OoC: This is an RP set in the universe of The Walking Dead graphic novels and TV show. As the title suggests, the city that our characters are closest to is Las Vegas. Send me a PM if you are interested because I don't want a HUGE group of survivors. Kthxbai.
BiC:
The scraping sound of limbs dragging across pavement. It’s a sound that one should never have to hear, yet one that Thomas Turner was intimately familiar with. Anyone would be after weeks of hearing it right outside your home, dimming the lights anytime they ventured too close. The faint moan accompanying every step that they took. Walkers, some folks called them. The living dead, interested in only one thing; eating.
Thomas huddled in the corner of the room, a single candle flame illuminating the room, blocked out from the outside world by heavy blankets covering the windows of his once family home. His family. He didn’t think about it, pushing it from his mind as he focused on something, anything, else. He counted the number of steps he heard outside his door, trying to determine how many of them there were.
In the beginning he tried to count the days that he’d been holed up in the house, only daring to go outside during the day, and only to go to the convenience store down the road. Now he didn’t go outside, the convenience store long since looted of the food; he himself had hoarded most of the canned foods up in his own kitchen. The days were blurred together; he blocked out all outside light so he could hardly tell the passage of time. His life became a sequence of sleeping and eating, occasionally he would do push-ups or sit-ups to distract himself from the horrible truth; no one was coming for him, he was going to die in this place.
The twenty-four year old was two years out of college and hadn’t even begun to really live yet. He tried to find a job at a local newspaper, having majored in English for some indiscernible reason. They wouldn’t take him, so he had resolved to work at a book store in town while he focused on writing his first book. It wasn’t coming easily to him. He was looking into jobs in New York, or another of the big cities; he was tired of the suburban life style. He had just been accepted for an interview in Atlanta when this all started. Suddenly, getting away from home to work for pieces of green paper didn’t seem all that important.
Within the first couple of weeks transmission was cut, the lifeline to the outside world severed. Before the news stopped broadcasting they were saying to go to the cities; the military could protect everyone in the cities. But Thomas’ mother was too sick to travel; one of the Walker’s bit her and she got really sick. They had no way of knowing just how sick.
Thomas volunteered to go to the pharmacy and see what antibiotics hadn’t been looted already, when he came back with the medicine it was too late; his mother was dead. But she didn’t stay dead.
The first one to be attacked was Thomas’ sixteen year old sister, completely dumbfounded by the sight of their deceased mother walking down the hallway. His father had been the next to get bitten, trying to free his daughter from his late wife’s hands. Thomas backed into a corner, too frightened and traumatized to think of what to do. He blacked out, and when he came around again, he was standing over his mother’s body with a bloody table leg in his hand.
The fever set upon his father and sister as though they’d been set ablaze, their skin gave off a horrible heat. His dad struggled to speak, “don’t you let us come back as one of them.” He coughed, blood ran from the corner of his mouth, “you do it for me and you do it for her.” His father pointed to the wardrobe that stood in their room, Thomas knew that there was an old revolver behind it in case of emergencies. With tears streaming down his face, he pulled the trigger on two of the people he loved most in the world.
After that, it hadn’t seemed worth moving. He lived in a daze, not feeling. Sometimes he put the barrel of that same revolver to his head, but he was too scared to pull the trigger; on those days he would break down and cry for the family that he lost. It had been a while since that.
He’d lost track of time. Days turned to weeks, and who’s to say that weeks hadn’t turned to months? Today, he sat huddling in the corner; a Walker got curious and started banging on the door. Thomas’ heart throbbed in his chest. “The cities.” He whispered to himself. “If I’m gonna have a chance, I have to get out of here.”
The closest city would be Las Vegas, about one hundred miles north; the irony that Sin City would turn out to be his salvation didn’t occur to him. Under normal circumstances, he may have found it entertaining. But, under normal circumstances, he wouldn’t have been driven to seek shelter there in the first place.
He wasn’t an excellent shot, but he tucked the revolver into his waistline, at close range he may be able to do something with it. He grabbed a flashlight and went to the garage door, which opened with a creak. Thomas was thankful that he had an attached garage and he didn’t have to venture outside just yet. Still, to be safe, he stood in the door frame and shone the flashlight around the interior of the dark room, not venturing inside until he was certain that the garage was empty. He hoped that his parents had fueled up the car when last they used it.
He stepped into the garage and looked around on his dad’s workbench, grabbing an old axe from his dad’s days as a volunteer fireman; it would probably be best to preserve ammunition, he wasn’t sure where he would find more.
He climbed into the car and started the engine, the roar would undoubtedly attract more Walkers, so he needed to be quick. Thomas locked the doors of his Ford Focus and checked the gas gauge, content to see that it was three-quarters full. It would have to do. He clicked the button on the garage door control pinned to the sun visor and was greeted by mid-morning Sun; there were four Walkers making their way up his driveway toward the sound when he floored it.
The car easily pushed through the creatures and Thomas turned north, trying to catch his breath as he saw his friends and neighbors all stumbling toward the car as it drove past. They aren’t your friends, anymore, he thought, just keep driving and don’t look back.
