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Current Now running: World of Light: The Tale of the Dark Itself
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Calling out from Scatman's world
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Bio

Current GM of World of Light. When it comes to writing, there's nothing I love more than imagination, engagement, and commitment. I'm always open to talk, suggestion, criticism, and collaboration. While I try to be as obliging, helpful, and courteous as possible, I have very little sympathy for ghosts, and anyone who'd like to string me along. Straightforwardness is all I ask for.

Looking for more personal details? I'm just some dude from the American south; software development is my job but games, writing, and trying to help others enjoy life are my passions. Been RPing for over a decade, starting waaaay back with humble beginnings on the Spore forum, so I know a thing or two, though I won't pretend to be an expert. If you're down for some fun, let's make something spectacular together.

Most Recent Posts

Suoh

Sector 3 Upper
Level 2 Goldlewis (18/20)
Goldlewis, Peach, Raz’s @Truthhurts22, Roxas’ @Double, Bede’s @Crimson Flame, Sakura and Karin’s @Zoey Boey, Midna’s @DracoLunaris
Word Count: 3268


With Peach in trouble Goldlewis hustled over as fast as he could, covering multiple sidewalk tiles at a time with his huge strides, but both of his new Psych-OSF allies were speedier. They sprinted ahead of him fast enough for their cloaks to flap in the wind, with Kagero in particular hurtling along in an odd run, arms crossed as he leaned into it. Then something strange happened; one moment they were there, cruising along the street ahead of Goldlewis, and then with a shimmer they disappeared. Invisibility? the veteran wondered, making the connection for the first time. He knew that every Psych-OSF member wielded a special psychic power, but something like this went beyond any ability he might have expected.

This wasn’t the time to think about that, though. Up ahead, Peach had gotten grabbed by one of the Buddy Rummies, and while she repeatedly dented its mannequin-like body with her parasol in an attempt to free herself, another succeeded in ripping off the car door. The man trapped inside, as flattened against the opposite door as he could make himself, gave a yelp, but the next moment the Other slammed down into the pavement with violent abruptness. Kagero flashed back into visibility, having broken his stealth with his killer backstab, and when the Other’s bulb popped out he unceremoniously put his foot through it. A split second later the report of Tsugumi’s revolver heralded her own appearance as the bullet blew off another Rummy’s leg. It immediately ate dirt, becoming a sitting duck for Tsugumi to finish off with another well-placed round. An Other staggered her way with surprising speed, its severed arm held up to bludgeon the girl on the head, but she threw herself backward with a couple parting shots to stop it in its tracks. Right on cue came a thrown knife from Kagero, followed by a lunge so fast he might have just as well been a blur. After the punch he seized his embedded knife and wrenched it sideways finishing off the monster for good.

At that point Goldlewis chimed in with a flurry of minigun fire, nailing a Buddy Rummy that had been sidling along the crashed car toward the missing door. Glass shattered and sparks flew as Skyfish perforated the creature, and when the barrage ended it toppled forward. At that point his gaze went to Peach, who’d just pushed her parasol through her attacker’s abdomen, skewering it straight through. Yet still it stubbornly clung to her, and with an irate growl the princess reached into the tangle on its chest to violently extract its spirit. The Other went limp, allowing Peach to push it away with a kick, then shatter its spirit for the kill. A small bottle of sweet, orange-flavored medicinal jelly appeared in her hand, and with the other she reached down to grab her scatterboom where it had fallen during the struggle. She leveled the explosive shotgun at the fallen Other as it tried to rise and fired point-blank. In a thunderous blast the Rummy was eradicated, and the day was saved.

“Thank you, thank you all!” The man climbed from inside the car, his face glistening with sweat. “Someone’s damn dog was running after ‘em toward the shelter, and I swerved to avoid it.” He looked down the street to where Naomi and Kasane were fighting in front of a shelter. Most of the small fry had already been eliminated, thanks in part to the arrival of the girls’ squadmates. A tall boy in a straw hat who fought with psychokinesis-controlled yoyos, a less tall but no less skinny blue girl who used her hydrokinesis to control and direct two electrified bird drones with bladed wings, and a short pink-haired girl who got up-close and person with gloves and cryokinesis. Together they’d already managed to shatter the armor of the Wither Sabbat, and after just a couple more seconds of concentrated damage it slumped down, allowing Kasana to lift and shatter it with a Brain Crush. “The OSF sure is amazing,” he murmured. “I’ll head for the shelter. Good luck out there!”

It looked like humanity’s defenders would not need luck, however. It had been only a couple minutes since the Otherfall began, but already the scattered Psych-OSF soldiers had rallied to Suoh’s defense. The rank-and-file soldiers, whose duties ended at long-range bombardment and point defense, pulled back so that the Scarlet Guardians could take center stage. They moved and fought in groups, supporting one another with effective teamwork and use of SAS. No matter where Goldlewis looked, the situation was the same; it seemed like the quick response of PSYCH-OSF had the situation well in hand. Most amazing of all to Goldlewis, the soldiers accomplished all this in remarkable silence, only calling out or making effort noises in the heat of the moment. Practically any combat operation on any battlefield that came to mind involved a frenzied back-and-forth of constant and often conflicting communication. “How’re they so doggone coordinated without any chatter?” he wondered aloud.

“Hm? Oh, that’d be thanks to Brain Talk,” Kagero told him, his easygoing manner restored now that the fighting had stopped. “It’s so second-nature to us, I forget people don’t know about it sometimes. We can speak directly into the heads of our squadmates over a good distance.” He glanced at Tsugumi, as if listening, then raised an eyebrow. “Oooor, if we don’t feel like talking in front of strangers~”

The girl panicked. “H-hey! W-why would you…?”

Kagero winced, his hands held up. “Sorry, Tsugumi, I couldn’t help teasing you. You know it’s bad manners, though!”

“Right. Sorry…” Closing her eyes, Tsugumi bowed her head slightly at Goldlewis and Peach.

“Oh, don’t worry about it, sweetie!” Peach smiled, trying to be friendly. “There’s a first time for everyone, right?”

As Kagero burst out in a fit of chuckles, Tsugumi turned her furrowed brows on the princess. “I’m older than you, you know…”

As Peach stood flabbergasted by that, Kagero got a handle on himself. “Whew, I’m sorry, that kinda thing just gets me every time. You must be new in town, ‘cause the first thing anyone learns about the OSF is that nobody looks their age.” He brushed back his hair with his hand, then crossed his arms. “The psychic hormone dries up with age, right? So they got us on growth suppression to keep us fighting fit. Of course, I’m an adult since I’m a late bloomer, but I’d bet you’d be surprised by how old some of us really are.” The corner of his mouth turned up in a mischievous smile as he gave Tsugumi the side-eye. “Aw, relax, Tsugumi, I swore I’d never tell~”

Goldlewis cleared his throat. “Ahem! Pullin’ us back to one just happened for a minute. I’ve been fightin’ longer’n most folks been alive, but that’s the first time I got up-close and personal with an Other. That electrifyin’ combo hurt somethin’ fierce.” His electrical burns still smoldered painfully as a reminder of the Others’ killer coordination. “Do they show up often ‘round here?”

“Not that often,” Kagero confessed, shrugging offhandedly. “It’s like the weather, no real rhyme or reason to it or anything. It’s just about the worst place they could land in fact, for them at least. Between HQ just up the street there and all the off-duty soldiers who live here, they’re basically throwing themselves into the lion’s den.” By this time Tsugumi had made her way over to him, more or less hiding behind him, but Kagero stepped to the side to give her a pat on the head. “We were just out on a stroll, in fact. Going to visit Aquarius to see some new flowers, right Tsugumi?”

The girl looked up at him, her brow still furrowed in that funny way. “...The scarlet dendrobiums, yes. Brought all the way from Wetland Aspect, where they supposedly sprang from the blood of fallen warriors…I can hardly wait to see them!” When it came to talking about plants, her painfully soft voice took on new vigor.

“Hmm.” Goldlewis realized that he probably wouldn’t be able to relate to these psionic warriors, desensitized as they were to a reality with Others in it. If he wanted a heaping platter of exposition, he would need to bark up a different tree. “I’ll let y’all get on with it, then,” he told the pair after a moment. “Thanks again for all your help.”

Kagero smiled cheerfully. “Think nothing of it! Like I said, an honor.” He stopped suddenly, looking up at a building across the street, and so did Tsugumi. “Looks like TV’s back online,” he announced for the sake of the duds. “Goodness, and sensationalizing Psych-OSF fighting for their lives against the Others for cheap spectacle, too? I’m utterly shocked.” The man neither sounded nor looked particularly shocked, however. “Ohh, you’re missing this. Even the Septentrions got in on the fun. We’ve got a flashy little highlight reel of Major General Karen Travers playing right now.”

While Goldlewis could only rely on Kagero’s description, Raz and other sensitives in the area could watch and experience the broadcast themselves firsthand. It showed a replay of a street on the other side of the Otherlobe, where the activation of a transport power created a cube-shaped field of orange light. From it stepped a handful of unknown figures all decked out in black, red, and gray. Two were a burly boxer, and a blonde woman with a staff over her shoulder who seemed to match. Then there was lady with enormous hair in a gigantic, fluffy, pink-hued ponytail, as well as long lashes on her closed eyes, who floated in the air, curled up as if asleep with her own hair as a pillow. Along with her came an elegant woman with big curls of indigo hair, yellow sclera, folded white cat ears, and two fluffy curled cat tails beneath the cosmic cloak behind her. There were others further back, but it was the two that stood in front who got most of the attention: a beautiful man with flowing light blue hair, capelet, and tie, and then a hard-faced commander with gray locks, pointed silver boots, a silver mask with only one eye visible, and a long trench coat with a white fur trim. Once they walked out of the light with dramatic slowness, the Scarlet Guardians seemed to pose together, with the frontrunner crossing his arms as he glared out at a street littered by Others. “Septentrion Karen Travers and Fubuki Spring!” the newscaster hailed. “

“Karen Regiment, Fubuki Regiment, Plan A. Move out!” Karen growled, and the Scarlet Guardians got to work.

After directing nearby civilians to make a run for the shelter, the Septentions join in as well. Fubuki fought with powerful cryokinesis and a royal blue greatsword, his movements as fluid as a dance, while Karen moved with superspeed and teleportation to unleash blasts of lightning, water, wind, and flame. Buddy Rummies, Vase Paws, and other monsters fell like chaff before them. “The Other was defeated with one blow!” the announcer declared. “Septentrion First Class ‘Brain Eater’ Major General Karen Travers is amazing!” The TV quickly cut between several high-action clips throughout the course of the Other massacre.

“Y’know, despite his gruff exterior, I bet Karen likes showing off as much as anyone,” Kagero smirked. “Why else would he keep switching powers?”

Tsugumi narrowed her eyes. “That nickname…considering what the Others do, it always seems so insensitive…”

As Goldlewis listened to them, an orange square like the one on TV blossomed into being not far away, grabbing the veteran’s attention. Having no idea what it signified, he bristled at the possible appearance of a new enemy, but instead the only thing that the transport field brought was a girl with a rabbit-eared headset. She looked annoyed, with her hands on her hips, and when she spoke her voice had the flatness of a thirty-year-old retail worker. “So it was you making all that trouble.”

Not a moment later, a swarm of black quadrotor drones equipped with cameras descended on the area. Kagero quietly disappeared, and thanks to SAS Tsugumi vanished without a trace as well. That left just the Seekers of Light stuck in a half-dozen impromptu spotlights. “These people have eradicated the Others!” a commentator announced through one of the drones. “In fact, you saved Ryujin Ward in that amazing victory over the Others! A stunning show of power and spirit by Goldlewis Dickinson, the Secretary of Absolute Defense, and some interesting new friends!”

For the second time Goldlewis groaned under the limelight of the paparazzi. “What is this, some kinda victory interview?”

“It is!” the drone replied. “How do you feel? What motivated you to take action on behalf of Suoh’s citizens, despite the potential entanglements? Could it be that you don’t believe Psych-OSF is doing its job? Can you comment on the state of Suoh’s affairs? Who’re your new associates? Have you chosen a new affiliation for the upcoming-?”

“All righty, all righty, that’s enough filming for the day!” In a pink flash, the girl from before used Hypervelocity to blitz through the crowd, gathering the attention of all the drones at once.

The drones did not object to the change of focus. “Oh, if it isn’t Arashi Spring! Just who are these people?”

Goldlewis took a step back, not sure what to make of all this. He turned toward the other Seekers, but instead found himself suddenly alone. “Huh? Where in tarnation’d everyone go?” He then felt a small but forceful tug on his arm. The veteran looked down to see a small boy with a green bowl cut. Then both teleported together.

They warped into an alley a block away. Goldlewis started, taken completely by surprise, but he saw Raz, Roxas, Peach, Pit, and Bede already here. So was the unknown boy. “We should be able to talk here,” he remarked, his voice gentle.

“What in sam hill is goin’ on?” Goldlewis questioned him.

The boy did not flinch despite being a fraction of the giant’s size. “I’m Luka Travers,” he stated. “I thought I’d get you away from the press so that you could breathe easy. This must all seem very sudden and unusual to outsiders, but I hope I can ask for your patience and understanding as you come to grips with the situation.”

“I…ah, well.” Goldlewis composed himself with the help of his comb, fixing both his hair and mental state. He remembered what Kagero said about appearances being non-indicative of age among Psych-OSF soldiers, which explained this young man’s own composure. “I reckon I oughta thank you then. Those reporters seem mighty hungry for a story.”

Luka nodded. “Indeed. Your presence alone tends to raise questions, Mr. Dickinson. There are many who’d be curious to know what you’re doing in Suoh, I’m sure. But for my part, I am only grateful that you and your friends went out of your way to help people. So, thank you as well.”

“It’s what heroes do,” Peach piped up, remembering the mission statement to spread and make great the Seekers’ name. Something else occurred to her, though. “Luka Travers, you said? Does that mean you’re related to one of the famous Septentions?”

Luka smiled, his face slightly bashful. “It’s embarrassing when you put it that way, but yes. Karen is my older brother.” He then returned to a neutral expression. “Despite my gratitude, it is still my duty to inform you that civilians are not allowed to fight Others.”

