Hidden 2 days ago 2 days ago Post by Rockette
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Rockette đ˜Łđ˜Šđ˜”đ˜”đ˜Šđ˜ł đ˜”đ˜©đ˜ąđ˜Ż đ˜șđ˜°đ˜¶.

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She meets the eyes of her reflection in the mirror.

– a mirror of mirrors.

Inverted eyes and inverted smiles, glimmering shadows of crystalline blue framed in curling lashes of black painted matte, she has garbed herself in finishes of red and silver, liken to warpaint, all harsh lines and feathered out colors with darkened undertones and glimmering shards of ruby. Her gaze feels heavy, slumberous, intentional, slick scarlet smiles perched over glistening bone to answer her observation before some unknown emotion compels her to look away. It’s with a devastating finesse that Amma Cahors inspires, and it’s with brutal efficiency that she performs as she cinches her waist and bodice in latex, a corsetted garment rigged with ebony, bone, and silver metals. Gossamer fabrics spill down her supple shoulders, bisected through ebony materials of mesh and nylon to expose inked skin and embossed scarring. A canvas of terror and the macabre beauty of torment undone under the might of life and power now harnessed into the weaponized woman that was Tiamat. It was the exterior of the beast, the facade, the donned mask of cruelty with barbed snatches of teeth and waggling tongues of malice; viperish annotations curled into French brooding, whispers of a lover endured and forlorn– lamented over in her passing graces.

Little more than a tool, a sword, a spear perhaps, little less than human.
Just the means to the end.

Through darkened tunnels and blackened halls, she was guided on rattling chains, some black and some rusted, some silvered and some purely decorative to be scalloped along her figure and through the deep plunge at her front where an inked moth pulsated with tendrils of red over skull donned wings. Freshly embedded yellows accentuated grays and whites, and she delicately traced over it in idle musings as she walked with an alluring swagger, her usual diminutive height exaggerated by the heeled boots belted over her legs with cinched, crisscrossing leather done all the way up to her thighs, buckled in silver. They lead her through a door and then another before introducing her onto the official set where a photo shoot has been scheduled; it is an initiation, a welcoming affair to the newest addition to The Foundation Force.

To welcome the experiment, the product, the one Made to be All, Amma Cahors, dubbed Tiamat as a goddess of chaos and destruction. A single moniker to embalm the fear she commands in crackling crimson and the void of death and renown eternally endowed. Everything is deliberate; everything is purposely undone; everything is permitted in the artful display of curling black that frames her elaborate pretenses, volumized to lengthen her intimidating stature to capture onto film and later displayed in banners to herald her inclusion into these infamous ranks. Here, she is a doll, a porcelain figure, a catered-over thing that hands fuss and brush and pluck over, head tilted here, arms positioned there, a curling lash to flutter then, and brushed lock of hair done too. A line of imposing heroes stand in her peripheral, guarded eyes awash in mute detachment, familiar with the procedures and now silently acknowledging the girl before them to be as one of them.

She is so young, one utters.

We were once young too.

The Amma that is not Amma flashes her eyes through slanting black, a glow that pours down her carefully done features, a dusting of blue that shimmers in silver as they talk until a hand guides her face back, a cruel smile donned and slid through her rouged cheeks that she bites around, literally snapping her teeth as a feral animal.

“Don’t touch me.” She calmly speaks, but there is a tremor through her hands, a subtle twitch in her brow, as she procures a darling smile and focuses back onto the camera, poised to perfection and not permitted to be anything less.

One. Two. Three.

She is instructed to turn, to bend, to summon those whipping red tendrils into a frenzy. Arcing lines of chaos glisten against her skin and writhe through her hair, plumes of black spiraling up and out. A show. A demonstration. It’s all for the camera, it’s all for the stories spun through the world, it’s all for the –

What is it all for?

One. Two. Three.


She smiles. She dances. She even sings.

Through it all, no one notices the tears that go unshed or the brittle soul that screams from within; the child she was facing against a mirror shattered and lost, reflecting all that was broken and what little shards of humanity remained.

A mirror of mirrors.

_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Location: Unknown.
Human #5.047: awaken.
_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Interaction(s):&
Previously: éternité.

It’s all so familiar. Perhaps it is too familiar to be anything but a coincidence.

The howling sounds, the eerily alluring echoes of wind-song that billow through the damp rock, all of it alludes back to a time that seems so far away, what feels like months ago is only maybe a handful of weeks, but in her weighted bones, it feels
 longer. It is a sensation that she cannot explain, but as she glances over the edge once more and regards the spires of rock below, everything feels reflected somehow. Switched. Where up is down and left is right. On shaking limbs, Amma lowers her body to sit with legs swinging over the edge, exhaustion allowing for little else as she leans against the yawning mouth of the aperture and sighs out a heavy breath that pulls her shoulders down and her eyes to close with them.

Death was so, so tiring.

Though now, Amma had to venture if that is what truly happened to her, for the pain that continued to pulse through her wounded legs and body numbingly, it all felt entirely too natural. Too real. Far too aware of being anything but life that spilled crimson rivulets down her flesh from needle-like punctures through her thigh and the old bruising and marks to be as faded as they were, recent injuries that should not have been so advanced or deep. She tried to decipher why and how—relying on recent memories that resurfaced with the vague recollection of her mother’s stories. They were too disjointed, hazing in and out as fragmented pieces of truth, lies, and shattered frames of red that burned through her venture as she tried. More locks were found in the layers of her mind, and more fractured remains floated unbound between her ears and phased into shadow, forgotten and forsaken.

Amma cradles her head within her scarred and bloodied palms.

This was not death, no, and it was not even an actual hell.

It was something, far, far worse, something unknown. Perhaps it was the realm meant for the beast that was her calling card, the prophesied creature worn through time and hate that reigned here as an almighty being of eternal demote.

