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๐•Š๐•ฆ๐•Ÿ: ๐•Š๐•–๐•ก๐•ฅ. ๐Ÿš๐Ÿ˜, ๐Ÿš๐Ÿ˜๐Ÿš๐Ÿ˜ / / ๐•Ž๐•’๐•ค๐•™๐•š๐•Ÿ๐•˜๐•ฅ๐• ๐•Ÿ, ๐”ป.โ„‚. / / โ„‚๐•š๐•ฅ๐•ช / / ~๐Ÿ™๐Ÿš๐Ÿ๐Ÿ˜


The slime had reached the subnatural studentsโ€™ chosen launch point by the time they had set up, the gelatinous mass creeping pulsing tendrils up the building slowly while the bulk of its body flooded the edifice carefully. In its growing mass of slime were remnants of the city and its citizens, breaking down slowly. Its rising body reached the third floor and no higher, much of its mass spread out like a sea of clear agar. Veins and capillaries led back to the massive circulation system and nervous system nestled deep inside its amorphous form, the heart easily ten times the size of an average person and the brain even larger still, at roughly triple the heartโ€™s size. Everything beat to the rhythm of the red organ and as its center passed the building where an ambush awaited, the crucial targets passed directly beneath the window where the students were setting up, heart suspended neatly beside the brain.

Meanwhile, lines of gray crinkled the air at random, targeting the tallest buildings first with a certain petty vengeance. The spread was haphazard, but eventually formed a rough ring that indicated the attacking mageโ€™s radius of effectโ€”and the centerโ€”some seven hundred or so meters around the convention center that the slime was deliberately flowing around without touching.

At the evacuation point, news had yet to reach the soldiers there of the recent massacre. But by then someone else had their full attention regardless.

Director Zhang stood behind a ring of guards, a hint of glossy skin around her throat the only indicator that she was wearing wishalloy in the event things went wrong. Pantyhose and gloves hid the rest of the evidence that she had anything supernatural on her body, save for the large semi-automatic in her hand. Her presence, however, was enough to divert any attention from the screams and chaos transmitted over the cuffs, if anyone could even discern beyond the screams and chaos in the vicinity.

Injured and frightened civilians huddled in large groups as large, military vans took them away to a nearby city for recovery. Injured soldiers who had been recovered were the first to be shuttled off, quickly followed by injured citizens. The dead were set aside for the moment to ensure every van could hold the maximum number of living occupants.

The Director stood far in the back, having arrived shortly after Sander had charged off towards the ice giant. The appearance of Catโ€™s Cradle hadnโ€™t seemed to faze her, though her grip on the magical gun tightened marginally. When she received the all-clear, she turned her attention back to the arriving students, waiting for them to turn the corner and drive into view. According to her map, they wouldnโ€™t be long. She knew several of the soldiers with keener ears had caught the transmissions from the cuffs of the offending subnaturals. She also knew her window to stave off the retribution would be small, even for the Director of USARILN East. The public would demand some sort of recompense, and they would expect the modern equivalent of a public stoning for the students involved once news of what sounded almost certainly like civilians being attacked hit the media outlets.

It was a mess, and one she could potentially deal with if she could keep them out of harmโ€™s way first. It was a matter of waiting for an investigation to finish while placating the worst of the affected. And in the ensuring chaos of the ongoing disaster, stalling for time would be simple while the capital of the government recovered. A three-pronged attack was unprecedented and she could manipulate the information to her tastes once they had a better handle on the situation. Easy enough to claim something or other in that midst had manipulation abilities. Had already taken over the humans involved. Too late for them. Politics, after all, was simply how well one could sell a lie. Following through on oneโ€™s word was optional and her influence and reputation afforded her an easy podium from which to sell almost any lie she wanted.

As Kadabra returned from his unsuccessful attempt to annihilate Catโ€™s Cradle, a spray of gray lines tried to catch him in a rough space of 20 meters wide, the timing meant to crush. Kadabra simply avoided it, moving easily out of the way and raising himself higher to survey the situation. And it became clear at once from a birdโ€™s eye view: there was a building left completely untouched in the surging slime and a field of destruction that centered around the carefully preserved location. To test, Kadabra threw a broken roof at it. Gray lines timed their appearance and crushed the approaching projectile with ease. He threw several buildings at it. Three sets of lines appeared to intercept.

It was enough for him to know that the user wasnโ€™t restricted to a single target.

He lifted the building itself. Lines blanketed the air around him and the two of them shot upward, Kadabra on his platform and the crusher inside the lifted convention center. Before he could rise any further, a stark naked figure jumped out of the building window, landing squarely in the slime that saved and enveloped the person, dampening the impact and absorbing the shock. Unlike the rest of the material inside the ooze, the man remained intact, buoyed upward until his head was above the surface of the slime.

