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Hidden 8 yrs ago 8 yrs ago Post by Plank Sinatra
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Plank Sinatra the reaper won't come when you're ready for him

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Hidden 8 yrs ago 8 yrs ago Post by SevenStormStyle
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SevenStormStyle Not an Authority Figure

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HereComesTheSnow dehydration expert

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Hidden 8 yrs ago 8 yrs ago Post by Write
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Write Currently Writing

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Hidden 8 yrs ago 8 yrs ago Post by NaraK
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When Fighting Evil Takes Too Long!

The Life of a Normal Student and a Warrior from Another World










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Hidden 7 yrs ago 7 yrs ago Post by Crimmy
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Crimmy Oi brat, what're ye using that noggin for?

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AERONWY LARKSPUR AND FRIENDS


It's 6am in the morning, and I can't be bothered converting from Word's WYSIWYG to BBCode, so have these two shared GDocs:

(2)
(1)

Have fun.
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Hidden 7 yrs ago 7 yrs ago Post by HereComesTheSnow
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Hidden 7 yrs ago 7 yrs ago Post by Plank Sinatra
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totally pissed with how little of this i got done so i'm going to be editing in more of the story and doing formatting as time goes on, final word count at judging time is around 6600 give or take a few dozen words
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Hidden 7 yrs ago Post by FlitterFaux
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FlitterFaux The Incurable

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You know, I have no clue how many words this is. Almost certain it is less that 1k. Sad, I had a bit more written towards the end but as it goes sometimes I lost all that to unfortunate circumstances. This is also a fraction of the tale I hoped to tell. ~shrug~ Time limits and I are not good bedfellows. No matter, this is the best I can do for now. Who knows, if it's enjoyable maybe I can finish it over time.


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Hidden 7 yrs ago 7 yrs ago Post by Onarax
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Onarax Sleepy

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No time to really proof right now so I guess I'll do that in the morning. I also might add in Episode 2 later if I ever finish it. Enjoy this last minute idea. Final word count was sadly just about 900 words from 5k, but I wasn't looking for credits anyhow. Enjoy I guess.

EDIT: And proofed, stuck the hopefully typo free version in the v2 header.





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Hidden 7 yrs ago 7 yrs ago Post by Krayzikk
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Krayzikk The Snark Knight

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“Benji!”

Ben Lloyd was pulled into a hug quickly, and with surprising force given the hugger’s age. Abe still had a few inches on his grandson yet, and his grip was inescapable iron when Ben tried to pull away from the imminent ruffling of his hair. His grandfather laughed, a cheerful sound that shook his thinning frame. Even though his hair had long gone gray, the blue eyes that looked Ben over when he finally let him pull free were the same from generation to generation. The old man’s smile only widened when the ruffled teen tried to fix his hair.

“What, you don’t visit anymore? Haven’t seen you for weeks, it’s not like I’m in Mistral.” He jabbed a finger in Ben’s direction, trying to look accusatory. “Don’t be like your Dad, your grandmother and I like seeing you. Lord knows she’ll bribe you with candy if she has to.”

“I know, Gramps, I know.” Ben answered a little sheepishly, slipping one hand into his pocket. “I’m sorry. Been busy.”

“I’m just yanking your chain, kid, it’s good to see ya. Come on in, the missus is out for the afternoon but she’d love if you stayed for dinner. What’s up? Designs you wanna show me? Updates on school?” Abe moved deeper into the house, making a beeline for a well-worn armchair in the living room’s corner. “C’mon, don’t keep me in suspense. What do I owe the pleasure to?”

“Well, Mr. Martin gave us a new project. We get to pick what we write about and I remember all those stories you used to tell me. I thought you’d be perfect.”

The elder Lloyd’s eyes took on an amused sparkle as he sank into his seat, a grin spreading across his face. “Benji, ain’t you a little old to be doing book reports on fairy tales? I can think up a couple, but old man Martin’s probably heard all the local Grimm legends.”

“I don’t think you get to call anyone old man, old man. He’s younger than you are.” His grandson shot back, dropping his backpack on the floor and giving Abe a bit of a glare. “I don’t mean the big Grimm hunting days. We’re doing a unit on the Great War, I thought you’d be a great place to start my report.”

