Avatar of Riven Wight

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Recent Statuses

7 days ago
Current I mean, some people want to do it for the reason it’s supposed to be for, but it being all but outright mandatory, well.
7 days ago
@Ricky: I never thought about it like that, but it really can be, huh? I checked out the Mormons for a stint, and I can 100% see that being a reason behind them pushing that.
8 days ago
Tricks them into thinking it was their choice, when it was structured for them to fail.
1 like
8 days ago
The Amish doing that strikes me as a psychological way to keep people there. Isolate them > send them out > get culture shock > return to the comfortable rather than figure out a foreign culture.
3 likes
8 days ago
Ashifa: Shoving/forcing the religion on someone isn't what Christianity should be about. I'm sorry if/that that's what's going on for you.
4 likes

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Most Recent Posts

Ryathane stood as soon as Aeylisia took the scarf, his neck feeling oddly exposed without it. He tried to make his movements around her as slow and nonthreatening as possible. With the mix of emotions he already saw on her face, the last thing he wanted was to startle her; people and animals alike could be shockingly dangerous when hurt and on guard.
“Why?” he heard her whisper. “Why are you doing this?”
The wanted poster crept into the front of his mind, before his conscience nagged at him again. She was a beautiful woman--an elven woman, but female nonetheless--in distress. He could think about turning her in later.
He snorted, both at his thoughts and her question. “You broke my bow.” He held out the cracked bow, letting the pieces dangle a moment to get his point across, before dropping it limply to the ground. He crossed his arms and looked down at her. “I can’t get a new one from you if you’re dead, now, can I?” He nudged the mangled weapon with the toe of his boot as he continued. “Good ones aren’t cheap, you know.”
Refusing to admit she had saved his life, he turned to pick up the couple poison-tipped arrows still laying on the ground. He glanced back at Aeylisia as he replaced them in his quiver. “Get that bound.” He returned to stand beside her. “I haven’t got all night, you know.”
He looked to the deceased manticore again, and gave a gruff sigh. It’d better still be here when I get back, he thought darkly, then offered the elf a wary hand up, ready to draw it back, just in case.
“Yeah, yeah.” Victoria rolled her eyes playfully at the reminder. “Okay, Mr. Inheritance.”
One of the things she admired about him was that he never acted like those pompous rich people she heard about or saw on television, or gone crazy when it was signed over to him when he came of age. But then, the reason of the inheritance was sobering in and of itself. Though the faces of her own parents were scarcely more than pictures on the wall and the blurry memories of a five-year-old, his memories, she thought, were surely far more vivid. More recent.
She glanced out the window, and subconsciously reached up to finger the vial pendant hanging around her neck, a necklace that had belonged to her mother. She almost never took it off. A miniature rose rested in the upside-down teardrop suspended by an ornate metal stopper.
Her gaze went back to Alex and she gave him a warm, sincere smile. “Seriously, though. Thanks. I’d love to see your place sometime."
@kittyluna45
Very much so!
One thing Victoria liked about the rain, was that it so often drove everyone to stay indoors. Here, in the odd little café nestled in an out-of-the-way spot, the streets were virtually deserted. It was one of the few times she could comfortably gaze out windows, or walk the streets, even if the latter meant coming indoors soaking wet.
Victoria sipped at her latte, the perfect blend of toasted marshmallow and coffee flavoring, as Alex sweetened his coffee.
Alex’s voice drew her attention as a car rushed by.
“Rain’s always a good way to start a school year.” She placed her paper cup on the table and wrapped her hands around it, letting the warmth of the beverage soak into her skin. “The school’s not too bad. Navigating will be fun this week,” she finished sarcastically with a small smile. Her mind shifted to the still unknown roommate, and a knot clenched in her stomach. “Only one of my roommates was moved in when I left, though. Hopefully the other girl will be…” she faltered for a second and looked to her cup’s lid, catching herself before she said ‘human.’ “Nice. This place is great, though.”
She glanced around the café, careful to avoid the only other customer as he noisily flipped the pages of his newspaper. The barista had disappeared into the back room.
Sounds like great Christmas plans!



