OOC - Alright! This is a very detailed RP that took me OMG-Forever to work out, so it's invite only. And it'll take forever to explain it to someone, therefore They'll hafta PM me/other RPers in order to get in. Alrighty! Post time! (finally)
BIC-
As Cornelius examined his empty glass, he considered just how fecklessly the airline he was flying on had attempted to portray a sense of elegance only found at first-rate restaurants. The glass was thin and delicate, with one, single faux diamond embedded a the object's base. And now it was flecked with beads of degrading condensation, and settled on a folded white napkin, to be dismissed entirely from the mind of the glass's owner. Except that it hadn't. What made the glassware take a plunging dive in status from refined to flaunting wasn't the design, but rather the liquid that it had held. No longer than several quiet, solemn minutes ago, the carbonated dregs of a soda had fizzled restlessly in the cup's bottom, Dr. Pepper to be exact.
Cornelius shook his head to himself, a vague smile gracing his handsome, young features. His jolting, icy-blue eyes held a faraway endowment that was not seen in public, as if he was traveling across universes all while sitting primly in his airplane seat, pale hands gripping his arm rests loosely. The character seated next to him, an elastic young girl clad in a beautiful white gown that would not last the fortnight, gazed contently out of the modest window, still wrapped in the delight of looking down upon a rolling field of cottony clouds instead of looking up at them. She would lose that thrill soon enough, if she was as wealthy as Cornelius's logic believed. All in exchange for money; not the visual pleasure, but rather the knowledge that you held more than anyone you pass in the street makes in a year, all on the tip of the pen you use to scrawl on a piece of paper, or on the bar code of a rectangular piece of plastic. He knew that feeling himself, yet wouldn't describe the emotion as pleasure. Disgust, perhaps.
The boy, late into his teen years but a boy just the same, leaned back in his seat, gently tapping his head against the soft material cloaking his seat. Hair of a thin and plaint quality, as black as a raven's breast, rested complacently on either side of his face, away from his eyes, and swept back from there, neat and untangled. His face resembled that of any spoiled rich boy, soft, smooth, and innocent. But the maturity and intelligence was all in his eyes, anyways. They weren't, as the clichéd saying went, the windows to his soul, but rather the quality of himself that he wished his colleagues (and enemies) to see.
"Are you finished with that, sir? We'll be deplaning shortly."
Without the briefest pause to mark how deeply he'd been buried in the layers of his own thoughts, Cornelius smiled up at the attendant, his lightly-shaded blue eyes observed her with gratitude as he offered the delicate glassware that had started his mind wandering.
"Thank you, miss. That's a fine object; the airlines certainly are conscientious, aren't they?" he commented, plucking the white napkin from his food tray to toss when they arrived in London.
"It is nice, isn't it." The plain-faced woman allowed, unable to mask her loathing of his wealth from his seeking eyes. She was gone as quickly as she had come.
Indifferent as to how much a flight attendant he'd never see again cared for him, Cornelius straightened the tie to his suit and tightened it with a practiced twitch of his hands. How neat the sleeves of his suit were was irrelevant; thanks to the unnatural chill that was sweeping through England (so said the man on the phone, anyways), they were unceremoniously covered by a jet-black overcoat. He briefly reached inside the coat, clenching a jagged object in his fist as if to ensure it was still there, before drawing out his pocket-watch. The device declared that it was half-past one, which would be a nice tidbit of information if it was correct. Not wise to rely on a watch that runs backwards, though. Once again the soft smile brushed his lips.
--((Skipping the airport scene...you can assume he gets his stuff there on your own, right?))--
Cornelius greeted the brittle cold with a complimentary curse, quiet to begin with and flung from his mouth the moment his spoke it, into the howling wind as it beat in his ears. His overcoat fluttered out madly behind him, whiplashing against the backs of his legs, struggling to free itself from its imprisonment. In his gloved hand he gripped his single black suitcase, as his entire speech for the following day had already been carefully written into the absorbent material of his mind. His scarf writhed angrily, in sync with the motions of his overcoat, yet moving in a pattern all its own. His blue eyes afire as he shifted his attention to the landmarks he had been told to look for, Cornelius heard the taxi he had arrived in revving its engine as it accelerated down the street.
