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    1. Grif of Hearts 11 yrs ago

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In Over 9 yrs ago Forum: Advanced Roleplay
Alistair, Elliot, Maeve, and Vail


Vail barely paid attention as someone called her out. She did not care. If she had spilled some brat's juice box then that was their problem, not hers. Not only that, Alistair was giving her another one of his lectures, something she had learned to drown out with remarkable efficiency. He would say something about responsibility and how impressionable young people could be, going on and on like a human resources instruction video, and that while Vail had every right to dislike A.M.R.O. she should at least understand that for all the bad they do, they have the right idea in mind. Vail nodded, although she refused to respond in any other way. Her hatred for A.M.R.O. was passionate, and she made every chance to rebel. That was not something one talk would be able to stop.

Clearly someone disapproved of that, as something flew past her, ricocheting off of a wall and striking her hand with remarkable force. She pulled her hand back, more out of shock than pain, as Henry stilled covered and shielded her left hand. Vail opened her mouth to curse, wreching herself away from Alistair's grip and turning. She raised a gloved hand, pointing it directly ahead at where she assumed the cane had come from.

"If you try and pull that shit one more time I swear I'll-"

A whole other serious of curse words fell from her mouth when she saw who exactly had thrown the object, and what the object was. A cane. Her fist clenched so tightly that even Alistair could hear the sound of metal grinding and bending against metal, groaning as the strength of Vail's clenched fist started to deform the very alloy that made up her left gauntlet. Her eyes were wild and her cheeks had turned a bright red.

Joux was everything Vail hated. A stuck up, arrogant, patronising little man who dedicated his life towards putting people like herself down just because he was he was an authority figure. That was far from his worst crime, however. Vail had been taught by this very man through her years as an apprentice Asylum, as had Alistair, and that had taught her one crucial thing about Joux that infuriated her more than anything else in the world.

He was stronger than her.

Vail brought her hand around and slammed it into a corner of a concrete wall, tearing out a solid, fist sized chunk as she did so. She grit her teeth, her breating heavy and erratic as she felt her blood boil. Vail thought her time with the old bastard over, but no, even graduation did not offer her sanctuary.

Alistair rested a hand carefully on her shoulder, and Vail almost brought her other arm around to punch him. She managed to restrain herself this time, but only just. "Relax. He's challenging the other students, not us. Head outside and take a breather for a moment."

"Fucking fine. Just don't get your hopes up that I'll be there when you're done."

Patting her gently on the back, Alistair leaned in and whispered something briefly in his companion's ear before he let her storm off, bumping into a few other nervous students as she passed. He gave a brief smile. Vail was angry, but she was learning. A.M.R.O. had torn her from her family and those memories were still quite fresh in her mind. Joux represented everything she hated about the organisation, and while Alistair was on good terms with Joux, he understood her pain. He had just learned to cope with it better than she did.

He turned on the spot, and as a single penny flew towards him he brought up his umbrella. Joux was accurate, only made stronger by his alchemy, but if anyone was fast enough to react to one of his attacks it was Alistair. He flicked his wrist, bringing his umbrella around in a full circle up just in time to knock the penny out of the way. Alistair carried the momentum around and brought Piper back down again, the tip of the umbrella tapping the solid ground audibly. The penny flew of to the side, hitting the wall and clattering to the floor. Alistair just grinned and leant forward, supporting himself with his umbrella.

"Joux! Is that really any way to greet an old friend?" Alistair bowed, walking with swayed, erratic footsteps as he started to approach the older man, tapping his umbrella against the ground as he walked. "You still enjoy throwing your students to the wolves, I see? At least try not to go too hard on them, will you?"

The coin struck Elliot directly between the eyes.

The real kicker? Had she not been absently touching her lips, staring bewilderedly after the redheaded kiss-thief like a deer stuck in some proverbial headlights, she probably could have evaded. Done a sweet, badass roll, or even just . . . shuffled awkwardly to the side, or something.

