Dan Sagittarius (
hallelujahjunction) wrote in
goneawayworld2020-09-24 11:33 pm
Entry tags:
I'm still the talk of this town, I'm still the roll of their dice.
Who: Dan Sagittarius and Beckett
What: Dan and Beckett bond(?) over poker.
Where: The library.
When: Prior to the attack.
Warnings/Notes: None here yet.
Dan feels a little bad underplaying how good he is at poker to Beckett, but on the other hand, he trusts that people who describe themselves as “decent poker players” are generally people who are well into the upper percentages of adept poker players. After all, if you describe yourself as a good poker player, you’ve already indicated that you don’t really know what you’re talking about. Dan’s a very good poker player, so long as they’re only using one deck at a time, because he’s got a fantastic memory for the cards and a practiced, fluid poker face. He’s financed many a trip back and forth across the continent on hustling poker games.
He still hates the library, though, which is why as he waits in one of the little alcove areas with the recliners he’s preemptively shuffling the deck of cards. Being completely illiterate - old school illiterate, the kind that signs that name with an X and needs a witness - is usually just a background handicap in his line of work, but occasionally there are places or things that throw into stark relief that he’s in a world where he’s intellectually got one arm tied behind his back.
But it’s quiet, and he has a bottle of wine, which the lady at the cafeteria gave him after he flirted with her enough to establish a “connection”. It’s not just in her head, either; Dan’s absolutely willing to get unprofessional with things. Anything to break up the tedium of the rig, which so far has been a corporate nightmare full of schedules and fluorescent lights.
He’s looking forward to an evening with Beckett. As far as he’s concerned, they have at least a few things in common, and there’s always something to be said for someone who mentions chess, poker and dancing in their introduction. That’s someone who has at least some kind of taste for intellectual stimulation by the way of both strategy and expression. That’s someone who can tap into both worlds.
“Beckett,” he says with a grin as he sees his new friend enter. “It’ll be a pleasure to get to know you better, and an even greater pleasure to kick your ass at Texas Hold ‘Em.”
What: Dan and Beckett bond(?) over poker.
Where: The library.
When: Prior to the attack.
Warnings/Notes: None here yet.
Dan feels a little bad underplaying how good he is at poker to Beckett, but on the other hand, he trusts that people who describe themselves as “decent poker players” are generally people who are well into the upper percentages of adept poker players. After all, if you describe yourself as a good poker player, you’ve already indicated that you don’t really know what you’re talking about. Dan’s a very good poker player, so long as they’re only using one deck at a time, because he’s got a fantastic memory for the cards and a practiced, fluid poker face. He’s financed many a trip back and forth across the continent on hustling poker games.
He still hates the library, though, which is why as he waits in one of the little alcove areas with the recliners he’s preemptively shuffling the deck of cards. Being completely illiterate - old school illiterate, the kind that signs that name with an X and needs a witness - is usually just a background handicap in his line of work, but occasionally there are places or things that throw into stark relief that he’s in a world where he’s intellectually got one arm tied behind his back.
But it’s quiet, and he has a bottle of wine, which the lady at the cafeteria gave him after he flirted with her enough to establish a “connection”. It’s not just in her head, either; Dan’s absolutely willing to get unprofessional with things. Anything to break up the tedium of the rig, which so far has been a corporate nightmare full of schedules and fluorescent lights.
He’s looking forward to an evening with Beckett. As far as he’s concerned, they have at least a few things in common, and there’s always something to be said for someone who mentions chess, poker and dancing in their introduction. That’s someone who has at least some kind of taste for intellectual stimulation by the way of both strategy and expression. That’s someone who can tap into both worlds.
“Beckett,” he says with a grin as he sees his new friend enter. “It’ll be a pleasure to get to know you better, and an even greater pleasure to kick your ass at Texas Hold ‘Em.”

no subject
He deals the third. Six of clubs, hellfire and damnation. The night wasn't going his way, so far. Still, there was always a chance. He doesn't twitch at the result.
"Well, I'm sure there's parties in your world determined to involve you in their squabbles. And Kindred breed conspiracy like black mold, unfortunately."
no subject
Nothing in the river for him to love, either.
"Kindred, huh? Ain't a term in my world." He takes the deck back. "I'm an independent contractor in my world. I go where my skills are useful to the common good."
no subject
It had been the hardest thing to learn. Aristotle taught that there was no shame in what they were, only what they might do; so why, then, did he hold with Camarilla secrecy? It had taken a demonstration for Beckett to understand. Fortunately, it had only taken one.
