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For what it was worth, Ahkari and Odessa’s strategy had worked well. The patrol they encountered was surely magnitudes smaller than what they would have faced otherwise, though Selene found herself worried for whoever it was on the receiving end of the Aberrant horde. Whatever composed their ranks, the creatures always found a way to compensate for their shortcomings with bestial rage.

For now, however, it would do to focus on the task at hand. The patrol’s vanguard reached them quickly, swarming like locusts around the Pilots and infantry. She moved instinctively towards the latter as the wave of Pawns grew closer and more ravenous, but Ahkari’s orders stayed her feet. Bishop Spearmen. Selene’s eyes darted across the battlefield, searching out the beasts as they began to scale the surrounding buildings. Those who could avoid the commander did so, scattering out with clear intent: devastate the fragile backline of foot soldiers and damaged mechs.

Smart. Rude, but smart.

She looked for the closest one, but found herself distracted by the sonic crack of a spear embedding itself into the road. The Constellation who had deflected it scrambled to recompose herself, shivering like a leaf even with her sword in hand. Selene searched but could not find her name, so she was likely a lower rank, which meant that even disarmed the Bishop had better odds than her—and the Pilot.

Selene was moving before she made the decision, already dashing down the street towards the charging creature. It was, predictably, much faster than she was, and for as much training as she did, no amount of time on the treadmill would make her close distances so quickly without a little assistance. So, she would be assisted.

One hand clutched Pleiades’ hilt, the other extended out towards the stuck spear. Air twisted around the invisible force of her Anomaly as it shot out and took hold of the weapon; she could not feel the coldness of its alien metal, but she could feel the pressure of the grasp as if she were holding it in her own two hands. Another ghostly limb took hold of the haft, then another, and another, and she could feel in the muscles of her soul how they held taut. Selene braced, and some otherworldly force within her flexed.

Nebulae pulled, hard, and wrenched her forward off her feet with the force of an Aberrant-scale line drive that sent her rocketing down the street. Briefly, she did not know where she was. The drab Aloran ruins whipped by her in a meld of gray and brown and pallid blue and at some point in the extended moment of her leap she saw color in her periphery. The angry reds and yellows and oranges of fire, the chromatic splashes of Aberrant blood, the suffocating, brimstone whorl of a dying sky. Althea’s crumbled skyline morphed, she saw spires ablaze and writhing, as if alive, falling into the lake of fire the earth had become. It was easy to become disoriented, but Selene knew these feelings, these visions, and focused on only herself and the Bishop.

They collided, and Alora snapped back into focus around her. Nebulae cushioned the impact, and Selene crouched parallel to the ground with her feet planted on the Aberrant’s invisible barrier. Pleiades’s half-broken blade burst with ethereal AB energy as she drew it, simultaneously slashing and kicking herself away. The barrier fizzled into reality, straining against the blow and force combined. Nebulae pried the spear free as she sailed backwards; Selene clenched her fist, and as she landed she threw her arm forward in a pitching motion. The spear hurtled past her in a near-imperceptible blur and slammed into the Aberrant’s weakened barrier, shattering it like glass. The creature flew onto its back several feet away, skewered through the shoulder. As it scrambled back to its feet, Selene glanced at the Proto Constellation.

Hello! That was a wonderful save, well done!” She smiled, resisting the urge to ask for her name. She could grab it and the Pilot’s later. “Would you go assist the infantry, please? I think they would appreciate it very much.

And with that she returned her attention to the enemy. The Bishop pulled its spear free with a furious hiss, but Selene didn’t give it time to regain its composure. She was on it, feigning action that made the creature panic, and swing its spear like a club to try and swat her away. Nebulae caught it, but did not halt or slow its momentum at all. It pushed Selene along the arc, and when the apex of its swing tilted up, the ghostly arms brought her with it and sent her flying high overhead. The world spun and twisted and for a blink everything was fire once more. Nebulae gripped the ground on either side of the Aberrant, and she righted herself in the air, poised above the bewildered spearman like a storm cloud welling with lightning.

███, ████████, ███, █████, █████, ████, ██

Nebulae pulled Selene down with blinding speed and surgical precision, carrying her right past the Bishop’s neck. She slashed out with Pleiades, and her anomalous limbs helped her land with a soft roll back to her feet.

Alora. This was Alora.

The Bishop's head fell away from its body, and it collapsed in a heap.