But, since this was apparently her penance for some sin committed in a prior life, no sick kickflips were to be had. Instead, Elliot flinched and took a heavy step back, wobbling precariously on unsteady legs. Shortly after, her world exploded in pain. It pulsed through her skull in jagged waves, igniting every single nerve ending she had, and it took every last vestige of willpower she could muster to bite back a yelp. Her hands clapped against her aching forehead, fingers gripping the skin tightly in a futile attempt to relieve some of the pressure.

It didn't work, because of course it didn't, and really, she probably should've known better by this point. Wasn't there some kind of bullshit law dictating bad luck? 'If something can go wrong, it will', or however it went? In this case, something had indeed gone very wrong. Catastrophically, even, because this delusional old geezer had almost dented her fucking skull!

Still clutching her aching forehead, features contorted into a cross between a snarl and a grimace - which lessened the overall impact exponentially - Elliot's eyes darted rapidly around. All she needed was a pipe, no matter how small or brittle. One pipe, one iron rod, even the bottom of a lunch table, and her alchemy would handle the rest.

"Hey, what the hell is your damage?" she snapped, levelling Joux a steely glower. "Don't lump me in with these idiots - I'm a bystander, I didn't do a damn thing! Don't you people eat up that 'saving the innocents' shit on a spoon?" And, predictably, her mouth gathered the makings of her yet-unformed plan, and unravelled them quickly and without remorse. Of course she'd mouth off. Of course she would, like a complete and utter jackass. Yeah, great job, shit for brains! Just provoke him further, why don't you? See if he'll throw a knife next time!

Distraction. She needed a distraction, something to keep him occupied so she could scavenge for a weapon - the coins, maybe? No. They weren't iron, so they were absolutely worthless. Can't even propel them back up his ass where they belong.

That idiot redhead had done something to her head, clearly. Why couldn't she concentrate?

"Excuse me, my dear," said a voice from behind Elliot as a finger tapped her gently on the shoulder. Behind her stood Alistair who tilted his head to the side as she turned to face him, a smug smile on his face. He had spotted her amongst the crowd as she had been involved in the fiasco involving Vail and the red haired woman, and she seemed rather distraught. Alistair never missed an opportunity to stick his nose in where it was not welcome. He moved his hand slightly to rest it on her shoulder and leant against her very gently. "You seem to be having a little trouble. I thought I might be able to offer you some help. First of all, this may help you think a little more clearly."

A rush of alchemy flooded Elliot's mind, blurring her vision for the briefest moment. As her sight returned she saw the cafeteria, as various rookie alchemists charged towards Joux, hoping to steal the glory and be the one to take him down. The fighting was fierce and swift, difficult for the eye to keep track of, but as moments passed, the movements of Elliot's fellow students seemed to slow. Their steps were sluggish and their punches seemed to move in slow motion.

"Relax, sweetheart," Alistair continued, although even his voice seemed unsually slow. It was hard to follow, albeit not impossible if Elliot concentrated. "My alchemy specialisation focuses on altering the mind's perception of the world around it. In the simplest terms I can use alchemy to speed up or slow down the reaction times of others. I have tweaked the way you see the world so that you might have a little more time to think and plan your method of attack. Now we have a few moments to talk. What was it that you were searching for so fiercely? A focus for your alchemy, perhaps?"

"Oh fuck!" Maeve shouted as she saw Joux's hands flick and the pennies leave them. Immediately she threw herself on the ground, feeling the coin rip through her hair as she dove. Rolling away and towards a table, which she promptly flipped over and took cover behind, Maeve began speaking Irish. "Lanna de cnámh a throid namhaid mianach. Lanna fola agus bhfeice. Lig dom caith iad le cruinneas Cernunnos." More bone blades sprouted from her hands, five in all. Maeve, hands bleeding from the wounds, stood from behind her makeshift cover and threw four of her six knives, one after the other. They flew with unnatural accuracy towards him.

