Modern/Delta Green - The Beginning of the End (Updated Daily: Sep. 8) - Page 9 - EN World: Your Daily RPG Magazine
127034 gamers and counting!

Go Back   EN World: Your Daily RPG Magazine > Gaming Action > Story Hour
Not a member yet? REGISTER your account!

Notices

Story Hour Post your ongoing tales from your campaigns, and read those from others for inspiration. Lots of other RPG boards post "Story Hours", but this is where it started!

Visit Our Sponsors
Subscribe!
EN World: Your Daily RPG Magazine
All the latest EN World official reviews, columns, and subscriber articles here. Don't have your subscription yet? It's only $3 a month and you can grab it right here!
Subscribe to RSS Follow EN World on Twitter Use our Facebook App Free iPhone App Free Android App EN World TV Subscribers Content Subscribe! Search Send me a Scoop
 
Share LinkBack (6) Thread Tools Display Modes
Old 5th April 2008, 03:56 AM   #121 (permalink)
has no status.

Community Supporter
 
talien's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: Fairfield, CT
Posts: 2,662
Dire Wavelengths - Prologue

Quote:
Life is a series of hellos and goodbyes
I'm afraid it's time for goodbye again
Say goodbye to Hollywood
Say goodbye, my baby

--Say Goodbye to Hollywood by Billy Joel
Quote:
The Rising had barely finished setting up and performing a sound check when people began filtering into the room. All were dressed to the nines, though the attire varied. Some came in suits, others in dress reminiscent of Victorian England. Still others looked like doctors, bankers, rap stars, and gang members. They all gathered around tables, each with their own posse, which made for a crowded room. Nobody was dancing.

The Rising started to play, timidly at first. The men looked on, whispering amongst themselves. Spider wisely switched gears to songs you could talk around, although they still involved a lot of screaming. It just took longer for him to reach the screaming part.

Blade sat down. He was dreaming. Again.

"Oh good, you're here," said a smooth voice.

Jake knew who would be sitting across the table from him this time. It was a thin, fine-looking Arab. He was dressed impeccably in a white suit.

“Hi Jacob. How are you?”

“I’m good. I did what you told me to do.”

“Yeah, that was great. I loved that part where you rammed the Humvee. And that whole thing about terrorists…” Alzis shook his head. “You know they’re saying it’s Al-Qaeda? Can you believe that? Now terrorists are attacking movie directors for their portrayal of ‘loose women in film’. Ridiculous!”

“Yeah, ridiculous,” said Blade.

Alzis glanced down at his own drink. “How rude of me! What are you having?”

“I’m fine,” muttered Blade.

“Oh, right, right. You don’t drink. I keep forgetting.” He paused. “So let’s talk about you. How you feeling? Have you talked to Christine lately? Called her up? Shot the breeze?”

“You know I haven’t.”

“Right, right. Ever since that whole alcoholism thing, hmm? Tough situation, very tough. That kind of thing needs to be handled delicately. Really.”

Blade nodded.

“But you’re not a delicate kind of guy, are you? Look, Jacob. I’m in a real bind here. We’re working on a timeline, so I’m going through the trouble of popping in and out of your head multiple times.” He gestured at the walls of the club. “I’ve got to say, there’s some pretty scary stuff in here.”

“Thanks,” said Blade.

“No need to thank me! I’m just trying to be helpful. I really want you back in your son Alex’s life. I think it might change things for the better, you know what I mean? And what’s more important than a father’s love for his son?”

Blade just looked at him.

“Nothing, that’s what. So here’s the deal: go to the Excelsior Hotel on the corner of Maple. Stop Christine from going to the movie set today in twenty minutes.” Alzis tapped his watch. “Time’s ticking buddy, tick-tock, tick-tock.”

“You said that last time,” said Blade. “Would it be too much to give me a little more of a heads up?”

Alzis looked offended. “Hey now, that’s no way to talk to a friend. I wasn’t going to tell you at all, but you’re going to be dead in a few weeks so I figured I’d…oops.” He put his finger to his lips. “Did I just let that slip? I’m sorry. You’re running out of time.”

“Wait, what?” Blade stood up. “Are you threatening me?”

“Threatening you? No!” Alzis shook his head. “I’m trying to help. But we’re wasting time just talking here. Beep. Beep. BEEP. BEEP!”
Blade woke up in a cold sweat. He hit the beeping alarm clock and shut it off. This time, he let his teammates know what he was up to.
__________________
Mike "Talien" Tresca
http://michael.tresca.net

Last edited by talien; 17th March 2009 at 11:54 AM..
talien is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 6th April 2008, 05:32 AM   #122 (permalink)
has no status.

Community Supporter
 
talien's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: Fairfield, CT
Posts: 2,662
Dire Wavelenths: Part 1 – The Excelsior Hotel

HOLLYWOOD, CA -- The Excelsior Hotel was just fifteen minutes away. After waiting for his teammates to gear up and get in the van, he covered the distance in ten.

“Christine!” Blade shouted into the phone.

“Who is this?”

“It’s Jake. Listen, you’ve got to—“

“Are you drunk?”

“What? No—“

“I told you to stop calling me, Jake. I want you out of my life and out of Alex’s. I don’t need you to mess things up anymore. Things are just turning around for me.”

“But Chris…”

“Don’t call me again, Jake.” She hung up.

Blade rang the phone again several times, but Christine wouldn’t pick up.

