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Zeroth Post
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Zeroth


The sleepy little city of Oaken-- a cobble of red-sloped roofs and coppery clocks nestled like a fawn in the forests between the mountains --had long ago forgotten the Rue. Only the Howling Museum displayed relics of the city's founding, when shadows would loom silent and staring at dawn, missing persons would reappear starved with strange eyes, and backward voices murmured in butcher-dyed stones. Illuminated tomes lay open to fables of two-headed dogs and trees with doors. A glass case presented an ancient leather shoe, the last trace of a child who had been plucked into the sky. Crops would sprout toxic flowers, goats would mew like kittens, blueberry pie would turn to rhubarb when cut. There had been nothing in this valley that the Rue had not touched.

Then, there was hope. Crumbling yellowed newspapers declared the long-anticipated arrival of witches who crawled out of the mountain caverns, carrying with them relics of shining stone. In the corner of the museum, a pedestal displayed an intricate replica of a witchcast piling: one of six hundred stone carvings that still circle the city today, protecting it against invasion by Rue.

Oaken is now a peaceful refuge for the Howl: the unlucky souls born with particular sensitivity to the presence of Rue. It is one of the rare cities untouched by the unexpected. Daily life is gently predictable. Perhaps it's this undercurrent of boredom that weighs the street-corner noticeboards with pleas for help against the plague of the Rue.

This newest flyer was just one among the many:

FOR A GOOD CAUSE
VOLUNTEERS WANTED

Traveling Apothecary Seeks Howls
As Escort Through Darklight Corridor
For Medicine Delivery 4 Day Journey
Good Food and Hospitable Conditions
Darklight Station 8 AM
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Hidden 1 yr ago Post by Mole
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Neomi Adams

It was after her shift, and Neomi was packing for her trip. She let out a frustrated sigh, as she thought how wonderful it would be to have her mother’s tips and tricks of travel. But, asking her mother for help was clearly not an option.

Since telling them about the journey, she could not help but notice her parents were less than thrilled about her decision. Actually, it was more accurate to say were livid. One would think Neomi was committing treason. In a way she was. She was throwing away the family values that had cradled her childhood upbringing.

And, until she left for the Darklight Corridor, she was having to endure her parents’ reaction. More specifically, the reaction of her mother. Whether she was at the front desk or working in the kitchen, her mother’s disdain was evident in the older woman’s now piercing eyes and tightly frowned lips.

This better not suck, Neomi thought as she scraped her teeth over her bottom lip. I will never hear the end of it. Especially from Mom.

There was also the chance that she would have to work at The Burrow for the rest of her life, which meant she would never truly have the opportunity to explore her powers as a Howl. This could literally be her last chance. It might not be, but it totally could be.

Besides, she was no longer a child. She had just reached adulthood. If she wished to be an escort for a traveling Apothecary, she should be more than able to fulfill that desire.

“It shouldn’t be this hard,” Neomi muttered to no one in particular. If she was being honest, as she often was to a fault, she was an adult. Obviously. Needing her mother’s help was for children. Plus, in less than twenty-four hours, she would be out from under her parents’ wings for maybe the rest of her life.
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Hidden 1 yr ago Post by Sadie
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Sadie had been staring at the flyer for what felt like hours.

She knew she was one of the special people, as her mother always made sure to tell her growing up. That, and the voices. So many voices had recently started to hum in her ear and take up residence in her mind. She knew it had everything to do with her job; being around death all day really does something to a person. The new ability probably would have scared her senseless if she didn't witness the absolute bliss on her patients' face when it was time for them to be called home, knowing they would be joining their loved ones on the other side.

At least, she hoped that's who the voices belonged to.

The curiosity drove the girl to accept a position on expedition. Besides, an Apothecary could only do so much with healing elixirs and the sort. The group really needed someone to tend to their medical needs, should any arise on the trip. This was the chance she needed to really find out what, or who she had been hearing for the last few months.

She wasn't about to let the opportunity slip through her fingers.

After deciding to join the group, Sadie had hurried back to her modest studio apartment to pack. What do you take on an adventure such as this? Soon opting for comfort and ease, she rolled a few options in the tiniest balls she could muster as she started to pack her bookbag. It would allow her to have her hands free should anything occur. She also started to pack a first aid kit, knowing it could prove to be invaluable.

Soon her bag was packed, full of just the necessities. A refillable water bottle was clipped on the side. Sadie took in a deep shaky breath as she stared at her reflection in the bathroom mirror.

"Time to kick some Rue ass." Her face scrunched as she practiced her tough expression. Bringing her hands up into fists, she gave herself a curt nod. "I can do this. Of course I can do this." Sadie's fists slowly opened as her breath caught in her throat. "I definitely need to be high for this." She groaned as she fell back onto her bed, knowing the morning would be the start of the rest of her life.
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Hidden 1 yr ago Post by King Cosmos
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The forest was a dangerous place for anyone to be wandering alone, let alone a tiny slip of a girl like her, but for some reason Sasha was always comfortable there.

Though not common there were wolves and bears to worry about and even the prey animals like deer or elk could be a threat if they decided to fight instead of run. Not to mention to risk of getting lost and turned around, wandering for hours or days and never finding your way back. Or the risk of injuring yourself, far from home and with no one for miles around to hear you call for help; something as simple as stepping in a rabbit’s warren and twisting your ankle could be fatal, given enough time. Yet she could tread through it without fear; with respect, with caution, but not with fear.

It was a place she knew and that included knowing about its dangers, but the knowing made it familiar rather than scary.

But she wouldn’t be able to keep doing it forever. She couldn’t keep coming out here, with her father’s rifle and her father’s gun, to pick at berry bushes and gather up mushrooms like she was now. It wouldn’t be enough for much longer. It wasn’t even enough now, truth be told. She needed to find something else to live by.

The snap of a branch had her shooting to her feet, already taking a step backwards to run as her eyes scanned the trees. Between the boughs of a young pine, Sasha saw the antlers of a deer, a buck, and followed them down to its head and its eyes. They stared back at her, dark and intense. It was large, a full grown male, large enough that it would give enough venison to feed her and her mother for weeks; or feed them for a week and fill their pockets if they chose to sell some of it instead. Moving slowly, she raised her hand and wedged her thumb under the leather strap of the rifle hanging at her shoulder and carefully raised it up. Sasha pulled the rifle into her hands, one under the barrel and another at the butt. Her fingers found the trigger as she pulled the stock against her shoulder.

She waited.

She waited.

She waited.

The deer ran.

She waited.

She let out a breath, long and slow, and lowered the rifle.

What good was a hunter that wouldn’t even kill?

Sasha could track animals and find them within the forests better than almost any of the other hunters, because her father had been better than any other hunter and he had taught her well. But, it was always an unsure thing whether or not she could find work. Everyone had a family to feed, a livelihood to preserve; most people would not want to split their hauls with her unless it was absolutely necessary and most of the time they could find game without her help. It was only the newer hunters that worked with her frequently; the rest only called her when they were having trouble or when they wanted to find something in particular.

Something like a buck. Hunters always liked finding a buck. The antlers could sell for a lot; either as a trophy or, as some people thought, as medicine. They were valuable. Sasha pulled out a little notebook and a pencil from inside her jacket and made some quick notes; size, location, features. If she came here again, if someone asked her to come here again she should be able to track it down. It was worth telling people about, just in case.

Maybe someone would be feeling generous.

