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Hidden 22 days ago 9 days ago Post by Hound55
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Hound55 Create-A-Hero RPG GM, Blue Bringer of BWAHAHA!

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Zara rounded the table, she felt the fine ridges in the underside, the laminate on the top. Familiarising herself completely with where they all would sit. What they would each in turn feel and experience as she asked her questions. Probed their motives and whereabouts.

The subjects.

It had been a while since she'd done anything like this. Since she'd been allowed to.

H.E.L.P had sidelined her quite a while ago, even before the pressure on the organization ramped up. The lack of faith-- no. The lack of trust was a sleight she had found more than difficult. It was one thing from the humans, their fear of the different was a defining trait. To be expected. But her own people? This was something beyond.

"So, you want coffee? Tea? Somethin' stronger, whilst you play the disaffected detective?"

Zara smirked, her neck straightened, recognising the voice before seeing its source as her back was still to the door. The Australian Captain.

"Or do you still not trust me and view me as a suspect in this whole infernal bloody investigation?"

Turning her head to the side, she scanned his face from profile for his reaction as she told him. "You were never a real suspect. Running around the whole ship in full sight of everyone, desperately trying to pull away from shore. Killing someone at that time would have taken a level of sleight of hand that nobody would reasonably believe you to be capable of."

"But suggesting it got you exactly what you bloody wanted, didn't it?" He spat in disgust. "So quick, clean and quiet. With your ego trip. Whatever last grab at glory you call this."

He was enraged, but she could tell she'd just confirmed suspicions he already had. She briefly wondered what could have tipped her hand before it immediately came to light.

"So how'd 'bullet retrieval' go on a through-and-through, anyway?"

Ah. There it was. If anything, she should have been surprised more didn't pick up on it, although they were probably distracted by the situation. For most, a murder isn't an everyday thing.

"Judging by wound diameter, I suspect we're looking for a .38 special or 9mm round."

Zara walked back around the table towards the side that she would actually be sitting in. Facing the entrance. Back to the wall, as she was accustomed to.

He sneered, unimpressed by her deflection and choice in ignoring his point.

She expanded further.

"A .38 special or a 9mm round would mean a revolver or pistol of some kind. Can you picture many humans going Hype-hunting with a handgun and firing off blindly at distance into fog? What do you think they'd expect to hit?"

"Probably some poor bastard on stern deck about Quinn Spence's size..." The Captain muttered as he walked away.

Zara poured a glass of water for her side of the table and sat and waited for the first person she'd requested to arrive.


________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Location: Alumni Village Port - And Surrounding Waters
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Interaction(s): NPCs - Hyperhuman Residents of the Alumni Village
Previously: I'm On A Boat


Lilly Marks
Celeste Boucher


She entered with an unwillingness to talk, even beyond her capacity to do so.

Lilly Marks slapped a notepad and pen down on the table top and rocked back in her chair, irritated by the whole process.

Zara maintained the silence, which seemed to irritate the woman opposite even further. Ink drew from her shoulders and swirled, until forming a clear, yet cursive 'What?' across her own forehead.

She didn't seem particularly impressed by this entire endeavour, and Zara's investigation had split the crewmembers. Not the least because of--

"The Captain asked that should I need to speak to you, I speak to you and Ms Boucher first, to not keep you from other duties. He doesn't much care for the fact this investigation is taking place, and what he views as the possible negative effects it could have on the people on this ship. I take it you feel this time could be better spent getting back to those duties as well?"

The ink on her forehead swirled and took the form of a picture of a brain. Before the word 'Smart' appeared underneath it.

Zara exhaled sharply, the sides of her mouth curling slightly at the sullen visual response.

"You like the Captain, don't you?"

Lilly's brow dropped slightly, not liking where the insinuation was going with the much older man.

She picked up the pen and started to scrawl, her handwriting much less aesthetically pleasing than the writing she could produce with her own ink and flesh. Zara sipped at the glass of water, just for something to do whilst she wrote her response.

She slapped the pen back down sharply, tore off the page and turned it, sliding the note paper to the former H.E.L.P investigator.

He's a good man. After all, he's the reason most of us have anywhere to go now at all. He seems to genuinely care.

Zara read the note and then looked at the woman seated across from her. Taking in her body language.

Lilly gave her something else to read. The ink on her forehead swirled again before spelling out. 'Probably including you.'

Empty speculation, but Zara's takeaway was different from Lilly's intent.

Deflection.

'He's funny.'

"And how did you know Quinn Spence?"

More scrawling on the notepad.

I don't really. Got introduced because he was going to be working in the kitchen. We haven't really had service yet though, so never even worked with him yet. Our prep work has been different and separate. Chef would know him better.

"Chef being Celeste Boucher?"

The ink once again swirled on her forehead to once again show the brain. This time throbbing. 'Genius' formed beneath it in pristine formal cursive.

The Chef was next. The Captain eager to let the kitchen staff be allowed to get back to work.

"Chef Boucher. What's your opinion of her?"

The question seemed to amuse Lilly. Rapid scraewling, as the smirk broadened across her face.

I think if she was the one who turned up dead, you'd have a lot more questions for me. As well as anyone who ever had to work with her and knows her personality.

Slap. Turn. Push.

Zara read the note and smirked herself.

"You mean 'personally'."

The ink on her forehead swirled and took the form of emboldened all caps 'NO.' as Lilly shook her head twice with her lips pursed. She knew exactly what she meant to say.

"Look. You were in the dining room at the time. Witnesses place you there as well during the entire incident. Main reason I wanted to speak with you first was to get whatever early impression of the victim I could, from someone who could be comfortably written off as a suspect and get your interview out of the way. Captain's orders."

Lilly shrugged, and pointed her thumb to the exit with her brow raised. The body language clear. 'So I can go?'

"Of course. You didn't do this. We both know that..."

Lilly got to her feet and made for the door.

"...of course, the question is, would you lie to cover for someone else? The Captain?"

The young mute woman stopped in her tracks and turned her face to profile. She scratched her cheek, and ink swirled around her wrist, before illustrating a perfect middle finger on the back of her hand. Less than subtle.

But then so had Zara's statement been. And needlessly provocative, by design.

If they were going to create a schism over this, become adversarial, the least Zara could do is use it to her advantage. She felt little for her fellow crew, and so would be completely unapologetic for her methods. Her investigation was still very much in its infancy, so much so she'd not even had to employ her 'special skills' yet. Nothing but the psychological training at this point.

It remained a little frustrating that she had little knowledge of the victim at this point.

Quinn Spence. Five feet eleven inches. One hundred and sixty pounds. Hyperhuman power: An immunity to radiation. Tasked with working in the kitchen, under the next subject - Celeste Boucher. Known associates: At this point none.

Frustratingly bare knowledge base.

Sure, there were things she could extrapolate from the body, but character witnesses add far more 'flavour'. Motivations and goals, personality traits, before you even get to potential background knowledge which may lead to motive for the killer.

Condensation had formed on the outside of her glass of water.

Just the first thing at this table she expected to see sweat.

Celeste Boucher stood formally at the door, awaiting acknowledgement and permission to take her seat opposite.

"Take a seat." Zara permitted.

"Would you prefer 'Chef' or 'Ms Boucher'?"

Even seated, Celeste Boucher seemed less than relaxed in nature. Completely unperturbed by the questions which may come, but more a preparedness to snap to attention. Like the very act of being stationary was itself disagreeable to her very nature.

"'Chef' in the kitchen. As for here, I leave it to your discretion." She replied simply.

"Do you feel you have anything of value to add to this investigation, Chef Boucher?"

"Yes."

"And what's that?"

"I did not do this, and, whilst I can't vouch for her on a great many other things, Lilly Marks did not do this either."

Zara dwelled on the Chef's phrasing for a moment. Tenting her fingers momentarily, she re-phrased the unasked question for the surrendered statement.

"So you are saying that this wasn't any of the kitchen staff?"

"I didn't say that. I said that I know that I didn't do this, and I can also account for the whereabouts of Lilly Marks. As for the other kitchen staff - the dishwashers - I'd granted them their leave, along with Quinn since it was general prep and there was no service at hand. We weren't anticipating an early cast-off."

Zara nodded, as if confirming a suspicion.

"An interesting choice of words regarding Lilly Marks, as well. What's your impression of her?"

The Chef considered what she was being asked, and the context her opinion had been requested in. She clearly didn't think particularly highly of her, but...

"She didn't do this. And this is meant to be an investigation looking into who did. So my thoughts on her are irrelevant."

Zara smirked at the backpedalling. Very willing to speak ill of her, until called to direct question.

"And those thoughts would be?"

"She floats. She's content to be far less than what she's capable of being. I can't respect a person without a work ethic. Especially someone who is so capable of more. A person without any sense of drive or ambition. It may win her friends, but it does not impress me."

As if sensing Zara's categorizing her statement, Celeste continued.

"...Like I said, irrelevant to the matter at hand. Speaks nothing to who killed Quinn Spence."

Zara took a sip of water and considered her statements. If nothing else, this subject seemed honest and direct.

"And if you asked her of me, I don't doubt that her response would be that I'm a cold, hard bitch."

And very willing to surrender statements to character. Especially when left with uncomfortable silence. Possibly due to seeing herself as a social 'outsider'. Eager to get her own views seen and heard.

"And you spoke of the dishwashers earlier, they also had been granted free time. What's your impression of them, and are you aware of how they got along with Quinn?"

Celeste seemed to give the question some thought. Her hand raised to her chin and her eyes lowered, as she tried to search for anything of interest pertaining to the people who were to be working in the kitchen.

"As far as I'm aware, they'd both only just met in the last few days. Ste, the Irishman. He's another floater like Lilly Marks. Made worse by the fact that he's loud. But the other girl, Suze. She tries, and she's eager to please, she's just a little... flighty. Prone to making mistakes. At the biggest moments too. But both had only just met him. We still hadn't had a service yet, for them to really interact a lot either, and as far as I know, neither of them really 'hang out' with Quinn either."

Zara made a mental note of the Chef's impression of her workers and considered what else this subject could possibly have to offer.

She'd been boxed in to speaking to the kitchen staff first, the Captain eager to provide early access so they could return to their duties with minimal disruption. Now that they were out to sea, preparation and food services would be more regular and their workload more intense. It wasn't an ideal way to run an investigation, the likelihood of solving a homicide drops to half after the first forty eight hours, and usually an investigation builds its own natural organic momentum. These early forced sessions of questioning broke that organic momentum, but they also gave important background, in a situation she admittedly knew too little about.

And most homicide investigations don't see all major players trapped in a singular location for presumably well over those first forty eight hours.

Whoever it was, the killer had nowhere to run to.

...but that could also lead to more desperation. And in turn, potential future victims.

The uncomfortable silence was whittling away at Chef Boucher's 'cold hard bitch' exterior, but she was clearly uncertain of what more she could add to break the silence.

"The Irishman will be working nights. Suze in the mornings. Actually..."

She'd finally found something else she could offer.

"Ste was quite insistent that he be working the night shifts. Which is quite irregular in the service industry. Most would prefer to work the earlier shift, get their work done, and have their nights to themselves. Especially a..."

Celeste Boucher hesitated to choose her words carefully.

"Especially someone with Ste's work ethic and personality type."

Insistent. Zara considered. Insistent on having the time available which aligns with time of death.

"That should be all we need, Chef Boucher. I'd like to thank you for your co-operation with our investigation." Again, Zara chose her words carefully.

"Well, hopefully you get to the bottom of whoever murdered poor Quinn.

Zara nodded solemnly in return. Her eyes not meeting the Chef's as if to consider the loss of the poor hyperhuman at the center of the investigation.