“Guppy, can you trace this phone number?”

“Trace the phone number of your ex-wife?” asked Guppy. “Sure…” He tapped away at the keyboard in the van. “No luck. I think she turned off her phone.”

They reached the hotel. Blade ran in along with Hammer and Guppy.

“I’m looking for Christine Dee,” said Blade, flashing his badge at the concierge at the front desk.

“That’s nice, sir. We don’t give out personal information for any of our clients.”

Hammer sighed and leaned forward. “I wonder if we should inspect this place. I bet we might find something wrong with it. What do you think, Blade?”

The man swallowed. “Let me see…” He tapped a few keys. “She just left a few minutes ago in a limousine.”

”Do you know where?”

The man looked at Blade like he was nuts. “Doesn’t everyone? She’s filming on the set of Curse of the Undead.”

Blade tapped the counter with a knuckle. “Thanks.”

“Who are you people?” shouted the concierge.

“Oh don’t worry…” Guppy shouted back. “Just her ex-husband.”
__________________
Mike "Talien" Tresca
http://michael.tresca.net
talien is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 7th April 2008, 11:51 AM   #123 (permalink)
has no status.

Community Supporter
 
talien's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: Fairfield, CT
Posts: 2,662
Dire Wavelengths: Part 2 – The Soundstage

What was once an abandoned desert airport was transformed into a low-budget soundstage. With no lease and only a token rent, Vanvon reasoned the isolation would be good for creativity.

Blade flashed his badge to the guard at the front gate and kept on running. Archive, Hammer, and Guppy trailed behind.

The crew was laughing at something. Christine Dee and Allen Roberts had just engaged in what looked like a kiss in front of a window.

“This is DRAMA, you ignorant cretin!” shouted the portly Derik Vanvon. “What the HELL is going on?”

The laughter died quickly.

“I know the script calls for my animal magnetism, but I thought a light moment might be more…”

“SHUT UP!” shouted Vanvon. “You’re not a comic—you’re a BUFFOON.”

Two men of average height with athletic builds, dressed in casual clothes covered by windbreakers approached. Each had a mustache and extremely short hair.

“Hold it buddy,” said one of the security guards. “Who are you?”

“Think they recognize us?” Guppy whispered out of the corner of his mouth.

Blade shushed him. “I’m Jake…” he paused. “Iron Shirt.”

“Jake?” The man’s eyebrows shot up. “Jake Blade? What the hell happened to you man? Rule number one in security: never get involved with a client!”

“Yeah, thanks for the advice. Listen, I need to talk to my ex-wife.”

“Don’t we all,” said the other guard, snickering. “You have to leave. You can’t be here.”

“I’m a federal agent.”

“I don’t care who you are,” said the guard. “We have specific orders to keep you off the set.”

Behind them, a wiry man of just under average height, dressed in jeans, a stained sweatshirt, a long leather coat, sunglasses, and carrying a messenger bag over his shoulder. He was clearly suspicious, but the guards were so focused on Blade that they had missed him.

Hammer didn’t miss him. He edged over.

The man was about to reach into his pocket just as Blade poked a pistol in the man’s ribs. “Easy. Put your hands up. Slowly.”

The man slowly took the item out of his pocket. It was a Desert Eagle.

Hammer got the bodyguards’ attention. “You guys may want to pay a little more attention to the real threats to the stars here,” said Hammer. “This man is carrying a gun and he’s NOT a federal agent.”

One of the guards plucked the gun out of the man’s hand.

Blade squinted at him. “You? You’re the threat?”

“I’M the threat? I’m trying to protect Christine from her crazy ex-husband!”

Blade turned to the security guard. “This is Carey Vora. He’s a real nut. She has a restraining order against him for stalking. I dealt with him years ago.”

Vanvon was still ranting. “Follow my direction and my camera will convince the world that even a SNIVELING idiot MILQUETOAST like you can be a hero.”

“You’re wrong,” said Carey. “You’re the stalker!”

Guppy rifled through the man’s bag. “Duct tape. A knife. A sock.”

“Looks like a kidnapping kit to me,” said Hammer.

“Miss Dee, since you seem INCAPABLE of delivering even a SINGLE line with conviction,” ranted Vanvon, “let’s continue with you doing the scene in DISHABELLE.”

There was the screech of metal overhead and the lighting above snapped.

Blade and Hammer rushed forward. Blade tackled Christine and Hammer grabbed Allen, shoving them out of the way just in time as the lighting structure collapsed where they had stood.

That was all Vora needed. He grabbed the pistol from the stunned security guard and turned it on the prone Blade…

Archive slammed into Vora, tackling him to the ground. He put his full weight on the stalker’s chest, pinning his arms.

Christine was also pinned beneath Blade. Their eyes met.

“You can have visitation rights once a month,” breathed Christine.
__________________
Mike "Talien" Tresca
http://michael.tresca.net
talien is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 8th April 2008, 11:20 AM   #124 (permalink)
has no status.

Community Supporter
 
talien's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: Fairfield, CT
Posts: 2,662
Dire Wavelengths: Conclusion

“Are you done using my van for your stupid personal problems?” snarled Drake, chewing Blade out for his actions.

“Yeah,” Blade said glumly.

“You’re going to turn Majestic-12 into COPS if you keep this up.”

“Yes, sir.”

