pennywise
Bluelighter
- Joined
- Apr 6, 2005
- Messages
- 5,207
ok, this is part 1. I was gonna write the whole thing and then post it but i forgot how much work that is. So, here is the first half, ending at a reasonable turning point in the plot I think. It's pretty rough, I have made no edits, so feel free to critique. I also made the text a little bigger because it gets hard to read all those tiny words.
By pennywise
Robert Kelly was a cop. He was other things too, but he was a cop first and foremost. He kept his hair cut high and tight. Everything about Kelly was tight, from the muscles of his face to his tie and starched shirt collar to the way he snapped the cuffs on a hype. He liked to lock people up, to put them in chains and barred rooms. It was the only time he felt like smiling, and the grin would shatter his stony face like a brutal slash. If you were locked up by Kelly and you saw that grin you would know that he hated you. He hated what you were, and he probably would have killed you if he could. It was simple for Kelly. He didn’t hate you because you used drugs or because he had some sense of a higher justice, he didn’t even have some vague paternalistic notion that he might be helping you somehow by tossing you into a cell. Kelly hated you because you broke the law, and he was on the other side of it. That gave him power. That was what got Kelly off: the power. By reducing you to some subhuman bit of filth, Kelly could put you on the ground, put the cuffs on you, pound the shit out of you, and throw you into bondage. He could hurt you, and that’s what he wanted. Kelly liked to hurt people. He loved the law, because the law let him do it. He didn’t give a shit what the law said, he would have locked you up if it was illegal to have brown hair or to walk and chew gum at the same time or to be Jewish. Once you were on the wrong side of the law, you became his prey, his to hunt and use as he saw fit to fulfill his sadistic urge. It didn’t even bother Kelly that he often broke the law when dealing with lawbreakers. He was a cop. He was the law. It didn’t matter who filed complaints or how many there were, because Kelly had no problem lying in court. The way he saw it, he was dealing with scum, so no one had the power to call him a liar.
Kelly had killed people before. Some were clean shootings, some were just because he could get away with it. He raped a girl once too, holding the gun to her head and afterwards telling her he would come back and kill her if she ever told anyone about it. He had skeletons, but he knew how to work the system because he was the system. He had the badge. They were just worthless perps. Kelly worked in the Narcotics division. He liked being a Narc, because it was always so easy to find prey. Just pull over any filthy longhairs and toss the car, or throw a dirty nigger up against the wall and dip into his pockets. He could get arrests almost on a whim. He was known and feared by all the players because they knew that Bob Kelly didn’t follow the rules, and he was an evil son of a bitch. Kelly knew it and it pleased him greatly.
Kelly was currently working a sting on a loose confederation of chemists and dealers involved in the synthesis and distribution of various psychedelic drugs in the nomadic hippy world of concert followers. He got his information from some kid who he arrested for pot and then flipped after taking him to an abandoned lot and beating him until he gave up whatever he knew. Kelly had scored with that one. The kid was skinny, white, and not used to having the shit kicked out of him by sociopaths with badges. And he knew things; big things that would bring big arrests. He strung the kid along with threats, coercion, and violence. The deal that Kelly cut with the kid was that once the kid gave up the time and place where a major synth was going on, Kelly would leave him alone. Kelly had been smiling inwardly when he made this deal, because he knew it would get him a major bust, and he had no intention of letting the kid go as a CI. In fact, he planned to charge him as a co-conspirator. The kid was going down with the rest of them, and Kelly thought about putting out the word into the prisons that the kid was a snitch. Snitch’s got hurt in prison, and Kelly wanted the kid hurt. The only downfall was that the kid might not know that it was Kelly who made it happen.
Scared and unaware of his impending doom, the kid made good on the deal. They would be finishing a synth of a large batch of LSD right in time for the start of a tour that would begin with a weekend show by one of the major longhair acts. They planned to distribute the doses to the concertgoers in the parking lot and grassy areas around the venue, and then follow the band and bring their product with them to sell in the towns along the tour route. They worked out of an RV so they could pack up their lab and bring it with them when they followed the band. The kid gave up everything. Kelly knew where the RV would be parked at what time, who would be in it, and what contraband they would have on them. Probable cause wasn’t a problem because Kelly knew he could make that up on a whim and sell it to a judge or even a jury if he needed to. He was set.
Kelly was not a complicated man. Moralism, empathy, or any doubt about his place in the universe was a foreign thing to him. To Kelly, he was the universe. The heavenly bodies waxed and waned to enrich his avarice, his power, his vanity at the strength he possessed and the glee that he felt when his power was impressed upon others under the guise of justice. When they became subject to him, his power became even more real, more concrete, and his narcissism grew, feeding on itself and pushing him to objectify others to solidify it without end. Kelly was an un-assailed ego, his consciousness never pushed beyond its stark and inflexible borders that fed the machinery of his growing cruelty. It was a consciousness narrowed to the pinpoint of a monstrous egoism.
