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Damn it. Andy's gonna have to go Super Saiyan on S'tann's ass.

Also, great posts.

And I'll try to get one in this morning – it'll be a short one, though – I won't be able to write for the next five or so days.



31st October, 2025

S’tann S’tonn. Martian. Manhunter. Nephew to the Martian Manhunter. Hates everyone. Very competitive. Extremely aggressive. Shares a dorm with Alex Luthor. Totally has the hots for Mari. Has the entire opposite for anything to do with fire. Hates the Earth. Is determined to make the entirety of the school hate him.

Oh, yeah. And a complete and utter dickwad.


Andy’s chest hurt. Something kept stabbing at his lungs every time he took a breath. His back felt like Batman’s after Bane had broken it. His cheek stung, burned, a feeling that was unfamiliar to him, and his vision threatened to give out to the black that spread from the corners of his eyes. Slowly, shakily, he got up onto his feet, staring at the Martian with a shocked rage that threatened to match the hatred his assailant was sending his way. There was no longer fire blazing around his head. His skull mask, a cheap thing he’d bought for five dollars, was torn where S’tann had smacked him. With pained effort, he removed it, tossing it carelessly onto the floor, an afterthought. The crowd that had gathered around them, too, was an afterthought. All of his focus was on S’tann.

“Do you know,” he gasped, “Why I pick on you so much, Stan?” He paused, breathing heavy, painful breaths, each time his lungs getting poked by what he assumed were his ribs. “Why I annoy you? Why I never seem to leave you alone?” He staggered forward, hand clutching his side. “I can tell you… right now… that it’s not because you’re a Martian. It’s not because fire hurts you so much. And believe it… or not, it’s not because I don’t like you. Do you want to hear my secret, Stan? Do you?” His eyes bore into his rival’s. “It’s because you make it so damned easy.

“You’re so caught up with hating everyone, with believing that you’re better than us, that you’ll do everything in your power to maintain that illusion. The tiniest thing gets a rise out of you. All I have to do is raise an eyebrow in your direction and you go apeshit. So, yeah, I may be the ‘bane of your existence’. But only because you’re too busy trying to be everyone else’s.” Andy paused, wincing. It hurt, talking. But he wasn’t about to stop. Not until he was done. “And you know what really pisses me off about you?” A tremor entered his voice. He was but a few inches away from S’tann now. “You could be the best of us. You could be the guy that leads us when we’re Titans. When we’re Leaguers. You keep saying how you’re better than all of us, but you don’t realise that if you just shut it and be, it’ll actually be true. You could be every bit the hero your uncle is. Every bit the hero your cousin is, and Superman is, and Batman is. So why the fuck aren’t you?” Now he was shoving S’tann at the end of every sentence, ignoring the pain in his side. “And now, you pick a fight with me. I have a little joke, nowhere near as bad as ones I’ve had in the past, and you pick a fight with me. You pick. A fight. With me.” He was glowing with heat. His skin was a bright orange, his veins brighter still, his eyes burning as bright as the sun. “And why? Because there’s a little room-temperature fire going on the top of my head. Well, I hate to break it to you, big guy, but that isn’t the furthest I can go. I’m not just another pyrokinetic that can shoot fire from his hands. I control solar energy, S’tann. That bright ball up in the sky? It’s me. I’m it. I am fire.”

With that, he let the bright flame engulf him, an aura of orange, almost golden fire blazing around his figure, incinerating his costume, leaving nothing but bare skin. He reduced it to a tendril, wrapping it around his lower body, covering his privates with the scorching flame. The sweat that tried to trickle down his forehead evaporated upon exiting its pores. The blood that threatened to trickle out of his nose did the same. His well-defined figure glowed magnificently in the mess hall, bright, exhuming a boiling heat that made everyone in the building sweat like pigs.

“But I’m not going to fight you, S’tann. I don’t want to.” He reduced the tendril that covered his vitals’ temperature, as cold as he could make it, trying to lessen the effect it would have on the Martian. “So take your best shot. I hope it’s worth it.”
Welp, that escalated quickly.

I like it.
Aaaaand posted.


Cajun Quarter, Pointe Bordeaux
March 18, 2016

A collab with @Hillan.

