Raleigh Harper / Emily Watkins (
callmeemily) wrote2014-06-19 09:08 pm
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It's like she's there, again. TW: VIOLENCE/TORTURE
Trigger Warning: This thread contains violence, and torture. If you have any questions, please don't hesitate to tweet @thestarsplay for clarification. Thanks!
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When he'd closed the bathroom door, when he'd turned the light out, the room was plunged into darkness.
Raleigh had screamed until her throat was raw; she sobbed until she had no tears. She was in that basement again; that basement where she'd been so sure that she would die; her leg was numb but she tried to crawl, tried to crawl and reopened her foot, blood smearing the floor. She'd finally stopped, her cheek flat on the ground as she stared at the minuscule crack of light that was coming from under the door. She may have slept; she didn't eat the meal they brought, although after they brought it she tried to pull her hands from the manacles, streaking her wrists with blood.
Finally, she waited. She lay on the floor and waited for them to come. Help wasn't coming. Maybe... maybe someone had noticed; it'd been a day. Maybe Jason had wandered to the bakery. Maybe Spencer wondered why she didn't bring him soup like she'd promised.
Maybe nobody had noticed. Maybe they'd noticed, but nobody cared. Maybe... maybe they'd just assumed she'd moved on.
She was going to die here. She was going to die here. She thought, still. She thought about things she could do, that there'd be anything she could do... besides die. She heard the door open, and she squinted at the light, shrinking back from the light and all that would come with it.
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When he'd closed the bathroom door, when he'd turned the light out, the room was plunged into darkness.
Raleigh had screamed until her throat was raw; she sobbed until she had no tears. She was in that basement again; that basement where she'd been so sure that she would die; her leg was numb but she tried to crawl, tried to crawl and reopened her foot, blood smearing the floor. She'd finally stopped, her cheek flat on the ground as she stared at the minuscule crack of light that was coming from under the door. She may have slept; she didn't eat the meal they brought, although after they brought it she tried to pull her hands from the manacles, streaking her wrists with blood.
Finally, she waited. She lay on the floor and waited for them to come. Help wasn't coming. Maybe... maybe someone had noticed; it'd been a day. Maybe Jason had wandered to the bakery. Maybe Spencer wondered why she didn't bring him soup like she'd promised.
Maybe nobody had noticed. Maybe they'd noticed, but nobody cared. Maybe... maybe they'd just assumed she'd moved on.
She was going to die here. She was going to die here. She thought, still. She thought about things she could do, that there'd be anything she could do... besides die. She heard the door open, and she squinted at the light, shrinking back from the light and all that would come with it.
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His third victim, the girl, his Funny Valentine as he thought of her, he had decided not to kill her. At least not immediately. She was proving to be interesting conversation and there was just something about her that he cherished. Yes, he cherished her.
The fourth victim, the baker girl, she was more what he was used to. She had panicked and screamed some, given up hope most likely. He had thought things were going quite well after he took her until today's debacle.
And it was a debacle, worse than he had ever had in all the years he had been doing this. He had tried to kidnap someone, not really needing to but figuring he would hedge his bets, and they had gotten away. It was early at the beach again and he had tried his doddering old man routine again. It was a success, as it always was, only something had gone wrong. The middle aged woman that had stopped to help him, once his partner had grabbed her, she had done... something. Joseph had only seen something like it once before, her body becoming scales and claws, ripping into his partner before disappearing back into the ocean. Joseph had only seen his partner do that.
A witness meant he had to act fast but the ritual could only be completed at night. He didn't dare risk moving them all and while he would have preferred more victims, he had enough. Joseph only had to hope that the police wouldn't be able to track him down in the meantime. He had no reason to believe that they would though, he had stayed out of sight and kept his head down. Even in a town as small as this one it was possible to disappear, especially for a frail old man.
So now it was time. His partner had retrieved the homeless man and secured him to a chair. He was weak, kept just strong enough so that he wouldn't die before his time in the ceremony, but he wouldn't be able to give any fight. The baker girl was a mystery though. Would she fight or accept her fate.
His partner opened the door, his large frame almost as wide and tall as the door itself. His wild hair was no more tamed than before, long and wavy with a beard to make any mountain man jealous. Joseph found it disgusting but more trouble than it was worth to get his partner to groom himself.