It was this essential fact about Kelly that must be understood if the series of events that was to unfold is to be understood. It is perhaps something a bit like fate when the course of a life takes a turn that was dictated by the core being of the subject of the event. It is when a thing like this happens that one glimpses the divine comedy and suspects that perhaps the universe has a sense of humor after all.
The night came. Kelly moved through the crowd outside the venue, not trying very hard to blend in. He didn’t need to, as he saw it. He did not intend to trick anyone, but rather simply kick down a door and take what was his with a maximum of violence. Any ruse, therefore, was unnecessary. Not that it would make any difference, he thought. Most of the crowd was too intoxicated to notice his dark presence. They disgusted him. Their weakness, their vulnerability made them deserving of his disgust, his hatred. They could not stand against him.
The air was filled with the pungent aromas patchouli and the sour stink of unwashed flesh. The sun hung low beyond the horizon, creating a soft sunset brilliance of pink and orange hues which gave way to the twinkling starlight of early twilight. The sweet smell of burning cannabis wafted by his nose. A man not far off strummed his guitar and sang a song which Kelly did not know:
When I awoke, the dire wolf, six hundred pounds of sin,
Was grinning at my window, all I said was come on in.
Dont murder me, I beg of you, dont murder me. Please, dont murder me.
A man approached Kelly, asking him if he wanted to “burn.” Kelly gave the man a confused look, at which the man gestured to a rolled paper in his hand and held it out to Kelly. More marijuana, Kelly realized, noticing the aromatic green substance protruding from end of the rolled paper.
“Sure, fuckface,” said Kelly with a malevolent grin.
The man cocked his head quizzically as Kelly swung his coiled fist up and into the mans’ throat. He still looked confused as he fell, then panic took over as he rolled on the ground, clutching his throat and struggling for breath. Kelly watched this detachedly, then kicked the man hard in the spine as he rolled on the ground. He smiled slightly as he did this. Most of the crowd surrounding the incident had stopped and was watching Kelly fearfully. Some hurried away while others seemed frozen in place as if in shock at the sudden violence. The man with the guitar had not noticed and continued to play and sing:
Trouble with you is the trouble with me,
Got two good eyes but you still don’t see.
Come round the bend, you know its the end,
The fireman screams and the engine just gleams...
Satisfied with this turn of events, Kelly adjusted his tie and moved down the line of revelers towards the lighted windows of the R/V with several thousand hits of LSD waiting inside. He reached inside his jacket, searching for the cold steel of his gun as he approached the door.
The Acid Death of A True Cop
By pennywise
Robert Kelly was a cop. He was other things too, but he was a cop first and foremost. He kept his hair cut high and tight. Everything about Kelly was tight, from the muscles of his face to his tie and starched shirt collar to the way he snapped the cuffs on a hype. He liked to lock people up, to put them in chains and barred rooms. It was the only time he felt like smiling, and the grin would shatter his stony face like a brutal slash. If you were locked up by Kelly and you saw that grin you would know that he hated you. He hated what you were, and he probably would have killed you if he could. It was simple for Kelly. He didn’t hate you because you used drugs or because he had some sense of a higher justice, he didn’t even have some vague paternalistic notion that he might be helping you somehow by tossing you into a cell. Kelly hated you because you broke the law, and he was on the other side of it. That gave him power. That was what got Kelly off: the power. By reducing you to some subhuman bit of filth, Kelly could put you on the ground, put the cuffs on you, pound the shit out of you, and throw you into bondage. He could hurt you, and that’s what he wanted. Kelly liked to hurt people. He loved the law, because the law let him do it. He didn’t give a shit what the law said, he would have locked you up if it was illegal to have brown hair or to walk and chew gum at the same time or to be Jewish. Once you were on the wrong side of the law, you became his prey, his to hunt and use as he saw fit to fulfill his sadistic urge. It didn’t even bother Kelly that he often broke the law when dealing with lawbreakers. He was a cop. He was the law. It didn’t matter who filed complaints or how many there were, because Kelly had no problem lying in court. The way he saw it, he was dealing with scum, so no one had the power to call him a liar.
Kelly had killed people before. Some were clean shootings, some were just because he could get away with it. He raped a girl once too, holding the gun to her head and afterwards telling her he would come back and kill her if she ever told anyone about it. He had skeletons, but he knew how to work the system because he was the system. He had the badge. They were just worthless perps. Kelly worked in the Narcotics division. He liked being a Narc, because it was always so easy to find prey. Just pull over any filthy longhairs and toss the car, or throw a dirty nigger up against the wall and dip into his pockets. He could get arrests almost on a whim. He was known and feared by all the players because they knew that Bob Kelly didn’t follow the rules, and he was an evil son of a bitch. Kelly knew it and it pleased him greatly.