Beckett makes up his mind, taps the table, shows his cards.
no subject
"And here you are revealing it to me. I mean, I imagine to plenty of those on this," he waves a hand. "Rig. Anyway. I'm flattered. And awaiting another story."
He starts shuffling for the next hand.
im............. alive.................
There's a thousand ways to politely tell someone a topic is off limit, and Beckett knows all of them. He doesn't want to spill every secret right off the bat; you never know which one you might need.
"Let's see... ah, yes. I wasn't directly involved, but I bore witness, about twenty five years ago, to an sequence of events in Philadelphia that I found rather amusing, at the time."
He actually rather likes this one, now that it's coming back to him. One of the classic Kindred dramas, rather like a good pull off a healthy adult male; you're never surprised, but you're never disappointed.
"Kindred tends towards hierarchy, as a rule; whether we incline towards discipline or license, we like to bicker and fight until there's a pecking order we can all feel comfortable with. In Philadelphia, the nastiest hen in the coop styles themselves Prince of the city. And the Prince when this story begins was about three hundred years old, vicious as a snapping turtle, and deeply disliked by his subjects."
A ventrue, to be precise, of long and thwarted ambition. Finding himself unable to move up the ranks in his clan, he exorcised his emotions by tormenting his kindred citizens. He was the oldest creature within the city limits, mostly because anyone with any better option got the hell out of Philly as soon as it was feasible. He'd only been there on the hunt, himself.
"Now, he was a kindred of particular tastes, and one night he happened to spy a young man that suited them perfectly. I don't suppose I need to bore you with the details - suffice it to say, the young man enraptured him totally. To the point where he began to neglect his iron control of his subjects. It shouldn't come as a surprise to learn that the young man soon approached a particularly vocal enemy of the standing prince, claiming to represent a party external to the city. This party wanted to see the current Prince overthrown and replaced by someone more amenable to certain business interests that the Prince had rejected in quite insulting terms. Our mark was happy to agree."
He pauses here to take his cards, leaving them face-down for the moment.
"So the night came. Everything was ready; the young man had proved an extraordinary liasion, and the way was clear to violently seize power and dispose of the hated Prince. Except someone hadn't done their due diligence. The coup goes off without a hitch, and our mark is about to take the throne - when his backer arrives, unexpectedly, and puts him to death for participating in an illegal action against a sitting Prince. Kindred justice, or what passes for it in some quarters."
Now he checks his cards. Off to decent start, this time. If the river is kind.
"And, of course, the backer then allocated the throne to a favored underling, and things have been going quite smoothly in Philadelphia - for now. I've heard word, however, that the mark had a loyal childe with a brain in their head who escaped Philadelphia that night, so perhaps things may heat up again."
no subject
He's learning that Beckett respects subterfuge and manipulation, that he has an affinity for a sense of just desserts (at least when the unfortunate soul includes carelessness as one of their crimes), and can find a spectator's pleasure is bloodshed. The latter two are ones that Dan doesn't find appealing, but that won't matter until they're on missions together; for now, they're just enjoying a friendly cared game, and Beckett's great conversation.
"Well, I'm glad to hear Philly's the city of brotherly love again." He takes another drink; by now, with as much of the bottle is missing, the fact that he's not visibly impaired is not a testament to sobriety but to an extremely high tolerance. "And that the person deposed won't be spoiling the place for everyone else. I don't know how the politicking don't make you crazy. If I had to keep track of ancient feuds and business interests and alliances, I'd blow my brains out."
He checks his hand: a two and a seven, mismatched. The worst pair of cards a gambler can pull; you can't make a straight with them, you can't shoot for a flush, and you have to pray on getting some very mediocre pairs.
He's been playing conservatively so far, but hell, fuck it. A two and a seven is a challenge. He puts in a sugar packet.
no subject
"Unfortunately, there's no escaping it in my line of work. Every lead I follow and discovery I make turns out to be tied into someone's old grudge or ancient feud. The perils of effective immortality, I suppose."
Which is really putting it mildly, but what does Dan really need to know about the jyhad's invisible strings, and how tightly they cut into the skin?
The sugar packet has him raising an eyebrow, but he doesn't hesitate to meet it.