“Oh yeah?” He leaned back in his chair, regarding Ben with a raised eyebrow. “What kinda report?”

“I dunno, you never told me much about it.” Ben flopped onto the couch, shooting his grandfather a grin across the coffee table. “I mean, I’ve heard some tall tales, but I figure you could give me a good start. Couple badass stories about you kicking Atlesian ass, I fit ‘em into the war’s timeline, instant report about the glory days.”

“I never told you much, Benjamin, because there’s no glory in them.” Abraham chided gently, much of the levity fading from his voice. His grandson frowned while he was quiet, thinking about what he wanted to say. “... It’s a good project. Martin suggest it?”

“Yeah.”

“He’s a good teacher, that one. Probably a lesson you need to learn.” A pause, then he gestured to the kitchen. “Grab me a beer outta the fridge. I’ll give you what you need, but if I do, it’s gonna be the truth.”

“I mean, obvious-”

“No, kid, I’m gonna give you the truth. Not the documentaries, not the action movies, and not a bedtime story. No sugarcoating. That’s the deal.”

Ben looked a little uncertain for a moment but he stood up and walked to the kitchen, bringing back a beer and handing it to his grandfather before sitting back down. He toyed with his Scroll to put it into recording mode and set it down on the coffee table, then cleared his throat a little.

“Why haven’t you told me about this before? You told me about fighting Grimm, even a couple of the ones you fought during the war. Even a couple of the ones your dad fought.”

“‘Cause you’re a kid. You wanted to hear about how cool your family is, you wanted monster-fighting, Grimm-slaying and saving the day. The sort of stuff that makes you grin and go to sleep happy. When they talk about the war in school, I bet, they talk about how the Atlesians and Mistralese were the bad guys. How we won and made it better.” He shook his head, a sharp, jerking motion. “No. It’s not that simple.”

“I mean obviously it was more complicated than that, but they were the bad guys. We did make it better. They treated their citizens like shit, you couldn’t express yourself.”

“Why?”

“What?”

“Why’d they make those laws?”

“I… Dunno.”

“Exactly.” He pointed at his grandson again, gripping his walking stick tighter with the other hand. “They did it because they thought it would make people safe. They thought if emotions were kept in check, if people didn’t get upset, they could avoid Grimm attacks. At least cut down on ‘em. It was a stupid idea. We can see that now, ‘cause hindsight’s perfect.”

“Wasn’t so simple back then. People were scared. We didn’t have Academies for Hunters and Huntresses, or advanced weapons, or robots. You built walls high and thick, you kept your weapons sharp, and you tried to be ready. War didn’t start because we thought what they were doing was wrong, war started because they started tryin’ to push it on everyone else.”

“But… They were wrong.”

“Yeah, and we spent ten years fighting to prove it. Any idea how many people died? On both sides? I lost an aunt and an uncle in the war, and that was just in our family.” A hand gestured north, accompanied by a nod. “Redwood was the frontlines of the Great War inside of a year. Atlas used Shiroyama, our neighbors, as a foothold. We were the first line of defense.

The whole family cranked out weapons for the local militia as fast as we could, we armed damn near most the town. Those walls kept Atlas out, but keeping them from moving too far past us was bloody. Even when Vale got more troops up here. The Grimm came in droves, the fear and anger drew ‘em in. Everyone suffered when that happened. Both sides had to fight them, and it was as chaotic as you think. It’d go on for hours until they were gone, and everyone fell back to lick their wounds.”

His voice got a little softer, a little gentler, when he continued. He rummaged in a drawer next to his chair a moment, and handed a small, cloth-wrapped object over to Ben. When his grandson unwrapped it he found a curved blade about eight and a half inches long. The teen turned it over in his hands while he listened, examining the worn tool. It was a billhook, the sort of thing he’d used for clearing shrubs before, with a battered wooden handle and a scuffed and scratched metal edge.

“I was sixteen when I first had to fight, Ben. A pack of Beowolves broke through the wall on the other side of the town, away from the gates. Everyone was fighting out front. No one could pull back. Coming right for my house. My family. Sixteen years old, a little training and a billhook. I killed a Grimm with it. Just one, and I was lucky it didn’t kill me first. The troops in reserve bailed us out, but it was close.

