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DramaMyth

TRUST me, you have a purpose.


Juncture One: The Dawning



"You can feel it too, right? That tingling in your soul... like a gut feeling, but more. Like your DNA is literally nagging you to succumb to it's true intention. Change."

4.16 Years Ago

"OH HELLLL NAHHH." A suave yet mellowing voice echoed through the Asheville home, nice and complacent among the beautiful mountains of North Carolina. He'd faced a tedious task, it was literally all down to him. His teammates had fallen, twas but him that was left to take on an opposing team of 5 in Rainbow Six: Siege, one of his current favorites. Mr. King of All Trades had lived up to his name in a typical day. He'd woken up 6AM to get his Iron Spartan workout in, a brutal regime for the conventional human. He'd then danced in the nearby studio following his weight-cardio flex as if the insanity of energy wasn't already enough to perplex the mind, before heading home to shower and write some music and find appropriate instrumentals to make soul changing ballads to. And later, the young quasi-progeny would do some coding to brush up on his comp sci skills and probably head out again for Krav Maga. Typical outline for the life of Lance Rush. He was enjoying yet utilizing his summer to the fullest, having recently graduated with honors from his alma mater with a couple of bachelors' degrees and a thick aura of confidence and fulfillment in his spirit. He'd sat composed as he played his gaming console, moving as tactically in the virtual recreation as he matched to do in life. Humble, but ready to conquer any moment. That was until of course the sound of footsteps breached his headphones, and his character was assassinated. Groans and criticism covered the party chat with disdain. Dammit Lance... you suck. "Did you-- I suck!? HUNNNNNNH!? I'm sorry I had to mount the team on my shoulder and carry y'all to the wins we did manage to get! Bunch'a JAGGALOONS". Laughters emit in good kinship following, his friends and peers all synthesizing the experience as they all prepared to log off and head about their day. This was classic Lance, this was true Lance. The one who was always the life of the moment, but never demanded it. He was just simply himself. Optimistic & always faithful in the path life would deliver. No matter the storm, he always told himself that he was the wind. He was ready to drift anew to a day of potential and limitless opportunities. It was going to be a good day.

Was.

It was the last time Lance would remember tranquility.

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Eight Days Ago.

The shoe. The shoe has dropped. Four years of pain and torment. Four years of The House... a will minimalized, but not diminished. Long dread of searing lights and screams, his own. He doesn't remember tears, nor does he remember life... he just was. The Orchestrator as they'd called him and Lance had come to known, said that Lance was destined to change the landscape of the universe, that among all his occupants... Lance truly was one in a trillion. Something they'd never mentioned before. That was the day The Orchestrator made the biggest mistake of his or her life. He'd told the only subject that had been assessing this entire time the key to his... and now others' liberation. Being a cinephile had its merits, and no matter how long the time, a person's soul never withers... only sleeps, or soars. It triggered a memory of Lance's, a biopic about a chess player. It was providence, The Montecelli Trap. The endgame was the middle-game. And so... it was. The seconds, minutes, and hours melted into a stream of dormant consciousness, only occupied by his locked away thoughts of the notion of who he was before The House. Lights associated with pain, and then nothing but lucid experiences of voices and more lights... he could feel himself fading away from reality, only anchored by his sheer willpower and faith now.

And that was enough. It was more than enough. Because the next thing he remembered, were lights glitching as the voices and senses around him became more than lucid, they became real. It was a shock to the system that brought severe disorientation and psychological shock, so much so the young man jumped from his state like a rabid nightmare, sweating and body weak from what seemed like limb indolence and mental fatigue. He saw black suited security uniforms with no logo, no nametags, no identity. They flooded the room, yet their sight scattered all about as if they were searching for something. Lance crumpled himself off of a sole medical bed, the IV in his arms bringing a slight sting to his epidermis. The momentum should've been enough to send the bed crashing down with him... but a peculiar thing: Lance looks up at the bed, and the IV's... both perfectly intact. For a nanosecond, confusion struck Lance as he then immediately converted it into resolve, bolting for the open door as he bumped into a guard, sending the being flying into the wall.
Not too weak I see... Lance thought to himself. But that was where his mistake came, as the guards all fired in the direction of the contact at the exact moment Lance lost resolve and concentration. It seemed to have gave attention to the security, as all of a sudden their focus laser locked on him, but as Lance noticed their body language... it was as if they'd seen a ghost. Lance felt the sting of a needle in his back, as he gradually slumped to the floor, his eyes fading on the view of the medical bed and a large, helmet construct above it with searing lights. That was it, the shoe. It clicked for Lance. He wasn't experiencing anything at all, because he was living in a dream... they all were. It was the most frightening, but most liberating piece of information. It was the key.

"Put him back in."

Lance knew that voice anywhere. The Orchestrator. "Ninety-Five... you gave us quite a scare. You're too precious to risk. You are going to change the world don't you see? You are the one of the strongest souls I have ever seen, and it will save humanity." Lance managed to peer outside the door, leading into a very long corridor of other two-way mirrors and doors, designed like the room he was confined to. It was them, the occupants. Had to be. Lance ushered a deep exhale in revelation of this, the awareness fading from his perception. He heard for the first time in the endless stream of time at The House.. other voices. Screams, cries, pleas. A huge burden ironically left his chest, he knew now he was truly not alone, moreover... they were going to be just fine. Just hold on a little bit longer... Lance sinks to the cold surface beneath him, yet upon his final moments in the conscious realm... he felt a distinct shape pressing into his abdomen. Slinking faintly, he brought his hands under him as if trying to get up, when really he was feeling out the object... it was the shape of a card, and almost as if God Almighty placed a gift in his lap, Lance sighed in a ending relief, too weak to react any stronger. It was from when Lance bumped into the guard, it must've pulled the card free. The guards turned him over and picked him up, to find nothing but a cold & hard surface. They sat him back on the bed, and The Orchestrator begin initialization of a monitor in the corner of the room, that activated the helmet-of-lights. Lance's last view was of The Orchestrator in an all black hazmat suit, tinted visor. "Lance, The Centennials are just a me-----" He fades away into REM State, losing all grip of senses. However, upon looking at Lance's face just before meeting the void, one would swear the young king of fortune was smirking. An internal seed to sprout at the moment of imminence.

Remember... HURRY.

___________________________________________________________________________________________________________
One Week Ago.

Endless streams of time. Watching. Waiting. The one flaw in the system: It looked in there as it did in reality. REM State allows for the brain to be actively cognitive, yet subtly dormant. Lance skated in between the blurred line. Solemn, stoic, and silent... those were his laws in an environment designed to cripple and torment the persona. Lance was an anchor, and he knew they were watching both inside and out. Good. Because today was the day. This was the eve of a new dawn, for him and for all the oppressed like him. he didn't know who they were, or where they hailed from, but they shared a common bond, and that bond would be enough to forge a fire to burn The House to pieces, if not just metaphorically, then fundamentally. Lance closed his eyes in the artificial construct of causality. The laughs from his family, banter from his friends, the loves he invested, the tears that he's shed, the life that was removed from his peace. He felt it all at once, blended it into one single purpose; It was the purpose that availed him last time. To simply be, and to fade away. He meditated, waiting..... waiting.... in the abyss of dark and unknown, he was there, waiting for the light.

But he was met with something else. Destiny.
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The helmet-of-lights glitches as Lance comes back to the real world. The seed that was planted embedded his mind with ambition and objective:
HURRY. Lance awakens and rips the IV's from his arms, a roar of absolution sounding through the corridor. He felt the changes on his skin, his afro and very bushy beard prominent from all the time under. Lance shakes and smacks himself as he drags himself to the security door to his room, the craggy stone walls almost as if they're underground somewhere being a cold reminder of the hardship ahead of him. Focus... this is it. The high tech door slides open as the light goes green and a team of security flood the room to an empty bed. "Sir, Nine-Five is invisible again, orders?". It was too late. Lance clings to the wall of the corridor, mustering himself along as more guards run past him and into Room #95. He was still silent, stoic, and solemn, but this time there was a lighter expression to his face. Hope. He channels his inner top tier athlete and training, shaking himself into a primed state as he starts to get feeling back in his arms and legs fully. He runs from Rooms #94 down to #90, pulling the keycard he'd stashed in his white gown out and swiping past the doors, the beautiful sound of the code switching from red to green as the doors to the rooms open. Lance one by one removes the REM helmets from the occupants, and it wasn't until he got to Room #91 and saw a young girl about his age did the House Security catch on. "CODE BLACK! WE HAVE A CODE BLACK! THE DOORS ARE OPEN PROTOCOL CONTROL OVERRIDE!" The corridor now darkened as red alert lights flashed all over the place, with Lance freeing #91 and moving down to #90. If the format was true, then there were 10 Rooms on each floor... but how many were there? It was then Lance remembered The Orchestrator's words... Centennials. That's the term associated with one-hundred. For the first time in the years that he'd been here, Lance spoke out. "Well damn." Numbers 90-94 awaken and falter out into the hall, with the Houseguard drawing from non-lethal to now dangerous weapons. "GET DOWN ON THE GROUND NOW, HANDS U--" One body flies into the wall. A barrage of bullets goes off as another guard body is used to shield the direction of 90-94. "SHIT, NINE FIVE IS ACTIVE. I REPE--" Two more bodies clash into each other. Nothing can be seen in the flashes of dim red in the corridor, as the Houseguard all try to remain composed, getting knocked unconscious one by one. Lance was sure the new awoken were panicking, he had to be the beacon they could lean on. He drops his focus, his invisibility ending and appears abruptly to the five individuals "Hey! Hey! It's okay... I'm one of you. This has been a long time coming, I know you're scared and frazzled but they've been keeping us here sedated in an engineered coma. We don't have much time... I don't know if the term Gift or Centennial means anything to you but that's us okay? We have to use it and stick together if we wanna get out of here. Okay? Oh... I'm Lance by the way." Just like that, the king of trades was back and in rare form, adapted and ready. It didn't remove the years of pain, but he could channel the storm, to become the storm now.

There had to be an override somewhere, where they could control the lock mechanisms on every Room. Lance knew 90-94 were still waking up and gathering themselves, but he needed to get the rest out. There were 90 other lives he needed to save and liberate, and he'd do just that. He hands the keycard to #91, the girl he'd seen and freed when things went to shit.
"Stick with the others. Find the other floors and free everyone. I'm gonna find the override and monitor the controls from there. They can't catch what they can't see." Lance gives a hopeful smile to the girl and her group and fades into existence. He finds the swarm of Houseguard filling into the stairways at the end of the hall, but that wasn't his target. They were probably following protocol and going to secure the other rooms, Lance needed the big fish. He peered up the vast stairway, seeing that he was on the bottom-most floor. That means 1-89 were on the above floors. The stairs were scattered with black uniforms, but a focused sight locks Lance's gaze on a spot of white. A white lab coat, not a guard, likely higher clearance. They seemed to scan into the central pillar which Lance inferred served as an elevator of sorts. That's where he needed to be. He moves swiftly, skimming the walls and trying to be as off-base as possible from the center of the stairs as not to run into anyone. He reaches the ramp leading to the central pillar and stands idle yet pacing to himself, eager with adrenaline to free the rest of The Centennials and praying #91 and her group was okay. This was the only shot they'd have, if this failed they'd likely be killed or worse, more of the same with added security measures. Like a call by fate, Lance sees another researcher hastily moving down stairs towards the pillar, but a few floors up. Lance rushed with grace to the stairway and sprints up closer to the scientist, the door just opening as Lance was closing in from yards away. The lab coat shines to Lance's eyes like a beacon to a sailor, as he slides and shifts pasts dwindling Houseguard to make it inside the elevator just before it closes, the researcher none the aware for Lance's presence. Lance controls his heavy breathing as quietly as possible, not certain if his gift extends to hearing as well as sight. His eyes never left the scientist, gazing down to a keycard that had no photo or ID, only color. It was black. Code Black instantly triggered in his mind. He needed that card.