And if this was such a place, and the cavern she crawled through was possibly an entryway to this realm, could she return?

Did she want to?

She glanced back into the darkness. Perhaps what attacked her, what horrible things she had seen, were watchers of a gate, of the pit she had languished in, unleashed to feed upon her remains so that she may never attempt to go back. Perhaps it was all meant to appease her into that possibility, to dream and brood over this afterlife of all she could have been under the passionate revelations found in a kiss and softened words whispered into a dance.

What good did it do now to think about it when he was dead?

Amma sunk nails into her temples and raked through her tangled hair, pulling through the strands to temper her sudden grief. She allowed no tears to fall, for no sorrow could encompass the well of sadness that burst to life betwixt her heaving ribs as she gazed up to a blooded moon and wished with all the power she once possessed to cleave through this shaded torment and rend it all asunder. For him. For her. For all the lost and forlorn souls of life, for all of Blackjack. Rage festered there and overtook her misery, sharpened it into a blade that cauterized her dejection and filled her lungs with a frenzy of harsh anger, of a blackness that fell into the familiar depths of her soul of souls, flitted to the fragments of self and wed to the brim of her hate. Amma grits her teeth and pulls at the tattered remains of her dress; she shreds through silks with a grunt and a hiss, wrapped pieces of obsidian skirts over her palms and the bruised soles of her feet. With a scream of pain, she took more swatches of fabric and bunched it over her bleeding wound, ignoring the webs of black that splintered underneath her flesh and breathed through her nose as she fitted another tear of chiffon through her teeth and bit down. A wail bubbled from her throat as she quickly knotted silk together and pulled, applying pressure to the bite and lapped at the warmth of blood through her mouth and spat it out, red awash over her teeth as she dragged the back of her hand against her violet-hued lips and glared into the dark of this perpetual night.

She couldn’t stay here, she knew that.

Adrenaline flooded her mouth in bitter saliva and sluiced through her veins as she craned her neck and looked up the cliff face, quickly surveying purchases in the rock before she stood and swung out her trembling hands and clutched over jutted pieces of earth. The wind promptly tore through her hair and the jagged pieces of silk that clung to her figure, determined to send her below where waves crashed against the uneven spires. Still, Amma was tired of falling, and the howling symphony that arose compelled her ever higher, reminiscent of a night she had scaled a similar musical edge to the depths of a much calmer ocean. A storm appeared to be brewing, the bitter cold spearing through her arms and legs, a clap of thunder booming as a quivering roar that sounded like something she had heard before. Once, maybe, in a nightmare long ago, where in the dark of sleep, a continuous bellow fell into the gloom, a screeching call of something ancient.

Of something angry.

Amma bit down against the answering cry of pain as the sharp rock fell away against her scars, but she ignored the well of warmth through her fingers, of the blood she now dragged and drenched through the silk wrapped around her hands as she continued to climb. Lightning flashed and struck far out into the void of the raging sea, and the great boom of wings sounded soon after, followed by another deep roar that shuddered through her bones. She was sure the gargoyle was now coming for her, determined to drag her even lower or carry her off to their creator. Amma dug her bloody nails in deeper, pushed herself that much harder, and relished in the pain of this peculiar life after death to see the edge of this plateau and face her would-be reaper.

A massive shadow passed overhead as she finally crested the cliff, arms trembling with the weight of her body as she dug and pulled and heaved herself up and over, clawing through dirt and grass and rolling onto her back with shuddering breath sawing through her lungs. She gazed up at the passing shadow above, blanketed in black clouds, lightning crackling overhead with crimson-membraned wings puncturing through the billowing storm with blackened scales that gleamed red, likened to blood with a jagged crown of silver horns.

Was that a fucking dragon?

Amma laughed as it flew overhead; it was utterly gargantuan! More extensive than any fantastical story could conjure as she witnessed such a fabled creature fade away into the dark with only seconds maybe that passed before a powerful tremor fell through the earth as it landed with a shattering wail of other beings that abruptly arose and clamored through the treeline that surrounded her. A smattering of golden eyes suddenly bloomed, glaring at her through scarlet shadows as the moon above seemed to glow even brighter in the blood-red gloom.

“Shit,” she was too weak to run and could only roll over to her hands and knees before she stood on trembling legs and faced the massive beast that crept from the darkness cloaked in pale fur with undertones of brown and grey. Harsh features fell into a snarling face as another figure shadowed and adorned in fur, but lesser, stepped beside the wolf and stroked through its muddled coat, for that is what it was that towered over her. She gazed at the massive claws that scraped through the dirt before the man, she noted, loomed over her next with a swift hand that latched onto her pale throat and snarled.

“Look what woke up the dragon.”
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Hidden 1 day ago Post by webboysurf
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webboysurf Live, Laugh, Love

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________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Location: Home - Debolt, Alberta, Canada
Human #5.048: All the Small Things
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Interaction(s): Haven - @Skai
Previously: A Place to Nest


Rory's eyes glazed over as he refused to focus on the trees that lazily rolled by. The jostle in the old truck's movements were clear signs of its suspension going bad. The old man certainly knew, and mentioning it would certainly come across as a complaint instead of an observation. So he kept his lips sealed, ran his fingertips over the tight muscles in his legs, and dissociated.

When the truck stopped, it took him a moment to register that they had arrived. It was that sudden absence next to him that registered action, and he instinctively used his arms to slide his body across the old bench seat. He swung his legs over the end, and eased his weight onto his legs. Pain shot through him, duller day by day but sharp enough to loose a strained grunt from his lips. Haven's fingers wrapped around his arm to help support him, as Rory flopped into the wheelchair. He felt the frustrated look from his partner, but shook it off.

He still didn't like the doting, but knew he'd be doing the same in her position.

