WayfaringWaaksian
To Anywhere but There
Fergie and Bogrum
On their way to the conference room, Bogrum wasn't ready to relent. "Are you trying to get away from me? You know we're headed to the same place." Her gait was brisk and a bit hard to keep up with, but he was managing. "Will you tell me what's on your mind?"
"Ugh, lay off. Don't make me talk 'bout me feelings, damn you."
"You did the same for me last night. It's the least I could do."
"... Nah. Least ye could do is leave me be." The harshness of her tone dropped significantly. "Actually in a good mood today. Pumped as hell. Don't need shit boggin' me down right 'fore the mission." Distraction kills, yes, but it went both ways. Sometimes it was better to stuff it all down, especially when there wasn't the time to unpack a bunch of complicated emotions. "Wanna play shrink? Wait till I get a few drinks in me tonight."
He smiled. "You're inviting my counsel?"
She turned her head just enough to shoot him a glare from under her hat. "Don't get a big head 'bout it."
"Don't worry, I will."
"When we reach the top of that castle, I'm pushin' you out the window."
The pair were some of the first to return to the room, behind Sebas and Melody. Though with the latter, neither recognized the pillar of black fog in her place. They couldn't have known about her powers, but it was easy to make the connection by the black marking on her face.
"Miss Treasure?"
Fergie tapped his elbow, whispering, "Don't bother her. Prolly just embarrassed from... y'know." After her own blunder with the Ord, Fergie had wanted to hide under her hat for the rest of the day, so it was an easy assumption to make.
Who she would grill for answers, however, was giving cat Avery some much needed moral support. "Sebas?" Fergie stepped up to the table, surprised to see him here in person. "Where's Lostro?" It wasn't that she didn't trust him, but she was immediately concerned. She remembered seeing Dr. Laylah launch herself from the ship, and if Sebas wasn't with the kid, who else was? "Ash watchin' her?" But she should be heading this way too. With that in mind, so should Elaina. Who was watching Orabelle, even?
"I'm sure he's got it taken care of, Fergie," Bogrum assured her. "Have some faith in your captain."
"I do," she said, that harshness returning. Chafed by the insinuation, she bristled and tensed her shoulders. "Just wanna know if we should expect her to come lookin' for him." Everyone had shades on hand when Lostro wasn't literally locked away, but not much could be helped if she decided to appear right in front of you before they could be put on.
"Doesn't her room suppress her powers, or something?" Kids kinda did what they wanted, especially if what they wanted-- needed, really-- was attention. But even still, "And she listens to Sebas. She wouldn't disobey him."
"I'm... Aye, suppose." She'd have to hear it from the horse's mouth first, but Bogrum had a point. Lostro didn't have a big habit of showing up unannounced, so either something or someone was keeping her in check.
Kylesar1 Emira Blight
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Nancy Noi
Nancy Noi
Time had stopped for this world so long ago, its residents could scarcely remember what it felt like to be under its ticking clock. Time pieces still measured the minutes and hours; simple tools that measured the mortal's comprehension of time weren't under its spell, and mortal beings still needed a way to schedule their affairs. And yet, despite bustling towns, flowing rivers, and swaying grass fields, the world was at a standstill. Not a blade of grass more had turned brown, or a leaf more fallen, trapped in an endless late summer. A chilly wind was from the frigid air of the Spirit Seas, rather than a cold autumn front. The salmon run, trapped in the downriver lakes, never turned pink or fought for mates who couldn't lay. Bear cubs remained cubs, deer foals remains foals. Children never grew up, and the old ones never passed on. No one died, and no one was born. Life went on, but was unchanging.
Those subtle, slow changes would take its time in showing themselves, should time return. But even though they couldn't remember the feeling, they would immediately recognize it. A curious sensation that was impossible to describe, despite it coming more naturally to mortals than any other entity. Something so ingrained, how can it be explained? And no one needed to; when time rippled through Kraiven for the first time in 200 years, every inhabitant felt it. From the lowliest of insects crawling in the dirt, to the King himself on his throne. Without it being said, they all knew.
And if anyone doubted their every molecule tingling in reverberation, all they had to do was glance out their window or up at the sky. Blue and clouded, unlike the ghostly appearance of its incorporeal counterpart. A sight to behold, after two centuries of aimless floating. And a sight unwelcome, to Stoneroses' resident alchemist.
Squinting through his glasses, Nancy was having trouble making out the three figures hovering over the distant mountains. His Lungborne vision wasn't any better above water than below, but he could make an educated guess. Floating... whales? Ships without sails? Whatever they were, it displayed innovation beyond their era. There was no doubting who the culprit behind this was. As for the why, his mind raced not to find a reason, but because there were too many to count. Their old enemy returning to finish what they started? A new one looking to take their land and resources? Clueless anthropologists meddling in affairs they ought not to? So much could happen in 200 years, he could only wonder what other sorts of motivations could be at play here. Whatever it was, malign or benign or in between, one thing was a certainty: their lives were about to be uprooted in a way that had only happened once before.
With the Emergency Meeting called, Nancy was one of the first to arrive, bursting from his laboratory at the first sight of red. "Ves!" His startled voice called from the crystal on his necklace, his face fixed in a familiar look of worry. Unfamiliar was it to see it mirrored on the cheery vampire's face. "I... I guess I don't need to ask what this is about." If someone hadn't figured it out by now, they had to be in a 200+ year-old coma. But Nancy was prepared... maybe a bit too prepared. His gear was fashioned to his belt, as well as his waterproof Bag of Holding. Almost as if he knew what was expected of him. "I didn't think it would be so soon..."
Was it ironic? That so much time could feel so quick? It wasn't even unnatural for Vespera, being an immortal vampire. Nancy should have died many, many generations ago. But there was so much more he wanted to do, so much more research to conduct. Plants and fungi never grew on their own, but all it took was a bit of magic to get the ingredients he needed. Rather than reaching an indefinite pause, his alchemy had only advanced, and all on his own terms. If this was it for Kraiven... if they lived to tell their tale... Nancy wasn't sure if he was ready to be subjected to the passage of time. To contend with his mortality, as well as the mortality of his companions. "Ves, whether it'll be true or not... just tell me we'll be okay? Please?"
Kylesar1
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