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Hidden 5 mos ago Post by Roman
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Roman Grumpy Toad / King of Dirt

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G I L E M O R Y G A L A H A D
G I L E M O R Y G A L A H A D

Location: The Trials, Southern Plateau - Dundas Island
Hope In Hell #2.053: Superego

Interaction(s): N/A


"I'm sorry."

Tiny-sounding, pointless words, squeezed out through labored breaths drawn into bruised lungs beneath broken ribs.

"I'm sorry."

Not heeded, not wanted, not respected. Empty platitudes born of desperation and pain. And there was a lot of pain.


"I'm sorry."


Gil's already-broken nose took another kick and he felt a sharp pain shoot across his face. A tooth came loose and rattled around inside his mouth, before he managed to roll over, shielding his head with his arms, and spit out the tooth alongside a sizeable wad of blood. The kicks went for his side instead, and the already-broken ribs sent agonizing protests across his torso with every fresh blow. Tears welled up in Gil's eyes.

Hands reached for him; he swatted them away, before latching onto one that tried to pry his arms away from his head, and with adrenaline-fueled strength, twisted it and yanked hard. The owner - some uniform-clad copy, Gil was too woozy to identify which specific aspect of himself this doppelganger was supposed to be mocking - fell to the floor, but no one paid any mind in the midst of the frenzy; the clone received its own blows, vicious kicks and stomps and punches, but disturbingly, focused only on continuing its own assault of the original Gil. Thrashing and kicking on the ground, the clone caught a boot to its temple, and Gil heard and saw the distinct sound and sight of a skull fracturing into pieces, shards moving beneath the miraculously-unbroken skin. Blood and something else leaked out of the clone's ears, and he lay still.

Gil vomited.

Someone stomped on his ankle and he felt something snap and he cried out. He was so utterly sure he was going to die, and felt completely hollow about it. What would he be remembered for? One teen rom-com a decade ago, and a handful of episodes on a niche soap opera melodrama. He could count on one hand the people that would miss him.

He clawed his way across the grass as best he could; some of the clones mistook the corpse of their ex-comrade for their actual target, and their beatings began to mutilate the un-moving carcass, granting Gil himself some breathing room. There was a slight break in the mob, and it galvanised Gil; somehow, plumbing depths he no longer believed he had, he managed to push himself along with his working leg, the broken ankle dragging his other foot behind him at an angle he'd rather not contemplate.

He rolled himself onto his back with a not-inconsiderable amount of effort, and in the process managed to slip one of his broken ribs through the soft tissue of his lung. He felt the pain immediately - sharp, stabbing, white-hot, turning to a dull but persistent ache that only got worse with each labored breath. He coughed, the spasms sending their own agony through him, and began to gasp for air; every intake was ragged and bubbly, and the pace of his breathing quickened, short pants unable to supply the air he needed.

The dregs of the mob that had followed him now called to the others, and, finally, Gil gave up. His muscles screamed for oxygen his failing respiratory system was no longer able to provide. With the last of his energy, he held a bruised and bloody hand to the sky, swirling it in a smooth repetition of an elegant movement from only the night before; a more pleasant memory, with a girl he'd had nothing to pretend to be for. The cigarette appeared once more, and Gil placed it in his mouth, regretting the AR Suit's lack of pockets for the book of matches he'd had to leave behind.

He rested his head, trying to focus on the cool grass beneath him, and closed his eyes, waiting for the end to arrive.
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Hidden 5 mos ago 5 mos ago Post by Zoldyck
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Zoldyck

Member Seen 9 days ago

________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Location: Southern Plateau - Dundas Island, Pacific Ocean
Hope In Hell #2.0054: Brutality
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Interaction(s): N/A
Previously: The Path To Ruin

CONTENT WARNING: EXCESSIVE VIOLENCE


The air was filled with a cacophony of violence and terror. Bodies made sickening noises as they were snapped, broken or just outright squashed. Horrific screams were uttered at the sight of comrades being casually slaughtered. And gun muzzles barked angrily as they were unloaded in futility upon a woman possessed.

Katja had lost control of her body, she was overcome by violent fury. All she could see was a red mist in front of her eyes, only raised when her next victim appeared before her. All she could feel in her head was a pain that felt like nails were dug deep into her brain, a pain which only temporarily subsided after she had taken the life of another attacker. All reason had left her, now all she could think of were simple terms. Crush. Maim. Kill.

Eventually, after what could have been hours or seconds for all she knew, only one man was left standing.

She gazed down at the miserable excuse of a man. This was the man who had barged through their door. The man who had yelled out that damned phrase that would keep haunting her for the rest of her life. The man who had butchered her mother. He appeared small now, as all in the room had appeared before the towering mass of rippling muscle that was Katja in her true form.

Katja picked him up by his arms, one in each of her massive hands. He was a prized one, one she had purposefully left for last. To cherish this moment. He was kicking and screaming as the realization dawned upon him of what was about to happen, begging for mercy. A mercy he hadn’t offered her parents.

A mercy she would not offer him.

She began to pull at his arms, slowly so as not to rush the moment. She wanted to take in every second of his suffering. Every tiny detail had to be registered. Just like she had been exposed to every single detail of what had happened to those who she had loved.

He screamed out in pain, a terrible, horrifying noise that sounded like the sweetest melody Katja had ever heard. Here was the man who had tormented her in her nightmares for years. The man who had taken everything from her. And she was tearing him apart. She tightened her grip around his arms, feeling the bones crumble to dust with but the slightest amount of force. She could first hear his joints give way as she dislocated them, followed by a sickening tearing sound. The sound of his flesh and sinews being torn apart by her incredible strength. Until finally, with a ghastly snap, both limbs were pulled free.

He fell down with a wet thud, landing in a pool of his own blood whilst screaming in agony from the pain she had wrought upon him. A smile crept up her lips, vicious and cruel like that of the raven-haired one hours before. Her mind did not linger on it, if it even registered it at all. Instead, she put her boot on the back of the man’s head, before then slowly applying her tremendous weight on it. Katja could feel that his nose was the first to give way, quickly followed by his jaw, which fractured into tiny pieces. She then stopped, holding his face down in that pool of crimson as she heard a gurgling noise. Her smile grew wider as she held him like that, savoring the sound of this animal drowning in his own blood.

She enjoyed watching him squirm, like the insect he truly was when compared to her. His legs started kicking less violently, his writhing became calmer and the gurgled screams became softer until finally, he became completely still.

Finally, after all these years of hatred and fear, she had finally gotten her vengeance. Finally she had seen to it that justice had been brought to those animals that had butchered her family. Finally, she thought, the nightmares could end.

But that feeling of sweetness and bliss quickly felt ashen and hollow. For the realization finally dawned on her that none of this was real. It was merely a simulation. A brutal, painful and extremely realistic simulation, but a simulation nonetheless.

Katja slowly fell to her knees, a light tremor shaking the ground as they touched down on the floor. She turned the corpse of the tormentor of her dreams around, tracing his skull with a finger while gazing into his broken features. Even through all the damage, she could still see that it had been too perfect. Like a wax doll instead of an actual human being. She just hadn’t noticed that before, either in her state of panic as a young girl or in her state of rage as the adult woman that she was now.

It wasn’t real. None of it had been real.

She had known this, of course. It was always there in the back of her head. But it had been so convincing, it seemed so real on the surface.

And, of course, it had once been real for her.

Katja gazed over her shoulder, her eyes darting through the mangled corpses to find the two that mattered the most to her. The only ones that had truly fallen on these floors, many years ago. A sob escaped the large girl’s lips as her eyes looked upon the charred remains of her father before they met those lifeless blue orbs of her mother.

Yet even these were not real. She couldn’t even properly mourn them, even that had been denied to her. She tried thinking of some of the few happy memories she had left of them, but every time she attempted to, one of those damned TV screens depicting another gruesome angle of their murder replayed in her mind.

Looking up at the ceiling, a single tear ran down the cheek of the brutish woman. She sat like that for a moment as more tears started flowing. She turned her attention down at the corpse that lay in front of her, looking into the empty eyes of that doll which bore the face of her nightmares.

She continued crying as she slammed her fist into the skull, scattering gore and bone fragments in all directions. Then she slammed down again. And again. And again.

With each bash her tears flowed faster. With each blow her sobs grew louder too. Until finally it didn’t sound like crying at all, but the pained howls of a savage animal that just continued pounding the ground. Katja continued this for what felt like hours. Perhaps it had truly been that long. Nothing seemed to change. She was locked up in this room, surrounded by the blood and gore of the Mundane. Eventually even the corpse would be long gone, with only a pink-ish paste covering fist-sized craters being left as the only indication that something had once lain here.

It all served as a reminder to Katja.

A reminder that she wasn’t just a liar, but that she was wrong.


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Hidden 5 mos ago Post by Lord Wraith
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Lord Wraith Actually Three Otters in a Trenchcoat

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________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Location: Southern Plateau - Dundas Island, Pacific Ocean
Hope In Hell #2.055: Riptide
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Interaction(s): @Melissa - Aurora Mitchell
Previously: Lose Yourself

The eerily white sterile walls fluctuated around Lorcán as the boy with the sun-bleached hair pushed onwards through the maze of corridors and rooms. The facility seemed to rearrange itself on a whim, becoming increasingly erratic. There were fleeting moments when the simulation completely fell away, revealing his teammates running around each other, lost in twisted mirages of their deepest fears. The honeycomb-like pattern of the floor and walls rearranged itself before the hard-light constructs reappeared and Lorcán was pulled back into the nightmare.

No simulation he had ever been in before had felt so intentional and alive, it was almost as if it was reacting to his every movement. But the shifts began to slow, hallways becoming static as Lorcán ran closer to the sound of her voice. Her cries pulled at his heartstrings while her sobs echoed in the barren hallways. Turning the corner, Lorcán felt his chest lighten as his eyes were cast upon familiar locks of copper-toned hair.

“Rora!” He called excitedly, ignoring the pains of his injuries, “Lady Dude, I’m coming!”

As she knelt on the floor, head in her hands and consumed with dread, Aurora wondered if she’d ever make it out of this twisted simulation. Her teammates were gone, had abandoned her and left her behind, and she was completely spent and drained, no HZE’s to spare. She knew she had to be strong, had been through hell and back before, but everything in this place seemed to compound, causing her to feel absolutely hopeless.

Just when she thought she was ready to throw in the towel and accept her fate, a voice, familiar and true, rang out, ricocheting off of the walls. It reverberated in her mind and in her heart.

Lorcán?

But as she turned, hoping to gaze into his familiar sunset eyes, all she could see was a bloody scar sliced down the boy's tanned face. It had been another trick of the simulation, it wasn’t the Lorcán she knew, even if his voice was so familiar and convincing. Raze had found her, chased her down like a predator to prey, and she knew she was done for. Aurora scrambled to her feet, and began to back away, the invisible barrier that had originally blocked off the hallway having disappeared, allowing her purchase. But in the back of her mind, she just hoped he’d be merciful.

“NO! Don’t come any closer!” Her baby blue eyes were wide with absolute terror, face to face with the dopplegänger once more. “GET AWAY FROM ME!” She screeched, her hands instinctively coming up to block herself. “I already told you, I won’t join you!”

The young man’s footsteps faltered as she screamed towards him, slowing to a stop just several paces away from her. Lorcán’s eyes studied her, taking a deep breath. The trial had been exhausting, and still it seemed to give no reprieve as he could only assume this Aurora was also a trick much like the other had been.

He leaned against a nearby wall, slumping down to the floor and allowing himself a rest. His face hurt, and his back was awakened with new pain as the cold of the wall irritated the burns and lacerations. A small tear of frustration welled up in the corner of his left eye, the right trying to do the same but struggling against the wound covering it.

“I just need to find my Aurora.” He lamented softly, burying his head in his hands before the environment flickered again suddenly. As the walls faded, revealing the interior of the Trial again, Lorcán’s eyes were drawn towards where Aurora was only to realize she was still there.

She was his Aurora.

The walls came back, placing the pair back in a hallway, the white tile interspersed with brick and vine as the appearance of the Foundation was beginning to melt away and the original code appeared. Excitement rose in Lorcán as he began to tap a beat against the floor before starting to hum.

“A singer in a smoky room,” He wasn’t the best singer, but Lorcán could carry a tune. “The smell of wine and cheap perfume!”

The redhead observed the boy through moisture filled eyes as he slid down the wall and sat on the floor, but kept her distance. Raze had tried to trick her once already - pretend he was someone he was not - she wasn’t going to let herself fall for it a second time. But something about his body language wasn’t the same as before, he looked like he was in pain, and his voice faltered, filled with emotion. Could it be? She took a single step towards him, but hesitated.

The simulation flickered, her neural uplink cooling momentarily as their surroundings changed and began to dissolve the Foundation’s chilling interior. But he didn’t change with it, his form didn’t waver, no he was real. Living and breathing and here.

And then he was singing that damn song that he knew got on her nerves like no other. There was so much great music out there, but for some reason this one was named an ‘anthem’; it was overused and cheesy, and yet, in that moment it was the sweetest music she’d ever heard.

It was him.

“...Lorcán?” The redhead’s voice was cautious, soft and small, a juxtaposition to how her throat had burned from her previous yelling. Her feet moved of their own accord towards him and she knelt down to his level, even though her legs screamed in protest. She started crying again but in relief.

He hadn’t abandoned her.

He’d come to find her.

“I thought you were- I’m sorry, I- He tried to-” She couldn’t complete each thought before the next one came on, her words coming out in between gasping breaths. She gingerly reached up to cup his cheek, examining his face. “What did they do to you?”

“I had to fight myself,” Lorcán replied, placing his own hand over hers, “But like a kook version of myself, dude had a gonk cape. He wanted to ensure I remembered him, left me this souvenir.” Lorcán explained, a finger pointing towards the scar over his right eye. His other hand moved to Aurora’s face, hovering over the forming bruises.

“I’m so sorry I couldn’t stop this,” He muttered, “I didn’t want you to be the one going through that door. I just don’t know what would have happened if I didn’t find you.” He moved his hands around Aurora’s shoulders, before pulling her in tightly, burying his face into her shoulder as he let out a small sigh of relief whilst fighting back the tears that had been welling up.

“I’m not letting go,” He teased, swallowing the lump in his throat.

Aurora grew rigid and tense at the mention of Raze, “I saw him too.” She breathed as his hand enveloped hers, committing the feeling of Lorcán’s comforting touch to memory. “I-I woke up in his garage, I thought he was you.” The redhead stuttered, wincing instinctively as he reached out towards her face. The skin was tender and painful, throbbing along with her head. “That’s why I ran from you. He tried to get me to join him and serve Hyperion, wanted me to kill my step-” She couldn’t bring herself to finish the sentence, utter his name, but as Lorcán wrapped her in his embrace, she could feel her whole body relax.

“It’s not your fault.” She reassured, bringing her hand up to run through his hair, stray tears continuing to fall down her cheeks as she attempted to regain her composure. “What happened though? I can’t remember anything after teleporting and my head really hurts, I can’t think straight.”

At his promise, she just held onto him tighter. Only moments ago, she thought he’d left her behind. Even though he did not realize it, his words meant everything and quieted the rogue thoughts in her head.

“Neither am I.”
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Hidden 5 mos ago Post by Skai
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Skai Bean Queen

Member Seen 0-24 hrs ago




Location: Southern Plateau - PRCU
Hope in Hell #2.056: Big Birds Don't Cry

Interaction(s): N/A
Previously: Wake Me Up Before You Dodo


"Goodbye, Haven."

The words were so simple, and yet they carried the weight of a life in their meaning. Uttered so softly, as if the speaker knew of the sacrifice they were committing. Did the puppeteer feel remorse? Did they value the soul they were sacrificing for their cause?

Haven didn't have the time to consider it.

She watched the face of her other-- her own face-- as she felt those fingertips latch onto the uplinks. Her signature determination displayed well upon the tanned visage. The crease in her brows that came with it. Brown lashes lowered over those eyes the color of a lush forest at dawn. Her golden brown locks falling over her shoulder as she leaned forward. Those faint, everlasting scars that adorned her arms. Tawny feathers splayed wide behind those toned shoulders. Haven absorbed every feature as shock heightened her senses.

Time seemed to slow down in her panic ridden state. She felt the racing of her heart become a metronomic pounding in her chest. She heard the rush of air that entered her lungs as she took a desperate breath. She smelled the faint traces of copper, fear laden sweat, acrid oil, and earth that covered her skin, suit, and feathers. Her other carried her own scent of moss and petrichor.

As the edges of her uplinks began to tear away from her skin, bringing her closer to whatever fate would come by trapping her within this nightmare, Haven saw it.

What once was the form of her other, kneeling so menacingly over her body, suddenly became lines upon lines of code. It ran across her vision like leaves in the wind.

As quickly as it came, it was gone. Flickering out like a strike of lightning. What replaced it was a darkness similar to a night on a new moon.

Her uplinks clattered onto the floor beside her. She did not reach for them. Instead, she stared into the darkness above her, petrified where she laid. Was this it? Was this her new fate? Had the simulation won?

Above her, just barely, Haven could make out the faint lines of a honeycomb shape in the ceiling. Her eyes slowly followed the ridges to the closest wall, and then down as far as they could see without moving her head. More honeycomb indents followed down the length of the wall. This was... It was what the trial looked like without the simulation coding.

Haven's eyes returned to stare at the ceiling above her. The events of the last few hours began to flash through her mind. From that first step into the trial, to the feeling of Rory's hand in her own, to their separation in that blazing room...

Where is he?

...to the cage, the painful cries of that woman, to her first battle lost, that cold metal table, her wings stretched impossibly taught, the hopeless feeling that crushed her spirit, the masks turned to ash, Amma saved her...

Did Amma survive?

...Amma's power spread through her calamus and vanes, Aurora's battered face, those monsters that tore at her skin, the wall that swallowed her saviour, Aurora's hand, her own dismantled and bloodied form, she let go of Aurora's hand...

I left her alone. I didn't mean to.

...the hair salon, her mother's laugh, the broken toy, the motel room, the disappointment, the pounding on the bathroom door...

It wasn't real.

...her sister's voice, the sorrowful words she spoke, the soft caress against her feathers, the regret that pierced her heart, the betrayal of a feather lost...

Anabel... I'm so sorry.

...not them, anyone but them, the pain they promised, the pain they inflicted, another feather stolen, ugly duckling, little freak, their hate, their disgust, their anger...

Was it real?

...the second escape from those girls, the second escape from that home, the forest, the warning shot, little bird, the shotgun reloading, she ran for her life, she was so tired of running...

Am I alive?

...the cabin, the darkness within, she fell, she crashed, she couldn't move, the false promises told to her, the name that should not be spoken, her other's foot pressed into her side, tan arms struggled against tan arms, more pain was promised, more pain inflicted...

I almost died.

Haven lifted shaking hands to her body, and she found that her injuries remained. The tender spots on her skin where bruises would form, the shredded flesh of her ribs and thigh, the cuts and scratches that adorned her palms, arms, and cheeks, the split skin upon her lip, and the wetness under her eyes. She couldn't free her wings from under her to check the damage wrought there. She wasn't sure she wanted to know how they looked.

It was real.

All of her pain, and all of the aching in her heart, welled up within her until she was overwhelmed by it. The dam to her soul broke. Whatever embers remained of her spirit were washed away by a wave of despondence. She hated the feeling so much that she choked on the sob that threatened to escape her. She wrung her fists beside her. She pounded them on the floor. She pressed her eyes together as tight as she could to prevent the tears from falling.

Yet they still trickled down her temples and once again pooled beside her. She held her breath, desperate to keep those sobs contained for as long as she could. Maybe she'd pass out before they erupted from her chest. Maybe she would wake up and the pain would be gone. She'd be surrounded by her team, by her friends, by her loved ones again. They wouldn't hurt her. They wouldn't betray her. She'd find her fire again, and she would move on.

The minutes wore by and the tears continued. Haven knew that it was only a matter of time until she couldn't hold her breath any longer. She pressed her brows together as she felt herself growing light-headed. Her attempt to hold it back was in vain. She still felt the anguish clawing it's way out up her throat.

Haven took a deep breath only when it became too much to bear. She felt the oxygen return to her blood, savoured the feeling of it for one precious moment, and then she lost control. A whine escaped her throat, and then sobs soon wracked her body. They filled the silence of the dead room with her grief. The aching in her side worsened with every movement and even that didn't stop them. It felt like they would never stop. As if the tears that flowed from her eyes were supplied by an endless cavern somewhere deep within the crevices of her body.

The sobs soon strained her throat until it was raw. They made her battered body feel like it burned in cold fire. And in some twisted, heartbreaking way, her weeping grounded her in reality. It made her feel alive.

I'm alive. This is real.

The aching in her chest lightened.

I'm alive.

The words repeated in her mind until she managed to catch her breath. Her sobs relaxed into feeble whimpers. The adrenaline that had been coursing through her slowly began to dissipate. Her body soon weakened with each inhale and exhale.

Did the others make it? Should I consider myself lucky?

She sniffed, her tears slowing to a stop as the lake within her dried up. She wanted to get up. To look for her friends. Anything could have happened to them. They could be worse off than herself. She tried to move her arms, her legs, but her body didn't respond. She'd overdone it. She'd lost too much blood. The fatigue was settling in like a warm blanket over her and she didn't have the energy to fight it.

Haven's eyelids grew heavy, each pass of her lids threatening to be her last glimpse of the honeycomb above her. Her breaths became slow and shallow. A quiet, steady rhythm thumped within her chest. Her exhaustion eventually won over her will, and pulled her into into a dreamless state.



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Hidden 5 mos ago Post by Qia
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Qia A Little Weasel

Member Seen 0-24 hrs ago

_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Location: Southern Plateau - Pacific Royal Campus
Hope in Hell #2.057: Livin' on a Wing
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Interaction(s): Haven (hey gurl heyyyyy)@Skai
Previously: The Cat Gets the Tongue


The weight of Harper’s injuries made each step a monumental effort.

Her legs, once firm and agile, now quivered like frail saplings in a storm, barely able to bear the weight of her battered body. She trudged through the desolate hallways, the silence around her so profound it felt like a tangible shroud, smothering any hope of life or rescue.

The artificial light, sterile and unforgiving, cast an unflattering glow over the scene where she was, unfortunately, the sole character. It was as if the light itself was an interrogator, exposing every tear of her AR suit and every streak of blood that defiled her once pristine skin. The walls, observers of her plight, stood lined with glass-fronted study rooms that bore witness to countless hours of scholarly pursuit, now just empty chambers echoing with the ghosts of academia.

Driven by fear and determination, she continued to navigate the mazelike corridors, her mind clinging to the faint hope of encountering another soul. Surely, in this expanse of isolation, there must be another living being? A friend, preferably. Surely, the fickle hands of fate must turn in her favour once more? The young girl did not think she could fight someone else in her state and live another day. Not this time.

Her fingers, smeared with the crimson evidence of her ordeal, clung to the cool glass for support, leaving behind a macabre trail as her vision blurred and danced with the threat of unconsciousness. The only sounds that dared to break the oppressive silence were the ragged symphony of her breathing and the morbid percussion of her blood, drop by drop, staining the pristine tiles beneath her feet.

The lights above began to sputter like dying stars, yet Harper, perched precariously on the brink of shock, scarcely noticed it. Instead, she fought against her body’s attempt to succumb to an encroaching darkness, a creeping void threatening to swallow her whole.

“Keep moving,” she murmured, the words a fragile lifeline in the engulfing darkness. With each push against the solid reality of a doorframe, she willed her body forward, grimacing as pain lanced through her. But the agony was a mere echo compared to the thunderous call of duty that resonated within her—Aurora needed her. She needed help. And she was somewhere in here. This singular thought, this unwavering purpose, was the beacon that guided her through her suffering.