Kadabra eyed the spreading ooze, mentally wrestling with the sentient control for a brief second and deciding not to waste his time fighting the being for manipulation of its body. He could win out, perhaps, but there was no time to hover there and engage in a battle of wills, especially not with a monster. They had nothing but conviction at that point. Instead he lifted the ground below the slime, sending entire chunks firing upwards like a gargantuan landmine had detonated below the creature, smaller pieces tearing apart arteries and slime segments alike despite several of the larger fragments unable to push through the viscous mass. Several of the shards skimmed the building from which the spotters planned to attack, scattering concrete in a brief hail on anyone near the windows. Before Kadabra could rain the shards of concrete, steel, and asphalt down for another makeshift shrapnel shot, a wall of gray lines scattered around the floating pieces and pulverized them, the resulting fine dust too small for Kadabra to pick up at that distance. Not that he would have wasted the time trying in the first place.

To the Precursorโ€™s surprise, the creatureโ€™s innards repositioned itself rapidly, sliding left and right at ridiculous speeds to avoid the worst of the projectiles and taking only glancing damage from the pieces that managed to pierce properly. In response to the sudden barrage, the monster reconsolidated its defenses, piling its body back together into a larger, denser mass and threatening to envelope the spottersโ€™ building entirely. Another wave of gray lines within its body cleared out much of the larger rubble, leaving behind a vacuous space only briefly before the slime closed its gaps.

An Animus who was almost a direct counter to Kadabraโ€™s ability and smart enough to remove his clothes to prevent the Precursor from lifting him directly. It was enough to clue Kadabra in that the slime was also a subnatural. Completely lacking in human form, but certainly a subnatural. And they were working in tandem. For the moment he lifted himself out of the range, keeping the crusherโ€™s attention with a steady fire of traffic light poles, broken building segments, and miscellaneous broken objects, forcing the Animus to repeatedly manifest wall after wall of shattering lines to prevent severe damage to both himself and the slime.



@dragonmancer Ye, abuse my slave boi. I love depravity and Star likes cucumbers.
I heard we could make slaves, so I made a gay fairy prostitute.

Awaiting approval.

Though he's paired with another character so probably will need to wait for that one, too.



In Removed. 7 yrs ago Forum: The Gallery
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In Removed. 7 yrs ago Forum: The Gallery
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๐•Š๐•ฆ๐•Ÿ: ๐•Š๐•–๐•ก๐•ฅ. ๐Ÿš๐Ÿ˜, ๐Ÿš๐Ÿ˜๐Ÿš๐Ÿ˜ / / ๐•Ž๐•’๐•ค๐•™๐•š๐•Ÿ๐•˜๐•ฅ๐• ๐•Ÿ, ๐”ป.โ„‚. / / โ„‚๐•š๐•ฅ๐•ช / / ~๐Ÿ™๐Ÿš๐Ÿœ๐Ÿ˜



Chrisโ€™s approach didnโ€™t proceed unnoticed by the feminine shape in the flickering light. He reached her and before he could fire, she extended a hand, turning it supine before the same beam of light that had drained the river shot him point blank, originating from a space inches above her palm and scattering the wisps of ice around Chris.

โ€Why?โ€ a flat, androgynous voice asked in the brief second before the flakes of white detonated. If there was any emotion to glean from the passive face that--upon closer inspection--only vaguely looked human, it was confusion. Consternation, even. As if it couldn't understand why the dragon was turning on it.

The sparks of ice snapped and froze Chrisโ€™s dragon body, ready to send him plummeting back down to earth in a trip he likely wouldnโ€™t survive intact. Unlike the ice statues of dead humans below, the dragon formโ€™s durability stymied the iceโ€™s effects, its damage freezing just the outer layer of scales and skin and trapping Chris in a molded prison.

He fell two meters before colliding with a clear, glassy platform that spread quickly around him as his frozen form tumbled and slid before finally coming to a stop. In the distance, a sharp scream cut through the air and then through the ice maidenโ€™s arm, severing it clean at the elbow. The lost arm exploded into tufts of deadly white wisps that returned to the owner and reformed her whole.

But Whisper had simply been testing the waters.

Trial and error and close shaves had made clear for the group that, with very fewโ€”and very terrifyingโ€”exceptions, regenerators often needed a portion of their original body to reform. Mere inches away from the reptilian ice sculpture that was Chris sprawled across Scaffoldโ€™s saving platform, a horizontal column of heat flashed away all air in its range, becoming a thick beam of light that engulfed the entirety of the ice girl. The light cut across the skyline like a blade, but anyone who was familiar with the effects knew what they were looking at: Firestarter, heavily amped by Refrain.

The attack lasted only a second and originated from a point towards the southwest end of the city, across the river, and at an even elevation with the ice manipulator and converter. When the heat flash faded, there was nothing left of the ice girl or her light and the golem she had created in the distance stilled, its body crumbling slowly even as Hazelโ€™s attack bisected it vertically. Callanโ€™s charge towards the body continued and the supergirl pounded through the breaking points, making sure death would be a permanent affair.