Well, unless you have THOSE kinds of in-laws, and it's more like this:

In which case, good luck, and I hope you guys have fun anyway!
Victoria returned Alex’s shrug lightly. “It’s not fair for you to always pay for both of us.” She took her card back from the barista and put it back in its place. “Besides, it’s the least I can do for you showing me around… and walking in the rain to get here.”
The shrrritt of the café’s latte machine sounded, and the robust smell of coffee beans burst anew as the barista expertly began to make Victoria’s latte, and put on a fresh pot of coffee. She glanced to Alex as he brushed aside his hair, then reached up and brushed her own from her face, the strands sticking to her skin. She gathered it up in a ponytail, and squeegeed it out a bit, the droplets falling to her already soaked shirt.
Letting her hair fall back around her face, she inhaled deeply at the smell of energy as if just the smell would imbue her with the pep from the coffee.
Alex’s coffee finished first. The man behind the counter placed a brown glass mug on the counter, steam rising from the dark liquid inside. “Fresh from the pot. Twenty-five-cent refills today. Start of school special. Help yourself to the creamers,” he nodded to a plastic organizer at the right of the counter packed with various flavors of creamer cups, “and sugar’s at the tables.” He went back to finishing up Victoria’s latte.
Once she had her warm beverage in hand, Victoria turned to the room and scanned the tables. Wanting to watch the rain, she headed toward one by the storefront window. Droplets beat down on the glass, creating thousands of streaks. The rainfall seemed to have diminished slightly.
“Mind a window seat?” She looked out the window at the mostly vacant street beyond.
206
@kittyluna45
Heh. Snow is beautiful... in moderation. And when you don't have to shovel it. We're actually supposed to be getting around three inches or something like that today, but we'll see.

@Treepuncher121
Welcome, welcome! :-)

@All
Anyone have plans for Christmas, or whatever holiday you may celebrate this time of year?

Thursday Morning


After spending what felt an eternity filling out paperwork the day before, Talia partially dreaded returning to Sector X. She had thought about banging her head on the desk many times, and was sure she had fallen asleep while filling out a form on medical history. At least, as she had hoped, Kalik had proven an excellent excuse to return to the outside world a couple times… one of those trips for her sake, and not Kalik’s.
That morning, after an unsuccessful hour of trying to coax her cats out from beneath the couch and half-heartedly convince Kalik he should not come to work with her again, she had headed to the storage units once more on foot, the husky mix eagerly at her side. A couple squirrels followed her most of the way, until Kalik grew irritated with them and chased them off.
I don’t know how moles can stand it, she thought as she waited for one of the elevators in Sector X, a half-full plastic coffee cup she had picked up the previous evening in hand. She pulled her phone out, double-checking the time to be sure she still had a while before she had to be to training. Whoever decided to build this place underground should be fired.
One of the elevator’s sounded, and a down arrow above the doors lit up.
She, Kalik, and a handful of others entered the elevator. Noticing her floor number was already lit, she busied herself with making sure she remembered the directions to the conference room. Who was it with, again? Kyle… She bit the inside of her cheek as she tried to remember his last name. Rodgers! She suppressed a self-satisfied smile.
Down, down they went. Two men got off on the same floor as her, but went in other directions. She muttered her directions under her breath as she went. Finally reaching what she hoped was the correct door, she took a deep breath and entered.
Though she was the first one there, florescent lights already shone brightly down on a long table surrounded by ten chairs. Thin carpet spanned the floor, and textured wallpaper plastered the walls of the small, windowless room in earthy browns. Besides a smartboard that took up most of one wall, the room was rather plain.
“Claustrophobia central,” she muttered, making Kalik look to her, his ears twitching. She frowned at the room’s color code. “Maybe it would actually help to be a mole…” Don’t think I’ve been a mole before, she added silently, resolving to give it a try sometime soon.
She went to the wheeled chair at the end of the table closest to the door, placed her purse and coffee cup down, and sat. She looked at the smartboard for a moment as Kalik sniffed at the floor around the chairs within the range of his leash.
Realizing the chair spun and wishing she had thought to bring something to do, Talia loosely tied Kalik’s leash to a table leg—mostly for show—pushed away from the table, and started to spin. Kalik paused in his sniffing to watch her, his head cocked and one ear raised, then went to smell the nearest chairs as the two waited for others to arrive.
@Kirah
Maybe snow doesn't believe in that part of the country.
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