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[IC]Pickman's Model Revisited[CoC]

Neal puts some Phish on the portable radio he has in his kitchen - always helped him concentrate - pours himself a cup of coffee, lights a cigarette, and walks over to the kitchen table, where he sits examining the list Renard provided. He almost spills the coffee as a rushing noise goes overhead.

Damned planes, he thinks. But that's what I get living so close to Logan, I guess.

Hit with a sudden brainstorm he hops on the Internet.

OOC: Looking on the Net for things about Pickman. Checking out the City Clerk's Office to check on houses in the North End rented, not sold, to individuals under the name of Peters in the 1920s. And I'm gonna try to gain access to the book at Widener Library that Renard tried to get, using my academic credentials if I need to (all that is only if I can find out stuff on the 'Peters' apartment).
 

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OODM: Uh, ok, looks like we're charging boldly forth without Vorlon then. But before you guys get very far on the ride back...

John chauffeurs you in his roomy Lexus as you all head back to Boston. The host on the talk radio is talking about the ten year old boy who went missing in the North End and complaining about the fact that the police haven't found him yet. Suddenly, you hear screams coming from the radio. About a half a minute passes, and the radio host, a woman in her thirties by the sound of it, comes back on.

"Whew! Everythings back to normal now. Sorry folks, but the tremors have come back to Boston, as you probably just felt yourselves."

[OODM: heavy, unrealistic fictionalizing follows]

All of you are aware of a phenomenon that has been present in Boston for centuries. Once every seven years, usually in the first week of August, a short tremor hits Boston, followed by an identical tremor exactly one week later.

The host goes on with the co-host for a bit, talking about the shock, then she announces that a special guest host, an expert in seismology from MIT, is going to be joining them.

You don't catch the man's name, but apparently he's a professor who's spent the last 20 years studying the weird tremors and their fixed periodicity. "Why yes, Barbara, the Boston Tremors are the greatest enigma of known seismological events. Nowhere in nature do you see earthquakes like this happening on a fixed schedule of years and weeks. Back in 1996, when the last set came, we noticed that, although the earthquakes feel as if they are 4.0's in Downtown Boston, the actual reading from our instruments is barely a fraction of that. We don't see a fixed center, but a multitude of tiny tremors, all occuring relatively close to the surface at exactly the same time."

"And the oddest thing? An friend of mine, an astronomer at Harvard, noticed that the pattern of the tremors coincide exactly with the orbital patterns of earth and a distant M-class planet. Every seven years, on the exact same day the two planets are at their minimum distance from each other, the earthquakes begin, and exactly one week later another batch of tremors occur."

"What puzzles us is not so much the periodic nature of the planetary orbits, but how any seismological activity could be dependent on it. The only other phenomenon in nature which really fits the pattern is the migratory patterns of some animals."

Barbara, the host replies, "but what type of animals could cause such tremors?"

"None," replies the expert. "Unless there's a whole herd of colossal earthworms that migrate to Boston every seven years, for a week, at the beck and call of a distant planet" he laughs at his joke. She laughs. They laugh. You laugh. Everyone laughs.

Neal knows there was a myth among the local Indian tribes centuries ago concerning just such a set of colossal underground beasts, and they claimed these beasts were the source of the tremors. They had no physical description of the beasts, however.

[OODM: I'll update the checks you made in a while]
 
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Dakkareth said:



[OOC: Research on:
The tome seen at Mr. Renard's
The Elder Sign
Pickman

In that order. Jens will use his library on all things antique for a +2 circumstance bonus and after that his computer and the internet. He will at most stay up until 2 am.

Jens doesn't discover anything in his library relating to these things. He can't find anything on the computer either.

OODM: And the light blue works great, thx Dakkareth.
 

apocalypstick said:
{OOC: Chris is going to make some calls to his friends (Streetwise) and see if he can't find anyone who knows about artists' studios in the North End, particularly any ones owned by Sicilians)

Chris's friends don't know anything about artist studios in that area, as the North End is primarily known for Italian restaurants and historic monuments. However, he does learn that the mob has a small presence in some of the alleys that in the general location of Pickman's house, doing small time racketeering and drug dealing.