He was out of the hotel almost as soon as he got there; not a hard thing to do when all of your worldly possessions fit into a duffle bag the size of a moderately sized dog. Clothes, his Mindjack outfit, and his gun. That’s all Gareth had in there. That’s all he needed.

He stopped by a small retail store across the street, family owned, like Serenade, for an umbrella. He didn’t mind getting wet, but the rain was getting decidedly heavier, and Leah was bound to have thrown a fit if he let himself catch a cold in favour of a little refreshment.

With his own personal shelter, he began his search for the convoy. The logical place to look would be the outskirts of the city; entering it would have threatened the safety of everyone in the convoy, and seeing how there had yet to be an uproar amongst the people of Pointe Bordeaux, it was safe to assume that they were indeed yet to enter. That was, of course, considering that Gareth's hunch was true. It wasn't often that one such as his turned out to be, no matter how sure of it he felt, and so he walked down the sidewalk from the store, hoping for his wife's sake that the convoy would be there for him to find.

The sound of a scuffle stopped him in his tracks, coming from an alley up ahead. Pedestrians passed it without a second glance, their eyes fixed firmly on the sidewalk in front of them. Unlike them, Gareth didn't hesitate. He walked to the alley, curiosity and concern overcoming him.

Four thugs were kicking a man on the ground. He looked almost homeless, his unshaven beard wild and unkempt. He was curled up, keeping his knees high and tightly together, his hands protecting his head as the kicks connected with his chest and back. The four thugs stomped and kicked him, unrelenting, eager to deliver some punishment. The man leaning against the wall, their leader, Gareth assumed, whistled, holding his hand up. One of the thugs picked the man off the ground and pushed him against the wall, holding his forearm against his throat, forcing his victim to stand on the tips of his toes. The man eyed the thug while wheezing. "Come... On, G."

The leader, G, walked over to him and put his hand to his own ear, acting coy. "What, what was dat, Marcus? Can't hear you, you gotta speak up." He punched Marcus in the gut, the air escaping his lungs.

Gareth had seen enough situations like this during his time battling the Zerilli Syndicate to know what this was: the bearded man owed these guys some money, and he'd failed to pay up. Three thugs were standing in a sort of semicircle around G and their colleague, observing the beatdown with a smile on their lips. They didn't look like regular thugs, though – the way they'd hit the bearded man, they knew exactly where would cause the most pain. No, they were trained; former military, maybe; definitely private security. Okay, thought Gar. They're like Zerilli's men.

He'd rained hell on Zerilli's men for three years. He could handle a few seconds with these guys.

Calmly, he placed his duffle bag at the alley's entrance and closed his umbrella, clutching it in both hands as he walked towards the thugs. There were two directly in front of him, the other one standing against the right wall. The one furthest from him, appearing in his late thirties, saw him, his head jerking in his direction in surprise. He managed, "Who the hell –" before the handle of Gareth's umbrella smashed into his colleague's left temple, sending him crumpling towards the ground. Knowing that they would be on him within seconds, Gar whipped the tip of the umbrella towards the other thug closest to him, an audible crack sounding as it broke against the back of his head. Discarding the umbrella on the ground, Gareth turned just in time to see the third thug's fist smack into his face.

With two of his thugs down, the man in charge grimaced, cursing under his breath. "Who the fuck are you?" the question rang.

Held against the wall, the bearded man, Marcus, felt the grip around his neck loosen as the biggest thug, the one holding him, paid attention to Gareth, dropping his friends like flies. He hissed with a rough voice, "None of your business, buddy," which was promptly met by another punch in the gut. "Seriously.. I.. Uhmpf, I've got this." Yet another punch met him, knocking the air out of his lungs as he squirmed against the wall.

The leader turned to Gareth and grinned. "This is none of your business. Shame you had to go and do that, looks like I'll be dumpin two' bodies in tha river." At that, he nodded at the thugs at his side holding Marcus, who promptly let go of the drunk, who in turn slid down the wall, catching his breath. The two remaining thugs headed for Gareth, one of them pulling out a switchblade.

