memehound (
memehound) wrote in
bakerstreet2020-08-04 09:43 pm
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
![[community profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/community.png)
THE FIGHT MEME

What else needs to be said? Release your inner warrior and partake in some epic (or hilariously bad) battles! Do you use a sword? Are you a martial arts master? Are you a wizard? Can you even fight?
It doesn't matter if you're just having a friendly spar or deciding the fate of the universe. You're suddenly filled with the urge to fight the next person you meet. Cut loose and show off your skills!
RULES
◘ Post with your character! List your fighting preferences if you'd like (Sparring, Death Battles, Anything Goes, etc.)
◘ Reply to someone else
◘ ROUND 1...
◘ ... FIGHT!
Here are some prompts to pick from (or RNG from):
1: VERBAL
Not all fights are physical. Maybe you're just really mad and really loud.
2: WUSSY
This is possibly the dumbest limp-wristed flail fight you've ever been involved in.
3: WITS
Because why would you beat someone into the ground when you can humiliate them with your massive intellect instead?
4: PRIZEFIGHT
There's an audience to watch and a prize at stake that only one of you can walk away with. Best bring your A-game.
5: SPARRING
You're fighting to improve. Whether you know your partner or whether you've
just met, you can be pretty sure you're walking away from this one.
6: GRUDGE MATCH
Your hated rival is in town. It's time for a rematch.
7: BAR FIGHT
Welcome to the mother of all drunken brawls.
8: YOU DON'T HAVE TO DO THIS!
Maybe your opponent is your friend/sibling/love/other cherished person. Maybe
you're a pacifist. Either way, you're in this fight, but you really
don't want to be.
9: TO THE DEATH
This is it. Too much has happened for this to be anything but a fight to the end. Only one of you is walking away from this.
10: OBLIGATORY SMUT OPTION
Hate sex is the best. And some people like smut and some do not.
11: AGAINST THE HORDE
It's you and your ally against many. Demons, zombies, whatever. Rip and tear, until it is done.
12: GODMODE
You and your opponent both have world-breaking superpowers, and frankly everyone would be happier if you weren't fighting. You are, though, and it's awesome, even if there might not be much left when you're done.
13: RANDOM
Your very own personalized scenario.
Original here.
no subject
"Two hundred years." Roughly. Not very long in terms of immortality but that left plenty of time for him to keep on living when he shouldn't. "Where are you?"
The trouble with immortality was you couldn't tell age by looking at someone. Booker looked older than the others because he had been when he died. Constantly middle aged was great.
no subject
Glancing around at the bodies on the ground, Marcus grimaced, then again when that agitated his healing wounds. Since he was still bleeding, he zipped up his jacket to at least minimize the visuals.
"We should get out of here... Clean up." He hesitated to leave though, not quite wanting to give up this tenuous meeting with someone who was so similar to himself. Two hundred years was but a blink compared to him, but this was still something. It was the first time in a while that he wanted to reach out and actually connect with someone, possibly someone who wouldn't eventually die like everyone else. "Meet up again? I... want to talk."
no subject
"Tomorrow morning. Eight. The Lakefront Restaurant." Booker licked his lips as he completely lowered his gun. It wasn't like the guy could kill him and he was probably just as desperate to protect his secret as Booker was. "I'll meet you there."
He left the gun on the ground with the dead men and then got in his car which he would have to ditch. There was no way to hide the bullet holes.
Tomorrow morning he'd meet him at that semi-famous Chicago landmark for conversation if the guy showed up. Booker wasn't sure if he would.
no subject
Cleaning up meant more than just a change of clothes. There were 4 bodies and Marcus had to make sure there were no CCTVs in the area that could place him or his buddy at the scene of crime. That was why he chose the spot in his own district, and he had good authority to access things when this eventually got called in. But that was for the future, now, he just made sure he picked the right paths that would keep him out of traffic cams.
Next morning, 8 AM, Marcus was there at 7:30AM, expecting that his companion might be there early as well. There were plenty of people there already, tourists, the morning group of breakfasters before the rush hour. He glanced around to see if he could locate the other man, and if he couldn't, then Marcus took an outdoor table for two.
no subject
Exile was exile.