The elevator opens as Lance reaches the top floor of The House, to see that it was more like a vast and advanced bunker of sorts. There were way more white suits than black ones here, meaning this had to be the main hub for operations. It would make sense to keep the captives deeper underground. Lance wondered if this was some terror group or government organization, but he had no time for that... he had to act. He followed the researcher into a lab where a whole staff of scientists, engineers, and operators were all communicating to one another and getting feedback. Lance was almost amazed at the structure and setup of the place, it was some technology he was familiar with studying computer science. All his attention faded at the mention of The Orchestrator, who could be seen on a monitor labled Section 9, showing the black hazmat suited director on the floor Lance was on. This was the perfect opportunity. They were on the deepest floor, the only way to go was up... right into the rest of The Centennials. Lance moved through the hub to where operators on headsets were typing in commands to lockdown all exits and doors.
Okay, here we go... Lance takes a deep breath and pinches the operator, the shock from the sensation making him jump out of his headset and grab his arm in bewilderment. Lance crouches under his legs to see a series of wires running concurrent with the computers and monitors. That would lead him to the servers. It wasn't long before Lance found the closed off room, but with a looted keycard from the pinched Operator, the code switches green and Lance enters the room where there were only a handful of technicians. This whole thing had to be adequately funded to be this well supplied, but it no longer mattered, because as Lance found the central servers where all wires would lead, he smirked an invisible satisfaction. He heaved the bulk of cords in his hands, and with all the built up anguish and empathic turmoil of his fellow captives, he pulls the cords from their server sockets as hard as he could. And then darkness. The emergency power would queue, but by then it would be too late... the REM helmets would be shut down and The Centennials would be free to their own volition.

Free to be free.

The rest was in their hands. All they had to do was get themselves to the top, where the Hub was. Lance and Team 91 as he dubbed them would take care of the support. In the brief moments of the power assimilation, Lance would take the chance to help The Centennials out further by heading back into the main area of the Hub, where frantic researchers and crew all scatter from section to section trying to salvage data and information imperative to The House's operations. Lance managed to slide up to a vacant station and open the command console, viewing the list of commands and then promptly typing in the command to manipulate and shut down all monitors tied to the cameras in each Room, every single one. Lance then jumps from the chair and scurries into a scientist on accident, breaking his lucid focus and reappearing to everyone. The man in front of him looked paled and in sheer terror, as if Lance was a loaded gun pointed at the guy. He might as well been, they'd all been deemed nothing more than subjects of pain and evolution here, maybe he'd seen the anger in Lance's eyes... or maybe even the sadness. Neither was worse, but both were immensely powerful influences. Lance tilted his head in cognizance of the scientist... it was the same man who'd done his REM psych evaluation. Lance was certain not every Centennial would have the same composure and self-discipline, but The House brought it on itself. There's no telling what they've brought out of people's deepest crevices. Lance nabs the keycard from the fallen scientist and bolts for the main door, a huge silo looking door he was sure was the way out. Houseguard close in on Lance with guns drawn as he presses the keycard against the reader, as it switches green, the huge door slides open slowly, but not at a pace that would ensure his safety. Lance turns around, fatigued but empowered in the moment from the surge of it all.


"NINE-FIVE! DOWN NOW! OR WE WILL KILL YOU!" Suddenly, a breaching voice on the radio of one of the guards... THE voice. Orchestrator. "No! 95 is to be taken in alive! The Deca cannot be harmed!" Lance heard all he needed to hear to bolt for the exit as the guards swapped to non-lethal measures. The door simply wasn't opening fast enough, and like a lion cornered, Lance turned back and run full speed at the guards, as they aim at Lance he closes his eyes. And then, nothing. Among the buzzing horns and flashes of emergency lights, Lance was still up and active, but the guards were down. They were subdued, he didn't know how, and he didn't know who but he was grateful nonetheless. "Thanks!" he uttered to anyone and no one, whoever it was that may have graced him. The path was clear, he could see it: Light. Stopped at the cusp of the border of The House, lined up dozens of Houseguard all aimed on Lance, with a helicopter swirling outside overhead ready to intercept any stray activity. "You're done now." Lance's heart drops as the Orchestrator walks forth obscured by the black hazmat suit, voice muffled and distinct. How did he make it to the top!? Let alone outside!? "It's over, 95... you are truly a spectacle. This was your endgame huh? Admirable. Four years of silence just to manipulate a fracture of opportunity. More and more you and your occupants impress me. But this is done--" His speech is cut off by the terrifying scream of both guards and scientists from behind Lance, as bodies fly and the Hub goes dark with red flashes. Silence. And then... liberty. The sight of a crowd of white gowns emerging from the stairs and pillar alike, placing an involuntary gasp & smile into Lance. They seem confused and dazed, but focused enough to know the situation at hand, that they were taken from their life as the person beside them was too. They looked pained, but they looked hungry, and not for food, but for answers. Lance turns back to The Orchestrator, whom even though he couldn't see their face, he knew it was full of fear and panic. "You were saying?" Lance says as he fades from sight & reality, the white gowns all screaming and charging the exit. "TAKE EM DOWN. Bring Section 9 to ME." The Orchestrator yells as the Houseguard fires lethal bullets into the crowd of subjects. Lance could only have faith none would perish, but that would be unrealistic. No checkmate came without pawns of sacrifice. Which is why he opted for the Montecelli Trap: To win the exchange, you must surrender to the logic of loss. From outside, Lance hyperventilated at the choice before him. It was the age old question: Would you kill lives, to save lives? While in his Null-State, He'd slipped a gun from a guard and knocked him out, and now his reflexes had but seconds to combine all his life wisdom and experience into one impulse decision. He could mow down the legion of guards, here and now and allow The Centennials to break free, or he could freeze, and possibly die, ending all of this for nothing. All the Krav Maga and athleticism in the world couldn't be applied adeptly in this surreal situation, where the stakes are life altering. So he chose outside the box. He switched to tranquilize and aimed the ACOG scope at the pilot of the helicopter, having faith there was enough force to push through the window, let alone his aim.

"Come on Lance...just like Siege, but ...er, real." he steadies... and shoots the tranquilizer into the steady chopper, the window creating a micro hole as the dart lands in the pilot's arm, a very unlikely probability. It was almost like the odds were fated on The Centennials' side. The chopper starts to swirl out of control, as the pilot dozes into a sleep, the chopper spinning towards the outside team of Houseguard, distracting them from gunfire and causing them to scatter like roaches. Among the thunderous clash of metal onto earth, the roars of white gown Centennials soon followed, their faces almost clung to the light outside as they blasted past the doors to The House and into a remote mountainous region. Cries of joy and of pain alike went out from subjects, as everyone ran in various directions. It was a misery to endure, but a beautiful sight in Lance's eyes... partly due to him. But there was no time to breakdown in joy yet, they still had to vacate the vicinity. Lance drops his focus and reappears, tired and drained from his endeavors. A small group of Centennials stop to help him up. "Thank you... we.. we can get out of here now. You're free. You're... we're..." Lance collapses. And that, was the beginning of a revolution. The Revolution of Evolution. That was a week ago. Not long after that, he'd woken up in a run down villa to find out they were in Puerto Rico. They, being his group of Centennials that managed to escape and get themselves and him to safety.

His current family.

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Now.


"You can feel it too, right? That tingling in ya soul... like a gut feeling, but more. Like your DNA is literally nagging you to succumb to it's true intention. Change."

A now clean-face shaven Lance says to everyone and no one about their Gifts, trying to build some camaraderie with his fellow group of Centennials. There was himself, Vince: an abnormally tall and more elder man, Anna: a young kid that seemed isolated and detached, Landon & Nick: another two teens around Lance's age that seemed the quiet but angry type, Kostya: a Russian looking fellow, and three females: one seemed a little older: Credence, one was about Lance's age: Mila, and the other was the first person he'd recognized when he'd woken up, #91, the girl that he'd woken up in The House: Sofia. They were laying low in the villa, trying to avoid all attention and attraction from The House. Lance was the one least in the loop the past couple of days, the first few days after the escape he was sleeping, hard. They'd almost thought he was in another coma. There was one point when Lance's Gift kicked in and he vanished from view, he got a laugh at that when they told him. He'd been keeping to himself lately, knowing sooner or later he'd have to formulate some sort of plan of advancement. Then there was the priority of them finding the others. The other Centennials, who were probably so lost and scared, the empathy of it all made Lance's eyes mildly begin to water. They needed help, all of them. He'd probably make a run to a mart soon in the barrio, to get more shave razors, water, and essential foods for the group. From the little time he'd known his group, he'd seen Vince was more equipped to deal with covert situations like these from his explanation of his military knowledge, Credence had mentioned experience too, but then she stared on about being a baby and an old woman and lost Lance. But, they had to stay sharp, this was the end of a misery but a start to a new peril.

This was only the beginning.







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"...Hmmng. I'm feeling something, I suppose."

Staring off into the underbrush through the frame of a shattered window, a frown deeper than the Mariana Trench was set into Guy's visage. Anyone could recognize it: the look of an utterly exhausted man. Even as the others talked and worked around him, Guy remained largely unmoved. Although his unshakable gaze was anything but thoughtless - mind racing at a million miles a minute - there was an undeniable weariness to it. Even a kid could see in his eyes just how close he was to laying down under that hot tropical sun and never getting back up. The key word, of course, being close. If his fatal flaw in his old life had been a bitter unwillingness to relent, then it was just the opposite now: the one thing keeping him alive. Not for himself, but for every other kid in that madhouse who had been wronged.

...and... Denver.

Lance's words washed over him with the same weightlessness as the cool ocean breeze drifting lazily through the run down villa. They had the same impact on Guy as a quiet gust brushing past an ancient oak: negligible. Rather, he was instead much more caught up in his own internal monologue. Sure, their own little ragtag group was safe - well, safe as a group of hunted human quarry could call themselves - but his thoughts continued to drift back to the other eighty or so Centennials still unaccounted for. The ones he didn't see escape the gunfire. The ones whose gifts couldn't defend them from swarms of armed men. The ones who might not have been lucky enough to develop a gift at all. Like a crowd of phantoms, one "what if?" after another howled and wailed in the back of his mind.