My friends called me a hero for not running away, but I was too scared to run. I fought because I had to. Because if I didn’t, they’d have gotten my family.”

He paused a few moments, taking a long drink from his beer, before he continued. “A couple years into the war, when the body counts started going up, that was when I fought for real. No armor, because if they got through your Aura you were dead already. Awful guns. Big, they had to be to punch through an enemy’s Aura, and they jammed all the time. Around here you took whatever hand-to-hand weapons you could. Nothing standard.”

“I kept that billhook. I used it on Grimm, and I used it on people. Soldiers that didn’t want to be there either.”

Ben had long since gone quiet, listening and trying to understand what he was hearing. He wasn’t smiling anymore, and he wasn’t really thinking about his report either. His grandfather looked old, maybe for the first time in Ben’s life. He looked tired and he looked sad.

“But they were the enemy, weren’t they Gramps?”

“No, Ben. The enemy was a philosophy. We fought them because we wanted to protect our home. They fought us ‘cause they had to. Because their leaders pushed them into a fight they didn’t want to fight, but now they had to. To keep their homes, and their family’s safe.

Once, about halfway between here and Shiroyama, we managed to wake up something big. That Datura had probably been sleeping there longer than anyone in the forest had been alive, because when it woke up it was like the whole forest came alive. Nothing we hit it with could make a dent. We all stopped fighting each other to fight it, to try and bring anything we had to bear. Smaller Grimm lived inside it, and came out to keep us busy while it just smashed, and smashed, and smashed. We set the place on fire to try and kill it, and that hurt us as much as it hurt the Grimm.

We wounded it, forced it off, but we were all trapped. Anyone that hadn’t already gotten out was trapped with the fire, the Grimm, and no backup.

I figured that was it. Probably should’ve been, because I was trapped in there with the Atlesians, too. I can’t remember most of them, now, but we worked together. That was why we lived. Instead of squabbling we fought the Grimm that were left, watched each other’s backs, and yeah. Carried each other out of there. At one point I fought back to back with a swordsman with a black blade, and we held off dozens of Grimm to get our comrades out. Because they were the real enemy.”

He sighed, letting the silence fill the room for a few minutes. It was deafening, encompassing and overwhelming all else. Ben was clearly thinking, unsure of what to say, but Abe knew he wouldn’t speak until he’d said his piece. Respect, partly, and a need to gather his thoughts. He was a good kid. A very good kid. It was harsh, but these were sentiments he needed to hear. Especially if he was thinking about following the same path his father abandoned.

There was a difficult subject. He knew Ben would ask. But it wasn’t entirely Abraham’s story to tell.

“We won, Benji, but it cost a lot. Not just in money, but in lives. We did make it better. The world is safer. That’s a noble thing. We established academies, and new governments, and better ways to communicate. Travel. Shiroyama, after the war, became our allies. If not friends. But the process is nothing to glorify.”

“Why do you tell me about fighting Grimm, then? If the war was so awful, why do you tell me about one but not the other?” Ben looked not upset, but troubled. He seemed to have forgotten he was recording for a project, and instead stared at the table between them quietly. The billhook was resting on it, laid there almost reverently beyond his steepled fingers. “The cost’s high there, too. I know… Your Dad died, after the war. Fighting Grimm.”

Abe nodded, slowly.

“He did. It was hard for me to deal with, even after the war. He was only fifty two. Barely twenty years older than I was. He’d made it through the war, too. My Mom cried, ‘course, but she didn’t lose hope. Told me, when I was struggling with it, that it was how he’d have wanted to go. He’d been fighting Grimm before the war, too, and told me that that was easier.”

A sip from his drink interrupted the comment, then the old man nodded to himself.

“Grimm are the enemy. They’re not fighting because they have to, they hunt us because they want to. They thrive on the worst of us. To fight against the Grimm, the closest we’ve got to a symbol for everything wrong, is noble. It’s a protection of those less capable. We’ve been doing it for decades, protecting Redwood. Dad wouldn’t have minded how he went because it was in defense of his home and family. I like to think he knew that. But he would’ve hated dying in the war. Fighting someone else like that, even winning hurts you. Stains you.”

