"Mami?! Mami, where are you?!"
Distress could clearly be heard in the voice of the man, the all-but-retired hero known by and large to the majority of the world as 'Kamina,' as he hollered and screeched at the top of his lungs as if that alone would bring forth even some apparition or specter of his lost companion -- any hint or clue that she was safe and here and everything hadn't just been one big old effed up dream. Kamina didn't even like dreams all too much, so on that front one might understand his aversion to those of the effed up variety. But at any rate, he could neither doubt nor affirm that he had just woken up from a long dream, because the ground on which he was now standing, with his shoulders tensed and fists clenched, was neither familiar nor unfamiliar. That was to say, he felt like he could have feasibly woken up here based on the memories he possessed of the moments before he blacked out, even if he'd never actually seen this exact place before. But that hypothetical scenario would've required the enlistment of some ungodly copious amount of alcohol, and possibly a few opiates. Oh, and women with downright intoxicating curves. And a highly irresponsible attitude towards the partaking of all of those things.
Okay, that was enough focusing on the past. Right now, what was important was that he needed to find her. His friend.
Friend? He turned the word over in his mind. What even were they at this point?
Kamina closed his eyes and let out a big sigh, and then began running through the streets, trying not to bump into the people, but failing at that attempt, of course. Now was so not the time for weird girly drama. This was all possibly a matter of life and death, and -- that's when his mind registered the screaming. The wild, panicked, hysterical screaming. Kamina stopped in his tracks and whipped his head around, his bewildered expression on display for the city. While Kamina had been running toward where he presumed the center of the city to be, all of these folks seemed to be fleeing in the opposite direction. Either the cops had just broke up one hell of a wild party, or Kamina was missing something. Grabbing a guy by the arm and yanking him so close to his face that he would be able to feel the spit flying from the agitated man's mouth, Kamina crushed their foreheads together and began to shout over all the mania.
"What the hell is going on out here? Why's everyone acting like someone just dropped a stink-bomb in the middle of the city?"
His temporary captive was struggling against him, as if he would die if he wasted another second, but still he seemed to decide to respond to Kamina's rather clueless demands. "No stink-bomb," he stated with a heavy, flinty accent that seemed to be characteristic of this region. "Disaster's coming. We're running for cover." Finally, he broke himself free of Kamina's harsh grip and took off down the sidewalk without so much as another word of explanation. Groaning out his frustration loudly, Kamina bolted for the middle of the street, which was very much devoid of vehicles and very much chock-full of frantic citizens. Completely fed up, he screamed to the air:
"OH FOR THE SAKE OF PETE, SOMEONE TELL ME WHAT THE HELL IS GOING ON!"
And someone did.
"Dumbass! Get away from the center unless you wanna die!" The kid was yanking Kamina away from where he had been headed as easily as if the man were a thin flag blowing behind him in the wind. This brat has some kind of strength, he thought. And then, the boy kept on yelling. "IDIOT!! Do I have to save everyone in this damn city? A storm is coming -- a storm. They called it the Storm of A Thousand Years last time because of how utterly destructive it was and how many people were killed. But it hasn't happened for over two hundred years," he sighed impatiently, as if he'd had to tell this story over two hundred times. "Now you're obviously not from around here, but I thought even an idiot like you would know that if the sky's pitch-black at midday, something's wrong!"
Kamina felt a vein thumping on one of his temples, and he closed his eyes against all the stress these people were causing him. He had just been passed out for an undetermined length of time on a sidewalk. He didn't know what the hell time of day it was! But something told him that he wouldn't further his case by any amount if he tried explaining that to this kid. So instead, he did what he did best: scream his head off.
"Just set me down!" He howled. "If it's as bad as you say, then I really have to find Mami! She's probably looking for me too!"
"You mean the other foreigner? I knew I've seen you two before," he mused sort of calmly as he released Kamina to tumble to the hard ground. "Well, I'm pretty sure your girlfriend got on the first or second bus and is headed for safety as we speak."
Kamina stood up quickly and breathed a sigh of relief as he finally got a good look at the kid, who looked no more than eight or nine years old and had skin a shade or two darker than Kamina's was.
Wait a sec...
Had this little runt just called Mami Kamina's girlfriend?!