"Two out of three would have me feeling lucky, too," is all he says.
no subject
Dan, too, is keeping his secrets. The shine wore off when his partner, his "little sister", the person who got him into monster hunting in the first place, died to save him on a mission gone pear-shaped. Ever since then, hunting has been an increasingly joyless and unsatisfying grind. But he doesn't want to talk about that to Beckett or to anyone else.
"Well, I don't want to count on Lady Luck too much. You know she don't like to be kept." Next card in the river is not a two or a seven. Dan's path to a partway decent hand gets all the narrower.
no subject
Beckett could share a thing or two on the subject of lost loved ones, but why would he? The past is another country, and no one's business besides.
"My experience has been that the complexities are always there," he says instead. "Experience simply makes them more obvious. It's something of a paradox, really - so little happens by accident, and yet somehow, so much ends up subject to chance."
no subject
Last card in the river gives him a pair of twos, which is better than nothing but worse than almost everything.
"I just wish there were more...space. More space to do our own things unencumbered. When I started out it was so straightforward, and now I got to worry about non-compete clauses, license dues, other people's rivalries that go back to before I was even born. It makes me want to drop off the grid again."
no subject
But he wants to see where Dan is going with this.
"Ah, that I can understand." He shrugs. "It's always easier before you get a reputation, isn't it? In and out before anyone even knows to look for you - nowadays everyone's got a list somewhere with my name on it, it seems. The price of success, I suppose."
no subject
Where is Dan going with this? At this point he doesn't totally know, and that's a bad sign to him.
"Fold," he says, tucking his cards, unseen, back into the deck. He'll take the loss this time.
no subject
"Go on, then," he says, shuffling for another hand.
no subject
"I have a friend back home, you know, a werewolf. Nice guy, name of Lionel. When we first met about ten years ago he was so surprised that I didn't care he was a werewolf that he started crying, that's how much he'd been put through the wringer after getting turned. We ended up on quite a few hunts together, probably more than me and almost anyone else." The exceptions being his friend The Ancient One, and his adoptive sister Eliora - and he has no intentions of bringing her up to Beckett or to anyone else on the rig, ever.
"So, about a few months ago, we were on a hunt together and it turned out it was a conspiracy of blood magic wizards trying to use other supernatural creatures to increase their own power. They had this whole complex full of werewolves they were going to use as fodder. And my friend Lionel, my friend Lionel who was too shy to speak to strangers when we first met - he rallied the whole bunch of them and convinced them to stop hanging in the dungeons with their tails between their legs and to bust free. And they did. We got every single one of the werewolves out safe, and he became their new alpha."
And Dan ended up having rough sex with one of the freed werewolves in the bathroom of a Chevron, so really, winning all around.
"Goes to show you how people can surprise you."
no subject
"And yes, people can. I'm pleased your friend did so for the better." It's a rare thing, in his experience. "Do werewolves suffer much prejudice in your world, then? In mine, the existence of the supernatural is kept strictly secret. I find myself rather fascinated by yours."
Beckett risks complete honesty. He's trying to imagine the results of similar transparency in the world he knows. It comes up bloodshed and death every time, and most of it in pursuit of self-fulfilling prophecy. Camarilla, Sabbat, assorted cults and sects - all aspects of a greater culture, in the end, a parasitical one determined to surrender free will to superstition. Convincing itself that monstrosity is only natural, when you can't possibly help it.
And the worst thing is, despite knowing that what he's in is water, he's still drowning in it like all the rest. It would take courage he doesn't have and resources he won't sacrifice to do anything else.
Maybe some of this shows on his face, in all its bleakness; this is frankly to his advantage, because he's just drawn the queen and ace of spades, which isn't a half-bad start.
no subject
"Well, it depends. A good most of the people in our world don't know about anything in the Weird - that's the supernatural, the monsters, the magic, all that - and they think anything that does come out is some animal with rabies or mutant from a lab. Those of us that do know about the Weird, maybe like a single percent of us at most...I wish I could say that we were kinder to those who ain't precisely human. Like I told you, I'm one of only a few hunters that bothered to learn Common Tongue. Most just see anything that goes bump in the night as subhuman, unless it's a magician."
Dan doesn't dislike magicians, but he dislikes the power they hold and how, in his opinion, as a whole they use it irresponsibly for petty feuds instead of for any kind of community betterment. In the Weird, they hold all the power, and they never let "mundanes" like him or the supernatural creatures in their community forget it.