"The time has come," he announced to her as his partner reached down to unchain her. Once that was done he would drag her to one of the beds. "In a short while it will all be over."
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Her hands were unchained, and finally she saw her only chance. Her only chance, because she had to do something, before they did whatever they were going to do that she already knew would end up with her dead. Either way she was dead, right? What ele did she have to lose? Hell - if they killed her now, maybe the old man would just fucking die already and it would have been worth something.
All of her, her life, her death, it would have been worth something. All she can think is when he'd said that. Perhaps you should have valued your own life more. Perhaps she should have. Perhaps- perhaps she should have kept herself safe. Not told anyone.
Raleigh had a lot of regrets.
But right now? Right now she moved abruptly, her nails raking across the huge man's cheek as she tried to twist her other wrist out of the grip he had on it. She had to try to get away, because if she didn't try then she would be giving in.
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His partner lunged after the girl, swatting her aside before she could get past Joseph. He didn't think it would cause any permanent damage, not that it mattered really, but the sacrifices couldn't be too damaged or the spell wouldn't be effective enough. But she had to learn the consequences of fighting.
"Strap her to the bed," Joseph said, lips curling into a sneer. Everything was too important now to have things fall through anymore than they already had.
His partner bound her wrists first, ignoring any blows she rained down on him with her knees or feet. If he felt that at all he gave no sign because Joseph didn't allow him to give any sign of it. Once she was strapped to the bed, Joseph moved over to her side.
"It seems you may have a stronger will to live than I thought."
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She didn't see anyone else around them, but he said strap her to the bed and Raleigh shrugged. She pulled and kicked and fought, even if it broke open whatever scabbing had happened in her foot, even though it hurt like hell. She stared up at the old man as he stood over her, and she pulled herself up as much as she could with her hands tied (which wasn't much) - and she spat at him.
"You're a monster." She was going to die. It didn't work, she was going to die, and she knew it, she knew it, and somehow this was worse than the bathroom because now? Now she'd tried... and failed. She'd tried and failed to escape, and now that's all she was. Whatever happened now - she'd done all she could, and that was the end of it.
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"I do have some delightful news for you though. You may not be able to see him over there, but tied to a chair is a man named Wulfric. A homeless man, actually. Like you, he's here for a reason. But, I've realized that I only need one of you."
This caused some stirring from the semi-dazed Wulfric who was just starting to come around. There was very little fight left in the man although Joseph seemed to have his interest now.
"I'm going to let you two discuss it alone, but when I come back I need to hear who you've agreed on to live and who to die. If neither of you agree then I shall kill you both just for rejecting my gift. I am allowing you to fight for your life, something I consider fair since that is precisely what I am doing here. It only seemed far. Are you clear on the rules?"
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It didn't matter anymore - but when he left, when he left Raleigh finally turned her head to look at the man sitting, tied to the chair, and finally she was able to focus. Wulfric, he reminded her.
He was a drifter, he said, and it made her think of Jason, and she wondered- If she had tears left, she would have cried. It'd seemed like everything was going so well. So well. She had friends, she actually had gone on a date - and now...
Maybe he'd just think she left. That something happened, and she'd have to leave in the middle of the night, the way she had the first time. They talked, her and Wulfric; he told her what they had to choose, and he told her the only option.
She protested; of course she did, but in the end. In the end, with her sobbing her thanks, with her hating herself for it.... Wulfric insisted. He was old; he'd lived his life.
The decision was made.
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She slips, sometimes. Sometimes she's not there at all. Sometimes she's Samantha Neptune or Corinne Viola or Juliet or any of the other people she's been or ever dreamed of being and she speaks as them, sees their worlds, slips in and out of their realities. Maybe she really does. Maybe she is just talking to herself. But its better than talking to the man. Joseph. The thought makes her skin crawl, but it's what has kept her alive so far, she thinks. And it's the only company she has anymore. A monster should not be able to engage in conversation. A monster should be like his partner, the silent killer who stands watch. You know to be scared just looking at him. Joseph is something else entirely. Is Joseph her life now? If he doesn't kill her will he just keep her locked here until she wastes away to a shadow? Maybe she is only a shadow now. Maybe she's already dead and this is her hell.
