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Northern District
Exhausting.

That marathon had been exhausting.

Couldn’t complain though, she got more donations and more subs than she ever had.

Couldn’t complain, but god, her head hurt. It sounded like someone was pounding a hammer inside her skull.

Wait, was there someone actually at the door? Tsurushi forgot the sign? God, she didn’t need the owner walking in on this mess. Rolling off her bed, Zaketa awkwardly disentangled herself from the sheets, pulling an oversized hoodie over the much more skin-baring outfit she wore for her streams, before stepping on a half-full bag of chips and cringing over the mess. Definitely a problem...but that’s what vacuum cleaners were for.

Biting back a yawn, Zaketa tip-toed over the mess of a motel room, before unlocking the door and creaking it open.

“H-”

Northwestern District
The doors had barely slid open before a young man with wild, platinum blond hair and an ostentatious tigerprint jacket slid through, his hands reaching out to both doors to force them open faster. His eyes burned yellow, while his chest rose up and down. Hands clutching his sides, he strode up right towards Mana, slamming both hands on the table.

Around the convenience store, other, less vibrantly delinquent-esque customers looked on in slight concern, before judging that a robbery wasn’t actually going to happen like this. They turned away, some of them back to reading magazines off the shelves.

Asahi, with slight concern, stood up taller and spoke up. “Welcome, dear customer. Ho-”

“Mana!” the delinquent practically shouted, his hands slamming down on the counter again, “Hanami! You’ve seen her?!”

Central District
It was a lazy Sunday morning. Retrospectively, it may be a ‘wasted’ Sunday morning, but for Miyane, rich beyond the commoner’s imagination and practically having retired in her early thirties, there was nothing to be discontent with. Her mattress alone could pay off a lesser person’s rent, after all.

Seeping into the down, she dozed off again. The shuttered windows allowed in only slivers of light to remind her of the time, and the soundproofing was as excellent as ever, blissful, crushing silence permitting only the occasional vibrations of her phone to disrupt her half-conscious rest.

Which was why it was strange, when a strange thumping noise sounded above her. Erratic, sprodiac. Sometimes in singular beats. Other times bursting all at once.

Curious.



Click.

The security bolt snapped shut, followed by three other clicks.

The thumping persisted.

Southwestern District
As businessmen stumbled homewards, suffering from the consequences of being a bunch of unfaithful womanizers who have to pay for the attention of women well out of their league, the more usual business of the seediest district in Tenoroshi had begun, hawkers shelling out their wares while groups of hostesses and hosts headed out to grab a bite to eat before crashing into their beds. In one corner, a dessicated man leaned against the wall of an alleyway, his fist clenched over his bills, crumpling the Emperor’s face. Elsewhere, bouncers sat on overturned crates, sharing cigarettes and stories of the night before. For all the vibrance of the neon night, Tenoroshi’s gray mornings stabilized the raucous red-light district easily enough, leaving everyone free to feel tired, to space out.

Well, at least they were able to do so till a dozen bikers obnoxiously slammed their horns, causing people to jump out of their seats and look at their direction. At their helm, riding with his arms crossed over his chest, was Kamigami Isokaze, the baddest biker in Tenoroshi, if his boasts were to be believed. Immediately, the bikers parked their steeds illegally on on the sidewalk, before going up to individuals in groups of two to three, shoving some piece of paper in their faces and shouting indiscriminately.

Definitely seemed they were on a job.

Also looked like they were just doing it so they could push people around though.

Southeastern District
The surf rolled in on the sandy, damp beach. April wasn’t ideal for having fun in the sand and the sea, but the salty sting of the wind was still refreshing. On the boardwalk, couples strode up and down, idly away and laughing at each other’s bad jokes. It may be close to the sketchiest parts of Tenoroshi, but it was also one of the town’s more significant tourist spots, and policemen regularly patrolled the area, while yakuza selling grilled squid ensured that young thugs didn’t cause any trouble. Sometimes, they may be at odds, but this time, both police and yakuza cooperated to ensure the safety of Tenoroshi’s beachside properties, especially now that movie companies were working near the area. Beach houses were inspected for food safety, volunteers regularly picked the trash out of the sands, and troublemakers were quickly dealt with.