OODM: Will the site let me post this time? Crossing fingers. Been trying to get this up for a while, but these boards keep flatlining.
 

Andrew D. Gable said:
OOC: Looking on the Net for things about Pickman. Checking out the City Clerk's Office to check on houses in the North End rented, not sold, to individuals under the name of Peters in the 1920s. And I'm gonna try to gain access to the book at Widener Library that Renard tried to get, using my academic credentials if I need to (all that is only if I can find out stuff on the 'Peters' apartment).

Neal doesn't find anything on the net. A call to the City Archives just before they close for the day informs him that he'll need either the property owner's name or the address of the location to get any information. He calls up Harvard's Widener to see about the credentials. They tell him that he'll need to come in during business hours tomorrow to apply for guest access to the main stacks. Other areas of the library, like rare books and special collections, require a faculty sponsor for a visitor to gain access, but the book he's looking for is in the regular stacks.
 

OODM: As you guys came back into Boston, you discussed your knowledge of some of the research tools at your disposal. Your knowledge of public information resources tells you the following:

-The Suffolk County Registry of Deeds; Hour M-F 8-5 pm; records all documents relating to real estate[ownership only, not landlord/tenant]; deeds, mortgages, etc and serves as a public resource for people wishing to verify property ownership. Records here go back to the early 1600's. Records indexed by owners.

-Boston City Registry Division; Hour M,T,Th,F 9-4; records, births, marriages, deaths.

-Boston Public Library, Central Library; Hours: General Library & Research Library: Monday-Thursday 9-9, Friday and Saturday 9-5; Rare Books & Manuscripts: Monday-Friday 9-5

-Widener Library, Harvard; M-Th, 9-10, F,S 9-5; Library Privileges office M-F 9-5

-Other universities have libraries that may be useful too, but not quite as extensive as BPL or Widener.

-City Archives; Hours: by appointment only; Monday through Friday, 9:30 to 4:30pm. Records the largest amount of public information available. It has a number of different departments; the most interesting for your purposes are:

•City Clerk: business registrations [this would cover landlord/ tenant stuff I think]
•Inspectional Services: use & occupancy permits, demolished building records, flammables licensing, building, health, and zoning code enforcement, 1871-1992.
•Treasury: tax collection, loans, and disbursement, 1822-1988. Records from 1896 to 1944 are available by appointment at the research library division, Boston Public Library (Central Library)
 
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[OOC: Flashback - we were a little hasty, it seems ;)]

"So ... I could go to the Boston public library and do some research. Tomorrow, when it's open of course."

Jens looks at his task planner briefly.

"How about we meet again tomorrow afternoon. If we meet at 6 pm we can do our research after work and then gather to compare the results."
 

OODM: You're pretty much free to accept Jens' plan at this point, and describe whatever it is you plan on doing tomorrow. John will be at work like Jens, so he won't be there to ferry you around, but he will be there after work at Jens' appointed time.

We're at a turning point in the game here; from this point on, and for a long stretch ahead, I won't be leading you around by the nose like I have been, so it's pretty much a free world at this point. Basically all I'll do is keep track of time and respond to your research checks until you have a location to investigate. Tuesday is ending as you guys do your research (the checks you already asked for above), tomorrow is Wednesday.
 

OOC: During the day, while I'm waiting for our 6:00 meeting, I'll take a cab to Widener and make some Research checks to look up things about Pickman and to find the book Renard was talking about. I'll also check into these tremors, and any weirdness that followed them. And following up on a hunch, I'll check into the disppearance of this kid, and exactly where it happened - I figure, being current, this'll be easy to find. Then I'll take another cab to the City Archives (considering I find any leads on the Pickman/Peters place, that is), and try to do some cross-referencing to see where the place is now.
 

OODM: I’m going to take research time into account, adding time when necessary to make retries. I’ll assume Neal arrives at the permissions department just as they open at nine.

9-10 am-It takes Neal half an hour to fill out the paperwork and another half hour for the attendant to check his references at BU. Access in hand, he marches off to begin the search.

