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Round 2: Bonecrusher (j) vs. Deacon

Chad

The Godfather
Staff member
Joined
Mar 17, 1988
Messages
3,928
Points
36
Website
thecswa.com
Roleplay runs from Tuesday, May 15 to Tuesday, May 22. 2 RP minimum this round. SHOW UP! :)
 

Deacon

Member
Joined
Apr 1, 1998
Messages
309
Points
18
Age
49
Location
Urbana, OH
I created my "own" thread cause I didn't see this (gimmee a break, I worked nearly 70 hours this week!), but JUST IN CASE the judges are sticklers... I'll post the same RP here.

-------------------------------------------------------

I leapt over the fence. The streetlights beat down on the concrete like feet pounding on pavement. So of course, it wasn’t a surprise when I heard those feet. I was near my prey, and though he was running, I had him pegged. To the wall. With thumbtacks. Though not really, I was just speaking in proverbs – it’s what I do.

"You’re never going to catch me,” he shouted.

I laughed, a deep, echoing, billowy laugh that wasn’t quite evil genius, but close enough to make me uncomfortable. So I coughed. I would catch him. I would catch all of them. All the idiots who said they’d be there and wasn’t. And the one idiot who no one wanted there, and somehow survived. All of them would go down to my fury, my unbridled, uncontainable, unbelievable, un…something else very big and bad… fury.

I ran faster than I thought possible, almost making me question if this were a dream. But dreams were not this dark. Nightmares were. And that was what this would be, not for me, but for them. I ran into the street, my head swiveling every direction, my ears scanning for the tell-tale sound that would reveal my quarry. With a crash, I knew I had him, the cowardly little man who ruined my party.

“I’d say give up,” I shouted, “but it’s more fun when you run!”

But he didn’t run. So I did, slipping around a corner and into an alley. It was dark. Darker than dark. But it didn’t matter.

Bonecrusher lay there wearing a Batman costume, nearly knocked out like he’d been after ‘winning’ his Round one match.

“I’m sorry,” he pleaded but as I looked into his eyes, I knew that he knew he would receive no mercy. “I’m not even really Bonecrusher. I’m Batman!”

“No,” I snarled, “you’re dead.”

And even before I touched him, I could hear his final, dying screams echoing throughout the cavernous concrete jungle.

“What the--,” Chad Merritt screamed as he jolted up in bed. He was sweaty, like his uncle during Thanksgiving dinner. And just like his uncle’s odor had overwhelmed the sweet smell of pumpkin pie, Chad felt the overwhelming burden of the Ultratitle Tournament. He took a deep breath and let it out slowly, hoping it would slow his heart. It worked. Just like the tournament would work in spite of the guys who put on a lackluster performance. But just like the Bonecrusher was never supposed to make it, Chad knew his Mulkey-like quality would grow, even though he would’ve preferred it to be against someone other than Deacon to play the Breaker of Mr. Cinderella’s Glass Slipper. Assuming Deacon showed up. God, what if Deacon didn’t show up?

“Go to sleep,” she said then rolled over, her blonde hair trailing over her very tanned and very naked shoulders.

Who was that? Who was he? Chad questioned his own identity, the whole thing and not just his sexual one, at least until he realized who lay beside him.

“Ivy?” Chad questioned and then looked at his hand. On his left ring finger was a wedding band. On Ivy’s was a matching one. He glanced into the mirror over his nightstand. His hair was receeding. His face was sagging. And somehow, he’d married Ivy!

“NOOOOOOOOOO!” Chad screamed, ripping at his face.

The Deacon sat up in bed, his scream matching the identity-confusing one from his dream. But it was only a dream. A dream within a dream. In spite of the scream though, his heart did not race. It was steady, like a referee counting the three count. Actually more like the 10 count when they actually are supposed to count the wrestler out of the ring. He’d had some weird dreams, but nothing quite so confusing, at least until this night. It was the Ultratitle – it messed with everyone, including him.

“If you had enough faith,” the voice said from the darkness of his room, “it wouldn’t get to you so.”

The Deacon squinted, but he didn’t need to do so for long. The speaker stepped into an errant ray of light from the kitchen.

“Bonecrusher?” The Deacon said.

But Bonecrusher couldn’t speak. He’d been gagged.

"You speak of a God?” The voice said from behind Bonecrusher. “But not a…”

It sprung over Bonecrusher and onto Deacon’s Super-King Sized bed.

“Space God!”

The Deacon woke up from his dream within a dream within a dream and looked at the clock. It was 2am. He needed to get some sleep.