And for those who started shit up where the yakuza and the police couldn’t cover, there was a third ‘peacekeeping’ force in the area.

Dressed in an expensive three-piece suit and wearing Dolce & Gabbana tinted shades, the Somalian man cut an intimidating figure, his broad shoulders and his tribal tattoos giving off a different feeling compared to the irezumi of the yakuza. More curious (and the reason why so many people stop by for selfies with him) was his cart full of freshly caught fish and his majestically deep voice, like dark chocolate syrup. ‘Captain Belo’ was written in English and katakana upon his embellished wooden cart, and his product truly was a marriage of passion and technique.

The Tsukiji fish market may have wonderful tuna, but they didn’t have the Captain. And that made all the difference.

Once again, to the amusement of those walking by, the dark-skinned man sang, his voice wafting through the sea breeze as he tempted passersby with slices of sashimi.

And in his presence, no one wanted to start shit up.

Southern District
Yasuo was already waiting for her beside the unassuming storefront of Galaxy, practicing kickflips over the guardrails separating sidewalk from road. As Marina approached, he waved, a toothy smile hidden behind his high-fashion handkerchief.

“Huomente, Mari,” he called, jogging over to meet up with her. “There’s an entrance at the back, but when I got there, a van was already there, so, y’know. Ain’t gonna catch the dude before the performance begins, unless you wanna do some Rainbow Six shit?”

He tilted his body over, catching a glimpse of the thick Sudoku books she had on her.

“Or do you just wanna sudoku and chill till the show starts?”

Probably not, knowing how serious this whole thing was. He was basically accessory to murder at this point, huh? But suspension bridges made people do weird things, and Marina…

“It’s starting in a couple hours. Already got tickets for it, but if you want front row seats, well...there aren’t seats anyways, so it’d be good to queue up sooner rather than later.”

Gwyn’s stalemate didn’t last for long, however. The clattering of the bow against dirt, followed by Ash’s own haphazard approach, caught the attention of undead swordsman, his jaw click-clacking together as he turned to face the new arrival. In that moment, Gwyn pushed forward, discarding her own staff as she grappled the armored skeleton. Her arms wrapped around his waist as she pushed forward, a prayer already on her lips as light spilled from her hands, the power of supplication manifesting itself.

But it was as far as she got, before the undead warrior drove his knee into her chest, before one hand grasped her by the waist and tossed her off, sending her sliding against the ice. Ash’s assistance came a moment before he could leap in to finish Gwyn off, and their swords sprayed sparks at they collided, ringing metal filling the air as they dueled. Cut and parry, thrust and deflect. The ranger’s wrists grew sore during the deadly dance, the difference in skill being felt with every movement, every stroke. On the icy terrain, where her core muscles clenched just so she could generate the strength to land an effective attack, Ash found it harder and harder to keep up.

Rangers, after all, weren’t trained off the bat to face foes alone.

With the crunch of a steel edge against armor, the swordsman swatted away Ash’s machete before charging in with a burst of speed, intending on putting an end to this farce and running her through.

Ettamri’s own greatsword swung with force unrivaled even by creatures unburdened by the weakness of flesh. Taken directly, there was no doubt she’d be able to decimate these skeletal warriors the same way she singlehandedly caved in the skull of the giant toad. Rather than the sundering of steel and the pulverizing of bone, there was only the whistling of wind. Moments before impact, the skeletal warrior had dropped down flat, his body sliding through the slick ice as Ettamri’s sword flew overhead. Engaging her in extremely close combat, his short spear struck upwards, a viper aiming for the underside of the white knight’s jaw.

Ettamri was skilled though. This surely wouldn’t be the end for her.

On the other hand, it very may well be the end for Muu.

Still trying to find her feet on the treacherous ground, the Bladedancer wasn’t able to respond in time to the charging axe man, who shoulder-charged her, his skeletal mass still sufficient to smash the smaller girl through the shanty wall and into the decaying hut. Broken bits of wood pierced her skin, and one or two of her ribs must have fractured from the tremendous impact. She wheezed painfully, but her foe gave her no respite, raising his axe over his head to deliver a mortal blow to his prone opponent.