OoC: So go ahead and make your opening post your character heading toward Las Vegas and stuff DD
BiC:
The scraping sound of limbs dragging across pavement. It’s a sound that one should never have to hear, yet one that Thomas Turner was intimately familiar with. Anyone would be after weeks of hearing it right outside your home, dimming the lights anytime they ventured too close. The faint moan accompanying every step that they took. Walkers, some folks called them. The living dead, interested in only one thing; eating.
Thomas huddled in the corner of the room, a single candle flame illuminating the room, blocked out from the outside world by heavy blankets covering the windows of his once family home. His family. He didn’t think about it, pushing it from his mind as he focused on something, anything, else. He counted the number of steps he heard outside his door, trying to determine how many of them there were.
In the beginning he tried to count the days that he’d been holed up in the house, only daring to go outside during the day, and only to go to the convenience store down the road. Now he didn’t go outside, the convenience store long since looted of the food; he himself had hoarded most of the canned foods up in his own kitchen. The days were blurred together; he blocked out all outside light so he could hardly tell the passage of time. His life became a sequence of sleeping and eating, occasionally he would do push-ups or sit-ups to distract himself from the horrible truth; no one was coming for him, he was going to die in this place.
The twenty-four year old was two years out of college and hadn’t even begun to really live yet. He tried to find a job at a local newspaper, having majored in English for some indiscernible reason. They wouldn’t take him, so he had resolved to work at a book store in town while he focused on writing his first book. It wasn’t coming easily to him. He was looking into jobs in New York, or another of the big cities; he was tired of the suburban life style. He had just been accepted for an interview in Atlanta when this all started. Suddenly, getting away from home to work for pieces of green paper didn’t seem all that important.
Within the first couple of weeks transmission was cut, the lifeline to the outside world severed. Before the news stopped broadcasting they were saying to go to the cities; the military could protect everyone in the cities. But Thomas’ mother was too sick to travel; one of the Walker’s bit her and she got really sick. They had no way of knowing just how sick.
Thomas volunteered to go to the pharmacy and see what antibiotics hadn’t been looted already, when he came back with the medicine it was too late; his mother was dead. But she didn’t stay dead.
The first one to be attacked was Thomas’ sixteen year old sister, completely dumbfounded by the sight of their deceased mother walking down the hallway. His father had been the next to get bitten, trying to free his daughter from his late wife’s hands. Thomas backed into a corner, too frightened and traumatized to think of what to do. He blacked out, and when he came around again, he was standing over his mother’s body with a bloody table leg in his hand.
The fever set upon his father and sister as though they’d been set ablaze, their skin gave off a horrible heat. His dad struggled to speak, “don’t you let us come back as one of them.” He coughed, blood ran from the corner of his mouth, “you do it for me and you do it for her.” His father pointed to the wardrobe that stood in their room, Thomas knew that there was an old revolver behind it in case of emergencies. With tears streaming down his face, he pulled the trigger on two of the people he loved most in the world.
After that, it hadn’t seemed worth moving. He lived in a daze, not feeling. Sometimes he put the barrel of that same revolver to his head, but he was too scared to pull the trigger; on those days he would break down and cry for the family that he lost. It had been a while since that.
He’d lost track of time. Days turned to weeks, and who’s to say that weeks hadn’t turned to months? Today, he sat huddling in the corner; a Walker got curious and started banging on the door. Thomas’ heart throbbed in his chest. “The cities.” He whispered to himself. “If I’m gonna have a chance, I have to get out of here.”
The closest city would be Las Vegas, about one hundred miles north; the irony that Sin City would turn out to be his salvation didn’t occur to him. Under normal circumstances, he may have found it entertaining. But, under normal circumstances, he wouldn’t have been driven to seek shelter there in the first place.
He wasn’t an excellent shot, but he tucked the revolver into his waistline, at close range he may be able to do something with it. He grabbed a flashlight and went to the garage door, which opened with a creak. Thomas was thankful that he had an attached garage and he didn’t have to venture outside just yet. Still, to be safe, he stood in the door frame and shone the flashlight around the interior of the dark room, not venturing inside until he was certain that the garage was empty. He hoped that his parents had fueled up the car when last they used it.
He stepped into the garage and looked around on his dad’s workbench, grabbing an old axe from his dad’s days as a volunteer fireman; it would probably be best to preserve ammunition, he wasn’t sure where he would find more.
He climbed into the car and started the engine, the roar would undoubtedly attract more Walkers, so he needed to be quick. Thomas locked the doors of his Ford Focus and checked the gas gauge, content to see that it was three-quarters full. It would have to do. He clicked the button on the garage door control pinned to the sun visor and was greeted by mid-morning Sun; there were four Walkers making their way up his driveway toward the sound when he floored it.
The car easily pushed through the creatures and Thomas turned north, trying to catch his breath as he saw his friends and neighbors all stumbling toward the car as it drove past. They aren’t your friends, anymore, he thought, just keep driving and don’t look back.
OoC: So go ahead and make your opening post your character heading toward Las Vegas and stuff DD
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