No closer yet. But with the formative background information from a few subjects who could not have committed the act, she was prepared for the investigation to roll downhill and find its own momentum now. With more flexibility to call people for questioning to come.
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Hidden 12 days ago Post by Lord Wraith
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Lord Wraith Actually Three Otters in a Trenchcoat

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The Path is narrow and difficult for only few will ever walk it. Enemies lie in wait on all sides, hellions and Magni alike, lurking to down the Sparrows as Samael’s soldiers continue their war, working in the dark to bring forth the light. The Path is the name given to the mission bore by the Jäger, the Hexensbane, and it is their sworn purpose to protect Midyeden from the threats of the Deceiver and his Hellions of Ünterland.

Hellions enter Midyeden through Conjunctions, an event when Ünterland and Midyeden, the Mundane, are briefly connected, bypassing the prison dimension known as Limbo. Limbo, or Purgatory, exists not as a plane between life and death but rather as a bridge between the worlds of the Mundane and Ünterland. A hostile plane, host to lost souls and the Hellions that feed upon them, Limbo is known as the realm of the damned. Originally a plane of traversal between realms, Limbo was transformed into a prison during the war between the Jäger and the Hexenbrut.

Due to the meddling of the Hexensbane, Limbo exists as a barrier, not only to keep Hellions and the Magni native to Ünterland from crossing over but also to keep the Mundane from entering. As such, it exists as an aid to Samael’s definition of the natural order, an attempt to maintain a balance between the Mundane and Ünterland. When a Magni crosses over from Ünterland to the world of the Mundane, Limbo often attempts to strip them of their extra seele or soul.

Despite acting as a prison for all manner of Hellions, Limbo is not impenetrable and at times Limbo opens, allowing passage where Hellions can escape to either realm. Other times Limbo causes the two realms to overlap and merge, creating a Conjunction which allows for travel and a temporary merger of the two planes.

The living can not remain in Limbo for an extended period, and those that do find their bodies rapidly aging before turning to decay. For this reason, it is understood that Limbo exists outside the normal passage of time making it particularly useful to Jäger who are walking the Path. With experience, one can use Limbo to cross the world in an instant or even defy the natural flow of time.

Sworn to walk the Path, the Jäger live disconnected and nomadic lives often free of attachments and entanglements. While imbued with numerous gifts from Samael, scattered and isolated, they were a target. Thus, the Venari Council was born, truthseekers with power and influence who could offer protection and aid to the Jäger. Men and women of influence who could have charges dismissed and offer housing, food and even comfort to the weary, road-worn souls.

Further still, Samael offered help in the form of his Chosen, virgin maidens elected for their untainted blood to be used to further infuse power and protection upon his Sparrows. Jäger are marked by Samael's Chosen. Their virgin blood inscribed on the Sparrows’ skin in the form of a protection rune through ritual skin stitching that imparts upon the Sparrow safe passage through Limbo.

The problem with power and authority is that it needlessly corrupts and so too it was that the Venari Council slowly began to distance itself from the Path and instead employ the Jäger to protect their fleeting power.

When the Jäger wouldn’t comply, they too were hunted to near extinction. An Inquisition was led and they were seen as no more than witches of another flavour. Like those they had banished, the Jäger were forced to take refuge in Ünterland.

Displeased with the actions of the Council, Samael returned from the void and ventured to Midyeden, the Angel of Death lashing out and so the Venari Council was decimated, free to rebuild as Jäger who had evaded capture ascended to the seats that had once been held over them.

There once was a woman who lived a life so strange it had to be true.
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Location: Seattle, WA - United States of America
Human #5.068: The Hunter
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Interaction(s): None
Previously: Unnatural Selection

| Several Years Ago
The motorcycle weaved in and out of traffic as Ellara’s hair blew loosely in the wind. Revving the engine beneath her, the bike protested ever so slightly before launching forward, the front tire lifting up from the ground before roughly slamming back down just in time for Ellara to guide the agile vehicle around the rear bumper of a large sedan.

Her head was a mess, images of a different time, a different person’s memories flashed across her mind as her thoughts returned to the murder by her workplace. Why was this hanging over her, why should she care about a random murder in the street? Ellara knew deep down that it was likely only because it was so close to her place of work, but part of her couldn’t help but feel there was something more. Some sort of unspoken connection, and she couldn’t be the only one who thought so either.

The people in the bar, what had they asked her? Something in another language, they had accused her of being something, something that had triggered a memory.
You’re a Jäger.

The words echoed around in Ellara’s head as she bit down on her lip, revving the engine of the bike hard, a steady whine echoing over the street as she rode the middle line. What did it mean, why did that word keep repeating itself. A woman’s face appeared before her, suddenly twisting as the skin turned a pale green, the eyes disappearing into her empty sockets as a voice like wind rattling dry bones echoed through Ellara’s skill.

Jäger

The apparition’s voice haunted Ellara as she merged into a new lane, coming around the left side of the the lined up traffic ahead of her. The bike fought against the road below as Ellara moved over the rumble strip before gripping into the shoulder as Ellara’s own mind tossed around the foreign word.

Jäger

Her mother’s voice echoed her own as the word began to take on a certain familiarity. Echoes of her parents talking, her Aunt and even her Uncle’s voice began to float through Ellara’s head as tears welled up in the corners of her eyes, the sudden sadness invoking first feelings of regret, then pain, and finally anger. Maxing out the throttle, Ellara jumped back into the lane as she guided the motorcycle onto the next exit ramp. Lost in her thoughts, Ellara failed to notice the whine of another motorcycle behind her as the woman from the bar filled her head again.

German for hunter, but a special type.

The woman had been cryptic and intentionally so. The primary question had to ask was why? Secrecy had plagued her entire life, her father had refused to reveal the cause of her mother’s death, his reasons for leaving Ellara in the care of her Aunt. Her Aunt had refused to comment on the matter as well and Ellara’s Uncle had pulled away from her after her Aunt, like her mother, died under mysterious circumstances.

Only we can see the darkness in people, the monsters that hide within.

Ellara couldn’t help but find it maddening as the memories came and went, abstract phrases and words lacking context taunted her like riddles that were never meant to be solved. Pulling under the bridge, Ellara guided her bike towards the tier, the glint of a headlight in her rearview mirror finally catching her eye as she was ripped from the past and placed back firmly in the present as the other rider began to gain on her.
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Hidden 12 days ago 12 days ago Post by Skai
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Skai Bean Queen

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Location: Home - Debolt, Alberta, Canada
Human: #5.069 I’d Love You Without Any Wings Attached

Interaction(s): N/A
Previously: Growing Vanes


The crackling of fire in the hearth was gentle as it reached Haven’s ears. Daylight warmed her bare skin where she laid across the bed. Her head rested flat against the mattress. Rory’s firm chest had been replaced by the cotton sheets beneath her.

Sleep had fallen onto her like a heavy blanket last night. No nightmare touched her in her peaceful sleep. If she’d had any dreams, she couldn’t recall them. Her mind felt rested and at ease; her body languid and loose throughout. A stark contrast to the usual tension she held in her shoulders and back since coming to the cabin. She hadn’t even felt Rory leave the bed, she realized, as her hand splayed open to search for him beside her.

Her eyes opened slowly, blinking once as they adjusted to the bright light streaming through the window. Outside the sun shone down through the yellow and green treetops. The forest wall was brightly illuminated by the afternoon light, save for the few shadows the branches and leaves cast on the ground beneath them. She’d slept longer than she expected to. As if her body was catching up on weeks of interrupted sleep, exhausting days of travel, and an eventful night of growth and rekindled passion.

The sound of wheels rolling over wood caught her attention then, soon followed by the soft clinking of silverware in the sink. It brought a smile to her face to hear Rory moving within the cabin. It grew wider as she remembered the feel of him last night, and the words that they’d shared with each other before she had closed her eyes.

Had he heard her say them? Did the admission carry him into the same blissful rest that had come over her?

Haven roused from her position on the bed to go to him, to remind him of those words. Only for her muscles to ache and protest the movement in a reminder of the display of her hype gene so many hours ago. She groaned softly as she sat upright. Her legs shifted to hang off the side of the bed. Before she even dared to stand, her hands moved to rub at her sore shoulders and back. The muscles there had taken the brunt of the development. In an effort to test the pain, she stretched out her arms and wings beside her. Her eyes fell shut as she felt the shifting of her muscles beneath the integument. Her small wings weighed heavily on her back; their muscles fully developed for their size but not yet trained to hold themselves up naturally. She’d have to work on honing them like she’d done many years ago. Which, she could only hope, would be a lot easier this time. Her feathered limbs returned to lazily rest at her back as she ran her fingers through her messy hair.

She’d gotten enough sleep to rest her mind, but it seemed like her body needed more time to recover. The thought sparked the usual million questions within her mind. Questions that wanted to ruin the happiness of last night and the quiet of this morning. Questions that would make the tension return in her shoulders.

Rory called her over for lunch, then, having noticed she was awake. His voice easily calmed her mind. She stood from the bed, moving to pull on a clean shirt and underwear, and was surprised to find that the dirt was gone from the floors already. She looked Rory’s way, and her smile returned as her heart warmed. Her worries faded into the back of her mind. The ache in her muscles dulled with each step she took to get to him. Her gaze turned to two plates he set on the table, each of them adorned with a sandwich and a pile of chips. A pang of hunger hit her in her stomach like a fist and her stomach growled in response.

A sheepish grin formed on her lips as Haven looked back to Rory, which seemed to be contagious as he gave her a goofy grin in return. The sight distracted her from her hunger, easily. She leaned down to greet him with a gentle kiss upon his lips. Her hands lifted to rest on his broad shoulders, and she soon felt his fingers graze her hips. The sensation that spread across her skin had her kissing him deeper. His hand firmly took hold of her hip now as the other moved to push her hair back from her face, gently pushing it to the back of her neck where he pulled her further into the kiss. She moved closer to him on instinct. Her hands squeezed his shoulders as she lifted one knee and rested it beside his leg. All thoughts consumed by his touch, by the need to get closer to him as she felt a different type of hunger take hold of her.

Her stomach growled louder, as if it was annoyed by the delay.

Their kiss was broken by soft laughter, the two lovers taking a deep breath as they reigned in their desires to focus on the meal. Rory positioned his wheelchair at the head of the table while Haven took the seat catty-corner to him. She wasted no time pulling the plate closer to her. Her fingers took the soft bread into hand and she tried her best to eat it slowly.

It was a simple sandwich, with mayo, a slice of cheese, and two slices of sweet ham placed between white bread. Somehow, to Haven’s current appetite, it tasted like heaven on her tongue. She had always thought that sandwiches taste better when someone else made them for her, anyways. So she happily ate it, and took her time eating the chips as Rory finished his lunch.

She thanked Rory for lunch by crawling into his lap.

Haven brought in more wood for the fire as Rory cleaned up the mess from lunch. Rory finished before her, of course, because she’d gotten distracted by the beauty of the fall colors outside. The forest seemed to call to her now, more than it ever had before. She brought in more than wood, having gathered a few lingering blooms among the aspens and pines. She cut them small, and placed them in the tallest glass with a bit of water at the bottom. One particular flower stood taller than the rest, resembling a paintbrush that reminded her of her sister.

Harper.

She wondered if anyone had answered her texts yet as she sat at the table, admiring the flowers she’d brought in. If they truly didn’t have service at the cabin, she’d have to wait until she went into town to find out. Aurora surely would have texted back by now, but Harper? She wasn’t even sure if there was a cell signal beneath the waters of the Atlantic. How could she know that Harper was safe there? That anyone that had chosen to go to The Foundation were welcomed with open arms?