She had less than a second to respond, and even if she did, perhaps it wouldn’t be enough.
Gonna be keeping an eye on this cause I basically lust after adventure RPs. In general, what's the power scale of this? How strong will we be starting out, and how powerful are top-class adventuring types?
“My name?” Sara smiled, her teeth showing. “I’ll leave that to your imagination for now. Call how you’d like, boy.”

Before she could further engage the raven-haired kid in conversation, however, more and more people popped out of the woodwork. There was a muscled man with jeans so tight they looked like they’d rip the moment he spread his legs out. A totally adorable furry guy by the name of Toppo dynamically burst into the scene, like the crossbreed between a Disney mascot and the Kool Aid Man. He was followed by a cute girl with long ears and an attitude that definitely spoke to Sara personally. Emperor Yuudai, was it? Gah, she went through the same phase back when she was ten years old, and now it was just super duper nostalgic, seeing someone else like that. William Jones, on the other hand, was decidedly less fun, a no-nonsense older gentleman packing a revolver. American for sure. How discombobulating.

Catgirl off in the side was quiet and unassuming, blue haired androgynous dude made his name up on the fly but was otherwise reasonable, brown-skinned girl wanted in on this verbal fight with cowboy and…wow, Sara felt bad for elf man. He just had to watch them go on about this, huh? She offered a sympathetic smile towards him, and then immediately pressed her hands over her ears as it turned out that YEAH HE WOULD BE REALLY LOUD.

Really powerful as well, if he’d be magically ripping portals into space. She let out a low whistle at that. “Pretty snazzy, Aloe. That something you do every day?”

Probably not. Healer of the Sticks sounded like a strong title for a strong person.

As she strode through the warpgate, Sara casually sidled up beside the big moose man. Looking up at him, she said, expression neutral, ambivalent, “Say...Toppo, wouldn’t mind if I touched your fur, wouldja? Curious as to what it feels n all.”
@Avemelle@o3o@RoflsMazoy
@BiffleChumpIt's already started, mate. Closed too, unfortunately.


Amaryllis never stopped.

As the barrier closed around her, as she was isolated from the rest of the world, the Knight of Rose didn’t spare a second glance backwards. Before her was the incomplete avatar of a Greater Horror. Before her was a foe that would put that demon at the stadium to shame. Before her was what anyone would consider a Demon King.

She sped up, midnight blue hair streaking behind her as malformed puppets of the monstrous devourer sought to slow her. The blossoming of the petals counted down their execution. The flash of steel slew them more gracefully than they’ve lived. They fell apart, silver closing their mortal wounds before a single drop of their vile blood could stain the air.

Her Sword sang, delighted at the appetizer, its hunger only amplified as Soth’s presence grew and grew.

She was in.

The chamber was vast, walls engraved with sigils profane and obscene. Lesser horrors mingled with cultists, their taboo deformities sticking out clear in the magenta glow. In the center was the only object of beauty within the room, an elaborate, treasured altar made grotesque by the content of its embellishments. Gaudy and tasteless was the correct manner of looking upon it. This wasn’t some alien beauty that humans weren’t able to comprehend. No, this was just the set of a bad horror movie, complete with sexually exploitative shenanigans one would expect out of such a schlocky creator.

Amaryllis grimaced, dropping her mask for just a moment, the sheer magnitude of malevolence giving the Knight of Rose pause.

“Disgusting.”

Three soundless step transported her before the enraptured maiden.

One hundred strikes turned her bonds into minced meat.

A single flick cleansed the mirrored blade of filth.

She turned to face the corpse that would soon become the vessel of an evil god and raised her Sword towards the sentient emptiness that dominated this crypt.

And she spoke.