Selene regarded her surroundings again, as if to reassure herself. Panicked calls for aid still rung through the comms, and with the threat partly reduced, she surveyed the battlefield for anyone else who might need a helping hand. With how small their group was, they couldn’t afford to leave people to fend for themselves. Everyone from the infantry to commander Ahkari counted. Everyone.


Sabine and Dunkirk—or “Howie”, it seemed. Selene scratched both of their names into her wall, so she wouldn’t forget. They appeared to know each other well enough, though she couldn’t have guessed which one was the superior, if either was. Howie had the gruff, commanding edge that she’d come to expect of MHA officers, whose stoicism was at once a weapon to be wielded against the Abberants, and a shield to guard their allies. But Sabine spoke with the casual candor that made Selene think she was high enough rank to get away with it. She supposed it could all break down in circumstances like this. Formality among Constellations wasn’t particularly rigid regardless, and it was refreshing, perhaps even a bit relieving, to see pilots who could both keep their cools and their senses of humor in the thick of an invasion.

Sabine made a joke, and Selene giggled, partly because she found it funny, and partly because it was the appropriate thing to do. She enjoyed banter, though she was only recently starting to engage with it. A mere few years ago she’d had trouble differentiating jokes from truth, sarcasm from seriousness. Clarity and social awareness came to her in bursts, where she would realize how stunted her outlooks were and grow incredibly embarrassed, only to lose her grasp on the concept shortly thereafter and need things explained to her. But over time, and with more socialization, she trained that muscle back into memory. It was that sort of effort, and those results, that had helped get her approved for active duty in the first place. Nowadays most people only considered her weird in the same way that all Constellations apparently were, which to her was quite encouraging.

Oh, I don’t know about that. I always leave my number, but they never seem to call,” Selene said wistfully, and added a wink of her own because it also felt appropriate.

Another joined them then, the hungry Constellation. She introduced herself as Rudis, or Rho Ophiuchi, so Selene committed them both to the wall just to be safe.

Selene. Nice to meet you!” she said to the imposing woman, with a smile, and turned her attention back to the pilots. “I’m sure you two will manage to find your own fun. Like…crashing a house party!

That was a guess, of course. Selene had never been to a house party. Perhaps she could add it to her ever-expanding list of to-dos.


As the remains of their little vanguard discussed the correct course of action, Selene sat quietly atop a discarded crate, listening intently and trying not to worry about how cavalier some of them sounded at the idea of a suicide mission. Five Bishop patrols, three Knight scouting parties, and two or more Rook encampments, all before even stepping foot inside the Nest itself, or facing the Princess. She didn’t doubt the capabilities of her companions, some of which she’d had the delight of fighting alongside before; unfortunately, the line between heroism and vainglory could be quite blurry. Yes, what else could Ahkari’s plan be considered but suicide? And she could not understand why.

She knew the reason, of course: to save Alora. To rid her home world of the Aberrants so that its people might return, rebuild, and regain their strength. It might take decades, maybe centuries. Entire generations of Alorans would grow up on a ruined world, working to recreate something they’d never seen themselves, and die hoping those that came after might be able to finish, so that their own children could enjoy the fruits of their labor. Planets were monuments, there was history rooted so deeply in the earth that could never truly be recovered if it was lost. People were tied to their homes in ways that defied the material. Not pride but duty, not heroism but instinct. She knew that, she knew all off that—she just didn’t understand it.

The civilians were safe, for now, evacuated or sheltered until they could be. The UAS and MHA had established themselves and while, true, there was resistance, progress was being made with each day, each hour even. Perhaps the answer was not to simply wait as long as they could, but surely vengeance was preferable to martyrdom.

She heard humming—or maybe she was humming herself—and felt inwardly ill. No, what a terrible thing to think. Terrible and callous to the suffering of people like Ahkari. Dr. Reom had told her—not dissuasively—that she might have been promoted a year ago, had she a habit of prioritizing the success of a mission over the wellbeing of her comrades, and not the other way around. That tendency had thus far failed to impress her superiors, but neither had it brought her any sort of court martial or official rebuke.

Still, it was best she hadn’t voiced those thoughts, and she was glad to hear a proposition that seemed to come from a place of similar—if more pragmatically-minded—sentiment. “I agree with Odessa too,” Selene said softly, hopping down from the crate.

She placed an extra ration bar beside Rudis with a smile, and then made her way over to the pair of pilots. She didn't recognize either of them, but then, protracted battles had a way of introducing strangers to each other, and she never turned down to the opportunity to meet new people. Though still in one piece, there was a weariness to the man—though Selene was not entirely sure if he simply looked that way normally—and the woman bore a scorch in her left side that Selene had noticed bother her more than once.