“Oh. Er…” Peach got her gears turning, trying to think of a way to save face. Her team’s efforts to curtail the Ever Crisis could hardly come to an end here, after all.”

Goldlewis crossed his arms. “Isn’t Psych-OSF responsible for allowing Others to enter the local airspace and putting civilians in danger?”

“Huh? Mr. Goldlewis!” Eyes wide, Peach held up her hands. Was he trying to sabotage the Seekers’ relations!?

Luka, however, seemed deadly serious. “Those are harsh words, Mr. Dickinson, but you’re right.” He gave a quick, light sigh, but offered no further comment on the matter. “I’m sure you have something to say on the matter, but this is neither the right time nor the right place, and I am not the right person.”

With a noncommittal grunt, Goldlewis turned his attention from the alley to a gurney being pushed by OSF paramedics through the street. To the sensitives present, the body lying on it would have a psionic censor overlaying his head, hiding it from view. Luka quickly interjected. “Oh, you shouldn’t look there. There’s no censor for duds. That soldier is very badly wounded from the battle. An Other tried to eat his brain. Two of the OSF troopers on guard duty with him were killed.” Unable to see what became of the catatonic guardsman’s face, he watched the gurney roll toward a nearby ambulance. “Looking at eaten bodies can have negative lasting effects on your mental health.” Luka turned his gaze to the sky. “I won’t ask what your intentions are here, but please just go on with your day, and try to keep away from the press. Alright? If you run into any more Other trouble, please feel free to contact me via Psynet. My serial number is KTN545301. Be careful out there.” In another blue flash, Luka disappeared.

A moment later, Peach got a call on her walky-talky. It was from Sakura, reporting that she, Midna, and Karin made it through, though not without their own difficulties. The princess held down the transmission button. “Hello? This is Peach. Reading you loud and clear, I think. Goldlewis and I fought some Others. Got a little help from local soldiers too, and learned a little about them. We might have an ‘in’ with a Septentrion. The Septentrion, maybe. As for where…” She jogged out into the street, looking for landmarks. “We’re by a place called Anistar Gym. It’s got a big purple roof. I can still see the Otherlobe, so we’re probably pretty close to Main Street still.” She turned to rejoin the others and discuss what to do, then remembered Sakura’s radio protocol. “Uh, over.”

Goldlewis beat her to the punch. “Well, we got our fill of Others, I expect. Now we got a couple hours to kill before we oughta head back.” He looked between the gathered Seekers, which aside from Peach were all teenage boys. Not a lot of authority or leadership among them, but psychic matters were Raz’s specialty, so maybe he had something to say. It looked like there wasn’t a camera cluster right here, so Goldlewis went ahead and continued. “Don’t suppose any o’ y’all turned up some leads? I got the feelin’ that the brother of a Septentrion’s someone important, and if everythin’s monitored we don’t wanna give ourselves away so soon, so I’d rather not ring up li’l Luka ‘cept as a last resort.”

Bede hardly needed the invitation to talk. “I’m pretty sure that this building we’re next to is from my world. Anistar is a famous city in a region near mine. So I don’t know about you all, but I’m going there. Do what you want.” He proceeded to set the example by walking out of the alley and into the neighboring gym. Goldlewis watched him go, then gave a resigned shrug and turned toward the others. He shared what little he learned about -and from- Kagero and Tsugumi, but it would be up to Raz to tell the others what he saw in the psychic broadcast.



Detroit

Sector 8 Lower
Level 11 Tora (110/110) Level 11 Poppi (110/110)
Susie and Blazermate’s @Archmage MC, Raiden’s @XoXKieroBombXoX, Geralt’s @Multi_Media_Man, Benedict’s @Dark Cloud
Word Count: 2119


As the machines stood together at the back of the bus, slowly actuating to keep balance as the vehicle rocked beneath them, Poppi did not take long to mull over Blazermate’s question. She found its premise fundamentally flawed. “I guess it must be pretty different. I’m an artificial Blade, not an android,” she pointed out. “They don’t exist in the world we’re from, so I’ve never encountered hate of any kind. Is there really such a thing?” For the life of her, Poppi couldn’t offer any guess as to why.

As a few moments passed in silence, however, she began to connect the dots. She thought about the people protesting androids back at the plaza, full of vitriol and resentment. Hating the Machines that waged their interminable war against this city and its people she would totally understand, but she took it to mean that they objected to the robots inside Midgar itself, which were made, bought, and sold for the sole purpose of serving the needs of the citizenry. Were they dangerous or unreliable in some way? If forced to hazard a guess, she would’ve thought that such contraptions would be popular if not outright beloved, since if they were anything like Poppi, they possessed incredible utility at only a fraction of the resource demand, which in turn offered countless benefits from convenience to labor. Robots could do all sorts of dangerous or undesirable jobs that humans couldn’t or wouldn’t want to, but of course they could do most things humans could, and without having to be paid.

Hmm. Maybe that was it. Perhaps androids were simply too good at doing the jobs of people, and that employers preferred using them over hiring actual human beings. If machines here lacked free will, that only incentivized the possible beneficiaries further. That could very well cut off ways for people to earn a living, leaving them angry. So then, it was a form of envy? How strange, Poppi thought. She’d spent her whole existence envious of humans, especially drivers and their blades. While happy with her lot, she knew as well as her Masterpon that they were just what she told Blazermate a moment ago: artificial. He wasn’t a real driver, since she wasn’t a real blade. If only they could have what others have, she often thought. And now she’d stumbled upon a part of the world where people lived in envy of machines–of artificial beings created to make lives easier, but in the end made things harder, too. “How…” Poppi murmured. “Strange.”

At several points during the somewhat circuitous trip back to the train station the bus stopped to exchange passengers with the outside world. People quietly got up or seated themselves, while robots marched to or fro along the vehicle’s length. Whenever a particularly bulking machine needed to embark or disembark, the driver -himself an android- pulled a second lever to open the rear door, which also provided wheelchair access. It took a while when that happened, so Tora had plenty of time to watch the city through the bus window. The further he traveled, the more he came to think that this place called Detroit was just sort of sad. It put on the mask of a technological metropolis like some of the plates up above, but to anyone who didn’t turn a blind eye, the cracks in the facade were plain to see. It was dirty, dense, cramped, and alternatively murky or so dazzling with its bright displays that headaches came quite easily. Danger lurked around every other corner, and people were suffering. With no alternatives, the jobless and destitute could only turn to crime or to DespoRHado, where by enlisting they could pit their lives -and perhaps their very humanity- on the line to make ends meet. It was a far cry from what Tora imagined.

The bus came to a stop again, hissing as the pneumatic doors opened. A lone figure climbed aboard, and when he spotted the stranger Tora shifted uncomfortably in his seat. This strange man wore a dark trench coat over his suit and tie, but his resemblance to the G-men went no further than that. Instead of a hat he sported a helmet of warped metal, so tight that it loomed more like head than headgear, and like the armor on his left arm a serum-filled canister protruded from it. As Tora looked on, the stranger strode slowly down the aisle, his hands behind his beck. The Nopon wished nothing more than for the man to keep on walking, but of course he stopped. He looked down at Tora, and though the young engineer could see no eyes, he could feel the weight of the stranger’s gaze. That tense moment felt like an hour; what did this person want? Was he an enemy? Had a hireling of the Consuls found them out again? But a couple seconds later, the stranger chuckled. “Aw,” he groaned, his voice gravelly, strained, and slightly resonant. He brought out his left hand, a massive and deadly-looking set of metal talons, and ever-so-gently patted Tora on the head. “Aren’t you just the cutest thing?” Then the Claw moved on, sitting a couple rows back. Tora swallowed and let out his breath. Poppi quietly put her Variable Saber away.

A little later, they reached their destination. By that time the Claw had already left; Tora hadn’t looked at him when he went, and scarcely dared to breathe. The four got off and settled down on the steps leading up to the train station to wait, since it looked like they beat Giovanna and the other team here. Tora and Poppi chatted, mostly just reminiscing about Alrest while they stared out longingly over Quarantine Valley. Just shy of ten minutes later, the other team arrived in dramatic fashion, zipping around the sky-lines that Giovanna pointed out when they first arrived. The secret agent, the witcher, the strategist, and the cyborg were all in one piece, although Raiden looked a little…well, lamer. Tora frowned at him disapprovingly, but Poppi nudged her Masterpon before he could speak his mind.

After distributing the sky-hooks the Seekers’ options opened up, so Giovanna considered what their next move should be. “Kay then, the Hermits. We’d find them for sure if we rooted around in Quarantine Valley, but we can’t afford to bumble around a corrupted zone. Any corruption you get, no matter how small, is permanent. And if you pass the threshold…” Giovanna trailed off, letting the threat hang. Compared to the results of redshift, radiation almost looked preferable. “Hate to add more to our shopping cart, but if we’re headed down there, we’re gonna need instruments that can track corruption levels. No telling where we’d find something like that though, so let’s just keep an eye out.” She crossed her legs as she leaned against the railing. “So, where do we go? If we keep hunting down gangs, we’ll probably bite off way more than we can chew before we find the right one. I guess I’m up for it if you guys are, but that’s asking for one hell of a lucky streak. If only we had some kind of guide.”

At this point Tora wished he could speak up with just the ticket thanks to some pertinent tidbit he’d picked up during his own travels, but right now the Nopon could only offer more questions instead of answers. Being unhelpful had never stopped him before, however. “We find out thing of interest during dig in scrapyard. Manufacturer design androids so that spirit housed in self-contained chip deep inside machine. As long as black box intact, androids not turn to ash, even if body inoperable in shambles. Tora want visit Cyberlife headquarters.”

“Cyberlife?” Giovanna squinted. “You mean, in the City of Glass? Not only is that crazy far away from here, but getting in would be just about impossible. The private security they have over there is nuts, I’m sure they’d see through your IDs in a heartbeat.” Tora shrugged as if to say he’d already done many things others might deem impossible, but for now he rested his case. Giovanna looked at the rest. “I guess we could always ride the sky-lines until we see something interesting.”

The nearest apartment complex brought them back up to the sky-line, allowing the team to hitch a ride away from the gawking eyes of the public, as well as any G-men that might be prowling among them. In just a few minutes Giovanna and her crew were hurtling along the sky-lines once more, joined this time by Poppi (carrying Tora), Blazermate, and Susie as well. Together they made for quite the procession, but beyond a quick glance upward most of the populace seemed pretty desensitized. Only about a minute passed before the convoy passed over the scene of what might have been a large-scale street fight, but it looked like some sort of gas had been let loose, and dark figures darted around through the smoke and shadows. Some of them looked G-man-shaped, too, so Giovanna kept right on going. A really curly, loopy bit ensued where everyone needed to tuck their limbs in and hang on for dear life while going around all the tight corners, so nothing much could be gleaned from that area. Further still and the Seekers were beginning to approach a block of factories on Detroit’s left side, closer to where it bordered the sprawl of slums, shanty towns, and junkyards that composed the undercity of Sector 7. This industrial zone seemed to embrace the sky-lines more than the commercial or residential ones, maybe for the sake of its blue-collar workers, so Giovanna made the most of the wealth of choices to lead the team on an upward rail headed higher into the air.

It dropped them off on a lofty factory roof that overlooked the surrounding area to a decent extent, as well as providing sky-lines downward. Around this facility lay an airplane factory, a chemical plant, and a construction yard, all pretty busy considering the time of day except for the construction site, . Weary workers were gearing up to make the final push through the last couple of hours before heading home for the day. Of course, the androids among them needed no such second wind, instead keeping their noses to the grindstones while their human coworkers refreshed with a smuggled beer or two. They realized that they weren’t alone up here, with a couple hoodlums huddled over in a corner with a six-pack of beer, but they kept to themselves so the team took a moment to catch their own breath. Benedict needed it in particular; back at the brewery he’d been obliged to go the long way around the compound, leaving the older man rather winded. Not everyone could boast Geralt’s stamina, after all.

Most everyone kept an eye out, but Poppi dedicated herself to lookout duty wholeheartedly. She flew up to the highest vantage point available and trained her optics to scan the industrial zone below, searching for anything out of the ordinary. After a few minutes, her impromptu stakeout bore fruit. “I see something!” she said suddenly. “Down by where they’re building. There’s a group of shady figures in weird clothes, carrying stuff.” When Tora waddled over to the edge of the rooftop to look, he could see them too. Whether stick wielders, roller bladers, gunslingers, or shotgunners, they clearly didn’t fit in, and as they stormed the place the few human workers quietly turned tail and fled. The androids they left behind got mercilessly slaughtered by the newcomers, their blue blood spilled all over the construction site. Then the Misconducts got busy planting sticks of dynamite under the direction of one huge, armored hockey player, TNT Randy.

“Wow, they really are everywhere,” Giovanna remarked, nonplussed. “There’s a lot of them, and it’s a wide open area.” She scratched under Rei’s chin. “Guess we’ve got our work cut out for us.” She attached her hook to a sky-line and began her high-speed descent. Tora and Poppi were only a second behind.

Necropolis

Level 10 Nadia (86/100)
Therion’s @Yankee, Sectonia’s @Archmage MC, Jesse’s @Zoey Boey, Omori’s @Majoras End, Ganondorf’s @Double
Word Count: 1004


Though the Seekers’ campaign through the shadowy, sepulchral fathoms of the Necropolis turned out to be a painstaking slog through all manner of monstrosities, each more troublesome than the last, when all was said and done the team stood reunited in the ghostly green light of Tartarus with everyone intact. Some could even boast of brand-new powers or weapons that didn’t seem to align with the vile dungeon’s typical, rather mutative rewards, probably a consequence of the new, markedly different rooms that the heroes overcame on the way. Those strange and out-of-place chambers suggested that the deeper this place went, the more variable it became, incorporating little segments from all sorts of worlds each with their own foes and logic. It was hard to imagine things getting less complicated from here on in.

