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Current What's the worst thing about the Roleplayerguild and why is it the status bar?
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Banner art image by Krysdecker




Location: Queens, New York; Avengers Academy



The further discussion on the shared rooms had done something to raise Laura's hackles, an uncomfortable feeling stirring in her gut, but it was one she'd shortly be able to work through in a method she always preferred to conversation. Hitting things.

The lockers were impressive enough, although she didn't have much time to appreciate them. Unlike many of the group she both had established gear to put on and not the intricacies of any mechanical assistance. Thankfully, the modified Forge-credited material that made up her iteration of the Wolverine suit made for a far easier process of putting on than its look and fit might suggest. Still, she remembered to think skinny thoughts as she went through the process of changing. For someone concerned about the accommodation situation, she was very not about the prospect of the locker rooms, snapping right to the process of preparing to 'roll out.'

There was little delay between the call coming through and Laura making it to the quinjet. The vaguely punkish nature of her attired replaced with the bold yellow and black of her distinctive Wolverine attire, of course it had been remade for her, but elements of her gene-father's helm had been worked into her own. It still felt a little alien to put it on, but at the same time, there was a comfort to it. She was Wolverine now, and she'd never let them define her as merely a code ever again.



Location: Stark Tower, Manhattan, NYC



The chaos of the flight and the scene they arrived into did little to shake Laura (other than physically) she had been in similar enough situations alongside Logan and the other mutants of Xavier's mission. Admittedly, a more concerning aspect was the presence of civilians. She was used to working in the dark and mysterious corners of the world, not doing battle among the livelihoods of normal, breakable people. She pushed the thought from her mind, it wasn't useful, as time passed and the jet was eventually put down.

You. Come with me, or do as you wish.


"How's a girl to turn down an invite like that." Laura channeled a little of the bold and brash women who had first trained her among the X-Men in her response, a blend of charm and snark which seemed to work well enough for them, but in truth, Laura already had her target as she rushed forwards. There was a somewhat sickening 'shunk' of noise as her claws extended, both from the knuckles and her feet, skin and suit parting to release the adamantium weapons.

"Hear that, folks? Lady with the spear and the fur jacket is highly dangerous. Take her out from a distance, if you can, as she is extremely competent at close range."


"Thanks for the heads up, but so am I."

Laura replied over coms, an involuntary snarl pulling across her features as already her manipulated physiology began to pump adrenaline through her system. It wasn't quite her dreaded kill switch, not that she advertised that particular modification, but it was still something she struggled to exist. She'd been designed as a weapon and the call to fight was one she had little restraint from. Along with that was the imprint of Logan upon her, her father had fought this one's father, thought little and less of them for all the suffering they had caused and Laura was hardly able to differentiate that from her own feelings, so well designed were her genetic modifications.

She moved low down and fast, a flash of yellow and black among the kaleidoscope of New York in crisis, the twin prongs of her foot claws cutting gouges into the concrete beneath her as she drew close to those arrayed against them. Laura mostly ignored the other members of the eclectic gang, already her senses had honed in and while she might not be familiar with her current teammates, she least presumed they would be acting in some way to engage with others.

Laura bounded up and across a vehicle marked with the Stark Industries logo, launching into the air with enough force to easily carry her augmented form the remaining distance. Let them see that the Wolverine was coming for them.

If only for a moment, before in the next the heirs of two different legacies collided, and the battle of beasts began.

Early thoughts I'm having are circling around the Fantastic Four (with quite a bit of variation) or the Hellfire Club. Probably the former makes more sense with what characters are already set up.
<Snipped quote by Ezekiel>

Hey, I know you.


Oh really?

I guess you might have seen me around.
I may try and dabble up a character(s) although rather undecided on who that might be.
Collab with @Ruby

The Reach

Oldtown






In the immediate moments it became rather clear to Davos why none of the most romantic moments of the old tales had taken place in the heat of martial combat, where maidens were swept off their feet by conquering heroes. He was not a weak man, but as Vittoria became an increasingly dead weight in his arms, the pace of their movement slowed to an intolerable level considering his fear for her. It was hardly the moment as he had envisioned it, but with a frustrated and angry growl, he lifted her fully, holding herself across his body as they moved. He was able to carry her faster than he could drag her, even if it was still a pace that felt like a crawl compared to what he wished.