“Look,” Drake’s voice softened. “I picked you, all of you, because you’ve dealt with some weird things in your past. So I expect you to deal with it. But you’ve got to do it in on MJ-12 terms. I want field reports. I want you to act like you’re part of an organization, or I will bounce your ass out of it. And nobody leaves MJ-12 alive. Do we have an understanding?”

“Yes, sir.”

That seemed to mollify Drake somewhat. “Good. I’ve got Caprice filling out the paperwork for the last mission. He’ll be busy for weeks at this rate. You owe him.”

“I’ll be sure to remember that.”

“Right,” said Drake. “Anything else you want to tell me?”

“No sir.”

“Good. Get some rest, Blade, you look like crap.”

Blade shut off his Cistron in the hotel room.

As he lay down, he wondered how he would spend his last few weeks alive.
__________________
Mike "Talien" Tresca
http://michael.tresca.net
talien is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 9th April 2008, 11:31 AM   #125 (permalink)
has no status.

Community Supporter
 
talien's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: Fairfield, CT
Posts: 2,662
Chapter 6: Love’s Lonely Children - Introduction

This scenario, “Loves Lonely Children,” is from the Cthulhu Now supplement “The Stars Are Right” by Richard Watts. You can read more about Delta Green at http://www.delta-green.com. Please note: This story hour contains spoilers!

Our cast of characters includes:
  • Game Master: Michael Tresca
  • Hank “Guppy” Gupta (Smart Hero) played by Joseph Tresca
  • Jake “Blade” Iron Shirt (Strong Hero) played by Matt Hammer
  • Joseph “Archive” Fontaine (Dedicated Hero) played by Joe Lalumia
  • Kurtis "Hammer" Grange (Fast Hero) played by George Webster
This is probably the nastiest scenario we played to date.

Love’s Lonely Children primarily takes place in a two-story hovel. But of course, that’s not how things go down. Once again, the PCs provided me a gift in splitting up (they seem to enjoy splitting up), creating a cinematic effect where Hammer investigates what happened at the house while the other three agents tracked the bad guys down.

I was surprised that the action moved beyond the house and that the agents didn’t move earlier. But in the end, it was even spookier.

There’s one problem with this scenario, and that’s the bad guy. Put plainly, unless the agents do something boring like calling the police without investigating the place themselves, or something totally psychotic like attacking presumably innocent people with no evidence, when the bad guy does finally show up the agents are dead meat. There’s one “out” that the scenario provides that I used as a last resort when it became clear that the villain was going to eat the entire party.

We used the “Tower of Sanity” to good effect this game. At the end, Guppy’s player had to pull twelve times from the Tower—a very tense moment. It also proved my point about having sanity loss be more in the PC’s hands. If Guppy had failed his sanity check, all the agents would have been massacred.

Defining Moment: Hammer, without my prompting, split from the rest of the team to search out the cultist house. I went back and forth between the two scenes so that Hammer discovered the true nature of the thing in a picture just as the agents encountered it face-to-face.

Relevant Media
__________________
Mike "Talien" Tresca
http://michael.tresca.net

Last edited by talien; 17th April 2008 at 11:40 AM..
talien is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10th April 2008, 11:18 AM   #126 (permalink)
has no status.

Community Supporter
 
talien's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: Fairfield, CT
Posts: 2,662
Love's Lonely Children: Prologue

Quote:
Just how deep do you believe?
Will you bite the hand that feeds?
Will you chew until it bleeds?
Can you get up off your knees?
Are you brave enough to see?
Do you want to change it?

--The Hand That Feeds by Nine Inch Nails
Blade’s Cistron chirped. He picked it up. “Hello?”

“Jake? Jake, is that you?”

“Spider?”

“Yeah.”

“How the hell are you!”

“I’m…I could be better. Listen, I saw what you did with your ex-wife there. Good save.”

Blade frowned. The news reports had barely mentioned him. Drake made it a habit of keeping a running tally every time Jake’s name showed up, keeping a scorecard of his publicity. And Drake was never satisfied with anything less than zero.

“Uh, thanks. How’d you get this number?”

“I called the FBI and they routed it to you. Are you near a telly?”

Blade looked around the hotel room. That was Drake’s doing. One didn’t just call someone up on their Cistron. “Yeah.”

“Turn to Channel Seven news.”

Blade fumbled for the remote with his other hand and switched on the television.

“…body of Katherine Louise Hammond, a seventeen old prostitute of no fixed address, was discovered early this morning in downtown Caufield Park by city workers. Pieces of the body wrapped in black plastic bags were found in several garbage cans along the edge of the park’s ornamental lake.”

The story was complete with on-the-scene interviews and moody shots of Caulfield Park at dawn.

“Who’s this?” asked Blade.

“Keep watching,” said Spider.

“…the corpse was crudely dismembered with a heavy instrument, possibly an axe. Numerous savage bite wounds also marked the body. These wounds, although definitely human, indicate a possible jaw or facial deformity of distinctive appearance. Hammond’s boyfriend, David ‘Spider’ Holloway, a musician with a popular underground bad called The Rising, is currently assisting police with the enquiries.”

“Damn,” said Blade. “So you’re considered a suspect?”

“Person of interest, yeah. Jake, I need your help. You used to be great security for us in the past, and since you’re in California anyway…” Spider rushed ahead in his speech, “Samson’s just a few hours away and I thought—“

“Did you do it?”

“What? F*&k no, how could you ask me that? I was in love with her, man.”

