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    1. Mivuli 10 yrs ago
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9 yrs ago
Current It would appear blue-haired girls are a thing. With me. It's become a recurring trend
2 likes
9 yrs ago
Halsey is on my mind. Nothing but Halsey. Heelp

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Living in the GMT+8 timezone, with important assessments awaiting in 2016! Forgive me if my schedule refuses to cooperate

(Have this gif as an apology ahead of time)

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Going to throw this in. Thanks for reading!

So if our characters are part of The Forgotten, they would have known each other for a while?


Green Room, The Amp

Where she was huddled in a corner with a pillow nicked from the couch, Mikayla had found where the WiFi signal was strongest. Her Macbook was balanced on her tucked-up legs. The screen bright, it made mirrors of the maroon-framed glasses on her nose, while she scrolled intently through Twitter. There were pictures of fans showing off The Amp, a few ten feet from the stage the band would soon be occupying with their larger-than-life presence. Selfies abounded across the Twittersphere, tumblr and Instagram. Every single face looked happy enough, and the followers had left near a thousand likes on the backstage photo Mikayla had uploaded only ten minutes ago, with the caption 'Blowing the roof off the place in an Amp near you. See you soon!' YouTube users who had bought tickets had left comments on their latest video voicing a unanimous anticipation for the concert. The rest of the fanbase had left replies of envy and congratulations. The last couple of months, fervour for this band had all been condensed on a screen, deceivingly intangible. Now there was a crowd screaming for four artistes. Mikayla couldn't help the small smile. Hopefully, none of them would leave asking for a refund tonight.

Mikayla did not look up from her laptop, when their lead guitarist spoke. She did, however, intone drily, "Good looks." Mikayla had seen enough comments raving over the band to know the fans loved them no small amount. Glancing over her laptop, she caught Levi's eye, and added, "And wicked sound, of course."

Their opening act had played their last notes. Mikayla shut her laptop and tucked it away on a cushion, fumbling for her phone and camera, popping to her feet and jogging out the green room. She wandered around backstage for a few moments, before she found Jackson Miller, the man with full hands keeping everything backstage straight. He looked keyed-up, but Mikayla was hunting for a couple of soundbites.

She slid in front of him. Any time now, the show would start. Smelling faintly of tobacco, Miller had a full foot on Mikayla, and - in flats - she had to stand on tip-toe and raise her arms so he could speak to the camera at eye-level. Finger poised over the record button, she said in a rush, "Miller, if you give me ten seconds of your time talking about how you feel about the show-slash-band, I'll buy you a donut afterwards. Do we have a deal?"
In his pursuit of aesthetics he's a bit of a neat freak, and whilst he has a habit of cleaning up after himself he also has a habit of cleaning up after everybody else, whether they like it or not; a sewing project might end up moving from a lounge chair to the coffee table, or a pair of shoes taken off on the dining room might end up moving to just by the front door.


Oh lord Levi'd be the perfect antidote to Mikayla's colonising tendencies
I wonder if Taytay has a lot of bra thrown at her on the stage. Friend of mine went to a Florence and the Machine concert once, and she said there was a surprisingly large amount of bra thrown at Florence by women. I assume we have at least one or two women in the band.

There you go, the things I do for research. j-14.com/posts/10-hilarious-celebrity-..

I'm gonna drop in this lovely trilogy of Halsey tweets then.
Li Shang/Lincoln


Day 307 (Present Day)
11:30 a.m.
Gymnasium, The Army Base, Pennsylvania


Sometimes I run never to experience fear,
Sometimes I fly from its frustrating power;
Sometimes I withdraw myself from evil
So never to be in its bondage;
So never to panic.

The earth thunders and my heart cries;
I am ever watchful, never to give in,
Never to fall;
Never to be trapped,
Never to be captured by its power.


“If this is to make me run faster, Jun Jie,” Li Shang quipped, from where he jogged without ever moving forward on the groaning treadmill. “It’s not working.”

“闭嘴 (bi zui),” Jun Jie muttered from where he had been reading aloud, perched on a chair and a book split in half in his hands. Shut up. “It’s by Jokpeme Joseph Omode, called Running From Fear.”