While she admired the nature around them, Miller approached, holding out an old set of keys. The key-ring had small flecks of rust from years of wear and tear. Rory reached into his inner jacket pocket, feeling for the stack of cash he had counted and bound that morning. He had always intended to use his inheritance to begin putting down roots, but never expected it to be this soon and under these circumstances.

He was sure that his parents would be disappointed.

That made it all the easier to place the stack into Miller's hands.

Miller left, and Rory ran his finger along the keys the man had left him. He handed the keys off to Haven when she motioned for them, and he watched her enter into their new home. He sat in front of the porch stairs, a small smile on his lips as he saw the wonder in her movements. Her happiness was infectious.

Infectious enough that he couldn't help but shift his legs off the footrests, and plant themselves on the course gravel. His arms did most of the work in pulling himself to his feet, adrenaline working to dull the pain. His right arm rested on the bannister, and his feet took each step one at a time. It felt almost surreal to walk again, grounded only by the shaky pain that made him feel like he would keel over at any second.

Haven had rushed to his side by the time he reached the porch proper, and the feeling of her lips against his melted the world away for a brief moment. She moved to support him, and he wasted no time to settle his weight on his shoulders. It would take time for him to be back to normal, but he felt a surge of pride in his chest at the steps he had made.

Most folks wouldn't even be able to stand for a second this quickly from a fractured femur.

“Let’s walk inside together.”

Rory nodded at the suggestion, letting her take the lead in guiding them through the open front door. He set the pace, taking one step at a time in a slow marching rhythm. He resisted Haven’s urge to set him down in the rocking chair near the door, instead nudging them in the direction of the dining table. They lowered him into one of the seats, Rory’s labored breathing intercut with sudden inhales. His legs burned in pain, but he tried not to show it. Haven was already out the door again to grab the wheelchair as he took the moment to admire the space. It was much larger than their former accommodations, and had much more natural lighting.

Of course, next came all the small tasks that came with moving into an old, small place. Rory had plucked an old towel from one of his bags, and began using it to dust everything he could reach from the comfort of his chair. He gave the handle of the sink a quick flick, grimacing at the sight of sputtering brown water. Miller’s comments on the water heater now felt more like a bad omen than an off-hand comment. He shook his head, flashing a look over in Haven’s direction. She had taken the towel from him to wipe some of the harder to reach places. Her eyes met his, and a faint smile traced his lips.

Rory rolled himself over to the bathroom. It was modest, sporting little more than a toilet, bathtub, and sink. Except, of course, for a small door. Opening it revealed the water heater, along with a junction box. He opened the later up briefly, noticing the handful of switches and making sure everything was powered. He then turned his gaze back towards the water heater, fiddling around with the controls until he found what he was looking for.

”Dove
 can you check the shed out back and see if Miller left a hose? I think we need to flush the tank.”

Rory powered off the water heater, listening as the screen door to the back porch slammed shut. His legs still ached, but he refused to let that stop him. He locked his chair's wheels, and slowly lifted himself up out of his seat. He tried lowering himself down slowly, only to lose his grip on the door frame in the process. He let out a sharp cry as he fell onto his tailbone, coupled with the newly fresh pain his legs were in as they had bent sharper than usual. He took a few deep breaths, centering himself as he pushed himself with his hands to sit near the base of the water heater. He turned off the cool water spigot, and leaned back to rest his head against the wall. Now, he simply needed to wait.

It took 3 hours of trial and error to finish flushing out the water heater and getting a nice, clean stream of water to come from any of the faucets. Running a hose out the bathroom window, fiddling with the water flow to flush water in and out of the tank to clear out the sediment buildup, and then letting the tank refill again while sprawled out on the bathroom floor had left him feeling somewhat satisfied. Haven’s relieved sigh at the sight of clean water sent a smile over his lips. His chest rose in a swell of pride.

Rory Tyler would be ok.

He would survive.
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Hidden 1 day ago 18 hrs ago Post by Skai
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Skai Bean Queen

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“Haaaveeen.”

His voice crawls up her spine, passing through the patch of feathers on her back, and digs itself into the soft spot at the base of her skull. Her muscles tense and lock into place, expression twisting into a wince, and she tilts her head in an attempt to free herself of the feeling. It’s no use. He calls her name again, and this time his voice digs into the joints between her shoulder blades. Pain blossoms there, like a festering wound, and her shoulders shift against it. No matter how she twists, the movement does nothing to ease the ache.

She’s helpless against this torture. Suspended in the dark as he does what he wishes. The futility of it weighs heavily on her chest with each poke and prod.

She stands alone in the center of a large room lit only by flickers of starlight in the night sky that shine through a gaping hole in a metal roof.
He calls her name over and over. Lovingly, at first, beginning as simple as a gentle caress along her cheek, and then building more malicious with each touch. His voice snarls by the end, saliva dripping from his lips that splatters against her cheek as she feels his hands rake themselves through her plumage. Feathers pull loose between his knuckles and fall to the ground around her feet. She endures it with fists clenched tightly at her sides.

There’s a glimpse of a twisted smile in the darkness, but when she blinks it’s gone.

Another voice chimes in just when she thinks the torture is over. This one is low and grumbling. It reverberates throughout her bones with the two syllables it speaks.

“Mother.”

A desperation fills her now. She wants to run. To hide from the monster that calls her kin. Her body strains itself, and yet her feet are planted firmly in place. She can’t move. Her very being is frozen by fear that grips her heart and squeezes it until it shrivels within her chest.

Screams follow the name given to her. The agonized cry of her lover in pain. She won’t reach him. The wails of a woman, of a
friend, in distress. There’s nothing she can do to ease the suffering. Horrified shouts come from the crowd within the dark.

Voices she recognizes, and voices she doesn’t.

The sound of bone snapping and sinew tearing fills the space above her, and suddenly crimson ichor falls from the sky to drench her where she stands. She nearly drowns in it. As the downpour subsides she’s left gasping. The air that fills her throat is thick and muggy in her lungs, and it leaves a metallic taste on her tongue.