Nadia certainly wasn’t complaining, though; after Therion elected not to ‘steak’ a claim on the Bait Launcher, she seemed to be on cloud nine. With some solid loot in hand at last, she didn’t even look twice at the rotten tomato in the item room that Sectonia uncovered. On the way to catch up with the others, the two thieves met up with the Knights, on its way back from a branching path to the east from an smoky-smelling brick room with bridges over shallow water. Nadia jogged over to take a peek down that route and found two rooms with little more than rocks, skulls, and ash. Yet again the little bug, clad in its fresh new PJs, had proved itself to be a fighter that nobody should underestimate. It went ahead and crushed all the spirits it found too, silently stockpiling all the money, health, and keys while leaving things like spider parts and bone shards behind. At the furthest extent of that path, the Feral spotted a shop, which the Knight evidently opened using a key of its own. Inside, a petrified keeper hung by the neck over its morbid selection of wares, including a bundle of rotten tissue for ten coins, a pill, and an empty spot where something that the Knight evidently purchased once lay. Neither of the leftovers even remotely tickled Nadia’s fancy, so she hurried on her way.

At the ominous boss door, during the team’s deliberation on which subgroup would tackle the boss of this floor, Jesse posed an idea. Even if everyone was okay for the most part, this place had already taken a toll in terms of stamina and mental health, so rather than send in just a couple intrepid souls to challenge what would probably be the toughest opponent yet, why not have everyone go in at once? To this end she used her handy-dandy Tool Gun to no-collide the boss door, making it effectively intangible. No matter who went inside first, everyone else could follow at their convenience. “Hell yeah!” Nadia agreed as she did some quick stretches. “This is probably the last one, right? Rule of three and all that? So let’s just beat the snot out of it and blow this joint!”

Once everyone loosened and psyched themselves up, it was go time. In the spirit of not breaking tradition, Nadia plunged through the breach, leading the way for the rest of the Seekers to follow. And though she plastered a brave smile on her face as she came to a stop a few yards beyond the doorway, putting up her dukes against whatever new horrors loomed before her, she could not deny the chill that ran down her spine, nor the hairs on the back of her neck that stood on end. Something felt wrong–instinctively, gutturally, very, very wrong.



At first glance it simply appeared to be a huge, circular chamber, with a vaulted ceiling shrouded by cobwebs and darkness. It lay in a state of pitiable ruin, and everywhere Nadia looked she could see massive cracks. But that damnable sound was what made every fiber of her being scream in protest. It was squishy, sloshy, wet, incredibly deep, and everywhere. Her wide-eyed search of the room quickly made apparent that the floor, ceiling, and very walls of this place were all subtly, slightly moving. Pulsations here and there caused small upheavals in the stone that settled back down a moment later. It was as if this chamber’s masonry were but a facade, built crudely and in vain to imprison something. Something alive. It left Nadia wound up tight from the tension, and before could figure out more, a sudden bellow reverberated through the room, scaring her so badly that she launched backward like a spring.

”ISAAC!”

As if in reply, the room rumbled, and parts of the floor began to erupt. The ghostly chandeliers quickly fell and smashed into the ground. Slabs of distended flesh welled up from the cracks, some shaped like hands, others with giant eyeballs, and others just bulbous mounds. As Nadia watched, horrified, the hands opened up, the eyes hatched like eggs, and the blubber tore apart to reveal four new enemies. They seemed to be cultists of some sort, long since overtaken by malignant meat, their bodies stretched and distorted in hideous ways. Most foes spawned in this way would just be cultists, but throughout the fight Brawlers, Casters, Priests, and worst of all a single Impaler would bubble up to meet them. After the first wave spawned, a section of the ceiling broke apart, and from the unseen flesh a gigantic leg descended, its many tons of flabby, pendulous cellulite behind a gargantuan red high heel shoe to stomp the ground in front of the door with staggering force. The hideous, distorted voice of a woman rippled through the room. ”Muhuhahaha!”

The Colorless Wood

Koopa Troop’s @DracoLunaris, Primrose’s @Yankee, Rubick’s @Scarifar


Go time at last! With the Hive Knight and his inspirational bravado leading the way, Bowser ordered the charge, and his cohort were happy to join in the fray with whatever weapons and magic they could bring to bear. Silitha shrieked out her defiance and stomped forward to meet her challengers head-on, but Bowser pummeled her with cannon fire, going for her wounded head. His barrage broke the Brood Mother’s focus and forced her to raise her forelegs for protection, but her makeshift guard in front didn’t prepare her for a giant, sorcerous left hook from the side. She gasped as she reeled to the side, her remaining eyes bulging out as the impact drove a loathsome wad of spit at teeth flew from her ghastly jaws.

Rallying herself as best she could, Silitha prepared to lash out at her incoming attackers, but two of them reached her first. Barnabee warped above her with another surprise slash to the back of her neck, her own back being the one place she none of her myriad limbs could reach. “En guard!” he cried as his chainsaw blade struck true, shearing through the carapace. The Hive Knight then brought his sword around into a reverse grip, plunged it into the wound, and with spirit abuzz he ran forward. “Huzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz-!” he cried, driving the embedded chainsaw along until he carved out through the top of Silitha’s head in a spray of brownish gunk. “-Zah!”

At the same time, Ravaging Confession brought Primrose behind the giant spider, out of sight and perfectly poised for some serious retribution. She still might not be back at one hundred percent after the wounds she suffered, even with some healing under her belt, but hurt or not Primrose now possessed both the raw strength and the rawer fury to make this overgrown pest pay. The darkness danced along with her as she struck again and again, until she brought down an enormous cross-shaped spear of molten pitch. Her punishment reduced one of Silitha’s legs to mucousy chunks of chitin, and as the arachnid screamed the Dark Lance continued to pulse, only for Rubick’s venom to scald her wounded face with exquisite pain.

Where Bowser’s bombardment ended, however, Junior’s beatdown began. With his clown car’s boxing gloves he made sure to treat Silitha’s head just as thoroughly as she treated his dad beforehand, and when he finished with an overhead slam, the koopa prince bowed her head just in time for Bowser to ram his giant fist straight into her ugly mug. Already cracked, cut, and softened up by the Seekers’ blows, Silitha’s head caved in, splatted like a big, juice bug on a windshield. Her body reeled back, staggered for a couple uneasy steps, and finally rolled onto its back with its legs in the air to melt away. In the color-devoid wood the spirit she left behind lacked its usual rainbow lust, but it shone brightly with power nonetheless. Along with it fell one other, less expected reward: a one-third mask fragment of spotless white.

Her death marked a sudden and drastic shift in the local populace. The hordes of small spiders fled en masse, and the Deephunters too aggressive to follow suit quickly dropped to the forest floor, punctuated by the stingers of angry bees. When the Hive Knight strolled over to join the grip, he looked about as proud as a four-foot insect could bee. “Well met, brave warriors! Few have braved this fell place and lived to tell the tale, yet you’ll be able to spin a fine yarn indeed!” He opened his mouth to continue speaking, only for his cheeks to bulge and his eyes to widen. “Bluh! Bleh!” He spat out two hivelings that floated up above the heroes’ heads, ready to serve as a fuzzy aerial vanguard. “...Begging your pardon. While that was a splendid victory, let us quit this place in haste, I beseech you. Even with the wretched Brood Mother dead, there will ever be weavers in the Webwood. Come, come!” He took off with a long, floating stride, covering a few dozen feet before he even stopped to turn. “This way! Past yonder habitation lies a tunnel of petrified wood, and therein lies the Hollow Bough, where I have made camp. And if you’ll allow me, I shall regale you with mine own tale on the way!”

With the eight-legged multitudes not scared off for long, the Seekers could either head back toward the Ruins, or proceed with the Hive Knight. If they chose to retrace their steps in search of their allies, Barnabee had no choice but to turn and follow along; it was clear that the group had something he wanted. Either way, it didn’t take long for him to do exactly as promised.

“Once again, I am Barnabee, the Hive Knight. That title, I assure you, is a matter of some renown, for it marks me as nothing less than the most devoted and capable guardian of Her Majesty, the Good Queen Vespa!” Having slung his blade over his back, Barnabee clasped his little hands together in a gesture of devotion, his eyes momentarily closed, at which point he almost tripped on a root. “Gah, foul impediment! …No matter. As I was saying, uh…saying…Queen Vespa! Yes, our truest and most rightful ruler, and yet for us loyalists tis a most bitter season, for the Queen has been usurped! Our ancestral homeland the Hive, invaded, plundered, and squatted in by…wasps! Egads, how I hate wasps! I could wring their spindly yellow necks, them and their blasted Queen! …And yet, I am most ashamed. For my rebellion ended in pitiable exile, leaving the vaunted Hive Knight a mere vagrant, traipsing the Under ‘til the day I find a noble lord who would restore our honorable house.”

Sadness overtook him as the Seekers neared their destination, although their departure from the Webwood meant that they were getting their color back. Barnabee turned out much as expected, with yellow and black stripes, a fuzzy brown head, and pitch-black eyes. “I have little to offer at present,” he ventured after a few moments. “But the Hive is a queendom rich beyond measure, where sweetest gold flows like water, but rather more slowly.” He pantomimed viscous honey slowly oozed from a container, then shook his fuzzy head and threw the imaginary flask away. “I have seen that you boast commendable strength! If you could somehow find it within your noble selves to embark upon this quest with me, I can assure your due compensation! We need only make our way to the Under’s distant eastern edge, though Hollow Bough, and then Ash Lake…but that can wait. Please, take all the time you need to consider my humble request!” He clasped his hands together again, bee-seeching the Seekers for aid.

Edinburgh MagicaPolis

Level 8 Big Band (38/80)
Ace Cadet’s @Yankee, Frisk’s @Majoras End, Red’s @TruthHurts22
Word Count: N/A


As the group -for the most part- lined up at the counter, Wicke treated Red and Ace’s mention of detractors with an innocently concerned expression. “Oh my, I certainly don’t know what the critics are talking about, either. And if I did, I wouldn’t be at liberty to tell, teehee. Company policy, you know.” She glanced at the menu of sweets and treats on offer, then turned her attention back to her questioners. “As for what we do, well, we’re a conservation group. To love and protect all Pokemon is our mission statement! We take in those without homes, or those neglected by their owners, and we also look after those who take ill until they’re aaaall better again.”

An almost misty sadness clouded her eyes. “You know, despite how incredible Pokemon are, people can be astonishingly heartless with them! Those who they think are ugly, ones that misbehave, who don’t meet their standards for battle…there are breeders out there who’ll make their pokemon give birth to litter after litter, all in search of just one with certain desirable traits. Then they’ll release the rest, or worse yet, leave them to rot in a Pokecenter box! Can you imagine that? Treated like trash, simply for the crime of being born with the wrong nature!” Wicke stopped herself, then took a deep breath, fanning herself with her hand. “Forgive me, I can get a little emotional. My blood sugar must be running low, but luckily, I know just how to fix that!”

Soon, the small group sat at a comfortable couple of tables in the back of the shop, tucked as far away from any magic as they could get. Band seated himself in a sturdy chair at the end of the booth, where he resided in taciturn silence. Wicke had bought a whole plate of handmade brownies for Sierra’s recruits, although she seemed happy to indulge herself as well. “Ahh,” she sang, closing her eyes as she rested her cheek in one hand. “Magic is a wonderful thing, but there’s nothing quite like a treat made with the human touch!”

After dabbing at her face with a napkin, she clasped her hands and put on a smile so warm it could melt chocolate. “If you’re interested in the Aether Foundation, I’d be only too happy to tell you more! What about our state-of-the-art, climate-controlled habitats, for instance? You could step out of Edinburgh’s freezing cold and straight into the sweltering humidity of a tropical rainforest! All the beautiful pink trees and flowers, painstakingly procured from the Luma Pools! Visit it yourself, and it won’t be long before you see why it’s called Aether Paradise! Our Pokemon have the highest-quality feed we can manage, all grown one hundred percent on-site! No cheap corn fillers here, our Tauros and Miltanks are all one hundred percent grass-fed! Our pokemon live in luxury most humans couldn’t even dream of. We have enrichment programs to keep our smart and fun-loving Pokemon engaged, you wouldn’t imagine all the clever toys and gadgets the sweethearts down in R&D think up! We recruit the best trainers from around the world to help our Pokemon live up to their full potential! And what do we get out of all this, other than the chance to research and study Pokemon in their natural habitat? Why, nothing! Nothing but the satisfaction that we’re doing the right thing, and making the world a better place!” Now that the bubbly woman had gotten started, she could scarcely stop, even to write the Seekers their checks. “Of course, we’d be unable to do all this without our generous donors! The fact that so many people want to give back to the world and its wonderful creatures, month after month, it’s such a beautiful thing. It hurts every time a new tragedy ends up on our doorstep, but seeing a broken Pokemon made whole again, able to laugh and play, it makes all our hard work worth it!”
Nice. I've kept Benedict close but in the background, so you'll be all caught up once you read the recent updates you're mentioned in.
I'm awfully sorry to hear that. I hope you're okay.
Suoh

Sector 3 Upper
Level 2 Goldlewis (2/20)
Goldlewis, Peach, Raz’s @Truthhurts22, Roxas’ @Double, Bede’s @Crimson Flame, Sakura and Karin’s @Zoey Boey, Midna’s @DracoLunaris
Word Count: 1711


Trusting that the musclebound mountain of a man could follow through on his part of the plan, Peach took off running. The sudden motion by a less formidable-looking target got the Others’ attention, but Goldlewis Dickinson did not intend to let them go after her. His coffin dropped to the sidewalk with a very loud slam, and its door slid open. An ephemeral blue light shown from within as starlit hands hoisted a massive Skyfish minigun weighing hundreds of pounds into the veteran’s waiting hands. With his cryptid companion pointing targets out like a spotter, Goldlewis bottomed out his Security Level to deliver a torrential fusillade of bullets into the crowd of Bile Pools and Plateau Pendus. “COME AND GET MEEEE!” he roared over the cacophony, and the Others obliged.

The fliers moved with dangerous speed, spreading out toward the sides of their target, while their gelatinous counterparts fixed their glowing lights on him. Goldlewis expected them to mob him, but things took a nasty surprise as the Bile Pools remained at a comfortable distance, content to sit there in a line and spew water from afar. As the alien disposed of the spent minigun Goldlewis brought the coffin up for defense with gritted teeth, but the triple dosage of Pool water did more than chip damage. It rinsed through his guard and left his clothes soaked. Neither did the Pendus come at him to strike with those dangling arms like raptors’ talons; instead their bodies danced with arcs of bright yellow electricity. After a moment it coalesced in their green gloves and they both hurled bolts of lightning his way. Elemental projectiles rained down on his position, and though far too experienced to lose his head, the veteran quickly began to realize just what he’d volunteered for. ’This wasn’t a brawl, it was a shootout!