Grabbing her basket of foraged fruit and mushrooms Sasha turned away and began to make her way back home. On the way she started thinking about other things she could do. Nothing that involved people too heavily, which ruled out most things, but maybe she could learn to make stuff; like a seamstress, or a carpenter. There was also the noticeboard, which was full of jobs, most of which were dangerous and most of which were asking people with experience; the kind of experience she didn’t have. That was always going to be a problem until she took a job though.

There was that one she’d seen. One that didn’t pay much, or anything at all really, but which would at least give her experience. Something to do with an apothecary?

It was experience, that was about as much as she could say in its favour, but if she did it then she could at least say she’d done a job before when they asked her what experience she had.

Maybe she’d do it.
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Hidden 1 yr ago 1 yr ago Post by YoshiSkittlez
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Gunther Borgadais


Location: The Moose Lodge, Uptown.






"Hey you take care now. And tell your new girl that she needs to come see me. It's been a while." Gunther took the empty pint from the freshly polished oak bar. And with the pint he scooped up the generous tip that the well-dressed gentleman he had been speaking to had left behind for him, with a wide-white smile and a tip of his hat as he left the bar with a bit of a stumble to his step. "Oh! And I'll tell the Mrs. I never saw you today, shall I?" A couple of the nearby patrons; regulars, chuckled lowly with Gunther. Gunther polished off the bar where the tip and empty glass had been, checked on his customers, and then headed to the end of the bar where a man he couldn't ever remember seeing approached.

"Afternoon sir! What can I conjure up for you?" Gunther asked, a bit of a pep in his step riding off the temporary high from his last big tipper. Maybe he'd finally buy into that brewer's course on how to make his own beer...

"Whatever you suggest, son. But I'm more interested in what I can do for you."

Gunther furrowed an eyebrow, confused.

"I'm not sure I'm following."

"Nor would you. Not like your old ma sat you down and explained this all to you."

Gunther's body reacted almost hastily at the mention of his mother, but before he even had a chance to get huffy puffy over it, the older man continued, putting his hand up to keep Gunther silent.

"If you've got a moment later, I suggest taking a look at this here flier. It might hold some answers to questions you didn't even know you had, kid." The older man reached into the lapel of his suit jacket and laid down a piece of paper down on the bar, the blank side facing up.

"Alright, I don't have time for any weirdos today. I'm going to ask you politely, just the once, to leave." Gunther threatened, more irate than before but also just questioning if this guy was just a well-dressed homeless man. It was also pretty likely he was just another rich fucker, but hopped up on something a bit stronger than alcohol.

"And you'll only have to ask me the once. I'll take my leave, kid. Just don't give up so easily." The older man adjusted his hat, tapped the face-down piece of paper and made his exit. Gunther's eyes never left the man until he was completely out of sight near the entrance of the building.

"Fucking crack-pot." Gunther seethed and snatched up the flier, crumpling it up in the process.

FOR A GOOD CAUSE
VOLUNTEERS WANTED

Traveling Apothecary Seeks Howls
As Escort Through Darklight Corridor
For Medicine Delivery 4 Day Journey
Good Food and Hospitable Conditions
Darklight Station 8 AM


Howls, huh? He'd heard the term before, sure. But just like a lot of everything around here, there was a lot more fantasy to that notion than reality. And that guy... why would he even be trying to help him if there was anything to it? And just like that, Gunther realized that the man had been right. Because now Gunther certainly had more questions that he didn't know existed until just now.
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Hidden 1 yr ago Post by Wayward
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"Stephan. James. You both know Mrs. Maribelle from next door."

Antonita Hawkes looked deeply into the eyes of her two younger brothers. Stephan, 15, and James, 13, looked back into hers with confused and disparaged expressions stealing their usually energetic composures. Her eyes kept a fixed, reassuring gaze at them until, finally, both nodded "yes," in unison. Toni returned their gesture, and turned to face the woman next to her.

Mrs. Olivia Maribelle, Toni's neighbor, A stern yet kind woman of 50, who had lost her husband not long ago, stood facing back at her. She placed her hand gently upon Toni's shoulder with a soft smile. "Dear. You have nothing to worry about. You need to take this trip to better yourself for your future. I'll be here bright and early tomorrow so that you can make it on time."

"Thank you, Ma'am." Toni bowed graciously to the older woman, grateful that her neighbor and so readily taken to an accepting and supportive role in her life. After leading Mrs. Maribelle out of the apartment, she returned to the living room, where her brothers still stood, perplexed. "Sis," James spoke up. "Where are you going?"

"Yeah." Stephan chimed in next. "And why do you have to go?"

"I... I have to go out of town. Just for a few days, I promise. It's a trip for... for my job training. The one that I'm in to work in medicine. It'll help me find work later on. And then... and then things will be better for us." Toni paused for a moment, seeing both brothers exchange looks, first of uncertainty, and then of acceptance. "Good. Now. I need you two to go off and get some sleep. I'll be right behind you; we all have early mornings tomorrow." Her brothers nodded, and walked from the living room and over into their shared bedroom.

Toni remained behind, watching them as they entered their room and closed the door behind them. A tear rolled down her cheek. Nearly two years had come and gone since the deaths of the trio's parents, and still, Toni felt uneasy in her ability to properly care for her younger siblings. She hoped that the trip she had spent the evening packing for would be worth leaving them in the care of someone else. She trusted Olivia; just the thought of not being around herself after being such a constant in their lives shook her to her core.

She shivered. The hairs on her body prickled up. Immediately, her instinct kicked in, and she power walked from the living room out onto the front patio looking out into the apartment complex. Across the way, a dark mist lofted and drifted as though looking towards her. Rue. She had been seeing them since she was a child, but only recently had she been informed of their name and nature, and that she was one of a unique type of people that could properly perceive and interact with them; the most extreme of these had lead to her inadvertently discovering she could manifest an energy field that could repel the beings. The one in question, however, seemed little interested in her or her brothers, as it floated higher and eventually listed away and out of view. "Good." Toni said to herself as she turned and went back into the apartment.

"Good night Sis!" she heard her brothers say together.

"Goodnight." She responded as she passed their room and retreated into her own at the end of the hallway. She flopped down onto her bed, thinking of her parents as she fell asleep.

Mom. Dad. Forgive me.
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Hidden 1 yr ago Post by Mokley
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The passenger entrance to the Darklight Corridor is easily missed. In Lumin Park, where morning light dapples the freshly swept walkways between well-tended beds of bright flowers, a gentle hill overlooks a little pond where flocks of geese float lazily honking. Atop this green hill sits a white-painted gazebo, which seems at a distance to be a perfect alcove to rest and to admire the scenery, but up close is only a decorative roof for the stairwell that leads down, down, deep into the earth below.

Like Lumin Park, the marble stairs are impeccably clean, illuminated in the bright blue glow of alchemic sconces placed at regular intervals on the walls. Occasionally there was a potted plant with cascades of flowers overhead, as if to remind the traveler of the beauty of sunlit life even as they descended toward a low hiss and rumble deep within.

The stairwell ended abruptly at a clean platform, where stained-glass blue light glowed down from the arched ceiling, accented by the brassy shine of hanging chandeliers. The platform hummed with a low breathing noise like a peacefully sleeping dragon. It smelled like wet stone and charcoal and it was empty.

Or, nearly empty. On the far side of the platform stood a great mechanical contraption: four robotic legs held up a huge glass terrarium, within which a small ecosystem thrived. There were flowers and rocks and running water and flits of insects and a skitter of small creatures moving about within a great glass jar. Cloudy condensation partially hid the delicate tree that brightened the terrarium with pink flowery constellations. The walking terrarium sat silently alive next to its purple-draped handler.