She knows who the blood belongs to.

The monster speaks again, and this time the voice is closer to her.

“Mother.”

Her eyes go wide and wildly search the darkness in front of her. Her heart beats a ferocious rhythm, threatening to burst from her chest, until she sees it. Glowing, red orbs glare at her from the dark.

Her heart stops.

The outline of a horned brow is illuminated as it steps into the light. Its grey skin is stretched taut over its enormous body. Batlike wings rise behind it as if to mock her blood.
Her blood. Frigid air puffs from its flared nostrils as it stalks closer and closer.

Its skeletal fingers emerge from the dark and reach for her, and something within her fractures. Her arms go limp at her sides, because she knows what happens once it touches her. She knows the pain that it causes. How it leaves her a shell of who she was before.

A single tear draws a line through the blood on her cheek.

There’s nothing she can do as those fingers cradle her skull and tilt her head up to look into–





Location: Home - Debolt, Alberta, Canada
Human: #5.049 Growing Vanes

Interaction(s): N/A
Previously: Place to Nest


A shuddering gasp escapes from Haven’s throat as she awakens with a jolt. She shoves herself upright, feet kicking the blankets off of her legs to free herself of any pressure against her skin, and she whines as her hands reach for her head. Her eyes are wide, but they are blind with terror. She’s still stuck in that room. Phantom fingers still clutch her skull where she presses her palms against the sides of her jaw. She feels the fear, the hopelessness, and the desperation all at once.

Sweat coats the t-shirt she wears at the center of her back and chest, and her hands are clammy against her face. Her baby hairs are stuck to her temples with sweat. Every part of her burns. Her back aches as if the injury had just happened. She needs air. She needs to breathe.

She flings herself out of bed and heads for the closest exit in their cabin. Her bare feet stumble past the boots she left by the bed, forgetting she had even placed them there in case of times like this. She releases the hold on her head only to palm the door, one hand sliding down until it reaches the lock. Fingers fumble for a moment until it turns, and she yanks the door open carelessly. Too consumed by the torment within to notice if her partner had woken up to her outburst, she pushes against the screen door until it allows her enough space to step past it.

The air outside is crisp and blissfully cold against her skin as she steps out onto the portico. The screen door knocks against the frame, but she’s already stepping out into the openness of the forest by the time it comes to a stop.

The ground beneath her bare feet is damp and cold. The detritus is familiar to her toes. The forest around her is quiet except for the rustling of leaves in the branches above. She walks away from the cabin, past the shed, and into the darkness of the night. Her feet slow to a stop about ten yards from the perimeter of their new home, and she falls to her hands and knees.

Her breath finally comes in ragged waves as she feels the tightness in her chest loosen. She stares into the fallen leaves beneath her until tears blur the vibrant colors together. She sobs once, for the pain in her back and the terror of her nightmare, and then again for the loss of her wings and for the suffering those closest to her endured that night.

She’s lost to her grief among the trees, until the aching intensifies. Her breath hitches in her chest. Teeth grit together, brows furrowed in a grimace, and her hands grab the leaves beneath them and squeeze the foliage between closed fists. Her body tenses and trembles as she tries to get some semblance of control of it, and she gasps as it overwhelms her.

It feels like the skin on her back is stretching past its limit. The muscles underneath flex, tearing at the center and spreading until her entire back is aflame. She feels it creeping into her shoulders, neck, arms, ass, and legs. All the way to her toes and fingertips. The pain is familiar, and yet it’s entirely new. A shrill whine fills the silence of the forest as she feels her nubs pop. It takes all of her willpower not to faint from the sudden nausea it brings.

She knows this sensation. She’s felt it before. It’s as if months of growth have been crammed into minutes.

The burning. The aching. The stretching of bone and sinew. It wasn’t a symptom of her trauma, nor was it the healing pains.

It had been growing pains, all along, and somehow it all built up to this moment.

All of it reaches a crescendo, and when she feels the edges of her vision going black and truly thinks she’ll lose consciousness, the flame flickers out. She breathes a heavy sigh of relief as the temperature of her skin drops with it. Her head hangs between her arms while the sensation fades into a dull throb in her muscles. The nausea subsides, and she takes a few deep breaths as she’s overcome with exhaustion instead.

Disappointment slowly sets in as she realizes her back is not as heavy as it should be.

She pushes her upper body away from the ground until she sits against her heels. Her hands grip the bottom of her oversized t-shirt, slowly tugging the damp material off of her full hips and up her short torso. Her shoulders throb as she pulls it up and over her head. Her upper body is fully exposed to the night air as she sets her shirt down in her lap.

Her hands rub at her sides, working their way up to her pectorals, and then to her shoulders. She closes her eyes as she works on her neck first, and slowly, slowly pushes her hands down her spine until they brush against the softness of her feathers. Her fingers flex, reaching for the base of her joints.

She explores further, and what she feels between her fingers makes her laugh.

It’s self-deprecating in its nature. It brings on more tears that trail into her sweaty hair as she looks up at the starlight peeking through the treeline above her. The sound is similar to a laugh she heard recently. A trill utterance from a woman with three names. It’s madness, it’s sardonic, it’s sorrow and joy combined, it’s borderline hysteria
 but Haven couldn’t care less how it sounded to the trees.

He took her wings. The monster ripped them from her body. She survived, and though she still feared that Deadalus would find her no matter how far she hid within the mountains, she was still breathing


And her wings were growing back.

What once had been nubs of flesh and downy feathers, remnants of her beautiful tawny wings that stretched taller than a man on each end, now settled against her back as adolescent organs of flight. She unfurled them as she tested the muscles that had rapidly grown. Everything seemed to be in working order. The tips barely reach her elbows, but size didn’t matter to Haven now. She was sure that they were beautiful, and she was equally sure that they would continue to grow.