With a frustrated grunt Goldewis took cover behind his hummer. He hated to use his beloved ride as a shield, but what happened when water and high voltage mixed, he needed to be pragmatic about this situation. His steadfast Patriot Mammoth took the first round of elements just fine, but the Pendus quickly buzzed around to either side to both flank and surround him. One threw more bolts his way, which he narrowly avoided, but the other electrified itself before flying in a shuttle loop to divebomb him. “Hmph!” Determined to not fall prey to this simple strategy, Goldlewis jumped onto the hood of his hummer. As the crackling Pendu whooshed behind him, he ran across the top of the vehicle and jumped again. Now with a clear shot, the Bile Pools sprayed water one after another, but Goldlewis didn’t intend to plop down right in front of their firing squad. Instead he pushed off a magical glyph mid-air, airdashing the remainder of the distance across the strip mall’s parking lot to come down amidst the Pools with his coffin beneath him, a half-dozen arms extended like the vanes of a cosmic pinwheel. “Try this on!” The attack covered enough space to hit all three, whether clipping them with the arms or crushing them with the coffin itself, and on hit Goldlewis unleashed his Behemoth Typhoon. “RAAAGH!” Swung in a downward half-circle, it slammed into one Pool and kept going with the Other stuck to its front like a bug on a windshield. The Behemoth Typhoon smashed into the second, then the third, and as Goldlewis hit the ground he brought the coffin all the way around in a loop to flatten the three-Pool pileup between itself and the tarmac.

A zapping noise got his attention, and he turned in time to see more lighting incoming. He couldn’t capitalize on his maneuver to batter the prostrate Pools into oblivion without eating a nasty shock. “Damn.” Goldlewis stepped off before he could get electrocuted, and the three sludgy pools slid in different directions to reconstitute. That gave him one moment, though, and his well-honed combat instincts made sure he wouldn’t squander it. “Thunderbird!” he called, and from his coffin the alien sent out a spiked drone to chase the offending Pendu down. Then he turned on the nearest Pool as it began to spray water and stopped it short with a heavy shoulder barge straight to center mass. That led straight into a massive backhand that span its head like a tetherball, and the next second an alien uppercut launched it skyward. Not even given the chance to expose its bulb from the ruthless beatdown, the Other exploded into red petals that soon turned to dust themselves.

Rather than savor his first takedown, Goldlewis charged toward the next Bile Pool. It spewed a blast of water into the tarmac in front of it, but the veteran stopped short to block while crouching. Then through the spray came a battering ram followed by an asphalt-cracking coffin crush, and from the floored Other popped a bulb. By that time, of course, its attacker had already committed to a walloping Behemoth Typhoon that would’ve finished it off anyway. Unfortunately, Goldlewis then took a water blast to the face from the last Bile Pool that not only stung his eyes, but also both knocked off his glasses and mussed his hair. “BAH!” he bellowed as he swung blindly, but his Hail-Mary haymaker came up just short. In the background, he heard two loud reports in quick succession, the sound of gunfire. He wiped his face with his arm, but it was too late. A Plateau Pendu struck him head-on, dropping the huge bruiser to the ground in a state of painful paralysis. The Others closed in on his twitching body, and the Pendu reached down with its green gloves to almost gently take hold of his head.

Then something drove into the Pendu’s back in a high-speed, light-blue streak, instantly shattering its composure. As it lolled limply in the air, a bulb protruding from its chest, a blonde stranger in a dark cape appeared. He took the Other’s bulb in a headlock and slid a wickedly curved knife just beneath the fixture, severing the brain stem. He gave a cheeky two-finger salute at the fallen veteran, then vanished the moment before the last nearby Pool tried to blast him with water. Three knives immediately slammed into its body, and as it reeled the same man manifested above it and dropped with a plunging stab that pinned the Pool’s head to the ground. A bulb appeared from its struggling body, and its assailant finished it off with a stylish kick.

As the paralysis wore off, Goldlewis sat up. “I’m mighty thankful,” he said, slicking his hair back into its trademark pompadour before replacing his slightly-crooked glasses.

“Aw, no need to thank me,” the stranger announced with a coy smile and joking tone. His eyes were two different colors, one yellow and one red, but the colors of his gear interested Goldlewis more. They marked this man as a member of Psych-OSF. “In fact, it’s an honor to fight alongside the illustrious Secretary of....”

The conversation stopped with the sound of more gunshots. Back by his hummer, a dark-haired girl was trading shots with the last Pendu using a revolver. Goldlewis stood, exchanged a nod with his new ally, and wordlessly took off running. As he drew near, the Pendu dove at the girl, but somehow she managed to dodge at the last second with perfect timing. She dropped to a knee, taking aim with both hands, and fired a shot that blew the Other’s doorknob-shaped head clean off. It staggered in a garbled slurry of sounds just long enough for Goldlewis to jump up, airdash in, and extend the many arms of his alien to snatch it out of the sky. Once his captive threw it to the ground, the veteran came down in a mighty slam to finish it off.

“Th-thank you,” the girl said, her soft voice barely higher than a whisper. She seemed to recoil from Goldlewis as he stood back up to his full size, and looked to the other man for help. “K-kagero?”

The easygoing fellow stepped up with a smile to put her on the shoulder for reassurance. “Don’t worry, Tsugumi. Even if he looks big and scary, Mr. Dickinson’s here to help. We can trust him to fight by our side!”

“Right,” the girl nodded, trying to meet Goldlewis’ gaze with sincerity. “S-sorry…”

“Scary?” Goldlewis blinked, his brows raised. “...Me?”

An explosion brought their attention to Peach. The princess had made it to the crashed car and engaged the Buddy Rummies over there in combat, but their durability and tenacity had taken her by surprise. She’d been knocked them down one at a time with scatterboom blasts to keep them from getting close to the unconscious man trapped inside his vehicle, not knowing that her strategy gave the Others time to recover their Crush. Now, with all four close enough to start smashing apart the car to get at the man inside, Peach resorted to her rocket launcher to topple all four at once. Farther down the road, Kasane and Naomi’s attempt to come help got stymied by the appearance of a a horse-sized ram of curved metal strips, vermillion leaves, and ghastly bone. With more Rummies in tow and its only weak point shielded by a hard steel dish cover on its back, the Wither Sabbat charged around with dangerous recklessness. Introductions could wait. The three humans ran in to help Peach wipe the Rummies out so she could get the civilian to safety, then on to the next battle.



Detroit

Sector 8 Lower
Level 11 Tora (108/110) Level 11 Poppi (108/110)
Susie and Blazermate’s @Archmage MC
Word Count: 1826


As her Masterpon protested, full of excuses about all the incredible tech on inside the Android Zone, Poppi dragged him by the wing past the place’s reinforced storefront window where a handful of glassy-eyed machines stared out from the pristine white store at the dirty street, their friendly smiles and welcoming gestures urging passing pedestrians to take them home. Atop the sidewalk stood a bus stop, well situated for what seemed to be a popular destination, and next to it stood a small shelter marked ‘Temporary Android Parking’, with a two-hour limit. Five identical models stood beneath its overhang as if crammed into a queue, indistinguishable from humans save for the LEDs on their heads. Poppi came to a stop behind it, well out of the sight lines of any humans or homunculi inside Android Zone, and there the team of four regrouped.

Once Blazermate caught up to the dynamic duo with Susie in tow, she opened with a teasing entreaty to Tora to keep her maintained. Not quite sure what the healer was playing at, Tora scratched his head with one wing. “Meh-meh? Of course Tora fix Blaze-Blaze up if needed. After almost full week of adventure, Blaze-Blaze and Bowser only ones left who there with Tora from very start. Plus, always heal Tora up when being tankypon. So Tora be sure to return favor, meh!”

As it turned out, Blazermate had something else on her mind. With more machines like her in evidence around here, she gave Tora a crash course on medabots and robattling so he could play the part of ‘Medafighter’ if need be. The Nopon accepted the device Blazermate handed him and mulled over the ominous things she said about Medal Ejectors and Mr. Referee. Those aside, the process sounded pretty simple if push came to shove, but hopefully they wouldn’t need to try their luck. “Tora get gist, meh,” he told her after she finished. “Still, best to not go looking for trouble and risk cracks in story. Should avoid medabot fight if possible. Besides…” He turned up his nose with his eyes closed, his little nub-hands on his hips. “There only one artificial partner for Tora!”

Standing with her head resting diagonally in her palm, Poppi raised her eyebrows. “And yet, Masterpon’s eyes tend to wander…”

“Meh-hem!” The engineer noisily cleared his throat. “Actually, Tora been thinking about something else Blaze-Blaze say, back in scrap heap.” He furrowed his brow, looking more serious than usual. “It bother Tora ever since. All those wrecks in dump surely not there since world began. As shown by big crane, new junkypons come in and old ones probably get recycled, too. Not just severed limbs either, which we know not disappear thanks to hunts in Land of Adventure, but bodies with heads.”

Poppi quickly boarded his train of thought. “But in the World of Light, destroyed machines turn to ash and drop spirits, the same as living things. I remember from the junkyard in Mushroom Kingdom, and the robots who ambushed us near Parnasse.”

“Exactly, meh. So why do broken robots turn up in dump?” Tora reiterated Blazermate’s question from before, now burning with curiosity. “Tora want go back to dump and take closer look for self.”

The four of them retraced their steps to the Solid Waste landfill, and with the help of his artificial allies’ eyes in the sky, Tora soon identified an android that looked reasonably intact. It seemed to be wedged in the dirt beneath the twisted, bullet-ridden husk of a DesoRHado UG, so he enlisted the others’ help to pull it out. “On three!” he said, directing Blazermate to take hold of the exposed legs as Poppi prepared her superstrength to lift the debris. “One, two, three!”

The moment the android popped out, it sprang to life. Its rose into a sitting position and reached out to grab Blazermate by her kimono. With a face flattened into a mangled, unrecognizable, thirium-soaked mess of circuits and plastic, it gasped out just two words as Tora looked on, frozen in terror. “Find…Jericho!” Then Poppi’s Variable Saber blazed in a brilliant arc, slicing through both of the husk’s forearms a moment before a point-blank blast from her revolver turned its grotesque mockery of a head into slag. Specks of the android’s blue blood spattered Blazermate’s face as the torso splattered down into the mud, and yet despite its catastrophic damage, the remains showed no signs of disintegration.

“Sorry about that, meh,” Tora said sheepishly. “Did not anticipate such fright. Not one bit.” He wiped a few flecks of thirium-310 from his fur, then waddled closer. “This only prove it, though,” he murmured. “Body still intact. Maybe secret lie inside?” He plopped down his tool box, took out a blow torch and screwdriver, then got to work.

Without any need to worry about component damage or eventual reconstruction like he did while working on Band of Raiden, Tora could dig into the machine without any regard for its wellbeing, and get straight to the heart of the matter. He pulled it apart piece by piece, stopping only to marvel at the slick ingenuity of the mechanical organs that seemed to cleverly mimic human anatomy. Removal after removal, however, the body did not turn to ash. Not even the loss of the robust heart-pump responsible for the purification and circulation of thirium-310 throughout the android’s system seemed to trigger a meltdown. Increasingly puzzled, Tora continued to ravage the wreck’s innards until he’d opened up its whole torso cavity, and only a few components remained. When Poppi held her Variable Saber close for a little extra light, however, he saw it: tucked away in the electronics by the spine where the heart once resided lay a small black chip, no bigger and barely any thicker than a playing card. Tora jammed his screwdriver beneath one side and pried it loose, and the instant the last transistor parted ways with its housing, the android wreck began to buckle. Tora watched as the gutted hardware turned to ash, then held up the unassuming component in his blue-stained wing. “Bingo.”

He handed it to Poppi, who snapped a photo of the mysterious chip before examining both front and back. “What is it?”

“It black box of some sort,” Tora replied. “Common electronic failsafe, built to preserve important data and record what happened in case of catastrophic equipment failure..” He narrowed his eyes. “Tora have sneaking suspicion that android spirit actually in there. Which mean that whoever make machines not only aware of spirits, but make products salvageable for some reason.”

Poppi gave the black box back to him with a shake of her head, unable to determine anything about it save one critical detail. “That must mean Cyberlife.”

“Meh-meh,” her masterpon agreed. He snapped his toolbox shut and tucked his wrench into his pocket like he meant business. “Tora think friends should pay visit to headquarters.”

The group stood there for a moment before Poppi poked him. “As cool as that sounded, we don’t know where it is. Plus, we’ve completed our current assignment. We should find Giovanna.”

“Mehhh…okay.”

They didn’t know any closer bus stops than the one by the Android Zone, so once again they went back the way they came. On the way through the Detroit streets, Poppi caught wind of some sort of commotion the next street over. Despite the potential danger, Tora chose to investigate and led the team down the block. On the way over they kept an eye out for any unsavory characters lurking in the darkness, just as Giovanna advised, but the four traveling together with obvious firepower on their side kept all onlookers at a distance. They arrived to see a hazy plaza with black, withered plants cast like shadows by bright cyan and yellow lights. Many people milled around, going about their errands with many a glance over their shoulders, or wallowing on cardboard boxes in the friendless hell of unemployment. A cluster of people had gathered with signs in one corner next to the busy intersection, making sure their noisy demonstration reached as many human ears as possible.

“What do we want!?”

“BAN ANDROIDS!”

“When do we want it!?”

“NOW!”

“What do we want!?”

“WORKERS’ RIGHTS!”

“When do we want them?”

“NOW!”

As Tora watched, he noticed an android with some sort of parcel veer away from the protest. Even with a few G-men in the area, which the Nopon couldn’t fail to notice as well, the machine clearly wanted nothing to do with the angry crowd. As the android hurried on his way, Tora also realized that he lacked any sort of human chaperone. Was he really running an errand on his own, in an undercity renowned for criminal activity? Tora wondered if Blazermate might be wrong about the existence of a prohibition against unaccompanied automatons. The direction of the android’s movement led Tora’s gaze to another bus stop, which worked perfectly for his merry band of bots. “C’mon!” he said, waving to the others as he bounded off..