The old woman had spread a prettily woven blanket on the platform and now sat cross-legged upon it, staring meditatively down the dark rail corridor while she puffed occasionally on a bamboo pipe that swirled a musky smoke of incense all around her. Wisps of gray hair curled out of a heavy, fringed turban wrapped with purple and coral and teal. Her every movement rattled with the stones in her earrings and long necklaces. She was the only one on the platform, for now.

Upon the arrival of a stranger, she would turn her head with a wrinkled smile and sparkling eyes. "Please forgive me if I don't get up to say hello: my knees are mad at me for the audacity of that stairwell. I'm Eudora Abby, apothecary and herbalist, but you can call me Yiya, everyone does. Are you here to help me with this confounded thing?" She gestured with the pipe over her shoulder at the stationary robotic terrarium. "Come, sit, sit down! There's room on the blanket, I don't bite. Tell old Yiya your story, child, while we wait for this hunk of junk they call a train."
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Hidden 1 yr ago Post by King Cosmos
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It seemed that she was the first to arrive, other than the apothecary themselves. The platform was deserted aside from the two of them and Sasha didn’t know enough about the Darklight station to know if that was usual or not. She didn’t think it was, somehow, but what did she know?

Her footsteps echoed lightly in the expanse as she approached the old woman, trying to give off the impression that she was more confident than she felt; the image was ruined somewhat, but the slight flinch she made with every step. She wasn’t used to her movements making so much noise and it bothered her, to disturb the peace of this place.

The old woman, Yiya, addressed her when she was close enough that it was obvious why she was here. Sasha listened along, glancing at the terrarium when it was brought up, then staring at it as she realised what it was; a huge mechanical thing with legs that carried a small microcosm of nature within its glass body. The hunter had never seen anything like it. The girl was startled out of her reverie when Yiya asked her to sit with them and wait, and tell them her story.

Sasha didn’t sit. She shuffled her feet instead, adjusting the straps of her bags on her shoulders and looked down at the ground in between them. “I’m Sasha. I… I’m here to help with…” The machine? Like Yiya said? No, she had no idea what to do with something like that. “I saw the notice. You need… an escort? I’m here for that. I’m good at finding my way.”

She lapsed into silence then, her introduction made. Soon enough a feeling of awkwardness crept in, like she should keep talking, or do something to break the silence. Or at least not just keep standing there. Making her decision, Sasha lifted the bag from her shoulder, long and narrow, and laid it on the floor next to the blanket; her father’s rifle, tucked away in a carrying bag so she wouldn’t get in trouble for wearing it on her shoulder through the city. Her father’s other gun was tucked away inside her thick jacket and she had a knife sheathed at her belt; the things she usually took with her into the woods, the latter being more for cutting stems and making notches in wood as anything else. The rest of her belongings were in a second bag, an ordinary backpack, that she placed next to the rifle; some extra clothing and some provisions, since the notice had said this journey would take four days. Now divested of her burdens, Sasha sat at the very edge of the blanket facing the old apothecary; she felt just as awkward as before, but at least now she had followed Yiya’s request.

“Um… are there going to be others? The notice… didn’t…” It didn’t say anything about how many were required, where they were going or even provide any information on how to contact the poster for the job other than to show up at the time and place specified. It was only now that Sasha was beginning to realise just how weird that was. What if too many people showed up? What if too few showed up, or no one at all? Would Yiya be sitting here, waiting for an escort that wouldn’t arrive? Would she still make the journey by herself if she was?

Sasha abandoned her question and was quiet after that.

@Mokley
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Hidden 1 yr ago Post by Wayward
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The night passed by with its terrors. Toni tossed and turned for hours, unable to settle to position to set mind and body at peace. When rest finally came to her, it was unsettled, outright tormenting at times. The sleeping dreams barreled upon her relentlessly; nightmares of Rue dominating the night's repertoire. In some, she was battling them as they sought to do harm unto mortals. In others she was consoling Rue that were despaired by their existence in the human plane. In others still, Rue were attempting to take over the bodies of herself and her love ones, as though they were demons Hellbent on possession.

Waking came her with a suuddenness unlike any she had experienced. She throbbed and shivered, head burning with a fever, and her face was covered by a thin veil of sweat. She shot upright, grabbing her stomach as her muscles cramped. For a minute or two, she stayed sitting in her bed, easing her pains. When she at last felt strong enough to ruse to her feet, she did so with a labored slowness. Almost as quickly as they had come about, the feverish symptoms receded as Toni set foot onto the floor and tracked to her window.

She pulled back the curtain, and sighed in relief. The first light of dawn was still just creeping into the distant skies. Her worry that she had slept in assuaged, she went about with the final preparations for her departure. Her travel backpack had been packed the previous night: a spare change of clothes, ammunition, a few provisions of food, and a water catine were among her essentials. She put the finishing touch by stowing a pipe, matchbook, and smoking herbs into a side pocket; whether she would have a chance to stop and smoke, she didn't know, but she felt right in bringing the items along anyways.

Dressing appropriately for the journey to come, she strapped her boots securely, fastened a holster with a sixshot revolver (a gift from an insistent Olivia) to her waist, and grabbed her backpack. Drawing the curtains and dousing the lamps, she parted from her bedroom. Checking both the clock on the wall and the pocket watch she had been left by her late father, she confirmed the time: 7:00AM. She would have plenty of time to get to the station. Walking down the hall, she heard no sound coming from her brothers.

Just as she had planned, she was leaving before they woke. She opened the door to the outside. Already standing on the front walk was Mrs. Maribelle; somehow, Toni saw, she was looking saddened in a way she hadn't the previous night. "Everything should be all set for you, Ma'am," Toni said. The older woman didn't respond, but looked back at her like a medium looking into a crystal ball. "Mrs. Maribelle?"

"Oh. Sorry dear." Olivia snapped to as though pulled from a trance. "Yes. All will be well. Stephen and James will be fine under my care. She placed another comforting hand upon Toni's shoulder, and hugged her quickly before setting her on her way. "Be careful Antonita. Your journey may be more trying than expected. But I know you will succeed."

Toni departed, passing through the front gate of the apartment courtyard with no more than a side eye back. Her trip through town was uneventful, the early hour of a Saturday seeing most people sleeping. All that were awake and about were the shopkeepers preparing for the inevitable rush of commerce. Toni nodded to the ones she knew, who looked at her, puzzled as to what had her out so early. She paid their bewildered stares no attention.

Her mind was focused on her destination. Atop a hill overlooking the city from Lumin Park, stood the white gazebo. She had heard talk of the Darklight Corridor. But had she not been required to go there, she might never have given the place any thought or notice. As she scaled the hill leading up to the Corridor entrance, the prickling sensation ran across her skin. She looked around, and, seeing nothing, felt best to ignore the feeling for the time being.

Only as she started down the marble steps did she begin to wonder about what Olivia had said. More trying than expected? Was it possible the older woman knew more than she was letting on?

Toni didn't have much of a chance to dwell on the question. The sight of the cathedral-like station caught her off guard, leaving her too awestruck to think of much else. Her eyes would come to a machine with four spidery legs, housing what looked like an entire ecosystem in a terrarium atop itself. That's where she also noticed an elderly woman sitting on a bench accompanied by another woman not far off from Toni's age.

Toni stepped forward to join the other two. From her pocket she pulled a folded copy of the flier, presenting it to both women. "Uh. I'm guessing I'm in the right place," she said. "Antonita Hawkes. But I go by Toni."
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Hidden 1 yr ago 12 mos ago Post by Mole
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Neomi Adams

Determination was overriding the apprehension that Neomi was feeling towards her decision. She was not going to let a little fear deter her, especially since it was coming twofold from her parents. However, despite their objections, Neomi’s father escorted her to the Darklight Corridor. Her mother stayed behind to take care of the lodge.