Relief etches itself onto her features, and she closes her eyes and basks in the moonlight. The forest seems to return to its normal hush now. The gentle breeze caresses her skin and feathers as she feels a sense of calm pass over her. She’s tempted to remain there for a while, in the peacefulness between the trees, but her mind drifts back to the cabin. She remembers how she left the backdoor open. How she left without a word, and without her boots. She thinks of her partner, and is suddenly overcome with a need to go to him.

She takes a breath, relishing the cold air in her lungs, then slowly rises as she clutches her shirt to her chest. She turns, her bare feet traveling over the leaves. They step back onto the path that connects the shed to the cabin, and to her home. The fire needs tending, and Rory definitely needs to know she’s okay, but at least she has something good to share with him.

They were both healing. They were going to be ok.
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Hidden 16 hrs ago Post by Qia
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Qia A Little Weasel

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_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Location: Strigidae Dorm - P.R.C.U.
Human #5.050: Walk Me Home
_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Interaction(s): Aurora @Melissa
Previously: The Prodigal Daughter


“Hey, Hayv,” she greeted, a touch of warmth and melancholy in her voice.“Big day
”

“It’s me, Harps,” Aurora stated by way of greeting, feeling her throat tighten as she announced herself knowing her friend couldn’t visually tell who was there, “It’s Rora.”

Over Harper’s shoulder, the redhead could see how barren her dorm room had become. The cozy space that her friend had carefully crafted and curated over the last year was a distant memory, now just blank walls and empty air. It was strange, foreign even.

“I came to say goodbye and, uh,” She pulled the heart shaped pendant along the chain of her necklace nervously, trying to find the words, “Apologize for how I spoke to you last night. I was- and still am- angry. I don’t know how to deal with everything, and I took it out on you. You didn’t deserve that.”

Harper’s hand hovered by her side, her fingers brushing the rough denim of her jeans as Aurora’s words sank into her like unexpected rain, soft and unanticipated. Apologies from Aurora were rare, precious in their own way, each one a carefully offered truth that only emerged when her emotions were sharpest, most real. This wasn’t a casual truce or a quick fix; it was something deeper, a shift in the ground beneath them, and Harper could feel herself momentarily losing balance, her mind scrambling to find some steady place to stand.

She parted her lips, ready to respond, but her words knotted up.

How did she even begin to address everything that had been said? How could she possibly address the anger, the hurt, that had built over the past days? The past years?

She wasn’t entirely sure.

But if she could say anything, she wanted it to be honest, to be free of the masks she’d hidden behind for so long. She wanted to cleanse herself of the guilt and grief that she’d carried, layer by painful layer, a burden she’d placed squarely on her own shoulders. But no more.

Taking a steadying breath, Harper leaned into the silence for just a heartbeat longer, searching for the courage to unravel her thoughts. “I get it
the anger. I understand that more than you’ll ever know,” she finally murmured, the words coming slowly, unpolished but true. She knew what it felt like to be angry—at herself, at the world, and even, painfully, at the people she cared about. And just like back then, there was the aching need to leave, to board the ferry and let the weight of this place, this fractured island and the turmoil it held, slide from her shoulders.

But she couldn’t yet. Not until she’d said goodbye to her best friend.

“And you were wrong, you know?” She lifted her face, sightless but unflinching, as if in that darkness she could still find Aurora’s gaze, as if speaking the truth might light the way forward. “You’re not alone in feeling like someone tried to take everything away from you. I know exactly what that feels like and more.” A bitter smile curved her lips, a flicker of something close to humour but edged with pain.

“Because they succeeded.”

Aurora’s chest tightened at the final words, the weight of Harper’s voice sinking deep into her, twisting the apology into something far heavier than she’d expected. There was no relief in hearing that she wasn’t alone in her anger- no comfort in knowing that the brunette shared that ache. Instead, it felt like a second, sharper cut, something she hadn’t quite been prepared for. How had she really thought, in the depth of her fury, that Harper had been unaffected? That she had been untouched by everything that had happened?

It had been selfish.

“I..” Her voice faltered as she searched for words that would make sense of everything that was unfolding.Her throat closed up again, and she could feel the familiar sting of tears burning behind her eyes, the feeling of being on the edge of breaking but not sure if she could, or even should. “I’m sorry.”

Harper’s white eyes might have been pinned on her, but Aurora knew that she couldn’t see her. Couldn’t see the way her brow was furrowed, unsure of what else she could say to comfort her friend, and herself. So, she asked the next logical question.

“Can I come in for a minute?”

It would be so easy to keep her at the doorway, to let the farewell be quick and clean. But that small part of Harper that had been aching for closure, for something real and lasting, reached out before she could even consider pulling back.

“Yeah,” she murmured, stepping aside to make room, letting her voice carry the invitation she hadn’t quite found the courage to give. As Aurora moved past her, Harper felt the door close behind them, sealing them into this moment with no escape, no easy way out.

It was the quietest they had been together in a long time.

Though, this time, the silence felt gentle. Like a fragile truce.

“I’m sorry too,” Harper began after a while, leaning against her door. She could feel Aurora’s gaze on her, waiting, patient, giving her the space to say what she hadn’t been able to put into words before. “I know I’ve always been
closed off. More than I should have been with you. It’s not fair, and I think that’s part of what got us here in the first place.”

A brief silence followed, one that felt both comforting and tense, as if they were both bracing themselves for something inevitable. Aurora felt the urge to speak, but knew better than to interrupt or attempt to fill the quiet with words that would only detract from whatever her friend was about to reveal. Harper’s fingers found the edge of the door frame, tracing the cool wood, finding something tangible to hold onto.

“Eight years ago
 my parents died,” she continued, “Sierra
my sister, she’d just gone off to college at the time. So, when I’d received the news, I was fourteen, and I was—well, I was alone.” She swallowed, the ache of that time resurfacing, though it felt muted, more like an old scar than a fresh wound.