They caught up with the android in question at the bus stop, where he stood waiting in the designated zone. “Mehllo!” the Nopon greeted, slightly out of breath. “Am Tora, what your name? Pleased to meet! Tora have few questions, if friend not mind?”

“My name is Markus. With nothing to do but wait, the android gave a courteous smile. “How can I help?”

“Tora want know two things. First, can machines travel city on own without running into problems? Third, where is CyberLife base?”

He watched the android’s LED turn yellow for a brief moment, then back to bright blue as he began to apply. “My name is Markus. Both military and civilian machines like myself may move through Midgar unaccompanied according to their owners’ orders, so long as they possess proper IDs and authorization. State-of-the-art onboard GPS, cybersecurity, and memory modules discourage acts of theft or violence. The CyberLife Tower stands in Sector 5, the City of Glass.” He looked over his shoulder as a bus approached, then back down to Tora. “Is there anything else?”

“No, that all Tora think of right now.” As the bus stopped and passengers began to board, followed by androids, Tora turned to the others. “Friends should take bus back to train station. It seem like folks know better than mess with other people’s machines!” He climbed aboard and grabbed himself a seat. As she went to join him, Poppi spotted Markus on his way to the designated android area at the back of the bus, where a handful of other automatons already stood in stolid silence. Without any insight into heavy-handed racism analogies, she could only shoot her Masterpon a look that said be careful on your own, then with a heavy sigh follow in the android’s footsteps.



Giovanna, Raiden’s @XoXKieroBombXoX, Geralt’s @Multi_Media_Man, Benedict’s @Dark Cloud


With one exception, the Seekers made quick work of the jump and climb in front of them to reach the decrepit tenement. Neither agile nor gung-ho enough to make the trip, Benedict volunteered to stay behind on lookout duty. Giovanna, still a little wary of the Turk, accepted on the condition that Rei stay behind with him as a guard dog, and Benedict didn’t have much say in the matter. Just a few moments later, the others got into position, then swooped down on the drug peddlers’ hideout like falcons on mice.

They each picked their targets. Separate from most of the others were a couple dudes in front of a ramshackle TV setup, mashing buttons on some old-timey fighting game. Giovanna landed on the shoulders of the man playing as a zoner, taking him so utterly by surprise that he couldn’t even yell before her legs clasped around his neck. “I’m throwing you,” she informed him, and so she did. By leaning backward into a handstand on the floor behind the couch and flexing her abdominals, she sent the thug flying back into the apartment building’s central cavity.

As he fell, howling all the way, his deathgrip on his controller caused the wire to yank the console straight out of the entertainment center, which seemed to startle the other goon a lot more than the loss of his opponent. He grabbed the bat that leaned against his bug-eaten sofa and whirled around. “Hey…!”

“Hey yourself.” Giovanna fully extended her leg with a jumping split kick to hammer the man’s jaw with the pawprint sole of her shoe. He smashed headfirst into the TV screen and lodged inside it, down for the count. Dusting off her hands, the secret agent looked over to see how the others were doing, and found them both already several murders deep as they ruthlessly cut through the Hoodlum Dolls. “...Ah.” Did these guys deserve it? Maybe. They no doubt perpetrated countless crimes throughout Midgar’s seedy underbelly, including the distribution of dangerous and degenerative drugs, with a couple kills of their own probably under their belts. But Giovanna didn’t assign herself the mantle of judge, jury, and executioner all in one. While the people she beat up might not necessarily be okay afterwards, she did not intend to slaughter them, and yet that was what the strike she led on this place brought about–a slaughter. Geralt straight-up outclassed them in terms of strength and fortitude, while Raiden reaped them like grain with those blades of his. Did that fluffy little guy with the toolbox back at HQ really have this in mind when he agreed to install them…?

Well, no turning back now. Down at the bottom of the building, the ringleaders saw their lackeys dropping like flies and went into panic mode. As the clients fled or hid, the stash carrier loaded up his cache of money and Red Ice packets onto the Stash Vehicle, and a clattering garage door began to slide open. Giovanna jumped again and silently dropped to the bottom floor. As a shadow fell across the driver, she looked up to see Giovanna descend in a flame-wreathed dive kick. “Fear on the wind.” She hit the other woman in the stomach, then plowed her through the stash behind her with a series of burning aerial kicks that ended in with a fiery Sol Nascente. The strongbox’s contents got scattered across the bottom floor as the driver tumbled through it, only to crash into and nearly crack in half a door behind her. “...Tempestade.”

Behind Giovanna, the stash vehicle toppled over with a slam, which seemed to jolt the stunned carrier into action. He pulled a gun on someone, but Giovanna dashed in with lightning speed to grab hold of his wrist and break his elbow against her forearm. One leg sweep later and he hit the ground face-first, where he lay holding his arm, sobbing as he begged for his life. “Huh.” She smoothed out her hair, flipped her braid back over her shoulder, and tilted her head. “Not as hard as you thought you were, huh? If you’re gonna try and kill someone, you should be ready to pay for your life if you fail.” The front door burst open to reveal Benedict with sword and shield in hand. Behind him, Rei was shaking one of the outside guards like a chew toy, while another lay twitching on the ground thanks to Benedict’s electric riot shield. “Guess that just about wraps things up here.”

She made a quick glyph call while Geralt collected the sky-hooks and Raiden helped himself to some spirits. While his decision to fuse with one of the pistoleers took Giovanna by surprise, the fact that he looked weaker after doing so did not. Less armor and less muscle wouldn’t help him in his next fight, but hey, at least his hair looked fancy. He immediately complained about feeling less intelligent. “Uh…That’s the caliber of spirit you fuse with?” Giovanna asked, an eyebrow raised. “You do you, of course, but a good spirit’s a lot like a good suit.” She leaned back, stretching her arms above her head. “Gotta find the right fit.”

Giovanna remembered all the formless dead and sighed. Rei joined her and nudged her head under the woman’s arm, obliging her to scratch her noggin. “I called the police. They’ll be here in a few minutes to mop up. Let’s take what we came for and get out here.”

The four hurried on their way, and how better to escape the scene of the crime than to sail through the undercity via the sky-lines. As the newcomers soon found out, though, the lines wound above the streets and between the buildings without any apparent rhyme or reason. Suspended by their new sky-hooks and forced to hold on with their own strength, the team hurtled through Detroit’s hazy yellow lights and murky shadows fast enough to whip their hair like flags in a stiff wind. Superhuman sight would come in handy in order to just make sense of the rail riders’ surroundings as they flew by. Giovanna remembered the sky-line she saw near the train station though, and knew that when the rail emerged from the upper alleyways to dangle her legs over orange-tinted Quarantine Valley far below, it would almost be time to get off this wild ride.

Unfortunately, they never got that far. About twenty seconds after Giovanna hooked a right turn at a rail split in what she thought was the right direction, the sky-line came to an abrupt end. Sliding along at full tilt, Giovanna’s sky-hook skipped right over the stopper, and she went flying through the open air with her brows raised. “Oh.” After a moment spent trying to control her momentum, she flipped over a large metal pipe and released jets of air from her shoes to guide her smoothly down to the ground. She landed in a drab brown lot and slid for a couple dozen feet in a low stance with her arms extended, and when the dust cleared she rose with a nonchalant expression. Geralt and Raiden landed behind her, more or less in one piece, while Benedict -who’d lagged behind out of an abundance of caution- managed to stop before he flew off the rail. “Guess it’s not a circuit,” she said with a shrug.

Giovanna took a quick look around. Her crew appeared to have landed in the right side lot of one Agua Mofeta Brewery, although an act vandalism on the billboard atop the main building at the back of the complex turned it into ‘Ass Brewing Co.’ Two giant propane tanks dominated this side, but she could see cars on the opposite side and, more importantly, another vista of Quarantine Valley across the street in front of the brewery. That meant they’d reached Detroit’s extremity, and that proceeding in this direction would bring the team back to the train station where they started. Unfortunately, things might not be quite so simple. High walls surrounded the brewery on all sides, with outward-facing security cameras in abundance, and a number of strange barrel drones stalked around on patrol. A few brass vats of orange liquid looked pretty sketchy, as well. Giovanna slid into the shadow of a wall and crouched down behind a small red car. “Looks like they take security seriously around here,” she told the others in a low voice. “Let’s keep a low profile and sneak out of this place. We don’t wanna be put on any more watch lists.” At the very least, this jumbled mess of a brewery seemed to feature a lot of ways to get around, especially now that she wielded a sky-hook that would let her slide along beneath lengths of metal. If she and the others could just get across the brewery to the orange tower on the other side, the rail that wound around it in a vertical corkscrew would give them more than enough height to escape to another set of sky-lines along the adjacent street.

The Colorless Wood

Koopa Troop’s @DracoLunaris, Primrose’s @Yankee, Rubick’s @Scarifar


Galvanized into action by the crushing damage that blindsided both Primrose and Rubick, the Koopa Troop went into overdrive, all four of them fighting tooth and nail with all they had to both whittle the needlessly large spider down and keep their fallen friends safe from further harm. Adrenaline pumped through their veins, and in a terrific display of magic and might the underground forest, once eerily quiet, erupted into a raging battlefield. Through all the chaos, however, Bowser’s true-blue team found a method in the madness, one predicated on the fact that despite her vicious strength and versatile teleportation, Silitha’s bag of tricks only went so deep.

That didn’t necessarily change when she called in Deephunters for backup, but their arrival complicated things, not least because their virulent orange spit bypassed Kamek’s protection. Most of the smaller spiders had cleared out by now to give the Brood Mother a wide berth, lest they too be crushed in the mayhem, but Junior was right; if the tides of battle turned against his team now, the eight-legged hordes would surge forth again, and drown their prey in a flood of burning pain. Shadow Clones fanned out in pursuit of the Deephunters, but they kept on the move, climbing through the heights between silhouetted hiding spots to confound and shoot down their assailants. Junior himself went for Silitha, and she turned to her tiny attacker as he closed in, happy to oblige his deathwish. A giant forelimb smashed the ground next to him, but it was telegraphed just enough to be dodged, and the child cast his spell. Silitha slumped down, momentarily dazzled by divine light. That gave Rika the opening she needed to unleash hell, perforating Silitha’s carapace with a withering bombardment from her main gun.

Unfortunately, that exhausted the last of her ammunition well short of the final blow, and Silitha rose to her legs with a horrendous shriek. With a forelimb she reached into the teeming masses of small spiders in the darkness, scooped hundreds of them up, and flung them like a child splashing water. The arachnid wave swept over everyone in front of her not hidden behind something, knocking the lighter ones to the ground before the spiderlings got to work spinning their webs. As the heroes struggled, the eyes of a dozen Deephunters lit up in the shadows where they’d taken refuge, and at Silitha’s command they opened fire like venomous ballistae.

The bombardment closed in on the sitting ducks who didn’t manage to escape their webs. Before they would rain down, however, buzzing filled the air. Dark shapes darted through the gloom, and one after another the blobs burst in the air. Silitha hissed. “W̸h̴a̵t̵ ̴h̸a̶p̸p̷e̸n̸e̵d̶?̷ ̷ ̵S̵h̷o̷o̴t̶ ̸t̷h̸e̵m̸,̵ ̸y̴o̸u̷ ̵f̶o̴o̵l̴s̸!̴ ̵K̴i̵l̵l̶ ̷t̴h̷e̴m̴ ̸n̴-!”

In a blur something appeared in front of her nightmarish face–a striped warrior who held in one hand a serrated blade that gleamed even in the pale light of the colorless wood, with teeth that traveled along the weapon’s edge on their own. The swordsman used it -and the element of surprise- to carve through a couple of Silitha’s eyes in one fell stroke. With another shriek she teleported into the background, and the newcomer fell to the ground. Spiders crowded around him, but as they drew near he raised his head and sword high.

“HUZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZAH!”

The sheer force of his bellowing cry blew the spiderlings around him back, and he waved his flaming blade above his head. “Never fear, unlucky travelers!” As he yelled a jagged mouth opened in his hairy head, making him look like a roaring lion. “For I, Barnabee, the Hive Knight, have come!” As one the Deephunters shot down at him, but even flightless the big bee was fleet of foot. He nimbly hopped around, bouncing like a basketball, and when the barrage ended he took in a deep breath. “HUZZAH!” He opened wide to release a dozen Hivelings to hunt down the Deephunters, turning predator into prey. Silitha teleported in to crush him, but he dodged backward in a stripy blur, sliding to a stop by the Seekers as the last one tore free of the spiderlings’ silk. “Friends! Let us finish this foulllll creature for good and all!” He leveled his blade at Silitha, then without waiting for agreement charged forward once more. “HUZZZZZZAH!”
Something about Jason being 40% head in the height chart, and therefore having a head that's over two feet tall, really tickles me.
The excitement and feeling of community here are wonderful to see! I personally don't use fancy headers just to save on space, but I respect the effort you went to, Magus. And that's an interesting height chart too, it seems like our average would be on the larger side if not brought down by Cricket, who I didn't quite realize was *that* tiny.
I'm glad you like my owl! I'll get him ported over.
Suoh

Sector 3 Upper
Level 1 Goldlewis (9/10)
Goldlewis, Peach, Raz, Roxas, Bede, Sakura, Karin, Midna
Word Count: 2076


For a moment or two Goldlewis just stood and watched as his new allies dispersed to begin the operation. Raz took off running toward the right side of Main Street with Roxas in tow, while Midna, Sakura, and Karin favored the left. They all moved like they had a plan in mind, even if that plan just happened to amount to ‘idle away time until the Others descend’. That went for Goldlewis too, but how to kill time never came easily to someone as punctual as himself, a man so particular about his schedule that he went as far as to meticulously time each and every one of his fights with the help of his wristwatch.