As she rounded a corner, Harper’s balance faltered, her body teetering on the brink of collapse. The corridor stretched endlessly before her, a gauntlet of flickering lights that cast long, haunting shadows as if the very darkness was reaching out to claim her. Each step was a declaration of war against the rebellion of her own flesh and bone, her spirit the general commanding her to persevere. It was a reliance on sheer willpower she had summoned many times before, but never under such dire circumstances, never while waging a simultaneous battle against the betrayal of her own wounded form.

At long last, the end of her torturous journey came into view—a set of double doors, slightly parted, as if in invitation or warning. Beyond lay a room shrouded in shadows, its contents obscured and ominous. Harper’s heart hammered against her ribs, a drumroll of anticipation and dread, as she mustered the strength to push the doors wide. Her gaze, sharpened by adrenaline, immediately found the still, supine figure on the unforgiving floor.

“Rora?” she managed, her voice filled with some hope. It was only when she really started to take in what- or rather who- she was seeing that Harper practically bolted forward, ignoring the pain that shot through her as a result. She knelt beside Haven, her hands shaking as she reached out. She hesitated, the blood on her own hands briefly reminding her of her earlier ordeal. She wanted to touch Haven, to shake her awake, but fear of causing more harm stayed her hand.

Compelled by desperation and tenderness, Harper leaned in, her whisper a fervent plea against the silence.“Haven, please, wake up. It’s me, Harper. We need to get out of here.” Her voice, laced with urgency, seemed to dissipate into the void, met with nothing but the stillness of the unresponsive form before her.

Harper’s eyes roved over Haven’s form, searching for any signs of further injury. The uplinks lay discarded on either side of her head, a possible clue to what had happened. Harper carefully moved one of them aside, her fingers brushing against Haven’s temple in the process.

“Haven, I’m here,” she murmured again, placing her hand gently on Haven's shoulder this time, giving a light, tentative shake. “Please, wake up.”

Time seemed to fracture, each second a heavy drop in the ocean of Harper’s anxiety, each tick of the clock a measure of her growing fear.

Please.

Haven's shallow breathing suddenly hitched as the movement altered her conscious. Where her limp hand laid beside Harper, her fingers twitched. Then an imperceptible line formed between her brows, so subtle that only keen eyes could notice.

She'd heard Harper's voice. She'd felt her teammate's touch against her shoulder. Inside her, she clawed her way to the surface of alertness. Harper was here-- she was safe. Haven climbed her way out of the sludge that her mind had become, and...

Slowly, Haven's eyelids lifted. They were still so heavy. Her body still refused to move. She desperately wanted to take Harper's hand, but she found herself settling for the ankle positioned next to her weak digits. Her lazy eyes lifted to Harper's face, and what she saw carved into her teammate's pale skin wrung the life out of her heart.

"Harps..." The words slipped out of her scarcely moving lips. Her rasping voice still carried the weight of her grief.

The moment Haven’s voice pierced the silence, it was as though time itself had paused, the air charged with the gravity of her utterance. Relief cascaded through her, a wave that cleansed away the layers of fear and pain, if only momentarily, infusing Harper with newfound vigour.

With hands marred by the trials of her ordeal, Harper reached out, her fingers quivering as they sought the warmth of human connection. They found Haven’s hand, cold and still, and enveloped it, the blood from her wounds painting the pallor of the skin there. And then, a miracle—a faint pressure, a squeeze from Haven’s fingers, feeble yet unmistakably present, a silent message of the will to survive shared by both women in the moment.

“Little Dove,” Harper exhaled, her voice fragile. “We… we need to go. Can you… move?”

The name warmed Haven’s heart the same way Harper’s hand warmed her fingers. Yet the anxiety present in Harper’s tone didn’t make it easy to feel better. She’d never heard her friend sound so… scared. What had she been through? Who had done that to her skin?

“Too much blood.” She managed, swallowing against the soreness in her throat before she took another shallow breath to speak again. “It’s over. The walls… they’re blank.”

“We’re ok.”

As Harper’s eyes swept across the room, they caught the intricate honeycomb pattern etched into the walls and ceiling.

So, it was indeed over. The trials, the terror, the relentless pursuit—it had all come to an end.

Finally.

“We can leave…” Harper’s voice was a hushed murmur, a soft declaration of their hard-won freedom. Despite the exhaustion that clung to her words, a faint smile graced her lips. “Just… hold on.”

Gathering the remnants of her strength, Harper pushed herself to her feet. Her stance was shaky, her body protesting the movement, but her spirit was unyielding. She scanned the room for something to aid Haven, her eyes landing on a sturdy chair that seemed untouched by the turmoil. With a grit born of necessity, she dragged it across the floor, its legs scraping against the tile.

Positioning the chair beside Haven, Harper eased her friend into the seat with as much gentleness as her trembling arms could muster. They both grimaced, their injuries a chorus of pain, but the act of sitting was a small victory in itself.

“Lean on me,” Harper encouraged, her arm wrapping around Haven’s shoulders in a solid embrace of support.

The winged woman looked warily at the space before her, unsure if she could bear to put any more weight on her leg. Yet Harper’s spirit was contagious. Despite their mutual pain, and the sluggishness in her own movements, Haven placed her trust in Harper and willed her body to make the final journey.

Her mind drifted to the past as she was reminded of another friend, whom she’d considered a sister, who had done the same for her once. Her eyes slid over to Harper, and she found herself thinking of her teammate the same way. Had she noticed it before today? How was it so easy to let Harper pick her up like that?

The pair found the exit to the room. What once had been sterile, endless white hallways now stood dark passages of honeycomb. In the distance, they could already hear the school’s emergency response faculty searching for survivors. They’d survived the game.

Could they survive the fallout?


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Hidden 5 mos ago Post by webboysurf
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________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Location: The Matrix - Dundas Island, Pacific Ocean
Hope in Hell #2.058: Dragon
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Interaction(s): Himself

Rory crashed into the wall of the hallway as he desperately flung himself forward in the hopes of finding any of his teammates alive. This was all a game… no, a test? That had to be it, if they wanted him to wear this getup. The halls were once again white, sterile, and empty. He immediately rushed left, sprinting with all the strength and speed he had honed while keeping his eyes up and scanning for any sign of… well, anyone, at this point. The hallway was unnaturally straight and long, with a single door swinging open near the end. Rory’s eyes focused in as he sprinted for it, sliding to a stop in front of it as he propped his arms up into the doorway to catch himself. His panting was loud and borderline feral, his shoulders hunched forward in anticipation of danger. The mask gleamed in the light, save for the single smear of blood near the eyes and the greek symbol emblazoned on the forehead.

It's a room not unlike a cell: cloaked in shadow with soft featherings of light bidden by the slivers in each panel of steel that reveal the darkness of the ocean yonder their constraints. Teasing glimpses of life in the deep void that mankind has barely trekked, therein lurked something better suited to the title of the unknown.

The misunderstood, the being that clamored through life as the harbinger of pain and rage.

Amma.

She had been fitted in cumbersome chains, looped around her delicate throat and more woven around her wrists and slight frame, the AR suit doing little to conceal her modesty where she had been attacked and beaten, the blemish of a vicious cut down her front now blackened and red, an angry swell of power that churned at her breast and lapped at the edges of reality. The world summoned to her anguish and the HZEs frothed with madness with silver flares of softened light coiling betwixt her and him.

Her lashes fluttered, eyes beholden to that gleaming mask defiled by blood, her lips peeled back over gleaming teeth awash in hated red as she moved, fingers arched as she crawled forward liken to a chained beast.

"Who are you." It was not an inquiry bated in confusion, but rather a demand, her usual cadence deepened into a feral husk of a whisper.

Rory remained silent for the moment as he stood his ground, one hand slipping into his robe to reach for the folded metal ball he had held on to. It was the closest facsimile he had to a weapon. His blue eyes remained fixed on Amma, trying desperately to scan her expression and appearance for any way to test if it was truly her. Of course, he had nothing to base his analysis on. She wasn’t brooding and quippy… but given her situation, he couldn’t exactly put it past her to be more prone to rage and intimidation. But Rory straightened his back as he looked down, slipping the metal ball out of his pocket and into his hand underneath his flowing robes.

“Rory,” he answered simply. His voice was still shaking from the adrenaline, and filled with a twinge of hesitation. “Are you… real?” His eyes remained open and unblinking as he watched her carefully. He could practically feel the buzzing energy of HZEs swarming. He hadn’t felt that from the simulation itself before… but the simulation had never tried to kill him and psychologically torture him before either. He didn’t understand the rules anymore, and instead opted to loom in the doorway. “You need to tell me if you’re real, Annabelle. I’m getting real sick of seeing fakes of us.”

“Rory…” She uttered, his name rolling through her lips and tongue, sliding off from the pout of her lip on a hiss of recognition. “Tyler.” Through the gloom her eyes tracked down his figure concealed by the robes, every flicker of lash peering deep, slow increments of her constricted pupils that speared through the entirety of his frame shadowed against the entryway.

“So, you wear a mask too.” Amma lurked, hands and knees, crawling and inching closer and closer with links of chain rattling in the dark. “Tears of blood, mark of Who, I wonder.” Her whispers purred away into shadow, broken and bleeding remarks shattered, her face and body warped and broken and bound. She finally stood to her full height, revealing the violence she had endured.

“Real. No.” Her head canted, black strands pooling over her blemished shoulders marked by the defiler whose talons had embedded deep. “Maybe. I don’t know.”

“Annabelle - another name to add to my flesh, another for the epitaph.” She holds up her inked and scarred hand, fingers splayed, and counts them down. “Five names, five summons, five meanings.”

She approached Rory carefully until the chains snapped and pulled taut, preventing her from moving any further, and there her eyes churned and wept, black marred down her cheeks and distinct against the bruises slowly beginning to darken and warp.

“What is your role to play here? Are you the knight to come put down the dragon? Do you come to me, now, to seek revenge for those I took away from you? Lorcán,” Amma purred around his name, lips pulled into a sliver of a smile. “Katja.. Maybe I’ll take Haven too. She wants so desperately to know me- asks so many questions.”

“Gil,” she breathed, lashes fanned low, lost in sudden memorium. “Harper. Aurora. Calli. Banjo.”

Everyone.


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Location: Southern Plateau - Pacific Royal Campus
Hope In Hell #2.0059: devour.
_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Interaction(s): rory. - @webboysurf
Previously: the offering & dragon.

Rory took a half step backwards, his eyes firmly locked on Amma as he attempted to parse her cryptic language. It was hard to tell between her and the twisted copies that the simulation had formed thus far. His fists remained clenched at his side, his eyes narrow and body tense. His body screamed that he was in danger, and that he needed to move and leave. Surely, this was like the Lorcán that tried to burn him, or the voices that begged him to kill.

But there was something too real in this Amma’s reactions, or perhaps too sad for him to believe as imaginary. He lifted a hand up, his fingers flexing as they probed the front of his mask. He slowly removed it, tossing it haphazardly to the side before looking back towards Amma. “Not my mask… but it was my blood.” He flashed his bloody palm in Amma’s direction, before just shaking his head. “I’m not going to kill you, Am, even if you’re trying to flirt with Wings or whatever you’re talking about.”

Rory took a step forward, his eyes focused on the chain and collar attached to her neck. She was restrained like a feral animal, not a person. His eyes lowered towards her wounds, a grimace crossing his lips at the sight. She needed medical attention. He desperately tried not to think about the torture he was shown of Haven. Wings had to be ok. Everyone had to be ok. They’d get through this, surely.

He slipped the robe over his head, and held the bunched up cloth in one hand. It became clear that his other hand was holding the folded up sidearm as he remained about an arm’s reach away from Amma, stepping just within her reach to hand over the robes. “I don’t know how clean this thing is… or if it’s even real, but I’d probably put some pressure on some of those wounds. Last thing we need is you bleeding out before they pull us out.”

"They won't let us go." She muttered with her eyes fixated on every movement Rory made, her head canted back and forth, reminiscent of a creature committing every detail into a singular point of observation.

"No? Then why come here, to me, why not go to Haven? I freed her, I gave my power to them. They should've..." Her admission feathered into a whisper, the mask discarded, her gaze flickering to and fro and back, tracking over every feature displayed to her now that he had revealed himself. She panned her stare down to the proffered robe but did not reach for it as Amma's stare aglow and silvered in power fell upon the weapon clutched within his grasp.

"Then, what is that? If not the weapon given to slay the dragon." A soft trill pulled from her bloodied throat, a slight shake to her shoulders that rattled chains and coils of red that fell from those lithesome bones donned in crimson light. "Are you even real?"

Amma's hand snaked out, one and then the other, arachnid gestures arched and splayed as she pulled tight on those restraints ratting and straining against the containment that was she. Her nails raked over his arm, down and down till she laced their fingers together, her hold liken to a vice as her power spooled away from her flesh in erratic pulses of hated carmine. With their hands conjoined she lifted his defiled palm to her lips and with a heated rasp she spoke:

"If you don't kill me. The others will get hurt. I can't stop it."

Rory’s eyes remained fixed on Amma as her fingers dug into him, his eyes filled with concern as she clung to his arm and hand. He dropped the iron ball and robe. He did his best to ignore the throbbing pain, focusing on her as best as he could. He took a deep breath, taking a step closer. “I… wait, are you a dragon? No, that’s stupid, sorry I asked.” He gave a weak, half-hearted smile, before he continued. “I’m not killing you, Amma.”

Rory eyed the chains and restraints again more closely, before looking Amma in the eyes. “They… whoever messed this all up, wanted me to find you. I got this far playing their game. But I’m not killing you, and I’m not gonna let you hurt anyone, ok? We’re gonna get you out of this, find Haven and whoever else we can, and hold out until they pull us out of this nightmare.” His voice was less wavering, and more firm. Even then, he couldn’t tell if he was trying to convince Amma or himself. “I know Jim and everyone are out there doing everything they can to get us out of here. We just need to buy them time.”

"Oh, Rory." Amma whispered, he stepped closer and she clung to him all the more, nails against the blood of his palm as she held fast, her opposite gesture reaching up and curling against the broad line of his shoulder, and there she too raked against his skin, summoned coils of red spindling away from her grasp and pooling down his arms. The world shuddered, the entire room quaked and a distant wail sounded, coming back down the hallway where he had come from. It shuddered and swelled with darkness, lines of vermillion warped through the shadow that swept through the gloom where they stood; demented eyes and endless smiles and slivers of crimson that bloomed like wildflowers of hell. Amma pulled Rory to her, nails tracking up and over as a roar shattered through, within and without, her cell of confinement beholden to the terrible cry as her chains rattled and then she appeared. The one that had dragged her into the void, the one who remained chained and bound to a horrid beast.

Like her, but then not, those eyes of hellfire and talons that raked up Rory's back and lanced deep, holding him in place as Amma's scarred palms caressed over his jaw and there she smiled; a delicate sliver of her full lips bruised and bloodied.

"I've already hurt someone. And no one knows, she won't tell. I know she won't. She has too many secrets herself."

What little light that could be spared guttered out, the ocean beyond swelled and churned, frothed as fiendish eyes of blue peered through those slivers in the walls. Everything trembled and in the dark, Amma simply laughed as a netherworld of her waking world descended upon them both.

"You should have killed me when you had the chance."

_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

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Hidden 5 mos ago Post by Lord Wraith
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The catwalk had collapsed that once held the Harbinger, though his body was likely no more than wall decoration at this point, Tad on the other hand stood a chance of surviving. His abilities allowed him to adapt, but Jim had never seen them proactively work, only retroactively and that’s what scared him.

There was one relief in all this, with the Harbinger gone and the Black Site destroyed, hopefully, Pacific Royal had finally seen the last of both House Orcinus and Hyperion’s Children.

Something hit Jim’s foot and he looked down to see the form of a man encased in stone. Focussing the last of his strength, Jim extended his field, covering Tad and dragging the younger man closer.

“I’ve got you, boy.” He muttered before pressing the button as Torres had instructed.

“Well I’ll be damned, you’re still alive,” Daytripper stated, announcing his arrival. “Let’s go, looks like they got your kids free.”

________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Location: The Southern Plateau - Dundas Islands, Pacific Ocean
Hope In Hell #2.060: In The End
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Interaction(s): None
Previously: High Hopes

Jim blinked and found himself in the fresh air of the Southern Plateau. Blackjack was being escorted out of the trial, every member of the team still alive though some worse for wear than others. He could see the bruises marring Aurora’s face, a fresh scar on Lorcán, one leg of Calliope’s A.R. suit was completely gone, the exposed skin of the leg underneath plastered in burns no doubt from the hard-light that was already blistering over her knee as she limped towards a care station. Though Calliope was in better shape than Banjo who’d likely be walking with a limp for the rest of his life given the wound he had received through his left leg. Gil had fared worse than the others however and was being carried out on a stretcher. Wounds covered his body, his breathing laboured on account of the punctured lung. Where others could be treated in the field, Gil was immediately rushed to the infirmary.

Leaning down, Jim rolled Tad’s stone-encased form over, checking for any signs of life. The chest was moving, slightly but the pulse was very faint as his body had gone into an almost hibernative state. Shrapnel and debris were lodged in his torso between the rock-like plates confirming Jim’s worst fears.

“I need medics over here,” Jim yelled as a pair ran towards him. Suddenly Tad’s hand reached out, grabbing ahold of Jim’s arm.

“Bla… Hyperi… K-kck!” He managed to spit out before beginning to choke as crimson bled freely from behind his teeth and pooled over his lips. Tad’s eyes began to roll towards the back of his head.

“We’re losing him,” A medic yelled, “I need transport immediately.”

“I’ve got you, gringos,” Daytripper interrupted, placing his hands on the medic and Tad before teleporting away. Jim watched them disappear in front of him, in five years it was the second time he had to watch his protégé fight for his life because of Hyperion, whether directly or indirectly and frankly, he was done with it.

“Jim, they’re in rough shape,” Miranda stated, moving towards Jim before being cut off by one of the techs from the control room. “Amma attacked Tyler, Calliope believes her leg is missing, and Gil’s unconscious and in critical condition. Most of the rest have burns and lacerations, and that’s not even beginning to unpack the psychological damage. Haven in particular got off exceptionally lucky, her neural uplink was ripped off seconds after Michael detonated the bomb. A moment sooner and she’d be catatonic right now.”

“I need y’all to take Friend and get to the hospital, the Foundation’s teleporter just left with Thaddeus, he’s not in a good state, Miranda.” Jim ordered softly, before leaning in close to Miranda’s ear, “Thaddeus tried to warn me about something before he went unconscious, do you know if he was chasing any leads.”

“He verified the Orcinus greeting, you don’t think a member of Blackjack is…?”

“I’d hate to, but at this point, it seems all too possible,” Jim murmured back before letting Miranda go, “Y’all best hightail it, best thing for Thaddeus right now is to be surrounded by loved ones.”

Jim bit down on his cheek, kicking his jaw to the side as he surveyed the team. He had known most of these kids from the first day they stepped foot on Dundas Island. It was hard to imagine any of them would align themselves with Hyperion’s Children and betray everything this school stood for.

“Sir, you need to see this.” A tech interrupted, handing him a tablet with footage from within the Trial playing on it. Jim felt his brown furrow as he watched Rory Tyler dawn the same garb that Hyperion himself wore. He knew Tyler, Tyler while a natural leader was not the type to want to harm anyone. There was context missing, but what it did present was an opportunity.

“Torres,” Jim called, approaching the woman and Hyperman who stood beside her clad in his long red coat.

“Can y’all spare a moment, need y’all for a little ride along.” He stated before showing them the tablet.

“I don’t think Tyler is guilty, I do think though we’ve been presented with an opportunity. Clearly, Michael wanted to recruit Tyler to his causes and I have reason to believe someone on Blackjack was loyal to that cause. We’re going to take Tyler on a little ride-along and explain to him what’s going on. There’s a pretty high chance he’ll cooperate and help us catch the true member of House Orcinus.”

“That seems like an actual plan, Chancellor, not very cowboy of you.” Torres allowed the corner of her mouth to turn into a smile before her face resumed its neutral expression. “Very well, Hank, if you'd please lead the way.”

“As you wish,” Hyperman bowed slightly before the three approached Rory.

“Tyler, you look no worse for wear, was wondering if you could give us a hand.” Jim stated, looking between Rory and Haven, the former having already been seen by a healer who had taken care of his lacerations.

“Sorry to pry you away from Miss Barnes, but I assure you she’s in good hands.” The surrounding company of Torres and Hyperman left little room for the request to be optional.

“We’ll bring him right back,” Jim promised as the four climbed inside a nearby Manticore. Jim was the first to speak, turning around to Rory, before presenting the tablet.

“Firstly, y’all aren’t in trouble, this isn’t an arrest or even an accusation. We want y’alls help,” Jim stated, “What we currently know is that a splinter cell of Hyperion’s Children was operating on campus as a secret house. Blackjack was specifically targeted by this sect and in our investigation we confronted the alleged leader and several of his followers. Unfortunately, he chose death by his own hand rather than to be arrested.”

“Based on the footage from the simulation,” Torres continued, taking the tablet from Jim and turning it towards Rory, “It would seem he was grooming you. Or attempting to. Your faculty representative unfortunately is in critical condition but according to Ms. Rivers was investigating the possibility of there being a member of Hyperion’s Children on Team Blackjack.”

“Tyler,” Jim paused for a second before starting again.

“Rory,” He spoke again, this time addressing the student by his given name, “We believe y’all have the rather unique opportunity to suss out this person. I’m hoping you’d be willing to be our eyes and ears, with Thaddeus in the hospital, you’re going to be without a rep until we find someone available and no one knows Blackjack better than you.”

“Take some time,” Torres interjected, “Don’t answer now, take some time, think it over but we ask that this stays between the people in this vehicle.”

Jim offered a weak smile.

“Including Hyperman.”

“Hank is fine, Chancellor.”

“Including Hank,”

Climbing out of the Manticore, Jim opened the door for Rory, motioning for the younger man to follow him back to Haven. As they exited the vehicle, Torres turned the engine over, the Manticore purring to life as the Foundation’s representative and her colleague headed towards campus. Jim broke the silence as he walked with Rory.

“Again, think it over, y’all can always choose just to be part of the investigation or just to be your team’s lead in the interim. Let me know.” Jim said, patting Rory on the back upon delivering the boy back to Haven.

Looking around the various students being treated for their injuries, Jim gave his head a shake. It wasn’t the tragedy of five years ago, but it was tragic nonetheless. These kids were supposed to be in the best year of their life and so far it had started with them being jerked around by their degrees being pulled, and now tortured by an enemy they didn’t know they had.

The semester had scarcely begun, and it had already been a year.

__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

The sliding door of Torres’ balcony opened as a man entered silently, He walked into the living room where Torres sat reclined in a large chair, a satin robe draped over her figure while she aimlessly swirled a glass of red wine held haphazardly in her hand.

Without a word, the man hung his jacket, exposing a well-tailored three-piece suit underneath before he approached the bar, picking up a decanter and pouring himself a neat Scotch. He took a sip of the drink, not a drop touching the neatly trimmed beard that accented his chiselled jawline. He remained expressionless while finishing his drink before Torres finally acknowledged her guest.

“Miguel, please help yourself.”

"I assume you brought me here to ensure the experiments don't start again." The Fist replied rhetorically before topping up his drink and taking a seat across from the woman. Torres in turn nodded solemnly before also shaking her head.

"I did," She answered. Hesitation hovered on her lips as Miguel’s keen eyes studied her with an intensity that was so familiar but yet escaped her at that moment. Finally, her lips parted, releasing the words she was so reluctant to speak.

"But I fear we're much too late.”
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“In today’s top headlines, a H.E.L.P. Albatross lost power while crossing the Pacific. Thankfully, no lives were lost as the Foundation Force was on scene within moments, Triton swimming to the rescue added by Daytripper and the Steel Shell.”

The man looked up from his drink, his eyes squinting towards the TV as he shook his head. There was something still bothering him from today’s rescue. H.E.L.P. was many things, but their equipment was top of the line, those aircraft didn’t just lose power. He absently swirled around the highball glass, listening to the ice inside clink against the tumbler.

