Ekkehardt Gehring (
spelleton) wrote in
datadiving2021-02-22 03:17 pm
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
![[community profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/community.png)
[smooth jazz music]
It's always raining, here; not that he minds it. Water drowns out the noise of the city, pours off the gutters, gives him a moment of peace and respite.
Or it would, if the most prominent source of noise wasn't right here in his office.
"Mr van Neth, is there something I can help you with at all?" He looks over his glasses at the man currently making himself a nuisance on his desk.
Or it would, if the most prominent source of noise wasn't right here in his office.
"Mr van Neth, is there something I can help you with at all?" He looks over his glasses at the man currently making himself a nuisance on his desk.
no subject
He shakes his head as he passes by to open the door, apparently choosing to talk with his potential client there instead of bidding them to talk with him near the desk. The hurried, half-whispered conversation continues for some time; if Avery chooses to eavesdrop, he'll hear 'trapped' and 'haunted' continuing to come up as key words.
Eventually, the client leaves, and Ekkehardt is left with a frown on his face, deep in thought. He doesn't even seem to realise Avery is still lounging about in one of the chairs as he paces the room before stopping at the office's dingy window.
no subject
He drops the damsel act in a second, crossing his legs and frowning at Ekkehardt's back. "So. 'Haunted,' eh? Care to elaborate, or are you going to keep pretending I'm not sitting right here?"
no subject
"I'm evaluating what I have, and whether it will be enough for this job," he replies. I'm not pretending you're not there. "And why so interested in anything to do with hauntings? I thought you were something of a skeptic."
no subject
He knows he's being a bit harsh, and the combative tone might be much, but with honey having failed, perhaps it was time to give vinegar a try.
no subject
He glances back at Avery for a moment, as if to prove his point.
no subject
"And what sorts of things are those, if you don't mind me asking?" Curiosity is starting to get the better of him. Maybe he'll follow Ekkehardt along to this "haunted house" of his, just to see what tricks are up his sleeve.
no subject
The murdered dead usually want something; to be reunited, to be taken somewhere. Revenge. To be asked to find a body - or to scout out a location to find one - usually comes with the additional complication of hearing what it has to say, whether he likes it or not.
He begins packing the items he's retrieved into a bag, more to occupy his hands than anything else. He's still halfway lost in thought reviewing what he knows of the place he's been asked to explore.
no subject
"You know, good hosts don't just up and leave without warning. It's kind of rude. The least you could do is let me go with."
no subject
He finishes piling everything into his bag and slides out a blank card, scribbling something on it.
no subject
no subject
"Get yourself ready and meet me here around five. I'd like some light for when we start." He hands Avery the card, which has an address neatly written on it, and begins to rifle through his filing cabinet for something else rather than step out of his office and leave Avery alone and unsupervised in it.
no subject
no subject
--------
The dilapidated, crumbling mansion crouches at the end of a decaying street, a hulking pile of once-grand architecture. Someone had loved this place, once; now it's merely a ruin sometimes explored by the brave and foolish, containing a dangerous maze of rooms threatening to cave in on themselves from neglect.
Ekkehardt waits on the sidewalk in front of the house's long-neglected driveway, dressed in red, carrying a black umbrella and his bag. It's still raining, even now.
no subject
"Yeesh," he comments as he gets a good look at the mansion. "No wonder people think this place is haunted. I'll be surprised if we get out without the roof collapsing."
no subject
He retrieves one of the packages from his bag, opening it to reveal a set of lockpicks, and gets to work on the door.
"Watch the house while I open this," he instructs, "and tell me if anything moves. Windows especially."
no subject
But everything along this road has seen better days. More than a few people have probably found less clean ways of entering rich old houses like these to get what they wanted.
no subject
The house is still a towering hulk; nothing seems especially out of place, save for the fact that the windows are completely empty of glass, rather than just being unclean, broken or cracked. As Avery keeps an eye on things, the only oddity is that one of them begins to reflect light, as if someone had placed a new window in.
no subject
He shakes his head. "So are these windows supposed to be glass-free or has a particularly particular thief already been by?"
no subject
He flicks on his torch. Even with a sizeable amount of daylight left, the ruined foyer is less than inviting, and surprisingly dark.
"Try not to look in any mirrors," he says, almost casually. "Or anything that looks like it's reflecting light. It might cause delays."
no subject
There's no better word than "creepy" to describe a place like this, the sort of building you'd read out of some pulp horror novel or short story. It's not enough to send a chill up his spine, but it's absolutely unpleasant.
"It looked like there was a window in one of the, uh, window-holes or whatever you'd call them earlier. Someone probably missed one." Or it was his imagination."
no subject
"Keep the umbrella with you, at least. We might not get the opportunity to leave out the front door." He closes his own umbrella, holding it in one hand loosely.