She felt a little like a child being taken to school for the first time. Part of her wished she had gone alone, but another part of her felt relief that there was some underline support for her next step in life — however small the support was. At least, they were not out right abandoning her.

Before they got to the entrance, her father gave her a big bear hug. He did not question her or make her feel any doubt. Instead, he wished her good luck and that he looked forward to seeing her artwork when she returned. Part of Neomi felt guilty. What if she didn’t return?

She shook the thought from her head. She’d return. If not for her own sake, for the sanity of her parents. Whatever quarreling she had done with them in the past several weeks was suddenly brushed aside. They were a family, through thick or thin. Nothing was going to change that.

Neomi returned her father’s hug one last time and entered the Corridor. It was nothing like she was expecting. Although, that was not necessarily a bad thing. At first, she felt herself in awe, as if she was staring at the prologue of the next chapter of her life. The excitement swelled inside of her. She wanted to turn and shout to her father that she’d be fine, but there was still a little embarrassment left in her that he had taken her.

There were several people on the platform. A woven blanket was outstretched with a woman sitting cross legged on it. She seemed otherworldly compared to the other two. She must be the apothecary. Neomi stood still for several seconds, sketching the scene into her mind. She knew what her first sketch would be, and she wanted to memorize all the details so nothing was left out.

As she drew closer, the old woman spoke. She seemed wise and content. It made Neomi smirk, and she took her seat. Quickly she explained in little detail that she was the the only daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Adams of The Burrow, and she knew hardly anything outside of Oaken City. She rolled her eyes and continued with a small expression of how much she was looking forward to the journey.

As she said all this, Neomi had taken her backpack and opened it. She had removed her sketchbook, a few pencils and an eraser. And, like the woman, Neomi sat cross legged as she began recording her surroundings. There was no hesitation in her actions. If anything, it was all rushed.
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Hidden 12 mos ago Post by Mokley
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Sasha didn’t sit. She shuffled her feet instead, adjusting the straps of her bags on her shoulders and looked down at the ground in between them. “I’m Sasha. I… I’m here to help with…” The machine? Like Yiya said? No, she had no idea what to do with something like that. “I saw the notice. You need… an escort? I’m here for that. I’m good at finding my way.” ...

Making her decision, Sasha lifted the bag from her shoulder, long and narrow, and laid it on the floor next to the blanket; ... The rest of her belongings were in a second bag, an ordinary backpack ... Now divested of her burdens, Sasha sat at the very edge of the blanket facing the old apothecary; she felt just as awkward as before, but at least now she had followed Yiya’s request.

“Um… are there going to be others? The notice… didn’t…”


The old woman's earrings clattered (wood and beads and strings of sturdy silver) while she turned her turban-laden head, her sharp eyes twinkling, amusedly following Sasha's nervous movements. Once Sasha had finally sat down on the woven rug, Yiya squinted with a pleased, smoky smile. In answer to the question, Yiya slowly canted her head toward the stairwell and gestured with her pipe over Sasha's shoulder: someone else was arriving.

-

Dressing appropriately for the journey to come, she strapped her boots securely, fastened a holster with a sixshot revolver (a gift from an insistent Olivia) to her waist, and grabbed her backpack. ...

Toni stepped forward to join the other two. From her pocket she pulled a folded copy of the flier, presenting it to both women. "Uh. I'm guessing I'm in the right place," she said. "Antonita Hawkes. But I go by Toni."


Yiya puffed thoughtfully on her pipe, and the air filled with the musky spice of incense. Her wrinkled eyes fell pointedly on Toni's revolver, then drifted aside to the rifle-shaped bag that Sasha had laid on the rug. The old woman hummed to herself, puckered against the pipe, and wheezed a stifled cough while she peered distrustfully at the red glowing herbs in the bell of the pipe.

"That's my flyer, Antonita Hawkes, you guessed right. Sasha here arrived just before you." The beads on her turban jangled while she leaned toward Sasha with a smile. "I'm Eudora Abby, but I go by Yiya. Sit down, Antonita, sit down! Don't strain my old neck to get a proper look at you." She waved a knobby hand insistently at Toni while, out of the stairwell, another traveler drew near and happily occupied another sitting space on the rug.

-

As she drew closer, the old woman spoke. She seemed wise and content. It made Neomi smirk, and she took her seat. Quickly she explained in little detail that she was the the only daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Adams of The Burrow, and she knew hardly anything outside of Oaken City. She rolled her eyes and continued with a small expression of how much she was looking forward to the journey.

As she said all this, Neomi had taken her backpack and opened it. She had removed her sketchbook, a few pencils and an eraser. And, like the woman, Neomi sat cross legged as she began recording her surroundings. There was no hesitation in her actions. If anything, it was all rushed.


While Neomi summarized the small tale of her Burrow-dwelling within the city, Yiya puffed thoughtful poofs of incense smoke and watched the sweeping scrape of pencil on paper, her brow knitted with interest. After a few moments of quiet (in which the mechanical terrarium-robot squeaked and released a short hiss of pressure) Yiya removed the pipe from her mouth and exhaled a cloud of blue smoke. "I hope you plan to draw everything and anything interesting that you perceive, young Neomi Adams of the Burrow. You never know when a sketch will prove important." She gestured, bangles clacking, to the other two who occupied the rug. "This is Antonita Hawkes, who goes by Toni and has come quite impressively prepared, and Sasha, whom I glean is an excellent scout and a tracker." She smiled through the last word, straightening her posture proudly. "Yes, I think we all will do nicely, if you finally decide to come along."

Yiya tapped out her pipe into a stone bowl beside her, then she pressed her thin palms on the rug and her joints creaked and cracked while she groaned with the effort of climbing to her feet. She accepted any help that might be offered, until finally she was upright and taking a deep breath.

"Now. Where did you put my cane?" She squinted over her shoulder and whipped out a skinny hand, smacking the glass terrarium as if it were a misbehaving child.

The robot sank slightly on its pressurized legs and a wooden cane toppled clattering to the stone floor seemingly out of nowhere.

"Thank you." Yiya stared in exasperation down at the cane on the floor before she made a wiggling gesture at her guests. "Neomi, dear, could you please pass me my cane?" It was polished, golden-brown wood with a dragon head for a handle. "Sasha, if you would be so kind as to take that bowl and dump it out in the railbed and pass it back to Echoh." With a gesture, she indicated that Echoh was the name of the terrarium machine. "Antonita, come on and roll up this rug, give that to Echoh as well. That means everyone off it, come, come on! And I'll tell you, in the meantime, what you're in for."

Yiya hobbled swiftly off the rug, and Echoh the terrarium-robot squealed and hissed after her, quick and nimble on its six spidery mechanical legs. The little ecosystem inside its glass bell was not at all disturbed by the movement, not a flower petal out of place, so smoothly and carefully it stepped.

Should anyone attempt to give something to Echoh, the robot would reach out with one of its spindly legs, open a pair of scissorlike claws, and snap them shut around the proffered object, which would immediately disappear as if swallowed by the air. Echoh would accept anything between its claws, and anything would simply disappear with a snap.

Out of habit, the old woman placed the empty pipe between her teeth, and she squinted beyond the chandeliers and blue-shining mosaics into the hollow dark of the rail tunnel, where cool stagnant air hovered like a ghost.