“You’re asking me to risk my hide to save you, so I thought I should ask.”

“The day before she died…we were debating about whether or not to be tested. I thought we should, she didn’t…”

“Don’t blame yourself, Spider.”

The television report continued. “…forensics established that Hammond’s body showed evidence of heroin use in the hours preceding her death…”

“She wasn’t high, Jake. I know that for a fact. She gave up shooting and was clean for over a week.”

“I’ll check it out. Got her address?”

“Yeah.” Spider gave him the address. “And Jake?”

“Yeah?”

”When you find this guy…I want you to make him suffer.”

“You can count on it.”

Blade hung up the phone. A second later a text message flashed through. It was from Drake, with a mission briefing to all of the team’s Cistrons. Another message came in immediately afterwards, just to him.

The text read, “YOU’RE WELCOME.”
__________________
Mike "Talien" Tresca
http://michael.tresca.net
talien is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 11th April 2008, 11:21 AM   #127 (permalink)
has no status.

Community Supporter
 
talien's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: Fairfield, CT
Posts: 2,662
Love's Lonely Children: Part 1 – The Squat

SAMSON, CA -- Like a cancer in an otherwise healthy body, the ramshackle house that was Kathy’s squat stood out clearly on an otherwise ordinary city street. Broken glass gleamed in its windows, wooden boards nailed behind the shards. Across its gray brick façade was painted the words, “Need a home? Here’s one. Anarchy.”

Instead of a front door, a rusty slab of corrugated iron was nailed over the doorframe. Blade lifted it open at one corner, providing entrance to the dark and dirty place. The rest of the team filed in behind him.

If misery had an odor, it smelled like the inside of the squat—stale, damp, and slightly rotten.

A human form was huddled on the sagging couch in the lounge-room, watching the rats play amongst the ruins of his life.

“Hi,” he said.

The man wasn’t a pretty sight: sunken eyes, bruised skin, cracked lips, and matted hair. His emaciated frame was racked with tremors.

“Who are you?” asked Blade.

“Matthew…” he said, his voiced slurred.

“Do you know a Kathy Hammond?”

“Oh yeah, I remember Kathy…”

“Where is she?”

“You got any smack?”

“What?” asked Blade. “No.”

“Front me some man, you’ve gotta front me some…and I’ll tell you where Kathy is.”

Hammer rolled his eyes. “We’re not drug dealers.”

Matthew made an animal-like noise and then began sulkily searching among the litter on the floor for a syringe, scraping powdered remains of heroin out of discarded foils.

“I think I found it,” said Archive.

The bedroom that was Kathy’s was little larger than a closet. A stained mattress covered most of the floor; the rest scattered with clothes, cosmetics, and assorted rubbish. A collage of faces cut from magazines and newspapers covered one wall.

Archive picked up a magazine. “Huh, Girltalk,” he said, reading the cover aloud. He opened it and winced. It was a pornographic publication featuring photos of naked men in various provocative poses.

Blade squinted at the cover. “Interesting. The sticker on the back cover gives the name of Hammonds Adult Books along with an address.”

Guppy picked up a photograph of three people: a weaselish man with thinning, ginger hair, and a grossly overweight woman. The shape of the third person was carefully cut out of the picture. Part of a storefront appeared in the background of the photo, on which parts of the words “Hammonds Adult Books” could be seen.

“I don’t know where the missing picture is,” said Guppy.

“I do.” Hammer pointed at one of the photos pasted among the montage of rich and famous faces glued on the wall. It was Kathy, in her schoolgirl uniform, her hair in braids.

“I guess we know where we’re going next,” said Blade.
__________________
Mike "Talien" Tresca
http://michael.tresca.net
talien is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 12th April 2008, 01:18 PM   #128 (permalink)
has no status.

Community Supporter
 
talien's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: Fairfield, CT
Posts: 2,662
Love's Lonely Children: Part 2 – Hammonds Adult Books

The street consisted of small storefronts with apartments above. Hammonds was sandwiched between a butcher’s shop and a place specializing in electronic goods. A green sedan was parked out front. The bookshop’s front window was painted over, and the words “Hammonds Adult Books” lettered upon it. A handwritten sign on the door warned patrons not to enter if “nudity offends.” The hours indicated it was open from 2 p.m. to 2 a.m., six days a week.

As they pulled up, a woman entered—rare in a place whose customers were most often nervous adolescents and skulking men. She was wrapped in a coat and scarf. Moments after she entered, a “Closed” sign appeared in the front window and the door was locked.

Hammer went down the alleyway to cover any escapes from the rear entrance. Blade, Archive, and Guppy knocked on the door.

After more insistent knocking, an unremarkable, weak, unassuming man answered the door. He was older and balder than he appeared in the discarded photograph.

“We’re closed,” he snapped.

Blade pressed his badge against the window. “We’re federal agents. We’d like to speak with you a moment.”

“I said we’re closed…”

Blade put his foot in the door. “We can do this the hard way or the easy way.”

The man sighed. “Fine, come in.”

Inside, the fluorescent-lit store was stocked with inflatable plastic sex dolls, row after row of shrink-wrapped magazines, clinically gleaming toys of plastic, leather and steel, and a glass-topped counter displaying dope pipes, condoms, and lubricants. Presiding over it all, leering at the agents from behind the counter, was the weasel-like Hammond.

“Do you know Kathy Hammond?”

