VampiricTouch
Cold Selfish Bitch
- Joined
- Dec 18, 2008
- Posts
- 3,895
-brrrrriiing- No. Not again. She didn't want to go.
The call that rang in her head brought with it a dull throb as Elaine forced her eyes open at the scrawl of chalk across the black board. Lines and equations blurred together in an incoherent smear as she dragged herself to her feet. Stuffing her notes into her bag without ceremony, she left the lecture hall... no, ran from it.
She fought the compelling urge to pick up the phone to answer the call, the act in itself bringing another beat to the rhythm of her headache. She didn't want to go.
Head lowered, she ran through the halls, barreling past people as she clutched her book bag with a desperate grip, if only so that she didn't reach for the phone inside. There was no time to get back to the apartment, but her car was close enough. Skidding to a stop beside the vehicle as she fumbled with the keys took what felt like an eternity. The bag she'd prepared for this situation sitting in the trunk as she slammed the door close.
- Got the call. I'm going in.- Shaking hands sent the text out before she lifted the cell to her ear... by then the call had reached a trilling pitch that was practically impairing her functionality. She didn't want to go, but she didn't have a choice.
It started a little over a month ago. It was an accident, a coincidence really, finding the phone card when she was in the Berkeley library. It had been stuck between the pages of a book she'd needed for class, standing out from the yellowed pages of her text. The brilliant red laminated plastic and it's elegant, almost savage lines... It wouldn't hurt to test it out. It was only a phone card. Or so she thought.
The questionnaire had surprised her. She'd never had to answer a questionnaire just to use a phone card, but she suffered through the strange questions. It was a free card, maybe the company was conducting a survey. However she couldn't help but feel uneasy when the questionnaire and call ended with the simple statement, "Thank you for taking this questionnaire, you are now registered as a player in Psyren. You will be contacted shortly to enter the game."
In the end, the phone card didn't work. Not the way it was supposed to. It didn't allow her to call anyone else, and it merely stated each time"You have 49 points remaining on your card" before the line went dead.
She never thought that the card, left forgotten in the bottom of her book bag, would be the source of her grief a week a later. The call came to take her to Psyren, the ground lurching away from her feet for a brief instant the moment the receiver touched her ear. To have survived this long... She had been lucky.
~~~~~~************~~~~~~
The relief was instant. The pounding beat against her skull vanished so fast that she almost questioned whether it had occurred moments before. Her eyes blinked open once her knees dropped down onto solid ground and braced herself for what she would see. This was the third time, and she still couldn't help but cringe at the sight before her.
Desolate ruin. The sky was a dark shade of red, with what she could only guess to be sunlight filtering in as a dull glow, direct light itself a vision she had yet to see in this place. However it was the rubble strewn across the horizon that was depressing, the familiarity of dilapidated building structures and the endless ruin...
Hefting her bag she rose from her knees as the dry wind picked up to whip through her hair with an ominous howl. The soft murmurs of disbelief along with the crunch of feet across loose concrete brought her attention to the people that had arrived, just like her. Clean clothes that stood in sharp contrast to the ruin they all stood in. The wild eyed confusion was etched across every face she saw. She hated having to lead, but with the blatant chaos... it was inevitable.
"Excuse me..." The quiet voice went unnoticed.
Clearing her throat, she tried again. "Excuse me. Please calm down. I don't think any of you have been here before. I have. My name is Elaine. I don't know where we are at, but I do know that there's a map and we can eventually get out and get back."
Heads swiveled and came to a stop on her. Wariness from some, relief from others... she took a frantic step backwards at the sudden din of questions that rose from the handful of people around her.
As if right on cue, the phone rang beside her. It was a beaten, unpowered thing that obviously should not be working... but it still rang. The shrill sound cut through the myriad of voices and for a brief moment silence fell.
Elaine's hand closed around the handle and when she'd lifted it to her ears... the transmission began.
The sound filled their ears, no, mind. It wasn't a sound. It was directly within the confines of their minds eye.
"Thank you for joining this round of Psyren. Psyren shall be the source of your power and despair. There is only one exit in this game. Those searching for an exit from this world, find the gate." The eerie voice spoke as the image of another payphone floated up in their mind. One side of the enclosure was missing and shards of broken glass protruded from the rust mottled frame that might've once been a smooth silver. The image stayed imprinted in their minds for a few seconds longer and the transmission of that violation of their mind ended.