"I think we're all on the same page in here," he said abruptly, breaking his silence for the first time in the past hour or so. He stood up slowly. Carefully. Only a foot or so of space saved him from brushing against the ceiling. Clearing his throat and brushing debris from his pants as though clearing the ill thoughts from his head, Guy continued. "About our first priority, I mean. Nobody's said it, but we're all thinking it. There's a bit less than a hundred other people out there in this sweltering nightmare, and as far as we're concerned, they're unaccounted for. Anybody see the problem here? You're all bright kids, I'm sure you can."

A lump hardened in his throat as he looked over the room. The mere week he'd spent with these people had felt like an eternity, and there was something intimate between them all. Something unspoken. In their presence, he felt a lot of things, but most of all, he felt pity. Not the condescending pity one felt for a crushed insect - no, it was something much more sympathetic than that. Perhaps even seeing some of his younger self in them and their situation. For himself, Guy at least had the cold comfort that he had lived a well and long enough life, but these people? As far as he could see, the oldest among them was barely above thirty. Each and everyone of them, if they got out of this, had a long life ahead of them. A life they would have to live on carrying this tragedy with them forever. The thought only deepened his anxieties, and for a brief moment he closed his eyes, deciding to save the wistful philosophies for later. None of it would matter if they didn't even live to see tomorrow, let alone the rest of their lives.

"Between us all, I'd like to think we have the manpower to be capable of splitting into two or three groups," he added, tone just a shade quieter. "Time is vital right now. We just can't afford to focus on only survival or only searching - we need to spread our efforts. Right now we have the advantage of knowing everyone is confined to this relatively small island, but we can't know how long that will last, nor how long we have until The House- well..." His voice trailed off, expression wavering for a moment. "...I think we all agree on just how dire the situation is."
 


Sofia Genova594232Torture in the form of everlasting sleep
The sun burned down from the sky leaving Sofia's pale skin pink in colour. She laughed as her seat on the swing set was pushed higher and higher with each oscillating movement. "Higher daddy, higher!" She screamed happily, her heart swelling with joy as she looked up at the light blue sky. "Sofia, if I push you any higher, you're going to fly off into the sky." Her father chuckled, still giving his daughter's seat another good push, one that would take her just a little higher. In this moment, Sofia felt bliss for the first time, a feeling she would soon begin search for in the years that followed. Her father was her hero, nobody made her smile the way he did. The bond they shared was beyond a father-daughter relationship, it was a long life friendship. Going to the park was one of their everyday routines. When Sofia's father would get home at exactly 5:45 P.M., she would run up to him and hug him. After the friendly greetings, she would beg him to bring her to the park even though she knew what he would respond with. After we have dinner. That particular habit she formed at a young age grew into a belief system. Sofia developed an ultra-ambitious character, never giving up when times get tough. Blue skies, her father's voice, the feeling of the sun kissing her skin softly, the smell of freshly cut grass...

Her father pushed her one last time, this time sending her higher than he ever had before. Sofia's heart skipped a beat, the excitement of this first experience made her eyes widen in awe. The sky was so blue.
"Daddy, you pushed me up so high that it's taking forever for me to get down!" She screamed excitedly, still looking up at the sky. She could have swore that she was flying, she felt free. When she didn't her her father's immediate response, she decided to look back at him to make sure everything was okay. But, when she turned, he wasn't there, and she was 35 feet up in the air. "Daddy!" She yelped out of fear, her heart began to pound in her chest. Her head shot back towards the sky. It was black. The sky that was once so blue was dark.

The moment that changed everything
Once Lance pulled off Sofia's helmet, her eyes turned a dark shade of brown, their regular colour. Her breathing was heavy and her skin was slicked in a light coat of sweat. It was not until that second that she realized that she had been having the same continuous nightmare for her entire stay at The House. She blinked at the boy in front of her, taking in the expression on his face, whatever was going on around her seemed to be quite serious and in need of immediate attention. Although she had no idea who this man was, she had a gut feeling that he was not one she had to fear. She listened to his words, trying to understand what he was saying but all she heard was white noise. The shock of the entire situation was starting the settle in, she felt as if she had been dead for years. She felt as if she had lost years of her life in this dreadful place. Her blank expression continued as the boy spoke, she stared at his lips to try to read what he was telling her. She looked down at the keycard in her hand and then back up at him. The only thing she was able to make out from reading his lips was
"free everyone", and that was exactly what she intended to do.

Sofia sprung up from her bed, her right hand gripping so tightly onto the card that it was beginning to slice her outermost layer of skin. She towards the door, poking her head out slightly to make sure that the coast was clear. Once she realized that everyone was focused on the boy who freed her, she sprinted towards the stairs. Her mind raced with confusion as she was trying to piece together what exactly was taking place. She ran towards the rooms that looked exactly like hers, figuring that there would be more people who were in her specific situation. Without blinking an eye, Sofia scanned the card that was given to her on the doors' locks and ripped of the helmets attached to the heads of the others.


"Come on!" She waved at them, she attempted to encourage them to leave their beds and join her in freedom. They followed. Once Sofia made it to the third floor, she ran into problems. In front of each door was a guard, armed with a riffle. Her eyes widened at the sight. "Fuck," she whispered to herself and gestured to the others not to move. "We have to move up, we cannot risk exposing ourselves to free them." She decided, gesturing the group to follow her up the stairs. She peeked on every floor, and every floor was covered in guards. "They must know that we have been freed," she said to them. "We have to be quiet and quick," She stated firmly. "STOP RIGHT THERE. ALL OF YOU!" A deep voice shouted. Adrenaline pumped through Sofia's veins as she realized that they had been caught. "Run!" She screamed, running up the stairs as fast as she could. She heard the sound of bullets being set off, but she would not dare to turn around. Ignorance is bliss. She up the stairs until she couldn't anymore, she reached the final floor. She felt cornered, there was nowhere else for her to run. She headed towards the glass doors that would lead her into the hallway of the last floor. It was there where she heard the commotion, she heard the voice of the boy that freed her. She followed his voice. She could hear the sound of men's dress shoes hitting the hard ceramic floor as they chased after her and yelled things towards her, but she refused to do anything other than focus on getting to that boy, and she did, along with quite a few others.

After freedom
Once she was free, Sofia began to indulge in an abundance of food specifically, Italian food. Her once raggedy black hair was now formed into soft curls falling right below her mid-back. She finally felt like she was back to normal because her sleep cycle finally regulated and she no longer slept for whole days at a time. She began to bond with those around her, but not the one who saved her. She wanted to thank him for what he did, but he was always asleep in his room, disconnected from the rest of them.

Current state
Sofia leaned on the wall to her left with her arms crossed over her chest.
"I think we all understand how extreme this situation is." She rolled her eyes at Guy. "Why don't we stop talking about our current situation and start planning for how the hell we're going to fix this." She stated and pushed herself off the wall. She walked towards Guy and stood next to him with a hand on her hip. "I think we could all agree that #95 is vital to our survival right now as he knows a lot more than most of us here. We should get his input before we start making any irrational decisions," She looked for any disagreements within the rest of the group.


 
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With a long, low sigh, Guy held the bridge of his nose hard enough to turn his face a shade redder, organizing his thoughts. He stood there for what could have been a minute or an hour with his face in his hand like that, silent. He couldn't tell if this kid was trying to pick a fight or was just stressed like the rest of him, but either way, he had no interest in getting into anything heated. He couldn't even be mad, really. Just tired. More tired than he already was. Was a little respect in such a tense and life threatening situation too much to ask for? Maybe. He certainly remembered copping an attitude when he was around her age. But all the empathy in the world didn't stop her catty attitude from making his skin crawl.

"...making plans for how to fix this? You mean like what I was just doing? You're more than welcome to throw your own two cents into the ring - and I mean that in the most sincere way possible, miss Sofia. Nobody in here is an enemy. Let's not make more than we have. I genuinely would like to hear a better idea if you think I was in any way shortsighted." His frown deepened, though, as she continued, and his arms folded themselves almost as if in slow motion.

"He has a name, you know," he cut in bluntly. "We're all people in here, not cattle. We're not defined by our brands." Guy punctuated that part specifically by gesturing to his shoulder, where the number 39 had been hastily stitched on.

"What we are not going to do, however, is put people on pedestals. We're all equally important in here." He paused to point to every individual in the room, an unreadable expression on his face, eventually landing on Sofia herself. "Everyone one of us. That includes you. I'm all for a second opinion, if that's what you want, but let's not start right off the bat defining some people as more important than others."
 

No. 086 Credence Babcock 594399

“Credence!” Eugene roared. His voice was stern and smoky, yet unsure of itself, his tongue sloshing about, awkwardly stumbling around the syllables of my name. Rarely did ‘Credence’ pass his scar bitten lips, it always sounded so clumsy and awkward coming from him, especially when he had been tending to his sorrows. Eugene preferred to keep things formal – usually sticking to “ma’am” or “private” – which was the same reason I called him by his first name instead of the million other epithets one would use for their parent.
“God help you, Credence!” That was becoming a bit of a joke at this point, He never did. “For what you put me through, I should have you strung up!”
Heavy, uncoordinated footfalls assaulted the stairs leading to the attic of our house. My small frame began to shake violently, light tears gracing my cheeks. The unmistakable taste of copper filled my mouth as I bit down on my tongue to keep myself from whimpering.
Anticipation gave way to acceptance as, slowly, the trapdoor was pushed open, and the off-white glow of dying incandescent light bulbs filled the musty attic. The scent of alcohol came off the breeze as my hiding place began to ventilate, and mingled with the already overpowering scent of sawdust and fiberglass. It seemed I would need to find a new retreat.
A somber expression had conquered Eugene’s face as he stepped into the tight space, his belt in one hand, and a bottle of whiskey in the other. It seemed he had forgotten to put it down in his rage.
“Credence... look at you... like a pathetic wounded animal... hiding from the world in your cave.” Eugene gave a sigh of exasperation as he swayed unsteadily. His jaundiced eyes seemed terrible and beady in the dim light. “When you leave this place, you had better hope... you had better hope the beast that comes out of this cave of yours is not a demon.”
He raised his belt.


***
One week ago...
Fading, flickering, faltering. The lights of the REM helmet went out, and the sliding of Subject No. 086’s cell door filled the already frantic air with a smooth mechanical whir. This was the sound that brought No. 086 – who was no longer No. 086, and finally Credence once more – into the present. Rather, into the present that another infinite other presents would converge on. Still, it was enough. As all of time poured forth, like a great waterfall into the endless mouth of what was, is, and will be, Credence had managed to cling to a single drop of water, a single period in time, just as she had practiced. It would be of great strain to remain focused on the present in which her body currently existed, and not the ever-roaring currents that swelled infinitely in her mind, so to assist, Credence recited to herself what she knew had already happened.
As she discerned it would be, Lance Rush had exploited a glitch in the REM helmet’s feed. Miraculous, if you were to really linger on the reality of it. It was such a tiny flaw in a vast system of well-worked and monitored computers, a fraction of an error in the networks relay, but just enough of a chink in the armor that a well-timed maneuver could slide through the seemingly impenetrable guard. From there, Lance had done his part in freeing enough subjects to put all that should be into motion.
To free the mad Gods. The Gifted. The Hundred. The Centennials.

Credence allowed herself a small grin as she shakily stepped from her cell into the rushing waves of chaos.