The one with the switchblade rushed Gareth, stabbing wildly at his neck, chest and armpit, giving him no time to think – he executed a crescent kick to the thug's wrist, intending to disarm him, but it only glanced off his arm, momentarily ending the plethora of stabs, giving Gareth an opening, albeit a dangerous one. With no time to lose, he got in close to his would-be stabber, elbowing him across the face, simultaneously grabbing hold of his knife hand with his other hand. With the thug dazed, he placed his free hand beneath his armpit, turning into the thug, lifting him up onto his back and twisting, throwing him onto the ground. The knife clattered across the alley, no longer a danger. Unwilling to give the thug any time to get up, Gareth punched him in the nose, hard and fast, blood bursting as it broke, knocking him out as he lay on the concrete.

While catching his breath, Marcus watched the fight, as if he was trying to figure out where Gareth learned to fight, like he was studying him, his eyes intrigued. He reacted with a smirk when the knife-armed thug was disarmed and knocked out by his saviour. The thug leader's attention turned to Gareth, his hand scrambling into his pocket, and the last and biggest thug lumbered towards Gareth. Marcus watched with interest, climbing onto his knees and then his feet, leaning against the wall. Holding his side, he bowed forward, coughing up blood. The thug leader looked at him. "Once we're done with this freak, we'll talk about your 'payment plan', Marcus," he said, reaching for the .44 snub-nosed revolver he kept in his inner pocket. “Jones, get ‘im.”

Gareth felt the air rush above his head as he ducked away from Jones' right cross, a powerful punch that would no doubt have taken his head off had he let it connect. Jones was a big man, muscular, his punches precise and strong, executed with great technique. If Gareth had to guess, he was a former fighter of some sort; maybe a boxer. He was keeping him on his toes, never relenting, sending one punch after another, each one as powerful as the last, forcing Gar to keep dodging as he searched for an opening. Just as he thought he found one, his head exploded with pain, his vision dimming as he lost control of his legs, falling to the ground. Through the pain he managed to register that he'd been kicked, a devastating roundhouse to the head knocking his senses out of him. A stray thought, flitting through the oblivion that threatened to overcome him, concluded that no boxer would be able to do that. Another recalled watching a UFC match a few years ago, before Leah had died, between Cain Velasquez and a Randy Jones... Oh, thought Gareth, daggers stabbing into his brain as he tried to get up. Oh.

Somewhere in the real world, his eyes caught sight of Jones' knee descending upon his face, and, whether through luck or survival instinct, he managed to work through the pain in his head, rolling out of the way before it was crushed. As he slowly stumbled onto his feet, Jones was quick to recover from hitting concrete, moving in to attack Gareth with a barrage of punches. Recalling the fight he'd watched between Velasquez and Jones, Gar remembered a habit of the latter's: he liked to finish his combinations with a right hook. As he desperately tried to dodge away from Jones' swings, he found that this was still the case, and he found himself presented with a variety of openings previously unseen to him. For every hook Gareth ducked and delivered a body rip to Jones' ribs, hitting the same spot each time. After a few hits, Jones began getting sloppy, annoyed, dropping his guard every time Gareth hit him in an attempt to get him back. Gareth responded with yet more punches, following up the body rip to the ribs with one to the stomach, a hook to the face and an uppercut to the chin. Despite Gar's predictable combination, Jones didn't seem to notice, focused entirely on landing a hit – so much so that before long, he dropped his guard entirely, his blows becoming more and more erratic. After what felt like ages, Gareth finally landed the knockout blow, an uppercut that sent Jones collapsing onto his back. Gasping for air, Gareth leant against the wall, feeling his balance momentarily go out. He was concussed. That roundhouse kick had done a number on him.

In his recovery, he failed to notice the revolver that the thug leader had pointed at him. He made to pull the trigger when the gun exploded in his hand, sending shrapnel into his arm, a pain filled cry escaping him as he held his bleeding hand. "FUCK!"

Marcus' eyes turned back from their emerald colour as he finally climbed onto his feet, holding his side. He walked over to the thug leader, holding his hand. "See, Gambit, now you done gone did it. Should probably call the cops and get an ambulance over here. You'll lose your hand, else."

"Agh, fuck you!" Gambit shouted, holding his hand in agony.

Marcus walked towards Gareth, patting him on the shoulder, before extending his hand to help him up from his position against the wall. "You owe me one," the drunk said, staggering out of the alley, towards where his car was parked. "I need a beer.." his words echoed as he walked about thirty feet before collapsing onto his knees again, spitting blood.