With the ice creature gone, however, the slime and the crusher were free to proceed. Gray lines warped and broke around Scaffoldโ€™s platform and the frozen dragon, the same phenomenon that had practically disintegrated the fighter jet earlier. Not a millisecond too soon, a blunt force shout fired at Chris, knocking him out of the targeted location and shattering the ice, tearing off large swatches of scales and skin as the cost for saving him from annihilation. Scaffoldโ€™s platform was crushed to a fine dust by the power and the material dissipated soon afterwards. Chris collided with a building that had fallen sideways, chunks of ice still clinging to much of his back and tail, flash frozen with the skin there as well. A hindleg had been broken by the shoutโ€™s impact and one wing bent uselessly at his side. The dragon lay atop the fallen building, bleeding heavily from where Whisperโ€™s shout had torn away both ice and flesh.

With the notice that Catโ€™s Cradle was in the area, what was already a screaming, mindless evacuation turned into utter pandemonium. People had pushed and shoved at each other earlier as they made their way to the escape routes. Now they trampled over one another, some abandoning children and loved ones to flee while others shook off the pleading injured to escape unburdened. The military, frazzled already with the combined attack, decided the ten subnatural terrorists were of bigger concern than the slime and the crusher, redirecting a large portion of their forces towards the direction of the attack just as Perfumeโ€™s signature golden cloud bloomed into life in the far distance as a blurry mist, the sphere of deadly gas buying time while a large, elongated Tumor circled around the group, swallowing up bullets fired in their general direction. Kadabra raced towards the group on his floating platform, throwing the full brunt of everything he had used against the ice giant towards the infamous subnaturals.

A tear in time and space appeared, its tip peeking just over the rim of Tumorโ€™s massive body like a spearhead, the lining of its existence ragged at the edges and an abyssal black within. Backdoor. They were running.

By the time the broken buildings and cars collided with the ground, Catโ€™s Cradle was gone, their one opportunity to attack safely used up to defeat the Dreamcatcher creature that had appeared above the city in tandem with the second awakening of two new Animi. Nico had chosen the most accessible target to assuage lingering sentiments that the group could (and Donovan would have argued should) help, but there was little chance to remain if Kadabra was present. They werenโ€™t in this for another relentless fight and it was too late to engage the two new Animi regardless. Too deep in the city. Too mired in Washingtonโ€™s hatred and military. And conspiracy.

Too many forces were at play and even Donovan didnโ€™t protest when the de facto leader called for a retreat. The past year they had noticed more frequent monster attacks, along with more activity from Fracture. What one had to do with the other, they had never bothered trying to find out, but it didn't take a sociologist to understand that something was shifting in the climate for both humans and monsters alike and something or other reeked of desperation. More than one something. And with strengths like theirs it was only a matter of time before the Precursors organized a search and destroy on Cat's Cradle as well--a serious one, on the level of the operation that turned Garrote into little more than a long, red stretch across the ground. If the monsters were ever dealt with, Nico was certain a reckoning was due. And for that moment, he already had plans.

In that time, the slime had appeared to hesitate, the presence of the infamous group of Animi slowing its spread to a feeble crawl. When the danger seemed to pass, however, it surged forward again, veins and organs pulsing rhythmically beneath its casing of digestive liquid. With newfound vigor, it rushed down the street, mere minutes away from where Zoe had briefly fallen.





๐•Š๐•ฆ๐•Ÿ: ๐•Š๐•–๐•ก๐•ฅ. ๐Ÿš๐Ÿ˜, ๐Ÿš๐Ÿ˜๐Ÿš๐Ÿ˜ / / ๐•Ž๐•’๐•ค๐•™๐•š๐•Ÿ๐•˜๐•ฅ๐• ๐•Ÿ, ๐”ป.โ„‚. / / โ„‚๐•š๐•ฅ๐•ช + ๐•†๐•ฆ๐•ฅ๐•ค๐•œ๐•š๐•ฃ๐•ฅ๐•ค / / ~๐Ÿ™๐Ÿš๐Ÿ›๐Ÿ˜


Hazelโ€™s sword took the ice giant by surprise, along with several of the fighter jets attempting to draw the behemoth out of the metropolis. The blade whizzed clean through the creatureโ€™s chest, detonating where it made contact and further showering the area with shards of ice. Most of the fragments scattered into the nearby buildings and smashed through wall and glass while smaller, lighter pieces burst away at slightly higher trajectories. Several skimmed past Hazel and several more struck her body and transparent arms, turning sharp nicks into three gaping puncture wounds on her left arm and one on her right with myriad more lacerations across the width of her arms where only thin cuts should have rightly been. The force of the large detonation knocked Hazel off her projection, her flight path fortunate enough to land her on the roof of a nearby building already sagging from structural damage. Her left arm snapped at the elbow from the impact, dangling uselessly while her right arm colored itself red. The rest of her body felt the unmistakable sting of severe bruising.

But her attack had its intended effect. The giant reeled, its upper torso and arms sliding off and crashing into the ground below, crushing buildings and people alike.

But it did not fall.

The sky light hummed again with that sharp ring, sending another beam of light towards the far river again and the Potomac drained even further, its waters already lower than half. More wisps of ice snapped and exploded across the length of the beam, frosting over the air and freezing solid anything within their range, including the larger portion of a jet unfortunate enough to be near the beamโ€™s direction. The frozen F-35C plummeted away, towards the direction of the encroaching slime and heading for a crash into the Walter E. Washington Convention Center. That same distortion appeared in the airโ€”lines of gray solidifying and crumpling in on themselves. But it appeared a short distance away from the falling planeโ€™s descent, as if preemptively. Or protectively.