‘This cave of mine... the beast that now emerges...’
Her bare feet planted themselves firmly onto the cold metal floors as she awaited the oncoming rush of bodies to carry her to freedom. She saw it all infinitely and knew exactly how each foot would fall, how each body would flail, would falter.
The desperation, the excitement, Credence had already experienced it.

‘That beast... Once a whimpering, pathetic thing...‘
With an inhuman grace, without wavering, Credence fell into place exactly where she needed to be. Bodies would unwittingly take bullets for her; bayonets would stray inches from her flesh, she would slip through the cracks, exist on the peripheral.
‘Is it a demon?... Or something more terrible?...’
Torrents of wind sent chills spiraling across Credence’s pale and scarred skin. She rose from the abysmal House amongst a whirling typhoon of bodies, which quickly dispersed to the surrounding land. Many were injured and would be recaptured, others would lose themselves and die in the surrounding wilderness, and some had already perished. There was, however, a sizeable amount that would successfully escape, and of those, there was a small group that Credence knew she needed to join. But she was quickly forgetting why. Her hold on that droplet of water that was the present was slipping, blurring together with the rushing waterfall of time. Credence knew her mental focus was exhausting; she had to get to them quickly.
Technically blind, if Credence lost sight of this present, she was as good as dead, if not worse.
Fueled by adrenaline, the newly freed experiment burst forward towards the departing group, a hand outreached. She attempted to call out for them but found her voice too weak from dereliction. The blur of reality was crashing down, the weight of infinity slowly stripping the mind.
A finger touches a shoulder.


‘The beast that emerged from this cave... Was it a demon, or something more terrible?'
'Was it a demon, or was it a God?’


***
Presently...
Spiraling into the infinite, Credence found it difficult to keep control of what she wished to focus on. The unyielding flow of time was experienced in its multitudes all at once, and there was so much to distract from the present her flesh called home. She was usually only half aware of her current state, just barely enough to operate in the world. To most any outsider, she seemed consistently dazed or daydreaming, whispering of things far off – things unimportant and puzzling. And that was how she existed presently, among the group of centennial survivors she had leeched herself onto.

Lance’s words filled the silent, dank, air of the abandoned villa, but they seemed to exist in Credence’s periphery, she was focused on something they couldn’t see.
Head resting on the tarnished, termite-ridden table between her fellow escapees, the woman began palming the clothes she wore. First, she traced a finger, almost absent-mindedly, along the edges of her wool navy-blue poncho, which she sported over a set of tactical, tan cargo pants and an ill-fitting black sleeveless shirt.
Pulled by some unseen magnetic draw, Credence’s finger found a pocket, and it guided the rest of her hand inward. There she slipped a thumb over the lenses of a pair of black, round-rimmed sunglasses, which were pocketed at some point over the past week and worn anytime she had to be out in public. Her hand continued its path, out of the pocket and upward. Credence began to trace her jawline, experimenting with the flesh on her cheeks – which were already far less gaunt than they were a week ago – before eventually, her fingers found themselves in the midst of her thick brown hair, which was once wild and long from almost a year in the House, but was now returned to its comfortable shoulder length.
This exercise in physical stimuli and recollection was repeated many times, and slowly, Credence’s mind was coaxed into a semi-lucid state within the perceivable present, just in time to focus on the discussion at hand, though fading in and out.


“You’re right, Sergeant Guy,” Credence butted in, in a stern whisper, before Sofia had the chance to respond. When she spoke, Credence starred straight ahead, her blind eyes party to things not in the room.
“You’re terribly right. A sort of awful truth has passed your lips, and I don’t think you even quite realize its weight...” her voice trailed off, and slowly, she lowered her head back onto the tabletop. She began mumbling again, mostly to herself it seemed. “All so very important, so dreadfully instrumental, all of them...”
For a moment, Credence seemed to lose sight of her flesh’s present reality, before she mustered a hoarse whisper aimed at Sofia,
“Ma’am, could I trouble you for some water? Sometimes I lose track of how awfully parched I get.” While indeed thirsty, Credence’s main goal was to bring the young woman’s attention away from Guy. The group was still figuring each other out, and Credence knew of futures were Sofia might begin to develop a grudge against the elderly ex-Marine, or act irrationally due to current high tensions. It was to be expected, but it was avoidable.

 
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Sofia Genova594405Sofia's brows furrowed in concern, her words were misinterpreted. She watched as the man in front of her turned red from what she assumed was frustration. She felt her heart tighten, she definitely did not want to make any enemies here as she felt as thought these people were her family. Being from an Italian family, everyone was outspoken, she really did not expect this kind of reaction. "Guy, obviously I do not think he is better than me or any of us here, nor do I think that I am better than you." Her voice softens when she said his name. She knew she offended him, not something she really expected. She sighed and looked over at him. "All I'm saying is that Lance has something," she paused. "The way he freed us, Guy, it was almost impossible." She explained, trying to make him understand what she truly meant. "He should be here with us. We need everyone involved, this is a group effort." She nodded towards the group. "No problem Credence, I'll be right back." She smiled towards her and went to the kitchen. She opened the kitchen and picked up a bottle of water. She made her way back to the group and handed Credence the cold bottle. "Here you go," Sofia said.

Sofia walked over to where she originally stood and leaned back on the wall. She gestured over to Guy to continue what he was doing, this time she would bite her tongue a little for his sake. She looked down at her white running shoes and drowned out all the noise around her. She thought of the day she was freed and how she had the same nightmare for so long. A shiver went down her spine at the thought of having it again. Of course, it was nice to see her dead father in her dreams, but every time she had to say goodbye to him, it felt like the first time she said by to him next to his coffin. Sofia swallowed the lump forming in her throat as she eyes being to sting from tears forming. She kept her gaze low, not wanting anyone around her to notice until the tears that were forming dried up.

 
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Abducted at a young age, Nicholas was never blessed with the opportunity to experience the sanctity that youth had to offer. Ironically, his first words to his family was “Goodbye”, as he left home for a friend’s party. He would’ve never guessed that a farewell that was suppose to last for a night would’ve turned into years.
594413
At the same time that many of his fellow Centennials were being told of their potential to change and better the world they live in, Nicholas was told of a different purpose. He was also designed to help make a change but instead of through pure skill, knowledge, or adaptation, he was to do it through fire and blood.

“You are not meant to help the world evolve but to enforce the path that we’ve already set.”-The Orchestrator

The House had bestowed Nicholas which one purpose. To become their weapon of tyranny. They would act as judge and he would be their executioner. This wasn’t the life that he had chose and it certainty wouldn’t be the one that he will live.

When the power to the Centennials’ helmets were shut down, Nicholas had awoken with a mind wrenching headache. His icy blue orbs scanned the desolate and eerie surroundings as his mind tried to comprehend what had just happened. His hands made its way to his head where they made contact with what seemed to be a helmet attached with wires. A stroke of realization befell him as he removed the helmet and threw it on to the cold hard ground.

Even through the thick tortuous walls of the House, sounds of commotion and discord soon reached his ears. He quickly realized what was happening. With his mind still yet to fully awake, Nicholas stumbled his way to the door. Peeking his head out, he could see multiple people doing the same. They were donned with the same white coat as he was and their eyes shared the same sense of bafflement and confusion.

As he locked eyes with the girl in the cell beside him, smiles quickly coursed their lips as they leaped from the edges of their room. Following the duos and trios running in front of him, Nicholas raced towards what he hoped to be the exit. On the way, he caught sights of armed men being thrown every which way. Bodies both unconscious and dead were scattered across their path.

When Nicholas finally reached what seemed like the uppermost floor, he could see a large set of doors at the very end. It was where everybody seemed to be racing towards, their bodies disappearing one by one as they pushed through the steel gates. Every time they did so, a stream of light entered the otherwise dimly lit facility. To Nicholas, this light represented salvation, a hope to end all the suffering that he and all the others had endured for so long.

A hopeful smile fell on Nicholas’ face until he heard a series of voices behind him.

“Stop all of you or we will open fire!” The warning resonated in Nicholas’ ears as he turned around. Men numbering around half a dozen were standing with their weapons drawn. It wasn’t clear who they were targeting, but that didn’t matter. Among them, Nicholas recognized one of the men as the very same individual who had kidnapped him so many years ago. He accompanied Nicholas to the House, where he personally guarded his chamber as he was installed with the helmet.

In a moment of built up rage, Nicholas lifted his hands at the same time that the men opened fire. Pit dark flames discharged from his palms as they devoured the approaching bullets and engulfed the screeching guards. Their cries were blood curling, a near parallel of the faint and forbidding wails that Nicholas have heard through the House’s walls all these years.

Leaving the screams of agony behind him, Nicholas turned as he continued to make his way to the door. As he opened the body of steel, a long missed warmth of light touched his body. He had finally made it and from what he sees, he wasn’t the only one.

————————————————-
Present

The days followed the grand escape was filled with relentless nights. In the first night, Nicholas managed to get a stable night of rest. But those following was filled with nightmares of his experiences in the House. When Sofia began her usual task as the group’s wake up call, Nicholas was already in the midst of preparing himself for the day.

“They’re right you know.” Nicholas replied in a blunt and unenergetic manner as he directed Guy. “There’s what? Only 9 of us? We’ll be free real estate for those SOBs.” He added as he leaned back against the sofa, located directly adjacent to Guy.

“Besides...” Standing on to his feet, Nicholas made his way to the fridge as he reached inside for an already half empty bottle of vodka. “...how do you expect us to find the others? The Orchestrator’s men are probably turning this island inside out trying to find us all. We’ll be discovered if we don’t leave this place.” Nicholas asked Guy as he reached for an empty glass from the upper cabinet and began to fill it with a citrusy and strong smelling liquid.
 
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"What does it mean to be a prisoner inside your own mind?"

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

The sun shone down onto the two teenagers who lay down on the ground. A gentle breeze brushed against the grass making the grass dance to a silent song that only they could hear. It was the perfect day to lay down and relax and forget about their worries. Even so, Landon was getting a strong amount of Deja Vu, but ignored it and instead took in the beautiful day.

"It's such a nice day out, don't you think?" Landon kept his eyes on the clouds while talking with Leon. "Yeah, but you know what would is even better?" Landon wasn't sure what could be better than this and he was about to ask what, when he had a sudden, nagging feeling to stop, as if something was wrong. Once again brushing it off, he said, "What?" He turned to look at Leon, but he wasn't there. All of a sudden, it was night and the gentle breeze had turned into a storm. Rain pelted his exposed arms, freezing him to his core. Panic began to set in and he looked around frantically, trying to find Leon anywhere in this storm. Then through the storm, he heard a voice. A voice he knew all too well. "He's dead Landon, you couldn't save him" It was The Orchestrator. Their voice piercing the sound of wind and rain, seeming to come from all around him. "You couldn't do anything to save him. It's your fault Landon. You killed him." They kept repeating the phrase "You killed him, You killed him" Over and over again, as it seemed to go on for eternity. Landon let out one loud scream in an effort to drown out the noise, and the Darkness.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

One Week Before

Landon woke up in a cold sweat. He was breathing really fast and tried to calm himself down. He took off the weight that sat on top of his head. As soon as he did, light flooded his vision, blinding him, he didn't have any time to get his bearings because as soon as the lights turned back on, a person in a black suit burst into his room brandishing a gun and started yelling at him. He instinctively made a knife and threw it at the person before they had a chance to shoot him. Landon knew that, somehow, the wheels of change where turning and that this was his chance for freedom. He ran out of his room and quickly made his way through the hallway, dashing through any obstacles in his way, and killing anything he couldn't go through. Landon soon made it to the stairs and then realized that he wasn't the only one freed, but they were all freed. Not everyone would make it, but death is better than the torturous procedures they put them all through, so he knew that The Orchestrator had already lost this battle. He ran up the stairs to the last floor, bullets just grazing him, and made it out to the open area where everyone was. He saw that at the doors ahead of him was a boy, not much older than him, had almost collapsed. Not wanting to leave anyone behind, he helped the boy up and ran with a few others who helped. He never looked back, wanting The Home, The Orchestrator, all of it, behind him and only looked forward to wherever life would take them.