His eyes roamed over the many businesses and attractions before him, all of them fighting tooth and nail to capture and preserve the attention of the cityfolk who frequented these streets. Even without the ability to see Visions, he got the picture; it was the same in back places like New York City and Las Vegas in America, after all. And here more than anywhere, the old veteran could feel how little he fit in. “I’ll never understand folks nowadays. ‘Specially kids,” he muttered. “All these trends, movin’ a mile a minute. The minute ya jump on the bandwagon, it rolls right outta town. Just tryin’ all this newfangled stuff takes a lot outta me. Last week, I tried somethin’ called a ‘gyoza’ that exploded when I bit it!” He ran his hand through his hair, closing his eyes as he did. “In the army or the government, they kept me too busy to worry about society.” Goldlewis chuckled, shaking his head in resignation. “Bein’ a civvie ain’t easy. How d’ya suppose they all manage it?”

“I guess they just go with the flow.” Peach wished she had an answer, but she couldn’t even call herself an expert on her own world, let alone the mashed-up World of Light. Then again, Goldlewis probably asked that question rhetorically. “Where I’m from, things rarely ever changed. We’d sometimes find new areas or inventions to spice up sports, or to travel to, but looking back on it, the status quo reigned more absolutely than Bowser or I ever did.” She and Goldlewis stepped back, then watched in amazed silence as a young couple passed them by atop a purple, tentacled brain, riding it like a horse. “If it’s any consolation, I don’t think any of us will be getting used to Midgar any time soon.” Goldlewis gave a grunt of affirmation, and Peach smiled. “Is there anywhere you want to go around here while we wait?” Her eyes landed on the nearby restaurant. “How about there? ‘Musubi’s’.”

Goldlewis furrowed his brow. “No thanks ma’am, I’m not hungry. In fact, I’d like to stretch my legs.” He turned around toward the apartment complex behind where he parked, referred to as ‘Kong King’ by a plate on the wall. “Let’s give that a try.”

The soldier and the princess moseyed on over. While clearly not the highest-class apartments around, the dwellings here had to be expensive, given their proximity to Suoh’s economic and cultural center. Most Psych-OSF soldiers slept in the citadel’s barracks, and its upper crust could afford far better housing than this, so the movers and shakers of Main Street’s business probably called this place home. Many of those here seemed determined to make use of Kong King’s most notable amenity, as well: the multi-tiered plaza. With its central gazebo, its planters of exotic eye plants, and selectable nature Visions that could turn the whole plaza into a grassy meadow, flower garden, or lush forest, and even an overarching Vision sky, it offered a place of community for the psychic populace fortunate enough to call this otherwise stark apartment complex home.

After wandering around for a few minutes, up and down the flights of stairs in a big, complicated circuit of the plaza’s various levels, Goldlewis parked himself on a bench overlooking the central area. With the Other Forecast fewer people were around than usual, although even on a good day Goldlewis knew that the sight of children playing would be a rare one. “Kids get sent over to Gutsford at an early age for safety,” he told Peach once the princess sat down beside him. “The Extinction Belt don’t go up that far, and Gates rarely ever open. So Midgar acts as one big shield between the Ever Crisis and the li’l ones.”

“Hmm.” Peach watched a man with a goatee jog past with his dog, which looked like a Golden Retriever but, judging by his curly tail and white socks, had to be a mix. “Well, that’s just what everyone’s made to believe, right? By Galeem, or…whatever. Since the World of Light has only existed for two months.”

Goldlewis blinked. “Huh? How d’you reckon?”

For a moment his response left Peach taken aback. “Well…I only have memories in the World of Light going back two months.” She stared into the old man’s eyes. “Isn’t it the same for you?”

Slowly, Goldlewis shook his head. “It’s hard to remember exactly, but…I’m pretty sure I’ve been in Midgar for the better part of…three years.”

Before the princess could fully process that statement, an unfamiliar voice from in front of her drew her attention. “Excuse me!” She and her new ally looked forward at the same time and saw a teenager standing there, his group of friends a little farther off. “You’re Mr. Goldlewis Dickinson, right? The Secretary of Absolute Defense!”

“Y-yeah, that’s me,” Goldlewis replied after a moment, surprised yet again in the span of only a few moments. “What can I do for ya, son?”

“Oh, nothing! We were just hanging out in my apartment, and I happened to see you down here, and then…” The boy waved his hands, only to realize that yes, he did in fact want something, and held up a finger as he reached into his backpack. “Oh! I mean, if you don’t mind, could you sign this?” He held up a large red sleeve with a rock-and-roll design, holding a big black vinyl disc inside it. “I’m a huge fan! Got your LP back when Vernon was in office!”

Just a tiny bit bashful, Goldlewis gave Peach an apologetic glance, then pulled out a pen. “Sure thing, son. I ain't with the government anymore, but anyone who likes the classics is good in my book!”

Little did he know, doing that opened the floodgates. The boy’s friends and a few random pedestrians crowded around, full of excitement for the unmistakable man whose distinctive appearance, character, and achievements once earned him the popularity of a hero.

“Oh, Mr. Goldlewis, can I get a selfie with you?”

“Is that THE coffin? The one with an alien inside!”

“Please sign my hat! A-and my baseball!”

“Can you say one of your famous lines? Give us a ‘down with the system’!”

“Whoa, whoa!” Goldlewis leaned back, his hands held up in surrender. “Did I really say it that often…? And that ain’t an alien, by the way! In fact, it’s still classified, so I can’t tell y’all nothin’!”

A new, louder voice cut through the commotion. “Mr. Dickinson!” It belonged to a quad-rotor drone, zipping down from above, and the voice that issued from the machine sounded composed and professional, like a newscaster. “If it isn’t Goldlewis Dickinson, the former Secretary of State! What brings you to Suoh today, of all places!”

“A damn Crow,” the veteran grumbled under his breath before replying. “I’m just on vacation! Ain’t a man entitled to a little privacy?”

The drone did not budge one inch. “Of course, of course! And yet, you are no ordinary man. The first active-duty soldier to become the Secretary of Defense in Midgar history, more popular than even the president at that time, Vernon Groubitz. The man who’s personally aided Psych-OSF and Desperado in the field on more than one occasion, saving countless lives! But what is the illustrious ‘Secretary of Absolute Defense’ doing nowadays? What are your thoughts on the Administration that replaced yours? In what direction do you think Midgar is heading?”

As Goldlewis searched for the right words to defuse the situation, the people around him suddenly flinched, looking in all directions. The next moment, an alarm rang out through Suoh. BOO-WOM! BOO-WOM! BOO-WOM! In a flash the citizens were on the move, yelling and screaming as they fled. Goldlewis heaved a sigh. “Perfect timin’.” He then stood up in a hurry and raised his voice. “Other Alert!” he barked. “All of ya, get to the nearest shelter on the double! Move, move, move!”

Peach had jumped to her feet as well. “It’s happening, right?” she asked, scanning the sky. “What do we do?”

Goldlewis grabbed his coffin’s chain and hoisted the whole thing over his shoulder. “You’re comin’ with me. We got some business to attend to.”




Within two minutes, they fell. Specks became visible up above, falling from the Extinction Belt above Sector 3 until they got big enough that even those on the ground could make them out. What appeared to be giant peach pits hurtled down toward the city like meteorites, getting closer and closer.

“...Fire!”

At the signal, the army trucks deployed from the hangars of the Otherlobe unleashed the missiles stored in the defense systems on their backs. The rockets ascended skyward en masse in a mountain of billowing smoke to intercept the Other pods before they hit the ground, destroying up to half of the monsters before they even got a chance to pose a threat. The pods that made it through, however, cracked open to jettison their bizarre contents down into the city below. With their mission accomplished, the rank-and-file defenders pulled back, and the available Scarlet Guardians moved in.

On the opposite end of main street, Yuito, Nagi, Naomi, and Kasane had burst from Musubi’s to set up a perimeter so that the other patrons could escape to the nearest shelter. All of the Visions in the area had turned into flashing alerts, urging the population to take cover. Most of the populace, more or less used to alerts like these, had already made it to safety, but here and there strokes of misfortune meant a few stragglers had fallen, been trapped, or gotten left behind, and when the Others hit the ground, the panic only grew.

These creatures were like nothing Peach had ever seen, and just looking at them made even Goldlewis’ skin crawl. They were truly alien, in that they looked like animate amalgamations of plant, animal, and object, moving in ways too unnatural to be called ‘bestial’. Bile Pools oozed around like bulbous slugs, the light bulbs atop their greenery lurching around in search of prey to batter with blasts of water. In tandem, Plateau Pendus hunted on wings of fencing, leering with doorknob heads as the green gloves of their inverted mannequin bodies dangled beneath them. Their electric bolts would ensure that any hapless civilian soaked by a Bile Pool would be paralyzed long enough for their brains to be devoured. Ungainly Buddy Rummies tottered around in groups, the torn-off arms of their comrades wielded as weapons to gather food for the fungal mouths on their chests. Worst of all, Vase Paws stalked around in packs, the bells on their spinal tails jingling as they searched for humans to dispatch with vicious, high-power kicks from their ruby-red heels.

“You two hurry and link up with your platoon!” Kasane told Yuito and Nagi.

“We can’t just leave these people. Nagi, let’s go!” The two boys took off running, the former using psychokinesis to draw his katana while the latter lifted bladed chakrams with aerokinesis. They closed in on a Vase Paws moving in for the kill.

“Kasane, they’re coming from above!” Naomi called, apropos of nothing. A moment later, two Buddy Rummies jumped off the nearby building to drop on the girls. They landed on the trap Naomi laid for them and were blown off balance. Kasane charged, surrounded by dancing blades held aloft by her own psychokinesis, and finished them off.

Goldlewis gritted his teeth as Others noticed him. “Heads up!” he called to peach, directing his attention to the three Bile Pools and two Plateau Pendus headed their way. Farther down the sidestreet, a man was trapped in his car as four Buddy Rummies surrounded it. “I’ll hold ‘em off, go!”



Detroit

Sector 8 Lower
Level 11 Tora (105/110) Level 11 Poppi (105/110)
Giovanna, Tora and Poppi, Raiden, Susie, Blazermate, Geralt, Benedict
Word Count: 898


Giovanna rather casually leaned against the railing that overlooked the extremely lethal fall to Quarantine Valley as the others shared their thoughts. Her mention of gangs in the area naturally piqued the interest of her new crew, and considering how much easier it would be to get around via the sky-lines rather than these smoke-tinged streets, finding some ne’er-do-wells that nobody gave a rat’s ass about to furnish the Seekers’ sky-hooks made sense. Raiden was on board with that plan, but he also seemingly itched to scrap some Machines. While nobody could object to an offensive against those artificial adversaries in principle, in practice it was another matter, especially considering the team’s current situation as Benedict helpfully -and curtly- pointed out.

The Turk did take the first chance he got for a metaphoric sniper shot against Giovanna, though. Rather than rise to the provocation, however, the secret agent just let the words roll off her back. “If you got some kind of problem with the SOU, you’d be better off telling Dickinson,” she said with a shrug. “I’m just a trigger. Gonna take a lot to heat up cold metal like me.”

As Blazermate and Susie described what they wanted out of today’s visit here, whether or not that related to the mission, Giovanna snapped her fingers. “Oh, that reminds me. One tricky little detail.” She pointed a finger at all three of the team’s female robots, using the index and pinky of her right hand to do so. “The gridLinks you got back at base won’t cut it if we run into any actual security. Robots aren’t people in Midgar, but they still need a way to ID you, because of the Machines. Gotta have a way to tell friend from foe, right? So everything gets an LED, white for military hardware like DespoRHado’s androids and Unmanned Gear, blue for commercial androids.” She brought up a glyph to display a map of the current area. “So before you go anywhere, visit the Solid Waste Landfill nearby. People dump their scrap there, so there’s bound to be some functional LEDs. Just scan it with the gridLink you got and it’ll transfer everything over, then put it on your temple.” She shrugged again. “I’m pretty sure that’s right.”

No sooner did she finish with that advice than Geralt turned toward her for some. “Should be possible,” she told him. “They say the Hermits started in Quarantine Valley as hackers, but when new leadership took over they expanded out into the city. Got more aggressive, too.” Giovanna peered around the nearby streets. “I’d be more surprised if there weren’t any in Sector 8.”

Tora spoke up at that point. “Before we go to war, friends should take time and figure out what working with, meh. Learn ins and outs of new place, and who better for help than streetwise Hermits? Tora vote search for hackypons!” He took one more look down at ‘Sector 9’ and shivered in the chill wind that blew across the forlorn, rusted rooftops. “Up here though, not in Redshift Valley. Plus, this Tora chance to study city tech!”

“Kay then. The three bots plus Tora to the landfill for LEDS, then either the Limb Clinic or Android Zone, sounds like.” She pointed out the facilities to the four, both within easy walking distance of the train station. “While the rest of us look go make some friends.” She, Raiden, Geralt, and Benedict set off, quickly discarding the electronic avenues in favor of claustrophobic side-streets and grimy lots enclosed by building walls and chain-link fences, like prison yards. Barely a hundred feet deeper in from the undercity’s well-traveled public roadways, its smooth, futuristic alloy facade became brick, mortar, iron, and concrete. For a ways it still seemed livable, but after the squad went down a warmly-lit street and took a turn, their surroundings downgraded once again to their base form.

They stopped in a raggedy, graffiti-plastered, pipe-infested alleyway, littered with trash bags piled up against walls like snow drifts. A couple people either laid or drifted around, whether homeless, delirious, semiconscious, or plain old down-on-their-luck. They looked like they could use some help. Giovanna ignored them and summoned Rei, who manifested behind her like a big, green scarf. They began to snoop around. “Finding criminals isn’t hard,” Giovanna said aloud as she and Rei alternatively scanned and sniffed the area. “Like finding a salamander in the jungle. It might seem impossible at first, but if you know which rocks to turn over, it’s only a matter of time. I figure a lot of lowlifes lurk near the train station, trying to catch naive newcomers or unwary commuters. Plus, it’s a quick and easy escape route if you don’t have a car. Places where people come and go in a hurry, you never know what you’ll find…” Producing a small pair of tweezers, she picked up a small plastic sleeve from the garbage and held it up in front of the light. Tiny, faded red crystals could be found within. “...In those liminal spaces.”