The bar was mostly empty, the occasional regular sitting by themselves spaced out along the bar rail. Unfortunately, that made the droning sound of the TV even louder, agitating the long-haired man as he swung his drink a little too hard before dropping it with a dull thud against the bar.

“We go now to an interview recorded at the scene with the Foundation Force’s own Triton-”

“Can you turn that off?” The man suddenly roared as his own face appeared on the screen.

“Yo, buddy what’s your-” The bartender started before suddenly pausing and realizing who he was talking to. “My apologies, I didn’t realize I was serving a bonafide celebrity.”

“Would have preferred it stayed that way.”

“You’re a hero, practically a god to some people,” The bartender smiled, “Enjoy it, Triton.”

“Mack.”

“Sorry?” The bartender replied,

“My name is Makaio Tawhiri.” Mack replied, “But you can call me, Mack.”

“Well, Mack, your money is no longer good here. A hero drinks for free.”

“If I was any other Hyperhuman, would you say that?” Makaio challenged as the bartender faltered.

“Hey, if you want to pay, you want to pay,” He snapped back while raising his hands.

“How about I buy you a drink?” A woman smiled while pulling a stool up next to Makaio, “And not just because you’re him,” She added gesturing towards the TV, “I’m mostly doing it because I think you’re sexy.”

Makaio finished his drink, smiling as the woman winked her long lashes at him.

“I never turn down a drink from a beautiful woman.”

__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

The door to the bedroom flew off its hinges as Makaio backed through it, the woman from the bar wrapped around his torso, passionately kissing his bearded face. She wrapped her hands around his face, pulling his mouth tighter to her own, her tongue dancing against his.

She pulled at the buttons of his shirt, the small pieces of plastic giving way to the aggressive tug as they flew in every direction. Her hands traced his muscled body, feeling out every vein and scar, the lines of his tattoos.

“You probably get this a lot,” She whispered in his ear, panting in anticipation, “But you get me so, wet,”

Makaio stifled a chuckle before reaching around behind the woman’s back. The tearing of fabric echoed through the room as she excitedly squealed at his display. Placing her feet on the floor, she pushed him onto the bed before dropping to her knees and going for his belt.

A wave of sudden nausea fell over Makaio as his eyes were drawn to the necklace laid between the woman’s bosom as she knelt in front of him. A crimson cross hung on a simple silver chain. The strength rapidly drained from his body, his mind quickly connecting the dots, but still, it wasn’t fast enough.

The closet door burst open and from within two men lunged forward, each driving a spike through Makaio’s shoulders, pinning him to the bed. The Foundation Force member howled in pain, weakly attempting to fight back but the waves of nausea only increased and his abilities were non-responsive.

A cruel sneer was the last thing he saw before a click and a whir echoed through the bedroom. The weapon's hilt flew to her hand from its hiding place before the blade materialized - one quick slash severing Makaio’s head from his body.

A splattered arc of blackened crimson sprayed the wall as a deafening silence fell over the room.

__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

“This is a warning.”

Broadcasts all over the world were suddenly interrupted, their image becoming nothing more than gray static as a modulated voice-over spoke. Their tone was flat, yet starkly defiant.

“No more deceivers.”

An image of an attack on Times Square by Hyperion’s Children from five years ago flashed onto the screen. It was followed by images of a squad of H.E.L.P. agents intervening in an investigation. Another image flashed onto the screen, this time of the Human Hyperhuman Alliance counter-protesting for more Hyperhuman rights.

“No more heroes.”

The voice spoke again, the static image changing to display the severed head of the Foundation Force’s Triton. His long hair and beard were stained in his own freshly spilled blood. It glistened on the screen, still wet from the kill.

“No more false gods.”
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Location: Pacific Royal Campus - Dundas Islands, Pacific Ocean
Take On Me #3.001: Brand New Numb
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Interaction(s): None
Previously: In The End

Prior to five years ago, the Homecoming Trials had always gone off without a hitch. Now again, for the second time in Pacific Royal’s history, the Trials had been disrupted. The student body was shaken, though thankfully the arrests of Naira Cameron, Lindsay Ainsworth and the rest of their House Orcinus associates had brought about a feeling of temporary relief. From the perspective of the bulk of the student body, Hyperion’s Children were dealt with, the only ones who were any wiser were the faculty and any remaining members hidden and laying low.

Staff at all levels had been briefed regarding House Orcinus, their greeting, and connection to Hyperion. They were splintered and disorganized now, without a leader and hopefully that would dissuade them doing any further harm. There was some welcome reprieve in all this, the attack by House Orcinus had taken some of the heat off of the Foundation during this tough transition.

That was bound to change.

A memo was sent out to the entire student body informing them of the uniform changes on campus. Understandably, this message was met with frustration due to the inconvenient timing. The majority of students packed only a limited wardrobe for wearing outside of academic hours. In the past forty-eight hours, the ferry to the mainland had been exceptionally busy with students of all ages venturing over to purchase new clothing, and the graduating class purchasing formal attire for their upcoming dance.

For the incoming students, Jim and the faculty had gone old school and replicated the first trial from the year the house system was introduced, back in 1990. Setting up both the Chimera’s Lair and the Thunderdome as a combination obstacle course, athletics and problem solving exercises. No augmented reality involved and medics were standing by in the event of any real world injuries. The low tech event had been a hit, and seemingly was more enjoyed than some of the previous spectacles brought about by the Hedge Trials on the Southern Plateau.

With the weekend behind them, the school had finally entered into its true academic year and the campus was buzzing with students moving between classes. It was still foreign to Jim to see the campus this alive without nary a blazer in sight. In all his years at Pacific Royal, from the time he was a student to being Chancellor, the uniform had been a constant. Scarcely updated from the day the doors opened until now, and a part of him was deeply saddened to see it gone.

Blackjack was still reeling from their experiences in the Trial, not that Jim could blame them. They had each been assigned time with counselors in order to work through what they had experienced. A team advisor had yet to be assigned and while Jim hoped that Rory would take up his offer to lead in the interim, he also knew that there was a very real possibility that Tad might not wake up and they would need to find a permanent replacement.

Most of the team’s physical injuries had been tended to. Some of the more severe injuries however needed time to fully heal and Gil was still bedridden due to the extensive damage he suffered. Even Hyperhuman healers had limits, and Blackjack’s wounds had found them. It was a surprise that none of them had been pushed into a state of Hyperpsychosis by the time they were rescued.

Initially, Torres had wanted to start Blackjack as her guinea pigs for a new sparring course, however given the state of the team and the fact that the Face of the Foundation had been called away to deal with an emergency, Jim instead had their courses rearranged to put the sparring later in the week. For the time being, they were simply attending their regular classes.

All that left was the Graduate’s Class homecoming dance at the end of the week. Calliope and Gil had made good headway, but with Gil currently still residing in the Infirmary, Jim knew Calliope would need a new hand. He had suggested that she reached out to Harper in Gil’s absence.

Hopefully, the team would get to enjoy a normal week for once.
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| Three Days Ago
Exiting the bathroom, Lorcán nodded a goodnight to Rory before venturing from their dorm’s shared common room into his bedroom. He paused, catching sight of himself in the mirror while removing his athletic uniform, the contrast of the white gauze against his tanned skin drawing the eye. His hand absently moved over his chest before rising up to his face. Molten eyes stared back at him, that cruel sneer haunting him as Lorcán quickly shut his eyes and pulled away.

Raze wasn't real, and he wasn't Raze.

Changing into a new pair of boxers for the night, he pulled back the covers of his bed, pausing to look at a photo of Blackjack. It was one taken at the end of last year, when Mei and Pallyx were still part of the team. Amma, Gil and Harper had all been newcomers last year and now Gil was fighting for his life in the infirmary.

Sleep was honestly the last thing on Lorcán’s mind, but at this moment it felt like the only option he had to make the time pass. His thumb hovered over Aurora's smiling face, a saddened smile forming on his own lips.

She got hurt today because he wasn't strong enough or fast enough. If he could have melted that door or even reverse engineered it faster she wouldn't have been put in harm’s way. A growl formed in his throat and Lorcán suddenly grabbed a nearby trophy and whipped it across the room.

No one should have been hurt.

At times, he had found himself almost sympathetic to Hyperion's mission, but after today, after senseless Hyperhuman on Hyperhuman violence, there was no way Lorcán could reconcile their mission with their behaviour.

Aurora had been staring at her phone for the better part of an hour.

She’d been back in her dorm for a while after getting assessed at the infirmary, where upon checking her over they confirmed she was indeed concussed. It was minor enough that they simply cleared her to go rest, but still was told to take it easy for the next while. That meant no running for the following few days and especially meant not overexerting her abilities - no teleporting excessively.

After showering and getting into her pajamas, the redhead was having a hard time turning off her mind as she lay on top of her bed. Everytime she tried to close her eyes, she found herself back in the simulation, whether it be face to face with her stepfather or watching her teammates abandon her. Over and over again she re-lived it, and she had no doubt that she would continue to do so for weeks to come.

She didn’t want to be alone tonight.

Which is why she had been hemming and hawing about picking up her phone and calling Lorcán for what seemed like an eternity. She knew he was injured too; he’d arguably gone through a more grueling scenario physically and needed his rest. But with how close they were, something told her he’d be more upset if she didn’t go to him when she needed him.

So she called him.

The phone rang once, twice, before he answered.

“Sorry, hopefully I didn’t wake you up.” Aurora hesitated, but proceeded. “But can I… come over? Would that be okay?”

“Shoots, Lady Dude” Lorcán replied, “I wasn’t going to catch any shut eye tonight. I’ll unlock the door for you.” He stated, walking towards the door.

But Aurora suddenly appeared in his room causing Lorcán to furl his brow slightly.

“Rora, you’re not supposed to be ‘porting.” He scolded slightly, immediately pivoting his body to turn the scarred side of his face away from her.

“It’s fine, I’m fine.” The redhead subtly leaned against his desk to stabilize herself and waited for the dizziness to subside, not wanting to admit that he was probably right and shouldn’t have used her abilities. “It was either that or attempt to get past my roommates and fail miserably.” She sighed, “They’ve been coddling me since I got back from the infirmary. I’m practically on house arrest.”

Aurora noticed how Lorcán had shifted, saw how he tensed as he hid his wounded face. She frowned, “You don’t have to do that, you know.” She stood up straight, taking a step towards him, “It’s not like I wasn’t there before they put the dressing over it.”

In her arms, she held his red Canis sweatshirt, the one she had technically stolen from the night before. She extended it towards him with an apologetic smile. “They threw this in with my stuff when they brought me my things from the tent. Figured you might want it back.”

Out of the corner of her periphery, she saw the light catch something on the ground, and her gaze fell to the broken trophy, recognizing that he had likely thrown it. Without saying a word, she set the sweatshirt on his chair and leaned down and grabbed the pieces it had split into, placing them on his desk.

She knew he was still upset about how things had gone down during the Trial; he blamed himself for what had happened and she didn’t understand why. Choosing to not mention it, she continued her previous thought. “Sorry again for taking it. When I went outside to get some air last night, it was a little chilly. Didn’t want to make too much noise and it was the closest thing.”

“What’s mine is yours,” Lorcán smiled briefly, “Possession is only like temporary, it was mine until you needed it and then it totally became yours and now it's mine again,” He explained, “But it's totally always there for you if you need or even like want it again.”

He chuckled slightly, “I guess I should totally keep my voice down so my bro, Rory, doesn't get like the wrong idea about you being in here, Lady Dude.”

Her bruises had begun to form, the colour changing slowly becoming more and more evident. Seeing them left Lorcán’s stomach in knots. He flinched again at the memory of her face being slammed against the window, the sound it had made echoing through his mind.

“I wish I could understand why the Trial was tampered with, were we targeted? Are we just doomed to hurt each other?” He asked, though not necessarily expecting an answer as he invited Aurora to take a seat beside him on the bed. “It doesn't seem to matter if it’s H.E.L.P. versus Hyperion or the Foundation versus Pacific Royal, we keep being pulled into the line of fire.”

He shook his head.

“Hyperhumans face enough adversity without fighting each other and yet we keep choosing to fight one another.” He let out an agitated sigh.

“Sorry, I’m ranting but I’m just feeling like I’m caught in a riptide.”

A blush pricked Aurora’s cheeks as Lorcán mentioned lowering his voice, not having even considered the implications of her being in his room at such an hour. To her, it just felt natural to go to him when she was needing comfort, no matter when it was or where they were. She sat down beside him on his bed, letting her legs dangle off the side.

“I know, Lorcán, I don’t understand it either.” She tried to reassure him, not minding his rambling in the slightest as it took the weight off of her own inner monologue. Her lips settled into a fine line and she looked up at him, a hint of sadness in her eyes. “The world already hates us, it will never make sense to me why we continue to find ourselves pitted against our own kind.”

“Today was scary. Really scary. But we’ll get through it, just like we always have. We’ll be okay.” The redhead said, reminding him but also reminding herself.

“But what will the cost be next time?” Lorcán asked, his tone low.

“I could have lost you today, that clucks me, like more than anything else, more than anything ever has.” He paused, taking a moment to swallow, “That’s what I keep seeing over in my head. Everything I went through in there was focused on getting you back,”

He shook his head, “This is supposed to be the safest place on Earth for Hyperhumans, but that makes it a magnet for trouble. Days like this, I just want to take you by the hand and disappear into the sunset, we could go our own way.”

“And what if we did that? What if we left right now, packed our bags and hopped on the next ferry. Would it change anything?” Aurora let her question hang in the air for a moment, looking deeply into Lorcán’s eyes before continuing. “If I’ve learned one thing, it’s that bad things can happen wherever you are. It’s not something we can control by leaving.”

She reached over and took his hand, squeezing it gently. “I know you want to protect me and I can’t even begin to tell you how much it means that you stopped at nothing to find me today.” The redhead felt a flutter in her chest at the thought of him going through hell and back during the Trial just looking for her. “But it doesn’t matter if we’re here or halfway across the world. Hell, Lorcán, some of the worst things that have happened to me happened in my own house.” She stated bluntly.

He knew she was right, as he hung his head in defeat. Running a hand through his hair, he looked up at the ceiling and then back at Aurora.

“I’m not used to feeling,” He waved both of his hands in front of his chest, “All of this,” He caught a glimpse of himself in a nearby mirror, a mirthless chuckle escaping his sore chest.

“I’m usually the one making everyone laugh,” He rolled his eyes, “And here I am ruining the mood more than ankle slappers on a balmy dawn.” Lorcán reached into his bedside table, producing a bag of red licorice before extending it towards Aurora,

“I read somewhere once that sugar helps with shock,” He explained, “Plus, I don’t think there's a problem on Earth that can't be made better with something sweet.”

The redhead smirked, gladly taking a strand of licorice from the bag. She was never one to say no to candy, especially given the day they’d had. She held the piece to her lips but hesitated, moving her hand back down to her lap for a moment to impart another thought. “I know you always like to be the one lifting everyone else up, making people happy, but it’s okay to put yourself and your emotions first sometimes.” Without elaborating further, not wanting to dwell, she took a bite of licorice, letting the sweet strawberry flavor coat her taste buds.

“New topic,” Lorcán smiled, pulling two pieces out for himself before placing the bag between them. “Did I seriously see Hyperman and Daytripper on campus?” He asked, the familiar amused grin returning to his face.

“What's up with those kook outfits? I mean, with that red coat, Hyperman may as well be wearing a cape. And then there's Daytripper’s mustache,” He shook his head before reaching for another piece of candy. “Pretty glad H.E.L.P. agents don't dress like that.”

Aurora laughed, although the speed in which Lorcán changed the subject was only slightly concerning. She pocketed that thought to mull over later. “It’s called fashion, look it up.” She playfully nudged him before taking another strand from the bag. “Hey, they can wear whatever they want, I heard they saved a lot of people today, including Jim and Tad.”

She said his name without even thinking, but her thoughts now were directed towards their advisor who was in critical condition. Her face fell once more, it seemed they couldn’t avoid touchy subjects even if they tried. “I hope he’ll be okay.”

“Tad survived Hyperion,” Lorcán replied somberly, “He’s a survivor, Jim will make sure he gets the best care possible.” He shuffled awkwardly on the bed, “I’m worried about Jess though, if anything happens to Tad I’m not sure what she’ll do. Not sure what I would have done if anything had happened to you. No pain worse than losing someone you love.”

The redhead nodded, although found herself stuck on his words.

Someone you love.

She knew that Lorcán cared about her a lot and she herself cared about him significantly. They were best friends, of course they cared about each other. But for him to describe that as love cut deep.

Because simply put, Aurora couldn’t remember what love truly felt like.

It was very possible it was this feeling, but doubt pulled in her gut. How could someone like him love her? Setting down her half eaten strand of licorice, she looked at Lorcán with a sad smile. “Jess is strong and we’ll all be there to support her, whatever happens.” She held out the candy to him, offering it up. “I probably shouldn’t have more sugar before bed, seems counterproductive to my already terrible sleeping habits.”

A smile of amusement spread across Lorcán’s face as he reached across the bed and snatched up the half eaten piece before devouring it and putting the rest back in their hiding spot.

“Speaking of bed, do you need anything?” He asked, standing up and stripping his shirt off, wincing as it caught on the bandages on his back. He paused as he brought the shirt over his head.

“Oh wait, would you prefer I wear a shirt? I don't want anyone to get the wrong impression, I can totally suck it up for one night.” He added.

Aurora did a double take, processing his words and actions after the fact. “Wait,” She looked almost confused, her brow raised.

“I can stay?”

“Duh,” Lorcán replied with a grin, “Best place for you is here.”

The redhead let her perplexed expression melt into a grateful smile. She’d imagined that this conversation would be terribly awkward, that asking if she could spend the night since she was so afraid of being alone with her thoughts would have been met with at least some hesitation. But Lorcán’s response, and the fact that he had simply assumed she would be staying, was all the more reason that she felt so fortunate to have him.

“It’s up to you, whatever is more comfortable with the bandages.” Aurora indicated, “Doesn’t make a difference to me.”

He reached around her, grabbing some pillows from the bed only now drawing Aurora's eyes to the large pile of pillows that Lorcán apparently was stockpiling.

“Choka, Lady Dude,” He replied, “Bed is yours, floor is all I need tonight.”

Aurora raised her eyebrows before shaking her head, clearly in disagreement. “Yeah, no, I’m not letting you do that.” She swung her legs up onto his bed, moving to the far side of the mattress and patting the ample remaining space. She knew Lorcán was just trying to be nice and gentlemanly, but that simply wasn’t going to fly tonight. “There’s plenty of room. Besides, you’re gonna aggravate your injuries if you sleep on the floor.”

“Either we share the bed or I’m teleporting back to my dorm.”

“You’re not allowed to teleport,” Lorcán repeated, taking one look at Aurora's expression and relenting. He put his pillows back on the bed and climbed up beside her, before hanging one leg over the side and keeping a foot in contact with the floor.

“Fine, Lady Dude, you win.” He said with his arms raised slightly, “I’m in the bed,” Lorcán teased before wiggling his way further into the mattress and stacking two pillows under his head.

Aurora smirked, satisfied with her small victory, and slipped under the covers, her copper locks fanning out behind her as she laid back. She instantly relaxed as she inhaled citrus and smoke, recognizing that Lorcán’s bed sheets smelled just like him. Her coy expression turned into a genuine smile. “Thank you.” She spoke softly, conveying her appreciation to him for letting her stay. Her eyelids grew heavier, exhaustion beginning to tug them down. Finally not on high alert, finding peace in his presence.

He laid back, his nostrils taking in her sweet aroma while Lorcán folded his hands together over his stomach, staring up at the ceiling above him. His tense body language might have given the wrong impression, but he loved that Aurora was next to him. He just never imagined that this would be the situation that led to her sleeping in his bed.

Lorcán had at least wanted to make her dinner first.

In contrast, the redhead drifted off quickly, indicated by the steady ride and fall of her chest as rest overtook her. Minutes passed, and the only audible sound was her slow and even breathing. But her stillness became short lived as she began to move in her sleep, shifting her body to find a more comfortable position. She turned onto her side, her back to Lorcán, but only lasted a few moments with her bruised face resting on the pillow.

In one movement, she flipped to her opposite side, now facing him, her extended arm draping across his torso, hand resting on his chest.

Lorcán’s heart skipped a beat as the cool hand came to rest on his chest. His mind raced as he tried to quiet the swirling thoughts inside his head, ignoring the based ones and focusing on that Aurora was here for comfort, nothing else.

They were just friends after all.

Weren’t they?

His eyes drifted back towards the ceiling as he intensely studied the stuccoed roof of his dorm. It was doubtful he’d sleep that night. No, it was most certain that he wouldn't.

Not a wink.
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Location: The Beach - Dundas Island, Pacific Ocean
Take On Me #3.002: I Want More
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Interaction(s): @Melissa - Aurora Mitchell
Previously: Riptide

| Present
The mist off the ocean stung in his wounds, the salt creeping into his new scars. The healers said they could remove them, but Lorcán wanted to keep them. He didn't tell Aurora that, it would only upset her but he needed the reminder, the reminder that he needed to continue to train and the reminder of what he could become if he didn't get it back under control.

The open water was a welcome reprieve from the looks of pity he received across campus. Thankfully with the dress code abolished, Lorcán was finally free to wear his hat and a hood, keeping his face shrouded so as not to draw onlookers who gawked at the fresh scar. Memories of Raze still haunted his nightmares, his mother had insisted he return to seeing his own psychiatrist, but Lorcán was reluctant. Even after all these years, that same darkness, that inferno raged inside of him. He saw it in Raze and even if it was someone else's idea of who he could become, he knew his own mind is what had made Raze so real inside the Trial.

The swells were small today, but Lorcán just needed to be out on the water, away from the campus for a bit. He had visited Gil almost daily since the Trial, but despite the support of his team, Gil had slipped into a depressive state.

Then there was whatever was going on between Lorcán and Aurora. His feelings for her were stronger than ever but he was more confused about where they stood after waking up with her wrapped in his arms. Her body had been pressed up against his, his hand tightly gripping her hip, while she moved against him. The soft skin of her side touching his fingers that had slid under her shirt in the night. But as Lorcán awoke, and Aurora accidentally scooted her hips closer to his, he realized she was feeling all of him and panicked. Aurora awoke soon after and realizing what was going on immediately teleported to her room.

She had yet to acknowledge that morning again.

He looked down at his reflection in the water again before it disappeared as a small white cap disrupted the glassy surface. A bark from the shore caught Lorcán’s attention before he raised his molten eyes to see Rothschild waiting for him at the water’s edge.

“You can swim out here.” Lorcán teased as the dog barked back again. Rothschild turned his head, and Lorcán followed his eyes before they were drawn to a cliff overlooking the beach. Above the morning's waves, just outside the forest's edge was a creature Lorcán had never seen before.

White like a fresh snowfall, it almost seemed to glow even in the Dawn's early light. Large antlers stretched from either side of the majestic creature’s head as the place stag let out a powerful bellow that echoed over the water.

It wasn't uncommon for the island to have deer or even the occasional moose, but Lorcán had never seen one such as this. It appeared almost ancient as vines and moss coated its horns, small buds of flower interspersed across them.

Lorcán felt a pulse in his pocket, reaching for his phone only to remember it was still in his bag on the shore. Only then did his hand pat the object that Jonas had given him. It pulsed again, growing warm in his grasp.

Another bark from Rothschild brought Lorcán’s attention back to the stag, watching as it disappeared into the treeline before the border collie gave chase, kicking up sand before leaping into the air and flying towards the cliffs.

There was something about a flying dog that never got old.

“Slag it,” Lorcán muttered before dropping onto his stomach and paddling for show. “Wait up, dude, I’m coming too.”
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Melissa Melly Bean the Jelly Bean

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| Two Days Ago
Aurora waited until late the next day to look at herself in the mirror, to visually see the damage that the Trial had inflicted. The healers had given her something for her head in order to speed up the recovery process and assist with the pain, but since everything else was purely cosmetic, and would fade with time, she opted to let it go away on its own. She could feel the bruises that covered her skin, tender and sensitive, but had not yet taken a look at them all together.