As soon as each one was close enough to Joux, about a foot away, she snapped "Pléascadh i dtreo Joux!" And the knives exploded into many shards of bone, all aimed directly towards Joux. They didn't have enough force to go deeply enough into flesh to kill him, but they would certainly hurt. It was a simple logic. If Joux was hurt, he couldn't fight back. She didn't want to kill him, though she doubted she could, but hurting him was completely and utterly fair game.

A dizzying wave of nausea crashed over Elliot, filtering her vision through a hazy blur. Maybe it was the grueling grate of the gaudy pink suit assaulting her eyes, or some latent case of vertigo, but she couldn’t figure out which was spinning faster: the world, or her head. Considering she'd just suffered what was probably severe brain damage - what the hell was wrong with the teachers at this school, seriously - she was banking on the latter.

Was she hallucinating? Was this her punishment for committing a crime in a previous life - was suffering through this encounter some twisted, sadistic form of atonement? Hopefully, this tacky creep with the ostentatious garb was just a figment of her overtaxed imagination.

There was no way it was humanly possible for someone to have such a horrible fashion sense, anyway. Elliot was no couture connoisseur, but seriously, head-to-toe pink? At his age? Disgusting.

"Normally, I make it a point to not talk to people that can't shouldn't be allowed to dress themselves, but I'll do you a favor and make an exception." Rude, yes, but maybe he'd been living his life in genuine ignorance, drifting through his days blissfully unaware of his predicament. Maybe the poor sap'd been waiting for someone to come along and rescue him - like, stage an intervention, maybe. "You sure it worked? Everything's all slow and fuzzy and my head hurts." She paused, then, with a noncommittal shrug, amended, "Could be the concussion, I guess - d'you know how hard that bastard hits?"

"That's normal, dear. It takes a little while to get used to it," Alistair replied. "I have only applied a mild change to your perception for now so that you can get used to it. I am used to a slightly stronger dose than what you are currently experiencing, but I know how disorienting it can be first hand and I am trying to help you, not hinder you. Now, you still haven't answered my question?"

A pensive look crossed her face, brows furrowed thoughtfully, and, swivelling her gaze toward the pink nightmare before her, she said, "Yeah, guess so - can't tear that guy a new one without a weapon, and I can only conduct my alchemy through iron. Kind of dumb and inconvenient." She surveryed him almost curiously, and her gaze locked on the umbrella at his waist. Her eyes lit up, and the gears in her brain kicked into overdrive. "Hey, gimme that umbrella - I'll forgive that hideous suit if you do!"

What she counted as approval - tolerance, in just about anyone else's book - was as good a bargaining chip as any, right? Besides, maybe, if she saved his ass - since there was no way anyone that blatantly colorblind was even remotely competent - she could convince him to give up the gaudy pink. A total win-win, if she did say so herself.

Alistair raised his umbrella up, inspecting it for the briefest moment. "This old thing? What could you possibly need this for?" he asked, although he did not hesitate to toss the umbrella up into the air, letting it spin once before he caught the opposite end with his open hand. He held the umbrella out for her to grab by the handle. "It is a rather unorthodox weapon, hon, so it is difficult to handle for those inexperienced in its use. However, if you feel like you may be better able to face Joux with such a weapon at your disposal then by all means, go ah-"

"Yeah, yeah, okay, sure," Elliot said, impatience bleeding into her voice as she grasped at the proffered soon-to-be instrument of mass destruction. That was, as soon as she made some necessary modifications, namely making it about a hundred percent cooler. Seriously, what kind of massive tool carried around an umbrella indoors?

With a sharp swish of the wrist, the umbrella was extended to its full length. One hand steadied the hilt as it swayed in her grip, the metal cool against her fingertips. The other slid up the shaft, brushing against the textured canvas.

She snapped it in two with all the cheerful nonchalance of an absolute maniac, a wide, unsettling battle grin - or was it a leer? - unfurling on her face. "Aw, shit, I broke it," she deadpanned, sounding exactly the opposite. Her voice brimmed with unbridled excitement, and the urge to fight, to pound fists against flesh and watch that conniving, slimy old fuck pay.