In the second it took for the magic to compress the targeted area, the jet had reached the distortion. Titanium, steel, and aluminum caved inward with the ease of tissue paper and the ice encasing the machine exploded into a fine dust.

There was almost nothing left of the plane by the time its pieces clattered to the ground below.

In the same moment, before the dust and debris had even settled around the ice titanโ€™s fallen bust, the monster was already reforming, its thundering steps spastic as it wavered unevenly, waiting for the regeneration to restore its missing body parts. The pilots of the remaining jets jumped on the opportunity, firing a salvo of missiles at the bodyโ€™s stump.

The damage slowed down the regeneration by a fraction, but not nearly enough. The titan would be whole again soon.

That was the thought, at least.

A line of white light fired from the direction of the Pentagon on the other side of the river, slicing clean through the air across the draining Potomac and colliding with the sphere of light above the city center. The detonation washed the sky white for an instant, temporarily blinding anyone who happened to be looking in that direction. When the harsh light of colliding powers faded, the floating cluster of energy in the sky lookedโ€”as much as a nebulous bundle of magic couldโ€”frazzled. The edges of its light looked ragged and what had appeared to be almighty light and power seemed to shiver sporadically. A wounded animal.

The giantโ€™s regeneration slowed as well, forming only half of its head before finally sputtering to a stop. It careened wildly, flailing out of control as the power source flickered like a dying light bulb. But the danger it now posed was immense; without any sort of focus that could be used to bait it away from the city, the monster was now blindly rampaging, tearing through the city at breakneck speed. Sharpened spears of ice jutted out from its body at random as the magic struggled to regenerate the humanoid shape while the monster struck down buildings with reckless abandon. People and rubble became one as it crushed them underfoot, every heavy step leaving deep craters in the ground.

Had the disaster been a movie set, Kadabraโ€™s dramatic appearance at that moment would have been perfectly timed. The Precursor floated up from behind a building in the intact sector of the city, standing upon a large platform of what was once the wall of a small business, the remnants of a โ€œGrand Openingโ€ banner still clinging sideways to the edges. There was little fanfare to his counterattack. One second the jagged remains of asphalt and high-rises were floating in the air like a swarm of concrete and wood, and the next they were raining onto the giant, burying the ice construct in a veritable mountain of man-made materials. It fought back viciously, however, and the ensuing chaos of a monolithic monster batting away entire edifices rained a new sort of hell on Washingtonโ€™s downtown.

Below the airborne chaos, Zoe and Allisonโ€™s approach down Massachusetts Avenue and towards the intersection at 5th Street near the looming monsters took a turn for the worse when their path narrowly missed a heavy step from the rampaging giant that was being slowly hemmed in by the force of telekinetically pitched buildings. Glass, wood, and broken beams rained down upon them as the giant smashed through several of the buildings with arms like battering rams, the collision forces drowning the area in deafening waves of sound.

The sheer brutality of literally throwing parts of a city at something, however, at least forced the creature backwards, pushing it past Gallaudet University and into the less congested grounds of the National Arboretum, Kadabra moving forward as well at a safe distance while he constrained the giantโ€™s actions.

The focus, however, left the spreading slime to happily engulf more of the city unimpeded. Closer inspection would reveal the patterning of black, spidery veins to be nested deep within the clear ooze while the gargantuan heart and brain at the core of it made for tempting targets. The caveat, however, lay in the disseminated bits of clothing and flesh as civilians unfortunate enough to be caught by the viscous liquid were slowly digested alive, their masses adding to the bulk of the sentient fluid.

By the time the giant had been corralled, the slime had spread to within ten blocks of the two girlsโ€™ location, its speed as it greedily surged down their same street appearing to pick up the more it consumed. Anyone with a sharp eye would notice that by now the ooze was starting to eat through even wood and plaster with threads like mycelium crawling up vertical surfaces in a strange imitation of hyphae.

At the same time, the mass of light in the sky still seemed unable to consolidate its power, a feeble attempt at a direct beam of ice aimed towards Kadabra failing to extend any further than a paltry ten meters. The effect of the unknown attack from the Pentagon lingered tenaciously, revealing why Kadabra had waited until then to emerge.

On the ground, civilians stampeded away, most abandoning their cars in the congestion to flee on foot towards designated escape routes that had been hammered into public knowledge for the past 10 years. Towards the chaotic outskirts as forces withdrew from the surroundings to deal with the surge of panicked citizens trying to flee, the members of Catโ€™s Cradle sported rings of red on their left hands while Cecilia gathered her transparent panels, readying for the moment the guards had thinned enough from the outskirts to allow the group a quick peek for a clear shot.