"I come from a village far away from here," she said, her words echoing on the vaulted stained-glass ceiling. "It's called Geami, the windy meadow, beyond the last of the mountains, near enough to the ocean, you can smell the salt. For years a dark ailment has plagued us, it's gotten worse: we hear every sound as loud as a gong. A pin dropping rattles your skull like a thunderclap." She pinched her fingers and released them over the floor. "Every shuffle of clothing scrapes your ears. The shriek of a seagull feels like your head will split in two. Wax and earplugs do little good. The turban helps to block the noisy vibrations," she tapped the heavy wrapping on her head, "but as the years go on, even if you've gone deaf, your bones are always trembling so badly from the noise that the people are simply falling apart, inside and out. Children collapse in the road, their parents pass out in the fields. Some just go toward the ocean and never return. Your body is a tuning fork, and the world is a hammer."

With a shuffle, Yiya turned around to see how her new companions were getting along with the cleanup. "There's a Rue responsible for it. And that tree," she smiled tightly and pointed at the terrarium with the small end of her pipe, "is the very poison that will be rid of it. The plant is called the Trailing Bird, extremely rare and very finicky: it only grows in a tiny little spot on the mountain over Oaken City, and will die the moment it's uprooted. So I'm taking that little mountain spot with me. But the flowers of this tree, the very color of them, sends the Rue into a tizzy. I journeyed here, I climbed mountains, I found the Trailing Bird and stole it, but I know I'm not prepared to fend off angry Rue. So I ask you: will you help us?"

A high-pitched mechanical sound accompanied a trembling in the rail tracks below. The railroad corridor behind them paled with a deep red light that grew brighter and brighter like an approaching demon, rumbling like distant thunder.

Toni was the first to sense it: something was standing on the tracks, the air around it breathing, its presence gentle as a breeze.

Then, Sasha and Neomi might catch glimpses of a shadowy, smoky figure, as tall as two men, hunched with dangling arms, its head the shape of a hexagonal prism. The last trails of Yiya's pipe smoke swirled in its hollow eyes.

It swayed on the tracks. The red light of the approaching train shone straight through the smoky figure while it raised its long arms high as if to engulf the train with its expanding presence.

Yiya only watched her guests expectantly. She couldn't notice anything was strange at all.
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Toni smiled gently as the woman greeted her, bowing her head in courtesy as she introduced herself; "Eudora Abby," but she went by the name Yiya. It seemed easy enough to remember.

The younger woman jumped slightly as Yiya continued, suddenly beckoning for her to sit down. Red faced, Toni nodded and sat herself down upon the bench beside Yiya.

She settled into her seat, and listened as another girl arrived at the station. Waving quickly when Yiya introduced her to Neomi. A mixture of awkwardness and comfort whirled around in her heart as she met the locals gathered for the task; she hadn't lived in Oaken long, and hadn't had much need to venture to most parts of the city, the Burrow being one such place. She was meeting her companions now for the first time. Even so, sensing that having a handful more acquaintances, if not friends, would do her good; the next few days would be an opportunity to expand her circle and become less of a stranger.

With introductions out of the way, Yiya had gone on to explain more who she was and about the job at hand. It proved a pleasant surprise to Toni that Yiya was also not from Oaken City.

Toni's attention was drawn then to the spider-like mechanation accompanying the woman. Inside its terrarium stood the a tree that could cure disease caused by the Rue. It sounded like nasty business, having one's body struck down by the otherwise innocuous noises of the world.

Fascinated as she was, Toni couldn't help but question the need for such a laboring journey. If the tree produced the medicine that could cure the disease, why not have something made in Oaken? Would the machine even travel well through the Corridor? Could the Rue harm it and the tree it was preserving?

There's got to be something more to it. As Yiya finished speaking, the light of a train glowed from up the Corridor. Following soon after came the rumbling of the locomotive as it rolled down the tracks.

Toni was about to ask her questions when another sense kicked in. It was the same feeling from the night before. Yet somehow, it was different as well. It started the same, with prickling skin and shivers off the surface. But where the prior evening had been as a passing cloud, this one lingered, digging deep into her flesh. If she had to guess, it signaled something stronger than before; or some level of intent.

"There's something here," she said to the others. She stood upright and pointed towards the tracks. There, the red lights of the incoming train illuminated the forming mass of thick, dark mist. It was larger than the Rue she had seen in the past, it's fog-like form rising up to the height of two grown men.

Toni looked to her new companions. "We may need to deal with this one."
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Hidden 12 mos ago Post by King Cosmos
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The answer to her question came almost immediately. Not from Yiya, but from the stairs behind her as another young woman descended onto the platform with them and approached. Sasha watched them as they walked the length of the platform but didn’t say anything; she let Yiya handle the formalities, since this was her expedition and she was much better at it than she was regardless, and instead took the opportunity to examine them instead. They seemed dressed well enough for a tough journey, prepared, though the revolver at her waist was what caught her eye the most.

Was it like hers? Sasha had never met another person who could see the shadows like she could; not among the hunters at least and she didn’t really speak to anyone else if she could help it. She’d also never told anyone about why she always kept an unloaded revolver on her at all times, so she didn’t know if the things it could do were common. The sidearm wasn’t a hunting weapon that much was certain, which meant it was either meant for use against the shadows or for use against… people.

Sasha looked away from Toni.

The next person to arrive was also a young woman and though this one was not armed, she was very talkative. Sasha listened at first, long enough to learn their name, but quickly began to tune the other girl out as she continued to talk; she pulled her knees up to her chest and wrapped her arms around them, as she fought down the urge to leave and find a job with fewer people involved.

Before she could lose her nerve Yiya began to speak again, asking them to help her put things away. Sasha stood up and stepped off of the rug so it could be rolled up, then picked up the bowl that she was pointed to and carried it to the edge of the platform. She tipped the contents out onto the railbed, mostly ash from whatever it was Yiya was smoking, and held the empty bowl out for the machine, Echoh, to take. Thin, robotic arms shot out from the terrarium and snatched the bowl from between her fingers before she could react, surprising her enough that she didn’t notice where exactly it put the bowl afterwards.

She listened, then, as Yiya explained the purpose of her journey and her need for an escort. The plant the terrarium held was needed to cure her village of a Rue; the old woman didn’t mention any medicine, just that the plant itself would repel the Rue, which was strange. If the plant would protect her village, why would she need an escort to protect her from the Rue? Unless it only worked on that one kind of Rue? But then why did it sound like she expected it to draw other Rue to her to stop her from reaching her village?

Any further questions Sasha might have had were interrupted when one of the other girls, Toni, brought their attention to the rails, the approaching train and a shadowy figure in front of it. It was tall, even hunched over as it was, and thin. The way it stood, the way it began to spread its arms, it looked like it was going to try and stop the train in its tracks. Sasha didn’t know if it could, she had always been unsure how real the shadows were, what they could do, but just in case…

A hand moved to the holster under her coat and Sasha pulled free her father’s revolver. Holding it with both hands she aimed it at the shadow’s back, held her breath and pulled the trigger. It kicked in her hands, despite holding no bullets and produced a gunshot that only she, so far, had been able to hear.
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Hidden 12 mos ago Post by Mole
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Neomi Adams


Quickly, Neomi scrambled to put her sketchbook and pencils back into her sack of things before she fetched Yiya’s cane and removed herself from the blanket. She watched the robotic spider-like contraption with awe. It was cute, and she had never seen anything quite like it.

Sure, she had seen some machinery in Oaken City before. Some guests even boasted about what they had seen or bought in town, but this terrarium was much more unique and intricate and… life-like. It even had a name!

As the terrarium scuttled about on its many legs, Neomi looked at the others. She had not given them much thought when she first arrived, but now, as she seemingly sized them up, she noticed they both had guns. A dark feeling sank inside of Neomi. Was she really prepared for this?

