Avatar of Mokley

Status

Recent Statuses

3 mos ago
Current I would like two months alone in the forest in a comfortable cabin with good wifi and a stocked library please and thank you
3 likes
5 mos ago
the library just gets more amazing.
2 likes
5 mos ago
brb my reality is being challenged
1 like
6 mos ago
One more day.
1 like
7 mos ago
Anemia sucks. I feel like there's an invisible vampire sucking my energy through a straw.

Bio



I have no idea what I'm doing.

Most Recent Posts

Chaos!

In a moment you three will be where you need to be, one way or another or by your own actions. Absolutely take this opportunity to show off, if you like.
At that moment, in Colchetta
Distantly rose a cacophony of screams, rumbles, and cracking stone. The floor under Rosella's feet began to tremble. An earthquake?

Above, the floating trees began to change color; like some deranged autumn shift, a metallic glimmer seeped into the quivering leaves, and soon the trees high above were laden with foliage that shimmered with some unearthly color that hurt to stare into.

Sparkles of soft pollen drifted on the breeze and showered peacefully down upon the city.

The trees rose higher, while pollen rained gently down.

A tower on the far side of the city ripped and cracked away from its foundation in a cloud of frightening dust and debris. More buildings throughout the city -- the tallest first -- broke away, twisted, their foundations crumbling, and rose slowly into the sky, following the trees higher toward the clouds, some of them with people trapped inside.

The boy inside the library had been still, uncertain what to do, clutching a map to his chest. But when the walls of the library itself began to shake and twist and drop dust and splinters on his head -- when the shelves shook loose their books and scrolls and pens rolled and bounced off the tables -- he threw his last caution to the wind and sprinted into the hallway, carrying the map with him.

He yelled unintelligibly, shouting at Rosella while the floor and walls twisted around them and his eyes watered from the falling dust. He opened the map hurriedly -- the map that Rosella herself had helped design -- and he pointed at the Ruins of Kimberton, jabbering urgently in a language she didn't understand. He poked a finger at the ruins, then pointed frantically outside. They had to go to the ruins, urgently.

The guild hall cracked and splintered from its foundation, prepared to rise up off the ground altogether, with Rosella and Collin and the boy inside.

Collin, still in the doorway, swayed on his feet, unusually and frightfully calm. Pollen rained down outside. Collin's eyes had turned dark and glassy. The madness of the Ruse had taken him.

The madness was spreading throughout the city. Everywhere people dropped to their knees, or fought one another like wild animals, or ripped themselves apart, while buildings rose up around them and the rising trees were gilded like lords.

At that moment, on the Rosario island
The young woman peered hard at Nisa with a hunter's determined gaze -- but she could not understand. She caught the words Rosario and leave and heard Nisa's voice lilt upward in a question, and knew she was being asked for a clarification she could not give when she knew so few words of this language. The woman instead gestured with an arm and a wide hand to encompass all of the Rosario tribe -- then she snatched back her fist, meaning the tribe and everyone in it would soon be snuffed out if the warning was not heeded.

"Rosario must leave," she repeated again in a deadly and finite voice. She looked up, her eyes widened, staring past Nisa to the expanse of blue water that had since the morning been peaceful and blue.

Halfway between this island and the next, the water began to swirl and bubble.

The whirlpool turned faster and faster; the water seethed and hissed and roared wider and wider around it, as if being sucked deep and down into a dark abyss far below the ocean floor. Two fishing boats and the screaming fishermen upon them were devoured into the spinning depths. The hungry waves tossed high on the shore of the island, so strong so quickly, as if the ocean planned to take the tribe and the island with it into a watery grave.

The roar of water was deafening, and only a moment had passed.

At the center of the whirlpool -- now wider and more far-reaching than the island itself -- something monstrous was moving against the impossible current. Black spines pricked above the water, followed by the graceful sleek of black shimmering scales, each as big as a house. Whatever moved below was as enormous and terrible as a mountain.

The woman in sealskin tugged on Nisa's arm, hurriedly, back toward the forest through the forbidden gate. It was now far too late to escape to the far island to safety: their only chance lay in the jungle that the Rosario people had feared for so long.

The monster in the ocean -- revealed only by the length of its many spines and scales to be something like a colossal eel -- unfurled and began to circle the island hungrily.

Water roared up onto the beach. The tide rushed in, higher and higher than it ever had before, as if the ocean would try to swallow the island whole.

But, in fact, the island was sinking. Within five minutes, everything would be engulfed by spinning, churning water. The tribe would be the colossus' first meal after eons of slumber.

Above, translucent in the blue calm sky, hung visions of long-rooted trees with silvery leaves.

At that moment, in the Rune Desert
The woman in black was quiet while lightning flashed; the storm moved closer again, more ferocious than before, kicking up dust and sand and goats and wagons.