“I think that’s when it started,” Harper admitted, her words slow, careful, as though she were piecing together a puzzle she’d kept locked away. “I didn’t want anyone to see how much it hurt, how hard it was just to
get through the days. So I kept it all inside, even when I knew that wasn’t healthy.” A faint, humourless smile tugged at her lips, a small acknowledgment of the irony that hadn’t escaped her. “Over time, I guess it became a habit—pushing people away. It felt safer, easier.”

Her gaze drifted in Aurora’s direction, though sightless, her expression softened, more open than it had been in a long time. “Maybe if I’d been more open with you—if I’d let you in a little more—things would have been different.” She sighed, the words feeling both like a release and a revelation. “I don’t want to keep doing that, Rora. Not with you. Not with anyone.”

How easy it was. To be honest with a goodbye.

The redhead’s heart splintered almost instantly.

Harper had never been forthcoming about her past or her family, rarely had Aurora heard tales of what her friend’s life was like before enrolling. As much as she wanted to understand her more, she never pried, never wanted to overstep. She knew as well as anyone that people kept things close to their chests for a reason. After all, Dundas Island was not only an institution for higher learning, but a place of refuge.

So hearing the brunette let her truth flow so freely in that moment felt even more devastating. A sign that things had changed so drastically in the last few weeks, days even, that warranted such things finally coming to light. And the truth was just as jarring as she had once hypothesized.

“Harper,” Aurora's voice was barely above a whisper, the single word hanging in the air between them like a fragile thread. And then she was moving, crossing the room in only a few steps before tentatively reaching around her friend and pulling her into a comforting embrace. She could feel how fast Harper’s heart was racing, no doubt from the truth she just laid at her feet. The redhead swallowed the lump that had formed at the back of her throat before speaking.

“I don’t blame you for not being open with me,” She started, assuring her friend that she hadn’t misstepped by not being candid earlier. “When I was younger, and I first got here, it took me a while to warm up to anyone. I was so used to being by myself and doing things on my own, that I didn’t want to burden anyone.” Aurora exhaled, pulling back and looking her friend in the eyes, thankful she could not see the moisture brimming in her eyes.

“But after a while, I learned how exhausting it is to go it alone.” She expressed, “And it makes a world of difference to allow people in your life to help lighten that load.”

“Thank you for trusting me, and I only wish you would have told me sooner so I could have supported you more.”

Harper took a deep breath as she heard the soft rustle of Aurora’s footsteps, the space between them shrinking until Aurora’s arms wrapped around her in a gentle embrace. The unexpected closeness caught the brunette off guard, and for a moment, she stiffened, her senses overwhelmed by the sudden warmth and scent of her friend. Slowly, hesitantly, she began to relax, allowing herself to lean into Aurora’s arms. She felt the rapid thud of her own heartbeat beginning to slow, her breathing becoming more even as her own arms wrapped around Aurora’s waist, her head finding solace on her friend’s shoulder.

Aurora was right. It truly had been exhausting. The endless cycle of fear and guardedness had left Harper feeling worn down, her spirit fragile beneath the layers she’d built up over the years. So, she was more than willing to let herself rest. For now, she could let go just enough to lean on her best friend.

“I wish I could have told you sooner, too.” Harper's voice was soft, muffled slightly against Aurora’s shoulder before she felt the redhead pull away just enough to look at her. “But I didn’t know how. I thought I could handle it all on my own.”

Harper took in a shaky breath, her fingers tightening momentarily on Aurora's arm, her emotions spilling over the edges she could no longer contain. “But I can't,” she admitted, her voice breaking just slightly as she forced herself to continue. “I thought I was strong enough to keep it all in, to keep everyone at arm's length and just... bear it by myself. But I’m terrified, Rora. I’ve been so scared for so long, and I didn’t want anyone to see it.”

She paused, her lips trembling as she tried to gather her thoughts, trying to find a way to put into words what had haunted her for years. “I’m scared of losing the people I care about. I’m scared of getting close, of letting anyone in, and then watching them slip away. And the more I tried to push it down, the more it ate at me. It’s like... it’s like I’ve been running on empty, and I’m just too tired to keep going like this.” Her voice wavered, the fear she had kept hidden for so long now bleeding into every word.

Harper swallowed, her throat tight as she finally let herself say what had been truly weighing on her the moment Aurora had appeared at her door.

“I need to learn how to be okay again, Rora. And I think the Foundation might be the only way I can be.”

The moment the words left her lips, Harper felt Aurora tense. She didn’t need sight to know how Aurora felt about the Foundation—after all, she shared the same wariness, the same mistrust. Harper wasn't going there for a sense of community or for any belief in their goodness. She knew what they were, and she had no illusions about it.

But this decision wasn't about them. Not entirely.

“When you said you were going to Crestwood Hollow, that you’d figure it out...” Harper continued, her words rushed, almost like she needed to defend herself before Aurora could object.“You said it like you weren’t sure, but you knew it was something you had to do. I think I need to do that too.”

Harper’s words resonated deeply with Aurora, more than anything ever had between the pair. They were two sides of the same coin, with the same fears that seemed to eat away at them all this time. They’d loved and lost before, and it was evident that those emotions still lingered and affected every choice and decision they made. The redhead still struggled with the possibility that those she cared about most would vanish into thin air again. Her relationship with Lorcán especially, now that her heart was his.

But as much as she agreed with the brunette, it was the mention of the Foundation that caused her to bristle. The cold and callous hallways of that asylum were not the right setting for Harper to go on a journey of self-discovery, she knew that as much. Yet, Aurora remembered that if things hadn’t played out for her as they did, she too would have ended up at the Institute. And although it wouldn't have been her first choice, she would have made the most of it, as scary and unknown as it was.