Fearfully, she approached her bathroom, turned on the lights, and took a deep breath before stepping into frame.

Who stared back wasn’t her at all.

The redhead’s left cheekbone up to her temple and underneath her brow were stained black, purple, and blue, stretching into her hairline. Broken blood vessels peppered her jaw, residual trauma from the impact on the blast door and the invisible wall that had extended outwards.

Fingertips were imprinted into the back of her neck where Sierra had laid her vice like grip and bruises covered her arms and legs where she had hit the cold floor not once, but twice. Red seeped through the bandages on her knuckles. Her body was a walking and talking tapestry of what had exactly happened when Blackjack entered the hedge.

And yet, in the reflection, all Aurora could see was her mother.

The girl said nothing as she turned off the light and exited the bathroom, her face devoid of emotion. Returning to her bedroom, she closed the door and locked it before climbing onto her mattress and curling up underneath her comforter.

It was only then she began to sob.

__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Location: Myotis House → Community Farm - Pacific Royal Campus
Take On Me #3.003: Every Rose Has Its Thorn
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Interaction(s): Ripley @Lord Wraith
Previously: Riptide

| Present
In the days following the Trial, Aurora barely left her dorm room.

Her roommates and Myotis housemates continued to fuss over her, from completing her community contribution on her behalf to bringing her back food from the dining hall so she didn’t have to make the trek. It was a testament to the House system that they rallied and showed such compassion towards her, and she couldn’t remember the last time anyone had gone to such great lengths and taken care of her that way. Well, aside from second year of University when she got the flu, Lorcán ran around campus like a madman getting all of her coursework and bringing her anything she needed for the five days she was down for the count. Then again, Lorcán always showed that amount of care.

But now that classes were in full swing, it was pertinent that she reintegrated back into campus life. Her therapist, who she had spoken with every day since the Trial, even made it a point to call her that morning to ensure she was getting ready for class like she was supposed to.

As she slipped on her shoes, Aurora glanced at her reflection in the mirror. The large bruise on her face had fully set in, stained the darkest shade of purple throughout and a yellow ring outlining the border. She wore leggings to cover the marks on her thighs and calves. On top, she wore Lorcán’s Canis sweatshirt that she had taken the morning after she stayed over, for no other reason than that the hood was large enough to cover her bruised face when it was up.

At least that’s what she kept on telling herself.

Departing her dorm, she began to make her way towards the farm. It was no secret what had happened to Blackjack over the weekend, everyone knew what they had gone through when they ran the trial. But as she walked across campus, Aurora could feel eyes pinned on every movement she made, almost as if they pried for more. Each step she took on the gravel path was tracked and even with her face shrouded by the sweatshirt’s hood she’d never felt more exposed.

“Hey,” The voice of a younger female called towards Aurora, “Hey, sorry to bother you, I was wondering if you could help me find-” She explained while running up beside her.

“Oh!” The girl exclaimed excitedly, “Aurora! I didn’t recognize you,” She beamed as Aurora looked up from under her hood, her eyes meeting those belonging to Ripley Jones, Lorcán’s cousin.

“Nice hoodie,” Ripley smirked, “I didn’t know you were in Canis,” She ribbed trying to keep the mood light, “Sorry, I can’t help myself sometimes, how are you doing?” She asked, a look of genuine concern crossing her face.

“We saw some of what happened, before we got moved back to campus, if there’s any truth to the rumours I can’t imagine going through what you had to in there.”

Aurora tried her best to muster a smile in the presence of the younger girl, popping her earbuds out of her ears so she could hear her better. She normally would have laughed at her joke, made some playful quip back, but it felt too forced. “I’m just borrowing it. Not good enough with makeup to cover this thing up.” Ripley had conveniently ended up on her non-bruised side, but no doubt noticed it when the redhead turned her head to reply.

She didn’t want to scare Lorcán’s cousin, make her fearful of this place only in her first few days, so she played things down. “I’m alright, it looks worse than it feels.”

Lie.

“Rumors are just rumors, we’re all okay.”

Lie.

“Nothing we couldn’t handle.”

Lie.

The words left a bad taste in her mouth, but she was better off not knowing the perils of what had truly occurred. Aurora inclined her head to Ripley, directing the attention away from herself. “How did your trial go? Where’d you end up?”

“It was different than what I was expecting,”Ripley replied, “Ultimately still pretty fun,” She rocked back and forth on her heels excitedly, “I was originally really hoping to be placed in Canis, kind of carry on the family tradition,” She paused, her blue-green eyes locking with Aurora’s own. “And I kind of did, just like you and Aunt Tori, I’m in Myotis!” Ripley beamed.

“And we’re both doing the farm for our community contributions!” She added, leaping forward and giving Aurora a small hug, “So I guess we’ll be seeing a lot more of each other.”

The redhead was slightly surprised by Ripley’s sudden embrace, but did not mind the affection, even though she tried not to wince as the younger girl unknowingly wrapped her arm around one of her more prominent bruises. “That’s really great Ripley, I’m excited for you,” She tried to sound enthused, and hopefully it came off as such, but at the very least, her intentions were genuine. The promise of getting to know another one of Lorcán’s family members better was certainly something to look forward to.

“You’ll love being in Myotis, I definitely do.” Aurora’s thoughts were brought back to her housemates who had been watching out for her over the last few days, and her heart felt warm. “I’m headed to the farm now, actually, were you on your way there? I’ll take you.” She motioned further down the path in the direction.

“Yes, please,” Ripley nodded eagerly, “I never imagined being able to get lost on the campus, but I keep getting turned around on this island.” She elaborated. “How long have you been here again? I know Leo probably said it before but I’ve forgotten embarrassingly enough. Do you go home for the summer at all?” Ripley asked while the pair walked before chiding herself.

“Sorry I’m asking so many questions, Leo - err, Lorcán has just talked about you so much I feel like we’re already best friends. I don’t mean to be a total Haven,” She joked, remembering how Lorcán had mentioned that of Blackjack’s members, Haven had a bit of a reputation for asking questions.

“You’ll get the hang of it, it’ll just take some time.” Aurora remembered how challenging it had been to navigate campus upon arriving. She was a small fish in a big pond when she first got to PRCU, she’d never been in a place that required such focus to get around before. Luckily, she had a built-in tour guide in the form of Lorcán, who grew up on the Island and knew it like the back of his hand.

Ripley’s question was innocent and well meaning, but Aurora couldn’t help but feel a twinge of self consciousness at explaining her situation. “I live here during the summer. Your cousin is stuck with me year round, unfortunately for him. ” She kept her response brief and deflected with a sad excuse for a joke, before stating the facts. “7 years, I’ve been here since I was 13.”

The redhead picked up on Ripley's comment about Lorcán talking about her, even remembered her saying something similar the other day after the ceremony. “Hopefully he’s said good things about me,” Her lips turned up, a small, soft smile appearing for the first time. “I’m honestly surprised he’s told you much about me at all.”

Unfortunately for him,” Ripley repeated with a small giggle, “I’m sure Leo’s in dire straits about it,” She laughed, “Are you kidding me? You’re his favourite topic, even when he’s not meaning to talk about you, he’s talking about you. And he’s never said anything less than stellar about you.”

The younger girl skipped along beside Aurora, her mischievous eyes studying the older girl.

“So what do you, y’know, do?”

Aurora’s face flushed, her cheeks tingeing pink hearing about how much and how highly Lorcán spoke of her according to Ripley.

Someone you love.

His words replayed in her head from the other night, they’d been one of the key parts of their encounter that she continued to think about. She’d spent three days thinking about it. That, and waking up in his arms, having committed the feeling of his touch on her skin to memory.

Snapping back to the conversation at hand, she raised an eyebrow at the younger girl. “What do I… do?” It took her a minute, but recognition finally crossed her features. “Oh, you mean,” A laugh escaped from her lips, “I can teleport.” Aurora explained, “All I have to do is think of where I want to go and I can be there instantly.”

“I’d show you, but I’ve been advised not to by the healers while I’m recovering.” She looked around, before leaning in towards Ripley, a smirk on her face, her spark slowly returning. “I think your cousin would kill me too.”

“What about you? I don’t think Lorcán ever told me what your abilities are.”

“I was a late bloomer,” Ripley replied cheerily, “I know, it’s ironic, girls are supposed to mature faster than boys,” She added while continuing to skip along beside Aurora, “So prior to my enrollment here, I think everyone thought I was going to end up being mundane, but then, BAM!” She yelled suddenly, “Summer hit and powers! I don’t think my parents could get on the phone fast enough to Uncle Aiden.”

Ripley suddenly cartwheeled ahead of Aurora before coming to a stop.

“Thankfully, I didn’t take after the men in the family, so no risk of me doing an accidental strip tease by burning off my shirt.” She smiled while giving Aurora a small wink, “Though I warn you, some people find this a little unsettling.”

Ripley suddenly bent over backwards, making the bridge position before the girl unexpectedly split at the waist, her legs standing up straight while Ripley walked on her hands out from behind her lower half.

“Ta-da!” She exclaimed before accidentally popping her head off its neck. The brunette’s face rolled onto the ground before coming to a stop at Aurora’s feet.

“Ow.” She muttered as her torso wandered around blindly. “I’m over here!” She called before rolling her eyes.

Aurora couldn’t help but find herself laughing at Ripley’s display. Not a forced laugh or a fake laugh, but a real true belly laugh. The kind that makes you feel better, one that reminds you that there is still good out there. The younger girl had spunk and energy, it not only made complete sense that she was placed in Myotis, but also solidified her relation to Lorcán, clumsiness and all. “That’s pretty impressive, don’t think I’ve seen anything like that before.” She watched as the girl struggled to wrangle the other parts of her body. “Need some help there?”

“Just give me a second,” Ripley replied with a smile, blowing towards the ground and sending her head rolling back towards her body. A hand felt around, grabbing a hold of her hair prompting a small squeak of pain from Ripley before her body cradled her head properly and affixed it back atop her neck. Her legs kneeled down allowing her to quickly clamber back atop them.

“There we go.” She grinned back at Aurora, “I’m still getting the hang of all of this, I envy people like Leo who developed their powers so young, but then again, look who his parents are.” She shrugged,

“Super-Mom and Super-Dad if ever there was a pair, practically bigger heroes than the Foundation Force.”

“Hey, we all have to start somewhere.” The redhead reassured, starting to walk again towards the farm, the outline of the building coming into view. “Everyone struggles for the first while, it’ll take a bit to learn how to master your abilities but you have a really great support system to help you.” She pointed out, referring to the aforementioned relatives.

“Dare I say I’m a little bit envious that you got to come here so soon after your H-Gene manifested. I had my abilities for a few years before I really figured out how to use them.” Aurora remarked, trying to help the younger girl feel a bit better about her situation. It was true though - she would have given anything to have at least one person who understood what she was going through at the time her abilities emerged. Her mother was mundane, and quickly after she got her powers she entered into the Foster system, where she rarely encountered other Hyperhumans. Most of her original tricks she had to make up on the fly.

“Yeah, my parents were pretty surprised. I still don't know if they know where they came from. Presumably my Mom’s side since she's Uncle Aiden’s sister, but given how different my abilities are from his and Leo’s, there’s a chance my Dad had a latent gene or just abilities that have completely gone undetected.” Ripley rambled on.

“Leo always refers to your abilities as rad, he has such a funny way of speaking.” Ripley commented, “Do you ever have moments where you're just left there trying to piece together exactly what he just said?”

Aurora nodded in agreement, another laugh leaving her lips as Ripley seemed to voice exactly what most people were thinking. “Oh, all the time.” She stated, before reaching into her pocket to grab her cellphone. Tapping into her notes app, she held the phone out to the younger girl, revealing pages upon pages of jotted down words and their corresponding definitions.

A makeshift Lorcán dictionary.

“When I first met him he would say things and I could not for the life of me remember what everything meant. So I started writing it down.” She shook her head subtly, as if she couldn’t even believe this was something that needed to exist. “Like any other language, the more you hear it, the more you understand.”

“I’m not fluent, but I'm definitely getting there.”

“Choka, Lady Dude,” Ripley giggled, throwing a little shaka at her with her hand. “I wasn't so sure it’d be easy to make friends here after leaving my life in Crestwood Hollow behind, but I’m glad Leo met you, so I could too.” She beamed fondly before opening a gate and stepping into the farm.

“So what do we do here?”

Aurora’s heart was simply about to burst.

She didn’t have siblings, she didn’t even have a proper family, and yet in that moment she wanted to protect Ripley with the tenacity of an older sister. Something about the girl’s pure heart and vibrant spirit she wanted to bottle up and hold close to her, preventing anyone from sullying her view of the world. With a warm smile, she guided the younger girl to the back of the farm where the flower boxes sat, grabbing two watering pails on their way. Now away from prying eyes, she lowered the hood of her sweatshirt, revealing her soft copper curls.

“Well, our job is to water the plants and herbs that grow here.” She motioned towards the rose bushes, tulips, and peonies, as well as the baby’s breath and greenery. “These flowers specifically are for the Senior dance. Later this week we’ll pick the best ones and hand them off to be used for corsages, boutonnieres, and centerpieces.” Aurora explained, filling up the pails and handing one to Ripley.

The girl nodded along, listening to Aurora’s instructions before taking the pail. A mischievous smile crossed over her thin face as she locked eyes with the older girl, lips pursed like a cat who had just caught a mouse.

“So who’s lucky enough to escort your beautiful self to the dance?” Ripley asked, batting her long eyelashes at Aurora, “Anyone I know, hmm?”

The redhead bit her lip, instantly brought back to her night in the tent with Lorcán, his half asleep mention of bringing someone to the dance at the forefront of her thoughts. Did he mean her? Did he mean someone else? She still didn’t know.

“You’re very sweet, but I currently don’t have a date.” She revealed, pouring copious amounts of water over the rose bushes to make sure they were well tended to. Especially after the Rory incident the other day, she wasn’t eager to rush and find someone to go with. “I’m just planning on going with friends right now. It’ll be a great time… I still have to figure out what I’m wearing though.”

“You don’t have a date?” Ripley replied stunned as she failed to stop her watering can from pouring, only realizing after her feet began to get wet. “I can kick his ass for you, Aurora.” Ripley mimed, exaggerated outrage coming over the girl.

“Ripley, language,” The older girl chided, and yet, raised a brow inquisitively. “But whose ass are we kicking, just so we’re clear?”

“You should get a revenge fit, something in either blue to make your eyes pop, or maybe a green that accents that gorgeous hair of yours.” Ripley smiled deviously, “Make that water-logged cousin of mine rue the day he didn’t ask you to the dance.”

She shook her head again in disbelief that Lorcán hadn't asked Aurora to the dance.

“Rue, Aurora! Rue!” She repeated, her volume starting to draw a few unwanted eyes before cracking another smile, “Are you going dress shopping on the mainland?”

Aurora couldn’t help but roll her eyes playfully. Just when she thought she was safe from being questioned about her relationship with Lorcán, Ripley was seemingly joining the chorus. “Look, I don’t know what kind of nonsense Sassy Cassy has been feeding you, but your cousin and I are just friends.” She explained, keeping her voice low, unlike the younger girl. But as the words left her mouth, she questioned herself again.

Someone you love.

Were they just friends?

Letting the thought wash away, she continued to water the flowers, making sure the peonies got enough before her pail grew empty. At the mention of the mainland though, she tensed. Especially given what had just happened to Triton, as well as her experience during the trial, the redhead was hesitant about making the trip. “We’ll see, I’ll only go if the rest of my teammates do. If not, I’m sure someone has to have a dress laying around here that I can borrow.”

“You should ask Aunt Tori, it might be some sort of 80’s fit, but what’s old is new again.” Ripley offered while mirroring Aurora's actions.

“Purple would also look good on you,” The younger girl suggested, “A little black dress would knock him on his a-” She paused, smiling widely before stating. “Tush.”

The redhead hadn’t considered asking Tori, didn’t even think it was an option. She raised a brow, “You really think she would lend me something?” She inquired, not sure whether Ripley was being serious or not. Tori may have been Myotis’ Faculty Representative, but she was also Lorcán’s mother, and she didn’t want to overstep. But quickly, she shook her head, “Beggars can’t be choosers, I’ll just be happy if I end up with a dress that fits.”

Emptying what remained in her watering can on the tulips, Aurora walked over to the younger girl and took her pail from her, following suit. “There, your first community contribution is complete.” She set down the twin containers next to the flower box and put back up her hood, gesturing for Ripley to follow. “Where’s your first class? I’ll walk you.”

“Of course she would,” Ripley nodded eagerly, “Uh, my first class is History of Hyperhuman Development, I know it’s in the Quadrangle, I think it’s with a Mr. Strum?” She added scratching her head.

“I feel like it's going to be a hard class first thing in the morning,” Ripley continued, miming a sleeping pose with a small giggle.

“Can't wait to be a University student, you guys get all the fun.”

Aurora’s previous smile fell at her words, once again innocent and well meaning, but she plastered a fake one on before the younger girl could notice.

“Yeah, you could say that. Let’s get you to class, Ripley.”
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Hidden 5 mos ago 5 mos ago Post by Lord Wraith
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Lord Wraith Actually Three Otters in a Trenchcoat

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________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Location: The Northern Forest - Dundas Island, Pacific Ocean
Take On Me #3.004: Monster
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Interaction(s): None
Previously: I Want More

Brush and leaves snapped beneath Lorcán’s feet while his flip-flops slapped along the forest floor. Rothschild had landed upon entering the thicket, opting to run along the ground beneath the overgrowth rather than try to navigate the reaching branches that were twisted together. A shimmer of pale white in the distance was all the encouragement that Lorcán needed while he kept moving forward.

The North Western tip of Dundas Island was generally left alone by the school, its faculty and students alike. Pacific Royal had no buildings or structures out this direction, partly due to the nearing proximity to the former Black Site on the neighbouring Zayas Island.

The forest on the Eastern side of the island and towards the center of Dundas was vibrantly green, inviting and warm, like something out of a fairy tale, it beckoned students forth to climb her trees and sit under her branches. But here, the forest was almost cold, the sun barely able to penetrate the thick canopy overhead leaving the ground covered in damp and dead leaves that squished under feet while small trees struggled to grow. Stumps gnawed down by local wildlife dotted the various clearings while branches were snapped from trunks. Scratches covered the bark, and the deeper into the untravelled forest he went, the more Lorcán noticed buzzing hives decorating the higher branches.

A sticky combination of sap and a putrid form of honey from the hives dripped down the trees attracting the occasional fly and trapping the oblivious insects in the amber substance. Spider webs filled the nearby branches, the lazy predators taking advantage of the unintentional bait left by the hives hidden amongst the gaunt, finger-like branches reaching down from above.

Beside Lorcán, Rothschild dropped low to the ground, the border collie adopting a stalking position. The dog’s hackles rose rigidly like a dorsal fin. His nose began to sniff rapidly, his lip curling upwards, exposing his long, curved canines while Rothschild’s caramel-coloured eyes started to glow like a macabre sunset.

Gone were the glimpses of snow-white fur, and the subtle glow of the stag. Instead, Lorcán felt trapped by a creeping darkness, like something was clawing at his soul, desperate to drag him through the forest floor. Branches seemingly snapped in all directions and for the first time, Lorcán’s eyes were drawing to the thick vines that snaked along the forest’s floor and wrapped around the creaking trees.

Rothschild barked suddenly, a growl filling the throat of the dog. The nose echoed through the trees but not a single creature stirred. The forest had fallen into an unnatural hush the further the pair had travelled into it. Even the insects above had stopped buzzing, retreating to their hives as the shadows seemed to grow darker and darker.

♫ ♫ If you like Piña Coladas! And getting caught in the rain! ♫ ♫

Lorcán nearly jumped out of his skin as the music started to ring from his pocket. He almost forgot he grabbed his phone while chasing after Rothschild. The dog in question let out a quick bark as if to scold Lorcán who scrambled to dig the device out of his pocket.

♫ ♫ If you’re not into yoga! If you’ve got half a brain! ♫ ♫

Finally getting the device out, Lorcán quickly ran his thumb over the screen before holding the device up to his chin on speaker.

“Hel-”

“You didn’t ask Aurora to the dance!” A voice belonging to none other than his cousin, Ripley Jones screamed from the other side of the phone.

“Brah,” Lorcán replied, his heart still racing, “She told the bro she didn’t want to go with anyone, I’m trying to respect that.” He answered, “Besides, I told her I wanted to take her and she didn’t say anything, so I let the tide take it back out to sea.”

“You’re a moron.” Ripley deadpanned, “If she didn’t answer you, you didn’t ask it correctly and knowing you, you probably danced around it and then said something in your bro speak that only Rory would understand! So unless you’re planning on taking Rory to the dance, I suggest you spit it out in English!”

“Lady Dude knows how I feel about her, we don’t need to make a big deal of going together” He argued, his eyes still watching the treeline while Ripley’s voice echoed through the deadened woods. “She’ll save me a dance,”

“Yeah, she’d save you a dance on her wedding day too,” Ripley snapped back, “Doesn’t mean you get the girl! If you ever want Aurora to be more than a friend, then you need to COM-MUN-I-CATE!”

Rothschild yipped beside Lorcán seemingly in agreement with Ripley, prompting a raised eyebrow from the young man. He shook his head, nearly rolling his eyes as his little cousin berated him for his inability to tell Aurora how he felt. But didn't he? That night before the trial, in the tent? In a guilt-driven state, did he not lay his cards bare on the table and Aurora basically had picked up the deck and put it away. She either didn’t share his feelings or didn’t want to acknowledge them, neither boded well with asking her to dance, let alone anything more than that.

Lorcan’s thoughts were brought back to his surroundings as his phone suddenly vibrated, the ongoing call temporarily covered by text from Cass.

CASSANDER CHARON SAID: C’mon man, srsly? Rippers said you still haven’t asked Rora to the dance?!?!?
“Really?” Lorcán interrupted Ripley as he read the message, “You brought Cass into this?”

“I did!” Ripley retorted proudly, “Figured if both of us are, then you’ll fix this, Leo!”

“Don’t you have class?”

“This is more important, I like Aurora, don’t mess this up!”

“I obviously like her too!” Lorcán snapped back before the call suddenly dropped. He looked at his phone with a furrowed brow before out of the corner of his eye watching Rothschild’s hackles rise again.

The ground beneath his feet suddenly shook as the canopy above began to sway. Rothschild alternated between barking and growling, slowly rising up into the air, his eyes glowing a defiant crimson.

A roar echoed through the words in response and Lorcán was suddenly tossed across the clearing.
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Hidden 5 mos ago Post by Qia
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Qia A Little Weasel

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Her world was an expanse of unrelenting darkness, a void where even the faintest glimmer of light dared not venture. Suspended in this nothingness, she stood motionless, her hands outstretched before her, seeking the warmth of visibility but finding none. Her eyes, wide open in a futile defiance, perceived nothing but the enveloping black. A silent scream began to echo within her, a crescendo of panic that filled the vast emptiness cradling her isolated existence.

Breathing shallowly, her whispers seemed loud in the silence that stretched on without end. The stillness was absolute, a canvas awaiting a stroke of sound. And then, it came—a whisper, soft and fleeting, like the touch of a ghost against her skin.

"Har-r-per."

A lullaby woven from memories of safety and warmth. It was unmistakably her mother's voice, yet it bore the weight of distance, a haunting reverberation from a place unseen.

"Harper, where… are…. you?" Another voice joined, this one heavy with concern, her father's voice reaching out from the depths of the shadows, a beacon of worry tinged with a longing that spoke of unspoken fears.

A single tear, born of uncertainty and fear, traced a path down her cheek as she reached blindly into the abyss, her fingers grasping at the thick air. A shiver travelled down her spine, a silent omen of the dread that was beginning to take hold. She turned slowly, her movements hesitant, as she sought the sources of the voices that seemed to call to her from beyond the veil.