Rory’s touch on her shoulder brought her back to the present. As if he’d seen the way her face fell and thought to pull her out of the darkness of them. She turned to him, offering a small smile, before she distracted herself from what had been bothering her by suggesting they tackle the laundry. Thankfully, he accepted the deflection.

Hand-washing laundry wasn’t new to Haven. She may not have done it right when she lived on her own, but she never let her clothes get entirely filthy. For Rory, though, it was a new experience. Haven sat on the edge of the tub as it filled, smiling at her partner where he placed himself in the same spot as last night. Each of them thinking of what they’d done together in the bath the night before, and trying their best to focus on the chore instead of the temptation to recreate it. She started scrubbing with him, sharing the story of the first time she’d washed her own clothes in a cabin similar to this one. Once they’d gotten through enough clothes, Haven carried the damp fabric out to the hearth where she hung them on the chairs and laid them on the table to dry by the heat of the fire. In between trips she’d linger to place a kiss on Rory’s forehead, or his lips, or allow their hands to wander across each other as the tension between them grew.

By the time they finished, the sun was setting. Haven made grilled cheese sandwiches for dinner. One of her specialties, she explained to him. It had always been a cheap and easy meal to make, for both her mother and herself when she was younger. The two ate together by the fire. She’d pulled the rocking chair over to face him, with her feet resting on the space between his legs as the two enjoyed the cheesy meal.

Haven cleaned the dishes while Rory ran another round of hot water for their bath. They repeated the routine of last night, the two of them undressing each other with tender kisses and wandering hands. As Haven lowered herself into the tub once more, she was gently surprised by Rory’s hands against the skin of her back and not her feathers. He massaged the sore muscles with firm ministrations that had Haven melting into the water. Soon his hands were replaced by a soapy washcloth, as he washed away the day’s sweat for her. She turned around when he finished. Her hand took the cloth from his and she set to treating him to the same luxury he’d afforded her.

They managed to make it to the bed before the tension broke between them. The lovers exchanged those three wonderful words many, many times, before their shared exhaustion pulled them under.
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Hidden 9 days ago Post by Melissa
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Melissa Melly Bean the Jelly Bean

Member Seen 1 day ago

__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Location: Vampire's Home - Ünterland
Human #5.070: Shot In the Dark
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Interaction(s): N/A
Previously: vampire

Aurora didn’t know how much time had passed since she’d been trapped in the living room of the vampire’s home, let alone how long ago she had arrived in Ünterland.

He did not return to speak with her as he so claimed he would, so she’d spent a while memorizing the ornate setting, from dusty rug to dark ceiling, and noticeably absent was any kind of clock. The sprawling view from the window was no aid to her either in telling time, the crimson moon solely remaining static in the sky and not once dipping close enough to kiss the horizon. She’d briefly fallen asleep on the chair in the corner beside the fireplace, her body noticeably stiff when she’d woken up, but what had felt like minutes to her could have indeed been hours.

It wasn’t for lack of trying that she remained in that room. The redhead had attempted to find a way out as soon as she had been left alone, however the door was locked from the outside and the windows were bolted shut. As far as she could tell, she was stuck until he decided to acknowledge her presence once more.

Her only saving grace to help the time go by was a bookcase, each shelf filled to the brim, that was propped up against one of the tall walls. It was a collection of books that had definitely been curated over many years, some newer, but mostly older looking. She’d spent some time flipping through the pages of one large encyclopedia-like text, hoping to gain some knowledge or history of Ünterland, but it told her nothing of this place and the people in it.

Returning to the bookshelf with the intent of picking up another dusty spine to parcel through, Aurora scanned the titles for anything else that would pique her interest. While some of the books were in English, there were many in languages she couldn’t decipher - pairings of letters that she wasn’t able to sound out or glyphs and symbols that were foreign to her.

But an orange colored novel caught her gaze, the ember hue reminiscent of Lorcán’s eyes, and her furrowed brow softened. They’d been split up back in the forest, ambushed and sent reeling, and she didn’t have even the slightest of clues as to where he was. Now, not only was she searching for their raven haired teammate in this strange land, but she also yearned to be reunited with her lover, neither of which she could do until she escaped this house.

As she removed the book from the row, a chilling breeze danced along her fair skin, faint, but unmistakably present. Puzzled, she reached her opposite hand up towards the space left between the spines, the air growing colder and stronger as her palm extended further towards the back of the bookshelf. Sure enough, deft fingers ran along the wooden plane and found the source of air, a small gap in the structure that was large enough for her to reach through. Where her hand should have met the wall, the one she initially believed to be behind the bookcase, instead there was only emptiness.

Could it be?

Aurora let the book in her grasp fall to the floor with a thud as she quickly moved to the side of the shelf, pressing her back flush against the wood. Using her legs and feet to propel herself backwards, she poured her strength into pushing the bookcase aside, revealing what she’d desperately hoped was there.

A concrete set of spiral stairs that led down, down into what lay beneath the ancient house. An exit, or the closest thing she’d find to one.

She peered around the bend cautiously, attempting to discern what she was about to descend into, but darkness filled the void below, meaning it’d have to be a journey sight unseen. Her weapons had been confiscated, so she’d be utterly defenseless upon her departure, causing more unease. The redhead hesitated to take the first step, looking back one last time towards the heavy double doors that remained locked and held her captive. She was afraid that the vampire would have heard her moving furniture and barged in to catch her fleeing, and yet, all she heard was silence.

If Aurora was going to have a fighting chance at finding Lorcán, she had to go, and it had to be now.

Taking a deep breath, she put one foot in front of the other, nimbly descending into the dark chasm. The light from above quickly faded as she disappeared, and the lower she traveled, the more frigid it became, nearly bone-chilling. Her eyes slowly began to adjust, making out the stone walls surrounding her. Ivy and moss poked between the cracks.

Her feet met solid ground upon reaching the base of the stairwell and she paused before proceeding, straining to listen for any sign of life. The silence that surrounded her was eerie, punctuated only by the distant drip of water and the whistling of a wind that rustled her copper locks. The air felt damp, and the scent of earth and decay grew stronger as she began to walk forward through the narrow passageway.

Minutes passed, and from what she could tell, this seemed like one in a network of tunnels. It was a labyrinth of twists and turns that led somewhere, with diverging paths splitting off from the direction in which she walked. Which points they were meant to connect with, she had no way of knowing, but it meant that this was her best chance of making some headway in her pursuit. A flicker of hope ignited at the notion of being one step closer, but it was instantly dashed as a low, guttural moan filled the air and made her blood run cold.

She wasn’t alone.

Up ahead, a figure crouched against the stone wall made their presence known, emitting another full-throated groan that Aurora felt in the pits of her stomach. From her vantage point, it was too dark to tell who, or more like what exactly they were, but their movements were sluggish as they clambered to their feet and began to approach. Her breath quickened as she evaluated her options, calculating her risk of running back in the direction in which she came and seeking out a different path, or running towards and around the threat to continue her journey.

The figure, a man, or what remained thereof, emerged from the shadows, vacant eyes glowing with malevolent hunger and devoid of any humanity. His flesh hung in ragged rotting patches from his skeletal frame, a sickly, greenish gray hue that was almost translucent, revealing veins of dark coagulated blood beneath. His mouth hung open, lips peeled back to reveal the few jagged yellowed teeth that hadn’t already fallen out, and his shuffling gait was uneven, with one leg dragging slightly behind as he advanced, lurching towards her clumsily, but forcefully. A dead man walking, a living corpse.

Aurora’s heart pounded, but she clenched her fists, refusing to freeze and let her fear overtake her. Dodging his first attack as he lunged, she narrowly avoided his gnarled grasp, and met him with a swift kick to his midsection. Her boot sank into his decayed flesh with a nauseating squelch and he staggered back, but regained his footing and mindlessly drew closer again, moaning in pain. Grabbing a loose rock from the tunnel floor, she swung it with all her strength and smashed it into his skull, the impact cracking his head to the side, but it wasn’t enough to slow him, his insatiable hunger driving him forward.

He closed the distance and swiped at her, sending the redhead stumbling backwards and into the stone wall, hard. She winced from the impact and just as he reached towards her once more, pressing his advantage, a blur of motion intercepted.

The vampire appeared between them, his speed wholly inhuman as his hand shot out, gripping the man by his throat. He convulsed, his decayed limbs flailing in desperation, but the vampire’s grip was unrelenting. With a low snarl, her captor made quick work of dispatching the barely undead, the sickening crunch of bone echoing through the tunnel as he snapped his neck. His body went limp, hanging lifeless in his grasp before he tossed him aside with a dismissive flip of his wrist.

The redhead, breathing in gasps and eyes wide, tried to take a step back to distance herself, but was met with the unforgiving stone wall. She already knew how dangerous the vampire really was, she’d come to that conclusion back in the forest whilst he chased her down, but the ease in which he just killed only confirmed her assumptions. And now, he was looking at her with the same unmistakable fury blazing in his eyes.

“You insolent woman.”

Before she could react, he reached down and hauled her over his shoulder as if she weighed nothing and without another word began walking back in the direction of his home. Aurora thrashed and kicked as he carried her, her fists pounding against his back, but his hold was firm as they retraced her prior steps through the tunnel.

“Put me down!” Her voice echoed off the stone walls in the confined space, but her protests fell on deaf ears. The vampire didn’t slow, didn’t waver, his pace remaining steady and deliberate. A simmering heat rose in her chest, an anger akin to his own, his silence only further fueling her frustration. The way he was treating her made her feel weak, damsel-like, even, as if she didn’t just single handedly escape from his home, finding her way into the labyrinth beneath it.

Emerging from the darkness, he brought her up the spiral stairs and strode back into the living room, finally setting her down on the couch in a controlled, yet forceful motion. Aurora instantly shot back up to her feet, icy blue glare and all, as she went toe to toe with him.

"Do you have any regard? Or are you truly just that ignorant." He asked, his voice sharp as he looked down at her in disapproval. "You don’t understand what lurks outside of these walls. Another second, and you would have been torn apart." Aurora crossed her arms, her jaw tight and brows knit. It felt as though he was reprimanding her like a child.

“Well I’m certainly not going to just sit here and wait until you decide to let me go.” She retorted defiantly, the little patience she had wearing thin. She could have sworn she’d seen a sparkle of amusement in his obsidian eyes at her reaction, but it quickly vanished as his rage took over once more.

“I already told you, you’re safer here than you were out there.”

“And I already told you that I need to find my friends,” The redhead snapped back, “Amma is out there somewhere, alone. She has been for weeks-”

“Weeks?” The vampire scoffed, “If she’s been here for that long, fair one, the only thing you'll be finding is her corpse.” But Aurora didn’t falter at his words, didn’t even acknowledge what could have very well been fact, continuing her tirade.

“-and it’s my fault that she’s here in the first place. It wouldn’t have happened if we were there to stop it, so I need to make this right. I need to find her, and I need to find Lorcán.”

She realized her misstep immediately, her anger having fueled her too far, and with clenched fists she dug her nails into her palms. The vampire’s expression shifted, his eyes narrowing at the mention of a new name, one he hadn’t heard before. He stepped closer, his towering presence casting a shadow over her.

"Lorcán," He repeated, his tone dangerously calm all of a sudden. "Your lover, I presume."

She hadn’t meant to let his name slip, but now that it had, there was no use in hiding it. The redhead nodded silently, her emotions softening against her better judgement.

“He and I came here with our friend Gil to find Amma. We were attacked in the forest and got separated.” Resigning to her fate, defeated, she sat down on the couch. “You know the rest of the story.”

The vampire’s eyes remained fixed on her, his expression unreadable. They stayed like that for a few long moments, the silence stretching between them and the previous tension and anger subduing slightly.