Alistair physically cringed when he saw his weapon so carelessly ruined. "Oh, please don't- no, there's no need to- If you wouldn't mind just-" His head quickly fell into his hand as he realised his efforts were fruitless. "Even Vail would be a little more considerate..."

The hilt elongated with a series of rattling clinks, and the sharp fragments of metal clinging resolutely to the canvas were drawn to the makeshift shank as if by bullshit hero magic - or, she noted almost wryly, magnetism, which wasn't nearly as lame. It was a crude approximation of a sword, all jagged edges and brittle, uneven points and perhaps a bit too flat and slender to sustain more than a single slash, but it was a sword nonetheless.

She shot the fashion atrocity a sideways look. "The jackass with the gauntlets? You don't mean the idiot that dragged me into this mess!" The hand not occupied by the makeshift montrosity curled into a fist, clenched so tightly the knuckles turned white. Considering how pale she was normally, it was kind of a neat trick. "Whatever, doesn't matter. How do I kick this fucker's ass?" she asked, gesturing to Joux.

The man beside her ran a hand thoughtfully across his chin as if stroking an imaginary beard. "Look at the way he stands. He puts more weight on his right leg. That is because his left leg is a prosthetic." He motioned briefly to Joux's left leg, and then to his right hand. "And his right hand? Joux injured it long ago, and it is much harder for him to fight with that hand than it is for him to use his left. That should give you just enough of an opening for you to strike his leg and make him lose balance."

Alistair playfully pat the woman on the back. "Good luck, dear, and make sure you land the first hit. Joux won't give you a second."

Determination blazed in her eyes, wild and intense, and with an unsettling battle grin plastered on her face like war paint, Elliot afforded the colorblind menace a perfunctory nod. Fake leg, fucked-up arm, got it. Probably got loads of cheap tricks up those ugly sleeves. Don't get cocky, you asshole, she warned herself, legs tensing in preparation.

She brandished the patchwork sword with a dramatic flourish, and, eyes locked steadily on Joux's right hand, she launched. Her shoulder strained with the force behind the swing, every muscle and tendon was screaming in protest, and the hilt was jagged and uncomfortable in her hand, but she didn't care.

Didn't have time to care. All she could do was slash and hope it connected.
In Over 9 yrs ago Forum: Advanced Roleplay
I am waiting for Baku and Griff to post. =p


Sorry. <3 Another Grif/Rtron/Baku post is in the works and it will be just as glorious.
In Over 9 yrs ago Forum: Advanced Roleplay
Speaking of Dragonball Z, I've finally discovered the fate of any male character who might try to flirt with Maeve or Elliot.

youtube.com/watch?v=ExTKEFZFi_8
In Over 9 yrs ago Forum: Advanced Roleplay
@Rumplestiltskin Sounds like vectors, and that's taken. =/


And I am still crying about it.
In Over 9 yrs ago Forum: Advanced Roleplay
Alistair, Elliot, Maeve, and Vail


The entire cafeteria fell silent as Maeve's bone-covered fist struck Vail's face with exceptional force. The taller woman felt pain in her mouth and in her neck as her head was thrown to the side from the impressive impact of the punch. Vail's stance, however, remained steady. Her boots never left the ground and her torso remained steady as if nothing had hit her at all. As Maeve pulled her fist back, Vail spat blood from the corner of her mouth and then slowly brought her head back around to face forwards. Her expression was blank, bored even, as a thin trail of blood poured from the side of her lips and as her eyes locked with Maeve's. Vail brought her arm up to her face, wiping away some of the blood with the sleeve of her jacket, her expression still stern and cold.

Maeve blinked in surprise as Vail just looked at her. Not at the complete lack of reaction, to be honest she more or less expected to be knocked on her ass the second she attempted to attack, but at the fact that she wasn't immediately attacking back. She smiled, taking a step closer. "Unfazed huh? That's no fun. Lets see if this will work." Without warning she closed the distance between them and kissed Vail. Completely worth all the pain this will cause me. She decided.