Sound seems to travel oddly in the foyer; there's a sense of unnatural quiet. Words, breath, footsteps; those things seem to die off much more quickly than they would in outside's rain-filled air.
There is the distant sound of knocking; once, twice, again. Ekkehardt raises his head, stopping to listen; when the knocking comes again, he veers off to the left of the foyer, apparently settling on a particularly dingy-looking hallway to go into.
no subject
Thus, he takes that little bit of knocking personally, snatching up his umbrella from by the door and scowling as he follows behind Ekkehardt, glaring about to look for whatever intruder was about to get a piece of his mind.
no subject
Whoever the owner was, they were an eccentric, decorating this way even before death. That much is certain.
no subject
"I didn't figure you to be the kind of guy for elaborate jokes," Avery says, struggling to keep his voice even.
no subject
no subject
no subject
He gestures with the umbrella, beckoning him onward. "I still have to talk with my client. And I wouldn't advise being alone in this place." Despite the fact that by his own admission, he himself has been in this place, alone, several times before.
no subject
no subject
In the room is a woman, pale-faced in the way that comes from significant shock and blood loss, dark-haired and dark-eyed. She has one hand clasped over her throat, like she's holding her head in place; the jagged edges of some ugly wound peek between her fingers, though mercifully there's little blood.
One hand is curled into a fist; she drops it on Ekkehardt's approach. Her head moves, just a little, to look at him.
"Excuse me," Ekkehardt says politely, as he kneels in front of her. The rest of his words are technically comprehensible, but are hard to grasp, like their very nature is formless. They're certainly having a conversation, that much is certain, but what it's about is hard to grasp.
No frames are left intact, no shards remain. But still, there's the gleam and catch of glass reflecting light, here and there, like something is poking a light through into the dark room.
no subject
That's a corpse. There's no doubt about it--a moving, speaking corpse. And Ekkehardt is talking to her. Or at least he thinks Ekkehardt is talking to her? He can't hardly hear it, or he hears it, but it filters in through one ear and out the other like grains of sand through a sieve.
He catches glimpses of glimmering light and wonders if he should interrupt the conversation to warn Ekkehardt about them. It could be something. It could be nothing.
He swallows, the threads of his skepticism slowly tangling and unraveling as he holds the umbrella with both hands, as though he could knock them away like he was holding a bat.
no subject
"--It will be done as you ask." Ekkehardt inclines his head; the woman smiles and closes her eyes, leaning back against the wall. He stands, finally, and glances over at Avery, and around the room, before stepping over the frames to get to the door.
(It's been propped open, not allowed to close fully. Ekkehardt had arranged that, too.)
"Come on," he says, beckoning to him. "Best not to linger. You might see things you don't like."
no subject
"What are you going to do? What the hell is going on here?" The questions are hissed for reasons even he's not sure of. Can the corpse woman even hear him? Is there a point in whispering?
no subject
Things have changed; a not-insignificant amount of time has passed, for one. The sun has almost set, leaving only the faintest hint of light in the sky.
"And this house draws certain things to it, the way rain pulls debris to gather in gutters. It's a spot for finding lost things, especially ones that nobody else wants to be found. I usually check here, if all other avenues are exhausted, as my other client already did."
no subject
Although he has a feeling that he isn't about to get an explanation for some time. "But fine. Whatever. Just tell me what you need me to do."
no subject
The darkened halls provide no challenge apart from those of nerves, at least at first. But as the last of the daylight slips away, flashes of mirrored light begin to shine from cracks and half-glimpsed rooms and decaying frames half-hanging off the walls.
They provide nothing so comforting as an ordinary reflection.
(Ekkehardt passes by a frame beginning to fill with what seems to be liquid mirror-light and it reflects, instead, the face of a stranger that's not him; but the same white hair, traces of the same smile remain. Sunlight, a strange countryside, more strangers dressed in clothing so unlike the stark reds and blacks he drapes himself in these days.
It's easy to get lost in mirrors, when they show you what you miss and what you desire.)
He switches his grip from Avery's sleeve to his wrist, continuing to tug him along.
no subject
They're leaving he assumes (he hopes), and it doesn't take long for Avery to match Ekkehardt's pace, the only thing keeping him from rushing ahead being his unfamiliarity with the decrepit old house.
"I can hit whatever's in here with my umbrella, right?" he asks, voice quavering just a little bit.
It's easier to deal with all of this if violence is on the table.
no subject
The handle clicks as Ekkehardt tries the door, and then he simply kicks it open and almost stumbles out into fresh night air, pulling Avery along with him. Light and the sound of strange voices follow them out, briefly, before the door slams shut and leaves them both in silence.
(The house's empty windows are shining bright.)
Ekkehardt finally lets go of Avery's wrist, just to sink to the pavement and take a moment to recollect himself, breathing hard. Even in the scant light provided by a half-full moon, it's clear that he's ashen.