Reaching into her coat, she produced a small medipen. It was nothing more than an analgesic gel, but it was what she had, and it would likely serve the pilot better anyway. Sadly, she didn’t smoke and had already given her ration to Rudis, so had nothing to offer the man, but she made a note to remember in case they both made it back.

I’m sorry I don’t have a proper burn kit.” she said, offering the medipen to her. “I’m Selene. I look forward to working with you both.
Boo
noicst
:emoji conveying interest:
H E C A T E
H E C A T E

“Your fuck-ups are literally costing me an arm and a leg.”
C H A R A C T E R P O R T R A I T
C H A R A C T E R P O R T R A I T
_________________________________________________________
C H A R A C T E R D A T A
C H A R A C T E R D A T A
_________________________________________________________
True Self
Alberta "Albie" Klein

Persona
Hecate

Pathos
Ktharia

Role
Healer

Weapon of Choice
Asclepian Dressing: Vestments of arcane bandages which act as both a spell-casting focus, and serve to hasten the regenerative process of her self-healing.

Domains
Darkness; Restoration, Manifestation, Enhancement

Playstyle & Attitude
Backline Healer; Asshole Altruist
A L B I E : I N H E R O W N W A Y
A L B I E : I N H E R O W N W A Y
________________________________________________________________________________________
Albie, who was very nearly “Albert” and who will only ever answer to “Alberta” under legal compulsion, has always sort of known what she wanted. Born to a nurse father and a therapist mother, she grew up surrounded by and constantly reminded of the absolute importance of empathy. No matter what, they said, she should always strive for kindness. People came from all walks of life, from all manner of circumstance, and though she would meet some she liked, and some she didn’t, it was imperative that she try her best to understand them, no matter what. Human interactions were ephemeral, and precious, and connections were made to be cherished.

She thought that was bullshit. People sucked. They were loud, and inconsiderate, and when they weren’t literally killing each other, they were arguing over the dumbest shit. Her middle and high school years were a protracted angsty, broodingly emotional not-a-phase spent lamenting that everyone else was just so annoying and couldn’t understand her. Except Linkin Park. And the people in the comments section of her Linkin Park AMVs.

Eventually she did grow up. With graduation approaching, and the fruits of her exceptionally studious labor opening the doors of higher education to her, Albie realized she didn’t really hate people—at least, not sincerely. Being annoyed with someone didn’t mean she had to treat them like shit. But being kind didn’t mean grinning through the things that annoyed her, either.

She finished undergrad early, and didn’t think twice before throwing herself into medical school. Surgery seemed to be her destiny, where her bedside manner wouldn’t matter and she could do what she ultimately had always wanted to do, and what her parents had wanted her to do—help people. That was her kindness. Not fake smiles, not endless patience or empty platitudes. Action.

H E C A T E : W O U N D T H I E F
H E C A T E : W O U N D T H I E F
________________________________________________________________________________________
Actions have consequences. If you stand in fire, don’t pop your defensives for tank-busters, or drop aoe in the middle of the raid, your consequence is an irritable healer calling you a moron as she puts your stupid little body back together.

Hecate has been joining pugs since Pariah launched, and while she finds herself malding every session, healing for the walking contraceptive endorsements that make up her groups, there is something strangely addicting about the whole ordeal. She’s not particularly interested in teaching, or lifting bad players up into competency, but no matter how bad a run goes, no matter how much yelling and fighting there is, she is the last to call for kicks and the last to vote for disbands. Apologies and removals are just band aid fixes; an entire gaming career correcting the mistakes of people who shouldn’t be able to tie their own shoes without medical intervention has taught her that any group is capable of clearing any content. No one is uncarryable.

But some people are much heavier than others.

Her reputation formed quickly. She was not a lone wolf; she was a healer, by definition she needed people to heal. Despite her prickly nature she was rarely seen alone, always tagging along with some group or another, having a small circle of regular players she ran with but never committing to something as serious as a guild. It was true that healers enjoyed a certain priority, but invites shriveled up quick if you were bad at keeping people alive. Hecate was not. When she joined a group, more often than not they cleared whatever dungeon they set off to challenge.

Climbing ranks didn’t matter much to her, she wasn’t competitive in the way some people were, which perhaps made her rise that much stranger. Despite being on the shortlist for some of the most prestigious guilds in the game, she could just as often be found healing for groups of nobodies who couldn’t move and breathe at the same time.

To her credit, she treats them all equally.



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