“You’re reckless to have come here of your own free will,” He finally said, his voice cold but measured. “This place is not for the mundane, it’s practically a death sentence.”

“We didn’t have much of a choice,” Aurora lifted her head, voice steady but lacking the same fiery conviction as before, “Amma was sent here and we couldn’t just leave her.” The vampire shook his head, almost in disbelief, his lips pressed into a thin line.

“Absolutely foolish,” He criticized under his breath, “You’re naïve to think you could show up without consequence, with no understanding of the danger you’ve put yourselves in.”

“Then help me.” The redhead blurted, knowing she had nothing else to lose. Her tone was determined, laced with an undertone of desperation. “Help me find my friends.”

“Help you?” His voice dripped in skepticism, and the laugh he emitted mocked the seriousness of her request, “Exactly why would I do that?”

The redhead stood once more, meeting his gaze with no hesitation and a newfound purpose.

“Because I have no other options.”

“And you think I should care? Take pity on you? That I should risk myself for the sake of your attempt to save your friends?” He scoffed again, “Not only that, but are you really willing to trust someone like me?”

“I’m not asking you to care, and as for trusting you, I don’t have another choice, do I. Hell, I don’t even know your name.” Aurora squared her shoulders, standing tall and refusing to back down. “If I stay here, I’ll never find them, and if I go alone- according to you- I’ll likely die. You say I don’t understand the threats of this place- if you know it as well as you claim, then you can help me navigate it.” She shot his previous words back at him as ammunition to fuel the fire and build her case.

The vampire stood eerily still, studying her with an intensity that made the air between them feel heavy. His gaze traveled over her, taking in the defiant tilt of her chin, the fierce determination burning in her eyes, and the steady rise and fall of her chest as she forced herself to remain composed. It was almost as if he were testing her resolve, searching for any weakness. Finally, he exhaled and spoke.

“Very well. I’ll help you.” He answered, “But you will follow my lead, and you will listen to me. Otherwise, you’re on your own.”

Aurora nodded and opened her mouth to reply, but he held up a hand, stopping her before she could speak.

“And know this. If you falter, it’s your life on the line, not mine. I won’t save you again.”

His words were harsh, but she swallowed her apprehension and fear, holding his gaze.

“I understand.”

“Good,” He stated, clipped, “Give me time to get some things in order. We’ll leave shortly.” The vampire turned to walk away, “And you can call me Cassius,” He added in response to her earlier query, before gesturing to the gap in the wall where the staircase descended into the tunnels below, “Put the bookshelf back where it was.” He paused, his eyes meeting hers with a flicker of something she couldn’t discern.

“It appears I underestimated you.”

It was the closest thing to a compliment she expected from him. She didn’t miss a beat with her response.

“You wouldn’t be the first.”
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Hidden 9 days ago Post by CaliforniaState
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CaliforniaState Biologist

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ELM
ELM

Location: The Foundation Institute - Atlantic Ocean
Human #5.071: Banquet
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Interaction(s): N/A
Previously: N/A


The sun had barely peaked over the horizon when Elmira had already been awake for hours. It wasn’t by choice really, her family had instilled this oppressive notion that the day started the moment birds rehearsed their orchestral performance and crepuscular animals were ambling to start their day. All it really did was leave her in a strange liminal space where she waited for the world to greet her with its warmth and radiance. Once a special place for her to hold in her heart with her parents was now a cold and poignant period in which she was alone and in a silent world all to herself.

It took her years of bartering with the faculty and her counselors at The Foundation to allow her a room to herself, devoid of any unwanted roommates or mountains of clutter whether well kept or an utter pigsty. Not only a room to herself, but one big enough to house windows large enough to allow ample sunlight to shimmer and bathe her flowers in warmth to grow. That was the other thing, space. What wasn’t decorated in gothic academia, natural science affections (posters, books, skulls, hides, feathers, past fish immortalized in resin, isopod tanks), and clothes lay strewn were her plants. Massive montesera, hanging golden pothos and hedera lily, vicious spider and snake plants, variations of orchids and lilies all lined shelves, stood from the floor, or hung from the ceilings off macrame hangers she made herself.

The juxtaposition of grey scale in her closet and verdant green living in her room gave off opposing vibes that would overwhelm a visitor surely, if she had any to invite. Through the massive jungle, bushwhacking past evergreen, Elmira could be seen perched on a stool almost perfectly still. Her back was slouched and hunched over, her posture rapidly declining with age and devotion to her hobby. Over her shoulder you could see the sprouting of a bonsai plant that had been pristinely cared for over years. Facing it would be Elm, with a pair of magnifying glasses equipped with a light, shining down on the branches of the tree with her eyes 40x the size bearing down on the overgrown stems. Like a surgeon performing open heart surgery, Elm raised her still hand to fix the blade of her pruning shears around the base of the branch. Just still enough to not sheer too much nor too little. Air swirled into her nose before she slowly expelled it and with it closed the shears.

Perfect, she would be able to benefit from the beauty and harmony the tree radiated that was otherwise devoid on this campus.

Removing her glasses and shutting off the light, her room was starting to illuminate, chasing the long shadows away and bringing in the light of a new day. A boring day she had hoped, that was until she checked her calendar for the day. It was mostly due dates on things past due or extensions she had asked for because she couldn’t be assed to do anything more that was required of her. Yet, quite counterintuitive for her plan to get out of The Foundation as fast as possible.

“Shit, I forgot today is the day we get transfers” sighing unpleasantly.

Elm knew from experience how daunting and dehumanizing the process could be with their archaic fealty to hazing as if this was some fraternity or sorority seeped in the days of yore. She could protest all she wanted, but it was something mandatory for the student boy. Who knows, perhaps she could find some way to lessen the load for those who couldn’t bear the humiliation.

Elm watered her plants which in all seriousness takes her about half an hour to accomplish, what with climbing stools or batting away leaves so she could find the smaller potted plants. She ate her breakfast which consisted of black coffee and a cigarette, wishing she was given the ability to photosynthesize rather than have to constantly feed herself ’real’ nutrients. Threw on her outfit of blacks and greys and did her make up, ensuring her eyes popped out the most as they usually did. Organizing her books and papers she wished her greenhouse children a farewell, closing the door behind her.

She sat on the steps of the main entrance just before the security gates. A line of fresh faces littered the area, that reminded her that some were even from the prestigious P.R.C.U. A school she didn’t get a chance to attend as there was no voice or choice given to her in the wallows of foster care. The metal clang of her zippo flying open to light her cigarette and shutting probably earned her a few looks of disapproval as this was not a designated smoking area, she could care less however.

Seeing child after child buckle and seethe in pain and anguish over the branding of a barcode into their skin made her body crawl. Searing pain rose to the surface of her wrist as she quickly went to rub it realizing it was nothing but her mind giving way to nostalgia and trauma. Most kids got an ID card or just had their name, here they marked you like livestock and there was no way to rid yourself of the phantom pain nor the tracker that lay dormant under layers of skin. Elm looked down at her as her other hand clutched it from the underside. It looked normal, there was no damage, no permanent scar and nothing to indicate she had ever been branded or had a serial number that denoted her entire history at this school.

“Fuck this” she said, jerking her body up and aiming to speed off into some library or walkway. That was until she saw a girl who didn’t collapse or cry out, lost in her own mind before being prompted to move on. It was almost sad to see how distraught and lost she was. Even more confounding when her gaze fixated on one of the banners overhead.

“What is she staring at?” taking a few steps forward to peer up onto the banner. Tiamat. She must have been one of the P.R.C.U transfers that everyone was gung-ho to eat alive. The thought of reaching out a hand and warning her of the perils that lie ahead prodded her mind, but she batted them away and with a quiver in her lip turned to recede back inside to attend her classes physically.

It wasn’t until later when the decadence of the welcoming dinner was at hand did Elm’s stomach truly turn in revulsion. She thought back to the night she was fresh from solitary confinement. One of the lucky ones to keep her scrubs clean of any excrement or stains. Nor did she have any stains on her mind as foster care and the isolation in her head she retreated to from time to time helped mitigate any inflammatory psychosis. It was just enough to get her bye and leave people bored of her from not reaping what they had wrought. She wouldn’t give them an inch so they didn’t give her a mile.

She dressed as formally as possible, which just meant a nice black dress with floral mesh at the nape of her neck, the cuffs of her wrists and the bottom of her legs. She sat through Professor Montogomery’s egotistical speech and caught vomit in her throat seeing the hierarchical markings that were Greek letters and black and beige jumpsuits. The extreme alienation in clothes and marking wasn’t enough, dinner was only a hair's breadth away. They moved onward to tables with the finest cutlery one would imagine, a banquet that looked as appetizing and elegant as if they were English royalty in the days of monarchs and hegemonies. The name of the insidious dish immediately translated in her brain, there had to be some extra play in why they served it. Normally they would be unphased by such a traditional dish from Italy, but this was no ordinary dinner for no ordinary guests.

Again Elm took note of the girl who was too famished to realize what the dish was, until she heard another possible P.R.C.U student speak up on its contents before spitting out her food and looking quite solemn. Quickly diminished by the enigmatic crowd of mockery and the continued shuffle and clacking of silverware. That was quickly disrupted again by what she could only assume was a giant of an Australian man joking of a horse playing cricket. His outburst would earn him the same fate she was resigned to for her rejection of it all.

Elm pushed around her meatballs, hardly touching them or the past considering she was vegetarian and the school did little in the way of accommodating dietary restrictions. Her nostrils were singed with a putrid odor first with the retching hot on the boots. Elmira scowled before anticipating one of her peers getting too drunk on the flutes of celebration. Instead she caught the gaze of the brunette who had been gripping the table with all her might, aiming to take a chunk of wood with her. A thought entered her mind to sprout some flowers from under the table to do away with the puke and sprout some sweet smelling flower to mask the smell, but she knew working hands would emerge and clean it up and disappear just as fast as they appeared.

“Huh…guess horse meat is something you learn to love. Who would’ve thought?”

She snickered at that one, unintentionally breaking the dead silence, before clearing her throat and taking a sip from her glass.
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Hidden 8 days ago 8 days ago Post by Lord Wraith
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Lord Wraith Actually Three Otters in a Trenchcoat

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________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Location: Ünterland
Human #5.072: Sister Golden Hair
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Interaction(s): None
Previously: Freezing

| Several Weeks From Now
“There will be more if we linger.”

Silence hung over the forest for but a moment as Lorcán tried to calm his racing mind. His heart pounded against his ribs like a thundering bass note. So much had happened in such a short time. They had travelled through the portal, the cut in reality Ellara had made with a knife she referred to as a fragment of Samael’s Scythe.

They had definitely been words that left her mouth, but they were words that bore no meaning to the island-raised young man.

Through the portal they had been drawn into Limbo, a place Lorcán understood to be a prison, a plane between life and death used for torment and suffering. Limbo had threatened to pull him apart, only to spit him out in this cursed place.

Ünterland.

It didn’t seem to take long for everything to go astray as they were immediately separated from Gil. Then the group was attacked before they could reach the village. The village whose tantalizing aromas bore a constant reminder that Lorcán hadn’t eaten since arriving. And now, he was staring at a ball of light that was introduced as his sibling.

His Guardian Sister?

So many questions clouded his mind as he studied the ball of light that radiated the same hues as his own eyes did, or at least as they did on Earth, or wherever home was. Here he was weakened, it was cold and everything felt heavier.

Was this what it meant to be normal?

“They’re getting closer with every second we hesitate, their stench taints the wind.”