England was a decent change from the United States; the cobblestone streets under his expensive shoes held a serenity nonexistent in the smog-ridden nexus that was New York City, where his father lived, running his vastly fortunate company, in one of many identical buildings that towered haughtily over the pedestrians scurrying to their various under-paying ( you were either under-payed or over-payed in New York, it seemed) jobs. Here, at least in this part of town, only the moaning winds and inky tides of darkness were there to greet him, and the air, while cold enough to send him into gales of harsh coughing, was pure and clean.
As he turned on heel, loose pebbles crunching together beneath his feet, Cornelius lifted his stunning crystal-blue eyes towards the heavens. He settled into a pace, his free hand jammed deep into the safe confines of his coat's thick pocket, and debated which was more enjoyable: sitting before a snarling, crackling fire, with a thick, well-written novel in hand and a cup of hot cocoa nearby, or staring wordlessly at the night sky presented before him now. The stars were innumerable, and so varying in sizes that it looked like an image conjured by an imaginative artist with a paintbrush in hand; and they were wedged into a deep, inky blackness that wasn't black, but rather a lush navy-blue.
With a restive sigh heard by nobody, Cornelius turned around a corner, faintly perplexed by the lack of light when he ought to be nearing a fairly populated street by now. Yet the street signs were all as he recalled being told of them, although the last had been bent crookedly, with some of the paint chipped away in the shape of a curious insignia.
Sheltered by the crumbling remains of what were likely old apartments beyond restoration, the teenager felt his pupils dilating slowly in hopes of picking out the sharp corners of the buildings in the cloaking shadows. The only intelligable explanation for his current location, wherever he was, was that the man he had communicated with had discovered a shortcut and relayed it. Without considering how late Cornelius's arrival time would be.
In the pitch black embrace of darkness, Cornelius was freely scowling when he turned a corner and was ambushed by torrents of blinding light. White splotches exploded in his eyes as he took an unguarded step backwards, flinging up his free hand to shade his eyes. His vision took its time clearing, but the raven-haired businessman dropped his hand from his face anyways, his countenance imperceptible once more. His sharp eyes focused on the only creature inhabiting the alley other than himself; a figure draped in an assortment of deep black garments. A hood concealed the figure's gender for all of two seconds, before it chose to speak.
"You're here early, not that it really matters. Nothing else to do - why the curious expression? You seemed o know exactly where you were going and here you are."
The male voice sounded young, almost as youthful as Cornelius himself, but everything about the figure was ominous. The instinctive side of him suggested he run as quickly as possible, away from this man and the illogical light that highlighted this alleyway for no particular reason. The blue-eyed character fatefully dismissed this urge, logically concluding that it was only the man's out-of-place clothing that irked him. Nonetheless he dropped his suitcase, and the idea of bending down to pick it up never occurred to him. The sound of the metal tapping against the grimy cobblestones sent a chill down his spine, yet a cold, steely expression settled itself on its face when the figure spoke again.
"Well, this is cliché, but I have been expecting you, Cornelius, seeing as-"
"It's Raven, please." He interjected politely, although the rigidity of his posture didn't change.
"-Cornelius, would you like a drink? Something to calm your nerves?" the man inquired, gesturing behind him to a rotted barrel.
Settled atop its decaying, moldy brown surface was the same glass he had critiqued from the airplane...no...perhaps it was merely one of similar design. No debauching soda fizzed in this ornate glass, as the liquid was of a thick, crimson color that reminded Cornelius of when he had sliced his hand open using a kitchen knife when he was younger. The substance sloshing lightly in the glassware when the robed figure picked it up looked exactly like-
"Wine?" The sinister man suggested.
Cornelius felt an illogical twitch of anger at this man, certain that he was smiling from within those folds of clothing. The bastard.
"I'm fine. Can't drink yet, anyhow. And I don't want it." He said dryly, shedding his polite act as he realized this man - figure - was making him paranoid. He was never paranoid.
"Pity," The figure said in a tittering voice, marching up to Cornelius until the pale youth was at the edge of the mystical light's range. "you'd have probably accepted it if you were younger. But then you'd be useless, you'd never survive."