"𝔗𝔥𝔢 𝔩𝔬𝔳𝔢 𝔬𝔣 𝔱𝔥𝔢 𝔪𝔬𝔬𝔫, 𝔱𝔥𝔢 𝔤𝔯𝔞𝔠𝔢 𝔬𝔣 𝔱𝔥𝔢 𝔭𝔢𝔱𝔞𝔩𝔰.
𝔘𝔫𝔡𝔢𝔯𝔫𝔢𝔞𝔱𝔥 𝔱𝔥𝔢 𝔤𝔩𝔬𝔯𝔶 𝔬𝔣 𝔱𝔥𝔢 𝔥𝔢𝔞𝔳𝔢𝔫𝔰, ℑ 𝔤𝔞𝔱𝔥𝔢𝔯 𝔱𝔥𝔢𝔪 𝔞𝔩𝔩 𝔞𝔫𝔡 𝔭𝔯𝔢𝔰𝔢𝔫𝔱 𝔪𝔶𝔰𝔢𝔩𝔣.
𝔄𝔪𝔞𝔯𝔶𝔩𝔩𝔦𝔰 𝔈𝔳𝔢𝔫𝔦𝔫𝔤𝔰, 𝔎𝔫𝔦𝔤𝔥𝔱 𝔬𝔣 𝔱𝔥𝔢 ℜ𝔬𝔰𝔢!
𝔐𝔞𝔶 𝔱𝔥𝔢 𝔣𝔩𝔬𝔴𝔢𝔯 𝔬𝔣 𝔶𝔬𝔲𝔯 𝔥𝔢𝔞𝔯𝔱 𝔟𝔢 𝔯𝔢𝔣𝔩𝔢𝔠𝔱𝔢𝔡 𝔴𝔦𝔱𝔥𝔦𝔫 𝔪𝔶 𝔰𝔦𝔩𝔳𝔢𝔯𝔩𝔦𝔤𝔥𝔱!"



But that was mere formality.

No heart laid within the Infinite Abyss.
Naoko felt it too, the vacuum of power left after Rider unleashed her onslaught, the certainty that her Servant had done something right. The exhaustion didn’t matter. The fatigue didn’t matter. Nothing mattered, except for this instance in time.

She pressed on.

She did not slow down.

As the knee crumbled beneath the force of her kick, the enemy master pressed on regardless, a berserker in her own right. Already, flesh and bone were knitting back together, a mess of cancerous cells that almost seemed to cling onto Naoko’s boot. Raised high and burning as bright as a star was the overcharged Noble Phantasm the vine-witch thought to destroy her with, the corporeal form of the weapon already bursting at the seams. Bursting with scarlet and bound by reckless rage were her commandments to her Servant, pushing the mad warrior to further extremes. And the vines had unfurled again, thorny whips poised to tear through leather and flay off the skin beneath.

But Naoko was already moving, shifting her weight onto the foot already pressed against Katherine’s knee. Maintaining the momentum of her kick, she spun, rotating her body past the Enforcer’s as the dagger struck air. She span through the air, her left foot surging up and catching the vines in spaces between the thorns, a round-about trajectory that mashed them altogether before she kicked off the knee, delivering a spinning kick to the back of the vine-witch’s skull while simultaneously pulverizing the plants against it.

If that bitch wanted to go forward, she could.

Right off the edge.

Naoko flew the opposite direction, tumbling safely before hopping back onto her feet.

“Sophie, need me to get you out?”

Already, the sigil upon the back of her hand glowed. To hold up against a Berserker empowered by a command spell was impressive. To do so with two? Unreasonable.

But Empresses and Mages alike were unreasonable.
Southwestern District
“Hm…” Kenshin sipped from the small cup as well, tasting it with his tongue but not actually swallowing any. As Marina recounted her story, he refilled her cup, mulling over the details that she imparted.

Well, his profession may be to weasel money out of enamored women, but that didn’t mean he was necessarily heartless.

“Seen him around this place called Galaxy. Live house a couple blocks north of that skater park.” A pause, pensive as the long-haired ikemen gazed into the still-full cup of sake before him. “He plays as the drummer for the Quartermasters. Never figured him to be that type of person though…”

He flicked a strand of hair out of his eyes, before smiling at Marina.

“Don’t get into too much trouble though, yeah?”

Southern District
“Her new teacher?” Yasuo raised his brows. “Wow, I can see why she’s so prickly now. Don’t worry ‘bout it too much. People ‘round here are rough, but ain’t nobody wants to get into hot water by getting labelled as a pedo or shit like that.”