๐•Š๐•ฆ๐•Ÿ: ๐•Š๐•–๐•ก๐•ฅ. ๐Ÿš๐Ÿ˜, ๐Ÿš๐Ÿ˜๐Ÿš๐Ÿ˜ / / ๐•‹๐•™๐•– โ„™๐•–๐•Ÿ๐•ฅ๐•’๐•˜๐• ๐•Ÿ / / โ„๐• ๐• ๐•ž ๐”น๐”ป๐Ÿž๐Ÿš๐Ÿš / / ~๐Ÿ™๐Ÿ˜๐Ÿ˜๐Ÿ˜


The Pentagon's basement floors were as confusing to navigate as its aboveground counterparts, but Vincent had been living in the facility ever since the United States' government bartered his citizenship from Vietnam in exchange for providing the weaker country military aid during the opening years of the Slumber.

He had already frequented the US prior to that, but never forced to remain under US military rule until 2011. For all his fame and power, it was staggering how little clout he truly had in the government. Even now he was only consulted for matters directly pertaining to subnaturals or Dreamcatcher's monsters. As a teenager, he had wanted to rebel against the established norms, taking up inspiration from old tales of vigilantes and superheroes. And the day he ran after Dreamcatcher on its slow, gliding walk through an underdeveloped countryside of hand-tilled fields and rice paddies whose owners were still fast asleep, he had wanted to change the world for the better. Fix the country's corrupt government that even his fledgling mind had understood to be broken. Save the people. Become a hero. Childish ideations.

Actually having power, however, wasn't about how many mountains he could fling before he exhausted himself. It was having a nation at your fingertips. Or, in the case of one USARILN director, a school of supernatural, magically gifted students at her beck and call. In exchange, she provided them a sort of sanctuary from the horrors of discrimination so long as they were willing to fend off monsters on command. On a bigger scale, the Precursors were under the same agreement, with a simple stipulation: if they ever fought back, Benediction would die first. The world's only known hope of revival, even from death, would be executed through a simple implant--similar to a pacemaker--that would trigger a heart attack. Any attempt to tamper with it would kill him as well. And the public would hear that the Precursors had killed the only power that could resurrect the dead. It didn't truly matter that most people would never have access to Benediction. The fact resurrection existed at all was a large beacon of hope to most in a world where death lurked and loomed from every angle. And none of them were so heartless that they would abandon Renard to die for their own "freedom," which would end up a perpetual chase until the day one of them slipped up.

Of course, the healer Precursor himself had always harbored misgivings when it was his life on the line, but to his credit the man had never faulted any of his teammates for their predicament. The government knew the damage they could wreak if left unchecked and the threat of death to the world's most competent healer was enough to stay the hands of countries, let alone eight magical humans.

Vincent and Julia had subtly offered to find a workaround to the death trigger implanted near Renard's heart, but a simple glare from the man had ended the double-sided words and implications. He didn't trust them to manage it without killing him and Vincent had accepted that the paranoia was fair enough when neither of them could perform surgery to remove the thing. It was just as likely that Julia's power would wear off and Renard would die from other complications of open heart surgery performed by complete amateurs with zero medical knowledge. And even with the aid of a practiced surgeon, there was no guarantee that the device didn't have alternative consequences on removal that they weren't aware of. Too many uncertainties, and Stella had only confirmed for every question and hypothetical solution Vincent could think of that "Yes, Renard will die."

No one was happy with the situation, but they had lived with it for years now. Among their skillsets, it just seemed like they didn't have the powers necessary to secure everyone's freedom without sacrificing the healer.

Now, though, with the events of the previous night behind him and a small hope, he had a few questions for the woman who seemed to maneuver through the current storm of politics like a leviathan through water. Her underground room was clean and painstakingly neat, the director of USARILN East seated behind stacks of papers and folders as she flipped quickly through a thick document secured with a binder clip where staples had failed.

She didn't acknowledge the Precursor stepping into the room, pausing only to take a quick sip from a cup of coffee nearby.

โ€œSo, the Hyatt Regency,โ€ Vincent began with a curt statement, his tone remaining as flat and uninterested as ever. Without waiting for her permission, he took a seat in a nearby couch, crossing his legs on the coffee table in front of it and settling into his seat. He would be here a while.

But Zhang had interacted enough with the Precursor to understand the question behind it, so she looked up from her mound of paperwork, waiting for him to elaborate.

โ€œAnd using your own money, too? Whatโ€™s wrong with an official facility?โ€

"They refused to let over a dozen powerful subnaturals into the safest locations in the Pentagon and the White House, so I had to settle for the safest civilian-accessible location." As if that explained everything, she returned to her current file, content to let the Precursor stew in his seat.

"That's quite a lot of resources invested on these kids."

"Yes."

"Which begs the question why."

"I believe we've already discussed this. And no one should have any issues with my decisions since none of these expenses come from taxpayer dollars." The Director earmarked her location in the document and placed it on the desk, turning her full attention to the Precursor. "So what are you here for?"

"Let's just say that...I have a feeling you are still hiding an agenda from us."

"Even if that were true, what makes you think I'd just tell you?" She swirled the liquid in her cup briefly before downing the rest and looking to the nearby coffee machine, checking if it had finished brewing another batch.