He made a sweeping motion, as if clearing an invisible slate. Cornelius frowned slightly at the man's hand, which was as white as the snow that frequented N.Y. The thought that there wasn't darkness behind him, but rather a solid wall, had taken form in his mind. Stepping through the wall was as absurd as taking another step back away from the light. The very illogical path his mind had taken was as frightening as this creature talking to him.
"What would you say, Cornelius Alexander Raven, son of Adair, if I informed you that we are not the only civil creatures inhabiting the Earth now?"
"Nothing. I'd walk away."
"Of course, but you won't right now, so you'll humor me. At least for the moment. Anyways, what if I explained to you that there are creatures that are imperceptible to the human eye in this world, able to travel through pockets in space to skip between worlds, if you will?"
Cornelius was thoroughly relieved to find his sense of intelligence and logic returning to him. As it did, this man's rantings made less sense. He remained silent, accepting the fact that he had somehow been forced to hold the wine glass.
"Exactly. These creatures - we'll call them Demons, for lack of a pronounceable word in any human language - can also phase in between shadows when they are "immaterial". That is, of course, to say, until they have received their "eyes". You'll understand soon enough - it makes more sense when you see it. Anyways, Cornelius-"
"Raven."
"Cornelius. Once they have received their eyes they are susceptible to attacks, unable to re-merge into the shadows with them. They usually return these "eyes" when they move through the space pockets back to their own world, but this takes much more time than simply melting into shadows, I'm sure you can imagine."
The cloaked man paused to observe Cornelius's skeptical expression.
"Well, practice makes perfect, my young friend. Experience is a marvelous learning opportunity, don't you think?"
"I think-"
"Twas a rhetorical question, Cornelius." The man, a blotch of black in the bright light, intercepted.
"I know, and I'm not quite sure it matters to me anymore, sir." Cornelius responded politely, icy-blue eyes blinking expressionlessly.
Without any pointless hesitation, the youth turned briskly around and placed one foot outside the receptive light that reflected off the ancient, stony walls of the alley. He began to take another when a vice-like hand closed around his forearm, agonizing enough to send a gasp of pain from his mouth. Feeling torn in two with his body half in, half out of the uncanny light, Cornelius turned around, an inquiry on his lips.
The question never left his mouth, transforming into a rush of air that he inhaled as his eyes widened in incomprehensible shock. The figure, one ghostly hand holding him upright, held a sword in his other, at waist length where he had run Cornelius through. The blade was made of a crystalline-like silver material, outlined in a glowing violet hue, and the hilt was the very essence that defined black. The cloaked figure sighed wearily, shaking his head.
"Honestly, such skepticism is a rather discouraging trait from someone with your fate, Cornelius Raven."
And the figure was gone - the light wasn't there...had it ever been?
With nobody holding him up, Cornelius collapsed immediately to his knees, his hands splayed on the uneven stony ground as he felt the color drain from his face. The pain in his abdomen effectively impaired his thoughts, although he did whittle it down to two. He killed me. That....bastard.
His arms finally comprehended the message being pulsed out by his brain, and buckled, and he pitched sideways awkwardly onto the dusted, dirt-riddled cobblestone path. He could feel his hands drenched in what turned out to be his own pooling blood, and felt a dark sense of hopelessness. Such an early, anti-climatic end, and it hadn't made any sense at all...what kind of murderer impales their victims on a glowing sword? To hell if he knew...and why was his vision clouding with white?
Weren't people supposed to "fall into darkness" as they fell unconscious? Or was that just the perception etched into his mind by novels?
His mind floated freely to whatever he wished to think about, which he was grateful of. If he was forced to remain transfixed in reality, with his cursed expensive suit absorbing his own blood, metallic and smelling overwhelmingly of copper, blackening as it dried, he'd probably be sick.
How amusing.
With equal amusement, Cornelius realized that someone was murmuring softly in his ear - the one not pressed to the pebble-littered street, of course. He couldn't understand a single one of the words being babbled to him, as they were of no language he had ever even heard rumors of, but he felt consoled at least. Someone was there with him...and it was pleasant, as if he wasn't actually dying, alone and cold and lost in a foreign country, but rather being rocked to sleep by his mother. The mother he had killed in birth, and thus never met. It was nice.