From the way Maeve had nonchalantly prattled on and on about the various ways an Asylum was expected to die (mostly in combat, she'd noted), Elliot had been expecting some sort of trouble. There was no way someone so infuriatingly cocky would be able to resist the opportunity to smash a few skulls.

So it really didn't come as much of a surprise when Maeve tried to deck . . . whomever the hell that was.

Not like I've got any right to talk. Her brows knitted, usual scowl spreading across her features. Least I'm not a jackass about it. Which, okay, probably wasn't true, but at least she didn't run around pretending to be afraid to garner some poor chump's sympathy!

Swiveling her head to level Maeve a choice glare, she opened her mouth to make a few choice remarks, possibly criticizing every single facet of Maeve's personality (even if, Elliot begrudgingly admitted, that trick she'd done with the Irish was neat. And by neat, she meant irrefutably hot). That was approximately when she learned her lesson about self-absorption and the importance of observation. That was also approximately when her scowl melted, replaced by a dopey, wide-eyed stare. Heat swelled in her cheeks, gradually sweeping across her entire face, staining it a particularly vibrant shade of red. Her mouth hung open, expression the picture of enraptured disbelief.

Kissing. They were . . . they were kissing! In public! With actual people present! "W - What the fuck! You're - d'you - what the fuck? What the fuck. What the fuck!" She tried for disgust. She'd have even settled for reproach. Instead, her voice filtered out as some kind of pathetic whimper. You can't go from fighting to fucking in the span of a few seconds, she'd wanted to say, but the words died as soon as they reached her lips. A-Are they mentally deficient? Shitty attention spans? The hell's wrong with them!

Damn it, why couldn't she look away?

For the briefest moment as her lips parted from Maeve's, Vail's lips curled into a devilish, almost sadistic smile, and she playfully bit lightly on her own lower lip. As Maeve pulled back from the kiss, which surprisingly the other woman had reciprocated, Vail brought her head forwards suddenly in a headbutt. She struck Maeve with so much force that she had to have been using alchemy, breaking Maeve's nose before she could even blink.

Vail's hands moved to her belt, where she grabbed two metal squares that hung there and pulled them off. They reacted to her touch, shifting and changing, as the metal split into fingers and the inner mechanics revealed themselves. Henry and Eddie primed themselves, tiny lights flickering into action and the machinery whirring into life.

Maeve stumbled backwards, her hands going to her nose instinctively as she felt her nose give way beneath Vail's forehead with a agonizing crunch. As her hands moved away, it being simple to use the movement to heal herself, she was grinning. It wasn't a very pretty sight. Blood had poured from her nose, covering her mouth and teeth and dripping onto her shirt. There was an audible grinding and clicking sound as her nose fixed itself.

"Gods where have you been all my life?" She practically purred, raising her bone gauntleted hands in preparation.

A voice called out from behind them as a familiar pink suited figure flashed into view. Alistair stood between them and pushed both Maeve and Vail away from each other with his long arms. "Now, now, ladies," he said, his voice still as chirpy as always. "I am sure we can all settle this like reasonable adults, and save the fighting for the sparring that is going to take place later this evening. We are all friends here, remember. I apologise for my friend's behaviour," he continued, turning to face Maeve for a moment. "But I am sure Miss Hyson would gladly help you train wh-"

Alistair caught the tiniest glimpse of metal in the corner of his eye and his neck snapped around to face Vail. "Sweetie, put those down," he said, glancing at the mechanical gauntlets in the woman's hand.

Vail slipped one hand into Henry, flexing her fingers and feeling the metal fingertips clang against the palm of the weapon. Her vision never left Maeve's figure as she responded, her voice remarkably calm. "I just want to talk to her."

"Sweetie, we both know you're not going to ta-"

"I just want one minute to have a little talk," Vail interjected, fastening Eddie to her other hand and rapping her metal knuckles together.

