Avatar of Riven Wight

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Recent Statuses

6 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.
6 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.
7 days ago
Tricks them into thinking it was their choice, when it was structured for them to fail.
1 like
7 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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Victoria shouted and stumbled to a halt when Alex all but appeared in front of her. In her haste to keep from running into him, she slipped on the loose gravel and fell backwards. She caught herself on part of the fire escape and just managed to keep from hitting the ground.
“...But there’s something in this alley...”
“Yeah,” she said in a shaky whisper as she pulled herself up and backed away from him, her eyes wide and glistening. “You.”
She shook her head at his request to come with him and his claim of an explanation. She would hear none of it. No more excuses. No more lies. She had chosen to let someone in, and it backfired in the worst of ways. Like it always did. That it was to one of his kind…
“I don’t ever want to see your face again,” she interrupted before he could get past “I’m sorry,” her voice an octave high than normal even in its quietness. “Leave. Me. Alone, filthy bloodsucker!” She managed to shout the last, then turned once more to leave the alley, searching for anything she could use as a weapon to fend him off if he tried to stop her again.
Nyaira sighed, and watched him leave. With a quick flip of her hair, she left the diner. Though Alex still clung to the humans, at least, if her suspicions proved correct, the visit was not a complete waste. She followed after Alex’s scent, her pace just faster than a human’s power-walk. After all, it was not like she did not know how to find him or his human... Victoria.

* * *

Victoria inhaled as the sound of feet stopped near the head of the alley. She stood quickly, and, forgetting about the fire escape, backed into it, hard. She gasped as the metal bit into her back, the force of her hitting it making a portion of the metal vibrate. She gritted her teeth against the pain just beside her spine, and looked over the dumpster.
Alex stood blocking the entrance.
Though she knew he could catch her in a heartbeat, every instinct inside her told her to run. So she turned, remembered just in time about the fire escape, and made her way toward the opposite end of the alley.
Here's to hoping! *Raises a can of Dr. Pepper.*
Not wanting to be pushed out of the seat, Nyaira moved out of Alex’s way.
“You can take a man out of the city, but you can’t take the city out of the man.” She smirked, refusing to admit defeat. “You can’t deny who and what you are, Alex.” She walked beside him as he headed to the door, her voice soft and alluring as she brushed her shoulder against his. “I think you know that, mon ami.” She walked slightly ahead of him and draped her hand on his arm, trying to force him into a slower pace.

* * *

Though she doubted it would take Alex more than a few seconds to catch up to her, Victoria ran as fast as her legs would go, paying her direction no attention. She bit her lip, hard, trying to keep back tears and bile. How had she not seen it? All those years. All those lies. And it was right in front of her face the entire time. Him being a vampire explained so much. The friendship she had valued for so long, built on false belief. How many times had she almost told him her greatest secret?
Does he already know? Victoria shook her head. She did not want to think. To feel the betrayal that made its way through her like a poison. She choked back a sob and lowered her head as she emerged from the side street she had absently turned down.
The sound of voices and cars brought her to a grinding halt. She narrowly missed running into a man dressed in a business suit.
He cast her a dirty look and snorted. Before Victoria could look away, his head flickered into one similar to an ox.
Victoria whimpered and pressed herself against the wall of the nearest building and quickly shifted her attention to the town square before her.
The streets were congested with people and cars from the lunchtime rush.
Her heart beat faster at the amount of people, her breathing refusing to even out.
Scents. The thought momentarily brightened her opinion of the crowd. Maybe he’ll lose my scent. She glanced down the alleyway, half expecting to see Alex or his ‘friend,’ then darted through the square. She wove between the people, carefully avoiding looking at those around her.
A car honked at her as she ran across the street. She drove herself into an alley that looked deserted. Her legs and lungs protesting her poor excuse of military avoidance tactics, she found a little niche between a dumpster and a fire escape, and leaned against the wall.
She placed her shaking hands over her mouth as she slid down the wall, her chest heaving from exhaustion, fear, and quiet sobs.
Nyaira stared after the human girl until Alex spoke. She gave a long, sad sigh, her face overly animated. “Don’t be so hasty, mon ami.” She exchanged the Southern drawl for her more natural general American accent. She reached across the table and took one of the thick-cut fries from Victoria’s abandoned plate.
“I was thinking about you the other day, and thought I’d drop in,” she said casually. She flipped her feathery hair over her shoulder with a seductive flick of her free hand. “Quite an interesting friend you have. You still hanging out with humans,” she scowled, her voice too low for human ears to eavesdrop on, “or did I scare off your next meal? Which is a new one, I must say.” She popped the fry in her mouth and looked to the door again with suspicious curiosity.
My gosh, it has! How have you guys been, besides busy?
@TheWindel
Sweet! And HI, WINDEL!
@Aristocles
I'm sure he would wave back if he could. ^.^
Nyaira pouted at Alex when he moved the menus, then slowly sat back closer to the edge of the seat.
“Everything I’ve done?” Raw anger flashed in Nyaira’s eyes, her snarl making Victoria wish she could disappear. Her expression changed to a simple hurt frown as Alex pulled out his phone.
Nyaira opened her mouth, but looked over when Victoria’s phone went off, her anger replaced with curiosity.
Victoria, ever aware of the vampire’s gaze, opened the text from Alex. Her heart skipped a beat. She tried to remain composed as “How?” looped through her mind. He has to mean something else.
“I only want to talk, Alex,” Nyaira said softly, sweetly. She reluctantly turned her full attention from Victoria as the human looked back to the two. “Just for a couple minutes. Catch up. Like the good days.”
Victoria glanced between them. The question of “how” still nagged at the back of her mind, when she noticed the similarities. Their beauty. Their grace. Even a sense of age beyond their appearance.
Alex was one of them.
Victoria felt like throwing up. She put her phone away, trying to hide her realization. She swallowed against a lump in her throat. “I-it’s fine,” she managed in barely a whisper as she scooted out from the booth, hoping her legs would not give out.
Nyaira’s attention returned to Victoria, her head cocked.
“I-I have to go, anyway.” She kept her gaze on the floor. “Thanks for lunch.” Victoria turned on her heels and hurried out the diner. The moment her feet hit the sidewalk, she broke into a run, hot tears making her vision swim.
“Victoria!” Nyaira cast a forced smile to her, apparently oblivious to the ice in Alex’s voice. “Such a lovely name!”
Victoria tried to smile back, but only managed a twitch of her lips. She hated hearing her name coming from that monster’s tongue. Finally, at the mention of their food, she broke her gaze from Nyaira, the burger and mound of fries all but forgotten a moment before. As she stared at the sesame seeds on the bun, a new thought occurred; Alex probably did not know what he was friends with. Most people never did until it was too late. She needed to find a way to tell him, but how, without sounding completely insane, or alerting Nyaira?
“Oh, of course!” Nyaira drawled, hanging her head back as if embarrassed. “Lunch! Oh, waitress!” she called to the woman, raising her hand and standing slightly from her seat to get her attention.
The waitress looked over from giving a receipt to the teenagers, who also turned and all but drooled at Nyaira.
“Could I get a menu?” Nyaira finished with a sweet, innocent smile Victoria did not buy for a second.
The waitress blinked dumbly at her a moment, then pointed to the stack of menus at the end of the table. “They’re at your table.”
“Oh, how silly of me!” Nyaira made a show of reaching across the table and taking a menu.
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