He made a mental note to inform the next poet he met of the ludicrous nature of a slender woman disguised as a knight being able to do this.

Davos paused for a moment, turned to regard the maelstrom of violence that was the vengeful actions of Vittoria’s deadliest sworn knights. The call of the storm was in his blood, as his mother would have said, and his whole form seemed to ache with the desire to join them in their bloody vengeance. His blood might have been of the storm, but the heart is beat through was for her, and with only a moment passed he resumed his following of the Redwyne blade.

She stirred, still in his arms, and still trying to countermand the chaotic devestation that was being wrought around her. He hushed her with a noise that was more dismissive than any he had ever replied to her with, instead calling to the knight infront of him.

“She needs a Maester, quickly, there may be poison.” It seemed an obvious thing to say, but what he meant in full was that there was no point in rushing her as far as possible if she was only to die of the foulness in her blood, if his fears were correct. They would have to risk something closer, and pray the attack had been blunted in blood before they could be found. So they diverged, away from the most direct route of escape towards where she might be saved, should the worst be true.

Ryam Redwyne didn’t stop swinging until there was nothing left in front of him. His body pulsated; his mind raw as his eyes blinked at the sudden absence of targets. Even those that had remained before them were running off, scurrying. There was not but confusion in his eyes until his ears found the missing piece in the screams from the street they had left behind:

Dragonfire.

But even that left him with nothing but confusion until Dennet spat, and came up from their rear guard to help Davos with the weight of the High Marshall, “Vaera’s bloody dragon.” Only after Dennet helped Davos steady Vittoria to a shared weight between the two men did his lift her face, and look at her eyes, “…hells, you might be right about that poison.”

Her eyes were empty vessels, with precious little recognition left in them, despite the fact that the blood came from her shoulder, not her chest, or neck. “Thank the Father whoever shot her missed anything important. What about the tavern?”

It was in front of them, but Ryam turned and shook his head, “Too close to the dragonfire if it starts to spread.”

“Wise, Ser,” the calm voice said, but Redwyne’s response to it was to lift his shield and blade again. The tall, thin, figure in grey sighed audibly and lifted the chain from under the robe, “I’m a Maester. We came for her.”

The gray hood was lowered, and it was only then that the older age of the thin man became apparent. Two other robed figures appeared from behind him, shorter but wider bodied, one of them getting very close to Vittoria immediately, enough for Dennet and Davos to hold out hands.

“We’re friends,” the robed figure explained, instead turning his attention to the face of the woman, “Vittoria? It’s Theyin. Where are they, Vittoria?”
The older man gave another supple sigh, and waved his hand, head darting this way and that, acutely aware of the danger they were still in, “Admirable, Theyin, but we do not have time…and she does not seem aware enough for an answer. Lords, follow us.”

The older man brought his hood back over his head and began to lead the way, as the other two Maesters walked behind the three Lords and the Lady. They went through one alley and to another, then another, and up ancient stone steps before through a seemingly empty building, turning left, walking into another alley, then finally up wooden stairs leading to the second floor of another wooden building, where a brown-haired young woman with green eyes and simply made dress awaited, holding the door open, eyes scanning the area around.

Inside was a perfumed and candle lit bedchamber with steel tub behind a screen off in the far corner. “Put here on the bed,” commanded the older Maester. Even though Davos and Dennet did as he bid, Dennet wasn’t done. Instead, the large man splattered in blood squared up to the older man and unleashed a tone that growled its way from his throat.

“What do you want with her?”

The tall man still wasn’t as tall as Dennet, his slender shoulders drooping, as if irritated with something he had no time for. “My name is Millin. At the moment, I am the best person in the Realm to see to Lady Vittoria.”

“He’s the Archmaester of Healing,” the other one who’d spoken directly to Vittoria, Theyin, interjected. In response, Ryam Redwyne, all but covered in blood, stepped uncomfortably close to him, with a quiet tone that sounded sharper than steel.

“Where is what?”

