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Icarus Ochre
Seidoujima Island - Mountains Icarus's Roost

Sometime during Golden Week


Golden week had started off mostly quietly, after the rather odd first day. Apparently having a fight in a random field was not part of the school's curriculum, to Icarus's great relief. That had been a little bit concerning towards the end there.
A bit of seclusion was what he needed after exploring the town he'd be living in for the foreseeable future. Humans were interesting but they were also exhausting. Everything was so fast with them, they really didn't seem to understand how to just stop and smell the roses. They could smell the roses on the go thank you very much.
He cackled at the thought, looking down from his stony perch to the town far down below.
To be fair, humans also only really had the one chance to make life right. But that didn't mean he was used to this kind of always-on pace.

So here he was, perched on a little rock outcropping, sticking out of the rocks; surrounded by mostly-climbable mountain, watching a distant skyline as the little specks below wove back and forth with every care in the world. They'd been doing so all day, and he would know, he'd set out to find a nice spot at sunrise and they hadn't stopped skittering around even once.
I really should pick up a hobby...would give me something interesting to do when I'm out here. A project would be nice...
Just another hour, then I'll slip back into town...the long way, flying out here was nice this morning.
Gosling "Gus" Mallory

Running into @Apoalo as Kairo and maybe @13org as Faye



Wheels on tarmac, the great metal dragon finished its descent, slowing, slowing, down to a crawl, prowling now through crowded pathways to its lair. A beast of marvelous construction disgorged its passengers upon the ramp, and among them was one minor magi with business here in Satsumasendai.
Well, Gus liked to think himself just a minor magi, even if he had the necessary talent to be a proper member of the Guild. And given the crew that had been put together, he was absolutely a no-name. Which might well be his best asset here. Between names like Louis, de Silva, and Ahmadi, a little Mallory would go completely unnoticed.

Right now, past customs and looking a little lost, he wasn't going quite so unnoticed. A check of his phone however very quickly gave him direction. Things had apparently been developing quickly while he'd been in the belly of the beast, to no one's surprise. The only reason they'd called this team in was because things had spiraled wildly out of control.
He started walking, his first destination, the train station.

Honestly, though, it was probably a blessing they hadn't been earlier. The safehouse going up like that meant it wasn't quite so safe after all. Hopefully because this new place wasn't expected by the Guild, it also wouldn't be expected by the troublemakers. Hopefully that meant things would be quiet.
Loud would be bad.

The train station was a short walk, which he was thankful for in as the sun was so close to setting. Onboard, things were quiet. And along the way, that simple fact stayed true.




Walking around Satsumasendai was certainly better than walking in New York last time he'd been there. Sure, not as idyllic and free of traffic as his own hometown, but it was still mostly calm and serene. Though, to be fair it was really only Gosling's surroundings that were serene. He himself tromped along exactly the way that might be expected of any random tourist, boots on concrete, tap tap tap.
He checked his phone again. It was just a few more houses down. A car had driven away from the building just a second ago.
A car had driven away just a second ago.
Now that certainly had Gosling just a little bit on edge. Was that an ally or an enemy arriving here now?
He tapped the power button on the phone, bringing it down to his side as he approached the door himself.
Icarus Ochre
Seidoujima Island - Lost

Today had been a bit of a stressful day for Icarus; not only was it his first day in this strange world, but he'd spent the whole day basically lost. Sure, the school was navigable enough, and finding the Griffin dorms had been easy enough, but the town itself was a new surprise around every corner, and so much of it made no sense.
For example, there was some kind of store on one road with signage depicting a mermaid, but he still wasn't sure what deer from the stars had to do with that; and while an enticing aroma had emitted from the doors as he passed by, he hadn't gone in. It was busy. And he had no idea what they sold there anyway. He'd also passed by some weird place called a "Game Center", but as far as he could tell it was simply full of flashing lights and screens, and peeking his head in through the door his curiosity had been sorely disappointed at the lack of game to be found in the center. In fact they didn't seem to have any game, as far as sight and smell could tell him. Perhaps it was simply a poor season here on Seidoujima.