Cornelius shut his eyes; the light came through anyways, as did the murmurings in a lost language. His smile wasn't vague, but real and genuine, as he slipped away from the land of the living.
BIC-
As Cornelius examined his empty glass, he considered just how fecklessly the airline he was flying on had attempted to portray a sense of elegance only found at first-rate restaurants. The glass was thin and delicate, with one, single faux diamond embedded a the object's base. And now it was flecked with beads of degrading condensation, and settled on a folded white napkin, to be dismissed entirely from the mind of the glass's owner. Except that it hadn't. What made the glassware take a plunging dive in status from refined to flaunting wasn't the design, but rather the liquid that it had held. No longer than several quiet, solemn minutes ago, the carbonated dregs of a soda had fizzled restlessly in the cup's bottom, Dr. Pepper to be exact.
Cornelius shook his head to himself, a vague smile gracing his handsome, young features. His jolting, icy-blue eyes held a faraway endowment that was not seen in public, as if he was traveling across universes all while sitting primly in his airplane seat, pale hands gripping his arm rests loosely. The character seated next to him, an elastic young girl clad in a beautiful white gown that would not last the fortnight, gazed contently out of the modest window, still wrapped in the delight of looking down upon a rolling field of cottony clouds instead of looking up at them. She would lose that thrill soon enough, if she was as wealthy as Cornelius's logic believed. All in exchange for money; not the visual pleasure, but rather the knowledge that you held more than anyone you pass in the street makes in a year, all on the tip of the pen you use to scrawl on a piece of paper, or on the bar code of a rectangular piece of plastic. He knew that feeling himself, yet wouldn't describe the emotion as pleasure. Disgust, perhaps.
The boy, late into his teen years but a boy just the same, leaned back in his seat, gently tapping his head against the soft material cloaking his seat. Hair of a thin and plaint quality, as black as a raven's breast, rested complacently on either side of his face, away from his eyes, and swept back from there, neat and untangled. His face resembled that of any spoiled rich boy, soft, smooth, and innocent. But the maturity and intelligence was all in his eyes, anyways. They weren't, as the clichéd saying went, the windows to his soul, but rather the quality of himself that he wished his colleagues (and enemies) to see.
"Are you finished with that, sir? We'll be deplaning shortly."
Without the briefest pause to mark how deeply he'd been buried in the layers of his own thoughts, Cornelius smiled up at the attendant, his lightly-shaded blue eyes observed her with gratitude as he offered the delicate glassware that had started his mind wandering.
"Thank you, miss. That's a fine object; the airlines certainly are conscientious, aren't they?" he commented, plucking the white napkin from his food tray to toss when they arrived in London.
"It is nice, isn't it." The plain-faced woman allowed, unable to mask her loathing of his wealth from his seeking eyes. She was gone as quickly as she had come.
Indifferent as to how much a flight attendant he'd never see again cared for him, Cornelius straightened the tie to his suit and tightened it with a practiced twitch of his hands. How neat the sleeves of his suit were was irrelevant; thanks to the unnatural chill that was sweeping through England (so said the man on the phone, anyways), they were unceremoniously covered by a jet-black overcoat. He briefly reached inside the coat, clenching a jagged object in his fist as if to ensure it was still there, before drawing out his pocket-watch. The device declared that it was half-past one, which would be a nice tidbit of information if it was correct. Not wise to rely on a watch that runs backwards, though. Once again the soft smile brushed his lips.
--((Skipping the airport scene...you can assume he gets his stuff there on your own, right?))--
Cornelius greeted the brittle cold with a complimentary curse, quiet to begin with and flung from his mouth the moment his spoke it, into the howling wind as it beat in his ears. His overcoat fluttered out madly behind him, whiplashing against the backs of his legs, struggling to free itself from its imprisonment. In his gloved hand he gripped his single black suitcase, as his entire speech for the following day had already been carefully written into the absorbent material of his mind. His scarf writhed angrily, in sync with the motions of his overcoat, yet moving in a pattern all its own. His blue eyes afire as he shifted his attention to the landmarks he had been told to look for, Cornelius heard the taxi he had arrived in revving its engine as it accelerated down the street.