He patted Tamiko on the head, and the 5th Grader was suddenly caught between wanting to maintain her threatening aura and blushing at the massive amount of embarrassment her older friend was causing her. She settled for another kick to the inside of his knee that he absorbed with another ‘geh’.

“Anyways, it’s just one of those days for her, so, y’know. Just how it is, miss. Better for you to head off ‘fore you get hit on, neh?”

Somewhere ; Sometime
She gasped, slamming the door behind her and sliding in the bolt, before crumbling down onto the ground. Her breathing was a mess, and her chest rose up and down dramatically, even as her compressed lungs could hardly stretch out. Her ears twitched at each sound around her. Outside, bicycle wheels creaked. Outside, a dog barked. Outside, neighbors chatted. Was she safe? She had to be safe. She was never safe now.

She sucked in a breath, raking fingers through her short hair as she let the suitcase drop onto the floor, no longer willing to even touch it. It rattled like a maraca. She wished it was so innocent.

Shakily, she pulled herself back up, kicking the suitcase underneath a table. Reaching for the phone, she dialed in a number, waited for the person to pick up, and couldn’t help but tear up a bit.

Everything was still fine. There was no change that was permanent.

“Ahmya, I...I got the case. So...don’t worry, ok? We can still figure it out.”



The man with the beady eyes grimaced at the cacophony. A whole dozen wannabe gangbangers, and not a single one of them were real men. All just a bunch of children with their souped up toys, revving up the engines in an attempt to appear more imposing. But manhunts took up time and resources, two things that the Suzume-kai couldn’t afford in such times. So they enlisted these motorcyclists instead.

He caught the glare, the curled lip of their leader, a man in his late twenties that looked more like a prospectless freeter with his stubble and his lanky form. Briefly, the yakuza enforcer imagined putting him in his place. Mashing his face against the concrete, snapping his legs like twigs, stomping his ribs into bits. But men didn’t respond to the provocations of children seriously, so he didn’t either.

“I need you to find this person and to bring her in.” He pulled out a photograph from his suit pocket. “Rough her up as necessary. Don’t damage her head, Isokaze.”

The lanky bosozoku leader snatched it out of his hands, peering closer as a wolfish grin surfaced. “Just the head, eh? Everything else’s fair game?” He received a hard glare for his comments, and shrank back, ever so slightly.

“As necessary. The yakuza enforcer repeated, leaning in. “Save that shit for the crackwhores in your nightclubs.”



She sighed, rubbing her hands together to warm them up. White breath rose up, temperatures dropping as night stole the warmth away from the world. It was louder now, more people showing up to rebel against society in the government-sanctioned place where they could, but still, the face she looked for didn’t show up.

“He might just be running late, y’know?” Her companion leaned in. He’d already given her his coat. Bought her a hot can of soup to sip on. They’d spent an hour or two chatting about nothing, before he showed off some of his new flips.

She shook her head. It was getting late. He’d been running late for half the day. And she hated nothing more than banal platitudes. The frustration had built, drop by drop by drop, and suddenly, before she think herself out of it, she hopped off.

“It’s fine.” She turned, and forced a smile, taking off the borrowed coat. “I’m used to it.”

But if he was going to disappoint her again, she wished he never called to begin with.




“Hey, thanks for today.”

“▂▂▃▃▅▅”

“Yeah, I know, I know. Well?”

“▂▃▅▃▃▂▂▅▅▅▂”

“Gonna be hard to get…”

“▃▃▂▅▅▃▅▂▃”

“Alright, I can work with that. You wanna shake?”

“▅▅▅▅”

“Just a joke, just a joke. Well then, I’ll get you the eye in a couple of days. You want it cleaned? Pickled? Wrapped up?”

“▅▃▃”

“Perfect. And once again, thank you for your good work.”


...

"Now then, Chihiro, where were we..."

Sunday, April 9 20XX
Time: Morning
Weather: Cloudy

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


The rain and the winds, whipping ferociously against the chopper, had been vital in wiping away what remained of Tian-Gui's lethargy. Most of it was gone by the time he had heard of the specifics of a mission, and now, his heart beat with valor and excitement. A search and rescue mission whilst in the middle of a storm? THIS was the sort of Psyker work he was interested in, the sort of stories he followed on the news with ardent attention. With a nod to the Lieutenant, the tall Striker took in a breath and...