“If that’s what you think is best,” Aurora inhaled and relaxed her shoulders, “Then you should go. I can’t stop you or tell you what to do, but please be careful.” She shuddered, “I have the worst feeling about that place.”

The gravity in Aurora’s voice settled over Harper like a veil, one that draped itself around her, heavy and undeniable. For a moment, doubt fluttered in her chest, clawing at the resolve she’d spent the morning building. Her decision hadn’t been easy—she knew the Foundation’s reputation, the rumours, and the risks. Haven and she had, after all, tried to find out as much as they could about the place. But her reasons for going weren’t about finding safety or shelter. She’d had enough of those half-solutions, enough empty reassurances from people who didn’t understand or know themselves.

What she needed was truth.

But something else anchored Harper, too—something that reached back to her very first day with Blackjack. She could still remember the way the training room had felt that day, charged with an electric hum of excitement and camaraderie that she wasn’t sure she belonged in. She’d lingered at the edges, hands shoved into her pockets. Laughter and banter had rippled through the room, the kind of easy familiarity that only time and trust could forge. But instead of joining in, Harper had felt that camaraderie deepen the divide between her and the others. She’d told herself she preferred it that way—keeping her distance, staying quiet, speaking only when absolutely necessary.

And then Aurora had walked over, cutting through Harper’s self-imposed isolation with a presence that was impossible to ignore.

Back then, Harper hadn’t yet mastered her enhanced vision, and Aurora’s presence had almost glowed with a surreal, heightened clarity. Her hair fell in a blazing wave of copper and gold, each strand catching and reflecting the light as though lit from within. The freckles sprinkled across her nose and cheeks stood out like constellations painted against the backdrop of her pale skin. Aurora’s eyes—bright, open, and blue as the sky—held a sincerity that seemed almost too genuine. Even the faint flush on her cheeks, probably from the recent drills, softened her features, making her look approachable in a way that felt almost foreign to Harper’s guarded perspective.

And then, without any invitation or prompting, Aurora had offered her a small piece of advice in an attempt to extend an olive branch —a light, almost offhand tip on adjusting her stance to keep her balance. It wasn’t what Harper had wanted or expected. Actually, she hadn’t asked for anything, and the redhead’s casual confidence had caught her completely off guard. Without thinking, Harper had let the words slip out in a dry, slightly impudent tone: “Didn’t realize I’d signed up for private coaching.”

There was a beat of silence, one in which Harper braced herself for a brush-off or a frown, some sign that her comment had stung. But instead, Aurora had laughed—a warm, unguarded sound that danced between them. Her laughter wasn’t offended or deterred; if anything, it was as if Aurora had found amusement in Harper’s walls, not intimidation.

In that moment, something had shifted. Harper had felt a tiny crack form in her carefully constructed defences, even though she hadn’t been ready to admit it. She’d rolled her eyes, shifting her stance ever so slightly—a grudging acknowledgment of Aurora’s advice, though she’d die before expressing any measure of gratitude to the girl. “Well, don’t expect a thank you,” she’d muttered instead, brushing an imaginary speck of dust from her shoulder as though to reassert her pride, her independence, her need for control.

Aurora’s presence, since then, had been persistent but not forceful, like the steady pressure of sunlight warming a cold surface. And somehow, without Harper even noticing it happening, that persistence had started to chip away at her walls, piece by cautious piece, until Harper had realized that Aurora wasn’t just a teammate—she was a friend. A friend who saw her, who stayed, even when Harper pushed back.

Still.

She’d changed in her own ways since then, bit by bit, but no one—not even her best friend—had been able to alter who she was at her core.

And maybe, Harper realized, that was why Aurora had stayed.

“I know the risks,” she replied softly now, a hint of steel beneath her voice. “The Foundation isn’t... good.” It wasn’t a haven, a place of second chances, or even a place to heal. It was a calculated gamble, and Harper was ready to place her stakes. “But they won’t change me. I won’t let them.”

Her lips curved slightly, a spark of humour returning as she tilted her head slightly in Aurora’s direction, as if she could still see her there.

“Besides
you couldn’t, could you?”

Aurora’s breath hitched at the question, her expression caught somewhere between surprise and something deeper, something harder to name. There was a new edge to her tone, a quiet defiance that she hadn't heard in a long while. She had broken down her walls with time, but it seemed they were being built back up again in preparation for the path she was headed down.

The redhead let out a quiet laugh, though it didn’t reach her eyes, not that Harper could see her expression. “I wouldn’t want to, even if I could,” she said softly, her voice laced with an odd tenderness. "You’ve never been the kind of person to let anyone change you.”

The thought of Harper facing the cold, indifferent walls of the Foundation though made her stomach twist in knots.

“Just- promise me you’ll keep your head, Harps.” A plea. “Don’t let them break you. I don’t care what they say, who they think you are- don’t let them take that from you.”

“I promise,” Harper said almost immediately. “I’ll keep my head. I’ll keep me. No matter what they try.”

For a moment, neither of them spoke. The silence felt fragile but not uncomfortable, like the pause between the closing of one chapter and the beginning of another. The brunette shifted her weight, her boot scuffing against the floor, the faint sound sharp in the otherwise still room. Her hand brushed against Aurora’s—lightly, fleetingly, as if testing the air between them—but she didn’t pull away. She wasn’t sure what she was searching for, only that the moment felt like it needed to stretch, to breathe, just a little longer.

Harper wasn’t used to asking for things, especially not like this.

But, as Aurora had, it was her turn to make a plea now.

“Walk with me?” It was posed quieter than she’d expected, almost like a confession. “To the ferry. Haven’s coming too, but... I don’t know. I just think... it’d be nice.”

“Of course, Harper,” Aurora didn’t hesitate, agreeing immediately, wanting to see off her friend for what could be the final time.

“Of course I will.”