The man’s features twitched. “That’s my daughter, yes.”

Blade and Archive exchanged a look. “You haven’t heard?”

“Heard?” The man’s head swiveled from Blade to Archive and back again. “Heard what?”

“She’s was found dead this morning.”

“Dead?” The man’s gaze wandered to the counter. He bit his lip. “I had no idea…”

“What’s your name, sir?” asked Blade.

“Colin,” said Colin. “I live here with my wife Edith.”

They could hear the thumping of the woman as she stalked around the upper floor. Judging from the heaviness of her footsteps, she must have been huge.

“When was the last time you saw your daughter?”

Colin sighed. “Kathy was always a difficult child, but as a teenager she became wild and uncontrollable. At fifteen she began listening to that dreadful punk music. It’s media like that Rising group that corrupted her mind, you know.”

Archive blinked. “He’s serious…?”

“By sixteen she was addicted to heroin. Kathy ran away from home shortly after her seventeenth birthday,” said Colin.

“When was that?” asked Archive.

”Eight months ago. Ever since then we’ve been dreading, but half-expecting, the worst.”

Guppy held up a magazine cover. It was a recent issue of the sadomasochistic magazine Dungeon, featuring a photograph of Colin on the cover. Though bound and gagged, enough of his face was visible for him to be recognized. Posed with him was a grossly obese woman dressed in black leather and carrying a whip.

“How much for this?” asked Guppy.

“Five dollars,” said Colin.

“I will give you two.”

Colin’s nose wrinkled. “I don’t know what country you come from, mister, but we don’t haggle here. It’s five dollars.”

“Fine.” Guppy put the magazine back on the shelf.

“Can we speak with your wife, Mister Hammond?” asked Blade.

Colin sighed. “Edith? EDITH!”

There was more thumping upstairs. “What?” she shouted.

“There’s some men here who want to speak with you!”

“What NOW?” More rumbling. “I’m coming down.”

Edith surged through the double doors behind the counter, a great, blubbery mountain of a woman, dressed in a floral print dress the size of a small tent. Her tiny eyes glared out at the world from a red and angry face. Although her hair was long, it was pulled back in a tight bun.

She ordered Colin out of the room. “Let me deal with this.” Her breathing came in loud, heavy gasps, sweat dotting her brow from the exertion of climbing down the steps.

Colin slunk away and Edith turned back to stare at Blade. “Now. What can I do for you gentlemen?”

“We were asking about your daughter.”

“Yes, our daughter,” she huffed. “Ungrateful little bitch.”

“Are you aware we’re conducting a murder investigation?”

“No? She’s dead then? Good.”

“You seem be taking this awfully well,” said Archive.

“Look.” She leaned forward, and Edith’s pendulous rolls of fat consumed the counter. “Kathy was nothing but trouble. Good riddance to her, I say.”

“Where is the woman who just entered the bookshop?” asked Guppy.

“A private customer. She is in our parlor.”

“We’d like to speak with her,” said Blade.

“Absolutely NOT.” Edith drew herself up. “Our shop prides itself on providing privacy to our clients. Now unless you have anything further to ask me, I will bid you good evening.”

“We can get a warrant and search this place,” threatened Blade.

Edith moved around the counter and ushered them out with her great bulk. “You have no cause. Now get off my property.”

She slammed the door behind them.

“That went well,” said Archive.

“Now what?” asked Guppy.

Blade jangled the keys as he walked towards the van. “Now we wait.”
__________________
Mike "Talien" Tresca
http://michael.tresca.net
talien is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 13th April 2008, 03:39 PM   #129 (permalink)
has no status.

Community Supporter
 
talien's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: Fairfield, CT
Posts: 2,662
Love's Lonely Children: Part 3 – Watching the Book Shop

Staking out the Hammonds’ Bookshop was not a difficult task. The team spent several boring hours watching people enter and exit the bookstore. Now and again Colin left the shop.

Around 2 a.m., Colin and Edith left the house and loaded a series of black plastic bags into the trunk of their car. With the trunk loaded and closed, Colin locked the front door of the shop.

Guppy took his eyes away from binoculars. “I think that’s a body…”

“That’s it, that’s what we need,” shouted Blade. He slammed on the gas.

The green sedan swerved, avoiding the van. The car accelerated and roared past and away.

Blade gave chase. They could just make out the silhouettes of Edith and Colin in front.

Small red taillights fishtailed up ahead.

Blade wasn’t gaining on the taillights. He fought with the wheel as the van swam on the road face.

The red taillights ahead started to turn. With a distant crunching sound, they disappeared.

The van’s headlights showed only empty road, starting to turn. Blade frowned and slowed down.

His headlights showed the sedan up ahead off the road, crumpled around a telephone pole, having failed to hold a turn.

Blade put on the brakes. He swept his bow off the front seat, threw open the door and got out. Guppy and Archive hopped out of the back van.

The wrecked car's headlights illuminated a mound of dirt abutting the highway.

Blade walked up to the wreck and peered into its half-open door. Edith was trapped inside the twisted wreckage, injured and moaning. Dust swirled in the headlights of the wreck.

Blade looked around. “Where’s Colin?”
__________________
Mike "Talien" Tresca
http://michael.tresca.net
talien is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 14th April 2008, 11:29 AM   #130 (permalink)
has no status.