Rothschild interrupted Lorcán’s thoughts as he continued to stare at the talking dog and the orb of light. Somehow, it was less surreal when Rothschild was simply the ‘Hyperdog’ on campus. The underbrush quivered and shook when suddenly another horror burst free. A growl escaped from Rothschild’s snapping jaws as the creature suddenly shed its guise. Curling tendrils of shadow spewed towards the ground as wraith-like claws met the attacker with no resistance as it cleaved through flesh, muscle and bone with no effort.

A retaliation from the wendigo passed harmlessly through the phantom form as the shadowy familiar savoured the lesser Hellion’s struggle. Flames of indigo and violet spilled out of both its eyes and mouth eliciting an unnerving cry of anguish from the creature as it vanished into nothing but fleeting ash, carried away on the familiar winds of Ünterland.

“Come, Moonchild,” Rothschild stated, transforming back into the familiar black and white dog that Lorcán thought he knew.

“What are you?”

“I am Ciar of the Stygian Veil, though you may continue to refer to me as Rothschild, others here refer to me as Kieran Cahorsbrut, a name I respect in reverence of my former master.” Ciar answered before raising his snout to point towards the orb of light hovering around Lorcán.

“This is your sister, Bridget, she remembers you well.”

“Little brother,” Bridget teased, her urgent tone softening as she tried to empathize with her brother’s confusion. “Look how grown you are. Almost a man”

“I don’t have a sister.” Lorcán argued softly, reaching towards his weapons as he tried to put several paces between himself, Ciar and Bridget.

“Not a living one.” Ciar replied softly as Bridget glowed in agreement.

“We shared the womb, but the Mundane world was not for me, before I could draw my first breath of look upon our mother I found myself here.” The orb of light suddenly grew, projecting itself into a humanoid shape as Lorcán found himself looking into a set of familiar eyes. He could see his mother’s eyes looking back at him, backed with his father’s fierceness. Long hair spilled down past her shoulders, ending above the waist while she stood only an inch shorter than Lorcán himself. Their nose was the same, though Bridget had her mother’s mouth where Lorcán’s was firmly from Aiden. Ears were the same too.

The twins studied each other, the urgency of the moment lost in the awe as their hands met, palm against palm. For the first time since he stepped foot in Ünterland, Lorcán felt a familiar warmth pulse through his body. Suddenly the world around him felt alive, reaching out through Bridget, Lorcán felt…

Something.

A force, not unlike the Hazies above, but far more raw, far more powerful. Pure, undiluted.

“You can feel the Vis.” Bridget replied with awe as Lorcán opened his eyes to look at his sister again. She pulled her hand back and just as suddenly as he felt the world come alive, it was ripped away and it was like drowning underwater again. Senses deadened, unable to reach out, struggling and sinking.

“I shouldn’t have let you do that, they’ll kill you for that.” Bridget muttered, retreating back into the form of an orb of light. The sky above Lorcán suddenly illuminated like a beacon calling forth and Bridget fled into the forest.

“We have to move.” Ciar urged, “The Vǣrloga will be hunting us now.”

“Nobody is making any sense.” Lorcán called, giving chase after the pair. He looked back over his shoulder, towards the direction he had come from. It worried him that no one had come looking for him during all this time.

Hopefully Aurora was safe with Ellara.
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Hidden 7 days ago Post by Rockette
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Rockette 𝘣𝘦𝘵𝘵𝘦𝘳 𝘵𝘩𝘢𝘯 𝘺𝘰𝘶.

Member Seen 0-24 hrs ago

Location: Ünterland.
Human #5.073: the daughters.
_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Interaction(s):&
Previously: in deliverance.

I see her in you.

Mother, maker, keeper. A remarkable thing that all children clung to– that all children were cast from, all of their mothers sown deep into this timeline as woeful beings struggling to contain hope for their wayward spawn.

Betrayer. She thinks and gazes towards the hearth.

Better yet she be born into a house aflame, to know the world as an eternal conflagration and her lungs filled with smoke. Better yet that she be given to the fire, to know only pain, for when was her life ever not set ablaze; to simmer as embers, coals, to bide time and patience until it was struck anew to rise as a beast of magmatic wrath?

And this woman, who claimed kinship to her, beheld those trembling gestures that dug nails into the damp wood and bled, nails splintered with the force of her disbelief: the convenience, the timing, the place. To be brought here, in this realm of unknown hell that tormented her dreams and warped them into the nightmarish reflections of other-selves and could-be’s that left her barren in all manners of heart and soul. Had she her powers, Amma would’ve tasted the ashen sorrows of hidden lies and truths, the viperish maw that would sluice through her pores and fixate on the lingering emotes of the world that subjugated to her vengeance, the pooling of hate on her wicked tongue stricken with the need to lash out and tear everything asunder. Water-spiked lashes drift closed on a withering sigh; the silence stretches on into a drone of flame and stuttering breath.

She thinks of the only other families she knew of to compare this revelation to, the name of Roth so well known on the island and deeply ingrained into the foundations of the school, even interwoven upon the seas of the Atlantic with their renown spoken into the waves. She cannot help but equate the disparity of her ancestral claims to the near royalty of such a lineage. The prince, she inwardly shudders, so blessedly charmed with life and home, whereas the name Cahors is a specter, a remnant of time fleeting and sorrows eternal. It is a shroud, an eclipse, a lament of death, destiny, and fate as she knows it to be. The name Baxter so delicately aligned with their downfall, the whispers once uttered by Sierra and the sister she both loved and hated and needed all the same. She sees Harper's pleading face in her mind and those eyes that saw everything they could not. Her Grandmother stands there so readily and maternally, a glimpse that fractures through her porcelain reserves to be faced with her kin and knowing such to be true. It does something to Amma as she remains there, still and silent, and dares this woman, dares herself, to deny such convenient dominations. To be brought here to this world so violently, accosted, thrown into the chasm of the dark that surfaced her latent fear of it, to be brought here, rested, and healed. It remains like some grandiose tale of fortune, a written prophecy of the forsaken child placated with familial contingencies; little did this woman know that she harbored a monster in her home. If her Grandmother knew of her sins, would she carelessly absolve them and bless her whole?

Amma had to speculate if she actually wore her mother’s face– if she was easily deciphered through Charlotte’s likeness. Her memory often remained shadowed in a veil of white, difficult to discern, clothed as if a maiden that wept over her misdeeds for the life she had given away. Even her dreams were haphazardly assembled to present that woman of pale skin and blue eyes, midnight hair likened to her own and donned in the mother's warmth yet so dissociated from what Amma thought she knew of the grace of god. She could not help but reflect on when another had looked at her as if a ghost, as an embodiment of someone else, and now she wondered, what had he seen? Who? Was her visage such a haunting shadow of the woman she thought she knew?

A mirror of mirrors reveals the truths of this world but conveniently conceals the lies of life in its embedded reflections, which bear all manner of self and other in this world and the next.

In the shadows of her mind's eyes lies a vacant spot on a hospital wall, ceramic remains, and the lingering confession of weakness to never face oneself again. Not for a while. Perhaps not ever. The bitter fear and self-hatred that lingered as stale and still coffee would in a perpetual ring of spiraling madness. Would she, too, be cursed, unable to face herself ever again and not see what they all saw? To witness the face of the one who had betrayed her more than anyone ever had? The raven-haired transfer written as an enigma, the paradox of who and what she was.

The water has now gone lukewarm and clouded with blackened swirls of detritus, and Amma finally wills herself to look up and lock eyes with her– her grandmother. Her pale hands wring together, and when she steps forward, taking that gaze as acceptance, something inside her swells and snaps and pierces through the rungs of bone that cage a grieving heart.

“Don’t.” She bites, teeth snapped against her tongue, lips paling in violet bruises, a split of flesh that peels against the constraints of a wound that begins to weep, blood washes against her hated mouth anointed as the kiss of death. “Don’t touch me.”

Kylmie looks almost perplexed, a shade of hurt crossing over her features, and Amma immediately loathes how the scrunch of her brows and the purse of her lips remind her of a shadowed face in the darkest corners of her mind. A dark, depraved voice slithers against her lobe and breathes aloud: how much would she look like Mother Dearest if she plucked those blue eyes from her head? She almost trembles from her cruelty envisioned, but would it entirely be out of character from what she knew of herself? What she could remember from sins gone past.

Since when did she care?

“I only want to look at your wounds.”

“Oh,” Amma deflates, a weariness threaded through every pulsating vein. She merely lifts her hand, fingers bruised and marred, and ignores the silvery line of scars that flicker in the hazed light of the fire; how many has she gained anew over the last few months? Did it matter anymore? Would she be fated to walk eternally donned in these laces of hate? Water splashes over the basin as she stands, wet strands of her hair sobbed and wed to her figure, like tentacles of darkness warped against the black lines raised against her skin. She gestures down to her thigh, the bandage now a shade darker.

“I’ll be fine.”

“Are you always this…”

“Defensive.” Dain lists, curiously tacking down his raised fingers. “Abrasive.”

“Difficult.”

Amma could entertain the banter; a quip danced along the edges of carmine-washed teeth, copper wetted against the fullness of her mouth as she merely glared through the casted shadow of her lashes and willed her stare to answer for her.

“Dain.” Kylmie snaps and hands Amma a thick wrap of grey cotton to conceal herself, which she lazily pulls from her familiar hands; she stares at those sapphire jewels adorned on her fingers and remembers a curious red jewel her mother possessed once. She deliberately wraps the material around her body with a feigned slowness and snaps the wet whips of her hair down her back before stepping out from the basin and settling back onto the blanket of furs. Dain growls but looks away, muscles and scars thick and taut, bunched under tan skin that gleams golden under the bathing of firelight before he snarls. It rips through the space that strikes at her bravado. She shivered from the fury she felt.

“You certainly have her eyes,” Kylmie muses offhandedly while kneeling beside her, and something in Amma crumbles beneath those words.

“Don’t do that. Don’t compare me to her.” She drags heavy pieces of her hair over her shoulder. “The woman you’re talking about…”

“I don’t know her.”

Silence resumes, and Amma pulls her fingers through her hair, knots snagging against every tug as she merely yanks through them, wetted pieces of black coming away through her fists, sharp pricks against her scalp that detonate the ringing betwixt her ears, the pain at least cements her to the now with the lingering fog of her nightmare gradually fading away. Though Kylmie doesn’t say anything, she can feel every flinch at the quiet brutality she displays and silently moves to unwrap Amma’s thigh, exposing blackened lines and finely pin-holed wounds of jagged teeth, but also the peculiar scarring that lay beneath and the thick lines of ink beside them. Beautiful, strange, and macabre.

“What happened to you?”

Had anyone ever asked her so blatantly before? There had been rumors and traded stories of things The Foundation had done to her over the years. Ghosts that bore an unknown face and name until they came for her once again. Speculated whispers tossed out over the sea carelessly abandoned, all confirmed during the trials when the simulation had cruelly displayed bits and pieces of truth and lies and spoken her name into the wavering spirit of her dread.

I know that what they did to you - the ghastly, abyssal things they must have done to you, to bring forth what you are now.

It’s a delicate inquiry, spoken carefully, almost in a whisper. Still, she hears it all the same as if a shout into the void of her past, every annunciation ricocheted off the rungs of her bones that splinter with every breath she takes. Amma goes entirely too still. And with her stillness comes the eerily silent reaper of her pain, the ache in her muscles, the fissures in the flesh of her scarred palms and battered feet, the weight of everything endured and lost and forgotten that manifests as more than just the paled crown that bleeds over her brow. She could have meant the markings on her skin, the tattoos she wore as a shield against the hated fragments of her past, to gain ownership of her body once more that had been plied apart over and over again, the violation of her sanctity of heart and the touches of chaos she bore through her trembling hands. She had said yes. The scars she had gritted her teeth against every time needles had graced the silver membrane of her malcontent, the burden she had to bear, the decimation of self. She had said yes.