“Dad hates Hunters.”

“No he doesn’t. He’s… He’s afraid.” Abe crossed his arms and leaned back in his chair, frowning a little more. “There’s no shame in that. Anyone who isn’t afraid is stupid. But he grew up seeing how difficult Hunting was, from seeing how exhausted I would be when I got home. Danny never said much about it, but that wasn’t the life he wanted. He was happy making weapons. But he didn’t want to use them.”

“Then why does he hate them so much now?”

“Because you were born, kid.”

Ben looked like he’d been slapped, opening his mouth to object- then closing it again. He clasped his hands tight and looked hard at the weapon in front of him.

“... I’ve been thinking about being a Hunter, Gramps.”

“I know you have, Benji. C’mere.” Abe patted his lap, and Ben dutifully stood and crossed the room to sit on his grandfather’s lap. The older Lloyd hugged him tightly and ruffled his hair again. “You’d be a great one. But that’s exactly what Danny’s scared of. Why do you want to be a Huntsman? Is it the fame?”

“No!” The teen objected, looking almost shocked. He shook his head vehemently, looking Abe in the eye. “No. That’s not what I want.”

“The money?”

“Most Huntsman don’t make that much.”

“Then why?”

“I…” Now he looked a little upset, as though the foundation beneath him wasn’t so certain. Ben was quiet a long time, trying to think of his answer. He finally shook his head and looked at the floor guiltily. “I don’t know.”

His grandfather nodded, and gently patted his back. “You don’t have to, yet. But if you choose to try, you have to do it for the right reason.”

“Dad won’t talk about it.”

“Of course not. But no matter what you choose, if your heart’s in the right place, I’ll help you. I never went to a fancy academy. I can’t help you study. But I can give you advice, I can show you what I know, and I can help you with your Dad. He can hate me all he wants, if it’ll help you.”

He leaned forward and plucked the billhook off the table, flipping it around to catch the flat of the blade with remarkable dexterity and held it out to Ben with a smile.

“Take it. And don’t decide now. I think that’s enough for your report, and definitely enough seriousness. Grandma will be home later, you are staying for dinner. In the meantime I know where she put the snacks, and I think I’ve got the latest episode of that talking train show taped. That’s still what you watch, right?”

Ben’s head snapped up in a flash, eyes widening in confusion until he saw the glint in the old man’s eye. Then confusion turned to red-faced fuming and a disgruntled laugh.

“It is not! You grab the snacks, old man, I’ll pick a movie. If you can stay awake for it.”

*****


The train station was desolate. Redwood wasn’t a hub of travel or anything, but even at its quiet hours the station was full of life. Trivial, mundane life. The workers trying to stay awake, chatting when no one was looking. Travelers trying to catch some shut-eye, or figure out where they were going. Hell, in tourist season you even had a bunch of confused looking foreigners that always stuck out like a sore thumb. There was always something, if you were looking.

This place was barren. Few people, and little life from the ones that were there. It was too modern to have a life of its own, too little character in its construction, and all the people were… Cold. They ignored everyone else, they weren’t paying attention to their surroundings, and the workers looked dead on their feet. It had all the life of Purgatory itself.

Or maybe he was projecting.

For Ben, this was Purgatory. A temporary place of suffering before he was shuttled off. Except he wasn’t headed to heaven. He was headed back to Redwood, to a father he’d failed to prove wrong, and a job that he’d labor away at for life. His father would tell him the shop would one day be his. His grandparents would console him, and his grandfather advise him. Probably tell him there was no shame in moving on.

But there was shame. He had thrown everything into it. His time, his energy, all opportunities he gave up to focus on his goal. And he’d gotten so close. He qualified for the entrance exam, despite never attending Signal. Or any other prep school. He had his weapons, his knowledge, his chance at qualifying for Beacon.

Until he fucked it up.

Until he failed the exam.

The objective was different every year, but it was always a test of abilities. And a test of how you could work with your potential teammates, too. He’d been confident. He strode in, ready to take on everything, and [i[fucked it up[/i].

He still couldn’t believe he did. One wrong decision. One fucking wrong decision, and out the window went years of work.