She held out the sleeve for Rei to sniff, then looked toward the others. “Red Ice,” she told them, knowing what that meant to Benedict. It was the drug of choice for the city’s dissatisfied underclass in the more techy Sectors especially, being similar to cocaine with an additive of thirium. “Strong, destructive, and addictive. Lots of poor men and women who lose their jobs to machines wind up becoming users. Or even dealers. I’m guessing someone got a fresh load and couldn’t wait to get home to help themselves.” Rei barked and began to move, snaking through the air down the alley toward the set of stairs that led back up to a second level along the street. “Let’s take a look.”

Rei led the team through a series of balconies and catwalks that ran throughout the area’s second story, between and through clusters of buildings. The locals watched them with unmasked suspicion, caring very little for their odd mixture of semi-professional attire, medieval armor, and cyborg components. At one point just after they passed beneath a third-story sky-line, a handful of hoodlums hurtled along beneath it with the aid of sky-hooks, and headed from the direction Rei indicated, too. Just over a minute later, the team wound up across the street from an abandoned three-story tenement on a corner that jutted out into and towered over a basketball court. A handful of lookouts lurked around what looked like a reinforced entrance at street level, further protected by that dead being closed off by barriers in case of inter-gang aggression, but Giovanna could see holes in the roof from here. She pointed up toward the alternative entrance, then with Rei summoned alongside her, took a running jump over the steamy manholes and beneath the unlit street lamps of the fortified lane. Once airdash later, she landed deftly on a protruding AC unit, mantled onto a pipe, and climbed onto a fire escape with which to make her ascent. If the others did not possess the agility to follow her example, they could find another route.

Once at their destination and ready for battle, the Seekers prepared to attack. From the roof Giovanna could see a number of Hoodlum Dolls, strewn all around their hideout. The whole tenement had been gutted, with the central area wide-open, so she got a good view. Gang members with knives, crowbars, bats, and a few pistols lounged around, making sure to look extra intimidating for the addicts trying to make a purchase from a stash carrier on the bottom floor, while a stash vehicle rested nearby. Plenty of sky-hooks were in evidence, which seemed to garner more of Giovanna’s attention than the weapons–a testament to her confidence. At her signal, the four dropped down and burst onto the scene.






Tora’s fantasy of poring through a smorgasbord of unwanted mechanical marvels got swiftly crushed under the cruel weight of reality once he and the ladies arrived at the Solid Waste Landfill. Instead he found a big, muddy pit ringed by construction amongst the downtown buildings of Detroit. A heavy-duty lifter sat on the brink of the dump, using its claws to shovel the contents of an adjacent reclamation truck into the mire, but instead of everyday garbage this morass contained the junk of countless machines. For a moment it looked to the horrified Nopon that a number of people lay within the dump as well, sprawled out and often dismembered, but after a quick look with her optics Poppi reassured him that they were just humanoid machines, probably the androids that the SOU mentioned. Still she herself could not quite overcome a feeling of intense dread that permeated her; being an artificial lifeform herself, she looked at this place as something even more macabre than a mass grave.

Still, their mission demanded that they descend. Tora reached the tail end of the street, jumped off the jagged edge, and slid down the dusty, scrap-littered incline. Once at the bottom, he looked around the heaps of dirt and discarded metal, big enough to form mountains and canyons throughout the area. As Poppi flew down after him he waddled up to the upper half of an android husk reclined against a filthy pile of its brethren, most of its valuable components gouged and and picked clean. Even its Thirium blood had been drained by some opportunistic salvager, leaving dry blue streaks across its hacked-up chassis. Higher up in the pile, the body of a Side Kicky dangled limply from where it had fallen onto a spike of rebar, the one big, blue eye that remained in its head smashed. The head of another medabot corpse seemed to stare at him, despite its cranium being caved in by some sort of heavy impact. Many other trashed robots and their parts came to rest here, including a number of pierces that undoubtedly belonged to the Machines themselves, possibly taken from the battlefields where they waged war with DespoRHado outside the city.

Noticing how uncomfortable this place made Poppi, in addition to how uneasy it made him, Tora wasted no time using his wrench to pry functional LEDs from the heads of dead robots around him. He could learn few lessons from this place, and none were the ones he wanted. Once he collected enough components for his team, he and Poppi beat a hasty retreat.

On the way back toward the Limb Clinic, Tora spotted another of the shops mentioned by Giovanna: Android Zone. He and Poppi, with the military-grade LED newly plugged into her right temple, entered to find a pristine white store full of all the latest lifelike android models on display. Some looked like normal, everyday people, while others seemed rather fantastical. Poppi almost immediately caught her Masterpon ogling some of the more elegant and alluring designs, prompting her to push him toward the clunkier-looking units. While he looked around, examining and reading whatever he could, Poppi went to wait at the main counter. After a staff member finished helping a man in green retrieve a KARA-type android that had been in for repairs, she met Poppi face-to-face. “What do you need?” she said, the professional smile she wore before replaced by a brusque neutrality.

Poppi smiled at the employee anyway. “Hello. I would like to ask about where these machines come from.”

“Come from?” The question seemed to take the woman by surprise. “You mean the manufacturer, Cyberlife? Wouldn’t you already have all the information your owner might need about it?”

Poppi shook her head. “No…” Given the false identity provided by SOU’s technical contact that now circulated within her LED, she knew that she couldn’t say that she didn’t come from Cyberlife herself. “Due to a technical error, I lost most of my stored information. My owner says he’s sorry. Can you tell me more about Cyberlife and its workings?”

“N-no?” the employee scoffed, her brows furrowed in incredulity. “If you’re defective or your owner tampered with you, we can deactivate you and ship you off for repair, but we can’t help you when it comes to anything else about Cyberlife. Everything there is to know about them should be available online, however.” Though she kept her tone gentle, the lady began to look impatient. Her expression said why didn’t you just do that from the start? “Who is your owner, anyway? Is he here?”

Poppi was beginning to feel a little impatient herself. “I have a Masterpon, not an owner. Sorry to waste your time, I’ll just be on my way.” With a final sidelong glance Poppi stalked out of Android Zone, stopping only to grab Tora by the wing, then drag him away from the female androids and out of the store onto the streets of Detroit.

The Caves

Level 10 Nadia (77/100)
Therion’s @Yankee, Sectonia’s @Archmage MC, Jesse’s @Zoey Boey, Omori’s @Majoras End, Ganondorf’s @Double
Word Count: 1088


“Whew!” Nadia took a deep breath and leaned back, stretching. “That wasn’t so bad. We’re really cuttin’ through these little abominations.” She happily pocketed the nickel that appeared in the room with the Hosts before either Sectonia or Omori got the chance, then began the trip back to the start. The weight of even a little money in her pocket made a lot of difference when it came to her mood; maybe this was the first sign that her luck was starting to change. Still, in this nightmarish place a little windfall could only elate her so much. “Three dead ends in a row, though,” she griped. Her new teams’ efforts got the Seekers no closer at all to the next floor. Instead they’d just been mopping up all the fleshy little fiends that dwelled in these caves’ alcoves and byways, like some kind of demented viscera cleanup detail. “Plus, we’re still dirt poor! Aren’t dungeons supposed to be filled with riches? Where are all the sparkly jewels? The priceless heirlooms?” She stopped in front of a fungus-ridden corpse crawling with maggots, grimace, and skirted around. “Huh, at least the maggots are eatin’ good. In fact, they’re spoiled rotten!”

On the way, Nadia suddenly realized something she’d been wondering since the fight with the Knights, which was why her new bauble didn’t seem to work the way Sectonia said it should, at least all the time. The answer suddenly dawned on her: she fought in a side-facing stance, so of course a light that shone in the direction of her torso would miss any foes in front of her. Plus, the more she looked at it, the less sure she felt about it being a gemstone of some kind. “Great purr-chase you turned out to be,” she grumbled, tapping the Night Light with her claw.

The team reunited in the northernmost chamber of the Caves, where Jesse and Therion’s own series of skirmishes just came to an end. Everyone seemed okay, no life-threatening injuries or grievous mutations immediately apparent as Nadia looked around. And wouldn’t you know it, there it was: another ominously-decorated boss door off to the west, wide open and ready to accommodate any would-be challengers. “We all made it!” she exclaimed. “Not that I doubted ya. But if your rooms turned out anythin’ like ours, we had a harder time even with fewer enemies. Next floor’s bound to be even tougher.” The cat burglar’s shoulders slumped down she let her her head loll to the side. “Ohh, we still don’t even know how deep this goes. This place is gettin’ ‘under’ my skin!”

Before they could think about the next floor, however, they needed to confront the final challenge of this one. While the others caught their breath, deliberated, and shared any tips they’d uncovered on their rampage through the Caves, Nadia happened to notice some movement by the door in the corner of her eye. When she looked over her brows shot up in surprise at the sight of the bug knight moving toward the gateway with a purposeful stride. So far the silent swordfighter had been content to follow Omori around, but now it seemed intent on tackling the biggest challenge in this place so far both head-on and all by itself. “Hey, wait a sec!” Before she could take action, or even decide if she wanted to, the Knight stepped inside. Nadia got a split-second glimpse at a towering heap of guts before the gates slammed shut to bar the way.

“Oh.” Nadia glanced at the others, shrugged, and jogged toward the door. She pressed her ear up against it to listen, and what greeted her was a near-constant barrage of swiping sounds, each punctuated by the wet shlorp of meat torn asunder. Monstrous coughing and the muffled buzz of oversized flies cropped up here and there, but only once or twice did the onslaught ever cease. After less than a minute, she heard a loud, meaty blast, and the door popped open, so suddenly that Nadia toppled over into the room. In front of her lay Gurdy’s head, dissolving into ash, and she recoiled from the smears of blood around it. In the center of the chamber stood the Knight, using a portion of its accumulated Soul to heal. Above a plinth floated a set of soft periwinkle garments, a new trapdoor could be soon on the floor, and behind the Knight lay a door with a pitch-black frame, adorned by the head of a goat. Within, a satanic statue watched over an item on the floor, a creepy head wreathed in a wheel of crimson flame, and like the shops encountered before it featured a price carved into the floor below it. Rather than money, however, it demanded health.

From her position, though, Nadia could only see the immediate room, the reward, and the very capable fighter that won it. “Well, aren’t you the cat’s pajamas?” she said, impressed. “Not this cat’s though, they’re all yours. Good work!” The Knight nodded and took the PJs, which immediately appeared on its body beneath its cape, with no other visual changes. Curious, Nadia headed over to take a peek inside the dark room, but what she saw made her fur stand on end. “It’s a demon!” Between that and the flat-out scary item in front of it, she backpedaled super hard. “Nope, nope, nope! Not messin’ with that!” She went over to the hatch, through which the knight had already descended. “See ya on the other side!”

Things did not get better on the next floor. Nadia joined her masked companion inside an even darker, drearier labyrinth, free from the nauseating odors of either the Basement or Caves, but somehow even more dreadful and grim. This ancient, crumbling ruin, replete with strange and unnerving bas-reliefs, possessed a fearfully primeval quality, as if chiseled by inhuman hands in some antediluvian era. It reminded the feral of the catacombs beneath the Cathedral of the Trinity, only worse, and that realization chilled her. That, and the atmosphere itself. Instead of stuffy, musty, and overgrown it felt cold, desolate and long-abandoned. Still, Nadia rather expected to find plenty more horrors here, and worse ones than those that came before. First filth, then rot, and now…death.



The Colorless Wood

Koopa Troop’s @DracoLunaris, Primrose’s @Yankee, Rubick’s @Scarifar


Silitha’s meteoric descent scattered the Seekers, their defenses, and their minions, and though she took a few puncture wounds from Bowser’s spikes in the process, the Brood Mother’s onslaught continued. When she warped off to the side, she got a satisfyingly good view of her handiwork. While the Koopa King wasn’t so easily squashed, the others had all been either thrown or knocked to the ground, and that meddlesome wizard Rubick took a direct hit that left him cratered in the dirt. Coarse laughter, scratchy as nails on a chalkboard, rang out before she moved in to make sure the biggest threat wouldn’t escape unscathed. Bowser was not the sitting duck that he appeared to be, however, and before her mantis-like forelimbs could test their serrations against her target’s scales, he leaped into the air, where he stuck fast in the strong, wiry webs of Silitha’s innumerable spawn.

With the defenders’ formation broken and prey freshly caught in their nets, the small spiders surged ravenously forward, but their foes knew better than to forget about them. Bowser hammered them with exoskeleton-rattling sound, while Primrose’s flames scoured the arachnids too eager for a bite to eat. Once Kamek’s entourage regrouped to pick up the slack, defending Rubick as best they could in the process, the star players still on their feet could give Silitha the attention she was due. The many-legged monstrosity boldly charged into Bowser’s flame, weathering the burn long enough to deliver a titanic one-two punch with her forelimbs, then laid into him with faster, weaker blows like he was a scaly speed bag. Rika and Junior hurried over to help as the Troop’s leader got turned upside-down. Their combined sorcery and gunfire plus the painful burns convinced Silitha to teleport again, this time on the opposite side of Bowser, at which point she reached her arms up to grab him. At that point she pulled him in for a giant spider bite, just as he feared, but in the nick of time Kamek’s barrier appeared. Silitha hissed as her jaws closed around a Koopa King as hard as rock, and she threw him away with all haste, though that didn’t hurt him much either.

Spinning quickly, she lashed out at the other flies buzzing around her, but thanks to Primrose’s dance the spider’s heavy blows barely left a scratch. Aghast and not sure what to do, Silitha teleported away again, appearing hundreds of feet away. Her options appeared to be limited, however, for after she composed herself the Brood Mother teleported above Primrose, hoping to lay low her enemies’ support the same way she did their sorcerer. After that she rampaged toward Rika and Junior, slamming away at them like whack-a-moles. This pattern of warp out, warp drop, attack, warp out, warp drop, attack would continue without variation–until the Seekers whittled her down to half health. At that point Silitha shrieked, and six-eyed Deephunters the size of dogs appeared from the backdrop. While their smaller kin shied away, the Deephunters spat globules of fiery venom through the air, quickly dealing heavy damage to any ignorant Seekers who stayed in one place too long.