Theyin scoffed, “If she did not tell you, I cann—”

The dagger from his belt came out, and the woman who had held open the door for them all closed it, gently, before pleading, “Not here, please.”
“You will,” somehow, Ryam’s voice was quieter than before, yet stronger still, “or your Archmaester will need to tend to you, next.”
The third of the hooded Maesters kept by the door, in case he needed to make an immediate escape.

“Don’t start killing them before they have a chance to save her.” Davos spoke to Ryam, but his apologetic eyes were on woman as the door was closed, eyes that turned many a degree colder by the time they settled back on the room, the intensity of his gaze set on the maesters rather than the knight he had just chastised.
"I would answer his question though, I have no authority here." It was the cool tones of someone who knew very much that there were few places across the realm where this was actually true, an ease of command from those born into it, but in this case he had little hope or desire to control the knight in his duty. The only thing that mattered was that their fragile temporary alliance did not fall apart before Vittoria had been saved.

Millin sighed so deep, it appeared as if the man might collapse where he stood, until his head gave a bitter shake, “Scrolls. Vittoria Tyrell has scrolls from the Valyrian Freehold that should not exist. Presumably taken from the Pirate King she defeated in campaign. Scrolls of ancient, dark, magic that could well end the world of reason and man. That is why the Citadel has had her watched. That is why we cannot allow her to die. If you know where they are, you NEED to tell us.”

Ryam’s body relaxed, confusion as his blue eyes looked at Dennet. Dennet’s dark brown eyes looked as stunned as they could ever look, it was Dennet’s low rumble of a voice that answered for them all, “She hasn’t told us. We haven’t seen anything. Knowing her, they’re in some vault of Highgarden. If you want an answer, it’ll have to be from her.”

Millin nodded, “As expected. Vittoria is no fool, she was always unlikely to leave them with the likes of any of you. Now go, we will do what we can. Theyin, I will send you to the Citadel for various substances.”

“I’ll stay right here.” Ryam Redwyne was her sworn shield, an oath to his cousin he would not break.

Dennet looked to Davos, “Let us see to the men that followed us. We need to find a way out of this city, and I may well need your Baratheon name to secure it.”

Davos nodded, the desperate cries of Vittoria even as she faded crashing back to his memory. Even if he wasn't inclined to act on his own accord, he wouldn't allow her to wake thinking he had done nothing to help prevent further chaos and bloodshed. At least towards those not directly responsible for putting her in this state.

He took a further look around the room, at those assembled. He had faith that they could treat her, but it still seemed a cruel jest of fate that this should happen so soon to the possibility of his happiness. He moved to where they had her, lying across and all but dead to the world. He did not fear the potential of any poison as he lent to kiss her, gently pressing his own lips to her's. Memories that were yet to be flooded his mind, of many more kisses and the potential of their years together. If the gods were not kind and they were not to be, he held the moment dearly, the potential last touch of their lips together, committing the feel of her to the very core of his being, never to be forgotten. He hoped there was still enough of her not wracked by the ravaging course of her injury that she might be aware of him, that they could at least share that.

"Farewell but not forever." He whispered to her, before standing tall again, determination set across his features as he strode from the room.



Terran Low Orbit


“I think that bit used to be an ocean, XV-25.” The chirpy tone directed towards the automaton was met only with a series of confirmation beeps, the speaker looking out over the slowly turning visage of Terra. The orbital station wasn’t large, by design, intended once for some sort of communications relay. The great nest of optical and communications relays now repurposed for a new aim, observation and espionage.

Acolyte Verona Zorel Omatah, colloquially known to those who mattered as ‘Oma’ didn’t like to ponder the true role of her post too much, which, she often considered, was probably the main reason she had been assigned to it. Once she had longed to study the intricacies of the Biologus, her father had been a dedicated organist and she had inherited much of his fascination with the study. But then her training had begun, and her talent for datasmirthery had become known to both her and the wider Priesthood. There were few of her generation who had completed their training by now, let alone receive a post in what could be considered a honoured role.