“Get thee behind me, Satan,” he said, and then flipped his pillow over. It was cool.

TOODLES
 

Deacon

Member
Joined
Apr 1, 1998
Messages
309
Points
18
Age
49
Location
Urbana, OH
“But one thing from people of the faith,” Chris Shepherd said in front of the Ultratitle banner, “we can be quite good at learning from other people’s mistakes. We do it all the time. We read what men did thousands of years ago, and take those lessons to apply to our lives. Bonecrusher, we both know Lane Cash made a mistake. The only question is… will Deacon learn from it? I got that answer. I gave you that answer. And tonight, we’re going to teach that answer to you and anyone with ears to hear that announcer tell the world that Deacon’s moving on to round 3.”

“Cut!” Gene announced. “Get it to editing.”

“Moving up, Gene,” Chris said, now fully out of character and into real life. “Directing now?”

“They fired the last guy for letting the N-word go,” Gene said without looking at Chris.

Chris pursed his lips and shook his head. “Getcha everytime. How are things at home?”

Gene stopped. He didn’t answer the question, and even though Chris’d talked to him at length about Gene’s family problems after the round 1 matches, Chris had to wonder if Gene was embarrassed.

“I’m sorry,” Chris said. He’d learned a long time ago that he could only help those who wanted it, and after last week, he knew Gene lived with a great deal of stress. Sometimes they broke only to dam it back up as soon as they could.

“Nothing to apologize for,” Gene said flatly. “My son’s just… he needs help and I don’t know how to help him.”

“I can’t say I have all those answers either,” Chris said. Some Christians wanted to give the ‘right answer’. Actually, that wasn’t just a Christian problem. As with most things, at its root it was a person problem, daytime talk-shows were full of people giving simplified ‘right answers’ to questions a lot more convoluted than we would want to admit.

“I know,” Gene said, so quiet Chris wasn’t certain if he was speaking to Chris or to himself. Chris wouldn’t question which it was. Gene seemed to need his time, or at least that’s what Chris thought until Gene did finally look at him. Eyes wide and swollen, Gene was scared, terrified, and trying to keep it all in, to find a way to hold everything together when the whole world seemed to be falling apart. Chris had learned a long time ago to help those who wanted it, but he’d also learned that sometimes, you just have to push a little bit harder.

“Did his mother show up again?” Chris asked.

Gene shook his head. “Maybe that’s the problem. She said she would be there and she stood him up. How could she do that?” It wasn’t a question to be answered. “How did this happen?”

Chris could guess at that answer. After hearing Gene’s story, Chris knew enough to see the picture of a boy still in a man’s body taking a wife too young for her own. The man started to grow up and the girl, mother now, was unable to grow with him. They separated. The man met and married another woman. ‘Fun and vibrant’ would be what she labeled herself as. ‘Unwilling to stay sober for more than a day’ would become his label when the newness wore off. And he’d do the same two more times with two more women, dragging his son into each. It didn’t take much to connect the dots, but Gene didn’t need the picture, he needed…

God, what did Gene need?

Chris offered only a shake of the head before he said, “Sometimes the question isn’t the important thing. Yesterday’s done.”

“Jason can’t even stay in school for a day without getting into a fight! What’s his life going to be like?”

Again, Chris shook his head. “Tomorrow will be there when we get there. You have enough to worry about today.”

“I wish it was that easy for me,” Jason said.

At this point, Chris could’ve jumped and told Jason how it could be easy, that if he trust God and grab ahold of Jesus’ promises, that all his pain would go away. He’d heard as much from thousands of theologians with bible verses galore to back up their claims. Chris could’ve, but that would’ve been a lie.

“It may never be easy,” Chris said, “but it’ll be worth it.”

“Sometimes I doubt it,” Gene said.

Chris could’ve told him to have faith, hold strong, all those things he’d done in all those wrestling promos. But this wasn’t a match. This was a life, and the only battle Chris could see was the one he couldn’t see – the one that’d grabbed hold of Jason and seemingly wouldn’t let him go. Rejection of a mother. Instability in a home and the resulting inability to trust someone enough to love them.

“I know you doubt it,” Chris said, “and that’s why I’m still here, still asking, and still praying.”

“Thanks,” Gene said, but his voice said he didn’t mean it.

“And why I’d like to pray for you here, right now,” Chris said, making certain that his voice sounded like he meant it.

Gene looked at him, staring through him. It was uncomfortable, but Chris held the gaze. Discomfort was the least of his concerns. Gene, and ultimately Jason, was the greatest concern, and inside, Chris prayed a prayer even before Gene said…

“Sure.”
 

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