Distress could clearly be heard in the voice of the man, the all-but-retired hero known by and large to the majority of the world as 'Kamina,' as he hollered and screeched at the top of his lungs as if that alone would bring forth even some apparition or specter of his lost companion -- any hint or clue that she was safe and here and everything hadn't just been one big old effed up dream. Kamina didn't even like dreams all too much, so on that front one might understand his aversion to those of the effed up variety. But at any rate, he could neither doubt nor affirm that he had just woken up from a long dream, because the ground on which he was now standing, with his shoulders tensed and fists clenched, was neither familiar nor unfamiliar. That was to say, he felt like he could have feasibly woken up here based on the memories he possessed of the moments before he blacked out, even if he'd never actually seen this exact place before. But that hypothetical scenario would've required the enlistment of some ungodly copious amount of alcohol, and possibly a few opiates. Oh, and women with downright intoxicating curves. And a highly irresponsible attitude towards the partaking of all of those things.
Okay, that was enough focusing on the past. Right now, what was important was that he needed to find her. His friend.
Friend? He turned the word over in his mind. What even were they at this point?
Kamina closed his eyes and let out a big sigh, and then began running through the streets, trying not to bump into the people, but failing at that attempt, of course. Now was so not the time for weird girly drama. This was all possibly a matter of life and death, and -- that's when his mind registered the screaming. The wild, panicked, hysterical screaming. Kamina stopped in his tracks and whipped his head around, his bewildered expression on display for the city. While Kamina had been running toward where he presumed the center of the city to be, all of these folks seemed to be fleeing in the opposite direction. Either the cops had just broke up one hell of a wild party, or Kamina was missing something. Grabbing a guy by the arm and yanking him so close to his face that he would be able to feel the spit flying from the agitated man's mouth, Kamina crushed their foreheads together and began to shout over all the mania.
"What the hell is going on out here? Why's everyone acting like someone just dropped a stink-bomb in the middle of the city?"
His temporary captive was struggling against him, as if he would die if he wasted another second, but still he seemed to decide to respond to Kamina's rather clueless demands. "No stink-bomb," he stated with a heavy, flinty accent that seemed to be characteristic of this region. "Disaster's coming. We're running for cover." Finally, he broke himself free of Kamina's harsh grip and took off down the sidewalk without so much as another word of explanation. Groaning out his frustration loudly, Kamina bolted for the middle of the street, which was very much devoid of vehicles and very much chock-full of frantic citizens. Completely fed up, he screamed to the air:
"OH FOR THE SAKE OF PETE, SOMEONE TELL ME WHAT THE HELL IS GOING ON!"
And someone did.
"Dumbass! Get away from the center unless you wanna die!" The kid was yanking Kamina away from where he had been headed as easily as if the man were a thin flag blowing behind him in the wind. This brat has some kind of strength, he thought. And then, the boy kept on yelling. "IDIOT!! Do I have to save everyone in this damn city? A storm is coming -- a storm. They called it the Storm of A Thousand Years last time because of how utterly destructive it was and how many people were killed. But it hasn't happened for over two hundred years," he sighed impatiently, as if he'd had to tell this story over two hundred times. "Now you're obviously not from around here, but I thought even an idiot like you would know that if the sky's pitch-black at midday, something's wrong!"
Kamina felt a vein thumping on one of his temples, and he closed his eyes against all the stress these people were causing him. He had just been passed out for an undetermined length of time on a sidewalk. He didn't know what the hell time of day it was! But something told him that he wouldn't further his case by any amount if he tried explaining that to this kid. So instead, he did what he did best: scream his head off.
"Just set me down!" He howled. "If it's as bad as you say, then I really have to find Mami! She's probably looking for me too!"
"You mean the other foreigner? I knew I've seen you two before," he mused sort of calmly as he released Kamina to tumble to the hard ground. "Well, I'm pretty sure your girlfriend got on the first or second bus and is headed for safety as we speak."
Kamina stood up quickly and breathed a sigh of relief as he finally got a good look at the kid, who looked no more than eight or nine years old and had skin a shade or two darker than Kamina's was.
Wait a sec...
Had this little runt just called Mami Kamina's girlfriend?!