"Help… me," came a fragile plea, quivering with the vulnerability of a soul laid bare. It was Sierra's voice, a tremulous whisper that seemed to trail from a place just out of reach.

They were all out of reach. Unseen.

With a sudden jerk, she turned, hoping to pierce the darkness that clung to her like a second skin. The voices wove a complex web around her, a symphony of sound that beckoned her deeper into the enigma of the unknown. She took a step, then another, each footfall sinking into a ground that grew increasingly yielding, threatening to swallow her whole.

The chill of water caressed her ankles now, a jarring intrusion in the blindness that had become her reality. She looked down instinctively, her gaze desperate to penetrate the darkness, but it revealed nothing but the night itself. The water, a silent and insidious predator, continued its steady ascent, now claiming her knees, then her waist, as the voices around her swelled into a chorus of despair.

"Harper, don't… leave…. us," her mother's voice broke.

"We… need… you," her father's voice wove into the lament, each syllable a pulse of raw pain.

The water now cradled her chest, an icy embrace that advanced without mercy. She struggled for air, her lungs straining against the relentless tide. She gasped, and choked, the water's bitter chill invading her being, a flood of despair.

"Help...me," Sierra's voice was now a fading spectre, a distant echo being swallowed by the all-consuming void.

Her attempt to cry out was a silent struggle, her voice lost to the waters that now enveloped her completely, pulling her down into the abyss. She was descending, drowning in the depths of her own fear, the darkness constricting around her like a shroud. As her consciousness began to wane, the plea for help was the last tether to a world slipping away.

Help me.

Harper's body catapulted into consciousness, her senses on high alert as she gasped for breath. Her lungs clamoured for air, each inhalation a battle against the invisible remnants of her nightmare that seemed to cling to her very soul. A sheen of sweat blanketed her skin, the visceral terror that had gripped her in the throes of the dream ever so slowly ebbing away. Her eyes, wide with the echo of that fear, darted frantically across the room, which emerged gradually from the shadows, bathed in the silver light of the moon that crept through the window's parting.

The clock on her bedside table blinked a bright, unyielding red—3:07 AM. The night was still in its infancy, and yet, Harper felt as though she had been thrust prematurely into the waking world, robbed of the solace that sleep was meant to provide.

"It was just a nightmare," she whispered to herself, the words a feeble shield against the pounding of her heart. The dream had been a tapestry of darkness and despair, woven with threads of pain and fear so tangible that they seemed to transcend the boundary between dream and reality. The sensation of drowning, of being pulled inexorably into an abyss, clung to her with a persistence that was almost tangible.

Just like before.

But she wasn’t there anymore.

Right?

With trembling hands, Harper drew her knees to her chest and wrapped her arms around them, seeking comfort in the cocoon of her own embrace. She rocked gently, a silent lullaby to soothe the remnants of dread that enveloped her like a shroud. The room was silent, save for the cadence of her laboured breathing, which gradually slowed as she focused on the rhythmic rise and fall of her chest—a metronome guiding her back to the calm shores of reality. Her true reality. She hoped.

The familiar contours of her room took shape in the dim light—the stack of books on her nightstand, the soft drape of the curtains, the gentle outline of her desk in the corner. Each detail was a lifeline, pulling her further from the edge of panic, anchoring her in the here and now.

Yet still, she knew she needed to escape. To find solace in the open expanse of the night once again. What else was she to do?

She reached out, her fingers brushing against the cool surface of her father's sketchbook that lay on the bedside table. The leather cover was worn, the edges frayed from years of use, but to Harper, it was a lifeline. She hadn't found the will to add to her own sketches since the morning of the trial, the images too raw, the emotions too near the surface. But her father's sketchbook was different; it was a connection to a past that felt both distant and comforting, a reminder of times when life was simpler, less fraught with the shadows that now seemed to follow her.

Clutching the sketchbook to her chest, Harper rose from her bed, her movements deliberate and silent. She reached for the well-worn black hoodie draped over her desk chair, its fabric soft from countless washes, and pulled it over her head. The familiar scent of laundry detergent clung to it, a small comfort in the sea of her disquiet. With a deep breath, she approached the door to her bedroom. Her hand rested on the knob for a moment, gathering resolve, before she pushed it open. The hinges gave a faint whisper, a secret shared between the door and its frame, as she slipped through the gap.

The main area of the dormitory was shrouded in shadows, the quiet of early morning hanging heavy in the air. Harper paused, letting the silence envelop her, a brief respite from the echoes of her own thoughts. She felt the plush carpet beneath her feet as she began to move, each step deliberate and soft, a silent dance that carried her away from the room that had become a prison of memories in the last two days.

As Harper emerged from the confines of the dormitory, the night wrapped around her like a comforting shawl. The air was crisp, with a gentle chill that kissed her cheeks and played with the loose strands of her hair.

The parts that remained. The pieces of herself that hadn't been forcibly taken from her.

She slowly made her way to the beach that lay a stone's throw from the school. The moon hung low, a silver orb casting a shimmering path across the water's surface. The rhythmic sound of the waves rolling onto the shore was soothing, each ebb and flow a peaceful sound to her ears.

She wandered along the edge of the water, her footsteps leaving fleeting impressions in the wet sand, until she found a secluded nook, sheltered by the craggy embrace of an ancient rock. There, she nestled into the sand, its cool grains conforming to her form, and she opened the sketchbook—a portal to a world crafted by her father's hand.

The pages were a gallery of his soul, each drawing a silent narrative captured in lines and shadows. Harper traced the contours of the sketches, her touch a bridge across time and space, connecting her to the man whose essence lived on through these strokes of charcoal and ink. The images were a mosaic of memories, each one a snapshot of life's fleeting joys—before the trials that had upended her world, before the nightmares that now haunted her sleep.

Yet, this night, the solace that her father's art usually provided seemed just beyond her grasp. The comfort she sought was muffled by the din of grief and fear that weighed upon her heart, a heavy shroud that threatened to pull her under, much like the relentless tide in her dreams.

Time seemed to stand still as Harper sat there, her gaze lost in the vastness of the ocean now. The constellations above were stories written in the stars, tales of heroes and monsters, of love and loss. She sought their wisdom, their eternal calm, as the tumult within her continued to wage its silent war.

Help me.




Harper’s return to the dormitory was like stepping back into a world that was both intimately familiar and strangely alien. The silence enveloped her, a tangible presence that seemed to press against her skin. She moved through the room, her steps careful and measured, avoiding the mirror by the door as if it were an omen. Its surface, a reflective pool of truths she wasn’t ready to face, remained unchallenged in the corner of her vision.

Her attention was drawn inexorably to the dresser, where her lifeline to the outside world—a smartphone—lay dormant. Its screen, a rectangle of faint light in the shadowed room, beckoned. Harper approached, her hand outstretched, the coolness of the wood beneath her fingers grounding her. She picked up the phone, its weight familiar and reassuring in her palm.

With a practiced motion, she unlocked the phone. The screen came to life, casting a soft glow that painted her features brightly against the darkness. Her thumb hovered, a hesitant bird over the list of contacts, each name a chapter of her life. But there was only one name that mattered now, the one marked with a dire warning: For Emergencies Only. I mean it, Rat!

Her heart thudded in her chest, a drumbeat of hesitation, but the urgency of the moment propelled her forward. She pressed the call button, her breath catching as the phone began to ring. Once, twice, the sound seemed to fill the room, a countdown to a conversation she both dreaded and needed. But not like this.

Then, connection.

A voice began to emerge, a prelude to admonishment, but Harper cut through it with the urgency of her plea.

"I need to see you," Harper interjected, her voice a raw whisper of vulnerability. The words hung in the air, a plea and a command all at once, carrying with them the weight of unspoken fears and the hope for understanding.

Silence stretched on the line, a pause that felt like an eternity. Harper’s breath was a hostage in her lungs, her entire being poised on the edge of anticipation, yearning for a sign that she was not alone.

The response, when it came, was not words, but a sigh—a heavy, laden exhalation that spoke volumes before the line abruptly went dead.


_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Location: Strigidae House - Pacific Royal Campus
Take On Me #3.005:Submerged
___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Interaction(s):I'm at a payphone, trying to call home, all of my change I spent on you
Previously: Livin' on a Wing


There was no way she could do this.

Harper remained motionless, cocooned in her bed, as the first rays of dawn crept through the gaps in the curtains, casting a soft, diffused light across the room. The world outside was waking up; the distant sounds of doors opening and closing, the muffled footsteps of early risers, and the faint voices of her dorm mates starting their day were sounds of normalcy that she now felt disconnected from.

The ceiling above offered no comfort, just a blank canvas where the shadows of her thoughts played out in endless loops. Today marked the beginning of a new term, a return to routines and expectations, to lectures and exams, but for Harper, it was a threshold she felt paralyzed to cross. The very idea of stepping out into the hallways, of mingling with her peers, sent a wave of dread crashing over her, leaving her breathless.

She sat up slowly, her movements languid, as if moving through water. Her fingers, trembling slightly, traced the contours of the scars that marred her face—delicate lines that told a story she wasn't ready to share. The healers had woven their magic, mending what they could, but some wounds were beyond the reach of special abilities. They lingered on her skin, a map of her ordeal, a reminder of the trial that had stripped her of her fragile invincibility.

Harper's reflection was a stranger to her now, the dishevelled hair framing her face like the chaotic thoughts that tangled her mind. Each unevenly cut lock fell without grace, a great contrast to the meticulous, sleek style she had once crafted with such care and that had helped form her reputation since attending P.R.C.U. The difference was not just noticeable—it was a chasm, a departure from the Harper who had walked the halls with an air of untouchable grace.

Now, she felt as wild and unruly on the outside as the animal the trials had almost freed on the inside.

She exhaled deeply, the sound heavy with the weight of realization. Her knees came up to meet her chest, and her arms wrapped around them, forming a barrier between her and the world. Confidence had been her signature, the armour that she wore with pride, but the trials had left it battered and tarnished. Now, she felt as if she were standing on a battlefield, defenceless, her shield in ruins at her feet.

The relentless ticking of the clock was a cruel reminder of time's indifference to her failing pride. 7:45 AM—the numbers glared at her, each tick a nudge, a push toward a reality she wasn't prepared to face. The world outside her door beckoned, a river of students already flowing toward the day's promises and responsibilities. But Harper remained still, a stone in the current, her anxiety an anchor that held her fast.

Her friends, her dear Haven with eyes that had seen too much, they would be waiting, expecting her to emerge, ready to face the day. They had shared their own trials, each carrying their own scars, visible or not.

But the thought of stepping out, of meeting the gazes of those who knew nothing of her pain, was a wall she couldn't scale. Judgment, pity, revulsion—these were the ghosts that haunted her, the ghosts that whispered doubts and fears.

"I can't do this," she admitted to the walls, to the ceiling, to the silent witnesses of her unravelling. The resolve to change, to metamorphose into the person she aspired to be, flickered within her—a lone spark in the oppressive gloom of her doubts. But the path to transformation was shrouded in mist, the steps to reclaiming the scattered fragments of her identity obscured and daunting.

How could she gather the pieces of herself, the shards of confidence and self-assuredness that had once defined her? They seemed like relics of a bygone era, remnants of a persona that had been shattered by the recent trials and tribulations. The chasm between who she was in this moment and who she needed to become felt insurmountable.

It was then that a previously insignificant memory surfaced, unbidden but clear—a teammate, a friend who had once revealed her own struggle with self-image to them all. Not by choice…but.

Harper found she could relate to it, to her, now especially.

With her relentless pursuit of perfection that could never be attained.
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Roman Grumpy Toad / King of Dirt

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G I L E M O R Y G A L A H A D
G I L E M O R Y G A L A H A D

Location: Infirmary Wing - P.R.C.U. Campus
Take On Me #3.006: Pinned like a note in a hospital gown.

Interaction(s): N/A


The first few days were the hardest for Gil, unpicking Orcinus’ handiwork as he rediscovered his newly-fractured mind, lying in a lonely bed in the infirmary ward.

The first night, after delivery to medical staff, he stirred from oblivion into a dim room, his clothes changed, the ground beneath him no longer wet grass but dry and warm bedsheets. He had awoken on the other side of despair and such a sheer acceptance of death that the realisation he had survived was as equal parts disappointment as it was relief. He merely lay in the dark, each breath a freshly laboured agony, and willed himself to slip back beneath the vale of consciousness, whether through sleep or death, each feeling as merciful as the other.



The second day he had woken with a start, his spasmodic jump into wakefulness triggering new pain that only sharpened his mind. The sun was up and activity buzzed lowly beyond the door of his room; he swept his gaze around his fresh surroundings and realised he had been sepulchred in the university’s hospital ward, patched and gauzed and stitched and bandaged and set. He felt the cloying pressure of medical dressings all about his person, and found his lower leg and foot entombed within a cast of their own; a vague recollection of a sharp cracking stomp troubled him briefly before he pushed it out of mind.

Someone had delivered him breakfast, gracefully without stirring him; it was the mug that piqued his interest, finding his mouth sticky and sour with dehydration, despite the saline drip-tube that protruded from his arm. He reached for it, wrapping a careful hand around the ceramic body to gauge how much heat remained in the beverage within, and found it to be enough. Gingerly, steadily, he raised it to his lips and supped deeply; the liquid was earthy and sugary and quenching - greedily, he drained the mug, slaking himself and enjoying the grounding flavour. It was only out of the corner of his eye, the very limits of his periphery, that he noticed movement as he set the mug down, and as Gil turned to look, panic gripped him with ferocity and he reflexively launched the mug with self-sabotaging vigour, his injured body protesting at every inch against the sudden and aggressive movement.

The mug found its mark square and true, and shattered against the silvered glass of the mirror set upon the wall, which shattered in kind from the impact. Splinters criss-crossed across its surface and where there had been just one Gil staring back at him - haggard, maimed, gaunt, and hollow-eyed - there were now scores upon scores, every one a spectre of anguish and hatred.

Lorcán had visited that day for the first time, though he did not find Gil to be a welcoming bedfellow, instead uncharacteristically reticent and withdrawn. Lorcán did not mention the splintered mirror, if indeed he noticed it at all; but the nurse who came in after he’d left removed it without comment or expression, and it was not replaced.



The second night was lonelier than the first, and sleep came no less difficult. With the day bringing the bustle of people to, from, and around his room, he felt their absence that much more keenly in the silvery moonlight. In the midst of paranoia and forlorn isolation, Gil made a decision he'd been warned against by both his medical attendants and his own subconscious: he mustered all the strength he could from the depths of his wounded body, and with desperation for companionship in whatever form, pushed forth a clone. His body protested the effort immediately; his heart rate spiked dangerously and the ECG monitor he was hooked up to raised an alert accordingly. The on-call nurse burst in swiftly, mere minutes later, but was shocked into hesitation by the condition she found her patient in.

Gil was out of bed, arm bleeding where the IV had been ripped out in the fracas, wrestling on the floor with a copy of himself in a medley of skin and bandages.

One of the Gils managed to break away from the melee, attempting to escape the room, but was in no physical condition to do so even without the preceding brawl. Before her very eyes, the copy of Gil began to disintegrate, flaking away at the extremities. Gil himself couldn’t stop screaming about the Him With No Face, about the hateful imposter that needed killing before it could turn the same intention upon him, about the self-produced assassin bent on his destruction.

All the nurse saw, staring into the very-much-there face of a decomposing copy of her patient, was fear in the eyes.

Gil was sedated and returned to bed, and he slept through the third day.



Waking up on the fourth day, Gil found himself fiddling with his phone. There was a swathe of missed calls and unread texts. The university had provided a statement to the Coast Guard and the Canadian Government in the wake of Orcinus' sabotage and attack, the Harbinger's fatal explosion rocking the island naturally drawing the attention of the outside authorities. Much as H.E.L.P. and H.I.T. liked to keep things in-house, there were limits to what they were able to keep to themselves. News of the assault on their campus by Hyperion's Children wasn't well-received, but it was kept out of major news circuits; still readily available to the public, but only found by those who went looking.

Unfortunately for Gil, still fragile physically and mentally, Artie and Elle were people who went looking, and both expressed their concern for his wellbeing through frantic messages and missed phone calls. He stared at his phone screen. Artie was one thing; bitterness rose within Gil, confident to the point of enmity that his agent's only real concern was whether Gil was fit for on-screen appearances. He didn't want to broach whether he even cared about returning to the industry anymore with himself, let alone Arthur.

Elle was a different matter; the previous rose-tinted memories had been replaced with sharper, far nastier images, accompanied by spiteful words and still-tender actual injury. He knew, rationally, that she was truly concerned for his health; but right now, rationality was in short supply, and it was the paranoid abstract that seized him instead, demanding that this was simply a way to finish the job.

He returned no calls, replied to no texts, and ignored any further that came through for the rest of the day. Lorcán returned, but Gil remained taciturn and distant; the visit was shorter than the previous, but no less frustrating for either party, and once again Gil found himself alone and frightened as the sun sank beyond his window.
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Hidden 5 mos ago 5 mos ago Post by Rockette
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Rockette 𝘣𝘦𝘵𝘵𝘦𝘳 𝘵𝘩𝘢𝘯 𝘺𝘰𝘶.

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Charlotte Cahors is young and she is afraid, afraid of a world that will never accept or forgive, afraid of the sleepless nights, afraid of the world that shudders and churns upon the wailing cries of her only daughter. The child barely eight years of age, spun of her likeness with those subtle reminders of her father that Charlotte still yearned for. On whispered promises, he made to return to her, when things were safe, when things made sense, when a mission had been fulfilled and a purpose had been given. Bound to an innate desire better fitted to demented chains that held him to obligations he had long sworn to before she. It is in the arch of her delicate brow, the intensity a child of her years should not have been capable of, and yet when Charlotte looked upon her, she felt everything shift as if the universe bid itself to her chaotic whims of youth. Bright eyes laden in crystalline blue banked with an innocence the world would later seek to destroy.

A child she adored, a child she feared, a child she wanted to save.

She would later cry and weep and scream, cursing a sky where an Almighty reigned, pleading to the heavens for redemption to lay upon her daughter, to spare her for the wrongs the world would do unto her. If only Charlotte knew that a netherworld would instead heed her woes, the darkness of an eternal void already marked upon Amma's soul. All that was, and all that would be, done upon the elegant scripts of two very different letters that would decide the ultimate fate of the harbinger of destruction, the elegant reaper that could've been Beloved and was traded instead for the Unknown.

A monster. A beast. A spawn of circumstances and manipulated chance laden in ash, the crown of bone impaled so deep upon her scalp she would know not where it ended and she began.

The first time such a christening is foretold is in the spires of Rouen: a cathedral that punctures the clouds above, spearing into the gardens of an Eden where once mankind reigned, sanctioned from such a beauty by the mutterings of an ill creature. Under the designated hour of twilight, Charlotte held a child with hair liken to a raven's wing, clung to her for all the hopelessness that bedeviled her life since those pulsating coils of hated scarlet first wreathed her daughter's bearings; eyes aglow, becoming brighter and brighter, almost laden in silver for all the strength that spun from delicate hands suddenly there and then not.

Ushered within, hushed mutterings of prayer and thankfulness as the vestibule yawned forth into eternal darkness speckled in small flames of lit candelabras encumbered by wax, almost skeletal and perverse and lain upon iron wrought in peculiar patterns. She mutters her worries in French, her accent reminiscent of a delicate hope that dubbed her as both Mother and Protector and Darling. Among the ivory of her skirts, Amma Cahors peers eyes wide and high, the arched ceiling giving way to bell tolls that mark the hour, gilded pillars tarnished by time, the interior a herald of the lost age when many gathered in prayer and worship. Led by a man donned in ebony robes they came upon a dias, the structure inlaid with obsidian and stone, plaster conformed to the lustre of volcanic glass to depict plunging angels that heralded many wings and eyes, the flickering fires abound cast them aglow.

Words are interchanged in hushed, panicked lapses, the manic fluttering of once simplistic gestures now as if wounded fletchings, a peculiar ring flashing there, twisted bronze and golds, the child that was Amma often looked upon its malformed design, noting that such was an all-seeing globe that was set with a precious jewel of red. Here her mother was strained and taut, the ridge of her stare a tumultuous breadth of fated nature raked over the world, peculiar starbursts lain in those eyes, wreathed in the cosmos of an all-seeing being.

Stars rose and fell in the encompassing stare of Charlotte Cahors, perhaps more unsettling than the wealth of power in her daughter's crippling gaze. She had stars in her eyes and the world in her hands, as once whispered to her by a philosophical man that saw both beginning and end in her damning gaze.

And lo, before them, anchored into the dias was a pool of rippling sapphire that lapped away at edges of gold, the slight depths bisected by a sliver of cerulean. Bidden closer, both mother and daughter looked unto those churning blues, and there in the flash of color, a marring whorl of black, something almost unseen and indiscernible if not for the eyes beholden to Charlotte to see and know All. In rushed whispers, she asks:

What is this?

A purposeful pause, a hidden signal, a wreath of black as more robed figures gather - a hush of a hymn vibrated down to her bones.

A cure, a means to see your child saved.
In the world we reign; in the world we live.
There is no room for false gods.
There is no room for a defiler --
you want to save her, do you not?


Charlotte stills, head panned down low, a glare that her daughter knew as both stern and wrathful. She quickly claims they were mistaken, that her daughter was no foretold wretch of this life. She was merely a child, and she was a mother only wanting to keep her safe, to seek the means to allow her the gift of happiness owed to her. They simply laugh.
It happens too quickly, it happens too fast. A mother torn away from her daughter, screams of horrid pain impaled upon this hour of hellish twilight, a trembling hand reaching and seeking and clawing for her precious babe. A child that wails, hands manacled and bruised upon her delicate arms, pale skin bloomed with fresh violets as she is dragged forward. Nails splinter, bones break, a terrifying cry that rings through the cavernous spires looming above. Above her crown, windows lain with stained glass, a myriad of colors blooming red and then silver, as the hour betwixt dawn and dusk reigned true. The glass splinters, cracks, it falls plink by plink by plink until --

Cherub bearings turned demented with rage, a screech of defiance and fury, tiny hands turning inward, slicing scarlet smiles into her palms, mouths gaped wide on the feral screams that tore asunder through her body beholden to fear. Amma screams and she screams and the world answers on drones of terrifying manifest, it explodes, the belfry of this cathedral shudders and trembles, wood and stone bellow and crack, flesh peels upon the herald of crimson whips of power that challenges the very heavens above. Fissures of silver reap and tear and pillage through bone and blood and eyes turn yonder in prayer as Charlotte grabs her child and runs.

She runs for what seems like eternity, she runs and weeps and falls to the earth, she laments over her daughter and the cruelty of the world that would don her the unworthy and the forsaken.

Chaos is many things. It is an awakening of disorder that existed long before the mundane, it is the reign and herald of something that the world has never forgotten but also refused to acknowledge. It is the unknown and the in-between, the void of life and death, the void of total disorder that gleams red upon pale skin that would later be defiled by many, many scars.

At the feet of Amma Cahors, where her hands weep blood, flowers of pulsating ruby cores suddenly bloom.

It's only a couple of years later that Charlotte Cahors loses her daughter to all the fears and woe she tried so desperately to save her from.


_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Location: Infirmary Wing: Solitary Confinement - P.R.C.U. Campus.
Take On Me #3.007: reflection.
_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Interaction(s): &&
Previously: devour.

A flower. But not a flower. The grass wet beneath her palms, dirt on her nails, and the sky above bearing down upon her.
Was it real?
Did all of that happen?

The simulation ends and Amma Cahors falls to her knees, once, twice -- again and again, breath caught betwixt her bruised and battered lungs. Every cinch of bone turned inward to impale against her erratic heart. Harsh pants rip away from her bloodied lips, slivers of bone impaling into her pout as she struggles to summon control into her waking world. Manic eyes of a horrid blue flash back and forth, upon every member of Blackjack -- she tacks each of them, rakes her intense glare through every pass of flesh and bruise and blood. Alive. Real. Maybe.