Community Supporter
 
talien's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: Fairfield, CT
Posts: 2,662
Love's Lonely Children: Part 4 – Inside the Hammond Home

The alley ran the length of the block behind the buildings. A stout back door and a curtained, barred kitchen window on the first floor guarded Hammonds. When Hammer heard the Hammonds drive away, he got tired of waiting. He clambered up to the second story bathroom window via a drainpipe. He jimmied the window open and climbed in.

The bathroom was situated at the rear of the house, with a narrow louvered window looking out over the alley. Hammer switched on his flashlight.

Hammer was momentarily startled by a man staring back at him, only to realize it was his reflection in the bathroom mirror. Mold clung to every surface, even creeping in gray blotches across the mirror. He opened the medicine cabinet.

Inside were the usual frayed toothbrushes, razors clogged with soap and bristle, and bottles of aspirin. There were also a container for vials and syringes. It contained a twenty-milliliter syringe and a large bottle closed with a rubber seal. The label, printed in Amsterdam, identified the contents as ninety percent pure heroin. One of the slots was open, indicating a missing vial.

Hammer took a picture of it.

He crept across to the room opposite the bathroom. It was a small, windowless bedroom surrounded by floral wallpaper. Heavy manacles and chains were bolted to the iron bed frame. Dried blood crushed the manacles and stained the mattress. The only other object of note was a one-eyed, fray-eared teddy bear propped on an empty chest of drawers.

Hammer took another picture with his Cistron. The ensuing flash gave a nightmarish cast to the room’s sordid past, burning it into Hammer’s retinas.

He continued down the hall and pushed open the next door.

When the door opened, a gust of foul-smelling air tinged with decay poured into the hallway. Manacles and wicked hooks dangled from thick chains. The chains seemed to strain toward an upside-down pentacle burnt into the wooden floor. The shapeless remains of black candles were carefully placed around the outside of the cryptic symbol, the floorboards stained with dried and drying blood and littered by decaying scraps of food, empty wine bottles, and a motley collection of whips and pincers.

A large axe, encrusted with blood, stood in the corner near a wooden lectern. Resting on the lectern was a tattered, dog-eared manuscript, obviously a photocopy, stapled down one side. Without looking at it too closely, Hammer took a picture with his Cistron.

He had all the evidence he needed to put the Hammonds away for life. That left one more room.

Hammer pushed open the door to Colin and Edith’s bedroom. It was small, squalid room dominated by a large and ugly four-poster bed. Clothes littered the floor, as did empty candy boxes and cigarette butts. A single window looked out over a busy street.

Something peeked out from beneath one of the pillows. Hammer pushed it aside with his Glock. It was a photo album.

Hammer flipped the pages open. It was an usual set of family photos—almost every one of them was of a sexually explicit nature. Kathy was in most of them, her age varying over the years from about five to probably sixteen. The most recent set of five photographs showed Kathy hanging from the chains in the room next door.

Colin Hammond appeared in each of the last photographs but one. Naked in the pictures, there was a tattoo of a broken heart located just above Colin’s groin.

But the last photograph…the last photograph showed Kathy and something else. Something bloated, puffed flesh shining with an unwholesome corpse glow. Of roughly human proportions, it was definitely inhuman in form.

Hammer looked closer. There was a tattoo of a broken heart just above the creature’s groin.

Hammer took a photo of the last picture with his Cistron.

“Guys,” he said, voice shaking. “You’d better take a look at this.”
__________________
Mike "Talien" Tresca
http://michael.tresca.net
talien is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 15th April 2008, 11:21 AM   #131 (permalink)
has no status.

Community Supporter
 
talien's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: Fairfield, CT
Posts: 2,662
Love's Lonely Children: Part 5 – The Hammonds Return

Blade swung the flashlight beam over Colin’s hunched form. He was moaning, hands over his head, body heaving. Blade wasn’t sure if he was throwing up or sobbing.

Archive and Guppy had their weapons trained on Colin.

“Guys,” came Hammer’s voice. “You’d better take a look at this.”

Blade took his eyes off Colin for only a moment.

The images came through in reverse order. The thing that he saw in the Cistron didn’t make any sense. It was too blurry for him to make out details.

“What is this?” asked Archive.

“I think that’s…Colin,” said Hammer.

Another picture came through, this one of a book. “Beyond a gulf in the subterranean night a passage leads to a wall of massive bricks, and beyond the wall rises Y’golonac…”

Blade tucked the Cistron into a pocket and drew a bead on Colin with his compound bow. “Put your hands up where I can see them.”

Colin’s moaning changed from one voice to the gibbering of two, shrieking and wheezing. His headless form swung around, palms spread wide, each punctuated by a screaming, fanged mouth.

“Ahh!” shouted Guppy. He fired his laser pistol at the thing, just as Blade released his arrow and Archive fired his pistol.

The body shuddered, still quivering as rolls of fat from within it pulsed outwards, absorbing the attacks. It took a shuddering step towards them.

Archive began chanting a prayer, but the thing backhanded him. The agent went flying, unconscious in the desert sand.

“Our weapons have no effect!” shouted Guppy, taking a step back.

Blade dropped his bow and drew his two hatchets. Swinging them expertly in front of him, he parried a swipe of the fanged hand.

“Hammer!” shouted Guppy into his Cistron, running for cover behind the overturned sedan. “Hammer, we need backup!”

“What?” Hammer shouted back. “What the hell is going on?”