At some point in his trek through the market district, he had acquired a very odd traveling companion, a vase full of flowers. He'd ended up in the florist's after one of those metal chariots had screamed; not at him, he hadn't even seen the reason, but he'd been spooked and he'd darted into the shop in that instant.
He'd gotten back his cool, eventually, desperately hiding in amongst the wallflowers. The flowers were nice in there, and somehow he'd been convinced to buy the bouquet of amaryllis and white roses.
If nothing else they would bring a little life to the dormitory. Something personal.
And if they wilted well they could maybe be repurposed as nest material. Which would also be a nice personal touch.
Either way, they were going with him wherever he went until he made it back to the dorms.

Down another road he decided to walk, this time more cautious and aware that just because something wasn't alive didn't mean it couldn't speak


Seidoujima Island - Field by the River

Starring @I-Am-X as Ultana, and Asta as Asta

Today was just the sort of day for new inventions, really. For example, inventing whole new levels of being lost.
The lush, open field had just been too tempting to resist, to be honest. It got him away from the streets at least, for a little while. And he couldn't exactly just fly off now that he had precious cargo that could not simply be so easily abandoned. On the other hand it meant he now no longer had the option of getting his bearings from a bird's eye view if necessary, though he had been avoiding that since arriving on this less-than-magical world.
What was the point of going to human school in a very human world if not to experience it the way the humans themselves did, for the most part?

Looking down from his thoughts of the sky, he took note of some kind of event going on between a couple of girls who seemed to be somewhere around his age. One of them had a spear and a shield in hand, though they looked a little odd. He kept his distance from the situation, but found his eyes drawn to see what would happen next. Hopefully no one got hurt...
Stone walls do not a prison make, nor iron bars a cage




Stone walls do not a prison make, nor iron bars a cage

Just wondering since the OOC here has been pretty quiet for a while, but the thread is marked as Apply, are you still taking in newcomers?
Rudyar



Day 2, Week 25, Cycle 1


Reality convulsed, shivering in the aftermath of the storms, that had lashed those dreary shores.

Another people stood on the island's ground, brought from somewhere old to somewhere new. Those first few seconds would be definitional to them in this new world. And in that first moment, most of them knew only silence, their jaws futilely trying to remember what they were doing, or even to speak a word.
"...the principle of..." spoke the wisest Rudyar, reaching for the words she had been saying but moments before. She had been saying something, something vitally important, something that she could never forget and that she was sure her people would never forget, and yet...and yet she could not remember now what she was saying, or who she was saying it to.
Yet the others had all lost the words on their tongues in that instant that crossed worlds. But in the minds of all those around, having forgotten whence they had come, those were the first words they had ever heard. And some part of them longed to celebrate that. All who had heard those words turned to their source, a wordless cheer rising through the crowd.
Others, further away, only understanding that cheering was going on, simply joined in.

It did not take long after their arrival for the Rudyars to break off into smaller crowds, groups that could all speak together, and watch the other small groupings as well. A murmur was gathering, an undercurrent beneath everything else. As each Rudyar looked around at the world around them, ideas came to their minds. Concepts that they could explain, and with each explanation more words entered the circles. Some even felt the call of concepts that they could not put to words, things they just knew without understanding what it meant until another next to them said a word, a word that they could use, knowledge being pieced together in scattered ways.

One particular crowd, having set up higher up on the mild slope they had arrived on, suddenly made a proclamation that drew the attention of others.
"Listen!" came the call to order, from the largest of seven, with a fine beard of black, "Listen! Before light becomes dark, we must have two things! Two things! Food! And! Dens!"

Now wasn't that a revolutionary idea?



The treeline to the north was of immediate importance to the Rudyar, many trees had fallen in the aftermath of the storm, and the ground was littered with sticks of every size. Some industrious few grabbed what they could and headed back south along the tiny stream, to where they had first appeared. They knew deep down that, even if the wood would be important, even if the woods might be absolutely vital, they could not live under their boughs. The open grasslands suited them much better. A minute did not go by between the gatherers here someone did not pass some comment on the flavor of a leaf or a berry they had found, or one tried again by another curious soul, to see if they also liked it.