"But-"

Maeve interrupted him. "Move out of the way, pretty boy. We just want to have a talk. A good, long talk." Unlike Vail, Maeve's voice wasn't calm. She was excited, like a dog straining on it's leash or a race horse chomping on the bit. Her eyes were bright and she kept her fists raise, waiting for Alistair to move. "Tá sé seo ag dul a bheith spraoi."

"Enough!"

Alistair muttered a few strange, short words under his breath, and immediately spun on his heel. He brought his umbrella, Piper, up and thrust the handle into Vail's stomach. She recoiled, and as Alistair spun he brought the curved handle down and hooked it around Maeve's ankle. He yanked the umbrella back, taking her foot out from under her, and then brought it around to strike Vail on the side of the head with enough force to take her off of her feet as well. Both women collapsed onto the ground in a heavy thud. Vail particularly resembled a tangled mass of limbs as she struggled to regain her footing.

Maeve only had a split second to stare in surprise, and then she was on her ass, staring up at Alistair with an odd mix of surprise and anger. Sensibility raged with the frustration at not having her needs satisfied, only teased. In the end she stayed on the ground, her bone gauntlets falling off and her knuckles returning to her sking, watching Alistair warily. "You're no fun."

"I'm not meant to be," he replied, holding out both hands to grab Vail's wrist, dragging her up to her feet and very briefly dusting off her back and shoulders. He then took her away to the other side of the room almost dragging her, and lectured her as he did so. "We're supposed to be making a good impression, Vail. Save it for later."

A startled laugh bubbled up in Elliot's throat, escaping in a sharp, clipped burst. "Oh, shit!" she crowed, and the corners of her mouth twitched. Waging a brief war on her faculties to smother that smirk, she shook her head, grim amusement glittering in her eyes. (Maybe she was exaggerating, playing up her reaction to push the prior . . . events . . . out of her mind. On the other hand, maybe the rational half of her mind, small as it was, needed to shut the fuck up.)

Gingerly walking over to the recently-downed Maeve, she said, "Wow, way to fuck up. Seriously, that was the shittiest attempt at flirting I've ever seen." She slowed to a stop right in front of Maeve, briefly pausing to revel in how beautifully the tables had turned. Who's taller now, huh? It almost brought a tear to her eye. The key word being almost, because she wasn't a massive pansy. "You don't get that, though."

And she slammed a fist into the back of Maeve's head. "You don't get that, because you're incredibly stupid!" she snarled as she retracted her arm, voice a low, terse growl. "Seriously, what the hell! I was right there! I could've been killed, you selfish fuck!"

Shaking her head, she scoffed, disdain almost tangible. Then, sparing a cautious glance around to ensure there were no witnesses, she thrust out her hand. "C'mon, get up, you big baby," she muttered, cadence colored with a hint of gruff exasperation. She had a reputation to maintain, after all!

Maever smirked up at Elliot as she spoke. "Sweetie, that wasn't me trying to flirt. I got exactly what I wanted from that. Well.." She shot a glare at Alistair's retreating back. "The beginning of what I wanted at least. If that bastard hadn't interfered..." Her eyes went back to Elliot's in curiosity as she continued, just in time to see the other girl's arm move and feel her fist crash against the back of her skull. "Ow! What the fuck." Maeve snapped, only to be overran by Elliot's continued speech. She was obviously considering hitting the girl back, but a glance at Alistair assured her it would be a bad idea.

So instead she took Elliot's hand and pulled herself up. However, she was far closer than necessary and she smirked suggestively at the shorter girl. "I get it. You're jealous." She spoke softly, leaning down until her lips were a hairsbreadth away from Elliot's own. "I could kiss you too, if it'd make you feel better."