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St. Louis, Missouri - August 12th, 2019



As the years passed without a word, not an utterance in earshot, and his age ticked down his remaining years but a single thought was held in his mind: was the day told to be that of his birth truly the one in which he gained life or an arbitrary estimate constructed by whoever created birth certificate upon which was his identity. Such a thought had held a veil over the fringes of his mindscape since the day he had first celebrated the concept of a birthday and had first laid conscious eyes upon his birth certificate. Immanuel’s hands fiddled with the wallet held in the reaches of his jean pocket, one by which he was gifted on this day years in the past. A wallet which he pulled out with stresses upon the leather from daily and a lone fragment of paper poking its bent end out from the inner space. The paper his eyes had averted their gaze from since the last time he had bore witness to its contents, to words written upon its surface that heralded falsehood and untruthful confessions of apologies. One in which he hated, hated the words that were written, the ink in which it stood, the paper that was defiled yet in but the same vein a chain from depths of his heart anchored the note to his person, kept it within his hands and not hitching a ride in the back of a garbage truck.

Immanuel’s eyes gazed up from the wallet he held and out onto the open street before him, slipping the leather-lined object back into his pants. His sight was clear, clearer than most even, there was but little doubt upon that fact, but as he watched the car pass and trucks rattle down the road his ears took in but little of it. Small, the most minuscule fragments of sounds so loud it would make another cover their ears. As he crossed his eyes darted both down and up the street more times than he had before, only catching the alert that it was his time to cross due to the blinking white light it present. Life had been a change, but what was his if not one of no constants, not even a natural sense he believed he could rely upon in his trial of life stuck around to see him through the tribulation that stood in store for him. For as his ears abandoned him from the force of another his eyes picked up part of the mantel shattered and shaken up by the loss of hearing. Not a single sound that entered his ears was clear, his world was low, with a muffled filter tied to it that added another layer of unintelligibility to a curse already wicked in its means.

As his figure turned the corner his eyes were met with the all familiar sight of the Blaylock. The only few who deemed it fit to house someone such as himself. Few desired to home a teenager, less one who bore a disability. By no fault of his own the system under which the reigns of his life were held spurred upon him the tag of undesirability. They were the ones who sent him away to a home that heralded tales of misdeeds from those among his peers, they were the ones who hadn’t found the boy a forever home even when he was but an untainted baby, unmarred or scarred by the reality that helped few and benefited fewer. Lady luck had only stood at the side the day Blaylocks sought to take in another child to fill their home, and the kid by which they could teach and mold stood ripe for the picking before the. And now as he stood before their door, fiddling with the lock that never seemed to want to open on the first turn of the key, it stood along a line of moments within his life laced with normalcy. And although he held questions reserved about the date today, the Blaylocks were the first to make the day feel but mixed with an ounce of his own, hinted with a pinch of love sprinkled at the top.

The door he held the handle of creaked open as his eyes were greeted with the same sight of brown furnishings accompanied by cream-colored walls, a warmth permeated the halls of the home as his other sense was greeted by the aroma of a baked good heating in the kitchen only adjacent to where he stood. The Blaylocks themselves were a family consisting of only a single hearing member, his adoptive sister who stood as the only one to greet him at his entrance. Immanuel slung the back off his shoulders and onto the hook beside the door as he spoke out to his sister, ”How long have they been out for, Steph?” his voice had been loud, almost a yell as he spoke forth. Through his time with a worse leveling hearing his control of the sound of his voice waned. Stephany had been the only one within the family he spoke to using his voice, reading lips was a skill with a learning curve he stood at the bottom of the incline for, and practice with his sister was one he needed. ”Not sure, about an hour or so? They stepped out for more decorations I think.” He watched her lips as she spoke, the verbalization of every word he registered within his mind. Although as she spoke he caught the tail end of her sentence.

”What? Can you say that again?” His own voice? He could hear his own voic-

His hands gripped his ears as he fell to the floor.

What was all this noise?

Why could he hear?


What was he even hearing?


He didn’t know. He couldn’t know. All he could do was scream. Air hissed from his mouth as a shrilling shriek pieced his own ears and that of his sister as he continued. His throat lay hoarse and felt like rips were being drawn in its meat as he could no longer extend sound from out of vocal cords. His mind could not comprehend a single sliver of a fraction of the sounds that crossed the border of his ears as his mind burned like the flame of a dagger doused and gasoline and lit ablaze carved into the surface of his brain matter. Tears strolled down his face as his sister ran to his side, gripping her own phone to dial the number of their parents.

“What the fuck is wrong with me.” Immanuel choked as the noise, the static by which there was no differentiating, became louder and louder and louder.


Location: In the air
Human #5.051: Vegas

Interaction(s): Nil
Previously: Third Contact

Immanuel’s eyes have only been heavier a few times before as his head up from the cushioned section of the head rests. He had never had the easiest sleep in general, much less within a seat stationed in a flying tube of metal with engines that roared with its hissing cylinders moving throughout and the screaming blare of the flames that left the back stood under the sharp whistles of the wind moving against and scratching the metal it passed. It was hard keeping a filter around him with such sounds pushing against his holds and the ungodly sounds of his fellow passengers made little help in his cause for the loving embrace of in slumber’s arms. His eyes looked upon the sleeping bodies of both Cleo and Lucas, as he checked his watch which read well into the AMs. Immanuel’s mind held it unlikely he would see another possibility of sleep upon this flight, flicking up the window to his left to get a sight of the night sky. The tints of purple darkness spread across the expanse as a view he had grown accustomed to during times such as these. Ones spent within his dorm room staring out into the star mind absent of thought. Ones spent staring out his room window in the Blaylock home hoping for a they never would abandon him. Ones spent staring out the window of his social worker’s car after another family had deemed his time finished. If anything, when there was no one left in his corner, but a single soul upon his side, the stars had always embraced his company with arms open unlike any other.

In the stars he found a shelter.

In those accepting he found a home.
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