He sat back with his eyes watching everything around him. It was a nice morning and his waitress was very kind about him waiting for someone for a long, long time. He would tip well for that.
Booker tensed when he stopped the man from last night. Alright, he had shown up. Now they'd talk.
no subject
When he found him sitting there on one of the tables on the outskirts he walked over, pulling a chair out and joining him without waiting to be invited.
"Coffee?" He asked, trying to make small talk as he waved a hand for someone to take his morning order. He had taken half a day off at work, although he expected he'll be busy when he returned with the quadruple homicide that they were a part of yesterday. He wore a new jacket today, and beneath his shirt, he was still bandaged up.
no subject
"Already have some." He gestured to the cup to his left which he had poured whiskey in shortly after the waitress left it. "I'm sure the waitress will be here in a minute."
There weren't many other people around at this early hour which was the point at meeting now. Less people would overhear the conversation about to happen.
"So, you're immortal."
no subject
"So are you."
At that point the waitress came over and Marcus ordered a coffee and their house special, barely glancing at the menu or the woman before handing it back to her with a slight nod. The man before him had his full attention the whole time. As soon as she left, their conversation resumed.
"So what did you do to get cursed?"
no subject
Immortality was something of a curse for him. Booker hated the weight of the years and the grief he felt constantly in the back of his mind and heart. It had certainly led him to ruin.
"That's not how it was for you?"
no subject
"Someone upstairs didn't like something I did. As far as I know, that's the story since. It's been a while, things got a little hazy."
Again they were interrupted with the waitress coming back with Marcus' coffee, and asked if the other wanted a refill. Marcus waited until she left to continue.
"So, can I get a name? I go by Marcus now."
no subject
"If that's all it took, we'd have a lot more running around." He smiled warmly at the waitress and nodded for her to refill his coffee. If she picked up on the tension between the two men she didn't show it.
Marcus. "Booker," he said with a small nod. "You seem to be living something of a normal life."
no subject
"I don't know about others... didn't know I wasn't the only one until, well, yesterday." Again, despite how guarded both men were, there was genuine awe in Marcus' tone when he talked about that discovery. "In all my wandering..." He shook his head, shaking away with it the melancholy that followed.
"And you've made a name for yourself. We all need to keep going somehow."
no subject
"You didn't have dreams?" That was unusual. Booker had never heard of an immortal not having dreams about the others. But... he hadn't dreamed of Marcus all these years and as the youngest he should have.
He had enough dreams of drowning to almost be grateful he never dreamed of Marcus. "I made a name being a mercenary. You have a day job."
no subject
"What dreams?" Now it was Marcus who looked confused, his brows furrowing slightly as he wondered what the other immortal meant by that.
"Yeah, I move around a lot. It's..." He shrugged when the waitress came back with his breakfast. He thanked her and waited until they were left alone before continuing. "It's just doing something." Because what else was he going to do otherwise? So he continued to pretend to live like a normal person even when it was no more real than the rest of his identity was.
no subject
"I knew of one other immortal. Trapped at the bottom of the ocean. I dreamed of her drowning over and over." Now, he had no loyalty to Quyhn. He would happily throw her under a bus without hesitation. "That's how we found each other but she's gone now. Disappeared and I don't dream of her anymore."
After two hundred years that was a relief. Booker hated those dreams and how they constantly plagued him. It didn't help him sleep at night at all.
"Just... never met another who didn't have dreams. She dreamed of me." Booker was confused by his lack of dreams. If he was that old then he should've dreamed of them all before.
no subject
He cleared his throat. "No... never had dreams of anyone else," Marcus confirmed, finally taking a sip of his black coffee to wet his lips. "If I had, I might have... I don't know, done something. Met sooner. I never met someone who didn't die normally." And from the way he said it, he considered that to be their blessing.
no subject
"I don't know how long. I've dreamed her for as long as I've been immortal." Oh, he knew but Booker wasn't going to say. That was too long and too much information. He wouldn't be able to handle it if he put the others in danger again.
