Avatar of Riven Wight

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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
7 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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Heh, that's great. xD

Welcome to the Guild! Hope you enjoy yourself!
“Wherever you think best, then,” Victoria said. Though both options for a safe haven made her want to cringe, she only leaned lightly against the drawer chest. She turned the cup in her hands anxiously as Alex continued. They need her for something. And whatever it was, it could not be good.
“So, where are we, exactly?” she asked, not wanting to think about the two who had abducted her. “I mean, are we still in the same city?” It dawned on her that she had not so much as looked out a window, so she glanced to the nearest one, but curtains blocked her view of whatever lay beyond the kitchen walls.
Yay for post offices... Good luck!

Do you mind enchanted objects, like the sundial I mention? If you do, let me know and I'll change it.
“Genes do tend to distribute rather unevenly, my dear.” Thayva turned her smile to him, then drank from her cup, making a mental note to draw more water before the storm hit that evening, just in case.
“Oh, that would be wonderful.” She placed a hand on her lower back and stretched in emphasis. “And perhaps I could return the favor.” Thayva returned to Serapis and gave his muscular shoulder a squeeze, before rubbing between his shoulder blades with her free hand. “You’ve been rather tense yourself lately.” She stopped rubbing, letting her hand rest gently on his back as they waited for the meat to cook.

* * *

“Use your dirtiest shirt,” Nick suggested once the masseuse finished. “Not like it’s going to make it any worse.”
Some boys from the next group had already begun to filter in, some sitting on the tables, others laying down, and some unknowingly mimicking Jorn with late stretches.

* * *

Laya and Illyrana joined Kia and Laura just as the dwarf whispered to the youngest in the group.
Kia rolled her eyes. “You and your boys.” She grinned.
“I know a good spot,” Laya put in quietly. “As long as you don’t mind heights too much. Change out, then follow me.”
Kia quickly changed back into the standard daily dress, then waited with Laya for the other two. Once all four of them were there, Laya led the way.
“I’ll meet you in the cafeteria later,” Illyrana said when they entered the hall outside the changing room. “I have some things I need to do beforehand.”
With that, Illyrana headed in one direction while Laya led them the other.
Two flights of stairs up and plenty of avoiding a couple staff roaming the halls, Laya opened the door to what looked like a classroom that was now used for storage. She crossed to a set of doors that led out onto a balcony overlooking the backyard. A ladder was attached to the wall, ivy clinging possessively to the bars.
The ladder led to a part of the roof that, from where Laya stood, looked almost level. A perfect place to sit and talk.
“We’ll be capable of keeping an eye on the time.” Laya nodded to a large sundial in the expanse of yard as she gripped a rung of the ladder.
Having absorbed the light and energy from the sun while it was out, the roman numerals of the sundial glowed a faint golden color in the gloom cast by the ominous clouds hanging in the sky. The gnomon now moved along with the minutes, keeping track of the time despite the lack of light.
“How’d you find this?” Kia asked, following Laya as soon as she had enough room.
“Belle showed it to me.” She hurried up the ladder with Kia in her shadow.
Have you missed having downtime?
Victoria looked into her cup as if its contents might be hiding a better solution to sending messages. Alas, the artificial light of the kitchen glinting off the tea’s surface offered only the promise that her next sip would be as tasty as the last.
“I have until tomorrow to think about that, too, right?” she asked into her drink. “Where are we going to keep an eye on things from, anyway? Here, or somewhere more central? Unless ‘here’ is central...” She let the thought trail off as the realization that she had no idea where “here” was hit her in full.
The corners of Thayva’s long lips pulled up at Serapis as she went to refill her cup, a tinge of hunger beginning to gnaw at her stomach as the tantalizing scent of the mutton filled the kitchen and floated into the rest of their top floor apartment.

* * *

Nick’s masseuse gave a content smile at her companion’s words.
When asked to roll onto his back, Nick closed his eyes and placed his hands behind his head, breathing deeply.
When she dismissed them, Nick stretched and followed after his friends. He sighed at the reminder of having to clean the cafeteria. “At least there will be a lot of us,” he muttered. "It'll take less time."

* * *

Kia looked at Laura, contemplating whether or not she wanted to poke Laura to find out exactly how much like jelly they became. Deciding against it, she instead answered Laura’s question. “Better than twenty minutes ago.” She stretched, arching her back and stretching her arms in a feline form. “So, we have until the end of the massage sessions before we have to report to the cafeteria. Which means we have some time to kill. Any ideas?”

* * *

As they neared the end of the twenty-minute session, the mute halfling started casting glances to his adversary. The dwarf child seemed to have fallen asleep on the table.
As soon as the halfling’s masseuse finished, he hopped from the table, gave the woman a quick nod in thanks, then hurried after the other boys heading to the exit. He disappeared between the legs of the elder boys and the faces of those around his height before the bleary-eyed dwarf could remember where he was, let alone that he had a revenge to enact.
Unsure which was worse, the temporary thought that all supernaturals could read minds, or just a few like the man she stood in the kitchen with. Victoria hid her frown with another, long sip of tea. She nearly choked on it when Illyad mentioned other “psychic abilities.”
Victoria stared at him a long moment despite the hair prickling on the back of her neck at knowing what he is. She could barely stand the ability she had. The last thing she wanted was to add another one to that.
“I’ll... think about it,” she said slowly, stiffly. She looked to Alex, eagerly changing the subject. “What do we need, then, to keep an eye on everything?”
Welcome back! :-) Man, I lost track of the days. I'll try to get something up soon!
Victoria stared at Alex for a moment at the newest supernatural revelation. They can use telepathy... She turned her attention back to her tea with an uneasy expression.
“Can you do that with just other supernaturals, or anyone?” she asked, trying to make the question sound as innocent as possible before taking a sip of her drink.
She glanced to Illyad at his pondering. “I’ve never read anyone’s mind before, if that’s what you want to know.”

* * *

Luc paced Jevan’s study, an impatient scowl etched onto his pale features. He pulled his most recent burner phone from one of his coat pockets and checked the time yet again. At long last, the door through which Jevan and Nyaira had disappeared opened and the two came out.
What looked like a brass pocket watch engraved with silvery vines dangled at the end of a chain in Nyaira’s hand.
“Iz zat it?” Luc nodded to the pocket watch as Nyaira sauntered to him.
Nyaira nodded with a darkly satisfied smile, and gripped the watch. "It is, mon cœur." She opened it, revealing a compass with runes in the place of the cardinal directions. The needle swiveled around a few times beneath the glass as if it could not quite make up its mind which way it should point.
“She’s likely under a protection spell or two,” Jevan said lazily, looking over Nyaira’s shoulder at the compass. “As long as whoever’s protecting her doesn’t have stronger magic than mine,” he smirked at the mere thought, “it’ll sense her once you’re closer.”
“It ‘ad better, with ze time it took you.” Luc took the compass from Nyaira’s hand and examined its face before handing it back to her.
“You can’t rush perfection!” Jevan returned to his desk as the wall swallowed the door. “Now, if that’s all, I have work to get back to. Manfred will get you wherever you need to go.”
As if he heard his name, the sleek-looking butler held the remaining door open.
The vampires headed toward the exit.
“Oh, Luc.” Jevan reached into a drawer at his desk as Luc turned to face him, a hand lightly on Nyaira’s shoulder. “Before I forget.” He brandished a wide brass cuff, a series of swirling runes carved into the metal. He tossed to Luc, who easily caught it. “The enchantment on it will last about eight hours once you put it on. I should hope that’s enough time for you to do what you need.”
Luc snorted, pocketed the cuff, and hurried out the door, ushering Nyaira ahead of him.
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