Or she was just dead.

"Who."

It was a declaration of malice, hate, of an untamed nature that simmered long and cold betwixt broken ribs, it was a bidden christening of the demented monarch, the coronation of the damned beast that rose with a crown laden of bone and blood and hate.

"Was it you." She hisses, eyes fell upon Calli, and then Harper, her lashes fluttering on erratic pulses as whorls of red pulsated against her quivering hands.

"No.. No. Who did this. Who --"

Sparks of dreaded carmine pulsated in threatening strikes upon her arms and hands, nails sunk deep into soil and rock, fingers arched and chest heaved with her quickening breath, eyes of a netherworld peeled wide on tides of a storm, a hellacious act of nature that burned and writhed and punctuated through every twitch of wailing muscle as Amma roared. She needed to get it out- she had to get it out. Needles from long ago pricked her skin, laying upon her flesh, and drove down to the sinew and marrow until burning hate was pumped directly into her soul.

"Get It Out!" Amma snaps, teeth bared, a wild animal stricken in blood loss and panic, her strength ebbing into disarrayed cords that slid around her throat, choking her cries, writhing against her tongue and stricken upon her teeth as fangs that pried her lips agape with each screech that peeled away from her heaving chest. A manic peel of laughter sundered from those bloodied lips capped in violets and sapphires and black, the grin that curled over her wounded cheeks split wide liken to a fiendish cheshire.

"They wanted to punish me for the life I spared. She said she could help me find her if I let her go! She said she had a sister. Baxter. I know I asked for it, I know I wanted it. Instead - they gave me to Hell! I didn't ask for this."

Somewhere she hears the call for sedatives and within the bedlam of her shattered spirit, Amma's heart splinters and crumbles away into dread, a choked gasp sputters from her lips, lashes peeling wide before her body suddenly goes limp, her entire frame broken and bleeding, wounds freshly irritated and exposing the lining of scars over the entirety of her body; the horrors of her past on a sickening display.

Upon the earth, she lays as a fractured doll, porcelain defiled by death and blood; a begone weapon forsaken in this life, and then the next, the means and her purpose warped and shredded.

Discarded and broken.


_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________


Amma Cahors was condemned to solitary confinement under the disguise of demanding to allow her wounds to heal; treatments were sparse and erratic, attention for critical medical applications spared for others, she thought she heard the staff mention Gil at one interval -- punctured, broken, bleeding. Dying. However, she phases in and out of reality, arms free from restraint after twenty-four hours of powerful sedatives to quell the compelling summon of HZEs that had continued to crawl across her skin in fiendish lines of black. After a series of various psychological evaluations, she was scheduled for release in the coming days, pending that she no longer attempted to flee. The first night had been a testament to the incredible power lain within, the walls of her room still held the scars of her wrath, the ceiling eternally marred and the floor splintered and jagged. A message had been left for her by Torres not long after, a cryptic missive and subtle demand that she comply with the school and rest well in preparations for the sparring matches to come. A reputation was to be held, and nothing less would be accepted.

They still demanded Tiamat- Amma promised she would receive it.

She rested now, as much as her body would allow, carefully plucking away at the bandages coiled of her wrists and arms, bruises fading into bisque edges, deeply seeded hues of purple and blue heralding over her flesh, beset by intense blemishes of red where the most powerful of blows had fallen. And there, upon her chest, the most devastating of wounds to behold where healers had attempted to still the remnants of death that had corroded muscle and tissue, where once a moth had been inked over her heart, wings displayed and proud and bright and beautiful. The testament of art that had been commissioned to regain a sense of self, to one day seek light and life in the dark, to hold over her own life as her own, which was now torn and jagged with a hideous scar. Amma studied it often and carefully, pulling away at the shirt given to her in exchange for a traditional gown, it pulsed and throbbed with her heart, an eternal reminder of the trials endured.

To the simulated life she had taken.

She had made a simplistic request to board the ferry at a later time, to purchase new clothing and certain supplies, which had been hastily delivered, and then answered with denial, claiming that Amma required a chaperone or guard until she completed a series of delegated therapy sessions. Such assignments had been seamlessly blended into her newly given curriculum, of such Amma could not be bothered with, not as she thought and pondered about her place here. P.R.C.U tried, it did, it attempted to welcome her as a normal girl, one burdened with power, one given a critical label, one that the faculty deemed themselves wary of but still a girl.

If only they knew.

Amma breathed in deep, ribs protesting against the stress of her actions, every follicle of nerve shorn and sensitive, firing signals of warning down every plane of skin exposed as she pulled away at her bindings. Pain was not new to her and neither was the aching sluggishness of healing, she grew up upon the finer knowledge of pain and the breadth of life that saw every scar anew with the summon of her powers that often linked into her back or postured over her arms. Though her many embellishments hid their truth, it could not entirely distract away from the simple nature that Amma was subjected to torture and experimentation for over an entire decade. A truth that had been revealed during their manipulated trial and the realization that even the most sterile of domiciles contained the most heinous of sins. Amma knew of the cruelty of this individual dubbed Hyperion and the remaining disciples that had bid themselves under the rule of this rumored Harbinger that had trapped them within that hellish realm from her nightmares. A group she knew nothing of besides the whispering of the healers and nurses that bustled outside her fortified door that she knew was guarded carefully not by just one, but two individuals.

The phone call she had received only just a few nights before resurfaces as a vague memory.

She carefully rips away one bandage, then another, gauze peeled and shredded, congealed lines of red against her trembling arms, the unbidden tremors coiling away into her scarred palms.

Did she even belong here anymore?
If she ever did.

Amma stares down upon the lines of fate and heart, disfigured by the myriad of scars crossing over one another in silver slivers of a horrid tale, one she refused to share. She splayed her fingers wide, listening to the grinding pop of her bones, her nails broken, her quivering gestures unable to be quelled as she stared and stared. Hands of the reaper, hands of the woeful, hands of a beast that had attacked two of her teammates. She still feels the flayed skin of her beneath her touch, she still feels the softness of feathers sweeping through her palms, she still feels the thread of power that she had given to another, she still feels the clutch of a clove cigarette shared before a quiet and innocent flame, she still feels the bloodied skin of him as she begged and pleaded to be slain.

She feels everything and wishes she could forget.

She knows, without a flicker of doubt, that she does not belong here. Amma knows this and clenches those hands tight, palms them through her hair, and shields them over her eyes as the hopeless dregs of reality tug and pull upon her limbs and the threaded strings woven within a hellish medley over her heart. She once denied Torres that she would return, that she would not go back, it was her Will, her Truth, her Conviction, and now it remained shredded and bloodied at her feet liken to pools of crimson hate that followed Amma through her waking world -- within and without.

She tells herself that she doesn't care. She tells herself that it doesn't matter. For she is selfish, she knows she is vain and stricken with sins of wrath and greed and lust. She whispers unto herself over and over and over again: I am the monster you all want, the answer to all the wrongs and all the things lost, I am the creature you fear and the one you envy - I am me. I am The Foundation.

Amma Cahors knows that freedom is often lost and fleeting, and hers was slowly coming to an end.
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Hidden 5 mos ago 5 mos ago Post by Skai
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Skai Bean Queen

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Three Days Ago ...

The first step into the fresh air of the plateau was as sweet as it was bitter. She refused the first medic's offer of help out of her own stubbornness, instead allowing Harper to be taken away. Although she was worse off than Harper, Haven was too busy searching the chaos of the site for a particular head of black walnut hair and sky blue eyes.

She held her breath as she tallied each familiar face within the crowd. Her teammates, shocked and injured, were all out of the walls. Most of them already being tended to, and yet Haven did not feel relief-- not even when she saw Aurora's autumn hair-- until her eyes found Rory among them.

"Rory." The relief and desperation held within her croaking voice carried through the noise of the camp like a feather in the wind.

She took a step towards him, another wave of exhaustion passing through her muscles as the relief settled into her bones. He's alive. He's okay. The cuts that marred his skin and suit alarmed her, but she didn't care for how they had come to be or what had caused them. Not when he was standing there searching for her too. Not when she felt her knees grow weak as those clear eyes found hers.

She reached towards him with shaking hands, holding onto her strength for just a moment longer as he approached. The moment he was near, she allowed herself to collapse into his arms. She let herself sink onto the grass with him, unaware of her limp wings slumping against the grass behind her. He was here. He was safe.

If she had any tears left to shed, she would have wept again. She looked at him with red rimmed, puffy eyes and tried to convey the words she couldn't utter aloud with the emotion swelling behind them. They were both out. They were both okay.

Rory barely registered the pain as he jogged to Haven and wrapped her in his arms, going down to the ground with her as he squeezed with all his might. She was far worse off than he was, and that stung more than the feeling of air on the cuts across his body. His thoughts were a fog, and it was still hard to tell what was real and what wasn’t anymore. But in this moment, the only thing he cared about was that Haven was safe and in his arms. He didn’t make much sound, instead moving a hand to her hair to hold her close, his thumb gently rubbing the back of her head as he tried to catch his breath. It felt like he hadn’t breathed in hours.

He held her for a moment, before he could finally find words or a voice. He had seen the injuries, especially to her wings, from a mile away. As he broke the tight embrace, he slid a hand down her arm and to her hand to hold it. His eyes were red, threatening to water and tear up. But he smiled softly as he looked Haven over. ”I’m… I…” As per usual, words were lost on him again. He wanted to apologize, and he wanted to ask what happened. He wanted to know what had happened to her. He wanted to know who was responsible. He wanted to know if it was the person who left him injured.

But most importantly, he wanted her to be safe and ok.

That didn’t mean he couldn’t be a little apologetic.

”Ok… next time, we’re not splitting up.” He seemed more on the verge of tears as he tried to crack a small grin, doing his best to make light of whatever Hell they had just experienced. He closed his eyes, swallowed, and focused to keep himself from breaking down. Breaking down into tears was what showers were for. For now, he had to stay strong. ”Have the healers checked you out yet?”

Haven had buried her face in Rory’s neck the moment he held her to him. His gentle swirls against the back of her head soothing any pain she may have felt by his tight embrace. This pain was welcome. His arms had become a refuge for her to take shelter within. Her own safe haven from the storm that remained after the torment within the trial.

Her eyes moved over the many cuts on his body as he pulled back from her. She needed to see every mark closely, ensuring none had cut too deep. Something about them seemed too familiar, and she felt a question rising from within as she looked into his eyes again. The tears welling in his sky blue eyes left her speechless. Her heart twisted in her chest and she offered comfort with a squeeze of his hand as he seemed to struggle for words. It was obvious that he had questions too.

Haven found herself willing to answer anything he asked. The heartbreak of reliving what she’d gone through was a price she was willing to pay to know what hell Rory had seen. She’d tell him everything he needed to know; about her pain, about her history, about her grief. She’d give herself over completely if only to keep him by her side.

In classic Rory fashion, the brave man tried to make a joke. Haven could only nod in response, her brows lifting as she tried to return his sad grin with her own. She lifted her free hand to his cheek as he fought the tears she knew he would let fall when he was alone. Her thumb delicately ran over his cheekbone, hoping to let him know that it was okay to cry with her there.

She shook her head as he looked at her again, her hand falling to press against his chest where his heart beat beneath her palm. “I had to make sure you were okay first.”

She looked between his eyes, running her tongue over her dry lips so she could make her words clear as she spoke them. “I kept worrying about you. The simulation told me you all were going to die.” Her eyes fell to his chest where she could physically feel his life beating against her skin, letting the rhythm soothe her. “It almost killed me.”

Rory squeezed Haven's hand back, his tears abated a little by a new emotion stirring deep in his chest: anger. Though, even that was dulled by the relief that everyone had made it out alive. ”I… think it did that with all of us. The simulation wanted me to choose…” His words trailed off. The end of that sentence wasn't pleasant, and he didn't want Haven to know what he had chosen quite yet. He shook his head, taking a deep breath. ”I… I'm just glad we all made it out alive.”

Haven lifted his hand to her lips and placed a gentle kiss against one of his many cuts. “We can talk about it later… when we’re ready.” Her lips spread into a sad smile.

A healer approached to their left, allowing them each a moment to shake the horror from their minds. Haven didn’t protest when they offered to heal Rory first, even if Rory tried to himself. She knew her injuries would take the longest between the two of them. Her hand did not leave Rory’s despite it, choosing to lay on the grass beside him to give her sore body a break.

With Rory patched up, Haven closed her eyes as the healer moved onto her. She had just begun to relax for the first time in hours when she heard them. Jim’s signature bow-legged footsteps along with two foreign. Her body seized the moment she opened her eyes to see the Foundation representative towering over her, the memories of the simulation mixing with what she saw now. Her hand tightening around Rory’s was the only physical signal she gave to suggest she was in distress.

Torres couldn’t know the fear that Haven felt looking at her. She wouldn’t give her the satisfaction. Even if the representative’s lips weren’t moving, Haven could hear the sneer clearly within her head. It rang through her.

Sub-class.

It was the only reason she let Rory slip from her fingers. Even still, Haven watched the group like a hawk as they took him into the Minotaur. Her eyes didn’t leave the vehicle once. Not even when she refused to let the healer work on her wings. She could hear their laboured breathing. Her other injuries had already taken a toll on their store of HZE’s, and she couldn’t bear the thought of allowing someone to touch her wings with Torres’s towering figure, and the place she’d been sent to by the simulation, haunting her now.

The healer instead chose to move onto her various bruises and cuts. Her forearms had just begun to look as scarred as they had been before the trial when she saw Jim and Rory exit the minotaur. She heard the words Jim exchanged with him, her curiosity peaking, but she couldn’t wrap her head around the meaning of them. She was too relieved knowing that Rory had made it out of the minotaur unscathed to bother asking as he returned to her.

As Rory returned, he seemed to be a bit lost in thought. He plopped down next to Haven, reaching a hand out to hold hers again as he stared off into the middle distance. He didn't want to believe it… Jim and Torres were just paranoid. But if they weren't… Rory looked to Haven, and a sharper pain struck his heart than anything the Trials themselves could strike. The thought that someone in Blackjack could have been involved In something like this, or even supported it, felt like a delusion.

But if one of them was…

Rory gave Haven's hand a squeeze as he looked her over, his eyes turning to her wings. His words were soft, as he had an inkling of what could have happened in there. ”Before we head back… can you please have them check your wings? I'll be right here.”

She had a feeling he would mention it the moment she saw his eyes turn to her wings. Her forest eyes glanced between his blues, their pain evident amongst the understanding that shone within them. Her nod of agreement was timid, and yet she still followed through by giving the same nod to the healer. She saw them exchange an appreciative glance with him before she felt their touch upon her feathers. She held onto Rory’s hand like it was a lifeline then, her eyes squeezing shut as she felt those rubber gloves upon her once more. Amma’s ominous curiosity mixed with the memories that flashed through her mind as the healer worked. She imagined a metal table underneath her, but she felt the cool grass grazing her feathers. Instead of the pain of her wings stretched taught, a soothing flow of energy passed through every muscle and barb. The missing feathers would need time to regrow, of course.

At least she wouldn’t have to wait to fly again.

Her eyes fluttered open once the healer finished, immediately searching for Rory, for the comfort he brought her. She allowed her hold on his hand to relax, hoping she hadn’t hurt him with her grip. Her voice, even though it was no longer hoarse, wasn’t more than a whisper when she spoke. “Thank you.”

Rory gave a soft smile and a nod, a throbbing pain coursing through his hand. He didn't mind it, though. If anything, the pain was keeping him from focusing more on Jim's potential assignment. As the healer left the two alone, Rory reclined in the grass for the moment and stared up towards the sky. His words were quiet and calm, his brows furrowed as he searched for the right words. ”After we… you know, get back and shower… I'm not trying to… I don't want to… gah.” He slapped his free palm into his forehead. Words were hard. Requests were hard. Feelings… that might be easier.

With his eyes closed and the back of his hand on his forehead as he desperately clawed for the right words, the weight of everything that had happened grew heavier and tighter on his chest. His voice became weaker and softer. ”I don't want to be alone tonight. Not like a hookup… I just… I don't know.” His voice trailed off.

Haven had taken the moment to stare into the open air above them too. With her mind so clouded, she yearned to jump into that open space and remain there for a while. She needed to forget about the trials, if only for a few hours. Her wings were healed now. They were safe. The one thing that kept her from taking off was her exhaustion, and the man beside her that tugged on her heartstrings as he failed to express himself.

With Rory’s eyes closed, he didn’t notice her move from her place beside him until she was leaning over him. She bent down, placing a gentle kiss on the healed skin of his palm. “I don’t want to be alone either. Maybe not for a while.” She murmured. Her eyes looked over his face, memories shifting from her new nightmares to the night they’d shared. It felt like it had happened ages ago.

“I need to fly for a bit… I need to feel that they’re okay.” She placed a kiss on his cheek this time. “I’ll come over to your dorm later… Promise.”

She promised him because she worried he’d doubt her. The simulated version of Mei’s words still hung over her, as it no doubt hung over him. She needed to prove that it was wrong. She’d already decided what she would do to earn his complete trust in the woods from her past.

A small smile crept on Rory’s lips at the affection and promise. He opened his eyes again, taking her and her healed wings in. She had a way of improving his mood, even after everything. He propped himself up on his elbow and turned towards her, nodding towards the open sky above. ”I’ll leave the window open for you, then… but I think I’m going to lie here for a little longer before heading back. I’ve got some things to think over.”


Interaction: Rory, @Webboysurf



Location: Strigidae Dorms - PRCU
Take on Me: #3.008 Eggs in One Basket

Interaction(s): N/A
Previously: Big Birds Don't Cry


Haven stared at the neatly kept uniform within her closet. Wet droplets fell from her locks and from the tip of her chin onto the soft material of the towel she clutched to her. The uniform sat there as a reminder to her that things were different now. The changes that the Foundation brought with them hung over her head like a hornets nest. Harmless where it clung to it's perch, and yet one shift in the wrong direction and the nest would be alive with malicious intent. Who would it sting first to protect it's survival?

Not only was the school different, but she was too. She no longer felt as if she could breeze through the campus with the ease in which she had before. She was always checking if people were too close to her. Her wings, patchy where her feathers were beginning to regrow, were kept close to her so that they couldn't come within anyone's reach. She no longer proudly stretched them in the sunlight as she walked between Rory's dorm and her own. The instinctual need to keep them close, to keep them safe, was ever present.

She didn't hide the damage done to them. If anyone looked, she stared back. A wild edge to her gaze that dared them to speak of it. The only one who didn't receive her challenge was the only person she felt comfortable to stand beside... or lie beside. Rory's presence had quickly become one of the few places she could relax. His closeness was something she craved. Even when she soared over the island, or when she had sat in her favorite tree to take some time away from the busyness of campus, she wished he was next to her.

It was a feeling she'd never experienced before. The feeling she thought she'd given a name to in the trial. The feeling that could be expressed in three little words. Words that Rory had already spoken to her, in his innocent way, that had not been mentioned since. In some way, she figured they were already expressing these feelings in a different form. It was said in the way they touched each other, the way they comforted each other when their dreams kept them from sleeping, and in the way that Rory left his window open for her each night.

The thought of his open window brought a small smile to her lips as she reached past her uniform and for the green flannel that hung with her casual clothes. She didn't feel ready to share those words with Rory yet. Not with the new changes to the school and the weight of the trial distracting her from which direction her heart was being pulled. They both needed time to sort things out and to settle in to their altered minds before they could make that leap into the unknown.

Careful hands pulled on a black tank top and then the green flannel. Less careful hands then tugged a pair of underwear and jeans up her full hips. She sat on her bed as she adorned her feet with socks. The first time she'd touched the unmade mess since after the bonfire. The only thing she missed about it was it's position in the room and the peace in knowing that she wouldn't whack Rory's face or the dorm wall when she had restless sleep. It had happened one too many times already, but she wasn't about to ask Rory to move his bed for her.

To think that she'd have to spend the day without him already had her feeling on edge. Her gaze drifted towards the printed out class schedule that hung by her calendar. This year was already going to be challenge enough without the weight of the trials on her shoulders. She was on her final year, held back because of poor grades, and she wasn't sure now if she could pull it off. Sitting in classes for hours on end felt like it would drive her wild. One class in particular, shoved into the end of the week to give her team more time to heal, had the hairs on the back of her neck standing tall.

Sparring, Torres.

Haven averted her eyes, hands trembling ever so subtly as they pulled on her sneakers. The memories screamed at her, like the winged woman had screamed, in the back of her mind. Ever present when she was alone. The simulation may have made it up. Her perception of Torres could be warped by her nightmares. Did that mean she could face her without feeling panic bubble up her throat? Rory knew about her fears; about the missing students at the Foundation Institute. He knew that she was terrified that she might disappear too, as irrational of a fear as it seemed. She would go only because her team would be there, because Rory would be there. She knew her friends had her back and that was enough for her to face her fear with them.

Haven shook her wings out behind her as she stood. A poor attempt to shake the memories from her head before she would step out into campus. She grabbed her schoolbag from the desk as she passed it, yet her steps faltered as they reached the door to her room. Her ears listened for movement outside it, and she was met with silence. Her roommates had gone already. She wouldn't have to breeze past their sympathy on her way out.

As she made her usual path through the dorm, back carefully turned towards the wall if she passed any student, she considered knocking on Harper's or Banjo's door. Other than Lorcan and Aurora's sleepover the night of the trail, she hadn't heard anything from her teammates. It was unlike her not to reach out to them. If she hadn't been so engrossed in her own recovery, or in Rory's presence, she would have liked to check in on them. She had to remind herself that they were likely feeling the same way, and that's why they hadn't reached out to her either.

With a soft sigh, Haven continued out into the morning light. It warmed her feathers, and the autumn breeze cooled her skin. She was half tempted to ditch classes to enjoy the weather, yet she knew it would do her no good. She needed to focus this year.

Well, focus about as well as she could with the trials haunting her every step, the Foundation hanging overhead, and no doubt more challenges on the way.

Pacific Royal had never felt more like home, and more like a threat, than it ever had.



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Hidden 5 mos ago Post by Lord Wraith
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Lord Wraith Actually Three Otters in a Trenchcoat

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| Earlier...
The blonde woman sat knelt in the greenhouse. The light of dawn illuminated the panelled structure as she worked away, free of disruptions from new or younger students who hadn’t put the time or care into the immaculate condition of her gardens.

She was lost in her tasks, unaware of the redheaded woman who had entered silently. A task that was not easy given the leather duffle bag swung over her shoulder that nearly spanned the entire length of her torso.

The woman with fire-like hair walked up behind the other, before dropping the duffle bag beside the shorter-haired woman to announce her presence.

“Lucille Calder,” Alyssa started, her tone grim. “Grab your hunting back. We have a Conjunction.”
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Location: The Northern Forest - Dundas Island, Pacific Ocean
Take On Me #3.009: Welcome to the Jungle
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Interaction(s): None
Previously: Monster

| Now
Rothschild’s barking echoed through Lorcán’s spinning head as his eyes opened to the damp ground beneath him. Leaves hung to his hands and knees as he picked himself up, his body outlined in splinters and chunks of wood from the dead tree trunk that exploded upon impact.

A flash of red illuminated the shadowy clearing as Rothschild fought valiantly against the angered creature. The agile dog swooped through the air, before aiming its eye beams towards their assailant.

“That’s new.” Lorcán muttered before turning his own molten irises on the wiry creature that had batted him haplessly like no more than a housefly. It was vaguely human in shape, though easily as tall, if not taller than even Katja. Its torso almost appeared too small for the long, gangly arms and legs that appeared to be made solely of leather-wrapped bones.