She was about to say something to Yiya when the enchanting sound of a train began to approach. She focused on the lights drumming down the tunnel. They became bright and brighter. But then, something stole her attention entirely. It was like a giant hunched shadow, just lingering menacingly… like it was about to engulf the train.

“Yiya, wh-what is that?” Neomi asked as confidently as possible. She wasn’t sure why she had asked. The old lady had not seemed to notice it, but the question fell out of Neomi regardless.

And then it hit her. She had seen something like this before. “Is… is that a rue?” Her heart was pounding. This is what she had been waiting for. She was exactly what she had wanted. Here it was. Right in front of her. There was no turning back now. Of course, that could have been for entirely different reasons now.

Of course, before the could truly ruminate on what was happening, one of the girls (Sasha was it?) took her gun and aimed it at the Rue. She fired what seemed like an empty shot. Time seemed to stand still as the shot went off, and Neomi felt her breath being taken with the moment.
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Fascinated as she was, Toni couldn't help but question the need for such a laboring journey. If the tree produced the medicine that could cure the disease, why not have something made in Oaken? Would the machine even travel well through the Corridor? Could the Rue harm it and the tree it was preserving?

..."There's something here," she said to the others. She stood upright and pointed towards the tracks. There, the red lights of the incoming train illuminated the forming mass of thick, dark mist. It was larger than the Rue she had seen in the past, it's fog-like form rising up to the height of two grown men.

Toni looked to her new companions. "We may need to deal with this one."


“Yiya, wh-what is that?” Neomi asked as confidently as possible. She wasn’t sure why she had asked. The old lady had not seemed to notice it, but the question fell out of Neomi regardless.

And then it hit her. She had seen something like this before. “Is… is that a rue?”


She listened, then, as Yiya explained the purpose of her journey and her need for an escort. The plant the terrarium held was needed to cure her village of a Rue; the old woman didn’t mention any medicine, just that the plant itself would repel the Rue, which was strange. If the plant would protect her village, why would she need an escort to protect her from the Rue? Unless it only worked on that one kind of Rue? But then why did it sound like she expected it to draw other Rue to her to stop her from reaching her village?

...A hand moved to the holster under her coat and Sasha pulled free her father’s revolver. Holding it with both hands she aimed it at the shadow’s back, held her breath and pulled the trigger. It kicked in her hands, despite holding no bullets and produced a gunshot that only she, so far, had been able to hear.


In this standstill moment, the chandeliers trembled with the thunder of an approaching train. Red light bathed the concrete walls and floors in a murderous hue. Red glinted on Echoh's glass chamber, flashed in Yiya's calmly smiling eyes, and sparked on the barrel of Sasha's revolver.

The thing on the tracks fizzled like a broken television screen. A smell of wet stone and hot metal permeated the stagnant air.

click

Neomi and Toni only heard the empty click of the revolver echo in the hollow vaulted space, barely audible through the rising noise of the approaching train, though Sasha braced against the kickback jolt of a fired gun.

Toni and Sasha would see the shape vanish immediately: a puff of smoke dissipated. The prickling feeling on Toni's skin snatched away and was gone.

Only Neomi heard it scream. The curdling, high-pitched howl echoed through the hollow chamber, piercing her ears through the rumble and metallic shriek of the train that raced through the spot where the figure had been. The cry dimmed and silenced as the train came to a scraping stop and opened its doors.

"That," declared Yiya, gesturing with the small end of her cane, "is a train, not a Rue. The looks on your faces -- I'd think you've never seen a train before! Well, then, it's about time you all had a taste of the outside world, I see. Sasha, stand down and put that gun away: we're not going to shoot it, we're going to board it. Come along, then, don't be shy!"

Yiya had neither seen nor sensed anything of the figure on the tracks. To the old woman, her three new companions had become frightened of the demonic, snarling approach of the train. She couldn't blame Sasha for shooting at it: the engine of the Darklight train had been carved into the horrible visage of a gargoyle, its smiling stone jaws emitting the hellish red light that burned into the black corridors. Each train car behind it had been painted black and carved with intricate patterns and symbols, some of which Sasha, Neomi, and Toni might have seen before carved into the witch pilings that surrounded the city. The train was packed with every known ward against Rue that might interfere with the train or its occupants

The heavy reinforced doors slid open with a knock and a clang. The windows were black. The train cars were dark inside, dimly illuminated only by an eerie red light with no substantial source, the seats in rows of comfortable cushioned benches that seemed new and untouched. The train appeared to be empty of any other passengers.

Echoh crawled happily toward the train, spidering across the platform and ducking through the wide open door, where it crouched in a slightly wider area between the rows of seats. Yiya was slower, her kindly smile perpetually calm, her cane clacking on the floor. She was in no hurry, and the train appeared to wait for her.

At each end of the car was another reinforced sliding door that led across the connectors to the next car. The forward door would lead through one empty car before the engine. The rear door would lead back through three more empty cars behind.

Toni might feel another very faint brush against her skin, pulling from across the door toward the front of the train.

Sasha might see, in the corner of her eye, something dark flitting through the seam in the rear door.

Neomi might hear a small scratching noise, tiny as a mouse, underneath the floor. The traincar was sitting over the track where the shadowy figure had been shot.

"I know you have questions." Yiya was still hobbling her way onto the train. "We have a long time together for answers."
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Hidden 11 mos ago Post by Mae
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Archie did not like Grant, and he did not like beer, and he did not like the tiny stool he had to teeter on like a hunched Gargoyle. Archie had made the mistake once of saying something Odd in front of Grant, so Grant had naturally adopted him.

SLAP. The feeling of Grant's hand reverberated through Archie's spine in the agreed upon ritual known as 'camaraderie'. Archie was not entirely convinced this was a good thing. He peered down miserably at the Cheshire cat smile that materialised before him. He wasn't going home anytime soon, was he.

"I bet you anything you're a Howl,' said those sparkly teeth. "I bet you this beer you're a Howl! 'ere, I grabbed this flier off the wall wot for you to look see. Make good money as a Howl, if you work for it. They won't push you to do double shifts anymore 'cuz Howls are all the rage with the top brass at the warehouse so they get these accomodations to do the good work, ya see.." Archie was frowning down at the flier. He'd gotten his big, grubby fingerprints all smudged over it, because of course he had. Archie tried to smooth the dogeared corners while Grant spoke in the mystical Grant tongue.

"So here's what we do, yeah? You go to this here gig, and I'll be like your manager yeah? So when you're a big wig Howl it'll all be cuz I scouted you from the stacks of packing boxes. What were you doing in there, anyway? How'd you get right in the corner with all them towers of 'em around you?" Archie got the feeling Grant liked Howls. Archie also got the sinking feeling he couldn't get out of this. He'd never had much practice at saying No, because people didn't talk to him often.



"No." Came the whisper of a murmur of a a soft, hoarse voice. See, if he'd said that sooner, this whole mess could of been avoided. He needed the practice. "No," his tongue clinked unnaturally against the back of his teeth and the syllables sounded alien from him. Further work needed, he decided, peeking his head around the corner of the 'maintenance only' tunnel he'd ducked into.

See, it wasn't so much he was late. It was that he was unsanctimoniously early by a horrifically embarrassing degree. So when he'd heard someone complaining up a storm coming down the stairs, he'd panicked and ducked round the corner. The thing is, he had had plenty of time to rectify the mistake. Little old ladies were not known for their speed. It wouldn't have been a problem if he'd just... Got ahold of himself and said hello. But after a certain point in time, it definitely starts to become a Problem. By the time Sasha and Antonita arrived, it had become a Big Problem. If he popped out now, would they have thought he was leering at them? He couldn't lie about being a maintenance worker, what if a real maintenance worker came by and got upset? Eegads, someone could come at any minute, and that'd be worse. If he was found, there's no way anyone would believe he was here for the job..