England was a decent change from the United States; the cobblestone streets under his expensive shoes held a serenity nonexistent in the smog-ridden nexus that was New York City, where his father lived, running his vastly fortunate company, in one of many identical buildings that towered haughtily over the pedestrians scurrying to their various under-paying ( you were either under-payed or over-payed in New York, it seemed) jobs. Here, at least in this part of town, only the moaning winds and inky tides of darkness were there to greet him, and the air, while cold enough to send him into gales of harsh coughing, was pure and clean.
As he turned on heel, loose pebbles crunching together beneath his feet, Cornelius lifted his stunning crystal-blue eyes towards the heavens. He settled into a pace, his free hand jammed deep into the safe confines of his coat's thick pocket, and debated which was more enjoyable: sitting before a snarling, crackling fire, with a thick, well-written novel in hand and a cup of hot cocoa nearby, or staring wordlessly at the night sky presented before him now. The stars were innumerable, and so varying in sizes that it looked like an image conjured by an imaginative artist with a paintbrush in hand; and they were wedged into a deep, inky blackness that wasn't black, but rather a lush navy-blue.
With a restive sigh heard by nobody, Cornelius turned around a corner, faintly perplexed by the lack of light when he ought to be nearing a fairly populated street by now. Yet the street signs were all as he recalled being told of them, although the last had been bent crookedly, with some of the paint chipped away in the shape of a curious insignia.
Sheltered by the crumbling remains of what were likely old apartments beyond restoration, the teenager felt his pupils dilating slowly in hopes of picking out the sharp corners of the buildings in the cloaking shadows. The only intelligable explanation for his current location, wherever he was, was that the man he had communicated with had discovered a shortcut and relayed it. Without considering how late Cornelius's arrival time would be.
In the pitch black embrace of darkness, Cornelius was freely scowling when he turned a corner and was ambushed by torrents of blinding light. White splotches exploded in his eyes as he took an unguarded step backwards, flinging up his free hand to shade his eyes. His vision took its time clearing, but the raven-haired businessman dropped his hand from his face anyways, his countenance imperceptible once more. His sharp eyes focused on the only creature inhabiting the alley other than himself; a figure draped in an assortment of deep black garments. A hood concealed the figure's gender for all of two seconds, before it chose to speak.
"You're here early, not that it really matters. Nothing else to do - why the curious expression? You seemed o know exactly where you were going and here you are."
The male voice sounded young, almost as youthful as Cornelius himself, but everything about the figure was ominous. The instinctive side of him suggested he run as quickly as possible, away from this man and the illogical light that highlighted this alleyway for no particular reason. The blue-eyed character fatefully dismissed this urge, logically concluding that it was only the man's out-of-place clothing that irked him. Nonetheless he dropped his suitcase, and the idea of bending down to pick it up never occurred to him. The sound of the metal tapping against the grimy cobblestones sent a chill down his spine, yet a cold, steely expression settled itself on its face when the figure spoke again.
"Well, this is cliché, but I have been expecting you, Cornelius, seeing as-"
"It's Raven, please." He interjected politely, although the rigidity of his posture didn't change.
"-Cornelius, would you like a drink? Something to calm your nerves?" the man inquired, gesturing behind him to a rotted barrel.
Settled atop its decaying, moldy brown surface was the same glass he had critiqued from the airplane...no...perhaps it was merely one of similar design. No debauching soda fizzed in this ornate glass, as the liquid was of a thick, crimson color that reminded Cornelius of when he had sliced his hand open using a kitchen knife when he was younger. The substance sloshing lightly in the glassware when the robed figure picked it up looked exactly like-
"Wine?" The sinister man suggested.
Cornelius felt an illogical twitch of anger at this man, certain that he was smiling from within those folds of clothing. The bastard.
"I'm fine. Can't drink yet, anyhow. And I don't want it." He said dryly, shedding his polite act as he realized this man - figure - was making him paranoid. He was never paranoid.
"Pity," The figure said in a tittering voice, marching up to Cornelius until the pale youth was at the edge of the mystical light's range. "you'd have probably accepted it if you were younger. But then you'd be useless, you'd never survive."
He made a sweeping motion, as if clearing an invisible slate. Cornelius frowned slightly at the man's hand, which was as white as the snow that frequented N.Y. The thought that there wasn't darkness behind him, but rather a solid wall, had taken form in his mind. Stepping through the wall was as absurd as taking another step back away from the light. The very illogical path his mind had taken was as frightening as this creature talking to him.