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Present

After his freedom, Landon tried to stay away from others as he needed to focus on the things that they needed to do, not making friends, but as the amount of time they were together grew, Landon started to understand that there was no way that they were going to make it if they were all just out for themselves. They would need to work together.

Landon sat down and messed with a piece of paper, turning it into different animals. He wanted to exercise his Gift, if only a little bit. Landon had listened to the conversation that was going on around him with interest. They were going to run out of food and water eventually and they would have to act soon if they didn't want to die from starvation. Landon interjected himself into the conversation, wanting to be heard "Well, I think that Guy's right. We definitely need to find other Centennials, but we can't do that if we are dead from starvation or captured by The Home. We need to get some supplies if we want to be able to find others. I also think that we shouldn't stay in the same place for too long, that just makes it even easier for them to find us, I saw that we should find somewhere else to stay soon, and maybe then can we look for others." Landon stood up and walked to the kitchen and checked how much food and water they have left and, seeing that they are on a low supply, sat back down. "And looking at the kitchen, it appears that we need food and water. Who wants to go out into town and find somewhere to get food and water, because if none of you will, I will go."

 
"There is safety in numbers," Kostya answered Nicholas. "They will be looking for us too. If they haven't left already. We are...fish in barrel, yes?" The island was like a hot box--it was too small to flee, too small to really hide in, and hot as hell. He shrugged one shoulder. "And if they do not want to be found, is no worry. They do what we do. They find place to hide, but they have to go into towns. We are not local. People will remember. We can find them. So long as no one else finds them first." He paused and looked around the room. He didn't think he had to explain what he meant, but they all seemed so damned young. He was going to war with a bunch of babies, and he didn't think they really knew. Except maybe Guy, but the old marine didn't look like he was thrilled with the idea.

"Good idea," he said to Landon. "After we find others, we should leave too," he said. "Get out of barrel." The odds of any kind of fight with the Orchestrator weren't appealing, especially not after a few weeks in which the Orchestrator had time to reassess and regroup, and they had done nothing but scrape for survival.

Sometimes, Ivan had once told him, the best thing to do was run and hide and live to fight another day. As much as he wanted revenge, the part of him that would always be a scrappy survivalist, a street kid clawing his way out of the gutter, whispered his agreement with Ivan's wisdom. Go to ground. Wait. Come out when the deck is stacked in your favor. Then you make them pay.

"Lance beat you to it, I think," he added to Landon, on the subject of supplies. He wanted a cigarette. A mug of tea. A room in Sankt Peterburg that smelled like tobacco and musk and butter. And the feral twelve year old he'd never quite stopped being sneered. When did you get soft?
 
She could not remember anything other than the big white room she was now in. It was her life and her prison. It was not like any other room she had seen. It's shape is spherical and taller than a 3 story building. Wall like the ones in the places where the insane ones are kept. No joy, no fun just endless existence. She would love to remember the life before but it is so far. Just too far.
No clock, no birds. The silence was driving the girl mad. She would even consider harming herself for some attention, some interactions with the living. The girl's life was lived like a bird in a gage. Day in and day out she just sat in the middle of the room and enjoyed the music. Oh the music it was fine. So good so great that even after her beautiful prison was ripped away she could still hear it.

With a one smooth moment everything was gone. Her room, her life and so much more just vanished. She was just left into the sickly looking room with all the machines. A woman stood next to her. Her words flew past the girl. "Vabandage! Ma ei mõista teid. Palun korrake uuesti. (Excuse me I am not able to understand you. Please could you say it again)" The words escaped her lips and as much as she didn't get her. The woman could not understand her. One thing was sure she will never have that life she just had. The perfect life. Life just made for her. Soon the alarm started. Her survival instinct took over and she ran.

They finally excited the building and the colors around her were so amazing. So many of them and so bright. She was not the only one who had shared the same faith as her. Everyone seemed so much older than her. They were also pretty even though they had their flaws. A young man just passed out near her. Everything was happening so fast and she was dragged along side with the others. They decided on staying in a abandoned mansion. The building looked amazing and even more so were all the luxurys in there.

The girl could not remember how long she had spent here. Was it months or days or years. It was a hot and sunny day. Too sunny for the girl. She had explored every inch of this house. Nothing new had happened today and her music played "On the beautiful blue Donau". She twirled and danced around the floor until her eyes met a wall that was so empty. She had a poem or maybe two but no paint. She loved red paint. The girl loved how it worked together with her bright yellow favorite raincoat and no red is like the red of the blood. Yes, blood is the perfect paint for the girl. She searched the rooms some more until an object so sharp that it could cut the skin was found.

Her veins were so good looking and after she prepared for the cut. A small sliver of pain crossed the girl's arm and nice red liquid just poured down.


"MEN, WOMEN CHILDREN DIE,
BUT CENTINALS CAN'T STILL DECIDE"


She wanted to know what others were doing and walked towards the noice. Her blood still pouring. There seemed to be a heated argument and she liked to have a word too. "The girl has a poem to share her thoughts. "

Tik tok, tik tok
A mouse looked at a clock.
Tik tok, tikkery tok
He looked and moked and moked
Tik tok, tik tik tok
No mouse should ever moke the clock
Tikkery tok tik tik tok
The mouse is dead but lives the clock

She gave another giggle and left behind a big bloody trail and not to talk about the place she stood.
 
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L A N C E



"Uh, si... necesito agua y verudas.. pollo tambien." The Puerto Rican merchant points to an isle in the back as Lance nods firmly with a smile, moving himself back towards the store to find the water, canned goods, and some easy prep chicken. Usually classic Lance was a fat ass, an inner fat kid whose stomach was a bottomless abyss that knew no bounds, but these were dire times. Lately the lad had given some of his portion to the ones who needed it most. Anna was the youngest, Credence was also pretty weak when they all came in, and Nick & Landon seemed to detach a bit from their conventional instincts. Lance would always add extra to their plates before serving them out, the rest looked well enough considering they were all pretty run down. A week ago they looked like a motley crew of vagabonds, withered and rough-looking. Lance took solace in how they were faring now, nicely-hygeine, looking like their old selves again. Vince was the oldest, and so Lance leaned on him from time to time about direction on how to stay off the grid and be careful. They all seemed grateful of Lance's actions that day, everyone except Lance. Instead the young man replayed moments in his head, wondering if he could've been better. It was why he didn't hang around a lot despite being pretty outgoing & social in nature, he felt like there was something he hadn't faced yet. Lance gathers the supplies, as well as some tampons for the women, his maturity overruling his discomfort. Turning his dark cap to the back he focuses in on some crackers and trail mix. Finally, he found some band-aids, tissues, and peroxide to stow in the his pack. With a deep sigh, Lance closed his eyes and looked at the merchant in the front, happily swaying to the music of Reggaeton. A deep sadness pierced Lance briefly. I swear I'll pay you back one day... Lance focuses himself into his gift, placing the items into a backpack they scavenged the past week when escaping. Lance learned that is invisibility extended to anything he came into contact with, so he would easily walk out of the barrio store, but not without a bit of grief.

They had no currency, and even though they were technically in a U.S. Domain Territory, they couldn't risk the exposure from transactions or sales of any kind. The House would surely be on them. Though, it did kill Lance that he missed 4 years of trends and pop culture, more importantly his time with family and friends. He knew he couldn't go back, nor any of his group. The merchant looks to the back to see nothing, assuming Lance just left and was disinterested in making a purchase.

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As far as places to lay low goes, a beachside village wasn't a bad place to be. The concept of tourism and locals alike presented an idea of ever changing people, a good cover for the group to weave in while staying here. Lance didn't know how long they'd be there for, but he knew it was finite. Lance makes his way up steps back into their remote little building on the outskirts of the village, a seemingly abandoned piece of property that they managed to tidy up. Wasn't the best conditions with eight other people, but a 5-star paradise compared to what they got away from. Lance was never one to complain, always humble, but always adapt and be ready. He wondered what everyone at the hideout was doing, and if everyone was up and active yet. With the backpack tight on his back, Lance decided to hone and work on his gift a bit while he was out. He wanted to test and see the conditions of his power. From what he knew, only Nick really displayed the whims of his gift, Lance had noted to Vince he'd have to watch the walking flamethrower, as one false impulse could literally burn their plans to cinders. Lance felt like Nick was an impulsive guy, and an isolated one. And that... that was a dangerous combo, nonetheless, Lance would never judge him. How could he? They were all fated to the same torment. Not only is it understandable, it's empathically expected.

"The Revengers will be aight until I get back." Lance then closes his eyes and renders himself one with his gift, one The Orc had many times told him was destined to save humanity. Fuck that, Lance just wanted to save his Centennial family for now, the rest could come later. He heads to a semi-populated area, where none were the wiser to his presence. He could feel the energy harnessing in his mind, but unlike last time at The House, Lance got his mojo back. He'd been doing torching cardio and bodyweight training in his room for the past week, getting a semblance of his top tier athleticism back. "Okay, test one: Audio" Lance then takes a deep breath, and then in the middle of the dispersing pedestrians, he barks like a dog. He waits for a moment.... nothing. No reaction from anyone. "TENGO UN GATO EN MIS PANTALONES!!!" He shouts with an entrenched heart in his gut, fearful of the reaction that his first test was an outlier. But alas, yet and still there was no reaction to the goofy rebuttal. Final test, Lance takes the biggest breath he could muster, before bellowing out the loudest scream to the top of his lungs. At first, it was indeed a test of stimulus... but gradually as he recounted the pain and anguish sleeping under his emotions, the scream became full of pain and rage, a vent from the past 4 years he knew. Veins stretched through his dermis and his body quaked with nerve as the instant he lost focus he stopped screaming, people would see a young man in a backpack fall to his knees panting, tears welling in his eyes. They didn't look until he fell, meaning the screams before weren't heard. It was only until he reappeared. Lance balled his fists, and possessed by undiluted willpower rises from the ground and pulls his cap back to the front. "Can't see me, can't hear me...". That was enough for now. He wished he'd had all day to fully push the extent of his gift, but the group was probably hungry.

And then, like a random surge of revelation to his core, Lance thought of something. Something big. He snuck to an obscure part of an alleyway, before going null-state once more, and paced a speedy jog back to the hideout.







 
594857Mila Barnette - #75

Mila had spent years craving for this very moment. For freedom. Lying down in her white-coated room, these thoughts would devour her mind, pulling her in and through daydreams that were both familiar and new.