Oma, though, couldn’t’ quite bring herself to despise the technobarbarians of the world below as much as she was supposed to. Of course, academically, she was aware of how substantial a roadblock the factions below had been to the pursuit of knowledge, often attacking the Explorators who had landed on Terra, seeking the secrets of a lost age. She had experience with some explorators though, and she quite understood the desire to shoot them. Her listening post was a key part of any ongoing operations, watching the world below for gaps in the capabilities of the Terran savages. To her, it more felt like listening out for a chance to drop a strike team on some poor people who finally thought they had a moment of peace on the world below. Because of this, no matter how capable she was at the spooling of the data-looms, of the artistry of encryption, she was never tempted to manipulate, she would provided objectivity through ambivalence.

She enjoyed her post though, for reasons many back home would probably find childish, or even vaguely heretical for the true emotion puritans.
“Hurry up, XV-25, it’s starting.” She called back to the automation which began to clank its way across the small lounge space, the smell of freshly fried cooking wafting ahead of it. With a loud clunk the thinking-machine came to rest beside her, handing over the paper bag in its hands. Once she was sure she wouldn’t be kicked off the station for the breach of protocol, she made some alterations to her nutrition station, able to approximate something close to her favourite comfort snack from back home. She bit into the first long stick of fried and sweetened dough with a happy hum, before pointing out across the viewport. It was entirely unnecessary, the automaton only had rudimentary optical sensors and the barest hint of what could be considered intelligence, but that hadn’t stopped her adopting the assistant as a sort of pet.

At the trace of her finger, the spectacle begun. The blazing light of Sol began to crest over the far horizon of Terra. The light streamed through an atmosphere abused by thousands of years of industry ad war, igniting the tortured clouds into a kaleidoscope of light. The light formed a corona across the planetary rim, while the world danced in tendrils of rainbow light. It was a shame only XV-25 ever joined her in watching the Sunrise, her colleagues were far too lost in their tasks to consider such frivolous things.

Despite her capability, she was the least augmented of the small crew. This wasn’t too unusual, considering she was also the youngest member by several decades. It was unusual that someone of her age and junior rank within the Cult should be assigned to the position. Many subsects of the Cult didn’t adhere to the unrestrained augmentation found among her station mates, but they tended not to be members of the Data Logi. She didn’t quite see why, they already had computers, she had no desire to become one. Another deepfried snack passed her lips as she continued to watch the light show of the world below, and she mused that perhaps she could do with being a little less ‘fleshy,’ but that the Cult doctrine probably wasn’t there to shrink a robe size on your hips.

“You are wasting time, Acolyte Omatah.” The droning voice snapped her out of her reprieve in watching the planet below. Magus Hemmar had not approved of her assignment to his posting, nor her ‘eccentric’ qualities, although he had begrudgingly accepted the results she had brought to the team. A suggestion that perhaps by retaining more of her human form than the normal datasmyth she provided a more nuanced ability to manipulate data had once been posed in a report to him by another member of the team, and that had almost caused a station wide schism. Considering their team was made up of only four Acolytes and the Magos, it wouldn’t have been the most impressive of Terra’s civil wars.

“I’ve already finished the latest data package, it is ready for sacred transference when you have time to evaluate its merits, Honoured Magos.” Oma’s tone was chirpy, but her vision didn’t shift from her view. The twin mechdendrites that linked to the base of her spine motioned towards her nearby work station from her improvised seat infront of the observation window. That, along with the bright blue glow of her eyes, and the metal edging along her temples and cheek bones were the only visible signs of augmentation Oma presented.

A brief burst of noise from XV-25 confirmed to the Magus in simplified binharic that the Acolyte spoke true, the Magus responding in a noise that was part frustration and part impressed surprise. “If you committed fully to your task, Acolyte Omatah, you could have my position within mere decades.” She didn’t dislike Hemmar, despie their disagreements. He was committed enough to his belief in results orientated piety that he was honest in his reports about her capabilities. That, or he knew enough about her ability to understand no transmission from the post would be out of reach for her ability decrypt. Sometimes she did snoop on her colleagues, but only out of boredom.

“I wouldn’t want to take that from you, Honoured Magos, Observation Post Beta-4 wouldn’t be the same without you.” In truth, as much as she enjoyed the Sunrise, Oma didn’t want to consider spending the rest of her days aboard, no matter how divinely blessed the opportunity was.
“I see our assessments about the offensives across Eurasia have been vindicated.” The Magus didn’t speak further on the matter, the mechanical eyelids across his optic enhancements closing as his mind delved into the data package she had prepared for transmission to Mars, his modified memory cores rolling through the data at lightning pace.