Guppy looked at the pictures Hammer sent over, desperate to find something that would help. The empty container flashed on the screen.

The syringes! One of the syringes was missing in the picture Hammer had taken. The Hammonds had surely used it to drug their victim. But the amount would easily kill a person, so there had to be more.

“Where is it,” panted Guppy, clawing his way into the sedan. “Where is it?!”

He popped the glove box. The heroin-filled syringe rolled out and fell to the roof of the car. Guppy reached for it…

A meaty paw snatched hold of his wrist. Edith, her grip so strong that he lost feeling in his hand, shrieked in his face.

Screaming back at her, Guppy turned his pistol on the woman’s hand. Fingers sizzled off and her angry shrieks turned to wails of pain.

Syringe in hand, Guppy stood up just in time to see the thing grab hold of Blade’s torso with its mouth-hands. Blade screamed as the fangs bit deep, blood streaming down his waist.

“Hey!” shouted Guppy. “Over here!”

The thing was massive. Had it grown in the few seconds since Guppy last looked at it? The human-like mouths hissed. It tossed Blade aside like a rag doll.

Now, overshadowed by the thing’s bulk, Guppy could see its true form. Its hands, dripping blood from two mouths that had no right to be there, reached for him. Guppy stepped into its embrace…

And plunged the remaining contents of the syringe into its blubbery fat.

The hand-mouths went from sucking and slobbering to a horrible chorus of keening. The shuddering body stumbled, taking a step back, a step forward.

The torso exploded, splattering Guppy with lumps of gelatinous, stinking flesh, black blood, and loops of glistening organs. Guppy fell back, screaming, alone with his nightmares in the lonely stretch of highway.
__________________
Mike "Talien" Tresca
http://michael.tresca.net
talien is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 16th April 2008, 05:19 AM   #132 (permalink)
has no status.

Registered User
 
AnonymousOne's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2007
Posts: 519
... Holy . Your agents need to start carrying flamethrowers or lots of C4.
AnonymousOne is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 16th April 2008, 11:20 AM   #133 (permalink)
has no status.

Community Supporter
 
talien's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: Fairfield, CT
Posts: 2,662
There's a precarious balance requesting gear for a challenging mission, and thus the agents go in packing an arsenal, and completely underestimating the opposition. In this case, the agents simply weren't prepared for what they were facing. They figured it was a cult bust -- at worst, it would involve fighting someone with spells (which they have very little defense against anyway). What they got was Y'golonac.

By the way, I've posted the latest character sheets at http://www.enworld.org/forums/showth...93#post4150193

As you can see, they don't have much. Jim-Bean insists on carrying around a large duffel bag that carries a submachinegun and occasionally a grenade or two -- depending on the mission, he's allowed to bring it along.

There will be long-term consequences for meeting Y'golonac, as you shall see...
__________________
Mike "Talien" Tresca
http://michael.tresca.net
talien is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 16th April 2008, 11:25 AM   #134 (permalink)
has no status.

Community Supporter
 
talien's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: Fairfield, CT
Posts: 2,662
Love's Lonely Children: Conclusion

Quote:
Blade woke up in the middle of the night. Something did not feel right. He couldn’t put his finger on it, but there was something wrong in his place.

He heard something outside of his apartment, down below. It sounded like stone scraping on stone.

Blade got up, put on a robe, and followed the steps down. It was coming from the apartment’s cellar. He’d never been down there before.

Peering down the steps to the cellar, he caught a glimpse of furtive movement. Odd shadows moved across the wall. One of the walls of the cellar had opened up to reveal a foggy passage that glowed with a sallow light. Blade caught a glimpse of a small, tattered figure darting into the foggy passage.

Blade took a few steps into the passage and found himself in a large, dank chamber. One wall was brick, and from out of the hole wafted the fog and the sickly light. The hole was big enough for Blade to crawl through if he got on his hands and knees.

Blade kneeled down. He couldn’t see anything beyond the brick wall without crawling inside. He scuttled into the mist.

Behind the wall was a large room thick with the stench of sewage and decay. There on the brick floor lay an enormous figure, fat, naked, and glowing with a sickly light. No head was visible. Streams of thick, clotting blood poured from open mouths in the palm of each giant hand. A horde of deformed eyeless figures crawled and scampered around and over the glowing body, apparently oblivious to its presence.

The naked figured sat up, brushing away the small, tattered figures. As it lifted its enormous sallow bulk, Blade could see that the thing had no head.

The crippled little things that clung to it had faces he recognized: Colin and Edith Hammond. They surged toward him in a swarm, pulling Blade down to the ground. The fat, headless bulk pulled itself to its feet; the floor shook under its heavy footsteps. The deformed creatures scampered away as the headless thing tower over Blade, and the last thing he saw was a massive hand reaching for his face, the drooling mouth in its palm snapping open and shut…
Blade sat up, sticky in the dark. It was just a dream.

His sides throbbed. Blade made his way to his Cistron.

In the glow of the Cistron, he could see his bed. Two dark red bloodstains had soaked his sheets. His wounds were seeping.

Blade clicked on the files. Picture after picture flashed on the screen. This time, he read the entire passage:

“Beyond a gulf in the subterranean night a passage leads to a wall of massive bricks, and beyond the wall rises Y’golonac to be served by the tattered and eyeless figures of the dark. Long has he slept behind the wall, and those which crawl over the wall scuttle over his body never knowing it to be Y’golonac; but when his name is spoken or read he comes forth to be worshipped or to feed and take on the shape and soul of those he feeds upon for those who read of evil and search for its form within their minds call forth evil, and so may Y’golonac return to walk among men and await that time when the earth is cleared off and Cthulhu rises from his tomb among the weeds…”

Blade accessed the case file, complete with all the pictures. He selected them all. Then he pressed the DELETE key.

