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    1. Glaw 11 yrs ago

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The cafe was perfect. The Doctor dropped comfortably into a chair, and he surveyed his surroundings with an interested smile. No one in the universe could pull off a cozy little eatery quite like the Londoners. He loved the soft textures, the worn-in tables, the sweet aromas of coffee and baking bread, the clink of cups and the murmur of conversation. He couldn't live without the wild and the strange and the fascinating -- but it was the little things that made life worth living.

Rose asked him a question, and at her comment on his dialect he gave her a smug grin. "Yes, it is!" he encouraged her, and he let himself be distracted by a gorgeous stack of blueberry pancakes that was being carried past them. He intentionally paused before his answer, just to drag out the dramatics; it was such great fun to tantalize Rose's curiosity. He could see her in the corner of his eye, and he waited until she was just bursting with more questions before he leaned his elbows on the table and peered at her with interest. Some people he lied to, just to gently satisfy their small minds; others he would intimidate purposely with the truth just to watch their heads explode. Rose, though -- Rose was curious.

He took a breath. "If I told you that I come from a far-distant planet, and that the big blue box in your bedroom is my spaceship, would you believe me?"

At that moment, there was a terrific crash, smash and clatter in the kitchen, like an entire shelf of plates had toppled to the floor. The Doctor sprang immediately from his chair, swung around behind the bar and pushed his way into the kitchen, where shards and bits of porcelain littered the floor. Everyone was talking at once, pointing in all directions, blaming one another for the incident, but some claimed to have seen a little dark thing sprinting through the debris toward the stock shelves. The Doctor set to scanning the kitchen with the sonic screwdriver, searching for signs of intelligent plastic despite the cook and waitress behind him who insisted he leave at once. If only he could catch one!

While everyone in the cafe craned their necks to see what was going on, something small and dark skittered across the floor past Rose, toward the door that led outside. It moved too fast to see clearly, but it was no more than eight inches tall and ran on two legs, and it was dressed in a playhouse doll's outfit. It had a silver key clutched in its tiny hands.
Thanks for the click!

I'm Glaw, and I like characters.

I don't mind your setting. It doesn't matter when or where or what or how. I could enjoy a post-apocalyptic zeppelin ride just as much as living in a treehouse in the fairy realm.

But give me characters. Characters that are driven. Characters that have a mission, who carry pasts and futures and dreams that are personal and important and heartfelt. Give me characters who see the world in a new and different way, who have peculiar philosophies or strange obsessions, characters who are passionate and defiant and who know who they are. Maybe they're a little unhinged, or not entirely clear on the scale of good and evil -- or maybe they're noble and brazen, determined to carry out their destiny at any cost. Give me characters with their own opinions, who make things happen unapologetically, for better or for worse.

I'm looking for unique characters who create plot for themselves.

I want to tailor my characters to yours. We'll fit the pieces together, place in one what the other is lacking, ensure a pretty level of conflict and camaraderie, knock them together with a crossing of paths, and let them loose in the wild to sow adventure and chaos. If we manage to hit the sweet spot, they'll tumble and crash their way through a story of their own making.

There are some ground rules:
1. My character's actions, reactions, emotions, hand gestures and/or lack thereof are solely mine to decide. Please do not assume my character reacts in any particular way to your post. In turn I will respect that every nuance of your character may only be controlled by you.

2. Lead as well as follow. Better yet, play tug-of-war with me for plot. I like things unpredictable, gritty, chaotic, and constantly moving. I expect you to add to the story with every post, especially if it's in a new and wild direction. Don't hesitate to do something crazy and unexpected. I'll roll with it.

3. Write only when you're inspired to. Too many great RPs die because those involved respond only out of obligation. If you're not feeling the story, you're too tired, etc, don't post -- it's always glaringly clear when the writer's heart isn't in it, and this is how stories die an awful death. If a week goes by and you're still not feeling it, maybe there's something we can change about the story. I'll work with you. I hope you'll extend to me the same courtesy.

I have some personal preferences:
1. I have no problem with violence, sex, obscenity or mature themes, as long as they're done tastefully and in the name of the story.

2. I love a long, complicated romance. I tend to draw out tension as long as feasibly possible because torturing characters is great fun. ;)

3. Post length is not a requirement, but I find it's hard to move the story forward in less than three paragraphs per post. If I feel like I'm the only one driving the story, I will very quickly lose motivation to continue to do so.

4. I can play male or female with equal interest. Romance could be possible between any two (or three) characters of any gender.