Kylmie could have meant her time spent within this Limbo they spoke of; she could have meant anything really as she delicately worked and redressed her wounded leg with a cooling salve, a gentleness that she had never known, or perhaps forgotten, mesmerizing as she looked down and then back towards the hearth that swelled and burned.

“Crushed chrysanthemums,” she said, merely to fill the silence. “It’ll help fight back the lingering toxins. You’ll be just fine in a manner of days.”

“Days. Weeks.” It was slowly settling in, like a stone plunked into the recesses of her heart. “I’m stuck here, aren’t I?” It was a simple whisper, dragged over shards of glass, her throat convulsing with thirst and weariness.

“There are… ways to cross realms. But we no longer possess them. She was the last ever to cross over.”

“My mother.” Amma clarified and pulled through her hair again and again.

“Yes. The council forbade us from using that power, but not before she crawled through a conjunction to seek out Midyeden. She always claimed to see things, feel them, and whatever was happening in your world was fated to spill into our own.”

“But…”


“She never came back, and we never heard from her again. The dragon woke up right before she left, and she claimed she’d find a way to send it back wherever it came from. It came, fed, gorged, and slaughtered before it went back to sleep on the neighboring island. She sought answers, answers we would be constantly denied here. Some still remember what happened long ago, and some still whisper our old name.”

Kylmie raised her hand, almost as if she intended to touch Amma’s shoulder, but she quickly lowered it and asked instead: “Do you know what happened to her? Did she ever talk about her home? Did she- is she…?”

“I don’t know,” Amma confessed in a whisper, flinching instinctively at the mention of home. The rapid-fire questions that rang hollow with her Grandmother’s concerns, the sort of affections she envied at that moment, because when had anyone ever thought the same about her? “Bits and pieces come and go; it’s all jagged shards and a ringing that won’t stop.”

Dain stalked closer along the edges of the wall, hearing her uttered whispers and the lulling draw of her voice, the accent that fell off the edge of her words as she spoke.

“I can’t remember many things; I can’t even remember her face. But I hear her voice sometimes, in the dark, and it speaks about a red moon and a Tree of Life. Sometimes, I hear another voice, a roar, a screech, a wail. Something that taunts me constantly, reminding me of what I’ve done. What she did.”

“What-”

“She gave me away.” Amma stares into the fire, the flames that she can feel burrowing deep into her pores, lancing away through her veins and marrow, boiling within and without; hidden within the depths of this contained malice lies the maw of her personal hell that roars, so loudly, so keenly, it vibrates against the heaving cage of her ribs, threatened to rend her asunder as her powers would, and she welcomed the distraction of the panic and pain as she said:

“She keeps telling me to run away. She keeps telling me she’s sorry. She keeps crying, and she won’t stop. She looks out over the sea and says his name, but I can never hear her. She weeps and screams and begs for something, but I can’t remember what it was, what it is. She tells me she’s sorry. She still gave me away to them.”

“I’m sorry, I’m sorry. Sorry. Sorry. Sorrysorrysorrysorry.” Her heart beats faster and faster; her heart pounds louder, over and over; it hammers at her ribs ruthlessly as she breathes unsteadily.

Forgive me, dove. They said you had to go; they said they could help you!

“But they didn’t help me– ”

“- They hurt me.”

Amma’s eyes flicker to where the flower remains, glittering with red shards, tiny fragments of who she was, of what she lost.

“I wanted to find her. I said yes. I wanted to find him. I said yes. I only wanted to go home. And here I am, in her home, trapped. Just when I thought maybe I could belong with them. I wanted to try.”

I said yes.

“I wanted the name they took away from me. The name she gave me. I just wanted to mean something to someone, and he promised me…”

Dain moves closer, and Kylmie only stares, unable to speak as Amma begins to shake. It starts as small tremors in her hands, her arms, her shoulders hunched inward, and her head bowed, pieces of her hair shaded over a quivering mouth as she grits her teeth and hisses with the weight of the life of lies that smother her in a choked shadow of dismay and anger. Her rage is a felt and thriving thing that pulsates with her broken heart, her soul shredded into ribbons of wasted remains brutally picked clean and left for naught, the only thing in life that she knew to be her own, something she chose in the darkest pits of gleaming needles and ringing voids, the only thing she could claim as her only means of purpose. She begins to whisper, lost to the toils of her sorrows:

“My name is–”

An exploding wail is there to answer her, a screech that shatters through Ünterland with the powerful thunder of wings that pierce through the shaded clouds of black and red as the dragon begins its attack on the blackwood coven.
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Hidden 5 days ago Post by Qia
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Qia A Little Weasel

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The bedroom was imbued with an understated serenity, the amber glow of a solitary lamp spilling across the walls in warm, honeyed strokes. Shadows pooled in the corners, deepening the room’s texture, while the muted whir of a fan harmonized with the soft rustling of scattered papers. She sat perched on the bed, her legs folded beneath her, surrounded by a chaotic mosaic of notes and schematics that blanketed the comforter like windblown leaves in autumn. Her dark hair, loosely tied, rebelled against its constraints; stray strands framed her face, unnoticed in her absorption. Meanwhile, the fabric of her well-worn pyjamas clung in familiar folds, drawn taut over the gentle arc of her pregnancy—a quiet, persistent testament to the burgeoning life she carried.

Yet, for all the comfort the room exuded, Anna’s attention was elsewhere, tethered to the labyrinth of her thoughts.

Her brow knit in concentration as her finger glided along the diagram of a meticulously designed glove, annotations crowding its margins with notes. Critical components leapt from the page—pressure-sensitive nodes embedded in the fingertips to monitor HZE flux, micro-actuators lining the wrist for optimal dexterity, and an intricate energy modulation array to temper volatile surges. Though the concept appeared straightforward, the execution demanded surgical precision, every component a delicate cog in a larger, interdependent mechanism. These gloves weren’t conceived as inhibitors, crude tools of suppression, but as instruments of harmony—designed to stabilize and refine abilities that threatened to spiral beyond the user's control.

Anna tapped the schematic’s edge with her pencil, her thoughts spiralling through the complexities. The adaptive feedback loop at the heart of her design demanded painstaking recalibration, a task rendered all the more arduous by the boundless variability of hyperhuman physiology. Each individual’s abilities, as singular as crystalline snowflakes, necessitated a mechanism both endlessly flexible and unerringly exact—a feat that often felt like trying to bottle the wind. The enormity of the challenge bore down on her, an invisible pressure that threatened to crush her resolve. It was as though she were tasked with carving perfection from shifting sands, the ground beneath her work constantly in flux. And yet, as insurmountable as it seemed, she couldn’t stop. Even with the looming reality of her body stretched to its limits, her pregnancy a constant reminder of how close she was to bringing a new life into the world, she pressed on.

Maybe a localized HZE modulation system…” she murmured to herself, jotting the thought into the margin of the page. Her solution, if it worked, would allow users to channel their abilities safely, minimizing risks like neural fatigue or system overload. It was a delicate balance—one that required a blend of cutting-edge engineering and deep knowledge of hyperhuman biology.

Now, if only I could just…” she murmured again, her voice tapering off as frustration drove her to shift a cluster of papers aside. Her hand halted when it connected with a wrinkled envelope concealed beneath the layers of her work. The elegant cursive script on its surface hinted at a meaningful intent, suggesting significance that had previously been shrouded in obscurity. She recognized that its true content lay buried in the depths of her unfinished tasks, silently beckoning her attention and embodying choices and challenges—requests—that required consideration.

Anna's attention remained fixed on the envelope for a moment, her hand gently resting on her abdomen. She bit her lower lip as she reflected on her situation, considering the numerous obligations that awaited her, both imposed by others and self-created. In her mind's eye, she envisioned her children’s future and grappled with the fear that they might inherit their father's struggles or instead find comfort in a more supportive setting. She recognized that life often presented injustices to individuals like herself, who possessed no extraordinary gifts. Yet, she realized it was likely even more challenging for people like James, whose uninvited abilities rendered him an outcast in the eyes of society.

A society that labelled them as different. A society that instilled fear towards them.

With a weary sigh, Anna eased back against the plush pillows, her eyes drifting shut in a rare moment of reprieve. The day’s weight lingered in her chest, but the soft creak of the bedroom door pulled her back to the present. She straightened instinctively, her hands pressing against the mattress as James stepped inside, balancing a plate in one hand and a glass of water in the other. The sight of him coaxed a quiet smile to her lips, the kind that felt like a small victory after an arduous battle.

Here ya go—peanut butter and pickle sandwich, just like ya ordered,” he said, setting the plate on the nightstand with a flourish. “Because nothin’ says ‘pregnancy craving’ like an absolute culinary abomination.

Anna's smile widened momentarily, her worries dissipating as if they had never been. “You say ‘abomination,’ but I say ‘delight.’ Don’t blame me, though—it’s your kid in here callin' the shots.

Fair enough, but it's your kid too,” James retorted lightly as he settled beside her on the bed, gesturing toward the scattered schematics. “And I coulda sworn we were supposed to have a date night tonight. Hmm.” He scratched his chin in mock contemplation, feigning ignorance. “Wonder what happened there.

Anna chuckled softly, her laugh easing some of the tension in the room. She gathered the disordered papers in her lap, carefully stacking them with the crumpled envelope on top. “Oh, you mean the date night where you spend the whole evenin’ tryin’ to distract me from thinkin’ about work?

Exactly that one,” James said, his lips twitching into a faint smirk. “You know, the one where I bring out my A-game—askin’ deep, meaningful questions like whether pickles even belong in the universe, let alone on a sandwich, and then challengin’ you to prove me wrong.

She snorted, shaking her head. “And here I thought I married a man with refined conversation skills.

Hey,” he feigned offence, “I’m a man of mystery. Besides, the whole point of a date night is to get away from all this work.” He paused, shaking his head in disbelief. “And I can’t believe that I’m the one that’s sayin’ this. Sierra’s off with Barbara tonight—a real babysitter, can you believe that?—and you’re still here, knee-deep in blueprints.

Anna rolled her eyes, but the warmth in her smile betrayed her affection. “Okay, point taken. But,” she said, plucking a schematic from the stack and holding it up like an ace in a card game,“This is the future, James. It’s not just work. It’s…” She trailed off, searching for the right words, her gaze falling to the crumpled envelope.

Noticing the shift in her demeanour, James set his teasing aside, his voice softening as he retrieved the plate from the nightstand. “It’s important. I know….” he finished for her.

Anna nodded, the weight of his understanding easing a fraction of the tension coiled within her. She accepted the plate, her so-called “abomination” remaining untouched for the moment. “I just…I can’t stop thinkin’ about how many people could benefit from this—how many lives could change if I get it right. But at the same time, all I can see are the gaps. All the things I don’t know yet… maybe things I’ll never figure out.

James tilted his head, his gaze carrying a warmth that cut through her doubt like sunlight through a fog. “You always do this,” he said softly. “You carry everything on your own shoulders like it’s your job to fix the world.

If I don’t, who will?” Anna challenged. “I’m tryin’ to create somethin’ that gives people a chance, here. It’s about makin’ sure people like you don’t have to struggle the way you did.

James’s expression softened further, a quiet understanding in his eyes as he reached out to place a hand gently on her abdomen.“And people like her,” he added, his voice barely above a whisper.

And people like her,” Anna repeated, the words carrying a weight that neither of them needed to explain. She finally picked up her sandwich, taking a bite before adding through a muffled chew, “If it’s a ‘her,’” pausing to swallow mid-sentence before finishing, “Of course.

It’s a her,” James said confidently, leaning back with an air of certainty, “I can feel it in my gut.