But now she faced quite an opposite dilemma.

In her newly founded freedom, the memories of her imprisonment couldn’t help but crash into her like tidal waves. Some soft and gentle, but others at full speed, drowning her in her own worries and revulsions. Funny enough, it was a week ago that had probably haunted her the most. Why? Four words: soldiers shooting at her.

The memories knotted themselves together in her head like a set of poorly edited film-clips: A pulsing red light. The smile of an unfamiliar boy. Falling soldiers. Mila had remembered running across the chaotic hallways with the gracefulness of someone trying to walk on ice, keeping her head low and body crouched. It was a miracle to have even lived, let alone made it out at all.

Sitting at the villa’s table, the girl fell back against her chair with folded arms, allowing her fearful energy to quiet and settle into a new form of unrest and discomfort. If there was one thing she was certain about right now, it was that she didn’t want to be here. Not in this chair, not in this villa, not in this country and not with these people. They were all dead meat, now or later. Especially if they stayed to try and find others.

“I’m not sure you guys.”

Mila hadn’t been sure or not if she would contribute, but the words had formed and spilled out before she could catch them. Her arms tightened around her.

“It’s nice that we want to go and find others – but all we know right now is that we’re safe and we’re alive. Like, we don’t want to make ourselves more of a target.”
 


Nicholas brushed off Landon's comments, understanding his ignorance regarding the location of Lance and that he was already out shopping for supplies. Instead, he turned his attention towards Kostya. From what he could tell, the group is currently divided between ideas of looking for the other Centennials as opposed to simply remaining in the shadows and await for the opportunity to escape this treacherous island. As of now, it seems that those standing on the same platform as him are the two girls named Sophia and Mila.

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Singled out from these two groups was the girl with the light blonde hair and a pair of eyes matching the icy texture to that of Nicholas'. Nicholas figured that her cryptic words and muddled poetic form of speech had likely resulted from her stay at the House. Or perhaps she already possessed said disorder prior to her adduction. He wasn't sure as he could never get a coherent sentence out of her.

"That's right. We AREN'T locals, which means that the minute we go out there and start asking questions, we'll automatically be drawing attention to ourselves. There's a reason that Lance is the only one who went out to grab supplies." Nicholas emphasized as he placed his lips on the see through glass and proceeded to empty out its contents into his stomach. Nicholas then began refilling the glass while he glared at Kostya, his face twisting into a slightly annoyed expression, having been irritated by his colleague's desire to potentially expose themselves.

Within the span of the last several days, Nicholas had grown to understand what his new group is capable of. From what he could tell, the majority of his colleagues aren't fit for aggressive combat. The woman named Credence seemed to possess the power that best fits Guy's goal. Ironically, the two both possessed a history in military combat which may had contributed to their vehement desire to save the lives of others.

However, like all of their abilities, neither one of them had fully understood their capabilities nor have they comprehended the extend of its potential. With such unfamiliarity comes possible complications which could lead to risks. Overall, their powers seemed to be more fitting towards a method similar to guerilla styled warfare, one involving a great deal of tactics, strategy, and admittedly, patience. But to have patience, they would need time. Which was something that they're running out faster than any one of them would like.

"We don't know who to trust. Some of the "citizens" out there could be working for the House for all we know. And I'm sure none of us have any relatives on this stinkin' island now do we?" He said in a sarcastic manner as he targeted the whole group with his comments.

"We can't risk anything that'll expose us. We barely understand the extends of what we can do. That's why we should be planning to get as far away as we can from this stupid island. I'm sure the other Centennials likely have the same idea." Nicholas added as he took a sip from the glass. The longer the group remain on this island, the easier it will be for them to be narrowed down. Even if it is risky for the group to attempt an escape off the island, it'll pay off in the long run as the dangers will be even higher if they were to stay.
 
"So we run. They found us before. They will find us again. If we run, we run forever," Kostya said, eyeing Nicholas. "We are investment. They will come back for us, no matter how far we run. We would spend the rest of our lives running away, trying to stay one step ahead of them until we lost. We will have to fight. Not today, not tomorrow, but if we ever want to live without looking over our shoulders, we will have to. We need others. We need to organize. We are our own best resource, and more of us we have, better we can plan. If we leave we lose our best chance to find each other." Kostya leaned back against the counter behind him, still considering Nicholas. He wanted to be charitable and call his point of view caution, but Kostya had seen caution kill as easily as rashness.

Ivan had called Kostya a too-clever fox more than once, but with hounds on his scent, he'd rather be a fox than a rabbit.

"I know how to get information quiet. It is my job. This is...not first rodeo? Is that how saying goes?" He'd need some things, to really pull off a believable persona, but the challenge of it itched at him. He had his wits and his words and ten clever fingers, and that was all he really needed. "We are not only strangers in Puerto Rico, and I can use that. And if hounds get too close, I lose them and come back." And he grinned. "I am even better at that than I used to be."
 
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"Kostya is right. The only way that we will be able to actually fight back against The Orchestrator is if we find others like us who can help. Leaving the island will not help as they almost certainly have people around the world who will be hunting us down and think about. In what place would the combination of the 8 of us be considered locals, no offense to anyone, of course. Puerto Rico is just as good as a place as any, even more so since there are other centennials here, but we still need to have our safety be our top priority." Landon knew that running was not a permanent answer to their problems and that they will eventually have to fight back against The Orchestrator if they want to remain safe, and to do that, they would need other Centennials to help them. Though, he didnt have the faintest idea on how to find them, so right know, he is focused on trying to establish a bit of permanency with their situation. "For now, we should just wait for Lance to get back before we really think of what we need to do next."

Landon walks over to one of the windows and watches the town beneath them, everyone living their own lives, with their own hopes and dreams, with their own goals they want to achieve. They were all like the people down there once. They all hoped to achieve something, to be able to be happy, but now they have to focus on hiding for their lives, knowing that at any second they could be captured again. Landon couldn't understand why they choose us, why them in particular. Maybe they weren't chosen, maybe they were picked at random to be their little Guinea Pig's in their own sick experiment. Landon didn't know why and didn't want to dwell on it anymore than he had too.
 
The girl left and heard how no one took notice of her words and that was sad. She knew that what she said may not be understood by some but not by all of them. Maybe they just didn't listen to her. She wanted them to listen to her, to talk to her. She wasn't some freak monster, right? Maybe..... maybe she was? Maybe that's why her parents left her and.... and she ended up there... here. Oh it didn't matter. Important was that they don't want her here.

The blood was slowly stopping and she felt light headed. The girl felt weak and neglected. She had to go back there and make them listen. They....they won't listen her when she is speaking their language but maybe.... maybe Kostya would listen to her. He seemed Russian so maybe she could try speaking in Russian with him.

The girl rushed back to the room and headed straight towards Kostya. Her vision was slowly filling with black spots. Just a little more and she would faint for sure. She stopped just in front of him and begged.
"Костя, Костенька почему ты не слушаешь меня? Не говоришь со мной? (Kostya, nickname for Kostya why won't you listen to me? Or talk to me?)"

She was loosing hope and continuousness. Her gift was starting to show as she just collapsed in despair. Her vision went black and she felt the first big impulse wave being released.
 
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No. 086 Credence Babcock - No. 095 Lance Rush 596257

Drowning. That is the sensation that spawns from the curse of omniscience – drowning in a river of information. Swelling rapids find themselves dashing against the shore banks of Credence’s mind, distorting and eroding away the acuity of the material world. The gentle sounds of Landon folding paper into miniature animals, the hum and swell of conversation, even the chill of water sliding down her throat. All these things were experienced through the contusions in the rapids of time. Not that the present conversation was of much importance to the soothsayer anyway, she was of course, already quite certain of its outcome.
With the present closing in on the groups' final verdict, Credence could feel the subtle shift in the currents of time, thus allowing her to see the path in the river which the perceivable present would set it’s course down. There was, however, an element still missing that was required in order for the approaching ruling to come to fruition.

“Pardon me,” Credence spoke in a voice little louder than a whisper. “I believe Lance will be at the front door soon. I should let him in.”
The woman stood abruptly and, with a surprising amount of grace for a blind person, departed the room, sidestepping Anna as she appeared. That would need to be addressed later.
Before arriving at the door, Credence strained her mind and searched the past to ensure no one was outside staking out the Villa. Focusing on what had already happened was an exercise akin to picking out a particular pebble adrift in a riverbed, but it was an ability Credence was slowly getting a handle over.
Satisfied with what she saw, the blind woman deftly unlocked the door to the rundown villa and opened it wide, allowing an impressive wave of sunlight to fill the condemned house. The halo of mid-morning glow encircled Credence, as she stood framed in the crooked doorframe.
Outside, Lance ceases his tempered jog, maintaining his sense of grace and adept energy as he exhales a vent of relief that he'd made it back safely. He drops null-state as he renders himself back to humanity yet again, and as soon as he places a foot upon the stone slab of a once sleek marble step, he hears the notch of the door before it’s swung open, seeing Credence up and at it, looking in the general vicinity of Lance as he delivers a sharp nod up to his Centennial companion. Credence had caught Lance just as he had been stepping onto the front porch – a depressing, slumping structure that was once enjoyed by the Villa’s now expired residents on many a lazy summer afternoon. The rest of the building was of a similar state, once the jewel of the community, now an epitaph to a family whom the rest of the party would likely never even know existed.

“Mr. Rush.” Credence addressed Lance in what she deemed was an appropriately formal tone. She faced the young man, but her gaze was off center and distant as if starring through or beyond Lance. This, of course, was standard fare for Credence.
Upon the formal call of his name, Lance in true fashion responds in a light-hearted manner, still not quite used to the woman's gift and the fact that she seemingly sees all, tangible and beyond.
"Sup Ms. Oracle, still not used to your freakin' Odin all-sight yet. Listen, I--" As soon as he begins to express the major thought he'd come up with, it seems that Credence was already privy to the notion of what he had to exchange with the group.
“Yes, I’m well aware. I do believe you have something important to share with the rest of us? Come in quickly.”
Lance had almost chuckled with a shake of his head in amazement as the woman had already pressed on what was to be delivered in the near moments. He took his blind partner's arm in his, knowing full well she could handle her own trajectory, yet the southern chivalry in him wouldn't allow him to let her walk alone while not being able to see in the conventional sense. Credence allows herself a small grin as Lance moves both of them into the den with expedite.
"Cree, I know you said your sight is always a river of the backbend, of here, and of the stream ahead... but... do you think if you hone your focus you could maybe focus on one specific part of the current? I may need some assistance. I know it's a big ask, but I think we need to start learning to hone our gifts if we're going to use them better and be better." He had known this far that Credence's gift allowed her to see the past, present, and future, yet muddled in a simultaneous pool of constant occurrence. It was like being a psychic on acid while just having taken a shot of adrenaline he imagined. While very powerful, it could be very dangerous, as those visions could lead to a fixed guideline that wouldn't have been the better option than another 'streamline' or, Lance thought that maybe while focusing on one stream, The House could use that to alter events from that stream or even Credence's sight on one instance in time could cause her and the group to completely miss another instance that would be vital for them.
“It can be done. I’ve done it before, and practice when I can, though the farther back I go, the more painful it becomes, the more likely I am to lose myself in the flow of time. Perhaps that is my only real expertise though, my only talent, to endure beyond the endurable... I implore you not to hesitate if you need my assistance.” Credence pursed her lips, now deep in thought, blind eyes searching for something not there. Once again, the woman seemed only distantly aware of her present circumstance.