Ben really couldn’t believe it. Still. Almost a week later and it just couldn’t process. He felt numb, numb except for the fire that briefly flared up in his heart when he had to call his father and tell him the news. He’d put it off for two days, while he got himself a hotel room. It was too painful to face, too painful to actually pick up his Scroll and make the call.

”I’m sorry. I’ll see you at home.”

The casual tone was what did it. The polite, apologetic tone like he’d just been told Ben lost the lottery. It wasn’t condescending, or angry, it was just casual. Like it wasn’t a huge revelation. He’d almost exploded until he continued with ”You should call your grandfather”, and all the fire died in an instant. Ben said he had to arrange travel, that it would take a while, and got off the phone. His heart wasn’t in the fight, and his heart wasn’t even up for making that call.

Gramps wasn’t going to be angry, he wasn’t going to be relieved, he was going to be sorry. Genuinely sorry. The old man was pushing a hundred and he’d still given everything he could to get Ben ready. Lessons, practice, advice. He’d even put up the money for all the application fees. Every one.

”You’re gonna do great, kiddo. Write us a post card from Beacon, alright? I’ll try and get my boney ass down there to visit.”

He still hadn’t called. He was taking a train back in an hour and he still hadn’t been able to pick up his Scroll. But doing it in person would be worse.

So before he really knew it, the Scroll was ringing.

“How’re you holding up, Benji?”

The silence was oppressive.

“... That good, huh?”

“I failed, Gramps.”

“I know, Ben. Daniel came by to tell me. First time we’d spoken in a year.” A heavy sigh rattled the old man’s side of the call. “It’s gonna be alright. I always told you, there’s no shame i-”

“In turning away.” He snapped, a little surprised at his own severity. “In turning away, Gramps. Dad chose not to, I failed.”

“There’s no shame in that, either.”

“Yeah there is. I wasted my time. I wasted Dad’s time. I wasted your time, I wasted your money, I wasted-”

“You didn’t waste a damned thing, Benjamin Lloyd. Listen here. There is no shame in fucking up. There’s pain. There’s anger. You’re pissed, and I’m sorry. But that’s a defeatist attitude, and that’s the one thing I won’t tolerate. You might be able to try again, screw what my son says. Even if you can’t, you learned. That is valuable. No matter what.”

“I’ll fuck it up again.”

“Maybe not. And if you do, there’s no shame in that either. Redwood will always need people to protect it.”

“What, as a fucking guard?”

The line, for a moment, became positively glacial.

“Do you think the only way you can do any good is through that school? Fuck the school. It’s younger than I am. I never went, and I can do better with my goddamn arthritis than some of those sad sacks you see at the Vytal Festival can do with thousands of lien of Mommy and Daddy’s money paying for their weapons and training. I served this town for fifty years, before they made me retire. Dad served it ‘til he died. Your father, whether you agree or not, serves the whole damn continent by making sure those Huntsman can do their jobs.” Abe’s tone softened, once he heard the silence on the other end, and became paternal. “I’m not saying you’re going to take the path you want, Benji. No one gets to say that. I know you could have done it. Maybe you still will. But you may have to live your whole life knowing you could have, but didn’t get the chance.

But why did you tell me you wanted to go?”

“... I wanted to help. I knew I could do better than the shop, and I wanted to prove it.” The call’s quality must have dropped a moment, because there was no way Ben had choked up. “I wanted to help people like you.”

“That’s right. And you can. Even if Beacon isn’t in the cards.” There was a shuffling on the other end, and a few muffled words. “... I know you’re getting in late tonight, Benji. Come stay with me and your Grandma. She needs some help around the house that I can’t give anymore, and you can have some quiet. I’ll talk to Daniel, he won’t bother you.”

“... Thanks, gran-”

Whatever the rest of his answer was disappeared into the piercing, shrill wail of a siren. The lifeless terminal was full of it in an instant, the frantic, hurried heartbeat of terrified life. And that was before the loud, resounding tone like the voice of God itself started in.

”Proceed to a secure area. Grimm activity has been spotted to the southeast. Respondents will secure the area. Proceed to designated shelters, or your nearest safe haven. I repeat-”

The voice continued, repeating its message, but Ben wasn’t hearing it anymore.

