Sun, Dec. 11th, 2011, 04:34 pm
Brigitte Pt. 4 - Those in the Shadow

"Miss Weihen, my name is Senior Constable Dobson. I'm going to ask you a few questions. You do not have to say anything, but it may harm your defence if you do not mention, when questioned, something which you later rely on in court. Anything you do say may be given in evidence." The tired officer said his piece in a run-of-the-mill professional voice, though his tiredness shone through plainly. "You have the right to call a lawyer and the right to call a relative or a friend. Coffee?" Brigitte shook her head. She didn't know any lawyers, and it wasn't like she could remember her mum and dad's phone number off the top of her head. Even if she did, what would they say if they found out she was in police custody?
"I think... I'll be okay." Try as she might, she couldn't completely remove the trembles of fear and anxiety from her voice. Would that be incriminating? What was she even suspected of?
The policeman looked at her, cocking an eyebrow and twisting his round face into a suprised expression. "You sure, love?" Brigitte nodded. His mouth twisted into a thin-lipped frown of reservation. "Your funeral, then." As he sat down, he opened up a manilla folder. "Let's start at the top, then, shall we? You're suspected of the murder of a Miss Maria Sunnadara, age 14." Brigitte blinked back tears as Dobson slid a photograph of the girl across the table. "I am presenting exhibit A to the suspect. A photo of the victim." Dobson's hard eyes met Brigitte's. "I'm sure you want to get out of here as much as I do, love." The smile on his face didn't hold any happiness at all. Dobson stood up and began pacing up and down the table, drumming his fingers loudly on the table. Why would anyone think she was a murder victim? She just wanted this to be over. She hated this so much. What would Alessa do? Thoughts raced through her mind as quickly as Dobson's fingers were drumming on the table. "Did you know the victim?"
"What...? Um... N-No. I mean, yes, but... But not really."
Dobson slammed his hand on the table. "Give me a straight answer, love!" he yelled, sending droplets of spittle from his mouth across the table. Brigitte burst into tears. He took a deep breath and raised his hand, ready to bring it down again when the door opened. Another cop entered the room with a tray holding two mugs of coffee.
"Senior Constable Dobson, go take a break." The other policeman wasn't as thick set as the first. As Dobson stalked out of the room, he grabbed one of the mugs and slammed the door. "I'm sorry for my colleague's behaviour, Miss Weihen. Long day, you see. The name's " He opened a small grease-stained bag on the tray. "Donut?" He pushed the tray over after taking one out for himself. His pleasant, casual manner reassured Brigitte and she wiped at her eyes. The tears had stopped, but her chest still spasmed as she sniffled. "Guess not, then? Well, okay." As he drew the tray back, he stared at her intensely. "We know you didn't do it, love, so don't worry 'bout that." Brigitte's head shot up. "Sometimes we get cases like this. Weird ones. Curve balls." He took a bite of his donut and a swig of coffee. "You've got to understand, you see. We're putting you in the watch house tonight for your own protection."
Brigitte paled. She'd heard stories about watch houses. Was it like on the television?

It turned out that the watchouse was actually very dull, and had it not been for the horror she felt at being put in such an institution to begin with, Brigitte would probably have coped fine. As it was, though, she spent the remainder of the afternoon and well past the time the guards shut off most of the lights curled up in a ball against a wall. Some time after that, the sounds around Brigitte stopped. The snoring, the footsteps of guards, the banging against the bars of cells; they all stopped. Brigitte looked up from her position against the wall, her chest still spasming with despair. She couldn't see anything in the cell across from her. She thought there was two women in it. Standing up shakily, she approached the cell's bars.
No one was in the cell. In fact, it seemed like there was no one in any of the cells at all. Maybe prison had finally made her lose it. Something dripped into the middle of the white linoleum between the cells. Inky and dark, it splattered on the floor, the heavy drops marking the ground black. Brigitte tried to peer out of her cage to ascertain what was leaking the goop, but her eyes only met darkness. The drops continued, slowly becoming larger, quicker, and then suddenly they stopped.
From the pool of darkness shot a hand, thin and stick-like. With a shriek, Brigitte jumped back, away from the swift-moving limb clawing its way around the spot she was just standing in. The hand jumped upright, and in its palm opened an eye of red. It's iris surrounding its horizontal pupil was black, and it searched around the room frantically until it froze on Brigitte. At the bottom of the hand a mouth open, contorting into a silent, tortured scream. Child of the sinful bloodline..." The thin, rasping voice seemed to come from that mouth, though the black lips' movements were frozen in the soundless shriek. "You cannot run forever. Your blood belongs to us. Your flesh belongs to us. Your soul belongs to us."

Through the haze shone a light, blindingly bright. After failing to turn over, Brigitte closed her eyes again and groaned. "So you're back with us," said a male voice. She turned her head and squinted at the speaker. It was a policeman. She tried to sit up, but was unable. Looking down her body, she saw why--she was strapped to the bed. "Sorry about that. You went hysterical. Flailing about like a looney, screaming about eyes in hands or something. Brigitte just blinked. She was in too much of a drugged up haze to process anything. The policeman stood up and straightened his shirt. "My partner's waiting for me. You'll be escorted back to the questioning room after the anaesthetic wears off." The large man gave her a reassuring smile before heading for the door. "Oh, Miss Weihen." He stopped at the doorway, looking back at Brigitte, who returned the gaze, fighting hard to keep her eyes open. "You cannot run forever." As she slipped back into unconsciousness, Brigitte saw the man's eyes gleam red.