Every vein, sinew and tendon underneath the taut skin was visible along its tightly drawn flesh. Its leather-like hide seemingly defied logic with each movement the creature made. Lorcán was expecting the skin to snap at any moment, pulling apart around its joints, but it moved fluidly with each movement, nary a wrinkle in sight. Wispy hair dotted its scalp, while sickly yellow eyes spun around in their sockets, seemingly autonomous of the creature’s head and neck. They swivelled around unnaturally, tracking Rothschild through even the solid bone of their elongated skull.

Rows of needle-like teeth filled its snake-like maw, unhinging as the creature bellowed a horrible noise. A putrid odour unlike the smell of decomposing flesh filled the air as the creature swung its haggard nails through the air against nearly catching Rothschild.

“Hey!” Lorcán called, ignoring the pain in his healing wounds, “Nobody hurts my dog.”

His eyes flared quickly before a flash of flame erupted in front of his face, the blast of flame and heat scalding the creature prompting a screech of pain. It flailed about wildly, charging Lorcán with its gangly, gruesome limbs. Moving to the side, Lorcán tried to escape the creature but his reflexes were still slowed from his injuries.

The creature’s nails dug into Lorcán’s forearm, the layers of decayed keratin splintering and cracking as it ripped his skin open. Searing pain radiated through his arm as the wound almost immediately spewed puss while slivers were left embedded in the mangled flesh.

A sharp inhale whistled through Lorcán’s teeth whilst he cradled his arm to his torso. He stumbled backwards, barely able to move out of the creature’s way were it not for the timely intervention of Rothschild, diving beneath the monster’s legs and taking hold of an ankle. The powered puppy dragged the creature back with all its might, the gnarled claws falling just short of reaching Lorcán.

Focusing his ability, Lorcán summoned a blade of plasma just like he had a thousand times before. Just like Ryan had taught him how to do since the time he was eleven. The hum of electromagnetic feels echoed through the force, harmonizing with the angry buzzing of the bees in the treetops. A snap and a hiss came from his hand as the orange blade came to life before immediately faltering as Lorcán was bowled along the damp forest floor by another blow.

The creature lunged for Lorcán’s chest, its gruesomely nailed hands targeting his chest like it was about to pry his ribs about. It suddenly howled in agony as Rothschild scorched the back of the creature with his eye blasts.

Roaring again, the horrific sound was cut short as a silver blade suddenly shot through its torso. The creature’s chest began to bleed a black ochre-like substance as the blade pulled back. Staggered, the creature stumbled backwards before being pushed further by a dropkick from a blonde-haired woman. The attack created enough space for Lorcán to scramble back to his feet as his eyes came to rest on a familiar pair of women.

Rothschild let out a couple of cheerful yelps before skidding to a landing beside Lorcán as Alyssa Townsend and Lucille Calder moved into action.

“Wendigo, Lucille Calder!”

“I have eyes, Uptown Girl!” Luce retorted, readying her weapon before lunging forward. Her assault was unpredictable, built on maintaining a form that put her in harm’s way almost as often as her attacks were aimed at her opponent. While normally Luce wouldn’t sweat a scrap, she knew better than to let the jagged fingers of the Wendigo so much as graze her skin, let alone its needle-like teeth.

Occupied with Luce’s assault, the wendigo paid no attention to Alyssa who put her hands together. From within her, her liquid metal flowed out through her pores, wrapping around her arms and hands before creating a large blade from her hands. Using her abilities to launch herself into the air, Alyssa swung her weapon hard, the blade cleaving through the creature’s neck before its head rolled along the mossy floor.

“Lorcán!” Luce yelled, “Burn the body, quickly!”

“Aurora?” Lorcán slurred looking at Alyssa, “What are you doing here?” He asked, wiping the quickly forming beads of sweat from his brow. The forest seemed to start spinning around him as Lorcán took another look at the two women.

“Hey, Lady Dude, now that you're here, I was wondering if you’d like to go to the dance with me?” He managed to spit out before his heavy eyelids fell over his molten-colored eyes. His body suddenly went limp and gravity took over.

Then Lorcán hit the forest floor.
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Hidden 5 mos ago 5 mos ago Post by PatientBean
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PatientBean Hi, I'm Barbie. What's up?

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Calli looked around her. Last she checked she was in her dorm room catching herself up for the upcoming week of classes. Instead, she was in some void. It felt unending like an echo that didn't reverberate back. She was dreaming. She had to be. She wasn't back in the Trials. Blackjack got out, though they were worse for wear. She strode forward hoping to come to some exit or identify something so she could ground herself.

It was then she heard the distant footfalls of someone running. Someone making a desperate attempt to get to their goal quickly. Every time she had been here she had been alone with her thoughts, as scary as they were sometimes. No one else was supposed to be here.

The footsteps got closer. Calli started backing away, unsure if the entity was friend or foe, though she knew better than anyone how she was her worst enemy.

The steps slowed down now though they could still be heard and were close. Calli glanced around. She spotted no one.

And then she was flung backward.

Calli landed with a resounding thud. She looked up and saw something forming. Materializing. It was a person. Gradually the form too shape and the entity began to clap. Slowly. Mockingly.

Their face showed with a smirk. The blonde hair fell behind them. A cold, calculating gaze of her own making.

"Hiya sweetheart. Miss me?"

Calli lay there, dumbfounded. It was her. Except this was not the simulation here, though the two were similar. She no longer wore her Foundation suit with the letter F in the middle. Instead, she was dressed in a dark blue shirt with black slacks. She walked forward, glaring down at Calli.

"You shouldn't be here..."

The figure tilted her head in a manner that spoke 'oh you just said something stupid'. "That's not very welcoming, is it? I consider you to be a sister. You had one before but, let's face it, they kind of dropped the ball on the whole sisterhood thing. No pun intended!" She began to laugh at her own joke.

"Seems I'll have to explain. You know that whole voice you had in your head? The one that told you how much of a failure you are? The one who ensured you remembered where you came from and how all your hopes and dreams and desires were basically worthless? How no one liked you and you could never match up to people's expectations? Well, here it is, manifested for your enjoyment! You should count yourself lucky. Not many people get to see their inner voice in person and the ones that do are usually put up in a nice all-white room with a self-hugging jacket. You're not insane!" The figure smiled, gesturing to the 'room' they were in.

"But when I am through with you, you'll wish you were."

Calli stood up quickly and faced her reflection. The other her laughed again. "It is so cute you think you can do anything here. You can't hurt me Calliope. But I can hurt you. Physically. Emotionally. Mentally. Hell, I can probably trigger any part of you at a moment's notice. Let's start with the easy ones."

Soon, the room warped and they were standing in Calli's therapist's office. Except instead of her therapist, the other Calli stood in a new outfit. She now had glasses on and was dressed in a smart red business-like suit. She sat at the desk and Calli felt herself fall back on to the chair she sat in before during many a session. She tried to get up but felt herself forced down, unable to move.

"Banjo. Andrew. Whatever the hell you call him, what's going on there? You literally left him to face his own demons alone. What you're presented with a choice to go alone or together and you choose alone? Some girlfriend. And you are so pushy? Have you once paused to consider maybe he doesn't want to get married or have children? You claim you want to move on from your family but you sure like acting exactly how they want."

Calli desperately wanted to shout how wrong she was...but couldn't. She had been having those exact thoughts. Banjo got hurt. Gil got hurt. The rest of Blackjack was hurt beyond what she knew and she couldn't do anything about it. And how much pressure had she been putting on Banjo? Her own father screamed for perfection and for things to be exactly as 'they should be'. But what did that mean? Wasn't she just falling into the exact roles set up for her? Wasn't she expecting Banjo to follow suit with her? She was so focused on being her own person and being someone other than 'Banjo's girlfriend' that she went to the other extreme without care.

"It's a mess up in here. Not sure how you plan to manage it. Maybe it's better if you just...ended things."

Calli looked up and before she could speak the room shifted again. This time she was on a table in what looked to be an operating room. The other Calli stood there in scrubs and a mask. Gloved hands ready to do....who knows what. Calli attempted to move but she was strapped in.She attempted to speak but couldn't. It was like she was under, prepped for surgery, but could sense everything.

"Don't worry. This isn't real surgery. But it will sure feel like it. Normally surgeons put you under but I thought...why? I want you to feel this. imagine how scared your team felt facing their own trials. Imagine how alone they were. Forced to be there seeing it all and being unable to stop it. That sounds like something. What's the word? Oh right..."

"Helpless."


The other Calli turned her back and grabbed something before she turned back. "Precious Calli doesn't want to feel helpless and yet puts herself in situations where she can't be anything but. You want to be saved. You want to be helped. Princess Calli in her tower waiting for someone to climb up and whisk her away and she is more than willing to hurt anyone that stands in her way. Even her own Prnce Charming. Face it Calli.

You don't have a leg to stand on!"


The other Calli raised her arms, brandishing a large blade before slamming it down on her leg. The same one she lost in the simulation. As it cut through, Calli felt force. Pain. Burning.

And then she woke up.




Calli sat up in bed, gasping for air. She pulled the covers off and felt her leg. It was still there.

Still there.

After the Trials walking took some time. The simulation messed her up so much she truly believed she lost her leg. She had to engage in some physical therapy to help her mind come back from the trauma. And even then, it lingered. She felt tingling often. The healer said it was normal and wouldn't last long, but that didn't make it easy.

She glanced over and saw her roommate was still sound asleep. Calli rubbed her eyes, feeling the sweat that formed on her forehead. She took a few more deep breaths.

That inner voice was ever present and now it got stronger. And its words rang true. She failed. She failed her team. She failed Banjo. She failed herself.

She curled her legs up so her knees met her chin and she laid her head down, knowing she wouldn't be able to fall asleep. Or perhaps too scared to. Either way, she had to get ready soon. Classes started and she needed to put the work in.

But what did it matter? How could she possibly be strong enough to face adversity without losing it like she did?

She felt a headache coming on. Could she really do this?

________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Location: Southern Plateau, Dundas Island - Pacific Royal Campus
Welcome Home #3.010: Deep Breathing
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Interaction(s): Banjo (@Hound55), Gil (@Roman)
Previously: With Family Like This


| Two Days Ago


"So what brings you in today Calliope?" Dr. Trinh asked from her chair. Calliope was tentative taking a step in and she knew Dr. Trinh saw that. She probably made a mental note to add to her file. Ever since her 'nightmare' Calliope had not been herself. She was walking around like she was just a husk. People noticed. She saw them notice.

Calliope kept her hands in her lap, letting her fingers rub over her knuckles to the point of pain. "Isn't it obvious?" she said with venom-laced punctuation. She chastised herself. It wasn't Dr. Trinh's fault and she was here to help.

Still, Dr. Trinh smiled warmly. "I heard about the Trials. For whatever it is worth I am truly sorry you and your team went through that. I cannot possibly imagine what you went through." The words were nice, but even then Calli's hand gripped the knee of the leg she 'lost' in the simulation, almost like her brain was trying to remember if it was there or not.

"What you all went through is incredibly traumatic and no one is expecting any of you to bounce back from it quickly."

Calliope scoffed. "Sure doesn't feel like it. I already need to jump back into classes. And they still expect us to spar and train. I don't...I don't know if I am ready."

Dr. Trinh nodded. "No, I don't expect you are. Nor do I think any of your team members are also. That's the thing about trauma: it doesn't care if you are ready or not. Life moves on regardless and we along with it."

Calli looked up. "So...what? I'm expected to forget it happened and carry on like nothing happened?"

"No, of course not. It would help if you had time to heal and there is no shame in admitting it. My point is that others who do not know what happened will continue to try to push you all forward. I expect the school would like nothing more than to sweep the entire thing under the rug but that is hard to do with large-scale threats. This is going to require more than deep breathing and mindfulness. Trauma can impact multiple parts of you. Physically. Emotionally. Socially."

"Speaking of....how is Andrew?"





| Three Days Ago


Calliope had knocked on the door to Gil’s hospital room and felt stupid after. She opened the door and peered her head in.
“Gil? Are you up for a visit?”
Given the nature of what they had dealt with during the Trials, Calli wanted to be sure Gil’s wishes were respected.

Gil stirred restlessly, turning over in his bed and staring at the door and the head peeking around it longer than he should have without reply.
“Do what you want.” He finally said, morose and apathetic but secretly glad for the distraction and the break to monotony.

Calliope winced. This was not Gil as before but Gil as he is now and, from the sounds of it, it was bad. She moved inside and came around to his bed. He looked….for lack of a better word….powerless. It saddened her greatly that whatever had occurred inside the Trials had twisted him so much so that he no longer was the happy guy she knew before. Granted, was he really like that or was it his actor mask hiding how he really was?

”Hey, obvious question so feel free to answer obviously in kind but, how are you feeling?”
Gil let the question sit while looking pointedly from Calliope, to his casted leg, to the gauze about his person, and back to Calliope.
”Shit. You?” He finally offered, making his best effort at remaining cordial while conscious he was coming up distinctly short.
”Shit.” she said in agreement before she pulled up a chair and sat down. ”I won’t stay long if you don’t want but I wanted to check on you. I am…so sorry Gil. I cannot imagine what you went through.” She took some deep breaths to calm herself lest her emotions get the better of her. After all, she was walking around while he remained bedridden for who knows how long? ”This whole ordeal was just….I just can’t….it’s my fault.”

Gil raised an eyebrow and shifted uncomfortably, disarmed by the uncharacteristic display of emotion from the normally guarded and aloof Calliope.
”I just…had some perspective applied.” He said, his voice attempting to sound blasé but shaking as memories he’d been failing to repress surfaced once again. He nearly scowled at Calliope’s guilty confession, though, and when he spoke again there was a tone approaching parental scolding in his answer. ” It’s no one’s fault but whoever set up the sabotage. Don’t do yourself a disservice. Or anyone else, for that matter. Last thing we need now is a martyr.”

Calliope moved her hands on her lap, one covering the other, as she felt a small tremor coming. ”No, I know it’s whoever sabotaged the Trial’s fault for us being stuck in there. But we never should have separated. It was exactly what they wanted. And because we did you got hurt. Banjo got hurt.” She let it fall that she also got hurt, but her injuries were mild in comparison. She gripped her leg, thankful it was still there. ”Point is, I am still sorry. When we were together we figured out what to do but as soon as we were separated things fell apart. The things I saw and heard. The things I continue to see when I close my eyes and listen to my thoughts.” Calli quickly realized how depressing she was acting. Gil deserved better. ”Are they taking care of you in here? Need me to sneak you in something?” She attempted to keep it light, but even then the light in her eyes had long since evaporated. That inner voice attempting to come back in.

”Look,” he started, adopting a softer tone, though he wasn’t sure what Calliope wanted here; absolution? Forgiveness? Gil was in no position nor mood to grant either. At the very least, he could allow an exorcism of misplaced emotion, but he didn’t want to encourage the perception of his bed-ridden body being Blackjack’s stand-in for a confession booth. He was sure that whatever everyone else had endured within the sabotaged trial was as deeply distressing as his own experience, but he was hardly capable of shouldering his own scars, let alone the rest of the team’s.
”Whatever they wanted to do to us - whatever they did do to us - was going to happen regardless of our own choices.” He sighed, sitting forward and rubbing his eyes as he placed a bandaged hand over Calliope’s own. ”They had the run of it, simple as that. Nothing we could have done.”

They held eyes for a long handful of seconds, and Gil almost saw himself reflected in Calliope’s face; a well-constructed wall slowly crumbling, leaving the builder unsure what was even behind it. He sat back, turning his face away. ”They’re treating me fine. Narcotics on demand. Not allowed a drink yet but only a few days until they let me out, I think. So I’ll take a raincheck on a beer or ten.”

Calliope nearly wept as Gil comforted her. She also chuckled. ”Heh, you’re the one in the hospital. I’m supposed to be cheering you up.” Still, Gil’s words were true. She knew it. It still didn’t unleash the guilt she felt and might feel going forward. They may not have been able to stop what happened, but she would be damned if they continued. Someone set them up. She was sure the Foundation was partly responsible, she just didn’t know how yet. ”Well when you get out and are able to, drinks are on me.” She let a moment linger. She didn’t want to continue to unload on him. He had enough trouble. ”If you need anything Gil, even after you get out of here, let me know. Someone’s going to have to step up to take care of you lot.”

”It sounds like you need to take care of yourself, first, Calliope.” Gil replied, an urbane tone masking genuine concern. ”Or maybe let that glib Aussie of yours take care of you. One of the two.”

At the mention of Banjo Calliope’s face fell, though she did her best to hide it. That was another matter she would have to address. Banjo was hurt and would be for his life. Despite him acting nonchalant about it all she couldn’t help but notice the energy shift while she sat with him in his own hospital room. The things left unsaid spoke more than actual words. ”He’s done a fine job so far. I’ll be fine.” The words were pretty but the meaning behind them left very little to the imagination. And whatever was going on, she didn’t need to pester Gil with it.
Gil felt the energy change - the chill in the air and Calliope’s crestfallen expression said everything her words didn’t.
”Hm. I suppose you know what’s best.” He answered, and left the matter there.

Silence hung for what seemed like hours, though it was only a few moments. ”Well, I don’t want to take up too much more of your time. I meant what I said though, please let me know if you need anything. Helping others helps ourselves. My therapist told me that and, while I didn’t believe her at first, I am slowly starting to.”

Gil let the words pass without comment; he had little interest in talking of therapy and healing. Instead, he smiled warmly in a practiced expression, though it did not meet the eyes, as Calliope stood, and the expression fell as soon as she stepped out.




Calliope sat in the cold chair in the hospital waiting room. She had just finished visiting Gil and it left her feeling numb. Gil had been a presence she enjoyed before but it was like emotions were sapped in that room. She could hardly blame him. Whatever had transpired in the Trials had impacted Gil so heavily it altered the man before.

The same could be said with Banjo.

Gil had brought him up and she recalled the last time she went to see him. As he sat in his own room ready to be checked out and continue with physical therapy and monitoring she could feel something different. It was hard to put it into words but she could tell something had shifted between the two of them. It wasn't that she didn't love him and want to be with him. But she could see every mistake she made concerning him before her. And surely he could with her. They held hands, him rubbing his thumb over hers. He would crack jokes, make the hospital staff miserable every time he tried to get up to leave and she all but forced him to stay in bed. She knew he was feeling hurt, physically and mentally. She couldn't take his pain away and wasn't that one of her responsibilities? Not to shoulder it all, but to alleviate some of the weight?

Once he was done for that day she kissed him and left. As she exited and found herself in the hospital lobby, she finally let it out. She put her face in her hands and wept. It felt oddly comforting to finally unleash the beast that had been held back. Some of the others in the lobby came up to her to express condolences, thinking she lost someone close to her.

How could she tell them that the person lost was herself?




| Two Days Ago


"He's healing. He'll forever have that limp, but he's cracking jokes and being a general nuisance."

Dr. Trinh nodded. "You both went through something and I am sure it brought you both closer together. However, shared trauma has a way of showcasing the points we try to hide from others. I encourage you to share them with him. It will be hard, I won't lie. And I know your history of opening yourself up has not gone well, but from what you tell me, I think he would understand."

Calliope thought it. Dr. Trinh had a point. And maybe in the future, she'll listen. But not now. She needed to heal first. And make some hard choices.

The session quickly wrapped up after that. Calliope stood up and looked around the room. What was once a safe space had been marred. She left quickly.

As she did so her mind raced back to someone she hadn't spoken to much. She had wanted to see her also but couldn't for whatever reason. Calliope couldn't help but wonder. Was she involved in all of this somehow?

She let it percolate for a bit before she tossed the thought aside. She needed to get ready. Classes would be starting up soon.
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Hidden 5 mos ago Post by Qia
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Qia A Little Weasel

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_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Location:Ursus House - Pacific Royal Campus
Take On Me #3.011: No Expectations, No Pretenses
___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Interaction(s):Calliope-@PatientBean
Previously: Submerged


The Ursus dormitory’s corridors lay in a hushed stillness, the usual bustle of underclassmen moving in being absent here. Instead, there was a sense of familiarity, the walls adorned with posters and pictures from years past, each telling a story of the lives that had passed through.

Harper stood outside Calliope's room, clenching and unclenching her fists.

The thought nagged at her: what if the other woman had no interest in even seeing her? They weren’t exactly close. And they had both, most of all, personally worked on the trials for the freshmen before it had been hijacked. Harper feared that her presence might only serve as an unwelcome reminder of a chapter both of them wished to close. Her, desperately.

With a trepidation that felt like a physical weight, Harper raised her hand, her knuckles stopping just shy of the wood, as if even that small distance was a chasm filled with the potential for rejection. The thought that Calliope might have already departed for class, or sought refuge in a quiet corner of the campus—a haven from the prying eyes and whispered judgments—loomed in the brunette’s mind.

Shaking off the uncertainty, Harper's knuckles met the wood with a soft but firm rap. The sound cut through the silence, a clear signal of her presence. She waited, the seconds stretching into an eternity.

If Calliope wasn’t there then she would just…well, she would just….

The brunette’s hands, acting of their own accord, rose to her hoodie to grapple with the absence of hair that had once been a curtain she could hide behind. Her fingers searched for solace in the shortened strands, while her lips found themselves caught between her teeth, an unwitting prisoner to the anxiety that gnawed at her.

Calliope held her phone in her hand. A text message in preparation of being written. She kept typing and deleting.

‘I think we….’
Delete.

‘It’s better if we….’
Delete.

‘I love…’
Delete.

She stared at the screen. Uncertain. Unmoored. The past few days of seeing some of her team really drove home just how broken they were. Even the ones who plastered sunny smiles on their faces, her especially, were troubled. And she played a part in it. That’s what she said to herself.
She wanted to go back to normal but what was normal anymore? Was she to keep living a lie? And would the truth be any better?

Before Calliope could wrack her brain more she heard a knock on her door. She wasn’t expecting anyone. Everyone else had run off in preparation for classes. Banjo was busy. Calliope put her phone down and got up from her bed, making her way to the door. She grabbed the handle with some trepidation and she mentally chastised herself for it. But the school was no longer safe.

She opened it a bit and looked out, seeing a familiar figure. Harper. Unexpected. Not unwelcome. Calliope finished opening the door. She attempted a smile that, as much as she tried, did not reach her eyes. “Harper. What a nice surprise. What can I do for you?” Calliope noticed the hair. Should she ask about it? Should she compliment her on it? Did Harper like it and would be annoyed if she asked? She really wasn’t herself anymore.

Harper, for her part, seemed caught in a dance of discomfort, her body language clearly displaying her nervous energy. Her eyes darted about the room behind the blonde, taking in the distant surroundings before anchoring back on Calliope. “Can I… can I come in for a moment? I need to talk… to you,” she asked.

Calliope noticed the tension and said nothing. It was not her place. Given all they had gone through it made sense Harper would be uncomfortable. After all, Calliope failed her just as much.

She took a step back and opened the door further. “Please, come in.” Calli would allow Harper to set the pace of this meeting, though Calli couldn’t help but wonder what she wanted. And why didn’t she go ask Haven or Aurora, girls who seemed closer to her? Not that Calli disliked Harper. It had to be something important and perhaps…awkward.

Harper stepped over the threshold, her movements deliberate, echoing softly in the stillness of the room. It was as though she were crossing into a sanctum, a place of quiet majesty that was undeniably Calliope’s realm, each detail that surrounded her to the blonde’s exacting standards. Books, their spines a spectrum of academia and literature, were stacked with geometric precision, while writing instruments lay in wait, their points sharp and ready, like loyal subjects prepared to serve at a moment’s notice. The desk was a command center, organized with an efficiency that spoke of planned late nights she was no doubt going to have. Potted plants, green and lush, thrived in the golden wash of sunlight that streamed through the window, their leaves reaching towards the light with a quiet determination that Harper found both comforting and enviable.

Calliope had good taste- a mind that valued structure and beauty in equal measure, which was no surprise to the brunette, really.

She paused, taking a moment to gather her thoughts, her gaze lingering on one or two familiar photos that adorned the walls. Then, with a breath that seemed to carry the weight of her decision, she turned to face Calliope. “I… I need your help,” Harper began. The next words felt like a leap into the unknown. “I don’t know what to do about my hair. Could you… could you cut it for me?”