"Thought I'd ask."

"Well then. You've asked."

"And I would like to ask some more." The Precusor remained in his seat, the message clear. He still had yet to accomplish what he came here for. "I want a favor."

"I make no promises." But she didn't turn him down.

"You have always had such an...uncanny luck when it comes to asking Stella questions." The previous night came to mind, when the Director had managed to find out when and where her subnaturals would be causing trouble. "I want to ask her something, too."

"I'm sure you don't need me to get what you want from Foresight. You are the Precursors' tactician, after all."

She stood up when the light on the coffee machine flipped from red to green, sliding her cup beneath the dispenser as the coffee poured out and filled the room with a hazelnut scent.

"But let's say I agreed," she continued without turning around, keeping busy with adding sugar and cream to her coffee, "what would I be asking her? And what's in it for me?"

"You will get a favor from me. From us." Vincent watched her back, choosing his words carefully. Because this was, no matter how he looked at it, treason. A dangerous offense. The underground rooms were the only safe locations to talk due to the excessive sealing and fortifications on every room in the event of emergencies. The same level of defense prevented any significant wiring for cameras or audio within the rooms themselves, and just beyond the automated sliding door, the paneling ofthe room could be made airtight in under a second if a biological attack commenced, the wall panels designed to close swiftly over the door's opening. He was lucky, then, that the Director had chosen one of these rooms during her stay rather than better accommodations on the upper floors. Or she was lucky. Again. "And in return, all you need to do is ask Stella about Renard's implant. Or more specifically, how to remove it."

"I could secure an even larger favor from the President himself if I notified him of this, you're aware."

The Director returned to her seat, a new cup of coffee in hand.

"You must be very confident in me to even present the offer. That, or you're not as intelligent as everyone believes."

"Perhaps a little bit of both." Vincent merely held her gaze, expression betraying nothing. "So what's your answer?"

"It's not a favor from you I care about. It's one from Benediction. Guarantee me a resurrection in the future should something go wrong and I'll see what I can do for your...situation."

"Deal." Vincent rose to his feet then. "I would wish you luck, Director, but you don't really need it, do you?"

She only smiled in response. "Some of us are just lucky."

As he turned to leave, the Director called out. "From my session with Foresight, Kadabra, something exciting will happen today, though telling you any more would alter the flow of events. At the very least, I'll tell you to stay alert and prepared."

"...Thank you." The Precusor paused for a few moments, then turned around to face Zhang once more. "And call me Vincent."

With that said, he left.


๐•Š๐•ฆ๐•Ÿ: ๐•Š๐•–๐•ก๐•ฅ. ๐Ÿš๐Ÿ˜, ๐Ÿš๐Ÿ˜๐Ÿš๐Ÿ˜ / / ๐•Ž๐•’๐•ค๐•™๐•š๐•Ÿ๐•˜๐•ฅ๐• ๐•Ÿ, ๐”ป.โ„‚. / / โ„‚๐•š๐•ฅ๐•ช ๐•†๐•ฆ๐•ฅ๐•ค๐•œ๐•š๐•ฃ๐•ฅ๐•ค / / ~๐Ÿ™๐Ÿš๐Ÿ˜๐Ÿ˜


"You're fucking kidding me. They really went into Washington," Donovan groaned, peering at the fortified defenses of the city's outer rim where multiple layers of tall, electrified perimeter fencing hummed with live and lethal current. There were several different entry points into the city, but on the furthermost edges guards and K9 units prowled like a scene straight from a prison break movie.

It seemed strange, perhaps, that the city hadn't walled itself in like so many other small towns that had the resources, but the matter wasn't too difficult to fathom after some thought. Given the wide variety of Dreamcatcher creatures and powers along with the constant stream of refugees surging into safer, better equipped areas, most large cities had to cope with balancing both a strong defense and flexible city spread during the years immediately following the Slumber, something construction of a wall would have hampered incredibly. And even then, a wall wasn't nearly as effective as people wanted it to be. The near constant demand for ground-based fortifications had died down quickly when a massive sphinx had flown into the city and wiped out much of the main downtown square, decimating the old Pinnacle Theater in the process.

It was proof--horrible, yet effective proof--that elimination and fast response trumped standard methods of prevention. These weren't cockroaches that could be dealt with simply by blocking off routes of entry. These were full-blown monsters with a plethora of unnatural attributes and abilities courtesy of Dreamcatcher's interpretation. Most of them would not be fazed by a wall.

Now preventative techniques were focused on stopping any straggling small fry, while the city relied heavily upon Precursor intervention to withstand larger attacks. In the last few years, there had been progressively higher rates of monster assaults, though most of the public were spared the panic of awareness. USARILN East's first experimental unit, after all, had borne the weight of rerouting and annihilating the enemies at the steady cost of their own members, the group whittling down to the paltry six that remained, two of whom had been more recent additions within the last month.

But the payoff was the glistening city and its gleaming new downtown center, a gift worth the price of human (or subnatural, rather) lives. Not a shred of justice for the forgotten dead, nor would there ever be.

Perhaps what followed was deserved, then.

