Hidden 7 mos ago 7 mos ago Post by Ducksworth
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Ducksworth Quack.

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Remember Them, Not Me.


He never saw the Mammoth hit him. There was only the after. A single impossible moment where the world folded into a fist around him, crushing everything between heartbeats — and then the pain slammed through him so violently he forgot what bodies were supposed to feel like.

It lasted all of a second. Then it was gone. Not eased. Not numbed. Gone.

The mist swept in, warm and thick, smothering the agony before his mind could process it. What had been a scream inside him became a strange, distant quiet — like someone had reached into his chest and turned the volume down on himself. He lay on the floor, cheek against mirrored glass, unable to remember how he got there. Or how many bones were broken. Or which organs were leaking into places they shouldn’t.

His hearing rang — a high, sharp note that felt less like sound and more like pressure. His vision blurred into watercolor streaks. Shapes moved in frames, not in motion — Yumi in three broken fragments of movement, Evie flickering, Locke bursting in and out of vision like a glitch. Roscoe was a still shape in the corner. Aramis’s chest tightened, but even that felt wrong, loose, distant.

He tried to inhale. The air bubbled in his lungs. Wet. Heavy. Final.A cold certainty set in. He wasn’t going to survive this. Something pressed against the back of his skull — not literally, but in feeling. A soft warmth. A hush. Death, not as an ending, but as a Mother’s hand slipping fingers gently through a child’s hair. Comforting. Patient. Waiting.nHe should have let go. Anyone sane would have. But his mind — the only unbroken thing left — clung to one thought like a man clutching a lantern in the dark: If I’m dying anyway… then everything I have left is theirs.

He dragged his fingers across the floor. The movement sent a quiet cascade of wrongness through his torso, but the mist dulled it until it felt like it belonged to someone else. He didn’t rise — he couldn’t — but he pressed his palm to the cold mirrored glass, smearing blood he barely recognized as his own. His vision flickered again.

Evie, running toward him with her shoulder hanging wrong. Yumi, vaulting on a shattered leg just to buy someone a second. Locke, firing into illusions without hesitation. Roscoe, who had stood between disaster and his people until disaster won. Strangers, all of them — but in a way he had never expected to have.

His chest hitched, something like a sob catching behind the ringing. He let magic bleed out of him — not shaped, not guided, nothing but raw will and the last warmth of a life leaving him. He poured into the floor the only thing he had left to give: the memory of them.

Not words. Not commands. Just the emotional truth of what he’d witnessed — bravery, sacrifice, stubborn human love. His voice was barely a breath against the glass.

remember them

A pause. A shudder. His fingers slipping.

not him

His body sagged. His vision tunneled. Death’s soft hand brushed a thumb along the back of his head, soothing, inviting. He pressed his palm harder anyway. If this was all he had left — if this was the last imprint he ever made on a living world — then let it be this:

Protect them. Please. Protect them.

Nothing else mattered anymore.


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Hidden 7 mos ago Post by ImaginedBird
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ImaginedBird

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Androph nodded at Evie's command and turned his attention away from the massive mammoth and scanned the area for the mage. His eyes narrowed as he clutched his hammer.

"Where are ya, you little piece of shit!?"

The mage needed to be rid of. And fast! Before all his newfound campanions die!

Actions.

Readying a swing.
Perception check!
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Hidden 7 mos ago Post by Novama
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Novama

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OOC: The end. Thanks for playing.
mentions: @supamusu@Moonberry@JonTheArchivist @Ducksworth @ImaginedBird



Kavros smiled and the change came quietly.

Not with another charge, not with a roar, but with a soft tilt in the air, the same way a dream gives itself away an instant before it breaks.

A sweetness rose in the mist. Warmer now. Comforting.

Yumi’s vision blurred first.
Evie’s next.
Locke’s HUD flickered.
Aramis felt the floor tilt beneath him.
Androph’s shout stretched into something slow and distant.

The mammoth dissolved into white.
The mirrored hall stretched until it was nothing but light.

Kavros’ voice drifted through them like a hand brushing across each mind.

“Rest. You are mine now... and I give you peace.”

The world folded inward.
Reflections peeled away.
Memories slid out of their grasp like water cupped in trembling hands.

One heartbeat.

Two.

Everything went dark.

.............................

A rooster crowed.

Someone stirred first, Roscoe, letting out a questioning whine as he blinked up toward the rafters of a wooden ceiling. Morning sun spilled through a cracked shutter. A warm draft carried the scent of porridge and fireplace smoke.

Evie woke next on a straw stuffed bed. She'd have a feeling she couldn’t name. Something sharp and important was missing, though she couldn’t remember what.

Yumi opened her eyes sitting upright on the floorboards beside her scythe, which rested neatly across her lap. Nothing hurt. No blood. No fracture. No bruise. As if none of it had ever happened.

Locke found himself slumped against a support beam near the inn’s door, armor scuffed but intact, visor dim until it rebooted with a soft chiming tone. His HUD displayed nothing unusual. No alerts. No damage. No mission running.

Aramis jolted awake at a small wooden table, glasses still perched crooked on his nose. Several dusty tomes sat open in front of him with notes he didn’t remember writing. His ribs did not ache. His lungs did not burn. He felt fine. Strange, but fine.

Androph was facedown on a rug beside the hearth, snoring until the clatter of a dropped mug woke him with a furious snort.

A villager blinked at them all from behind the counter.

“You lot alright?” she asked, brows raised. “Must’ve been a strong drink last night. Best be about your business. Other patrons will be coming soon and the best jobs don't wait for hungover adventurer.”

Looking around, no one had an answer. How did they get there was missing from their memory although some recall arriving in the village at least. But other memories weren't there.

No mission.
No patron.
No labyrinth.
No mammoth.
No Kavros Dern.

Just the faint echo of something important slipping away the harder they tried to grasp it.

Outside, the village was peaceful. Ordinary. Children ran between the houses. Merchants set out wares. A bell chimed somewhere near the well.

Whatever had happened before, whatever choices they had made, whatever price they had paid,

Something had swallowed it whole.

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