The call that rang in her head brought with it a dull throb as Elaine forced her eyes open at the scrawl of chalk across the black board. Lines and equations blurred together in an incoherent smear as she dragged herself to her feet. Stuffing her notes into her bag without ceremony, she left the lecture hall... no, ran from it.
She fought the compelling urge to pick up the phone to answer the call, the act in itself bringing another beat to the rhythm of her headache. She didn't want to go.
Head lowered, she ran through the halls, barreling past people as she clutched her book bag with a desperate grip, if only so that she didn't reach for the phone inside. There was no time to get back to the apartment, but her car was close enough. Skidding to a stop beside the vehicle as she fumbled with the keys took what felt like an eternity. The bag she'd prepared for this situation sitting in the trunk as she slammed the door close.
- Got the call. I'm going in.- Shaking hands sent the text out before she lifted the cell to her ear... by then the call had reached a trilling pitch that was practically impairing her functionality. She didn't want to go, but she didn't have a choice.
~~~~~~************~~~~~~
It started a little over a month ago. It was an accident, a coincidence really, finding the phone card when she was in the Berkeley library. It had been stuck between the pages of a book she'd needed for class, standing out from the yellowed pages of her text. The brilliant red laminated plastic and it's elegant, almost savage lines... It wouldn't hurt to test it out. It was only a phone card. Or so she thought.
The questionnaire had surprised her. She'd never had to answer a questionnaire just to use a phone card, but she suffered through the strange questions. It was a free card, maybe the company was conducting a survey. However she couldn't help but feel uneasy when the questionnaire and call ended with the simple statement, "Thank you for taking this questionnaire, you are now registered as a player in Psyren. You will be contacted shortly to enter the game."
In the end, the phone card didn't work. Not the way it was supposed to. It didn't allow her to call anyone else, and it merely stated each time"You have 49 points remaining on your card" before the line went dead.
She never thought that the card, left forgotten in the bottom of her book bag, would be the source of her grief a week a later. The call came to take her to Psyren, the ground lurching away from her feet for a brief instant the moment the receiver touched her ear. To have survived this long... She had been lucky.
~~~~~~************~~~~~~
The relief was instant. The pounding beat against her skull vanished so fast that she almost questioned whether it had occurred moments before. Her eyes blinked open once her knees dropped down onto solid ground and braced herself for what she would see. This was the third time, and she still couldn't help but cringe at the sight before her.
Desolate ruin. The sky was a dark shade of red, with what she could only guess to be sunlight filtering in as a dull glow, direct light itself a vision she had yet to see in this place. However it was the rubble strewn across the horizon that was depressing, the familiarity of dilapidated building structures and the endless ruin...
Hefting her bag she rose from her knees as the dry wind picked up to whip through her hair with an ominous howl. The soft murmurs of disbelief along with the crunch of feet across loose concrete brought her attention to the people that had arrived, just like her. Clean clothes that stood in sharp contrast to the ruin they all stood in. The wild eyed confusion was etched across every face she saw. She hated having to lead, but with the blatant chaos... it was inevitable.
"Excuse me..." The quiet voice went unnoticed.
Clearing her throat, she tried again. "Excuse me. Please calm down. I don't think any of you have been here before. I have. My name is Elaine. I don't know where we are at, but I do know that there's a map and we can eventually get out and get back."
Heads swiveled and came to a stop on her. Wariness from some, relief from others... she took a frantic step backwards at the sudden din of questions that rose from the handful of people around her.
As if right on cue, the phone rang beside her. It was a beaten, unpowered thing that obviously should not be working... but it still rang. The shrill sound cut through the myriad of voices and for a brief moment silence fell.
Elaine's hand closed around the handle and when she'd lifted it to her ears... the transmission began.
The sound filled their ears, no, mind. It wasn't a sound. It was directly within the confines of their minds eye.
"Thank you for joining this round of Psyren. Psyren shall be the source of your power and despair. There is only one exit in this game. Those searching for an exit from this world, find the gate." The eerie voice spoke as the image of another payphone floated up in their mind. One side of the enclosure was missing and shards of broken glass protruded from the rust mottled frame that might've once been a smooth silver. The image stayed imprinted in their minds for a few seconds longer and the transmission of that violation of their mind ended.
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