“Yes, the ‘Imperium’ continues to press their Eastern front, their assault on the Nordyc bloc seems to be going well, if their own reports are to be trusted. I’ve been able to back that up via orbital imaging, but, sadly, the Sen don’t have much in the way of data-based communication to confirm from their side.” Oma stood and stretched, or at least floated up into a standing position, her mechadentries no longer holding her down to her throne of repurposed boxes. The installation was meant to be gravity locked, but steadily as the ancient systems aged more and more of the post had reverted into near zero-g. As the newest replacement, she’d been assigned one of said chambers as her work station, despite it posing the greatest risk to her functioning given her more human physiology. She didn’t mind for the short term, in fact, it was quite fun.

“Merica is a cascade of transmissions, the fighting must be fierce, but it does not seem as if all of the Vault-Cities have unified.” She continued to muse, correctly estimating where in the report the Magus would have reached. “The Pan-Pacific Invaders are starting to negotiate terms with some of them, it seems many are weighing up the opportunity that vassalage could give them in combating local rivals.” That, in fact, was exactly what the encrypted information passed between the invading force and some of the more central territories of Merica had shown her, timed with the start of the Imperium’s intervention into the territory.

“Very well, Acolyte Omatah, I will begin the sacred rites to-“

Every light in the room suddenly wavered for a moment, before returning to usual brightness. It was a momentary glitch that interrupted the Magus’ thought process, but he made to immediately carry on, were it not for the Acolytes sudden frantic activity. “Acolyte, your heart rate has increased dramatically, explain.”

Oma had her face practically pressed to the glass of the observation window, gazing down at the surface of Terra as a new series of lights joined her treasured Sunrise below. “Magus! That was an electronic disturbance from the surface, a detonation!”

“There is nothing in ongoing datastreams to suggest-“

“I can see it! It’s in Eastern Ursh.” She gestured frantically with both a finger and the right of her two mechadentries, her frantic motion causing the long strands of her blonde mane of hair to cascade around her in the weak gravity.

“Visual assessment is not a part of your duties, Acolyte.”
For once entirely ignoring her superior, Oma’s eyes blazed an even brighter blue as she accessed the Noosphere web of the station, the far more hidden and subtle enhancements to her cortex immediately plunging into the dataweave. There hadn’t been any warning from such sources prior, but now that the attack had commenced, and the territory below recovered from the electronic pulse, evidence blazed before her.

“Then look to the data, Magus, four thermonuclear detonations in Eastern Ursh.” While such devices had been a key factor in the current state of the world below, in the modern day they were vanishingly rare and even harder for the states below to maintain. That was, at least, the official stance of most of the Cult. Accepting that some of the Techno-Barbarians of Terra had become advanced enough to understand and implement the greater technologies of their past was something of a taboo. “It’s on their Eastern border, the Empire has struck them too.” Her voice was barely a whisper as she spoke, pulling together the conclusion from the data almost as fast as it was realised in real time. The gridlock of powers that had held sway over Terra for at least her entire lifetime was beginning to shift, a power grab that would have more consequences for Mars than even the Explorators could have anticipated.

“We may need to modify your report, Acolyte.”
Banner art image by Krysdecker


Location: Queens, New York; Avengers Academy
Interactions: Everyone



The group as she had shown up, and those that had arrived since certainly made for an eclectic bunch. There were those clearly arriving with loved ones all the way to those seemingly being delivered under armed guard. Laura had a brief grin to herself that she supposed she counted against both of those. It reminded her of the early days at Xavier's. Mutants had come from a wide variety of different backgrounds and different levels of support. At least, she supposed, for some here, that didn't always come with the caveat of a nation which feared and hated them.

She had her differences with how the X-men had run things and had continued to function, but she couldn't doubt the necessity of the work. A shudder of guilt ran through her. Some days this felt like abandoning her people to side with the oppressor, the 'human.' There were those on both sides of the mutant divide who had often accused Logan of such things, was she simply following in the footsteps of a man who had turned his back on his own people?