Others slunk through the trees and the grasslands like they had spent their whole lives doing so, crude knives of stone in their hand, shaped almost on the move. For this first day of days they avoided the larger game, but rodents, lepus, any creature they could reach and get their claws on was prey. They needed something more than just knives and a newly-formed hunting party if they wanted to take on the striders or krollans that seemed to rule the river itself. Some of them understood what they might need, but also knew they needed more than just rocks to get there.
Nonetheless, the Rudyars would eat tonight, and perhaps tomorrow, they would take down one of those birds.


Day 6, Week 25, Cycle 1


Home.
What a nebulous concept, thought up by the wisest Rudyar, claws sunk into the earth as she dug. Was this home? They were building homes, certainly, half-dug into the earth and roofed with whatever materials were quick at hand. They had been doing this for days now, at first all squished into whatever shelter they could scrounge up, now getting more comfortable in what space they could spare. She had been one of the first to suggest setting aside one home to keep their food, after lining the floors with some of the flat, smooth stone that could be found down in the riverbeds. It wasn't perfect, but it kept the food dry and kept the worst of the pests from eating it and leaving once they'd had their fill.
Some of the 'pests' were tasty too, they all had discovered, once they were caught.
"Perhaps put the pests to use?" she muttered aloud, some half-remembered dream of an idea coming to her.
"Ya need more sun if you're thinking stuff like that, quiet one" immediately came a response from outside, even as the speaker continued on their way.


Day 1, Week 27, Cycle 1


It had taken more time than the hunters would have liked, but sturdy wood had been needed for shelters first and foremost, and it was only now that they could spare anything to hunt down the larger prey, when smaller prey was plenty safe and plentiful still. But word was traveling fast around the stacks of hovels and the sunning-logs that had been brought back from the forest. They had appeared here at the very tail end of the hot months, and it would be getting cold soon.
But with the lack of wood, they had had plenty of time to prepare the heads for their tools. And prepare they had. Some of them carried a couple of short spears each, but the burlier individuals going out today had axes they'd shaped from the biggest and most promising stones they could find.

The strider never saw it coming, really. The first spear thunked satisfyingly into its thigh, and its cry of terror set the rest of its herd into a rapid retreat, leaving their comrade to face whatever monstrous predator had appeared.
They were allowed to escape today, as the Rudyars only wanted the one bird today.
Stumbling along, uselessly flapping its wings and simply trying to run itself, the strider didn't really stand a chance. Another cry as one of the tiny reptiles slashed at its leg with its stone arm. On the ground, flapping, trying to push them away...
Another cut, this time through its neck...


Day 3, Week 29, Cycle 1


Intuition, that little voice in the back of your head, the thing that occasionally (well, very rarely) poked into a Rudyar's head and told them speaking wasn't the right idea here, was paying off.

The hunters had learned that to hunt without speaking was the only way to succeed, at least until after they had downed their prey. Then the congratulations and the salutations could begin in earnest. And once they were back home, their speech was more earnest, even less restrained than the norm. And after a month of that hard work, running through the woods and even dragging back and splitting so many of the sunning logs, to ensure that ever more good sunning spots were available, they had decided that the only reasonable payment was that they would enjoy the best spots for themselves. So atop the slight incline of the grassland, they stacked up their thrones of sticks and logs, which they would ascend every morn, to look down on the littler Rudyars from.

Others had concluded very simply that to live was to speak, and so they spent their days gathering, or now watching the little plants grow in the small fields being tested to the east, where some of the island's vegetables and a few cereals that looked promising, or working together to dig and line the foundation for more storage.

It was a scarce few who had ideas, who stayed quiet as they tried them out. Sometimes it was just that something had clicked in their head, and now they were breeding little beetles in a hole, feeding them with grains and seeing just how many little larvae they could have. The little pests could be useful it seemed, after all. They would happily eat the worst parts of the grain and grow up to be eaten themselves. And they were far tastier than grain.

Others had more radical ideas, and they didn't necessarily turn out. But they all knew it in their bones...

They had to beat the cold, somehow.

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