Elliot's face went hilariously red, and her brain kind of . . . she wasn't really sure? "I - I, uh," she mumbled, face going slack. She could almost see her own mind retreating, leaving basic cognitive functions to some kind of autopilot as it tried, desperately, to recoil from the horror. She started to say something else, offer some pointless empty platitude, before her expression sharpened. It blinked through terror, muddled its way through confusion, and finally chose hunted as its hill to die on. This emotion was different. It wasn’t like anger, which you could identify by the burn and the red and the sudden, scarily mutinous urge to strangle. This wasn’t like guilt or shame, all soft and chilly and hesitant and all-enveloping.

It was - she couldn’t classify it. It was very odd. Warm, kind of, vibrating with repressed . . . something. Very, very, very unusual, and that was precisely why it made experiencing it so uncomfortable. All she knew was it felt exactly how those hideous Crocs shoes paired with athletic toe-socks and leg warmers looked. "That's - " a really good idea - wait, what, no, what are you saying, shut up, shut up, shut up! " - that's - fuck you!", she hissed, though her voice was shaking with - oh, god, ew, that wasn't want, was it? Her brain did that thing where it translated relief into irritation. It was a parody of her former bravado, but at least it wasn't . . . whatever the hell her treacherous mind had supplied, the bastard.

Maeve chuckled gently as she saw Elliot's face go as red as the other student's hair and heard the stuttering. A wicked joy filled her, reflected in her eyes, as she waited for the poor girl to get something intelligible out. When she finally did speak Maeve only smiled wider. Flustered and falling back on Anger, or trying to at least. How cute.

"Oh, I don't think so. That'd be moving a little too fast for the both of us, wouldn't you think? I mean, we haven't even kissed yet. But if you insist I can speed things up a bit."

One hand gently went behind Elliot's head to prevent her from fleeing as Maeve moved the remaining hairsbreadth between them and gave her a soft kiss. Breaking it she leaned in to whisper in elliot's ear, "Ná bíodh imní ort. Feicfidh tú a fháil níos fearr leis an gcleachtas. It's been fun, Sweetie. See you around." With that, she began heading out the hall.

The kiss was soft, gentler than Elliot had expected, with none of the violent, lipsplitting passion Maeve had shown Vail, for which Elliot was secretly grateful. Having to explain a bloody lip would have been troublesome, to say the least - err, not that she planned on sharring, of course! This - whatever the hell this had been - was the kind of secret she'd quite happily take to her grave. (Considering the nature of the person who'd bestowed it, that was probably going to end up being sooner than anticipated.)

"Holy shit," she breathed, voice faint and awed and even a little bashful. Her lips still tingled, even moments after the fact, the lingering sensation still ghosting across them. A finger cautiously drifted up, prodding experimentally, and she was pretty sure she was gaping like a fish. Both eyebrows raised, mouth slightly ajar, shock widening her eyes - god, she probably looked like a moron.

A really, really confused moron. Flustered, too, because that thing she did with her mouth? With the Irish? Yeah. That was . . . wow. Did she always kiss total strangers, or were Elliot and the chick with the gauntlets part of the privileged few?
In Over 9 yrs ago Forum: Advanced Roleplay
You guys are in for a treat, trust me.
In Over 9 yrs ago Forum: Advanced Roleplay
After reading through a few of the CS's again, I feel suddenly compelled to give Alistair and Vail pictures and quotes. I love that sort of thing. Why have I not done that yet?
In Over 9 yrs ago Forum: Advanced Roleplay
What if everyone shoots down Maeve's advances


Did you forget Vail exists? There is no chance of this happening.
In Over 9 yrs ago Forum: Advanced Roleplay
Alistair and Vail

Team: Pendulum

While Alistair did not receive the warm welcome or swarm of interested students that he had hoped for when he had entered the room, a small group of young Asylums in training had approached him for conversation and that was more than enough to lift his spirits. He happily answered the numerous questions that the alchemists had with a smile on his face and with his typical flair, with honesty about the hardships of being a fully qualified Asylum but made sure to keep them optimistic and eager to face their days ahead. They asked mostly about the work of a qualified Asylum; how dangerous the missions were, how frequent they were, and what their preferred styles of alchemy were, and he answered each and every question to the best of his ability. Alistair revelled in the attention, although Vail, who had positioned herself some ways away from the group, was not quite in the mood to be pestered by a whole group of kids. She leaned against her wall, arms folded, and a stern look on her face, as she looked out over the different people who moved about the room.