“Are you sure you want to permanently delete all pictures?” asked Blacknet.

Blade tapped YES.
__________________
Mike "Talien" Tresca
http://michael.tresca.net

Last edited by talien; 17th March 2009 at 11:56 AM..
talien is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 17th April 2008, 11:29 AM   #135 (permalink)
has no status.

Community Supporter
 
talien's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: Fairfield, CT
Posts: 2,662
Chapter 7: Thin Jack

This scenario, “Thin Jack,” is a free download from http://www.yog-sothoth.com/modules.p...p=getit&lid=63 by Dr. Michael C. LaBossiere. You can read more about Delta Green at http://www.delta-green.com. Please note: This story hour contains spoilers!

Our cast of characters includes:
  • Game Master: Michael Tresca
  • Hank “Guppy” Gupta (Smart Hero) played by Joseph Tresca
  • Jake “Blade” Iron Shirt (Strong Hero) played by Matt Hammer
  • Joseph “Archive” Fontaine (Dedicated Hero) played by Joe Lalumia
  • Kurtis "Hammer" Grange (Fast Hero) played by George Webster
  • Sebastian "Caprice" Creed (Fast/Smart Hero) played by Bill Countiss
Thin Jack is one of those scenarios that has so much potential but doesn’t really capitalize on it. Consider: we have an old Wild West myth about a creature that lurks in darkness and has a vulnerability to precious metals. A movie crew arrives but runs out of money mid-production until a middling actor digs up the legendary gold mine and the creature itself. Begging for the thing to spare his life, the actor forges an unholy deal with the creature and agrees to cover up for its feedings; in return, he keeps the gold and gets his movie made.

If you’ve ever seen Shadow of the Vampire, there’s so many more possibilities here. For one, the similarities between Thin Jack and a vampire provide plenty of confusing twists for the agents. For another, I love directors with god complexes, so wouldn’t it be more fun to have the director make the deal with the creature? Why not have the thing be PART of the story, the ultimate special effect? And finally, this is a Wild West film…surely there has to be a showdown at high err…moon?

This whole plot is of course completely outrageous, so it takes a bit of convincing to get the agents to be part of it. Since Blade already has a connection to his movie star ex-wife and he wants to stay in her good graces, this is another opportunity to prove he’s cleaned up and is worthy of seeing his son more than once a month. The team also rescued a famous Hollywood writer, Randy Kalms, who’s trying to get back into the business with this daring movie.

The “Gaunt” race is actually a psurlon from Monster Manual II. Psurlons are particularly interesting, because they have psionic powers like domination. Thin Jack is intentionally manipulating events such that he can be a star and go out in a blaze of glory, just like the song says.

I used Curse of the Undead, the first vampire western, as the movie that Vanvon is remaking. The film is suitably cheesy and intentionally keeps the villain off-screen enough that Jack has time to be horrifying when he finally does appear. There’s even a red herring thrown in. It’s a good thing I threw him in too; as I suspected, the agents didn’t wait for the entire film to play out.

Defining Moment: Caprice and Hammer, trying to keep the supposed vampire calm, all have their hands hovering over their pistols in a showdown at the mine. It was very tense.

Relevant Media
  • Blaze of Glory: by Bon Jovi.
  • The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly: by Hugo Montenegro.
  • Curse of the Undead: Yes, it's a real film.
  • Shadow of the Vampire: I followed the general plot of this storyline, but updated it for a modern film crew filming a Western.
  • Monster Manual II: The source of the Psurlon. I obviously tweaked some of its attributes, likt its vulnerability to gold, to match the scenario. Still, the Psurlon's mental powers and worm-like abilities made it a great fit. Although it never evolved to its next stage, there are several kinds of Psurlons and Thin Jack could have grown into something huge...
__________________
Mike "Talien" Tresca
http://michael.tresca.net
talien is offline   Reply With Quote


Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


LinkBacks (?)
LinkBack to this Thread: http://www.enworld.org/forum/story-hour/214026-modern-delta-green-beginning-end-updated-daily-sep-8-a.html
Posted By For Type Date
Forums - Yog-Sothoth for Lovecraft & Cthulhu - This thread Refback 13th September 2008 06:47 PM
Story Hour: The Gates of Delirium - Yog-Sothoth for Lovecraft & Cthulhu - This thread Refback 13th September 2008 03:23 PM
Closed Casket Story Hour - Yog-Sothoth for Lovecraft & Cthulhu - Post #0 Refback 12th September 2008 08:53 PM
Getting Results Story Hour Post #0 Refback 11th September 2008 01:52 PM
Talien's Tower: Getting Results: Part 1a – Ambush Post #0 Refback 10th September 2008 01:49 AM
Talien's Tower: Closed Casket: Conclusion This thread Refback 3rd September 2008 02:31 PM


Check out our sponsors!

Powered by vBadvanced CMPS v3.2.2

All times are GMT +1. The time now is 01:59 AM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.7
Copyright ©2000 - 2012, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.

Search Engine Optimization by vBSEO 3.2.0