First card in the river is a seven, useless to Dan.
no subject
Beckett is quite pleased to see another ace as the second card. He disguises the pleasure with an uncomfortable cough.
"There are some - ordinary mortals," Beckett catches himself before referring to the kine as such; there's a slim chance Dan might know the word means livestock, "who come to be aware of the existence of the supernatural. Usually they're dealt with, usually not pleasantly; those that survive long enough to try to and turn the tables may pose some threat to the weak or foolish but, in the end..."
He trails off, trusting Dan to guess the conclusion. And perhaps not wanting to go further down the halls of memory then the subject already requires. It wasn't that long ago, by his standards - Berlin in flames, the Beast raging in his heart, an old friend dead for nothing and that woman the only one nearby to blame.
He's paid for it. He'll pay again, he suspects. Some debts have higher interest than others.
"I can hardly blame them for their attitudes. Mortals are - generally not highly regarded or of great concern."
no subject
She gave him a heads up that the witch who slaughtered his family was coming for his soul. He wasn't able to figure out enough about the situation to make that warning useful.
"We "mundanes" aren't held in high regard in our world, either. Some people get bitter about it, but I try to think of it as a matter of trade-offs. We may not have magic or strength but we can go pretend the Weird doesn't exist, usually, and assimilate with the larger culture."
Not Dan, though. Something about being cursed for nearly a decade makes it hard to ever truly feel at home in a milieu that doesn't believe in witchcraft. It's not that he ever talks about what happened to him, but the difference is that people who know The Weird know how to turn a blind eye, and ignorant normal people require a fakey explanation like "cancer runs in my family".
"For the record, I don't work with many other mundanes. Like I said, a lot of them takes slights more personal than I do. Bad mindsets."
no subject
That, and the kindred have spent seven thousand years entrenching themselves in the mindset of mortals-as-cattle. They're not going to budge just because it's rude. But he rather likes Dan, so far, so there's no need to get into it.
"What sorts have you worked with before? Do you know much about the vampires in your world?"
no subject
And the language Dan speaks is very encompassing, from seduction and persuasion to more utilitarian skills like firearms and working his way around explosives.
"I've never worked directly with a vampire, but I fought a few. I know the basics, which I imagine are different from the ones on your world." His face is blank, not letting slip that that's where he suffered one of his greatest losses, one that he still has nightmares about almost daily. "I've worked with ghosts, werewolves, wraiths and magicians, mostly. Sometimes a few odds and ends from the other side of the supernatural world. I guess most folk call them 'touched'."
Next card in the river is a seven - a pair for them both.
no subject
"Well, the relevant details if we need to work together are thus: Fire will kill me, and sunlight - thought not here, for some reason - and may make me beserk with fear, so do be careful about them. Stake through the heart causes paralysis. As for the rest - running water, invitations, briar thorns, that rot - irrelevant."
He looks at his cards, looks at the river, and pushes five sweetener packs forward.
no subject
"I appreciate you giving me the primer on if I ever might need to kill you." Dan smirks. "As for me - well, you've met one mortal human, you've met them all when it comes to how easy it is for us to die. We're pretty fragile for the species that runs the world, for better or worse."
He meets Beckett's sweeteners and raises two more packets, seeing if Beckett will take.
no subject
Mostly through luck, rescue, or having never been that big a priority in the first place, but it still counts.
"In all seriousness, however, do be careful with open flame. When I'm pushed far enough into fear or rage, I lose any sense of friend or foe - we call it the Beast. Mine is well-disciplined, but the danger is always present."
Beckett meets the bet, and when the next card come, smiles just a little. The queen of hearts, in all her glory.
no subject
That queen does nothing for Dan, but he still has a two-pair with kings high, which is hardly a hand worth complaining about. He feels confident throwing a sugar packet in, expecting Beckett to either fold or meet him.
"I'm familiar with people having similar impulses, and I'll be considerate. I was actually wondering if you minded me smoking in here, but I can hold off until we're done tonight, or just light it behind a bookcase." Dan's almost done with the wine, and he's not someone who feels comfortable without substances.
no subject
It won't panic him, but that doesn't mean he likes it. The invention of electric light had come as profound relief every kindred alive to see it.
Beckett meets his sugar packet, and resists the urge to raise. Dan's caught him out once before, and he does have his pride to think of - although he doesn't see how he could be hiding anything that beats two pair, aces high.
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
cw body horror, death, devil worship, loss of pants
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)