“Benjamin, where are you?” Abraham’s voice had taken on a grim note, there was no way he hadn’t heard. “Get somewhere safe. Now.”

“That’s Mountain Glenn, Gramps.”

“I know where it is, that’s why I’m telling you to get to a shelter.”

“Average response time for incident response that far from Beacon is more than ten minutes. On a good day. They’re dealing with new students, missions started yesterday for the upperclassmen. They can’t get there quickly.”

“That’s not your problem. The station should have a shelter, get to it now, Ben.”

“I’m looking at the news right now, it’s only a couple of blocks away.”

“That’s why you should get to the godda-”

“You wouldn’t.”

Utter silence reigned, for a long moment. In that second he made a decision.

“Call you back, Gramps.”

His feet were moving before the call ever ended, going from a walk, to a run, to a dead sprint. The sounds of chaos grew by the second, the human tide moving in the opposite direction; towards safety.

It was a really, really stupid idea not to go with them.

Artorius and Lawnslot had half a dozen rounds each, tops. The rest were in his luggage. He hadn’t even meant to bring them, he just couldn’t bear to leave them be. They helped a little, in a way. He was glad he hadn’t packed them, now, because he was running dick first towards danger with a quarter of what he usually brought. They weren’t even loaded a fact he realized after the first block, and one he started to fix by loading Artorius. Not that he was really gonna have time.

A flipped car soared past to his right, missing him by inches, before he’d even gotten four shells in. The Ursa that flipped it leapt to meet him.

It wasn’t conscious thought, it wasn’t a plan, it was action. He crouched low and met the lunge, slipping under and into its outstretched arms quick enough to drive Artroius’ blade through where its heart should’ve been.

The city street had already turned into a hellscape. People screaming, people running, and Grimm pouring through the breach they’d made in the city wall. Ursa, Beowolves, and he saw a King Taijitu or two poking their heads through. Probably more behind. There wasn’t any time. He flipped Artorius around and fired two Fire shell into the fray, buying a little time. Like, a couple seconds. The Grimm weren’t expecting resistance, but they’d adapt fast.

“Get going!” He roared, loud enough to make himself feel hours already. A frantic gesture directed people towards the safety behind him, from atop the care he stood on. “That way! Station had a shelter! Move!”

Aaaand there was the adapting. Duck low and left, get out of the way of the lupine Grimm’s claws. One round to the head. Dead. Nine shells left.

To his left an Ursa lunged for an old man running as quickly as he could, and it took two to the chest. Dead. Seven left.

The tide of Grimm probably wasn’t as large as it seemed, but it was damn well large enough to keep him from holding them all back. He needed to slow them down, funnel them, keep them from being able to progress. No one was left in front of him, just Grimm. So he retreated a few paces, put down a lunging Beowolf, and put a hasty plan into action.

A parked car, when thrown, served preeeetty well as a path clearer. One Grimm, maybe two, were actually hit but the rest were slowed down. Enough to flip a couple more. Each one was heavy, and he could feel his Aura dropping, but that was what the batteries were for. What was left in them, at least. Even after a week they weren’t completely charged up. Better than nothing. He was flying on a wing and a prayer, here, no instruments to guide. He didn’t have an Aura gauge, he didn’t have enough ammo, and he didn’t have any backup. All he could do was guess at where he was at.

The batteries gave him a little pick me up (maybe green on a gauge? Maybe?), enough to flip a few more cars. Not to throw, this time, as barriers. They were all focused on him already, the one human left in their sight, but makeshift barricades could help funnel them through.

He exhausted the ammo in Artorius before the fourth minute, with none in Lawnslot yet. So when the next Ursa passed his little makeshift barricade, mid-loading, he spun from its slash, drove a Deinamig-powered elbow into its side, and chambered a shell in the same motion that he but the gun to its head. Bang.

Another few steps retreated, but the Beowolves were coming up over the barricades now. They’d gotten smart, flanked him. No rounds in the chambe-

And yet, somehow, bullets cut ‘em down.

He didn’t recognize the man with an assault rifle, maybe he saw him at the exam, but he wasn’t going to look a gift horse in the mouth. He retreated the rest of the block, towards his rescuer, and loaded Lawnslot on the way. Fire from the man’s rifle kept him clear of attackers until then, but the Grimm were surging up over the barricade now. No time for holding back. His ally batted the first Bewolf to reach them away, turning his rifle back into a sword, while Ben brought his tonfa together.