The tour provided an opportunity for her to be quiet with her thoughts, perhaps a blessing and a curse. The workshop didn't hold too much of pressing interest to her. Logan had taught her to tinker with engines of various kinds, but that was more from a self-reliance perspective than an upgrade one, and she'd always kept her own bike away from communal areas like this, especially when she doubted this campus would have any mundane security issues. Beyond its own inhabitants, that was. The gymnasium and assorted spaces grabbed her attention more so, despite her distractions. She wasn't sure if it would always have been a part of her personality or a deliberate choice of her 'behavioural programming' but she had a fierce competitive streak and was already evaluating her chances against her fellow students at each of the sports and activities on offer. Apart from swimming, she gave the pool a wide berth.

When the tour reached the cafeteria a few moments passed where the keen eyes of the students may have picked up on Laura's absence, but by the time the tour was moving on she was miraculously back in the fold, an unwrapped and already half-finished snack bar in her hands, no doubt procured from the mostly empty space. She seemed a little more animated, putting aside the troubling thoughts for the moment. She knew Logan would secretly adore the library, at least the portions which didn't entirely relate to magic. Then came the matter of the dorm rooms.

The revelation of shared rooms brought a raised eyebrow to her features before a brief laugh and comment passed her lips.

"All that Stark money couldn't afford a few extra walls?" Her tone was teasing, but ultimately light-hearted.
Banner art image by Krysdecker


New York State
Definitely Not Queens


Out in the sticks there were the sort of places that never really shut. Not because they were always heaving like the most infamous of night clubs but just for the chance of anyone passing through a part of the country no one had any real reason to be in.

In Laura's defence that was exactly what she had been doing, passing through. She'd loosely been heading in the direction she was supposed to be, roaring through the countryside on the way to New York proper. The Ducati Diavel Cromo she had 'borrowed' from Logan a while back had always been a dream to ride and so she'd been in no real rush other than wanting to push the speed on her way down from the border. Ever since Logan and her had put a crashing stop to the latest (and hopefully last standing) Weapon X offshoot she'd been killing time while Logan focused on the set up for the new academy. While she'd spent plenty of time with the old man she'd not seen much of Canada, the land that had brought the world Wolverine.

A few months of crisp air, endless forest and rolling mountains had done her good. Perhaps she had inherited some of Logan's desire for isolation after all, for she hadn't found herself missing much in the way of company, beyond the small collection of frontiersmen and Athapaskan she'd shared a few campfires with. She'd felt far worse on the brief trip across the Great Lakes once she had finally quit the wild lands of the Canadian North West. The deep cold waters of Lake Ontario were one of the few environments she wasn't built to survive, just an endless cold waking grave were she to go overboard and sink on account of her mesh skeleton.

She'd been frantic once she was back on dry land in Rochester and had opened up the bike, far from taking a direct line to New York City she'd powered up and into the Appalachian mountains. Laura had spent some time on the trail, listening to old ghost stories from keen-eyed students and excited pensioners on their bucket list trip across the mountains. Older than the rings of Saturn, she had no doubt at least a few of them had to be true about those ancient peaks. Eventually though, if she was going to be on time, she had to carry on.

So, that's how she found herself at Roamin' Joe's. An establishment that half claimed to be a truckers' diner, but in reality was a dive bar on a trucking route. The kind of place that had sprung up when drinking and driving wasn't considered a crime but an acceptable way to deal with the boredom of such a life.

Plus they did an all-you-can-eat wings deal and she was very determined to prove that 'all' was her limit on that.

The claret red of her Doc Marten boots kicked the stand of the bike into place as she dismounted, helmet under one arm as she made her way to the bar itself, the gravel of the car park crunching under her tread. With a short black leather jacket, matching colour jeans, and a white European Tour AC/DC T-shirt tied into a crop top, she certainly hit a few wild child stereotypes as she pushed her way through doors that had once been automatic and into the establishment.

It would be generous to suggest there were half a dozen other patrons in the bar, depending on if you included an older man snoozing in a booth in the corner, so she sat at the bar with a generous bracket of empty stools on either side of her.

