one of those little pondskipper amateur witches, that was for sure.
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At least Balem knew he probably didn't work for Redbright or the council. There would be no congratulations from their sort.
"What is your work, exactly?"
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"Oh, but I also run a small side business. Here you are." Faust rifled through his pockets and produced a business card, which he offered to Balem. It advertised a medical clinic and gave its main physican's name as Johann Faust.
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"I don't have a business card, but I am an astronomer of sorts, I suppose. And I occasionally grant requests, on behalf of my kin," he said. By requests he meant wishes, and by kin he meant the stars (who often received quite a few of them, for whatever reason), but he wasn't very nice about it.
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"As you must know, necromancy is a rather arcane and demanding art. Any hack willing to cut a few throats can learn to raise bodies from the grave. But true resurrection is much more difficult."
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You know, like Faust himself. "But there are those who die before their time." Those who deserved more time on this earth. Those who had done no wrong…
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"I don't believe that anyone has a 'time', really. There are many who have found a way to outlast it."
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"Thus the wishes?" Faust couldn't really get on anyone's case about selling their soul or anything else for extended life; lord knew he'd traded away quite a bit in pursuit of his goals.
"You sound like someone that Circle Daybreak would disapprove of."
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