10-11 am-It takes him an hour to read up on Pickman. He learns some of the standard stuff that he probably already knew; Pickman’s family had a past history in the occult, with an ancestor hanged in Salem for witchcraft in 1692. The family apparently had an extensive library of occult texts written in Greek. He learns that Pickman’s painting, “Ghoul Feeding,” was sold at auction after his father passed away and made its way into the ownership of a local art collector named Brian O’Malley. No other paintings were ever recovered. The case of Pickman’s disappearance was never resolved.

11am -2 pm- It takes him a several hours to track down and skim through the book suggested by Renard. It is a general history of the North End with particular emphasis on the architectural trends and zoning layouts of the district. It discusses the history of some of the older structures, the types of houses built (some of which lasted for centuries), as well as detailing the gradual creation of monuments and tourist attractions around the North End. Of particular interest, the book discusses the role of the Italian mafia in the renovation of certain parts of the district. Filippo “Phil” Buccola, head of the mafia in the area following the demise of Gaspare Messina in 1924, ran bootlegging, racketeering, and loansharking operations in the area through the 1930’s. These were limited operations, due to the dominance of the Irish boss from South Boston, Frankie Wallace. With the successful murder of Wallace and the end of prohibition, Buccola scrambled to take the opportunity to invest in more legitimate fronts for his racketeering. These involved all sorts of things, but the book mainly details Buccola’s construction and property interests. Buccola became aware of precisely how much revenue could be gained (and laundered) in construction costs when he saw how long it took to construct the nearby Sumner tunnel. Beginning in 1934, the year Sumner Tunnel opened, Buccola bought much of the property in the area that Pickman’s place was supposed to be, usually badgering the current Italian-American landowners to bring the costs down, and tore down all of the older ramshackle structures, replacing them with sturdier brick apartments. Much of the construction expenditures used in the process were actually a means to launder illegitimate earnings and turn it into viable capital, with which Buccola then invested in legitimate interests all throughout Boston, while continuing with racketeering, numbers, and loan-sharking. The book, though written in the 1990’s, doesn’t get much past the 1950’s, presumably because there has been little change in North End construction since that time, save for the construction of the Callhan Tunnel, which opened to the public in 1961. By this time, Buccola had retired to Sicily, but his successor, Ray Patriarca, successfully acquired a share of the construction interests in building the second, sister tunnel to the Sumner.[Note that these are well traversed commuter tunnels, veering somewhat to the southeast of the North End and have nothing to do with the ancient tunnel systems Pickman described to Thurber].

2-4 pm- Neal spends a bit of time fruitlessly looking for items on the tremors, then finally comes across a journal article published in 1996 shortly after the last set of tremors. It doesn’t tell much more than they already heard on the radio, though it does show a map of Boston proper which details 13 unique epicenters scattered in or near downtown, from Beacon hill, to the commons, to the financial district, underneath the City hall, Haymarket, and up into the north end, with two epicenters in particular standing out; one just a little north of Copp’s Hill cemetery, and another just north and east of the alleyways where Pickman’s place was supposed to be located.

4-4:15- This part goes much more quickly; Neal just reads that the 10 year old was a student at the Eliot school in the North End, on the southeast corner of the intersection of Charter and Hanover streets. He never came home from school one day. He was known to visit the North End Playground, which is at the very northern tip of the North End overlooking the Harbor. The most direct path there would take him through the alleyway networks where Pickman’s place is supposed to be, and the path from the Playground back to his apartment where he lives with his mother on Lynn St would take him by the Copp’s Hill Cemetary. None of his friends knows where he went that day.

4:26-Neal calls to make an appointment with the City Archives, but learns it is too late to schedule one for today, as they are just about to close. They are able to schedule him in for the following morning at 10 am.

OODM:If Neal is an iron man researcher, he can do something else before the appointed meeting time, or he can assume he took a break for lunch somewhere in the above schedule and that the time for the meeting is drawing near.

Give apocalypstick a chance to chime in, then feel free to start the meeting. At this point in the evening, the Boston Public Library is probably the best bet for squeezing in any more research. It has the best historical selection of newspapers and journals on microfiche available, even surpassing Widener in this regard.
 
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