"There is no time for that, small one," she said, in the same language but with a stiff lilting accent. Her deep blue eyes flicked down to the orb held tightly in the boy's arms, and then back to his face. "Any harm done to me is by my own affliction, for the sake of staving off this storm a moment longer -- the East Wind has fallen to chaos, and I and the North Wind can only battle it for so long. Something terrible is coming, we must get your people to a safe place --"

She had spoken too long. A huge, reverberating CRACK echoed from the distance across the dune. By the light of the stars they could see the silhouette of the far mountain -- so long a familiar comfort to the tribe -- was shifting, shaking, and undulating. The dark, rigid picture of the peak changed its shape, twisted and writhed and moved as if the stone itself had come to life.

Something lifted up out of the distant destroyed mountain: a pair of colossal, leathery wings.

"We must go!" The woman turned and flung her bleeding arm, but this time there as no effect on the spinning storm. The clouds began to gather again, and the voices of the stars were in threat of once again being silenced.

Another funnel sprang up on the sands -- and another, and another. The tornadoes whirled and whipped around one another in frantic destruction. The air was thick with stinging sand and deafening howls.

And then, a cold wind -- the North Wind -- spun around Cyrus alone, like a bubble of safety in a sea of disaster; it gave him clean air to breathe and ensured his link with the stars remained strong, while the world around him was lost in spinning sand. The rest of his tribe was not afforded the same protection.

A hideous, enormous screech rang out over the desert, over the noise of the storm. The tribe would hear the ominous flap of wings, so huge that the storms themselves quivered with each rush.

The mountain itself had awakened after eons of slumber -- and now it had unfurled, and flew over the desert in search of its first meal. Glimpses of the monstrosity showed it to be the color of the desert, spiked with stony scales, with a hungry red eye. As it came closer, its bulk and its enormous wings blotted out the sky.

There hung in the dark sky the translucent images of floating trees with silvery leaves, fading in and out as the storms passed through them, the colossus drew closer, and the tribe screamed.
Ok then, onward it is! Just as soon as I recover from work. XD
@Fairess@Vesuvius00@Awkward Afro

Shall we lock in and move on? I hate to do so without @Incanus, especially if he/she is not feeling well. (please feel better soon!)
On the deck, the battle of the sea raged and swelled and hissed and roared and smashed against the hull. Wind howled in the rigging; rope snapped and whipped. The tatters of flags flung in the ferocious salt spray. Crashes of sea foam leaped into the air and slammed the boat to and fro, tossing it up and dropping it, plummeting down again into the tumult of waves.

A pair of headphones skidded across the foamy wet deck, connected to nothing.

A lumberjack's boot caught against the mainmast, soaked through and ruined by salt.

A slashed, bloodied and unraveled sweater -- bearing the letters TSU -- was tangled wetly in the cannon ropes.

Thunder boomed and cracked open the sky with a violent flash of light. The ship thrashed; a cascade of water tumbled into the Mess through the grate, and with it fell the glimmer of a stopped pocket watch and a little silver key, two treasures that had until now been in the cat-boy's pockets.

These were all that were left of Dakota, Tommy, Samira and Elin.

Water sloshed thick and foamy against the walls of the Mess, crashing and hissing every time the floor shifted in a new direction. It fell in buckets through the open hatch and quenched the last of the flames. The bodies collected beneath it -- waiting to be hauled above -- were soon drenched.

Zosime -- after being dragged out from behind the boiler -- no longer breathed nor exhibited a pulse, but there appeared to be no injury to her person. She was, quite simply and incomprehensibly, dead.

Risa, on the other hand, continued to breathe but refused to wake. Her skin was cold to the touch.

Light accompanied a deafening crack of thunder. Throughout the ship, every unwitting passenger was blinded by brightness. By the time their eyes once again adjusted to the dark, TamTam had suddenly and silently disappeared.

And so, six remained.

The gray fox stood silent in the sloshing water, its fur matted and dripping, offering an intelligent stare to Connor, then Sidwell, Suichiro, Chris and Christopher. Its ears pricked and turned, listening to something no one else could hear over the waves and the wind.

The ship tossed. Cannons on the far side of the tilting floor strained against their straps. The cannon ball that TamTam had used to open the trap door rolled and rumbled through the hissing water and smacked the wall.

Lightning flashed once more; in that moment of light, only Christopher and Moss might see the spectral, translucent image of TamTam pressed back against the leafy wall of the Mess, her head thrown back in a silent scream of terror.

R-r-r-r-ke-ke-ke-ke

A familiar growling, clicking sound filled the engine room. Although unseen, the dark lizard lurked somewhere in the shadows and smoke.

The vines that crisscrossed the machinery had been burned and frayed. Some of those vines snapped, and gears began to grind and turn. A few of the larger gears were jammed by the mangled bones of an old corpse caught in their metal teeth.

While the boilers remained cold, there was little the machines could do.
In Lantern 11 yrs ago Forum: Casual Roleplay
@drewccapp Well, you've got an inn at your disposal, and you're welcome to assume Anise finds anything she might want or need. Also I'll definitely post more often as long as you guys are waiting on NPC responses.
Sorry. Been away for a while owing to a medical complication. Give me time to read through the rest of the OOC and the IC before I post.