He briefly thought about waiting it out and heading home, but Grant had already talked up a storm at work so he could go...

He screwed his eyes shut and licked his dry lips. Plan B: rush onto the train once everyone had arrived. Archie had never been late for anything in his life, but floundering punctuality was less of a mortal sin then being unforgivably out of place, right?

At some point, in the excruciating stretch of time of accidental lurking, Archie heard the screech of the train tremble into the station. Blissfully unaware of any Rue, he let out the breath he'd been holding and swivelled out the archway. Now was his chance!

...Except, it seemed he had mistimed it slightly. The gaggle of Howls hadn't quite got on the train yet. Archie stopped in his tracks like a deer in headlights. His mind blanked, and a very unhelpful thought decided to chip in - Is that was Howls look like? They all seem so... human? Where are the superhero muscles? Eye lasers? Superior cooking abilities?

Well, there was still hope for that last one.

"Hum, oh." His faculties decided to rev into action at that moment. He patted down his pockets as if one of them contained his name. Unfortunately, all he found was a slightly beer stained flier.

"The Job." He stated, shoving his hand out awkwardly only for the ..contraption... To gobble it down.
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Hidden 11 mos ago Post by Wayward
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After Toni had pointed out the Rue hovering over the train tracks, her new acquaintances set to motion. She stepped back as the first of them moved forward. Sasha was the one to challenge, unholstering a revolver.

"Huh? Toni looked to the revolver held at her hip, and back to the one in Sasha's hand. Could the Rue be hurt by bullets? She wouldn't have thought to even try it. She quickly reached for her piece, but stopped to a freeze frame when Sasha pulled the trigger. The click and sound of an empty chamber cycling echoed around the platform. Though Sasha recoiled against the force of a shot fired, Toni saw no evidence of a round being spent. Yet a sharp, piercing sensation drove through near her left shoulder in the same time that the Rue dissipated. A single tear rushed out from tightly shut eyes; a slow breath, like a patient easing through a needle stick flowed out from her lungs. The pain was gone almost instantly.

Seconds later, heralded by an unnerving, demonic-looking filter of red light, the train of the Darklight Corridor rumbled in and whistled to a halt before them. The door of a empty car opened up where the Rue had been. The train as a whole, intricately decorated with Witch symbols, and primarily coated in black accented by red lighting, seemed foreboding. Were they embarking on an adventure, or being carted to Hell itself?

Maybe both. Toni thought quickly of her brothers until a feeling drew her in the direction of the train car. She side-eyed Yiya quizzically as she started toward the car. If couldn't sense Rue... surely she knew that her escort of Howls were capable of it...

Toni would he the first to enter the train following Echoh and Yiya. Crossing through the sliding door felt heavy, but once inside the weight became feathery; a light sensation, like being brushed by soft hair or fur. At ease, she looked a Yiya, pondering her questions. But her attention would turn more to Sasha as she would enter the train. "Your revolver," she would start. "It's... not normal, is it?"
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Hidden 11 mos ago Post by Mole
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Neomi Adams


"Wha..." she whispered to herself. That was definitely not just a train.

Her eyes studied the situation, looking at the creature that had just vanished after the mysterious gunfire. Her hand pulled on the strap of her backpack as her top teeth scraped her bottom lip.

That was a rue!

Again, her eyes studied the space in front of her as she put two-and-two together.

She can't see rue!

A small breath of air emitted from her lips in what some could have considered exasperation and others might deem annoyance. Why didn't she tell us that...? Neomi paused for a moment and continued her thought before jumping onto any more trains of conclusions. Or maybe she's getting to that.

Neomi looked around at the others, Toni and Sasha. Sasha's revolver was still out. It didn't necessarily fire anything, but she saw something. This was kind of a lot to take in.

Okay, I can do this.

Again, Neomi played with the strap of her backpack. She might as well say something since nobody else was. Her top teeth grazed her bottom lip, again. God, I'm so freaking nervous. If she had her own gun, she'd shoot herself with it. She was an adult! Yet, she felt so much like a child in one too many ways.

"I--I think there was a rue," Neomi said to Yiya. "And we-or, umm... Sasha? She fired a gun at it, and it disappeared." She looked back at Sasha and then at the poor guy who just showed up. There was something awkward about him, and it was not just that he had arrived quote-unquote semi-late to the game. Not that this is a game...

"And, yeah, I definitely have a lot of questions," she quickly added and looked back at Yiya.

This was going to be one helluva ride.
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Hidden 11 mos ago Post by King Cosmos
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By the time Sasha had managed to steady her hands, the shadow was already gone; as usual, the effects of pulling the trigger was almost instantaneous, but Sasha wasn’t sure if it was because the Rue had been killed by whatever it was she had done or if it had simply fled. In the forest, when she was out hunting, the mere act of drawing her weapon was usually enough to send those creatures running; ever since she had demonstrated its abilities that first time at least. The Rue had never been willing to test their luck against her a second time, but truthfully, Sasha wasn’t sure why that was the case or what she would do if she ran into a Rue that wasn’t so easily dealt with.

Now that the tracks were clear, the train pulled up to the station and stopped in front of them. Surprisingly, Yiya didn’t seem to realise that the shadow had been there at all, didn’t understand why she and the other girls had reacted as they had; to her, they seemed like silly children scared of the approaching train. It made her feel chastised, embarrassed as she slipped her father’s gun back into its holster, even though she knew she had not been in the wrong. She kept her head down as she grabbed her belongings, throwing her backpack over her shoulder and hefting the rifle bag up into place, and quietly followed the old woman and her machine into the warded and protected train.

She barely noticed the man join their party, more focused on looking small and unnoticeable.

Once on board one of the other girls spoke to her, asking about her revolver. It was the other girl that had brought a gun with her, Toni; Sasha had wondered if hers was the same, if it could also scare off the shadows, but judging by their question it was not. “No, it’s just my dad’s old gun… I’m… I guess… I’m the one that’s not normal.”

She’d never questioned it. Why could the revolver hurt them, or scare them? Her father couldn’t see the shadows. Or at least, when they were hunting together and she saw them and pointed towards them, he never looked their way and just told her to ignore them. Sasha never saw him acknowledge their presence, so she just assumed he couldn’t see them. He would carry the revolver with him on those hunts, but he kept it loaded and told her it was in case they ran into poachers. She never saw him use it, on the Rue, an animal or otherwise. It was just a normal gun.

The people who could see the Rue sometimes had special abilities, so she had heard. Sasha just figured that this was hers. It had nothing to do with the revolver. Maybe it didn’t have to be this revolver and she could do the same with Toni’s. Maybe she didn’t need a gun at all. She didn’t know the answer to that.

To be honest, Sasha didn’t feel much like questioning it either. It worked; that was all she needed to know. Now was the time for different questions and Yiya would be the one answering them, but before that…

“Um… Yiya? You can’t see the Rue, can you?” The answer to that seemed obvious, but it was surprising nonetheless. She had just assumed that the old lady seeking a cure to her villages plight, who had come all of this way to find a plant to get rid of the Rue, would have some way of avoiding them until now. But she didn’t, which just made their job as her guide more difficult. It would mean she was more defenceless against the shadows than Sasha had assumed and would need more protection, more guidance. And it meant that Sasha and the others needed to be taken seriously.

Being taken seriously was not something Sasha was good at.