But the crack. It's all she can focus on. It stares at her like burning. Like destiny. If she could tear at it, break it, there must be some weakness in the cheap plaster. If only she could do it without the brute's detection. If only she could break from the chains. But they're tighter now, heavier, than the last time she attempted such stupidity. The scars she bears from that struggle will probably never heal to normal. Not worthy of a star. She will never be a star again.
And she hears screaming. Something like screaming. She thinks it's screaming. She's not sure if it's just her own.
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"Corrine?" he called out as he came into her room. It was late on Sunday evening now and the ceremony had to take place soon and he wanted her there. It would be the first of many that she witnessed so she might as well get used to it.
"It's time. For the ceremony. Not for you, of course. I've decided to take you with me. You will write and perform stories, as we discussed. But it's time for the ceremony and I want you there."
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"Joseph." She greets him with sweetness. With gladness in her voice and maybe it is better than deteriorating alone in captivity. But she doesn't understand what he's saying. Ceremony... Not for her. But someone else... There's a horrible part of her that is relieved but there is no release. Only more death and more captivity and it has to stop it has to what can she do? Can she help them escape? Would she then surely be killed?
"Ceremony?" She is too tired to play. To pretend. "I don't. I don't want to. Please. I - I have a story about a-a troll king that I must tell you. P-please." She swallows hard. Please no one has to die. Please no one for me ever again.
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It was, Joseph thought, a rather good story. Maybe not as good as some, maybe it wasn't the Great American Novel, but it was good all the same. It was certainly unlike any story that he had read, that was for sure. Perhaps, when he could no longer stave off the inevitable, Corrine would be able to tell his story.
"My partner there, you can't see them, but he wears a special set of manacles. These manacles allow me to control him. I only have to think a thought and he must obey. It's been that way for years. But the spell necessary to maintain the control requires sacrifices. If I ever were to fail to perform the spell I would not longer have him in my control, and he would certainly kill him."
That was why the ceremony must be completed tonight. There was no time to find more kills despite how dangerous staying here was after their debacle earlier that day. It had to be tonight.
"But as I said, I'm not going to kill you. I had to go find another girl to take your place, but that wasn't so hard. After the ceremony we'll leave and I think I will have a similar set of manacles fashioned for you. I can't risk having you escape. It means twice the deaths but I've been doing this for a long time, so I'm not worried about that."
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"No." She can't bring herself to look at the man. She imagines she is Leslie and burns the man to a crisp with ferocious magic. She frees them all. "At least most villains find henchman to stay with them by choice. Are you really so pathetic?" He can't hurt her anymore. She is dead or she is his slave. She believed she would be rescued but it has been so long. So long and there is no one. Her story. The goblin king. It has become darker as she tells it. The princess died. The prince is too late and the goblin king steals his soul too. He reigns. He wins. But he must die. She hasn't figured out the ending yet. Her goblin king must have an end. All things do. She does too.
"Please..." She doesn't fight the sob anymore. "Please don't." Humanize. Humanize him. It has worked so far. "Joseph. Joseph, please." If she's to be enslaved, if someone is to die, if she has nothing else she can at least plead for their life. Both of their lives. Must Corrine Flynn live with blood in her hands the rest of her life? "Just let her go. I'll stay with you. Please." There is no hope for her anyway. He has carved her fate. And maybe one day. Maybe one day someone will recognize the shell who was once the great Corrine Flynn. Or maybe one day... One day she will escape.
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"If I don't complete the ceremony tonight, I will die. I'm not willing to let that happen."
His partner came in then and unchained the girl, grabbing her tight around the wrist. If she tried to attack him or get away his partner would show her what a poor idea that was.
"Come now, it's time to meet the others."
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She says nothing but the sheer look of hatred she directs at Joseph as the brute carries her off says more than any words could.
And then she changes her mind. She can be the actress. She will be his henchman. "You're right. I want to see. I want to help. Show me how you do it, Joseph." And maybe then. Maybe if she plays a part of henchman, willing accomplice, she can find a way to help the girl. To escape together. "If she is dying for me, it should be on my hands."
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"Come then," he said, leaving the room as his partner drug her along after him. It was late and there was no one outside their motel to see. A quick hand across the girl's mouth ensured that she couldn't scream while he entered the new room.