The time to combine them had never seemed that long, but the few seconds were an eternity. Still, Caletfwlch was in time to cut down the Beowolf making a move. More help had come, now, two redheads that he had definitely seen at the exam. An Ursa coming up on his left practically disappeared, flung away when a crude-looking claw slammed into it. The makeshift mace pulled back towards its owner, the redhaired woman giving him a faint nod, while her opposite unloaded on the oncoming Grimm with a six-barreled gun.

The first man had placed his shield and let it expand, giving them some cover, but there was just one issue; the Grimm were starting to circle around. Quicker than there was time to cut them off. The good news was that their attention was now firmly focused on the concentrated circle of human resistance, but the assault was relentless.

Caletfwlch swung left and Caletfwlch swung right, the odd gap in his defenses compensated for by the others just as they compensated for him. But between the blows and Deinamig, his Aura was already running low.

Abraham’s billhook had found its way into his left hand, filling in the gaps. His grandfather’s weapon had been a good luck charm. Something to give him confidence, or at least to remind him of his grandfather’s confidence in him. He hadn’t expected it to save his life.

But it was.

As the circle closed in, he had to fine-tune his assault. Stabs, not slashes. Small movements. Compensate for the the delay in strikes from Caletfwlch with ones from the billhook, carving out little spaces in the assault bit by bit. He was getting tired, running on fumes, and he wasn’t even thinking anymore. Just acting. There was no time for anything else.

But in the chaos, he understood.

His mind went back to what Abe told him, about fighting the Datura. About the time he was certain he would die. Ben had thought he was about to, too. Somewhere between that first Ursa and now, he had reconciled himself to it. There was an odd satisfaction there. That he would die proving he could do exactly what Beacon had sought to prove he couldn’t.

Now, though, he understood it a different way.

He knew these people, the people fighting alongside him. He didn’t know their names, or their stories, or their hopes and dreams. But he’d seen them at the exam. They had been his competition. And now they were the allies that he hadn’t expected to have, raging with one voice against the world.

At the Grimm that opposed them.

At the Reaper that hovered over their shoulders.

At the school that had told them they weren’t good enough.

At the very odds that beset them, as the assault went on and wore them down. It hadn’t been more than fifteen minutes, that he knew, but it felt like an eternity. There was whole world between seconds, a feeling he could relate to across the decades. Because in a different time, Abe had felt the same thing with a group of soldiers he knew even less.

There was a grin on his face, somewhere between a snarl and mania, in defiance of the situation he found himself in.

He barely noticed that the Hunters and Huntresses had arrived, his perception had shrunken to the range of his blades. But he noticed when the fighting stopped, when the last Grimm was fading away. He noticed the looks on their faces when they saw the huddled defenders, standing in the midst of a ruined street.

He was too tired to say anything. At least, until two days later, when he finally picked up the Scroll again.

“So, old man…”
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Hidden 7 yrs ago 7 yrs ago Post by Write
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coGM
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Write Currently Writing

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@Silvan Haven, @Plank Sinatra, @Krayzikk, @Crimmy, @HereComesTheSnow

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Hidden 7 yrs ago 7 yrs ago Post by Azereiah
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Azereiah far, far away

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Post un-nuked due to sufficient progress. Life happened, then life unhappened. Pardon the roleplay style in the intro. Felt that was more fitting at the time, but now that my feelings have changed, I'm too lazy to go back and rewrite it.



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Hidden 7 yrs ago 7 yrs ago Post by Crimmy
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Crimmy Oi brat, what're ye using that noggin for?

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Hidden 7 yrs ago Post by FlitterFaux
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FlitterFaux The Incurable

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Hidden 7 yrs ago Post by Plank Sinatra
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Plank Sinatra the reaper won't come when you're ready for him

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Fuck it, too sick and too busy to finish this up right now. 2500 words or so is as much as I'm gonna get done.
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Hidden 7 yrs ago Post by Silvan Haven
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Silvan Haven Interstellar Paladin

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A few thousand words shorter than I would like and not at all what was originally planned but it's here.


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