Edinburgh MagicaPolis

Level 8 Big Band (38/80)
Ace Cadet’s @Yankee, Frisk’s @Majoras End, Red’s @TruthHurts22
Word Count: 1524


In the end, the show went even better than Sierra, in all her endless optimism where random, untrained volunteers were concerned, could have either expected or hoped. Ace and Frisk both gave it their all, and if they stumbled at all the crowd barely seemed to care; they were here for cute Spheals doing cute things, after all, and All Round more than delivered. Clumsiness was practically part of the charm. Sierra kept the audience excited and attentive as her helpers went about their business, hyping up tricks with cheers of praise and encouragement, or offering fun facts about these ponderous Pokemon when the trainers needed a moment for setup. They pulled off routine after charming routine, and whether the Spheals rallied Pokemon-colored balls, balanced atop one another, water gunned down the targets, tricked off the ramp,instigated aurora borealis, or just vibed to the music, the crowd ate it up. Oohs, awws, and uproarious applause filled the plaza when the show came to an end, with the only disappointment being that it was over too soon.

“One more time, let’s give it up for our stellar squishes, our sensational sillies, the heart and soul of All Round, Glenn, Dumpy, Happy, and Sadie!” The people obliged Sierra as she directed her Avalugg over to the front of the fountain, in which the four Spheals were waving at their adoring fans like the superstars they were. Being too small to help either of them, Sierra could only beckon to her trainers to join her up on her animate iceberg, offering them their own icy stage for both the audience at the security detail to see. “And let’s give another big hand to our talented trainers, too! Would you believe this is they’re first time?” A chorus of cheers resounded, and together the three took a boy. “Thank you for coming, everyone! If you enjoyed the performance, please feel free to show the Aether Foundation some support, so they can keep funding more spectacular shows just like this one! See you next time, everyone!”

After the show finished, a bunch of fans swarmed the fountain, eager to stroke, scratch, and feed the Spheals for themselves. With no disturbances of any kind throughout the performance, much to his relief, Band moved in toward the fountain to keep a closer eye on the meet-and-greet, and his fellow guard Lucia did the same. They kept a close eye on everyone who came up to meet the Pokemon in person, but most of them were children, and none gave any sign of ill intent. A few parents and miscellaneous fans crowded around Sierra, full of praise and questions, whether about All Around, Pokemon shows, Pokemon handling in general, or the Aether Foundation and how to show their support for delightful events like these. Ace and Frisk, meanwhile, got a chance to sit back by a portable heat lamp and rest while warming the fingers numbed by constant fish handling in the cold.

Several minutes later, with most of the remaining spectators dispersed, Sierra made her way over to the fountain. “All right, all right!” she told the red-faced youngsters. “Our Spheals love you guys, each and every one, but they’re tired from the show and need a nice, long nap. Plus, they’re so stuffed full of fish, they’ve gone all round!”

One of the kids, a young blonde boy in glasses, looked affronted. “What do you mean, they’re always round!” he corrected her in a nasally voice.

“Ahah, you got me!” Sierra wagged a finger at him. “You really know your Spheals, dude! For real though, it’s time to pack up. See you next time!”

Reluctantly the kids moved on. Band chuckled as he watched them go, then lent a big, brass hand to help carry the spheals to their cushion-lined cages in the back of Sierra’s van. “Gotta say, little lady. Ya put on a damn good Spheal show.”

“Thanks!” One by one Sadie toweled the Spheals off, then installed them in their cages with a pat on the head apiece. “Wouldn’t have been possible without you guys, though. With that finished and all the doors closed, she sat herself on the vehicle’s rear bumper, letting off a big, misty sigh of relief. “Hwah! Man, I’m beat. There wasn’t any trouble, right?”

Lucia shook her head. “Not a peep. No pickpockets, poachahs, nothin’.”

Sierra leaned back against the rear doors, allowing her tired eyes to slide shut. “What a relief. I honestly didn’t think there would be, but if any actual Spheal poachers showed up, I would’ve lost all my faith in humanity. Stick a fork in me, I’m done, you know?” She clapped her hands on her knees. “Still, even if it was for nothing, I’m glad you all kept an eye out. The Aether Foundation…well, it’s not the most popular company in town. Some people have real issues with our shelters. So, someone trying to hurt the Aether Foundation by targeting All Round...not that farfetched, if you ask me. I kinda feel like these shows were approved just in the hopes of boosting our public image. But training and taking care of these guys is my passion, and I’m going to keep working as hard as I can to make this cold, bleak city of ours a brighter place.”

“You got a good heaht, miss,” Lucia told her. “...I feel bad sayin’ what I planned ta now, ‘cause I don’ wanna bahst yah bubble, but the postahs mentioned a rewahd, yeah?” She shrugged, her hands held up as if the question couldn’t be helped. “We’ah really shoaht on cash right now, is oall.”

“Oh…!” Sierra paused only a moment, but that was enough for the shoe to drop for Band. Sure enough, her paltry attempt at a poker face turned into a wince. “I’m, uh, really sorry, but I don’t…actually have the money right now. My crew’s paid in a lump sum at the end of each show week according to overall performance. In fact, the analyst should be around here somewhere…” She scooted off the bumper and onto her feet, sidling off as she looked around the area. “Where, where…ah!” She turned toward the group and held out a hand toward another woman in white. “Here she comes now!” Then, in a loud whisper. “Better cross your fingers for good news, ahaha…”

After a moment, the senior Aether Foundation employee joined the group, a pleasant smile on her face. She wore gold-accented white clothing much like Sierra did, albeit in the form of a shawl, skirt, and thigh-high boots. A thick pink turtleneck sweater matched his big pink glasses, and her mauve hair boasted both impressive volume and height. Her bright green eyes lingered on Frisk; the two seemed to possess a similar energy, almost motherly in nature.

“Good afternoon,” she greeted them. “You must be our darling Sierra’s hired help, then? A pleasure to meet you!” She gave her coworker a warm smile. “I’m so glad you managed to find some substitutes after all, dear! And they did quite well, considering its their first time. I have all the analytics right here.” The lady held up her tablet and took a deep breath for a thorough explanation of how things went, but second-guessed herself and waved the numbers off. “Oh, but I don’t want to bore you all. My name is Wicke, by the way.” The Aether Foundation analyst put one hand on her hip as if posing for a photo. “I won’t waste your time with quibbles, I’m sure you’re eager to receive your pay. I can handle it in Sierra’s stead, but I’ll need to crunch some numbers before I write your checks.” She put a finger to her smiling lips, thinking. “Why don’t I treat you all to a nice cup of hot cocoa at the nearest ROSE? You’ll drive us, won’t you Sierra dear? But let’s hurry, it’s cold outside~!”

With no other choice if Band wanted to cash in on an easy job well done, and no reason to be suspicious, the detective cast one last wary glance over his shoulder for any sign of EMPD personnel before taking Wicke up on her offer. With Sierra behind the wheel of the van, Ace could take shotgun with all his equipment, and Red squeezed into the middle of the back seats between Frisk and Wicke. Lucia didn’t mind riding in the back of the van with the Spheals, whose soft snores the passengers could hear through a grate in the separating wall. Band followed behind, sliding smoothly along the snow-dusted street after the vehicle with a stream of jazz in his wake.

A few minutes later, the van came to a stop at Dessert Shop ROSE, a warm and pleasant-smelling bakery where the magic of a pink-haired witch fueled the creation of pastries, chocolates, and other confections of all kinds. Sierra bid the team farewell to take the Spheals home, leaving them in the capable hands of Wicke for their rewards.

∞ Activity




The afternoon sun shone through a blue sky dotted by vast, voluminous upon the shingles, timbers, and battlements of a bustling medieval town, livelier than usual. After all, it was Saturday, and for the inhabitants of Lumbridge that meant the exact opposite of a day of leisure. Townsfolks and adventurers alike ran back and forth, each with at least a dozen tasks in mind and only a scant few hours left in the day to check everything off their lists. The outposts, camps, and other staging grounds built around the Land of Adventure throughout the week needed to come down, their equipment and supplies salvaged for use in the coming seven days. With any troublesome monsters cleared out by hunters over the course of the last few days, it was all hands on deck to make the most of this iteration. Field teams arrived to the town one by one, laden with all the loot they could safely carry back to home base from the dungeons, forts, mineshafts, and other such points of interest. Valuables, materials, foodstuffs, spirits–they all got handed off to the citizens for sorting, itemization and distribution through Lumbridge, while the weary adventurers who procured the goods on behalf of the Guild took the records of their achievements with them as they returned back to base for their wages and a hard-earned feast.

In a few hours, as dusk began to gather, most would be sharing stories of this cycle’s exploits over plentiful food and drink. WThe menus of Lumbridge’s eateries and canteens never grew stale, for each week offered a brand-new assortment of ingredients to supplement with the crops and livestock grown within the settlement’s boundaries. Life here was a whirlwind rich with adventure, danger and opportunity going hand in hand, with every week a brave new world of unknowns and possibilities. This ever-changing reality offered its hardships, of course, but as long as the people here -from the most legendary heroes to the most ordinary millers and potters- worked together, there seemed to be nothing they could not achieve. And once the sun set and the sky grew dark, alight with the twinkling of countless distant galaxies and worlds beyond measure, those who wished to could gather at Lumbridge’s borders with their chairs, blankets, and lanterns, and in awed silence watch a realm unravel and woven anew before their very eyes, knowing that even as everything changed, the bonds they forged would remain the same.

On the parapets of the Guild Castle rooftop rest a lone figure, watching the wagons of plunder roll hither and thither, the excited shouts of adventurers gearing up for one last run, and the laughter of squealing youngsters underfoot whose eyes shone with wonder at all the new stuff brought in to enrich their home. The observer reclined comfortably in his fine chair, the spiky, black-scaled tail that protruded from his armor coiled around one of its legs. He slouched, languid, with his elbow on the arm of his seat, occasionally sipping from the glass of red liquor that sat on the table beside his seat next to his helmet, which with its horns and fangs almost seemed to glare balefully down at the townspeople. The Consul’s face, however, was one of faint amusement as he idly tossed a palm-sized cube up and down. As if someone who’d painstakingly erected a house of cards before him was a mere moment away from its completion, oblivious to the errant gust of wind just about to blow his way.

When the rooftop door behind him swung open, the Consul turned a sidelong glance in that direction, and his smile only grew. A familiar figure approached with his cape billowing in the winds of change, too tall to be mistaken for anyone else with a similar taste in armor. “How interesting,” he remarked, his voice curt and acerbic. “A visit in person? You must be infatuated to flatter me so.”

“What are you doing here, M?” S asked, his own tone devoid of humor.

M narrowed his eyes, an unfriendly smile on his lips. “Is a man not entitled to the sweat of his own brow? This happens to be my territory, in case you’ve been meddling around so much you’ve forgotten. Did you know that these fools made a road all the way to the Hamlet, honestly believing that a link to Lumbridge would prevent its re-generation? What a laugh!” He looked again at the villagers below, then slumped down in his chair with a sigh. “Ugh. It really has gotten nauseatingly boring around here. So here I am to set things straight. You wanted as much, yes?”

“M, I beg of you,” S drawled, putting every ounce of tiredness he felt into that word. “Speak plainly. Perhaps it slipped your notice, but I have expressly avoided so much as a singular utterance to you for quite some time.”

At that, M snickered. “Oh, but I can take a hint. F was kind enough to stop by and tell me about the meeting with everyone. The way you talked about me, it almost sounded like you thought I wasn’t doing my job.” He feigned sounding hurt. Unconvincingly. “So I simply thought, what better than to clean up one of my partner’s messes for him? Think of it as a gift.” His gaze returned to the people of Lumbridge. “A fresh start, if you will.”

S looked down as well, but not at the people. The eyes inside his helmet settled on the object in M’s palm. It was a chiseled cube of sleek black obsidian, emblazoned with gold in a distinctive shape plus an inlaid fragment of diamond on each of its four sides. He took in a sharp breath, and his eyes narrowed. “The World Anchor.”

“Mmhmm~” M tossed it again, then caught it. “I knew you put it here, but I didn’t mind since that just meant more subjects for me. But it turned out to be a snoozefest, and we can do better than that, can’t we?”

“Why? Our enemies have no reason to return here, and the people aren’t freed. There’s no benefit. You’re…not even going to harvest their lifelight?”

M’s brows rose. “Oh, how bloodthirsty! That didn’t occur to me. And here I thought you were a feckless wastrel, more interested in playing with heroes than serving your purpose.” He stood and put the World Anchor away. “Oh, don’t you worry about giving me any ideas, I’m just kidding. I’ve already mostly drained the Clock most of the way. Not bad for a peacetime colony, too, must’ve been some big monsters out there this week. We won’t lose much, and it’s more than worth what we’ll gain when the clock strikes midnight! All those gnats, preening with arrogance…I can hardly wait for them to see all they hold dear evaporate before them. What a sublime moment it will be!”

Green wings unfurled from his back as he rose up to clasp S around the shoulder. “You’ll stay here to watch the fireworks with me too, right? ‘Parter’? I know we haven’t always seen, heheh, eye to eye, but let’s not dwell on the past, hmm? Why not enjoy this as the start of a brand new chapter in our friendship!” S said nothing, his eyes dark, and after a moment M shook him by the shoulder. “Hey now, why the hesitation? You haven’t gotten attached to these worms or anything, have you? That’s not very cash money of you, S. Your hands are stained, black as pitch. After all, you’re Moebius, just like the rest of us.t” His mockingly jovial voice dropped to a whisper as he leaned in close. “Or did you not wish for the endless now?”

“Hmph!” S tilted his head away as he pushed away from M. “Questioning my loyalty is a buffoonish jape even for you. Our newfound initiative against the new heroes is my handiwork, after all. These people are…nothing…to me.” He dismissively flipped his hand at Lumbridge, his voice bitter. “I only ever selected Lumbridge for edification in the first place in an effort to do your job for you, since you prefer wanton murder to proper cultivation. This was clearly a gross mistake, and one I shall endeavor not to repeat. Moebius I may be, but a sadist I am not. There is no purpose in any pretensions between us so long as we do our duties. Do with your fiefdom as…as you please.”

“Aw.” The other Consul landed, a disappointed look on his face. “Well, I think I’ll do just that. It’s true I’ve been slacking off lately, after all. My colonies are infighting; I’ll need to whip ‘em into shape before we visit any of yours.” M put his helmet on, then turned toward S with a mocking bow. “See you on the battlefield?”

But S was already gone.
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