"Wings, please." She called out, pointing to the offer hanging from one corner of the bar. "What whiskey have you got?" This second question earned her a long look from the bedraggled man behind the bar. They shared the look for a moment before the man decided the business was worth more than pressing on the matter of her age.

"Just serve Jack." He rumbled in reply, which earned a scrunch of Laura's nose.

"Ugh, best hope the sauce on those wings is strong then."




Time passed, as it was want to do, wings were consumed along with a steadily increasing measure of Jack Daniels’ finest whiskey. The previously quiet bar, while it could hardly be described as busy, had livened up a bit with the benefit of live entertainment.

Live entertainment in the form of a young woman in the process of breaking whatever ludicrous record had been set before, no doubt by a significantly larger human being.

Where before she'd been sitting alone at the bar, Laura was by now nestled in one of the booths, accompanied by an assortment of individuals. A combination of those who had been passing through and decided to watch history in the making, and those called in by the barman, who she had presumed to be the eponymous Joe, as excitement had built up.

One wing left. The last wing on the last plate to cap it all off. Taking a moment to breathe, Laura pulled her teeth along the bone, pulling the ragingly spiced meat, before throwing up her hands in victory. There was an assorted and raucous cheer from her new trucker friends, who immediately took to taking photos with her, one would end up on the board no doubt for her efforts.

With a content sigh, she sat herself back down, just as another drink arrived for her, although not served by ‘Joe’ as a shorter man slid into the sear opposite her.

“I didn't think when I said ‘be in New York’ I had go specify the City and not wherever this damn place is.” The voice was a growl, but it was hardly done with malice, for all the judgment Logan attempted to put into the words, it was clear he was somewhat amused.

Laura attempted to immediately reply but the combination of a few too many drops of bad whiskey and a few too many (admittedly quite good) wings replaced her retort with an overfilled hiccup, the young woman raising a hand to signal a pause as Logan snorted a laugh at her predicament.

Eventually, she simply followed with, “Yeah but this seemed more fun at the time.”

“You even have to show em a fake ID?” Logan flicked one finger towards the now empty glass still held in Laura's hand. Despite downing drinks for the last hour, she barely felt a buzz and that was fading, the power of their shared healing factor generally more powerful than the rate a dive bar was willing to serve drinks to counteract it.

“I'm waging a war against tyranny in all its forms, like a drinking age of twenty-one, my people would never stand for it.” She mused with a grin, pushing the glass away and drumming her hands on the table.

“You can't drink in Canada yet either.”

“I was talking about Mexico.”

“You're a quarter Hispanic, you've never even been to the place.”

“Sure, but I feel very strongly about this issue.” She let out a sigh, sitting back up straight as the supercharged nature of her body was already easing the sensation of being too damn full. “So, you here on a collection call?”

“Kinda bad form if my kid doesn't even make the opening ceremony,” Logan grunted, trying and failing to seem like that sort of thing would ever bother him.

“Oh no…it's just opened and I'm already a legacy.” Laura half-wailed, a look of false horror on her features. “I can already feel the transatlantic accent taking route.”

“Shut up, pay your tab, and let's go.”

“Oh don't worry, you already did that.”




The rest of the journey went even faster, as was their nature to be competitive, the pair practically racing their way across the remainder of the state, as green mountains gave way to urban sprawl.

The gun of engines heralded the arrival of Wolverine past and present by a few moments, the pair of motorbikes swinging through the gate, the older Logan marginally in the lead as the bikes swung into place. A few terse competitive words bounced between them, before Laura swung herself off her bike. Logan hadn't made an issue of it, so she mostly presumed it was her's to keep for now.

As her genetic father made to vanish into the backdrop, ostensibly to aid with any further preparations but no doubt a means to avoid having to socialise with all the new arrivals at once’ Laura treaded her way over to where the great green form of the Professor was greeting the new arrivals.

“Sup, Hulk.” She called out with a friendly wave and flicked of her hand in a mock salute before her attention drifted around the new arrivals. She'd been part of a similar institution before, but issues among mutantkind had soured that experience. Perhaps a fresh start could lead to a new result.

“How do you do, fellow kids?” She spoke with a flash of a smirk, enough of her black matte-covered lips parting to reveal the flash of her sharpened canines in amusement.

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