Donovan tracked the group of Aberrations Cat's Cradle had been chasing on foot and through teleports since La Plata, straining to catch the sense of relief and safety just as they passed out of his range. Even the notorious terrorists weren't keen on marching straight into the jaws of heavy military and the waiting Precursors. A game of cat and mouse between Jonathan and the enemy group's teleporter had ended with the other side's victory and escape, Jonathan's randomized portals costing them precious time in the chase.

And it was all the more disturbing that in one of the United States' most hostile cities, the runaway group had felt relief. The ginger suspected a safehouse, potentially. Or contacts in the city.

Contacts influential enough to let them pass through the security checkpoint without issue.

"I don't think we can challenge this, Nico," he mumbled, trying to sense anything other than the soldiers in the distance.

"They have two Aberrations about to become Animi and you're telling me we can't challenge that?" Nico's glasses were cracked in several locations and the left hinge wobbled dangerously close to breaking apart.

"That's exactly what I'm saying. It'd be bad enough just getting in and out, but to fight two at once and the Precursors? Not to mention a stray bullet can kill any of us if someone isn't keeping an eye out constantly for soldiers. That's a disaster waiting to happen."

Donovan felt the hypocrisy rise in his throat like bile. Just days ago he had argued about Nico's callousness in letting Wisford's civilians die, but he was all too willing to let the citizens of Washington fall prey to the two Aberrations just a few quick kills from becoming the latest in a long series of monsters.

"Then we wait here," Nico's voice pulled Donovan's thoughts back to the present.

"What? We're way too close for comfort. If we don't leave now there's a real high chance we'll get caught--there's no way someone didn't catch Maaya's giant worm display back there. We're lucky they aren't patrolling as far as this freaking hill!"

There was heat rising to both his neck and voice at Nico's stubborn insistence on staying. It was true that they couldn't pass up the opportunity where two Aberrations would change, but everything about the location was a death trap for well-known terrorists and their targets weren't close enough for Donovan to scare back towards an approachable distance.

"It's our lives to two more tries, Nico. I don't think it's worth it. ...And I don't want to argue with you. Feels like we've been doing that too much these days."

Whisper came up to them, then, the raised voices drawing his attention. Rhian followed behind him, her expression mirroring his concern. "Hey, Nico," she cast a wary glance towards Donovan before motioning towards the rest of the group behind them, "The others are getting kinda antsy. We want to know what the plan is. Are we waiting for something?"

Even from that distance, though, the group could already tell that they were far too late.

A nanosecond in time.

And for all the Aberrations in the city it felt like a choking firebrand gripping their necks across the lines of their mark.

But only two today. Just two.

Yes. Two.

Too brief to comprehend and just long enough to feel with every molecule in a body, but in the moment time stretched to eternity, running away from its own flow like it feared for its life.

Light froze and fractured and every particulate matter in the air knew its place like space itself was holding its breath and waiting to drown.

The Animi of Cat's Cradle felt the thunderous pressure crash over them again, rushing towards the vacancy of their Stigmas and into the sanctuary of their thoughts, slipping fingers into the gaps, widening, searching, peering.

And then it was gone, as if dragged away by a slipstream.

An emergency siren blared in the distance and suddenly the protective perimeter surrounding the city was in chaos. Soldiers craned their necks in alarm, some ran towards vehicles and others shouted orders to one another just before a low rumbling drowned it all out. A massive pillar of dirt and debris burst up from within the forest of skyscrapers and more recently erected watchtowers that dotted the city.

Before the dust could settle, a second noise drew all eyes towards the sky. A high pitched ringing accompanied a bright white light as it flared and condensed just before firing off a thin beam that, for a moment, seemed as though it were headed towards Roosevelt Island but instead plunged into the Potomac. Chilling flurries of snow spilled from the beam in short bursts, spiraling off in some direction like a rogue firework before exploding. The first wisp found its way dancing towards the reflection pool in front of several shocked and terrified citizens and tourists. With a sparkling pop, everything within an eight foot radius was completely encased in ice. Bloodcurdling screams increased in volume as, along with a small corner of the long pool, several people were frozen in place.

Meanwhile, a small whirlpool formed in the center of the river where the beam met the water. A massive hand composed of solid ice rose from the deep blue currents, reaching for the shore. Five clawed fingers, roughly the girth of redwood trees, plunged into the asphalt of one street, sending cars veering off the road and crashing into each other. A gargantuan shoulder emerged next, followed by a head and face that, aside from its icy exterior and frozen expression, seemed remarkably human. Two sapphire eyes were lifted high above the city as the ice giant rose to its full height and the beam disappeared. Standing in the river, frantic boats moved towards the opposite shore at excruciatingly slow speeds, leading some men to abandon ship in panicked confidence that they might outswim the monster. Unfortunately the temperature of the lake had fallen well past what any normal human being could withstand and those unfortunate enough to try their luck couldn't help but sink as the cold overcame them.