Your gut isn’t exactly a reliable metric, dear,” Anna teased. “Besides, what are you going to do if it’s a boy?

James grinned, leaning forward as if he had been waiting for this moment their entire married life. “ Easy. Name him J.J.

J.J.?” Anna raised a brow, skeptical.

James Junior,” he replied, his smugness palpable.

Anna groaned theatrically, though her laughter undercut her protest. “Over my dead body,” she shot back, shaking her head as their laughter mingled.

James chuckled, raising his hands in mock surrender.“Alright, fine. What about a girl?

Anna hesitated, her playful smile fading into a pensive expression.“I don’t know yet,” she admitted, her thumb absentmindedly brushing the edge of the crumpled envelope. “ It has to feel… right. Somethin’ that fits her. Somethin’ like—” Her voice trailed off, her gaze fixed on the envelope’s worn surface as if it held the answer she was searching for.

The lighthearted air between them shifted, giving way to something deeper.

You know, I’ve been thinkin’ about something… about someone,” Anna began, her voice quieter now, tinged with a blend of empathy and urgency. “A woman wrote to me last month—a mother. She’s desperate. Her son’s just startin’ to show signs of his ability, and it’s… too much for him. She’s terrified he’ll hurt someone, James. He won’t even leave his room most days.

Her words quickened, spilling out as though she couldn’t contain the flood of emotion behind them. “And he’s not alone. There are so many kids like him. People thrown into situations they’re not ready for, scared outta their minds. You know what happens—a pyrokinetic doesn’t have to try to burn a room down when they’re panicked. It’s just… their body reacting. Adrenaline spikes, stress hormones take over, and they lose control. It’s not their fault, but they’re the ones who pay the price.

She picked up one of the diagrams, holding it between them as if it were a talisman. “But this—this could change that. It’s not like dampeners, shutting people’s abilities down. It’s about stabilization, giving them the tools to regulate their powers, to understand them. It could make training programs safer, help with rehabilitation, or just make daily life bearable for someone whose powers are unpredictable. Someone like…” She hesitated, her eyes meeting his.

Someone like you.

James regarded her with a steady attentiveness once she finished speaking, his hazel eyes—so much like the ones Harper would one day inherit—glinting with a blend of understanding and subtle admiration. “Darlin’,” he began, his voice laced with gentle humour, “just to remind you… you married a very, very simple man. All this—even just in theory? It’s pretty damn impressive. Maybe a 'lil ambitious, sure, but impressive all the same.

Anna laughed softly, the tension in her shoulders dissipating slightly.“Sorry… I guess I got carried away,” she admitted, her voice lighter now. Her lips quirked into a sheepish smile as her gaze dropped to her hands, her fingers twisting together in an unconscious display of nerves.

James leaned closer, his tone turning warm and earnest.“No need to apologize. You’ve got a big heart…. bigger than most. It’s one of the reasons I fell in love with you.

Her cheeks flushed a faint, rosy hue, and she shook her head, her humility tinged with gratitude. “I just… I just want kids to stay that way,” she said softly, her voice trembling slightly with emotion. “To still be kids.

Her gaze lowered, falling to her rounded abdomen, and her hand instinctively rested there, cradling the life growing within her. Her words hung in the air like a quiet wish, tender and profound.

Just a girl.

_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Location: The Foundation Institute - Atlantic Ocean
Human #5.074: What's in a Name
_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Interaction(s): N/A
Previously: Sentio ergo sum


The restroom lay in a state of stasis, its silence punctuated only by the drone of the fluorescent lights overhead and the intermittent cadence of water droplets, a melancholic sound of some unseen spigot’s weary confession.

Drip

Harper braced herself against the porcelain basin in front of her, her quivering hands gripping its edge with an intensity that defied her diminished strength. It was not mere fatigue that weighed upon her however—it was the indelible sting of mortification, fresh and unrelenting, the infernal rush of blood that warmed her cheeks giving its presence away though her sightless gaze could not confirm what she knew to be true.

The scene in the dining hall replayed in her mind in excruciating detail. She felt again the knot tightening in her abdomen, the visceral betrayal of her frame as it faltered beneath the suffocating deluge of heightened perception. Every detail etched itself into her memory, refusing to blur or fade.

And then, the laughter—piercing, caustic, inescapable. It had erupted not from a single direction but from everywhere at once, encircling her in its dissonant chorus. Yet, as her mind replayed the moment now, subtle distinctions emerged. Not every sound had been laced with derision. Some of the chuckles had carried an unmistakable hesitance as if their originators wavered between discomfort and the instinct to respond to something they couldn’t comprehend. Perhaps their intent had not been malicious.

Perhaps it was worse. That they’d pitied her.
And what the fuck was she supposed to do with that?


Blindness. What should have been a reprieve from the unrelenting sharpness that had carved her identity into polarizing extremes, felt instead like retribution. It was no gift. It was no mercy. It was an admonition, a cautionary tether yanking her back toward some inevitable reckoning she hadn’t meant to bring about. But that wasn’t true, was it? She’d asked for it, practically begged for it.

Her grip on the sink slackened as her trembling hands rose to her face, the cool heels of her palms pressing against her eyes in a futile attempt to block out the unrelenting torrent of imagery.

The darkness behind her lids was no refuge, was it? For how could a punishment forged in the crucible of her own torment suddenly transform into a blessing?

When the nausea finally ebbed, when she no longer could feel the acidic burn of her throat, Harper turned the faucet’s knob, letting the cold stream spill over her hands. The sensation was bracing, but she cupped her palms and splashed the icy water onto her face anyway, the sting of it anchoring her, if only tenuously, to the present.

But what now?

She couldn’t remain here indefinitely, entombed in her own hesitation like some fragile thing. Hiding wasn’t her way—it never had been.

She was Harper Baxter, for fuck’s sake. The seeker of the unseen, the unspoken, and the imperceptible truths others were either too blind or too cowardly to confront.

When had she started believing that this unrelenting pursuit of clarity, the instinct to delve where others dared not to, was something to be ashamed of?

“Get it together,” she muttered under her breath as her fingers adjusted the blindfold resting over her eyes. “You’ve faced worse. You’ve overcome worse.” The fabric clung securely to her face, veiling her gaze and the strange, fleeting metallic sheen that had flickered across her eyes earlier. She didn’t know what it meant and wasn’t about to let herself dwell on it. This was neither the time nor the place to sit on yet another mystery.

A knock sounded at the door.

Ah, right. Harper had almost forgotten.

The unwelcome return of her self-proclaimed saviour and therapist.

Uh, hey…you’re not, like, drowning yourself in there, are you?” His voice broke through, muffled slightly by the sturdy barrier between them. “’Cause, I gotta say, there are probably better ways to go than in a bathroom. You know, assuming it’s not the pissing kind.

The humour, crass and unpolished, was delivered with a casualness that could only belong to him she realized then. Of all the people who could’ve followed her, it had to be him.

Her someone he used to know, if she could even call him that. She hadn’t asked his name, hadn’t wanted to know, and she still wasn’t sure if she cared to.

Harper moved toward the door, her fingers easily finding the handle, twisting it and pulling it open to reveal her uninvited confidant. As the door creaked open, her expression solidified into its trademark scowl—a mask as much as a message.

There was no preamble, no deference—just the one question that had been eating at her.

Why’d you do that?” Her voice was sharp, stripped of everything except raw curiosity. Why had he offered to take her here? Why had he stepped in when no one else had after she had publicly fallen apart?

She, of course, couldn’t discern the motion of his shoulders, but the tone of his reply carried the distinct air of a shrug—casual, indifferent, and pointed in its simplicity.

Guess I don’t like seeing people singled out or so distant from others which—by the way—is the second time I’ve noticed it with you.

The remark landed with a peculiar sting, catching Harper off guard.

So distant from others.
“Like, none of us even mattered.”


Without replying, she pushed past him, her movements brusque and automatic. She focused on blocking it all out—the images, the voice, everything. Her feet carried her forward, but soon she realized she had no idea where she was going. Nowhere, it seemed, was the only destination she had in mind.

A sigh escaped her lips, heavy and resigned, as she slowly turned back to face him.

Could you just… describe it for me?” she asked, her voice quieter now, tinged with an unexpected vulnerability. “Everything...

She couldn’t see it. She would at least remember it. She would hold onto it all.
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Hidden 5 days ago 4 days ago Post by Hound55
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Hound55 Create-A-Hero RPG GM, Blue Bringer of BWAHAHA!

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Banjo couldn't sleep.

Whilst his body had well and truly healed he still felt ghost pains from that night. He'd turn and twist trying to find a way to sleep which would ease the pressure on his ravaged body which didn't have a scar to bear.

The size of the bed did nothing to help, either.

He was used to single beds and cots and swags, and in this pampered preppy school everyone got their own huge bed. A bed that was far too soft, and he could lie well across without covering the area.

He'd piled clothes on it just to try and take space. Make it feel less sparse, open and bare. Some nights it was more effective than others.

Life since he'd left the infirmary was just as uncomfortable. His Community contribution at the Collegiate library saw him inundated with a swarm, a horde, of girls who'd gossip and seemingly double in number with every passing day. Something weird was going on. Had been ever since the incident.

Calliope was acting... irregularly... around him. Inconsistent with how she'd been speaking with him before that night. She'd said she had wanted to take time to get to know him, she seemed to try to avoid him at times, but then things would run hot and cold when they were actually together, noticeably hot in particular, and she wasn't backwards in making physical contact. But she'd said earlier she didn't want things to just be physical, or her using him for that or whatever.

His life seemed almost... split... between his time before and after the infirmary.

He needed someone to talk to about all of this, but he didn't really have anyone. Old mate Butler would probably just give him shit and be less than no help. Elle kind of dodged him a little since she did the good legwork of getting Calli back in touch after they'd tried to deny him visitors. Just the thought of a repeat performance from the Hyperhuman terrorist Hyperion had been more than enough to put the wind up her a bit. That day seemed to impact everyone else pretty heavily. Probably because they were still left in the thick of it whilst he was quickly ragdoll'd in seconds. Barely had the time to regret his words... as if that were a thing he would ever do in the first place. Ground was under him. Then it was WAAAAY under him. Then it was very quickly rushing towards him.

But with Elle creating distance he just realised he didn't really have anyone to talk to about it. Most people he knew, he just didn't really have that kind of relationship with to talk about this kind of stuff. His own inexperience and Calli's seemingly strange, inconsistent behaviour. Not that he was complaining about the hot and cold treatment, it just would have been nice to have some kind of understanding about what the Hell was going on. Not like he could talk to anybody else.

Least of all his roommates. Any discussion on this would, well, kind of just be seen as rubbing their faces in it.

But still, it left him confused and isolated... whilst ironically never being more popular. It probably wouldn't last, sure. He'd do something knuckleheaded eventually and things would return to the usual status quo eventually. Inevitably. But it didn't make things any less frustrating now.

He kicked the quilt off the bed with a deep sigh.

Drink. Get something to drink. Reset. Maybe then sleep will find you.

He staggered from the bed in his boxers, to the communal kitchen and the coffee machine.

He had one eye half squinted open from beneath the unnegotiable bramble which was his hair, as he scratched his chest and considered his options.

No coffee. That'd be dumb. Warm milk's too bland... He checked the chocolate powder in the shaker, and didn't give anyone else a second thought.

"That'll do..."

Not coffee. Not at this hour.

He upturned the shaker over a mug and holding it in place, he gave it a good shake until he felt he had enough powder.

Something rustled.

He straightened slightly, a perplexed expression penetrating the exhausted face. He froze. The chocolate powder was communal. For dusting. Not for what he was doing.