They entered the new room where the baker girl was tied up, along with the homeless man. It was close now and he could feel his heart beating faster, the need to have that security of the ceremony completed itching through him. His partner tied Corrine up in the other chair, duct taping her arms and legs to the chair. He wouldn't take any precautions when it was this close.
"Now," he said, turning to the baker girl and the homeless man. "Before I hear your answer, let me introduce you to Corrine. She will be observing the ceremony tonight. She asked to help, but I'm not sure if she's ready for that just yet."
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But the brute forces her to face them. Forces her eyes open. Staring at the other captives. She didn't expect to know one. She wants to scream. She wants to tell the girl to run but she's as trapped as Corrine and it would do none of them any good.
She's staring at her now. Corrine at the girl. The girl at Corrine. It's the baker. She knows the face almost immediately despite how disheveled and frantic and terrified it is. The sweet girl who helped her feed the crew cleaning up the beach. She doesn't even remember her name. It's too cruel. All Corrine can do is mouth words to her. Silent, but true.
"I'm sorry."
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He already knew which one they would have chosen. Rarely did the choice he gave the participants in the ceremony change when it was two people so different. The homeless, for all their filth and often madness, were a surprisingly altruistic group for the most part.
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Staring at Corrine, Raleigh's face twisted as she watched her. It was with pain and hurt, the scraped skin from when she'd been batted into the bathroom wall starting to purple slightly, but the red of her face from being backhanded was only just beginning to fade.
She didn't look terrified as she stared at Corry - she looked exhausted, she looked angry - but not terrified.
Wulfric spoke up, sounding just as exhausted. "Me. I die." Raleigh closed her eyes tightly, and turned her face from him for a second as her hands - half-numb from how tight she was strapped down - they curled into fists, before she looked back at him.
She's not talking to Joseph, she's talking to Wulfric. "I will remember this, every day of my life. I'm so sorry. I'm so sorry."
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They are all going to die.
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Joseph let that sink in for a moment, impassively watching the realization dawn on her that she had just killed herself, that a man had been willing to sacrifice himself for her and she had thrown it away. She had ruined his gift. He didn't take any sick, sadistic pleasure from it beyond the fact that this girl had been so enraged at him for being willing to take a life for his, now she had done the same. Or tried to.
"But not to worry. I was never going to spare one of you. It's absolutely necessary that both of you die during the ceremony. Now if you'll excuse me, I have to prepare."
With that, he had his partner both walked through the door that separated the two rooms and shut it. It would take a moment to prepare everything but none of them were going anywhere.
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"I'm sorry," she sobbed, and she closed her eyes before he stepped out. He stepped out and closed the door with a click, and Raleigh finally, finally looked at Corry.
"I guess me asking you to tell my mom I love her would be stupid, right? Given that you'd rather help?" Her voice is sharp and strained and raw, and she wonders, idly, how much it's going to hurt. How long she'll be awake. If she'd see Wulfric die before her - and if Corry will be glad.
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"I'm sorry!" Her wrists are raw and stretched and torn but the tape stays all the same, he sobs are too overwhelming to bear. It doesn't matter if they can hear. This is probably all part of Joseph's sick game. "I d-I didn't know. I'm so s-sorry. God I'm sorry." She rocks the chair so hard it falls. She crashes to the floor hard. A leg breaks. She can't escape the chair, but it seems she can break it. And she has her body on the ground now. It's horrible tedious work but she snakes closer. Closer to the baker. They are in this together.
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"Her name's Emily Gregson. My mom."
Corry continues then, she looks back, her face twisting in confusion. "They'll kill you. They'll kill you, too, for helping me.For even trying to help me." She's saying me, like Wulfric wasn't there, like he wasn't already a walking dead man. "There's no way out," she says lowly even as Corry's chair falls with a crash, and Raleigh's eyes flick to the door. "I can't walk.... much. He made it- He sliced my foot open so I couldn't run." It's horrifying, but she says it the same way you'd just talk about a normal injury.
When Corry falls, Raleigh just can't see her anymore; she's gone, and she hears this sickening crack, and she has to ask - "Are you alright?" Not that it mattered.
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She cries out as she strains her hands. Futily, but enough that her fingers graze the tip of the wood. "I'm - I'm trying - I'm trying to help us. My life is over anyway." Alive or dead. Corrine Flynn will be no more.