His little brother still held dear to his books on literature and poetry, prose that never-ended, and haikus that were as sweet and concise as the taste of sugar. “傻瓜 (sha gua),” Li Shang teased, hopping off the treadmill and switching it off. Fool. For believing any honeyed words could fend off death, or the putrid breath of the things they kept outside their walls. But the truth was harsh, and Li Shang couldn’t bear to weigh his brother down with it. “You will never get any girls if you keep your nose in the books.”

That pinked Jun Jie’s ears, and Li Shang smirked at him as he picked up his tablet. “You’re never away from that thing,” Jun Jie protested abruptly with a slight sputter, still frazzled, but unwillingly to linger on the subject of girls.

The cameras had been acting up lately. Blotches would whizz across the screen sporadically, and while that could be easily dismissed as faulty wiring, or bad weather and signals, it tended to terrify whichever poor soul Li Shang stuck with camera surveillance duty, nerves already on edge at the imagined prospect of a zombie leaping out at the camera. His attention was being called more and more to it. “Yes, well,” said Li Shang, scanning the feed from the cameras – all seemed good, “this tablet is my job.” Maybe he should check the cameras on the perimeter. Risky, but Li Shang did not enjoy margins of error in his work.

“You work too hard then,” Jun Jie said nonchalantly. “I’ll leave you to it. Mama says Chinese lessons after lunch. I don’t see why it matters, seeing as a zombie would eat me whether or not I scream Mandarin vulgarities at it.”

Li Shang glanced up from his screen, and shot his little brother a quizzical smile. “Mama isn’t teaching you Chinese vulgarities.”

Jun Jie returned the smile mischievously. He was already out the door. “She says them in Cantonese under her breath and to Baba. She thinks I can’t understand.”

Li Shang called his name in admonishment, but Jun Jie was already gone. “笨蛋,” he muttered with a splitting grin turning his gaze back to the tablet. Whipping a towel around his shoulders, Li Shang left the gymnasium and entered the flow of the corridor. There was a steady bidirectional stream of people. It was nearing noon, and soon the hallways would be packed with survivors searching for lunch. He had better grab his meal soon then from the mess hall.

Head bowed to the tablet, Li Shang checked the thermal cameras. At least these ones weren’t giving him splotchy performance. He had plans to put up proper fencing. The current generators wouldn’t be able to support electrical fences, but with a few tweaks and maybe a bit of a jump… Li Shang didn’t see why they shouldn’t experiment with how many zombies they could fry and deter.

Suddenly, there was an insistent tugging on his arm. He paused his pace, and turned to find a grizzled man with grey peppered in his hair and beard – both unkempt – at his side, staring up at him with wide eyes that looked feverish and exhausted at the same time. “Mr Finch,” Li Shang said, straightening and pivoting to face the man properly. He had an inkling what this would be about.

“Lincoln.” Mr Finch sounded tired, but vibrating with some kind of electrical charge. “Have you – have you found anything? On the cameras you have around the walls.”

“I am sorry, Mr Finch. The feeds have not shown us anything. Not even the thermal information is reporting abnormalities.” A cold analytical voice. The voice of a computer, of Lincoln, who refused to empathise with this man’s loss. Finch had had a wife and daughter in Philadelphia. He had been flying back from an overseas trip, forty thousand feet in the air while the world crumbled below him. Once he had touched down, he had been ferried off to the army facility. Finch held a job important enough to land him here, but perhaps the influence didn’t extend to his family in crises. Wife and child, both lost to him, yet Mr Finch persisted in clinging to his irrational wishful thinking like a dying man. With the recent discovery of the Martello brother outside of base, Finch was not alone in reviving his hopes of having his family returned to him.

The man withered before Li Shang. The rekindled light in his eyes died every day with Li Shang’s words, and in front of Li Shang’s eyes he slumped away with a nod of defeat, as he always did. Li Shang watched his back retreat, knowing that come tomorrow it would all repeat. Die, live to hope, and die again. Li Shang wondered if it would simply be mercy to put Finch to the sword one last time. Spout the truth in his ear – that his wife and daughter were dead, that if Finch did find them it would not be to feel warm blood and flesh – and cease his suffering.

However, today, Li Shang let the man walk.
I've run Mikayla's CS by @Fillet already (:
You've got my interest

@Frengo D'aw, you're way too kind! But thank you!
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