"What would you say, Cornelius Alexander Raven, son of Adair, if I informed you that we are not the only civil creatures inhabiting the Earth now?"
"Nothing. I'd walk away."
"Of course, but you won't right now, so you'll humor me. At least for the moment. Anyways, what if I explained to you that there are creatures that are imperceptible to the human eye in this world, able to travel through pockets in space to skip between worlds, if you will?"
Cornelius was thoroughly relieved to find his sense of intelligence and logic returning to him. As it did, this man's rantings made less sense. He remained silent, accepting the fact that he had somehow been forced to hold the wine glass.
"Exactly. These creatures - we'll call them Demons, for lack of a pronounceable word in any human language - can also phase in between shadows when they are "immaterial". That is, of course, to say, until they have received their "eyes". You'll understand soon enough - it makes more sense when you see it. Anyways, Cornelius-"
"Raven."
"Cornelius. Once they have received their eyes they are susceptible to attacks, unable to re-merge into the shadows with them. They usually return these "eyes" when they move through the space pockets back to their own world, but this takes much more time than simply melting into shadows, I'm sure you can imagine."
The cloaked man paused to observe Cornelius's skeptical expression.
"Well, practice makes perfect, my young friend. Experience is a marvelous learning opportunity, don't you think?"
"I think-"
"Twas a rhetorical question, Cornelius." The man, a blotch of black in the bright light, intercepted.
"I know, and I'm not quite sure it matters to me anymore, sir." Cornelius responded politely, icy-blue eyes blinking expressionlessly.
Without any pointless hesitation, the youth turned briskly around and placed one foot outside the receptive light that reflected off the ancient, stony walls of the alley. He began to take another when a vice-like hand closed around his forearm, agonizing enough to send a gasp of pain from his mouth. Feeling torn in two with his body half in, half out of the uncanny light, Cornelius turned around, an inquiry on his lips.
The question never left his mouth, transforming into a rush of air that he inhaled as his eyes widened in incomprehensible shock. The figure, one ghostly hand holding him upright, held a sword in his other, at waist length where he had run Cornelius through. The blade was made of a crystalline-like silver material, outlined in a glowing violet hue, and the hilt was the very essence that defined black. The cloaked figure sighed wearily, shaking his head.
"Honestly, such skepticism is a rather discouraging trait from someone with your fate, Cornelius Raven."
And the figure was gone - the light wasn't there...had it ever been?
With nobody holding him up, Cornelius collapsed immediately to his knees, his hands splayed on the uneven stony ground as he felt the color drain from his face. The pain in his abdomen effectively impaired his thoughts, although he did whittle it down to two. He killed me. That....bastard.
His arms finally comprehended the message being pulsed out by his brain, and buckled, and he pitched sideways awkwardly onto the dusted, dirt-riddled cobblestone path. He could feel his hands drenched in what turned out to be his own pooling blood, and felt a dark sense of hopelessness. Such an early, anti-climatic end, and it hadn't made any sense at all...what kind of murderer impales their victims on a glowing sword? To hell if he knew...and why was his vision clouding with white?
Weren't people supposed to "fall into darkness" as they fell unconscious? Or was that just the perception etched into his mind by novels?
His mind floated freely to whatever he wished to think about, which he was grateful of. If he was forced to remain transfixed in reality, with his cursed expensive suit absorbing his own blood, metallic and smelling overwhelmingly of copper, blackening as it dried, he'd probably be sick.
How amusing.
With equal amusement, Cornelius realized that someone was murmuring softly in his ear - the one not pressed to the pebble-littered street, of course. He couldn't understand a single one of the words being babbled to him, as they were of no language he had ever even heard rumors of, but he felt consoled at least. Someone was there with him...and it was pleasant, as if he wasn't actually dying, alone and cold and lost in a foreign country, but rather being rocked to sleep by his mother. The mother he had killed in birth, and thus never met. It was nice.
Cornelius shut his eyes; the light came through anyways, as did the murmurings in a lost language. His smile wasn't vague, but real and genuine, as he slipped away from the land of the living.
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