Lance escorts Credence into the worn foyer, calling out to the group as he takes off the backpack and begins to unload the contents onto the floor for everyone to help assort and adjust, giving them time also to get settled before he expresses his thoughts.
As Lance does this, Credence’s hand deftly grabs for a roll of bandages and pockets it.
“I’ll return when you all have finished your discussion. Thank you, Mr. Rush. I know... thievery does not come naturally for you. Perhaps we allow Kostya to lead the next expedition for supplies, to ease your mind a bit. Now, if you all will excuse me...” Credence turned just as Anna reentered the room. She watched through visionless eyes as the woman in hysterics approached Kostya, spouted something in Russian and began to collapse. Without a moment's hesitation Credence swooped in under Anna and caught her, lifting her up with a surprising amount of ease, years worth of pulling injured friends from firefights manifesting in perfect form. "... I have someone to be tending too." Credence began to move Anna from the foyer into one of the back rooms, laying her down on some bedding and wrapping her wounded arm in bandages.


Written in collaboration with DramaMyth DramaMyth

 


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L A N C E


Lance ceases his tempered jog, maintaining his sense of grace and adept energy as he exhales a vent of relief that he'd made it back safely. He drops null-state as he renders himself back to humanity yet again, and as soon as he places a foot upon the stone slab of a once sleek marble step, he heard the knotch of the door before it swung open, seeing Credence up and at it, looking in the general vicinity of Lance as he delivers a sharp nod-up to his Centennial companion. Upon the formal call of his name, Lance in true fashion responds in a light hearted manner, still not quite used to the woman's gift and the fact that she seemingly sees all, tangible and beyond. "Sup Ms. Oracle, still not used to your freakin' Odin all-sight yet. Listen, I--" As soon as he begin to express the major thought he'd come up with, it seems that Credence was already privy to the notion of what he had to exchange with the group.

He'd almost chuckled with a shake of his head in amazement as the woman had already pressed on what was to be delivered in the near moments. He took his blind partner's arm in his, knowing full well she could handle her own trajectory, yet the southern chivalry in him wouldn't allow him to let her walk alone while not being able to see in the conventional sense. He moves into the den with expedite.
"Cree, I know you said your sight is always a river of the backbend, of here, and of the stream ahead... but... do you think if you hone your focus you could maybe focus on one specific part of the current? I may need some assistance. I know it's a big ask, but I think we need to start learning to hone our gifts if we're going to use them better and be better." He had knew this far that Credence's gift allowed her to see the past, present, and future, yet muddled in a simultaneous pool of constant occurrence. It was like being a psychic on acid while just having took a shot of adrenaline he imagined. While very powerful, it could be very dangerous, as those visions could lead to a fixed guideline that wouldn't have been the better option than another 'streamline' or, Lance thought that maybe while focusing on one stream, The House could use that to alter events from that stream or even Credence's sight on one instance in time could cause her and the group to completely miss another instance that would be vital for them. Lance escorts Credence into the worn foyer, calling out to the group as he takes off the backpack and begins to unload the contents onto the floor for everyone to help assort and adjust, giving them time also to get settled before he expresses his thoughts.

Collab with Croaker Croaker

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{@ Everyone}



"I don't want to put you in pain at the cost of your gifts Credence, so you set the pace, and I'll follow, okay?"

As he did, he saw that Anna seemed a little bit weakly, yet Credence was all on it, immediately going for the bandages Lance had nabbed and instantaneously pulling them from the precise spot they were veiled underneath the other supplies. Lance takes a deep exhale, releasing as his mind enters a meditative peace before addressing the Centennial family. He instinctively rushes over by Anna, furrowed brows and an expression of deep concern on his face. It seemed she'd coped the only way she knew how: pain. It was something Lance had thought he'd alleviated from them all, but logically it wasn't expected for all despair to just vanish simply because they escaped. "Anna...." Lance says with compassion, feeling for the young teen. He delivered a brotherly rub to her back as Credence tended to her, without taking his eyes off of her his words resounded to everyone in the foyer. "We can't leave. And I mean that in the sense of being trapped, but I also mean that in the sense of we shouldn't leave." He figured there'd likely be mixed controversy among the fam, but he stood up tall and bold, almost empowered. "I realized somethin' ... The House had enough means to internationally grab us and secure us here with the world none the wiser... these guys are well funded and well-resourced. That we know, but what I also realized is that groups like this have an endgame. They weren't gonna let us be comatose for the rest of our lives let alone theirs right? Which means... they were going to use us at some point. What if our escape isn't as much of a kink in plans as we thought? Think about how organized and proficient they've been for YEARS guys. It took a billion-to-one microcosm play for me to do what I did, but wouldn't they have had a contingency? Under the premise we were to be used for 'great things' we may have just sped up their timetable if anything."

Lance sits criss-cross beside the bag of supplies, trying to meet the eye contact of everyone periodically to emphasize his intellectual analysis. "Put our minds in the wolf... they know we will try to leave the island, that's why they put us on an island. Every ferry, cruise, flight, hell manual swim off territory... they'll be there. Put your mind in the sheep... where are we going to go? Back to the flock. Scared Centennials are going to call home, try their best to reach 911 or any semblance of their life before... and that's where The House will strike. They could be harmless private investigators acting to touch bases with our families, following up on our 'disappearances' and seeing if any of our old life has had any contact or weird anomalies involving us in the past few years; A clever and subtle tactic to really see if we've tried to reach out to our families. They could leak as criminally insane, they could list us as whatever they wanted to to skew the public world to their whims. That's the point I'm making. SO, let's use that. I say, we lead the wolf into the sheep's pasture, and let the world watch. They wanna see what we can do? Let's use their own propaganda against them." Lance nods confidently to anyone and no one in his thinking, hoping they'd agree. "I know there's been talks of splitting up and finding the others. I feel like that's what The Orc wants. Divide and conquer. We have to stick together. They could've chosen anywhere in the world. A remote gulag, freakin' desert, any other place than a well-populated U.S. Domain Territory. Why? Unless Orc wanted us with people, blending with people... what if we're a catalyst?"

The lean young man approaches a window, looking out at the village by the bay. Beautiful, yet they were subject to isolation. "They can reach out to our families, friends, and whoever they want with any mask they please. We have to assume that. They expect us to wear a mask, they'll exploit it. That means no new identities, no reaching out to our old life, and if we want to find the rest of us, we have to become the wolf. Even after escaping, The House has us trapped in every way. Except for one. Us. We are free to operate how we choose, but we gotta play the system. It's the only way I feel. If you guys got any better ideas now's the time to speak up." With a final sigh, Lance turns from the window, looking at the individuality in the room, mind still bringing him back to a week ago, during the escape. Pained and worn faces were now clean and able. It brought him solace, but they still had a ways to go until uniform liberation. "Another thing, we've talked around our gifts, only having an idea here and there of what they actually are. That needs to change. I did something... in the village. I screamed as loud as I could while I was 'null' and no one heard me. I thought I could just turn invisible. If we're going to take The House on, or if we're going to run place to place, we NEED to know fully the extent of our abilities. We should spill what we know about our gift, and then have maybe Mr. Vince lead us in honing them together. Otherwise we're nuclear warheads without launch codes."

"Oh and one more thing!"
Lance says with a hasted enthusiasm towards the bag of supplies. He pulls a newspaper from the backpack and throws it on the table nearby. The main article was in Spanish but one thing that was understood was the picture, it spoke more loudly than the corresponding words ever could. It detailed a man with piercing eyes scaring Puerto Rican citizens at a park about 50 miles from the mountains where the breakout happened. "We have something to go on, if we wanted to pull on that thread. Either way, we all need each other. Every last person in this room is a key. Non-negotiable. Non-expendable. So... how are we feeling about this?"








 
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597166
Mila Barnette - #75

The House


Two months after Mila’s capture, the buzzing started.
At first it was insignificant – a faint humming in her ears, so soft that she had first mistaken it for a straining light bulb, a broken alarm, the static of a surveillance camera. Something that would fade over time. Leave.

But it never left.

The noise followed her across her room, down the hallway and up the stairs. It followed her to bed and in her sleep, softly and delicately shifting from just a sound to a sound and a sensation. A slight prickle in her limbs. Not pain exactly, but something more. Somewhat pleasant. Something very persistent. It pushed her, growing louder, stronger, but no matter its presence, Mila knew one thing: there was no way on this planet that she would tell the guards.

Bad choice.

She was leaning on one of her wall’s many mirrors when it hit her: The pain.
It came out of no-where, sharp as a knife through her chest. She gasped, tumbling to the ground as the guard entered her room – her usual guard. The guard who seemed to be tasked on ‘looking after her’ since day one of her arrival. The man recoiled away fast, rushing back toward the door.
“What are you doing?” the girl scrambled as she fought to get back onto her feet, the lilt of her Irish accent seeping through her words like light through a forest’s canopy, “Come back and help me you dingus!”

But the man didn’t. He just stood there, wide-eyed and open-mouthed. Mila’s face twisted in confusion as she looked down at hands that were no longer hers. They were his. She was him. She was the guard.

“Shi-“ Everything went black.

Present Day

The familiar buzz hummed under the surface of Mila’s skin now, pleading, no – demanding, to be set free, to be embraced. To consume and transform her into something else. Anything that wasn’t her. Anything that wouldn’t have to be in this situation.
But she held it down. Forced herself to look at hands that where hers and that would remain to be hers. There was no way that she would become a freak-show in a room full of freaks. Not now. Not ever.

However, there was no stopping the fear and desperation that was tying knots in her stomach. She wanted so badly to agree with Nicholas. She wanted to leave this island, leave the others behind. Save herself. But how could she? That Russian guy, Kostya, was right. A lifetime of running scared her.

Then there was Credence and Lance, who spoke of what? Staying on the island, leaning their powers and fighting? Mila wanted to vomit. Wanted to be someone else. Wanted out of this mess.

She violently pushed herself out of her chair, hands running through her crispy blonde hair. She didn’t belong here. She wasn’t one of them.
“You’re all crazy” the girl snarled, looking briefly at the picture, “This is all crazy! Can’t you hear yourselves – we aren’t keys, we aren’t special, we’re – you’re science experiments. I’m not going to be a part of this.”

The girl moved to the kitchen, in hopes of pouring the rest of Nicholas's alcohol down her throat.
 



Landon watched as Credence announced that Lance was going to be here soon. It seemed like even though she wasn't always there per say, she did seem to know a lot more then she let on, willingly or not. Soon enough, Credence came back with Lance, but just as she did, Anna walked up to Kostya and said something in German. Landon didnt know much about Anna, infact, half of the time, he couldn't even understand her. She was like Credence, in a way. Not always there, lost inside her own mind, but while Credence from time to time gives them some useful advice, Anna just seemed, in a way, lost. Landon felt sorry for the girl as the testing procedures seemed to have broken her mental stability, but they have all gone from hell and back so they can't all just reminisce on what has happened, they had to focus on the future. Though, he did feel a pang of guilt for not trying to connect with her, but people had never been his forte, so he left it up to the others.