Gareth stumbled over to his fallen saviour, grimacing at the pain shooting through his head as he did so. Lifting one of Marcus’ arms over his shoulders, he stood up with a grunt, helping him stand back up. “The way I see it…” he grimaced once more, “We’re even.” He began walking out of the alley, half-carrying, half-limping along with Marcus, stopping only to reclaim his duffle bag. “I’m Gareth. Gareth Corrigan.” He gave his companion a brief smile. “So you’re a hyperhuman too, huh?”
There is an art to getting a character sheet up and accepted before the IC starts. I have concluded that this art is known as 'not being in full-time employment and instead being a lazy bum-ass student'.

So it goes.

I can confirm this.
<Snipped quote by Tyler>
I suppose I could get on that.

@GreenGrenade You wanna do a collab?


Sure thing. What do you want to do it on?
<Snipped quote by GreenGrenade>

Heh, I sort of half-hoped you'd have Gareth stop on his way to City Hall and be like "That hobo's getting beaten up."

Else, Marcus will continue to get beaten up, whichever, really.

I could always have Gareth walk in on the bikers beating Marcus up on his way to the convoy. We could make it so the divebar isn't too far from his ex-hotel. I think that's what I'll do. Yeah. Okay.

Mindjack to the rescue!

WEEKLY DISCUSSION:

This is a weekly topic of discussion used to incite activity in the OOC and encourage players to interact with one another.

  • WEEK 1 | Going forward in the RP, what are you looking forward to seeing in terms of plot, antagonists, interaction and other elements?


Like pretty much everyone else said, the interaction. I'm particularly looking forward to Gareth's interactions with Lucas, Josh and Grace (now that I think about it, I'm looking forward to interacting with everyone's characters. They're all great). Besides that I'm also especially looking forward to developing Gareth; giving him more reasons to live other than the fact that his deceased wife would want him to. This springboards off of interaction, too, so you can probably see why that's at the top of my list.

<Snipped quote by Bigg Slamm>

We're not collaborating on anything. The Fairchild Electronics arc is largely intended as just a personal one for Emory; that's why I chose to have the product they were marketing essentially just be a taser. They aren't any real threat to Hyperhumans at this point, they're just monetising on the fear and public unrest. Honestly, I am surprised that so many people have headed to the rally.

I think there is definitely potential for FE to become a larger threat later on. Money is power, and they have a lot of that thanks to their global enterprise and an especially generous charitable donation. But currently FE doesn't care enough about Hyperhumans to allocate resources for producing anything of real threat to the Hypes; their involvement is solely monetary, they've yet no motive for a vendetta.

Wraith has a lot of his own solid plans for the RP that are much more interesting than anything to do with FE, and I think people should focus more on those elements - the real danger to Hyperhumans, from whom the convoy is running. Fairchild Electronics will only ever be a minor antagonistic presence at best. The entire scene has kind of been blown out of proportion by the amount of characters who have attended; it was initially to be a scene purely for Emory to face his father, but then after a discussion with Wraith we realised that the electrical nature of the rally would give Zeke an opportunity to shine.

Now, I'm not sure what will happen. There seems to be too many Hypes present for Zeke and Emory to cause a fuss with any degree of convenience. I personally was expecting most people to want to introduce their characters and head for the convoy. I don't see the other characters attending just to see whether they can get a deal on the Pacifier, and frankly I feel that a large group of Hypes causing a scene at the beginning of a roleplay about keeping a low profile is more than a little counterproductive.

I will likely just have Emory face his father in private. I don't know what the rest of you plan on doing.

I honestly thought that this was where Wraith wanted us to go. I can easily edit my first post and have Gar head to the plantation instead. I have no problem with that.

EDIT: I've edited the post. Gareth's no longer headed to City Hall, but going to the convoy, instead.


Cajun Quarter, Pointe Bordeaux
March 18, 2016


Gareth ate his breakfast at a small restaurant, Serenade, in the Cajun Quarter, a family-owned eatery serving “the best pancakes in town”, as proclaimed by the sign resting just outside its doors. He’d come across it during his first week in Pointe Bordeaux, reading the large, chalky letters with a level of scepticism that prompted him to see if they told the truth, if not because he was curious then because he was starting to feel hungry. He’d entered the restaurant, dressed in jeans and a grey shirt, and was soon attended to by a plain young woman, no older than twenty, who placed him at a table near the restrooms, meekly apologising as she explained that the rest of the free tables were reserved.