Kelly was currently working a sting on a loose confederation of chemists and dealers involved in the synthesis and distribution of various psychedelic drugs in the nomadic hippy world of concert followers. He got his information from some kid who he arrested for pot and then flipped after taking him to an abandoned lot and beating him until he gave up whatever he knew. Kelly had scored with that one. The kid was skinny, white, and not used to having the shit kicked out of him by sociopaths with badges. And he knew things; big things that would bring big arrests. He strung the kid along with threats, coercion, and violence. The deal that Kelly cut with the kid was that once the kid gave up the time and place where a major synth was going on, Kelly would leave him alone. Kelly had been smiling inwardly when he made this deal, because he knew it would get him a major bust, and he had no intention of letting the kid go as a CI. In fact, he planned to charge him as a co-conspirator. The kid was going down with the rest of them, and Kelly thought about putting out the word into the prisons that the kid was a snitch. Snitch’s got hurt in prison, and Kelly wanted the kid hurt. The only downfall was that the kid might not know that it was Kelly who made it happen.
Scared and unaware of his impending doom, the kid made good on the deal. They would be finishing a synth of a large batch of LSD right in time for the start of a tour that would begin with a weekend show by one of the major longhair acts. They planned to distribute the doses to the concertgoers in the parking lot and grassy areas around the venue, and then follow the band and bring their product with them to sell in the towns along the tour route. They worked out of an RV so they could pack up their lab and bring it with them when they followed the band. The kid gave up everything. Kelly knew where the RV would be parked at what time, who would be in it, and what contraband they would have on them. Probable cause wasn’t a problem because Kelly knew he could make that up on a whim and sell it to a judge or even a jury if he needed to. He was set.
Kelly was not a complicated man. Moralism, empathy, or any doubt about his place in the universe was a foreign thing to him. To Kelly, he was the universe. The heavenly bodies waxed and waned to enrich his avarice, his power, his vanity at the strength he possessed and the glee that he felt when his power was impressed upon others under the guise of justice. When they became subject to him, his power became even more real, more concrete, and his narcissism grew, feeding on itself and pushing him to objectify others to solidify it without end. Kelly was an un-assailed ego, his consciousness never pushed beyond its stark and inflexible borders that fed the machinery of his growing cruelty. It was a consciousness narrowed to the pinpoint of a monstrous egoism.
It was this essential fact about Kelly that must be understood if the series of events that was to unfold is to be understood. It is perhaps something a bit like fate when the course of a life takes a turn that was dictated by the core being of the subject of the event. It is when a thing like this happens that one glimpses the divine comedy and suspects that perhaps the universe has a sense of humor after all.
The night came. Kelly moved through the crowd outside the venue, not trying very hard to blend in. He didn’t need to, as he saw it. He did not intend to trick anyone, but rather simply kick down a door and take what was his with a maximum of violence. Any ruse, therefore, was unnecessary. Not that it would make any difference, he thought. Most of the crowd was too intoxicated to notice his dark presence. They disgusted him. Their weakness, their vulnerability made them deserving of his disgust, his hatred. They could not stand against him.
The air was filled with the pungent aromas patchouli and the sour stink of unwashed flesh. The sun hung low beyond the horizon, creating a soft sunset brilliance of pink and orange hues which gave way to the twinkling starlight of early twilight. The sweet smell of burning cannabis wafted by his nose. A man not far off strummed his guitar and sang a song which Kelly did not know:
When I awoke, the dire wolf, six hundred pounds of sin,
Was grinning at my window, all I said was come on in.
Dont murder me, I beg of you, dont murder me. Please, dont murder me.
A man approached Kelly, asking him if he wanted to “burn.” Kelly gave the man a confused look, at which the man gestured to a rolled paper in his hand and held it out to Kelly. More marijuana, Kelly realized, noticing the aromatic green substance protruding from end of the rolled paper.
“Sure, fuckface,” said Kelly with a malevolent grin.
The man cocked his head quizzically as Kelly swung his coiled fist up and into the mans’ throat. He still looked confused as he fell, then panic took over as he rolled on the ground, clutching his throat and struggling for breath. Kelly watched this detachedly, then kicked the man hard in the spine as he rolled on the ground. He smiled slightly as he did this. Most of the crowd surrounding the incident had stopped and was watching Kelly fearfully. Some hurried away while others seemed frozen in place as if in shock at the sudden violence. The man with the guitar had not noticed and continued to play and sing:
Trouble with you is the trouble with me,
Got two good eyes but you still don’t see.
Come round the bend, you know its the end,
The fireman screams and the engine just gleams...
Satisfied with this turn of events, Kelly adjusted his tie and moved down the line of revelers towards the lighted windows of the R/V with several thousand hits of LSD waiting inside. He reached inside his jacket, searching for the cold steel of his gun as he approached the door.
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