And then she remembers something. Name. Emily. Her mother? Corrine tries to distract herself as she works towards - something. Getting closer to Emily, getting closer to the broken chair leg. "Y-you're Emily."
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"I know. I know." She says it to the ceiling as the tears slip back into her hair, and her lower lip wavers as she doesn't want to think of it. As she tries to think of what they'll do to her - and given how this was a lie, how this whole thing was a lie, she wonders if they'll do the one thing that he said they wouldn't.
She wonders, now, why he told her that they wouldn't violate her. If it was so she'd think it wouldn't happen.
"Your life isn't over. You... You can- You can get away, later, when he's sleeping, or... I don't know, but you can get away. Everyone knows who you are."
She starts to cry, then. Really cry. "Nobody's even going to know I'm dead," she says thickly. "Nobody would miss me, so- so it's good, if you survive." It's gotten to her. The stress, the pain, the exhaustion - the things Joseph said. A young girl that no one would miss walking alone before the sun is up... perhaps you should have valued your own life more
"You have to get up. They need to think that you're okay." That's when she finally said it. That she was Emily, and Raleigh couldn't even say anything but the truth. "Emily's my mother. Emily Gregson. Please, just- just tell her I'm sorry, and that I love her. That I loved her, okay?" Her words are thick with tears, and she's just staring up at the ceiling now, letting them run back to her hair.
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And then she remembers something. Emily, not being missed. A conversation that seems forever ago. Leslie. The realization of him again. That he is real, that he is shared, that he is not some figment that she has made up. It gives her hope that she hasn't felt in an incomprehensible stretch of time. "Leslie would know." She lifts her head from the floor to look at the girl. "Leslie." She starts to laugh, her beautiful wonderful Leslie. She feels something like giddiness. Maybe she is beyond gone now. "He told me about you. That he was telling you about the supernatural world in exchange for cake. He got such a kick out of it."
She can't get up. The chair's half broken. The most she can do is stay in place. Or keep going. She's going to keep going. She remembers why she has to again.
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She can't move. She can't sit up. She can't do anything, and that seemed to be Joseph's purpose. That she couldn't do anything but die.
"He made fun of me," she says thickly, when she turned her face away as Wulfric made peace with whatever afterlife that was supposed to exist. "He thought it was funny, I think, that I was scared of all this. Because I'm human and I can't- and now look." She remembers what Les did bring her, though. That was how she ended up in Jason's arms, how she had the best night she'd had in months because of the way he was so entirely clueless about people who weren't like him.
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"Your name's not Emily. What is it? Tell me your story. We deserve that. A good complete story." She rests her head on the floor, closing her eyes and just - attempting to find some peace in another's voice. She's a siren. Voices are entire worlds. Voices are power. "I was born in Siren Cove to a renowned adulterer and a pill-popping mother who likens herself to the height of society. When I was 3 I started singing and dancing. I was in my school play at 4 and never stopped. My parents thought I was too much, too wild and vibrant, so by the time I was old enough I spent all my free time on the boardwalk, performing for whoever would watch. That's how I met Leslie. He was my best friend. My everything as kids. And there was Owen and Lou... I grew up I got out, I found all the stardom that I ever wanted. I saw the world. They called me America's Sweetheart. But then... things happened. And I came back. But it was going to be better. It was going to be better..." It should make her cry. But there's peace here. She has lived. She has loved. All she can see is their faces now, and the scenes of her life. This is what they say happens before you die, isn't it? She is her memories now. They bring her peace.
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"He found out. He must have found out, I don't know how, but they told me to keep it quiet and I didn't, and now I'm here." Her voice cracked, because where Corrine's finding piece, Raleigh isn't. "My mom- Tell my mom, okay? It's Raleigh Harper. Tell my mom-" She can't stop crying, and she wonders why she had to break; why she had to tell Jason, why Aoife was here. Why the man who brought her here brought her to the place she was in danger, when he could have just left her in fucking Bangor or something.
Why this is where she was, now.
Suddenly, all she can think about is Jason's damned dog, about how she'd said she'd stop in and check on him and she hadn't - it makes no sense, what happens when you're staring death in the face. "Can you-" She was going to say something else, anything else, but she can hear the rattle of a door, and all she can do is make a strained noise of fear before it swings open.