There are some genres I like best:
Fantasy. The best roleplays I've been in -- all of them -- have been in the fantasy genre and completely made up as we go along. Past, present, future, choose-your-punk, it doesn't matter. The two of us should be free to create the rules of the world around our characters on an as-needed basis. Want to introduce a long-lost race of civilized two-headed anteaters? Do it. Want to say that the fish my character caught has a rib bone that grants wishes? Awesome. Maybe somebody gets abducted by fairies. Cool. Whatever you feel like doing to keep things moving, do it. Fantasy's just permission for imagination, and I'm all for imagination.

Still with me?
Please don't post here, PM me.
Ralarulash stared at the cloak for a moment before he slowly stretched his hand out to take it. Experimentally he felt the fabric in his fingers, then draped the cape around his shoulders and closed it in front, hiding all but his head and feet. He looked down at himself, wriggled his toes in the sand, shifted his arms beneath the cape, then finally turned his frown on Cyrus. This hadn't been the wonderful, glorious transformation he had hoped for. He just felt weak and cold.

"You can stop calling me Leon," he said in distaste. "I'm neither lion nor noble. My name is Rulan, of the Casseion clan."

Everyone in the land knew the name Casseion -- centuries ago they had ruled the entirety of the continent with their bloodthirsty armies and their tyrannical laws, which they forced upon every civilization they conquered. Wherever they marched there had been rivers of blood. Those that resisted were slaughtered; those that surrendered were enslaved. They had spread throughout the continent like a plague, leveling civilizations and building weapons and fortresses, never to rest until they had claimed the land from sea to sea. It was at that time that the leaders within Casseion began to covet the land of their brothers, and the clan collapsed into a civil war. In the end, without organized governance the Casseion clan had destroyed itself with its own greed, and the current empire rose up and stamped them out. All surviving members of the clan had been gathered up and executed publicly, as a symbol that violence should never again rule this land.

The tyrannical Casseion clan had disappeared so many centuries ago, and yet Rulan lived.
"He's an asshole," Felix answered readily, even as he sped Rue off toward the big top. Damn that Cole! He was always showing off his abs and his bad attitude and catching the girls' attention -- Cole thought he was better than everyone else and he made sure no one was confused about his superiority. Felix often hoped that Cole would set himself on fire one day, just to prove the fire-breather could make mistakes just like everyone else. One thing that Felix had right now that Cole didn't have was Rue -- and Felix would make damned sure Cole would never have her.

"Anyone can do that fire-breathing thing," he answered her question irritably, "but it takes a lot of practice, a lot of stupidity and a lot of getting burned. It's what desperate people do when they have no other skills."

He saw the manager walking by, and Felix flagged her down. Isabel was a proper lady in a simple dress, bright hair pinned back and a no-nonsense determination in her face. She noticed Felix and stepped toward them, and her eyebrows immediately raised at the sight of Rue's teeth and ears.

Felix took off his hat out of respect. "Miss Isabel, this is Rue. Rue, Miss Isabel is the manager here. Ma'am, Rue here would like to stay on with us for awhile -- right?" He looked hopefully at Rue; the alien girl hadn't exactly been excited about joining the circus, and Felix only hoped she would say yes.

Isabel folded her arms, and she regarded Rue carefully, though not unkindly. "It's a pleasure to meet you, Rue -- but why do you want to join the circus, and what are your skills? I don't have money or food or shelter to give anyone who can't pull her weight. Tell me what you can do."

Cole had followed them, and he sat nearby whittling at torches to use in his act, obviously listening to every word.
At Sam's voice in his ear, August tightened his grip on her just for a moment -- but he relented, and he laid her down gently at the foot of a tree. He avoided looking at her face, so professional was he in the care of his charge. When he looked over to the dwarves, however, it was with a glare of hate and distrust. "Stay here and watch her," he growled, and he rushed into the fiery camp.

"You don't tell us what to do!" Coralie hollered after him, brandishing her dagger at his back -- but the Marshal had fallen into step under Will's orders and was immediately employed with putting out the flames. Coralie huffed, and she sat down by Sam's head. "Whatever's going on with you an' him," she muttered to Sam, "I don't like it." She frowned, and she patted Sam's head. "But go to sleep, you're safe as a lamb now I'm here."

Raquelle, meanwhile, looked after Will with a forced crooked smile, and she regretted not dumping that bottle of potion into his canteen. Oh, what fun it would have been to watch Will suffer, to render him helpless to her will. She remembered Liam, then, and she spun around in a panic before she spotted him; she sprinted to his side, nearly running over a few soldiers and the Marshal on her way. "Liam!" she cried, taking his hand. "Liam, what's wrong? What's that Samantha girl done to you? She's tried to kill you, I know it! Oh, Liam!"