Sat, Oct. 29th, 2011, 09:51 am
Brigitte Pt. 2 - Shadows and Lights

The next day, the entire school was called for an assembly. Strict curfews were put in place with no explanation given to the students. Brigitte didn't really care. It wouldn't disrupt her sports schedule too much. Track and field would have to be shifted to a different time. Hopefully it wouldn't clash with swimming or gymnastics. The rest of the assembly was the usual. Uniform, make up, piercings, etcetera. The old headmistress wasn't a particularly pleasing person to look at, nor was she a particularly pleasing person at all, really. She had about as much power, the countenance of, and all the motherly instincts of a berserk rhinocerous. But who was the person with a hood over their face at the back of the stage? The question stuck with her as the girls filed out of the auditorium to go about their daily classes.
"What a slag," said Nadine as she stepped in beside Brigitte. The athletic girl was a member of the track and field club and boarded in the same dormitory as Brigitte. "Can you believe her, Brig? Getting up there and putting all these restrictions on us? Who does she think she is? The P.M.?"
"This way, you might be able to focus more on your studies than boys, though," Brigitte replied with a grin, in turn getting a sharp look from her friend. "Who do you think that person in the hood was, though? Did you see them?"
Nadine glanced at the other girl quizzically. "You going crazy, then? There weren't no one up there but Headmistress O'Leery." Brigitte frowned, but put it down to Nadine's mind being elsewhere. The two girls went their seperate ways, and outside the window, a shadow followed Brigitte.

Sat, Oct. 29th, 2011, 06:04 am
Brigitte Pt. 1 - Dust in the Wind

...Seperation is inevitable. Whether it is something sentient or not, it will not be there forever. In a child's world of constants, seperation is terrifying. Brigitte looked over what she had written. Not bad for a last minute essay. Not bad at all. She saved the file then finally shut down the computer. It was such a relief to stand up and stretch! As Brigitte prepared herself for bed the way she did every night, it was obvious that the watcher outside the window had gone unnoticed. Brigitte rose from her prayers then settled into bed and the watcher dissolved into the night wind, hurtling over the sleeping city back to its master.

Fri, Aug. 26th, 2011, 09:40 pm
Alessa & Brigitte Pt. 2 - Schatten

  Days seep into weeks, weeks trickle into months, months flow into years. No matter how much you wish or try, you can never go against time's current.
The twins changed little throughout their childhood. Brigitte was still a tomboy at school, and Alessa was still an intelligent bookwork, if clumsy. Though, as night follows day, idylls must end.
In June, when the twins were seven years old, Alessa sat in the shade of a tree, reading a book on ancient religions. She was completely absorbed in the book, so much so that she didn't notice the shadow looming over her. To some children, difference is something to be feared. Things that are feared need to be eradicated. The story of mankind's history, a story of sorrow adding to sorrow and the monster known as retaliation.

Sun, Aug. 21st, 2011, 06:37 am
Alessa & Brigitte Pt. 1 - Mädchen

That is... Destiny gone awry, a tale of twin sisters seperated by the hand of man.

In Clophill, England, a woman gave birth to twin girls during a total lunar eclipse. The prophesized time had arrived. The Golden Witch had been born. The twins grandfather had been waiting for this exact moment, planning for this exact moment. This exact moment was the culmination of centuries of careful, precise manipulation of humans, global affairs and fate. The babies openened their eyes, strangely silent for new borns. One had eyes of an aqua blue, the other a violet purple. Destiny had use for but one of the girls. Which one would be the one to survive?
Their grandfather departed, heading back to his ancient castle in Germany, and the girls grew up normally. Alessa had her father's blond hair and light eyes, a stubborn attitude she could have inherited from either of her parents, an inquisitive mind her father insisted she got from him and a sharp tongue that he insisted she got from her mother. She was very much an inside girl. Her favourite pastimes in her early childhood were drawing and looking at picture books, which turned into reading by the age of five. Despite her apparent intellect, Alessa was a clutz. If she could fall over something, she would. Black and blue bruises marred her pale skin from falls down steps, up steps and over mats and tiles. Despite her stubborn nature, she was quick to cry when she was hurt.
Brigitte's face looked similar to Alessa's, heart-shaped with a sloped nose, but her mother's dark hair and dark blue eyes were passed on to her. Like her sister, she was stubborn, but that's where the likeness ended. Brigitte was a tomboy. Athletic, loud and energetic, she would rather be kicking a ball around outside with the boys than stuck inside doing something boring like looking at a book. Brigitte was not a girl to take things standing down. If a boy teased her or said something about Alessa, she'd beat them up; most of the time the boy would come out the worse. The sisters argued the way all siblings do. Bouts of hair pulling, name calling, pinching and punching happened once every few days, but they cared about eachother, and were very close through their younger years.
Underneath the azure sky, surrounded by the verdant countryside, those days seemed like they could last forever.