Why do you not you go talk to some of the students, dear, rather than trying to scare them off?” Alistair asked, turning to face his companion for a brief moment. “I am sure they would love the opportunity to talk to an Asylum as tough and as talented as yourself, and many of them are even around your age. You may even make a friend!

Vail groaned, grumbling under her breath that she “didn’t want to make a friend” and that “until the fighting started she wasn’t interested”.

Scram, I’m busy,” said Vail as one of the students who had previously been speaking to Alistair came over to her, opening his mouth to speak and presumably ask her a few questions. As the scrawny boy turned to leave through, Vail grabbed him by the collar and pulled him back. “Actually, no, don’t scram. I have a few questions.

Alistair rolled his eyes as he caught sight of this, although his smile suggested he still found Vail’s actions interesting if not just amusing. “Try not to traumatise the boy too badly. Save that for the sparring matches.

I wouldn’t dream of it,” Vail replied as she turned her head back to the student that she had caught who seemed to be no older than fourteen or fifteen. Her lips curled into a devilish grin that might scare even the hardiest of Asylums.

Vail had felt a change of heart, and had every intention of doing what Alistair had suggested, but she wanted to talk to someone a little bit more specific rather than wade blindly into the crowd. She was entirely focused on the fighting that was to come, and Vail did not want to put herself up against an inexperienced rookie who could not hold their own. Vail wanted to find the toughest, rowdiest alchemist here that could make her blood boil and sock them in the jaw. If they got back up and did the same then it would be all the more entertaining; it meant she had more of a chance to feel that oh-so addicting rush of adrenaline through her body. By the way the boy caught in her grasp struggled and squealed, he was not the person Vail was looking for, but he might be able to point her in the right direction. A.M.R.O. had no shortage of sociopaths and lunatics, which Vail had always thought might have been the taint of alchemical madness in its early stages, so surely she would be able to find someone her who was up for a tussle.

Apparently there were a few here that might just be scrappy enough to stand a chance, at least according to the boy. His descriptions of their skills and alchemical powers certainly implied they could be dangerous, assuming they had enough control over their abilities. One used alchemy to channel blasts of electricity, and one girl supposedly fought by tearing her own bones out of her body and beating people to death with them.

Damn, that’s actually pretty metal, Vail thought, running her free hand along her chin thoughtfully. “What’s her name? And point her out to me.

“M-Maeve,” the boy replied, lifting a hand to point off into the crowd. “I don’t know her last name, but she’s the one with red hair”.

The locks of bright red hair made the girl with the tall frame stand out among her peers like a beacon. So she’s a fighter and a fiery red-head too? Where were you when I was in training? She loosened her grip on the boy’s shirt and pushed his shoulder, letting him stumble away and out of arm’s reach.

Now scram. I have work to do.

Running a hand through her messy black hair, Vail made her way towards the red haired individual and the younger girl that she was talking to. Vail did not know who the other person was, but perhaps she would find out soon. The fair haired girl was young, but she looked like she had some fight in her too, which only made Vail more interested in approaching the group. Vail overheard a few pieces of their conversation as she approached, and it gave her, in her opinion, the perfect opportunity to interject and join their conversation. Vail cleared her throat casually to get their attention.

So the fiery, tough girl look is just an act?” Vail asked. She stood a few feet behind Maeve, the red haired woman in question, with one hand on her hip and the other hand brought up closer to her face so that she could feign examining her broken nails. “That’s a shame. Here I was, thinking at least one of you might be able to put up a fight, but I guess you’ll end up all like the rest. Down in one punch.

Her blank, bored expression changed in a moment, as her eyes glanced up to Maeve and she smirked.
In Over 9 yrs ago Forum: Advanced Roleplay
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