"Well, we've met now." He smiled sardonically. "I'm not really sure what to do about that."
no subject
He wanted to talk, they talked, but it was like he hadn't actively tried to make a connection with someone for so long he wasn't sure what he should be doing either.
"Do you want to.... keep in touch?" he asked, because a hundred, two, maybe even a thousand years down the line, he might want to see that familiar face.
no subject
But there was an instinctive surge of emotion at the question. Yes, he wanted to keep in touch. His only friends, his only family, had exiled him. He deserved it but fuck, it was lonely.
His paranoia warred with his loneliness. It was not an easy choice to make. "But you found me once. You should be able to find me again."
Booker wasn't sure he would reach out. He was really torn over this. Talking to another immortal felt like he was cheating his exile. That he was really close to breaking the punishment set out for him. Like always, Booker was making a mess of things.
no subject
"That was an accident," he pointed out, although who would have thought that one thing would lead to the next like this. It was like too many happenchances had brought them here today, and Marcus wasn't sure the same circumstances would ever repeat themselves if he missed the opportunity now.
If Booker wasn't going to take the chance, then Marcus would have to.
"Marcus Pierce... I'm working Lieutenant in violent crimes right now, Chicago PD." It was a risk, sure, the man knew of his identity as the Sinnerman criminal boss as well as his immortality. If Booker wanted to ruin things, he had enough information to burn Marcus' current identity in a bad way. Yet Marcus learned if he was going to gain something, he had to take risks. "I plan to be in Chicago for another decade or so if it holds." Normally he would be out in less, but now he might have something worth waiting for, and an open invitation for Booker to come look for him.
no subject
"How do people not notice you're different?" His family had noticed only a few years after he returned from the war. He didn't age like his wife. He didn't get sick like his sons. They figured out his gift and then everything went to hell.
If Marcus was living a normal life people had to notice he was different and not like them. They had to. Booker felt a little panicky by the idea that someone could live a normal life and not suffer the same miserable consequences he did.
no subject
It wouldn't be that easy though. Marcus changed his name every few decades, changed cities every few years. That was how Sinnerman even started, he needed criminals to help him forge identity papers and reinvent himself in the modern world, and it got to the point that running his own gang made controlling that information flow easier. One thing led to another, and he was now an immortalized crime boss too.
But Marcus Pierce, that name went back only a decade, although Marcus went back two millennia. Good luck finding the five dozen or so names he cycled through. Sinnerman was a more consistent one, but he was a legend. Any crime could have been contributed to it.
Marcus might have provided his current information, but he gave away nothing that was too deep.
"I move around a lot." A wanderer, a drifter, cursed to a life of loneliness. It really wasn't a normal life at all. "Everyone who knew are dead... Well, there's now you." Which was the real question, what would Booker do with it.
no subject
"But no one notices you getting sick? No one notices broken bones healing?" Because those were dead give-aways in Booker's experience. His family had absolutely noticed.
Someone had to notice the more than mortal things that happened with Marcus. Booker was just... amazed by his normal job and relatively normal life. Those things didn't seem possible.
no subject
But the main thing, he didn't heal quite as quickly. He stayed upright and alive, healed at ten twenty times faster, but it still sometimes took time enough that it still be problematic.
"It's not impossible as long as no one's there to see." That was the key to it, wasn't it. Never let people get close. "Just need to change identities... Could help you with that." If Booker wanted, Marcus was willing to help. A fellow immortal. He found out for a day and the concept still boggled his mind.
no subject
"I don't need hospitals at all." Booker hadn't been in one since his last visit to his son. He simply healed too quickly. "Leg gets blown up by a landmine, I get torn up by a grenade, and fifteen minutes later I'm fine."
It left him tired and hungry usually because his body burned so much energy healing but that was really the only downside. Oh, and not being able to die.
"I know how to disappear," he said with a little surprised chuckle. "I've been faking identities for centuries." The offer was kind but Booker trusted his own work best. He was a forger before he knew he was immortal. It wasn't hard to adapt those skills.
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)