...leapt off.

A blue bolt streaked through the storm-scarred sky, lightning converging upon his form, sparkling off the amulet wrapped around his wrist. As the world slowed around him, each individual drop of rain illuminated by the crack of lightning, all Tian-Gui could hear was the sound of his own breathing. His own breathing, and the roar of the world.

“Final Red…”

Crossing his arms, Tian-Gui ran his psychic power through his Armament, a golden light flashing as identification was confirmed. His right hand thrust to grab the fiery power of the red sun, and his left hand reached out to draw upon the might of the earth’s magma core. A stream of golden energy coursed through his body, as real and powerful as the blood that flowed through his veins, before it covered his form entirely.

“TRANSFORM!”

Straight red lines shot through the golden haze, while brilliant white burst from the back. Within the convalescing Armanent, twin orbs of burning blue flashed with righteousness and courage. And then, like the thunder that followed after lightning, the roar of a lion resounded through the minds of all that watched the transformation, before the veil was lifted.

Lightning struck, flaring up the image of a golden monolith, a hero of justice that made the power of the storm his own. Somersaulting down onto the off-shore rig, he landed with a burst of flame and a boom to match the roar of thunder. Static electricity snapped off his white man, as Tian-Gui slowly stood up from his dynamic arrival, his azure gaze sweeping around his immediate surroundings, ready to take on any Invader not cowed by such entrance.

Retrospectively, maybe the Lieutenant would yell at him for that, but hell, Strikers gotta vanguard. No point in being what he is without being the first on the rig, right?
Well…the beam of white light, so bright that it stood out even in the light of the sun, seemed like a good enough place to aim for. With the awkward shuffle-step of someone whose pants certainly no longer fit their waist, Sara stumbled through the undergrowth, dodging the endless greenery that was all too eager to snag themselves upon the fabric of her shirt or the curled strands of her hair, and soon enough, the novelty of such beautiful greenery turned into a mild frustration. With her shoes in one hand, the green-haired girl awkwardly slapped low-hanging branches out of the way, while with her other hand, she continued to pull up her sagging pants and pull down her oversized shirt. Countless twigs had snapped against her clothes, while now, in the absence of overhead planes and roaring cars, Sara could distinctly hear the drone of flying insects around her, from bees to aphids to cicadas to moths. Hanging from the branches were silkworms and extending between two trees were spiderwebs filled with the corpses of sucked-out insects.

The amount of unpleasant forest-y things she dodged really didn’t compare to the sheer volume of insectan obstacles she had to go through, nor how the pleasant sensation of walking through a lush woodland barefooted was soon replaced by the sorta-squeamish sensation of stepping on a fat caterpillar and feeling all those meat-juices spill inbetween one’s toes. It wasn’t supremely uncomfortable, but she certainly couldn’t recommend this to anyone else, either. Following trails cut into the greenery by animals just meant she ended up having to hop over mounds of old shit, while she felt absolutely awful with bulldozing her way through unsuspecting bushes.

Her misadventures kept her mind off the future and the past, though, and the uncommon strength found in her new body surprised even Sara herself. She certainly was no wilting willow back on Earth, but to think that a child could display such strength and stamina? Crazy stuff. Queen of the playground, right here.

Like a moth drawn to light, the green-haired girl in unfashionably baggy clothing pushed through the last leg of her journey and stumbled into the clearing, her red eyes flickering up from the ground to the two others who had already gathered. A pretty looking man with long ears, accompanied by a less pretty, more cutesy man who served as an almost perfect counterpoint to the lightbearer.

She blinked, her expression stuck between happiness and curiousity, before Sara swallowed both of those weird things, and walked up to the both of them, offering a hand to the bright kid first. “Heyo, Alaela? 13 souls to fight the darkness? Soun- woah, my voice sounds realllly weird. Anyways, you’re here for the same reason I am, yeah?”
@RoflsMazoy@Avemelle
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