While the river's shores erupted in chaos, more screams filled the main streets thick with smoke and debris. On the northwest side of the city, a blob of gelatinous, transparent substance had formed. It was large, rivalling skyscrapers with its height and could easily engulf said buildings. Within the substance of its body, a floating heart and brain could be identified, and from those two organs, nerves and veins thread across the clear slime. The creature appeared harmless, its shapeless body devoid of any claws or fangs, until it began to catch people with its slime. Civilians and soldiers alike sank into the blob like quicksand as it spread, slowly but surely drowning city blocks.

In the distance, the air around one guard tower suddenly shimmered with jagged gray lines like the space was cracking apart, distorted by an unknown power. Seconds later, the walls collapsed in on themselves like paper. The phenomenon repeated a few moments later at another guard outpost, disabling the cityโ€™s defenses at a frightening speed.

By sheer coincidence, all of the threats originated from the far side of the city, towards the border of Washington, D.C. and Bethesda, Maryland, leaving the White House and the safest political havens and buildings untouched for the moment, but with an ice titan as tall as the Washington Monument lumbering through the town, the blessing of distance was a small one indeed.

In the Hyatt Regency Hotel, pandemonium had broken out among the staff and occupants, with many of the VIPs and major political figures ushered quickly towards the safety of the White House bunker. Those with less ties to the government were directed towards an underground tunnel that led to a fortified shelter just outside the White House grounds--one of many developed under the city for fear of this exact event. There was no concern for the subnatural occupants of the top floor, with only the USARILN soldiers rushing to their rooms and calling for backup from any nearby military troops. The deafening crash of a building toppling just several blocks away cut the message relay short and Officer Brahms was the first to issue orders to the students themselves.

"Two or three hostiles in the city, all high threat!" he barked as soldiers ran to pull students out of their rooms and into the living room. "And a monster we're classifying as a three until further notice! Orders are to evacuate and regroup for an assault once backup arrives--"

The entire building rumbled as the titan broke into a sprint, tearing through the city haphazardly. Military fighter jets had already sortied and were firing from afar, but the creature was already retaliating in kind, breaking off segments of buildings and pitching them towards the planes. A giant swatting at flies. One of the thrown building sections--a fifth of a high-rise office building--smashed into the ground level of the Hyatt Regency's East Tower, the force of the impact crushing half of the ground floor and destabilizing the entire tower. The skywalks that connected the towers creaked and groaned dangerously from the impact and sections of the glassy encasement broke off, shattering on the ground far below.

But it was a jump from the ice titan that did it, the creature jettisoning itself forward to lunge at another squadron of jets hammering missiles into its rapidly repairing body. The impact of its landing about seven blocks away was an earthquake and the unsteady tower lurched.

Once.

Twice.

Then toppled.

But the royal penthouse suite had long been advertised as "bulletproof" and "bombproof," boasting about the multiple layers of protection anyone staying on the top floor would receive. And it wasn't all smoke and mirrors. The tower collapsed forward, tearing away from the attached skywalks and falling across New Jersey Avenue and the shopping plaza across the street, sending debris, glass, and dust surging out of the impact in a wave.

Inside the intact penthouse suite with its fortified walls and floors, most of the windows had shattered on impact, raining glass onto the students tumbled onto the side amidst the scattered furniture and spilled snacks from the shelves. Several soldiers were dead or injured, bodies crushed by sofas or injured by chandeliers. The wall of broken glass was now the floor and the adjacent wall, with its row of shattered windows, was now the new doorway.

Officer Brahms was unresponsive near an equally knocked out Lawrence, both rendered unconscious by the fall and impact while other soldiers attempted to move furniture off their fellow military.

Emma and Hazel had, by a miracle, landed on an upturned sofa, sustaining only light scratches from the hail of glass. One of the soldiers still standing glanced at the two and, gritting his teeth, fished Brahms's phone from the downed man's pocket, tapping at a few commands that opened all of Hazel's cuffs save for the original school's cuff and the collar around her neck.

Ernie was pinned under a coffee table nearby, but the glass and wood structure wasn't heavy enough to be of any serious threat. Sander and Marcus had tumbled cleanly onto the new floor of windows and glass, both sporting lightly embedded shards and small gashes across their bodies. Brent, Lily, and Chris had been partially buried under a mountain of miscellaneous items--lamps, small end tables, cushions, and the broken frames of various paintings.

A larger group of Grant, Kusari, Siena, and Callan had fallen onto each other into a large dog pile, in that order with Grant on the bottom, nearly speared through by Kusari's claws. Angel and Sophia were half caught beneath a bookshelf a short distance away, the weight of the damage looking almost certain they'd suffer internal hemorrhaging. Gregory, Zoe, and Allison had been caught by one of the chandeliers and its torn wiring in a corner, tangled and held down by its weight.

Christmas had stumbled near the balcony during the hotel's initial shakes, and had barely avoided tumbling out in the fall. When the entire hotel had finally crashed to its side, the balcony segment had broken off, dropping him a short, but painful distance to the group below where a broken edge of the railing slammed into his leg, impaling it as another bar stabbed into his side.

Between the pain and his short, uneven breaths, he had no time to scream.



In Removed. 7 yrs ago Forum: The Gallery
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