The noise had stopped though, whatever it was. Somewhere in the darkness. Not that Zimmerman would ever let him have it if he found what he was doing with the chocolate powder in the first place. Big Steve wouldn't want to wake everyone over it either. He'd just hear sullen bullshit and passive aggression in the morning, that was more his M.O. The instinct of getting caught just got to him in the moment. He yawned broadly and scratched his chest again, slowly feeling more secure.

He did hear something though.

Fuck it. Whatever it was wouldn't be important.

He hit the 'Hot Milk' button on the machine, with his mug in place to cover the pilfered powder. It started it's obnoxious cacophony as it performed its task.

Then he felt it.

A-- cat--? Its tail slowly entwining itself around his calf and lower leg. He straightened again in confusion.

'When did they get a cat?'

But that didn't make sense for more reasons than one.

For one thing cats are normally furry or fluffy.

He felt someone's gaze upon him in the darkness.

This is more-- scaly.

A feminine smirk from someone he'd never seen before, barely outlined from the dim light of the coffee machine. He caught a brief glimpse of a forked tongue flicking at the air. The corners of her mouth creased even wider.

"Oh shi--..."

Before his sleep deprived mind could finish the thought, he was off his feet. The strong tail dragging him to the one room in the dorm he'd never set foot in.


________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Location: The Foundation - Present
Human #5.075: Shoshanna Tannin
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Interaction(s): Former P.R.C.U transfers to The Foundation
Previously: Horses


"No." She said flatly.

"Well, that's somethin' I guess." He half-jogged at an awkward pace to keep up with her. "I mean, I'm not surprised they lumped you in the beige brigade as well, but I was worried they might make your life even--"

"No. I mean 'No. Stop talking to me.'" Shoshanna's scaly arms crossed her chest as she pushed on.

"You think they're watching us..?" Banjo quickly turned and looked around, trying to spot the surveillance.

"No, you idiot. I mean stop talking to me. I finally have a chance to start over and make a new first impression after you and that bitch played a prank on me and ruined my reputation at our last school."

"Prank? You think I pranked you - a person I had never met and never think, nor thought about - to try and commit sexual assault on me? Some prank." Lawyer Banjo flashed his head.

"Ssssssh!" She tried to silence him, unable to cover her natural lisp as she hushed him. She hoped the words wouldn't travel across the open ocean to find her here. "Sure. Is that why you bragged about it?"

"Bragged abou--?! I never told a damn soul."

"Then how'd it follow me around school for five years?"

"I. Don't. Know. Not from me. I'd just been tossed away like a used Kleenex in front of everybody into a hospital bed like it was nothing, you think I wanted people to know you were able to drag me into your bedroom and I wasn't able to do a damn thing about it?"

"Her then. Before she got expelled. She must have told everybody."

"Elle didn't get expelled. She stuck out the full four years. Course she stopped talking to me. Probably over this. Who could blame her? Believe me, she would have been just as embarrassed about the whole thing as we both were."

"That still doesn't explain why you keep trying to talk to me now."

"I told you... you've got to watch yourself here. They have... a different way of seeing hyperhumans like yourself. They see you as-- less than. 'Sub-species' is the term they use for it. Haven - girl on my team - has been on the receiving end of it. It went so far as one psychopath trying to--" He stopped. The thought was still too raw, after what happened to Calliope.

"They have some... different views about certain types of hyperhumans. Different types of views about a lot of things, by the looks..." He generalised.

"So? I'm supposed to think you care? You never cared enough to speak to me before."

"You shut yourself in your room or went out. And I didn't exactly blame you for doin' that. After everything, I kind of feel its best to respect your bloody privacy. And there's a difference between caring enough to be a friend to a person, and caring about their basic fundamental well-being and that they not be ravaged and have their shit harvested by some lunatic fringe nutbag. You'll notice I'm not asking about your day, am I?"

"That's exactly what you were asking me." She smirked back, skepticism still deeply imprinted on her face.

"From an angle of a person who doesn't want to see you get your shit harvested! 'Hey, have you come across anybody saying anything like 'Cor, check out the scales on that sub-species.'" He snapped back with no small amount of exasperation.

"Look... all I'm saying, is that if you notice anyone being particularly, I dunno, cruel over your-- whole-- deal. Or acting weird."

"Weird?" She levelled him with a look that suggested she was looking at such a person as they spoke.

"Ha. Ha. By our standards, 'weird'. Even if it's just you feel someone looking at you funny. I want to know about it."

Shoshanna snorted dismissively. Her tongue whipping out in a flash, before returning home, so quickly a bystander could scarcely tell it had happened in the first place, as she shook her head.

"What?"

"You just live such a charmed life, don't you? Do you have any idea how many people and how often I get 'looked at funny'? Even back in our old school?"

He went to reply, but it was clear she wasn't done with what she had to say yet.

"Even just studying I could feel eyes on me. Always. And after what happened with..." She sighed, and focused inwards, as if fighting off an outburst that could be a public spectacle. "After THAT it was all the time from everyone. And whispers. Always whispers. Could you imagine what it's like when you've waited so long to get into a place where you might finally be accepted for what you are. WHO you are. And then have that first impression trampled on, just to become a-- a FREAK in everyone's eyes again. Some monstrous thing that can't control herself? You both STOLE that from me."

"I. Did. Nothing. To you. I was as much a victim of what happened as I came to realise you were. Many would unfairly claim 'moreso'." He crisply fired back.

"You are just the worst--"

"--person you ever attempted to mate with against their will? Cheers. It's an Honour." He shot back, leer on his face.

Her quickened gasp, made it clear his instinctive response was a tactical error.

As she turned and ran down the hallway, he cursed at himself. "Stupid."

He'd just put more space in between himself and probably the most vulnerable target in this place. There was no way she'd trust him enough, if anything worth reporting did happen to come up and threaten her now.

No leads, few allies and his horse stirring up a tempest in his gut.

If he was honest with himself it was stirring more out of fresh guilt than ill-preparation or the origin of the meal.

He'd since formed the conclusion that on that night there were two victims. The nature of Shoshanna's hyperhuman powers and physiology went beyond skin deep. The 'reptilian brain' was more developed in her, the reptilian brain which was more susceptible to the natural urges that came from pheromone dispersal than the average person.

He found himself under direct physical threat - of sorts... - that night, but she had fallen victim to a situation beyond her own control as well.

He just hated that somehow she was attempting to blame him for it. There were enough things in this world that people COULD fairly blame him for, without concocting new ridiculous things that he wasn't responsible for. It triggered the persecution complex that drove his lawyer brain into overdrive.

Time was, Zimmerman would be able to get to work putting out his fires on this one. Quiet hushed conversation through her closed over door. But that was more complicated here and now. He was going to have to let time scab that wound and hope nothing befell her in the meantime.

She did raise a reasonable question about how it spread across the school so fast. He always just chalked it up to being such a small island, nothing stays hushed long. Some rumour snuck out of faculty somewhere into some student's ear and then it spread like wildfire. Perhaps the 'real reason' of Elodie Miller's departure. He'd never really given it much thought, because that rumour was a long forgotten one in the cacophony of gossip and scuttlebutt that surrounded him and his actions. He'd had five years of questionable behaviour which swirled those waters since then. Shoshanna had-- well, she'd always tried to keep quiet and to herself. So that one never left. And was the only thing many knew about her. It became a label, that forever stuck to her. However unfair as it may have been.

Regardless of how her actions did nothing to help people forget or move on from it, it still wasn't fair that she be viewed as little more beyond that. Her vulnerability to the pheromones he'd been unknowingly doused with making a victim of her as well.

The best indicator he had for spotting sentiments similar to those shared by Daedalus in this place was running from him and viewed him with a level of disdain that wouldn't soon be repaired.
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Location: Home - Debolt, Alberta, Canada
Human #5.076: Hands on the Wheel
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Interaction(s):

“Shop is a block that way. Can’t miss it.”

The truck squealed to a stop, and the gearshift crunched into the correct position as Miller gave Rory a curt nod. He had been gracious enough and had the foresight to schedule the drive into town when the two had first moved in, as even the two lovebirds wouldn’t be able to subsist on deli meat, government cheese, and trail mix for very long. It wasn’t a very big village, a bit larger than the single road towns from a Western by technicality. Rory felt like he was on the set of a movie, rather than in any part of Canada he had ever known before this trip.

He’d pinch himself to wake himself from the dream, but the pain that radiated through his legs as he made the transition into the wheelchair was a fair substitute.

Haven’s kiss lingered on his cheek as she made her way towards the independent grocer they had parked in front of. His eyes followed her as she entered, his hoodie easily hiding the fresh signs of her healing. Miller began slowly walking up the sidewalk, with Rory following a few moments later. A few locals passed by, eyeing up Rory with a mix of curiosity and warm smiles. He knew it was only a matter of time before they began asking questions he didn’t know yet how to answer. But for now, they settled to give him distance.

A small bell announced Miller and Rory’s arrival in the cramped hardware store. The aisles were barely large enough for his wheelchair to roll down, and the collection of bits and tools were stored in bins and boxes of varying sizes and colors. A middle-aged man in an old painter’s jumpsuit looked up over the rim of his glasses towards the two from his stool behind the counter, his eyes naturally wandering over Rory’s figure. Faint jazz music drifted from an old radio hidden somewhere out of view. A fading patch over the man’s left breast read “Ashburn” in distinctive red lettering. Rory gave a quick look up to Miller, who approached the counter.

“Kid here is renting my hunting cabin for the time being, and was in the market for a beater. Told him I knew just the bastard.”

A small smile twitched the corner of the stranger’s lips as he turned to look back to Rory, standing up and coming around the corner with a hand outstretched. Rory took it, and muttered out a few words. “I’m Rory. Been travelling West. Looking to settle down for a bit.”

The stranger nodded, cracking his neck and running his tongue across his inner lip. Rory knew the man wanted to ask, but his melancholic expression seemed to repel it. “Well, you can call me Gus. Not often we get strangers in town who want to stay.” He turned his gaze back behind the counter, tilting his head back and forth as if weighing his options, before turning back with a grin. “Tell you what… the thing is rusting out back anyways. I’d let it go for a grand.”

Rory reached into his coat pocket, producing a small stack of brightly colored bills. “Cash ok?”

Gus raised an eyebrow towards Miller, who only shrugged in response. He looked back towards Rory. "You always keep cash like that on you?"

Rory hesitated, his hands frozen as the wheels in his head turned. Miller didn't seem to care, but the last thing he needed was for folks to start getting weary. So, he shook his head. "Well, uh... I kind of withdrew cash from my bank back home. Hard to go out of my way to a bank like this." He motioned towards his lower half, his words dripping with a hint of frustration. He continued counting out the payment, before holding it out in front of him.

Gus nodded, shrugging his shoulders. He lowered a hand to accept the bills. "Fair enough."

Rory breathed a slight sigh of relief. His eyes drifted, trying to drown out the uneasy feeling in his chest. Among the various tools and materials were various homemade items. Small abstract vases and hand-carved trinkets filled up what would be the few empty spaces in the shop. Near the door, resting in an old grated trash can, were a few canes. Rory instinctively pocketed his remaining cash and rolled his way over near the door, lifting one up to admire it. Gus looked up as he finished counting the payment, setting the money down on the counter and walking over. ”Made these myself… but most folks around here who need them already have one. Or are too stubborn to admit they need one.” Rory didn’t need to look up to notice the side-eye Gus had flashed towards his old pal. Miller rolled his eyes and scoffed, trying to make a point to stand up a little straighter than he had been. ”I’d be happy to let ya take whichever ones you like… but I do have a favor I’d like to ask of ya in exchange.”

Rory raised an eyebrow as he turned to face Gus, who was already holding out an old set of keys. ”What did you have in mind?”
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