The young and small girl just didn’t command any presence. Even as a guide to the woods, a service for which people knew she was an expert, a veteran, there would always be hunters who saw her and dismissed her. They would ignore her warnings and her advice and would come back from the woods empty handed, if lucky, or injured, if not.

Sasha placed a hand over the holster at her waist. “When you see me draw this gun… it means there is a Rue nearby. That’s the only time… the only reason I’ll ever draw it.” She never kept it loaded. She had never pointed it at another person, or even at an animal, not even as a threat. It was a keepsake and nothing more. At least… at first it had been.

“I… we… need you to trust us. If we say run… run. If we… say hide, then hide. If you see me… shooting at nothing… there was a reason for it.” Sasha’s voice faltered, suddenly realising how defensive she was sounding and feeling embarrassed. “Just… you hired us because of the Rue. So… trust us.”
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Hidden 11 mos ago 11 mos ago Post by Mokley
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"Hum, oh." His faculties decided to rev into action at that moment. He patted down his pockets as if one of them contained his name. Unfortunately, all he found was a slightly beer stained flier.

"The Job." He stated, shoving his hand out awkwardly only for the ..contraption... To gobble it down.

Echoh paused with a steamy hiss and a mechanical squeak, a sharp leg scratching on the concrete floor. It reached out a scissored appendage and snapped the flyer from Archie's hand: the paper disappeared into a limitless abyss beneath the thriving terrarium. The robot tap tap tapped on the floor as it spidered away, leading into the open door of the red-lit traincar where the others were gathering.

Toni would be the first to enter the train following Echoh and Yiya. Crossing through the sliding door felt heavy, but once inside the weight became feathery; a light sensation, like being brushed by soft hair or fur. At ease, she looked a Yiya, pondering her questions. But her attention would turn more to Sasha as she would enter the train. "Your revolver," she would start. "It's... not normal, is it?"

"I--I think there was a rue," Neomi said to Yiya. "And we-or, umm... Sasha? She fired a gun at it, and it disappeared." She looked back at Sasha and then at the poor guy who just showed up. There was something awkward about him, and it was not just that he had arrived quote-unquote semi-late to the game. Not that this is a game...

"And, yeah, I definitely have a lot of questions," she quickly added and looked back at Yiya.

“Um… Yiya? You can’t see the Rue, can you?” ...

Sasha placed a hand over the holster at her waist. “When you see me draw this gun… it means there is a Rue nearby. That’s the only time… the only reason I’ll ever draw it.” She never kept it loaded. She had never pointed it at another person, or even at an animal, not even as a threat. It was a keepsake and nothing more. At least… at first it had been.

“I… we… need you to trust us. If we say run… run. If we… say hide, then hide. If you see me… shooting at nothing… there was a reason for it.” Sasha’s voice faltered, suddenly realising how defensive she was sounding and feeling embarrassed. “Just… you hired us because of the Rue. So… trust us.”


Yiya was quiet while she shuffled down the center aisle of the traincar, her cane clacking a rhythm on the red-hued wood. After she had found a seat with significant leg room (space for the angle of her cane and the stretch of her aching legs) she let go of a long sigh and sniffed thoughtfully. A knobby finger tap, tap, tapped on the carved handle of her cane.

"The stations are supposed to be protected from Rue interference," she said quietly, almost to herself. She tilted her head to peer up at Toni, consideration stiffening the lines in her face. She could not see Neomi from this angle, but the girl's explanations curled the old woman's hand tighter on the cane. Her eyes rested heavily on Sasha's holster.

As soon as Archie had stepped across the threshold, the traincar doors hissed and snapped shut. He might see the fading, scattered shimmers of what had been a Rue in the space where the train now sat.

"I cannot perceive the Rue," Yiya acknowledged, and she stared at nothing in particular, lost in another thought. She hunched in her seat, a transient feebleness shuddering through her. She was still smiling hauntingly. "My daughter always sighted them for me. And now it seems I've been followed."

The traincar rumbled to life and metal wheels screeched underfoot with a rattle and a quaking jerk. The red light flickered and shone again. The station moved slowly past the left-side windows, while on the right smooth concrete gave way to rough-hewn stone.

"You all saw it, then?" Yiya raised her voice over the rising rumble of the train. The station slipped away from view and the windows blackened, leaving them with only red light. "Or perceived it? Neomi, you saw something. Sasha, you shot at it. And hit it, I expect, from the tone I hear in Toni's voice. All of you recognized a Rue in the station. So you are truly Howl."

The tracks clattered beneath the train, and Yiya wobbled in her seat, her cane pressed firmly into the floor in front of her, while she turned her sharp eyes to each of them in turn.

"The Trailing Bird is sacred to them," she explained gravely. "Like a deadly volcano is sacred to the people who live below it. While the tree lives, its presence is like a drug or an idol god, intoxicating. But the moment it dies, so do all the Rue in a miles-wide radius. So the rumors say. Our village is finishing its own barrier of witch-pilings: we'll kill the Trailing Bird at the middle of the village, in a swarm of Rue like moths to the flame, and then we'll finally be free of them for good. But until then, as far as those Rue are concerned, I'm a burglar who's stolen a god from their temple, and they're not too pleased with me."

She rapped the end of her cane on the floor like a gavel and sat straighter, the obstinance returning to the square of her thin shoulders. "So tell me, Sasha, what made you choose to shoot it? What was it about the thing you perceived that prompted you to raise your gun? Neomi, if that shot hadn't fired, what would you have done? Toni, you were the first to call it out, you said you may have to deal with this one. What did you mean? Did it threaten us, did it have a look in its eye, did it say anything, did it touch anyone? Are you sure it's dead? Are you sure there aren't more?" She twisted in her seat, a vain attempt to squint back over her shoulder. "And why are there four of you? Who is it, who's there snooping? Just because I can't see Rue doesn't mean I'm blind!"

While Yiya spoke, Echoh produced a steaming teapot from nowhere and poured a stream of rosy pink tea into a chipped blue cup, its saucer clutched in the delicate grasp of a scissorlike clamp. The robot held out the cup and saucer in a slow sweeping motion, offering it to whomever would reach out, while it poised a third leg and started filling a second cup of sweet-strawberry tea.

The train had picked up speed and was speeding through darkness. Outside the windows were shimmers of bioluminescent insects clinging to great stalactites and stalagmites, formations of flowing rock and deep gaping caverns that stretched away like the throat of a dragon. Occasionally a witch-piling blurred past the window, a feeble beacon of safety in the heavy dark.
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Mole

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Neomi Adams


Something must have happened to her daughter? Neomi immediately thought. A chill tan through her spine. This trip seemed more real and dangerous than she had previously acknowledged. Or, maybe I’m over thinking this…

She decided not to ask the question begging at the forefront of my mind. The haunting smile was enough in itself, and truth be told, knowing this place’s protection from the Rue was failing due to something the Yiya had, was already worrying her enough. She was second guessing herself terribly.

The gun shot got rid of the rue so easily, though, she told herself. Nothing bad happened. It was just a little scary, that’s all.

Putting on a brave face, Neomi answered bluntly. “I am not too sure. I can kind of manipulate air with my hands. It doesn’t do much, to be honest, but look cool…” Neomi felt a little lame admitting this. She hoped she wouldn’t be sent back home for being too inexperienced, but skirting the truth never suited her. “…I guess I need some practice, or guidance.”

Her hand played with the strap of her backpack, again. The nuance was becoming more of habit as the time in the corridor ticked away. She felt a little bad for the guy she had judged so harshly. Who knew what was going through his mind? She was certain she was becoming more and more awkward by the moment.
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