Once the fire had all been put out and the remains of the camp were being gathered for inventory, Alphonse shuffled forward with his hat in his hands. He stepped quietly toward Will, who appeared to be in charge, and he cleared his throat. "Sir," his voice wavered, "I don't mean to interrupt, but I and my companions owe you and your men the deepest and sincerest of apologies. We are responsible for the fire at your camp. I assure you it was a terrible mistake, we had no idea you were soldiers of Eldonia and Itelia." He spoke quickly, bowing up and down in apology, and he wouldn't let Will get a word in edgewise; Alphonse simply couldn't bear to be yelled at. "Please accept our offer of shelter and supplies. The farmhouse at the end of the lane belongs to our good friend, there is plenty of room there for your company." He bowed again. "Please, we insist."
I've lost August. x.x I dunno what happened, but whenever I think of him I get a huge blank. Maybe I should be drinking less coffee.

But yeah, that's what's holding me up. :(
"Okay, Gimpy." He tipped his head back to stare placidly at the rolling sky, then was distracted for a moment by his reflection in a dark shop window, where something wild and sharp-toothed shimmered dimly at his shoulders. That other demon was roiling sharp and fast in his stomach, and there was a screaming and snarling echo in his head, raw as a chalkboard -- but it was nothing he couldn't fall asleep to. The damp cigarette dropped into a puddle and he loped on, his sharp eyes straight ahead.

"I'm Tzek." His name escaped his teeth like a convict. He grinned. "Not really a name but that's all I've got, can't remember what I was before I was that." He shrugged and let his shoulders drop. "So you can call me Tzek, or you could call me Charlie. I like Charlie, I wouldn't mind it."

He'd walked a good few yards ahead of her before he stopped and thought to look back. She was scuffling along under the dripping streetlights like she'd been hit by a truck. For awhile he simply stared.

"Y'know, if I carry you, we might get to the hospital before you bleed out and die a slow and horrific death." He was completely and utterly serious, in that he doubted very much that she had as much time to kill as she apparently thought she had. "Or I could just wait til you pass out and then carry you, but I don't know where the hell I'm going, so."
Ha, got something up! Finally! Woot!
The Doctor was almost too preoccupied with his thoughts to notice that Mickey had left -- but the distinct lack of irritable muttering in the background was a wonderful relief.

He gave Rose an appreciative grin and he loped easily along beside her in the cool dark, hands clasped behind his back, glad for her company and her curiosity. He decided he liked this girl, whose first instinct upon finding a strange man in a box in her bedroom was to invite him to tea. She didn't jump to judgments, and that was a rare and funny thing.

"Nothing?" At her question he tipped his head with a closed smile and a crinkled brow, and he laughed. "Rose Tyler, nothing is nothing!" He hopped forward and spun around, walking backward then sideways while his arms encompassed the sky and the trees and the fences and potholes. "Everything is [/i]something[/i]. The tiniest atom on the smallest speck of existence," he hunched his shoulders and pinched the air, "once gave birth to a universe. Every thought in your head," he tapped his temple, "has infinite potential to change the course of time and history. So recycle bins that move on their own? No, I don't think that's nothing at all!" He winked and strolled ahead, eager to see these mysterious bins, even while he smiled to himself at the look on Rose's face.

"That must be them!" He rushed across the street, and he circled the culprit bins with a satisfied grin, as if he expected them to apologize for their misbehavior. When they obstinately did nothing of the sort, the Doctor reached inside his coat, flipped the sonic screwdriver in the air, and pointed it with gusto at the guilty party.

Whirrrrrrrrrrrrr

He circled round the bins like a tiger stalks its prey, poked the screwdriver at the sides and wheels and lids, peering intently at the readouts above his thumb. His victorious grin was fading with each second of silence. He yanked a lid open and pointed the little light down into the pile cans and bottles, then peered close at the readouts, his brow furrowed. He dropped the lid with a disappointed snap.

"Well," he sighed, spinning around to face Rose again, hands in his pockets, "maybe they are nothin' after all. But best we keep an eye on them, just in case. Cafe's the perfect spot! How 'bout those sandwiches, yeah?" He gestured hopefully toward the cafe. "I'd love a cup of tea."

Just around the corner, a couple of trash bins scuttled quietly into the alley.
Ha! I love those guys. Villains to the core, and great liars to boot.
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