Still with us? :)
Take care, @Bunnita. Please do return when you can!

Mod post is on its way. Some notes for me and for anyone interested:

Suichiro is alive again, with one swollen eye and a splitting headache from where the beast had smacked him pretty good upside the head. He's got a bit of memory loss, or at least some confused dizziness.

Connor is in possession of the flamethrower pistol as well as a shortsword. He was the only one left standing at the time the trap door was lifted, and is relatively unscathed.

Chris is somewhere between the mess and the engine room, helping to move the bodies. He's got a bag full of cans of food, the silver box, an unloaded pistol, and a ring full of keys.

Christopher, I think, is probably on his way across the deck and below, following Chris. Christopher has a magic book, which he stuffed with some random maps. He also has a burlap sack, which he never put anything into. Maybe some more food.

Sidwell is also somewhere on the Mess deck.

Moss is on the deck, though at this point I assume she has probably moved toward the stairwell to the mess.

Everyone who is not mentioned above is hereafter considered MIA will be subject to the whims of the ship.
In Lantern 11 yrs ago Forum: Casual Roleplay
Posting again to express my deepest apologies to @Bunnita. I wrote a comment that was too easily misinterpreted, and I completely failed to address the harm I had caused until it was irreversible. I seriously feel like crap.

I also apologize to everyone else for effectively causing the removal of a pivotal character in the story. I promise to always be supportive and respectful of everything everyone writes, IC and OOC. If anything I ever write here causes offense, I encourage you to call me out on it. My first priority is that everyone here is having fun. I've failed at that, and I'm sorry.
In Lantern 11 yrs ago Forum: Casual Roleplay
The Woods
From here, Simon and Talan could hear the distant waterfall, where the remains of the pirates' bridge lay mangled in the foamy dark. The campfire glowed between the trees, as did the smaller glimmer of the inn's beckoning lamp. The green lantern appeared in the inn's doorway, moving in slow gestures, held by a tall brown woman. Everywhere else, the woods were quiet and full of shadows: leaves of every shape and color trembled in imperceptible breezes. The birds were sleeping.

Above, the thin canopy revealed a star-crusted sky, deep-black and violet and blue.

A voice rose up out of the inn, barely audible from this distance: "I am Princess Anise Sinclair of the Kingdom of Riverforde! Don't just walk away without answering me!"

The woods went quiet again: nothing but the soft rumble of water whispered through the woods.

For the moment, nothing intended to kill them.

But as Talan and Simon returned to the campsite, they would find they had a guest.

Tyaelaem sat cross-legged beside the fire that Talan had made, roasting a wild potato on a stick in the flames. The boy was just as clean and undamaged as Anise had first found him: a youth in a white rabbit mask, barefoot, with scraggled brown hair and thin gray garments. He still had the canteen strapped across his shoulder, and a pouch at his waist glowed slightly yellow from inside. The campfire cast an orange flickering glow on his mask. He lifted his head and smiled.

"The Fox and the Wolf," he addressed them. He spied the rabbit over Talan's shoulder. His smile twitched, but his expression was hidden. "Come on then, come come, this is safe to eat." He gestured with the steaming potato that they both should sit down, as if this had been his own campfire all along.

The Inn
Rhea woke up in the mud, aching and trembling; her hair dripped and her soaked robes clung to her. She crawled, sloshing through shallow water, out from under the twisted wreckage of the bridge. There was no sign of Talan in the dark of the woods. She'd lost her grip on him sometime between the fall and the landing.

But there was an inn.

It took Rhea a very long time to convince herself it wasn't a hallucination. She approached the back of the inn cautiously, her water-filled boots squelching with each step; she touched the stone wall as if it might disappear, peeked through a window, and saw a fire in the hearth and people moving and talking inside. A Lantern sat on the table, as if it were nothing more than a source of light.

While Anise knelt sobbing on the floor, Rhea slipped in through the kitchen door. The pirate stepped quietly around the back of the room, moving around tables and chairs, slowly closer to the ragged princess. Even though Anise clearly wasn't a Kith, it was unclear what powers she might possess.

"What you can do right now," Rhea said in a commanding voice, "is stand up, and bring me the Lantern."

Rhea was Anise's height, dark-skinned with thick black hair that hung heavy and dripping. She wore crude leather armor under soaked, clinging dark robes. She had no weapons, but dark, sprawling tattoos on her skin mimicked the symbols on the lantern's iron casing. Anise might vaguely recognize her as one of the figures walking alongside the captured and unconscious Randold, seen from afar long ago.

Rhea extended her hand in threat toward Anise: an eye was tattooed on her palm, the same as the knight Anise had killed. She caught sight of the scabbard at the princess' hip, and her eyes widened in recognition.

Outside the inn, something big was moving.

A pair of bright yellow eyes stared down at Robin and MC from the quiet shadows; it was unclear how long the great black wolf had been watching. A breeze brought the pungent smell of its hot breath, like rotting flesh.
© 2007-2026
BBCode Cheatsheet