Harper fought the instinct to retreat into herself, to nibble at her lip as she so often did when uncertainty crept in. She pushed forward, her explanation tumbling out in a rush of words that felt both freeing and terrifying. “I figured…well no it’s just that you’ve…always given me the impression of being good at that kind of…stuff. Like makeup and…stuff.” The words were awkward, a clumsy dance around the truth that she sought not just Calliope’s skill but her care, her touch. This was going well, she thought, a wry smile flickering at the corners of her mouth. Things were severely more awkward than she had intended.

Calliope watched Harper look around her room before finally stating her intention. “You want me to….cut your hair?” She had to admit it was not a question she considered. Harper’s other words hit her though. Calli knew Harper meant it as a compliment and Calliope took it as such.

And yet.

The implication was there. Heavy like a weight in her stomach. YOU are good at this Calliope, surely. YOU look put-together all the time which must mean you are good at fashion and style. That begged the question: What did people think when they looked at her? To some, it seems, she was fashionable and thus, must be good at all things that required an eye for style and flair. And, in a sense, she was.

Never mind that she had to know how to look good because of her father. The expectations that a woman needed to look her best at all times or how else was she expected to attract a mate? Meanwhile, her mother never showed her how to do it with care. There was always an underlying fear to her words when putting on make-up or styling her hair.

Calliope mentally shook it off. Harper was not like this. Harper came to her out of everyone else she knew and that made Calliope special, even if she felt anything but. “I mean, I guess I can. I’ll let you know I have never cut hair before, but I can see what I can do from YouTube tutorials. I don’t want to mess it up though. Are you sure?”

Hazel eyes, usually so full of resolve, now shimmered with a raw desperation. “Yes, I’m sure,” Harper affirmed. “I just… I need to do something. I need to take control of—” The words caught in her throat, a confession half-formed, stifled by a sudden rush of shame. It was the admission of a need to command even the smallest aspect of her life, to hold dominion over something as mundane yet personal as her hair.

She averted her gaze, her fingers betraying how she felt as they toyed with the hem of her hoodie. “I trust you, Calliope,” Harper said simply, and the truth of it resonated in the quiet space between them. It was a trust not extended to herself, for Harper had never ventured beyond the simple routine of trims and self-care, the familiar ritual of washing and nurturing her locks. Her hair had been a constant, requiring no more than the occasional snip and the loving attention she could easily provide.

“I just need it to be…even,” she continued, her voice steadier than she felt. “I’ll figure out what to do with the rest of it later.”

It didn’t take a genius to put this together. Clearly, Harper was going through something. A deep turmoil only her mind knew. And wasn’t Calli going through something similar? Granted Calli didn’t want to cut her hair. But Harper did.

“Okay, okay. I can make it even. I don’t have salon scissors though so it will have to be regular-duty ones. Do you…want something to read while I cut?” God, she felt so weird about this. Harper was placing her trust in Calli and that was no small feat. Calli wanted to do a good job. She needed to. She didn’t want to be the one to damage Harper’s hair even more. “I have some classic stuff, probably a mystery or two if you want. Or we can….talk while I work? We haven’t really caught up since…you know.”

Harper’s lips curved into a tentative smile, a silent acknowledgment of the care Calliope was extending towards her. “Talking would be nice,” she murmured, her voice soft but sincere. She eased herself into the chair Calliope had pulled out, feeling the solid support beneath her as a small but necessary comfort. As she settled in, her eyes caught the gleam of the scissors resting on the desk. A shadow of apprehension flickered across her features, but she quickly pushed her doubts aside. She had said she trusted Calliope, and she meant it.

“It doesn’t have to be perfect. Just… better,” Harper reassured, her words meant as much for herself as for Calliope. She needed to hear it, to remind herself that perfection was not the goal—improvement was. The simple act of asking for help, of allowing someone else to take control, was a step towards reclaiming a part of herself that felt lost.

Calliope grabbed the scissors and stood and stared for a moment. She looked at Harper’s hair to determine where to start. As soon as she was somewhat assured, she picked up a piece of hair and snipped, allowing the strand to fall to the ground. She’d have to clean it up before her roommate returned.

“So, how are you doing?” A simple question loaded with ticking time bombs. Because how else would she feel after what happened? But Calli didn’t want to push or press. She, herself, wasn’t quite ready to talk about it. Hell, Banjo barely knew what her thoughts were.

Calli glanced at her phone again. Then back to cutting.

Harper felt the tension in the room, a palpable undercurrent of unspoken understanding that they were both navigating a minefield of memories and emotions. She glanced at Calliope in the mirror, who was momentarily distracted by her phone, its screen dark and devoid of notifications. Was she expecting someone? Or perhaps her thoughts were drifting to someone she wished would reach out? Should she dare ask her any of this? It was none of her business, after all.

Taking a deep breath, Harper decided to simply answer Calliope’s question instead once the girl resumed her task. “I’m… managing,” she said, her voice steady but soft, “It’s been hard, you know? Trying to find a new normal after everything.” She paused, her eyes following the path of another lock of hair as it drifted to the floor. “But I’m trying to take it one day at a time.”

Harper watched Calliope in the mirror then, noting the concentration etched on her teammate’s face. The way Calliope’s brow furrowed slightly as she worked, the careful precision of her movements—it was clear that she was putting her heart into this small act of kindness. The brunette felt a surge of gratitude, mixed with a pang of guilt for burdening her with her troubles. Because surely she had some of her own.

“How about…you?” Harper ventured, her voice tentative. It was a simple question, but she knew it carried the weight of everything unsaid between them. She hoped it would open a door, even just a crack, to understanding what Calliope was going through.

Calli glanced back at her phone when Harper asked how she was. What could she say? The normal response was “fine” and then you moved on from the conversation. How could she say she felt equal parts guilt and anger over the Trials? “Same here. Managing, trying not to let it drive me insane. You know, typical college shenanigans.” Her attempt at humor drew her mind back to Banjo.

She continued to clip hair after hair, doing her best to even it out enough that Harper was happy or at least content with her work. “I haven’t spoken to anyone really after it all went down. Except for Banjo, of course, but that goes without saying. You’re the first I’ve interacted with since….since we got out.” An opening, perhaps. A way to talk about it without talking about it.

Harper felt a pang of empathy. She knew firsthand how isolating it could be to carry the weight of memories like that alone. But at least…the blonde wasn’t alone in this. Not in the same way Harper was.

“I get that,” she said quietly. “It’s hard to know what to say or…who to say it to.” She watched Calliope’s reflection in the mirror, continuing to note the way her friend’s hands moved with steady precision, even as her eyes betrayed a flicker of whatever was going on in that head of hers.

“Banjo really has been good to you…hasn’t he?” Harper continued, her tone light but laced with genuine curiosity. She wanted to keep the conversation meaningful without delving too deeply into the painful memories that lay just beneath the surface, waiting for their moment to rise and burst the bubble of geniality around them. “I’m glad you have someone like that.” She paused, considering her next words carefully. “I guess we all need someone to help us through times like this.”

And it wasn’t to say that Harper didn’t have that. She had Aurora, or Haven, or even Katja. Yet somehow…somehow she found herself drifting back into her old habits. Habits of complete silence, of shouldering her burdens alone, of not wanting to impose her invisible wounds on those she cared about. The trials had brought up things, memories, of the countless times she had retreated into herself, hiding her pain behind a facade of strength. It was easier that way, or so she had convinced herself.

But maybe with Calliope, it could be different. With Calli…she had nothing much to lose. There were no expectations to meet, no image to uphold. It was a selfish thought, but it was nothing untrue.

Harper felt a strange sense of liberation in that realization.

Calliope smiled softly knowing how lucky she was to have someone like Banjo there for her. And yet she couldn’t hide the guilt. Her inner voice echoed in her mind. “Yeah, he’s great. He’s been a rock through this.” Calliope knew better though. There were things left unsaid. Moments where there was still love, there would always be love, but also those little bits in between that went unacknowledged. Sometimes those were the most dangerous. Big things can be worked through. Little things had a habit of slipping through the cracks and causing more damage.

But even then she knew she loved Banjo. That wouldn’t stop. “So, anyone in your life like that? Weren’t you talking to someone the night before the Trials?” Calli seemed to recall though her mind was elsewhere that night.

Harper hesitated, the question stirring memories she had honestly almost forgotten with everything that had happened this week.

“Err, yeah,” she started, the words slowly forming in her mind as she tried to articulate her thoughts. “But it’s not like… that.” She trailed off, unsure of how to explain what she herself wasn’t entirely clear on. What did she mean by “that”? She decided to stick with what she did know.

“It was Cass, Lorcán’s cousin, I think?” Harper continued, her voice gaining a bit more confidence. “We were just talking about some stuff and…” She paused, the uncertainty creeping back in. Should she mention the next part? Would it even matter? But then again, Calliope would find out eventually once the dance came around.

“He sorta asked me to go with him to the dance,” Harper admitted, her tone casual but with an underlying hint of uncertainty. “And I figured… why not?” She shrugged, trying to downplay the significance of it all. Because, in the grand scheme of things, none of it seemed to matter that much anymore. The dance. Getting a date for it. All those things that once felt so important now seemed trivial compared to everything else they had been through.

Harper snorted aloud, a sound that was part amusement, part frustration. “I wish that had been the biggest thing to worry about this week. Who would have thought, you know?”

Calliope could agree. In retrospect, the dance seemed silly now. Yet, she was still in charge of setting it up. She couldn’t tell them that it worried her that the dance would be taken over like the Trials. She wanted to ensure people forgot what happened.

“Well, maybe it’s a good thing. My therapist reminded me that life goes on even if bad things happen. Perhaps a night at the dance with a cute boy would do you some good. Plus, I am willing to bet he is going to love your new look.” She snipped off the last piece before she put the scissors down. “Tell me how that looks. Need me to do any more?”

Harper looked at the mirror, her eyes scanning her reflection. The new haircut was…different. A big change. So different from what she’d looked like before. And while it was in a much better state than how her sister’s clone had left it, the sight of her new look sent a jolt through her. The uneven, jagged edges were gone, replaced by a more uniform cut.

But it still felt foreign.

Like she was staring at a complete stranger.

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"Nerve damage?"

"That's right."

Banjo rubbed the palms of his hands into his eyes, working up to easing the bridge of his nose, before running his hands through his hair.

"The medical term is 'Peripheral neuropathy'. Irony of it is, that it could have been caused either by repeated deep shock from the Augmented Reality suits, or by an actual icicle through the leg."

Banjo stared blankly.

"Okay. Too close to it to appreciate the irony." Murmured the doctor to himself. "The next one and a half, to three months are going to be all important in your recovery."

"So you want me to keep off of it for a month and a half..."

"Oh God no! No. No-no-no. That's the worst thing you could do. No, this is going to take rehabilitative work. A lot of exercise. A steady amount of work to keep blood flow to the region..."

"Wait-- You said it's the nerves. So what if I just gave it the full bloody sun clea--" He looked down at his legs and got to his feet.

The doctor held out a hand to stop him. "Well, with what little we've been able to ascertain about your powers that COULD possibly clear your nervous system from this issue, but--" The doctor gave an uncertain wince. Banjo didn't care for the familiarity in his bedside manner.

"But--?"

"Well, it COULD clear your nervous system of the issue, but if it failed at that... the way your powers work, it could also possibly fall short. Not fix the problem, and then your body treats its current state as the new normal. Making the damage more... long term." Banjo scrutinized the doctor deeply. "Possibly permanent."

"So wait-- You're saying, I'm not just going to be expected to rehab and exercise the leg, but you're telling me to lay off my powers altogether until the rehab's done?

"Well, that depends. When you use your powers are you able to isolate them to different body parts, prevent your legs from being used and affected?"

He screwfaced at the question. "Well, I mean, a bit, yeah. I can't just turn it off for one leg though."

"We wouldn't want you to anyway. Your body would be assymetrically developed and more prone to other injury." The doctor turned and started writing on a pad.

"What are you writin' now?"

"Oh, umm... since you won't be able to balance your nutrition with your powers as you normally do, we're going to actually have to put you on a strict diet as well. Anything else we should need to know, where you lean on your powers for?"

"You're saying I shouldn't be smokin' anymore."

The doctor laughed. "Well, as a doctor, I'm NEVER going to tell you that you should be smoking, but for the next three months, don't even think about it."

"Now, I've got a script here for a steroid, but it'll likely take a while for it to make it's way here. We have a hyperhuman here who can create chemical compounds, but he goes off the island in the holidays, just got back and he's working on backlogs. The steroid's not urgent to your rehabilitation anyway, but when it's done we'll call you in. I'm leaving you some literature, follow it, to the letter."

"How about alternative medicine?" Banjo asked dourly, as he read 'Limit blood sugar' and immediately translated it in his own mind to 'Avoid Flavour'.

"What did you have in mind?"

"A bullet? Right between the eyes?"

"Ha! It's not that bad. At most three months." The doctor got to his feet in a not-too-subtle-suggestion that Banjo should get the fuck out of his office.

"You can be a good boy for three months, can't you?"

The last thing Banjo got out before the door closed behind him.

"I really wish you phrased that a different bloody way..."

- - -

________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Location: Various P.R.C.U Campus Locations
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Interaction(s): Myriad NPCs
Previously: Black The Sun


Banjo's room cracked open. Zimmerman and Big Steve turned to the door with a half gasp, before realising they'd stopped what they were doing and going back to continuing with their early morning preparation.

Banjo stepped out with a subtle limp in a full Strigidae uniform, nodding at the pair and opening the refrigerator, before closing it again, realising he couldn't eat anything in there.

"Coffee?"

"Fun fact: Coffee is a stimulant which can inhibit nerve signals and worsen peripheral neuropathy." A fake broad smile dropping into a dour grimace.

"So that's a... 'No'..?"

"That's a 'No'. But cheers, I would've loved one. So... points for askin' I guess."

Mornings had been difficult of late. The leg was less of an issue by this point for his getting out of bed, than the lack of caffeine had been for keeping him out of it. Similarly, the occasional shooting pains were far less of an intrusion on his life, than the way it affected his diet and lifestyle.

If the joker in the Mess Hall tried to tell him one more time that 'tuna is brain food', he was gonna take old mate's boat out to sea himself, come back and club him with a yellowfin.

Alex had been incredibly excited to grill him after it happened. Mainly because the rest of the student body had been led away and he'd heard the 'Force' were on the scene at the eventual rescue of his team from the Trial. A fact Banjo neither was aware of, nor gave a shit about, and had nothing to tell them about what they were like.

Mornings with him had been like walking on eggshells.

"Oh! They pulled the uniform! You know you... don't have to... wear that anymore, right..?"

Halfway through the question, Alex saw Big Steve shaking his head and making a 'Cut it' gesture with his hand by his neck, but it was too late.

Banjo walked up uncomfortably closely to him. "Zimmerman... I appreciate that you think you're givin' me helpful information. But right now. My life sucks. Fuckin' with these people is pretty much all I have right now. That and my girl. So don't suggest takin' fuckin' with these people away from me again. Cheers, mate."

He turned and walked out the door.

"Yeah, he... he already knew about the uniforms."




Banjo limped around the A.R.C to get to the farm from the backway. Within its heavy structure resided the equipment to create another scenario similar to what they'd all endured, and if it had been used in the few days since, he suspected it was just for a full diagnostics testing run to ensure that the issues within the temporary augmented reality facility they constructed on the plateau hadn't found their way here.

Waiting in their usual spot were the four freshmen in plain clothes. Their houses would have been a mystery if they hadn't chosen to wear corresponding coloured handkerchiefs around their arms, with team armbands on the opposite side.

It hadn't been a schoolwide trend, but he supposed for the first years it probably helped make things clearer, maybe even a conversation starter.

They clammed up as he started to approach with a conspicuous silence, which bothered Banjo more than their usual nattering.

"Alright, what is it?"

The mousey brunette spoke up for the group, after the rest held tight-lipped silence.

"Umm... is your name Banjo?" She asked. He suddenly felt eight eyes glued on him awaiting an answer to confirm things they'd heard. He'd been waiting for this moment. And not with excitement.

The name listed for the supervising person on duty for the farm, in charge of monitoring their Community Contributions was 'Andrew Olyphant', something he was in no hurry to dispel these few freshmen from believing - contrary to his usual behaviour. Because he suspected his treatment would have them complaining or asking about him to older kids, and that name was almost an afterthought for how long-timers thought of him after his five years here.

He stuffed his tongue in his cheek as he considered how to answer it, whether he should lie, and how long he'd get away with it undiscovered of he did.

Finding the juice to not be worth the squeeze he thought better of it.

"Yeah, why?"

The four conferred excitedly in front of him, as if he wasn't standing right there. He sighed loudly. This was going to be a distraction. They were going to do that stupid thing where they stare at him, like he can't realise they're staring at him. Or the worse thing, where they'll whisper to each other right in front of him.

"Alright, there's four of you. One question each. Then we either get to work or you piss off to class, I don--"

"You don't need any of us."

"You're damn right. Lonely Hearts? Wanna kick us off? Or is Next-to-blondie feelin' bold today?"

"Did you punch Hyperion in the face?"

"What? That rumour's like five years old. Lemme guess, it was some pig-faced lookin' senior over in Lutra who told you that one? No. I've never punched Hyperion in the face."

"Her name's Bethany."

"I didn't say a name. Or give a gender. But all of you note that Lonely Hearts immediatiely knew who I was referring to from that description. Who's next?"

"Did Hyperion's ghost stab you in the leg in the Trials the other day?!" 'Hugh' more exploded, than asked.

"That's an even dumber question than Lonely Hearts'... and another Yes or No question to boot. You're not very good at this, are ya?" He said to the group with a laugh.

"So which is it?" He re-directed back to the question.

"Did I get stabbed in the leg by Hyperion's ghost a few days ago..? No." He shook his head in a state of disbelief.

"Is there really a place here where kids can get drunk, and where is it?" Blondie asked.

A wry smirk crossed his face, part in relief that it wasn't just all descending into bullshit they'd heard people say about him.

"Yes. Better question too. See, stick with Blondie, she'll do right by ya. You know that building you were livin' in until they figured out what House to shove ya in? It's in around there. Sound-proofed too. It'd bloody wanna be. Bloody Ryan's caterwaulin' once she gets a skinfull..." He exhaled deeply. Lonely Hearts went tight lipped as if he'd been told some kind of secret, and Next-to-Blondie snickered at the way he was discussing one of the Reps.

"Well, what exactly happened in the Trials? We got told that it was something to do with Hyperion and you and some janitor who worked here." Next-to-Blondie finally asked her question. A re-worked open question that looked into rumours they'd heard which apparently started this whole thing.

"As far as I know..? Someone dicked around with the inner-workings of the thing. Pulled the safeties. Played into the fears of a lot of good people. And also me. But Hyperion? I dunno. When I was younger, and I suspect you lot heard this much, he came on down here with his goon squad about the same time of year, and I told him in no uncertain terms to kindly go fuck himself - with or without the kindness. His response was to tell me he was comin' back for me, and hurl my sorry arse into a hospital bed for a good while. He wasn't a subtle sort, and neither were his followers, best I could tell. I mean, he'd plan. But when he'd make a move the message was big. Big show of force. The way I figure, if they were makin' that kind of move they'd have come at me hard. If it were them trying to make an example of us, I'd have figured they'd have made it their business to get in my face about it."

He looked at the group and they seemed disquietened. It hadn't occurred to him before that the school's line kept things 'neat'. There was a bad guy. The bad guy died. He ad some followers. They were caught and apprehended and the main one blew himself up. Neat bow. Questions and doubts as to whether they were actually the ones behind it all in the first place, muddied up a lot of waters. And left a lot of scared people unsure of how to feel or act. He'd never really considered things like that before. Questions were just questions. The means to find answers. When he was young he never really gave a shit about those questions scaring peole like him and his own age. But now he was five years older, and the people being scared seemed more--

"Or maybe I'm just an idiot and concussed... being on the inside wasn't exactly the best place to see what was goin' on anyway."

--seemed a lot more vulnerable.

"Gotta get stuff fed and milked anyway. So if you're stayin' you're workin', if you're goin' you're goin'. Only have half as many legs worth a damn at the moment, so I gotta make a move."

The four split into their pairs and fed the chickens and milked the cows in relative silence.




Lillian Morse shuffled through her files and paperwork as she planned out her day's sessions. Earlier it had been intended that her nephew Rory Tyler would assist her with this in the mornings, but he'd apparantly been given additional undisclosed duties and had been quite rattled by the events surrounding the Homecoming Trials.

Coincedentally, the first student she'd be seeing today was one he happened to be familiar with.

Probably far more familiar with than she was at this point, despite the fact that this would be his third session.

Lillian was the fifth therapist he'd been moved to at this point, and so far he had said no more than sixty words in a session.

No less than that either.

So far, the two sessions prior had mimicked what notes relating to his last few therapists stated they had taken.

He'd sit in the chair. Uncharacteristically say nothing, even when queried, and every five minutes, just as the second hand swept passed the twelve he'd utter "So are we done now?" whether or not she was talking.

The last session she removed the clocks from the room. He counted the seconds in his head and still did the same.

They'd told him he wouldn't be allowed off the island because of the lack of progress in therapy. He didn't display any visible signs of caring.

Jim had transferred him to Lillian's patientload under the logic that being Rory's aunt and guardian might lead to him seeing her more as a person, and less as an 'other', therapist or faculty.

It wasn't the worst idea, the notes in his file over the years showed an intense distrust for faculty, therapists, reps and basically anyone who would enter the teaching profession.

But it wouldn't be enough. She'd have to find another angle if she was going to make any inroads at all of getting him to be in any way receptive to therapy. He was quite possibly the most stubborn case she'd ever encountered.

Every aspect had complexities to consider, and balance. Even things that would usually be not only straightforward, but mundane. Right down to his name. Should she refer to him as 'Banjo' as he has made it abundantly clear he prefers, or is this ceding too much to him? Also, to call him 'Andrew' could be seen as a breach of trust due to the connection of that name to his past from a former therapist. She'd been open and transparent about not only her own powers, but also the limitations of those powers.

That being, that she was a telepath - an issue for him, because of a previous therapist - but also her limitations, that she could only utilise it through touch. Which seemed to prevent it from becoming a larger issue. He still wasn't receptive, but he didn't seem openly hostile or defensive as the revelation of her telepathy brought out in his expression at first.

It was transparency necessary to bridge trust. But whatever trust that had bought, was so far yet to pay off. Still sixty words a session. Every session. She'd have to try something new, or he'd be transferred again, not that the next person would likely fare any better. They were starting to run out of qualified therapists on staff. More troubling still, he was smart enough to know it, and probably more than a little curious about what they'd do once he'd been through them all with no results. Another thing to work against.

Last session she said that if he wasn't willing to talk about what he'd experienced in the Trial setting, that she would have to view what he'd endured. It had been difficult, and only moreso because it also made her wish she could also be made privvy to what Rory endured as well, but he was not a patient, and there was a conflict of interests there which prevented that from being possible.

She'd also told him that if he wasn't willing to open up and talk in session, she'd have to ask more questions ABOUT him OUTSIDE of this setting.

She'd laid the foundations, made it clear and kept things as transparent as possible, he seemed completely unperturbed by this at the time, but she had made some basic inquiries.

He had a girlfriend, long-term, named Calliope De Leon who was also on his team and been in the same tragic incident. His behavioural records seemed supported by peer comments, if anything they were perhaps underdone in the records. And he divided opinion, although most were overwhelmingly negative in their opinions of him based on interaction.

A few people closest to him suggested his mood had seemed a little darker of late.

The question was now how to use this information.

He walked in the room, closing the door behind him and sat down in the chair.

She noted he was dressed in full Strigidae uniform, despite the dress code having been lifted.

Probably in spite of it.

He looked over the door. The clock was still gone. He chuckled to himself.

She was pretty sure he'd started counting.

So what now?
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