Gareth smiled at her. “That’s okay,” he said, before pretending to browse the menu. “Is it okay if I order now?”

“Of course,” the waitress said, a little less meek now, a pinkish red colouring her cheeks. Gareth’s smile widened a fraction in thanks, and her cheeks deepened to crimson. He ordered their signature buttermilk and ricotta pancakes, along with poached eggs and avocado on toast in case he was still hungry afterwards. The waitress, whose nametag read Delphine, departed with the menu to deliver his order.

He waited for his food, sipping on a cup of cold water she’d poured for him as he pretended to mull over his options, and ten minutes later she returned with two steaming plates of cuisine that looked like they belonged in a fine dining restaurant in the Carib Gardens, not here, in what was supposed to be a simple eatery run by a local Italian family.

Gareth thanked Delphine, then dug in. He was pleasantly surprised to find out that not only were the pancakes the best he’d ever eaten, but that the poached eggs and avocado on toast were to die for. He concluded that the food they served here was magic on a plate, and he made sure to let Delphine know as he paid the check in cash. Her cheeks went red again as she giggled, and she shyly told him that she hoped to see him here again.

And so here he was, three weeks into his stay at Pointe Bordeaux, eating his now regular meal of pancakes, poached eggs and avocado on toast as he watched slivers of rain drizzle on the street outside. Delphine came to his table to check that everything was okay, and they engaged in their routine small talk. Over time Gareth had gotten to know her, and as she revealed small things about herself he came to the conclusion that he liked her. A hyperhuman sympathiser living amongst a family of racist, conservative Italians, Delphine longed for the day that she could cut ties from them and their restaurant, trying her luck as a journalist in the big city. But for now, she explained, she was stuck here, in a generally unbearable job; unbearable, that is, until Gareth came along. She told him that the highlight of her day was when he came to eat his breakfast, when she could talk to a polite customer with an open mind, and, for the brief hour he was there, escape from the chaos that was her family.

But a few days earlier she’d expressed just how appreciative she was of him as she served his food. Swallowing past a lump in her throat, she asked him if he was free that night, and if he maybe wanted to go out for dinner with her, if, you know, he wanted.

For seconds he just stared at her, unsure if she was being serious, before looking down at his plate and saying, “I’m married.”

In that moment Delphine went redder than she ever had in his presence, apologised, and scurried away behind the counter, busily attending to the coffee machine although she’d already cleaned it but a few minutes earlier.

But that was Tuesday, and when Wednesday came Gareth made sure that she knew that there was no harm done.

It was now Friday. Gareth chewed slowly on his slice of pancake, savouring its maple syrup-covered sweetness for as long as possible. As she refilled his water, Delphine talked of the weather, and of the rally that was taking place at city hall.

“Are you going to go?” she asked, resting the jug of water back on his table.

It took a moment for him to answer. His mind was preoccupied. Ever since he entered Serenade this morning, he couldn’t help but feel that his doing so was the last time. He didn’t know what it was, but the more he thought about it, the more certain he became… but why? Why would today be the last day he spends eating here? Why would it be the last time he gets to speak with Delphine? He kept at asking himself these questions, shouting into the void, not expecting an answer – but eventually, he gave himself one.

He’d come to Pointe Bordeaux for one reason: to join a hyperhuman convoy in the hope of evading law enforcement for long enough to find a safe haven where he didn’t have to run from his past as Mindjack… or go back to it. He knew from the start that the longer he stayed, the more he risked getting caught. And now he was being given the chance to leave, the chance to search for a new home, where he wouldn’t getting prosecuted for being what he is, for trying to use his power to help people.

A convoy was in the city. He was sure of it. All he had to do was find it.

“No,” he answered, coming out of his trance, “No, I have somewhere else to be.”

When he finished his food, he paid the check and tipped Delphine. He was headed for his hotel, where he’d pack all his things and check out before starting his search.

As he handed his money to Delphine, he told her goodbye, and that she should take care of herself, knowing that she was unaware of the finality of his words.

With that he exited the restaurant, the lingering taste of maple and avocado the only relic of his time there, knowing that it, too, would soon be gone.

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