Landon quietly watched as Anna collapsed and was swiftly catched by Credence and taken care of. Credence, though infrequent, can be very useful when Lucid. Landon turned back to Lance who had dropped a mound of stolen goods right on the table. It seemed as if his excursion had yielded results, though he didnt look at everything on the table, there would be another time for that. Right now Lance seemed very eager to share something with the group, so he listened. To Landon, it seemed as if that Lance was grasping at straws, trying to find any meaning behind what had happened to them, it seemed absurd, but then again, the whole situation they were in was absurd and they didnt have a lead, so at least it was something instead of just arguing. The more Lance spoke, though, the more it began to make sense, of course they aren't just some science fair project, meant to be created and then just thrown away, they obviously have something to gain from them, though what exactly he couldn't figure out. Honestly, all of this didn't make sense, it was straight out of a comic book, or some other form of media. Maybe it was just some form of entertainment, maybe all of this was just a game, maybe- Landom stopped his train of thought, he can't just keep thinking of what could happen as that isnt helping any of them, he just needed to focus on the situation at hand.

It seemed as if Lance had finished speaking, but he then said that he had something to show them. Lance rummaged through the items on the table and pulled out a newspaper and slapped it on the table. It was in Spanish so he didn't know what any of the words meant, but the one thing that he did see was the boy, staringnright at them. It seemed as if he was telling them that he was coming for them. It was crazy, and under any other circumstances he would have said it was a hoax, but right now it appeared to be another Centennial who had been not-so-careful as to hiding from everyone. Landon knew that this paper must have been made recently, so there was a chance that The Orc may not have seen it yet, though it was extremely unlikely. At least it was a lead. Landon was about to say something when Mila stood up. Landon knew that not everyone would be on board with the whole "saving the world" thing, but he didn't actually know how to calm her down. Plus, she had a point, this was very crazy, but it did seem like crazy was going to become their new normal, do it didn't make a difference. Landon looked around the room, hoping that someone else would try and console, as people had never been his forte. "I don't know how to deal with her so I'll just leave it up to you guys."

 


Sofia Genova
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Mentioning: Jack19XK Jack19XK
Sofia watched the blue eyed boy speak, observing him closely as he sipped on this drink. She raised one of her eyebrows once he spoke of ideas that correlated with her own. Finally, somebody who understands what I'm saying. She continued to take in all of his features, not really paying attention to everything around her. She walked toward the kitchen once more and returned with a clear glass that matched Nicholas'.
"Mind if I have some," she asked with a charming smile on her face and then poured some vodka in her glass. "Thanks," she said as she returned the bottle to Nicholas. "We should definitely pick up more of this," She chuckled softly. Without mixing her drink with any sweet substance, she began to sip on it. She enjoyed the burning feeling it left once it went down her throat, it comforted her. Sofia took a seat next to Nicholas on the pillowed arm of the sofa.

Once her mind was finally off of the boy next to her, she tuned back into what was happening around her. Lance finally decided to show his face. It's about time.
"And this is why we needed him here." She pointed at Lance after he explained his ideas. She listened closely, nodding her head every once in a while to let him know that he was being listened to. She admired Lance for his wisdom, he was definitely someone that she trusted. "What the-" She said, watching the blond girl next to Nicholas lose her mind. "Sooner you accept it, the sooner you could control it." Sofia stated in attempt to calm the girl. "Jesus Christ," she looked over at Nicholas. "She's a bomb waiting to go off," she whispered to him. She drank more of her drink and thought of ways to calm the girl down.

 
I opened my eyes in a familiar room. Yes, certainly I have been here several times but something about it felt off. Was it the bed I woke up or is it the way the wind flows between those curtains. I knew they view outside, the beautiful landscape just molding and flowing. The images just dancing before my eyes and the nice warm ocean wind. Wait a minute. The air it was not the warm and inviting as it was usually. It had something odd. Something more sharper and colder. One could even describe it even as.....as...... I ran to the windows and pushed away the curtains. The view before me was even more breath taking. Only thing I could see was endless mountains and snowy peaks. They were so inviting and homely in some weird way. The pull towards it was so great that I....I needed to......JUMP. I walked to the other end of the room and ran strait toward the open window. Then came the jump and I fell strait down the cliff face.

Or that is what I thought would happen. But now.....now I was flying. I AM FLYING. Oh this felt amazing. The gentle wind through my hair and the feeling of true freedom. I was free like a bird. My clothes flowed in the air as I did all kinds of twists and turns. The joy was hard to hold back and soon small bursts of giggles escaped me. I tried to fly as low as possible and skimmed the snow. It was so cold in a good way. "I wonder how high could I go?" The wind helped along as I rose higher and higher like the Superman. Well not the hand part that is stupid. I reached the cloud line or however they call it. I could touch the clouds and admire the land beneath me . Among the white snow and black mountain cliffs stud a person. Hmm I wonder why they just stand there. Like a comet I shot down to him. Yes it was a man. His face so familiar yet I could not tell where I met him. He turned towards me and stared strait into my eyes. I could feel my body lower so much that my levitating body was floating at his eye's height. We were so close yet so far. One more step and he could reach me. Just a step and before I could react his hand were wrapped around me. He was holding me still.


He was....gone. It all vanished with a blink of an eye. The girl was back in the dark damp sadness.
 
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Nicholas’ reaction to Lance’s and the other’s suggestions was just as same as Mila’s. The mere idea of remaining on the island to to fight against their former captors felt absurd to him. Especially when neither of them even fully understood or know how to control their abilities.

“Finally, someone with some sense.” Nicholas said referring to Mila as he watched the woman approach him in the kitchen. He knew instantly what her target was.

“Woah there. Get your own. There’s another bottle in the fridge.” Nicholas said as he lifted up his nearly empty bottle to Mila.

The first thing that came to Nicholas’ mind when the brunette approached him was her beauty. Having been in captivity for so long, Sofia was perhaps among the first females Nicholas had met and one of the few closest to his age. Of course, most of the impressions he’d developed for Sophia in the last week was minimal. Everybody has been so tired from their escape that they simply didn’t have time to focus on things other than rest.

When she too asked for a drink, the first thoughts that came to Nicholas’ head was “not again”. Ultimately, he ceded.

“Yea, sure.” Nicholas replied back as he handed the bottle over to Sophia. He was going to go back on his earlier response with Mila until he noticed that she had already grabbed her own drink.

“Now that’s what we should be discussing about.” Nicholas replied jokingly in response to Sophia’s comment about buying more alcoholic beverages. The first run to the store was hectic and rushed so drinks such as alcohol were on the very bottom of the necessities list. But for Nicholas, drinks such as this is a “need” if he wants to make sure that his new team don’t get incinerated in the first few weeks.

When Sophia passed back the bottle, Nicholas would proceed to refill it to the edge. Every sip pleasures the young man’s taste buds. The scent and taste were strong but it’s the feeling that proceeded them that Nicholas had sought after. The numbness helped control his emotions which in turn stabilized his powers.

“Problems just keep stacking up.” Nicholas said as he saw the blonde girl fall down. He observed as Lance dived into action. Nicholas wasn’t sure what was happening to the girl, although he presumed that it was likely having to do with her abilities or trauma.

“Does this look like the team who’s fit for fighting back against the House? We’ll be lucky if we even last a month here.” Nicholas exclaimed to all in audible distance as he ran his hand through his face.

After chugging the remnants in his glass, Nicholas proceeded to dump the now empty bottle into the trash can before rinsing the glass off in the sink.

“While you guys help with sleeping beauty there, I’m going to try and think of a way to get out of this hellhole.” He said as he began to make his way to his room.
 
Kostya darted forward as Anna fell, but Credence was faster. He sank to the floor next to her while Credence got to work. "Я слышу тебя, я слышу тебя, Αннушка," he said. (I hear you, I hear you, Αnnuška.) He wasn't sure if she could hear him, or if she was out cold, but it seemed like the thing to do. "Прости, я не был быстрее. Пожалуйста, не делай себе больно, Αннушка, я здесь." (I'm sorry I wasn't faster. Please don't hurt yourself, Αnnuška, I'm here.)

He held her hand while Credence worked, listening to the others argue. He shook his head.

"Lance is right," he said, in the same soft tone he'd been using for Anna, though louder. She wasn't the only scared baby in the room. "Screaming and sticking our heads in sand will not change anything." He looked at Lance from his spot on the floor. He was so young, but he was the leader, in a way that Kostya couldn't and wouldn't argue. "They can not leave," he said. "If they are found, and tortured, they will lead them straight to us." He squeezed Anna's hand. "Ох, Аннушка, почему они все такие глупые?" he asked her softly. (Oh, Αnnuška, why are they all so stupid?) He looked from Nicholas' retreating back, to Mia, to Sofia. "Sometimes you are given bad hand. Do you think this means you just roll over and die?" Kostya looked back at Lance. "I like very much beating them at own game."
 

No. 086 Credence Babcock600815
Splayed before Credence, Anna lay unconscious, uncertain and ragged breaths punctuating the dim murmur within the gloomy foyer the party occupied. With a surprising amount of strength, Credence lifted Anna and began moving her from the lobby and back into the girl’s bedroom.
“Excuse us, we’ll go ahead and get out of your hair for now. Don’t wait up for me, I fear my input may only make things more perplexing.”
Entering Anna’s designated room, Credence laid the young girl out on her makeshift bed and posted herself at the head. Sabers of sunlight slicing through the uneven wood panels of the Villa provided sparse illumination in the simple chamber. This, however, was of no consequence as Credence operated under a different sort of sight.
Resting Anna’s head in her lap, Credence got to work. With a damp washcloth, the blind woman began to clean the wound on Anna’s forearm, soaking up the excess blood before it could begin to congeal. A light layer of Neosporin was then applied to deal with any immediate threats of infection before Credence set out to wrap the open gash in medical bandages. As the blind woman applied pressure to the wound, Anna let out a faint whimper. Her once still body grew restless, a tear now forming in the corner or the young woman’s eye. Words not quite perceptible to Credence’s ears tumbled awkwardly from the blonde girl’s mouth, and as the blind woman leaned closer to listen to what Anna might be saying in her sleep, Credence found herself feeling unnaturally light. Another fidget sent a shudder through Anna and suddenly Credence could feel both herself and Anna lift off the bed. It was a strange, weightless sensation, like floating in a motionless pool or lake. Languidly, the two women levitated in the dimly lit room, their movement seemingly mirroring the dreams of Anna.
A sad smile crept across Credence’s face as she ran a calloused hand through Anna’s soft hair.

'She really is just a child, only a year younger than me when I signed my life away to the military. What a terribly tortured soul...'
Not really aware of her own actions, Credence found herself quietly singing to Anna. A simple lullaby that her mother would sing to her when she was sick seemed to conjure itself from the annals of Credence’s own distorted past and softly the blind woman sang, in hopes of comforting Anna.

“...on the first light of the day, you march on
Departure has arrived, don't look back
Avoid the darkness, stay away, stay out of sight
Until you feel the blast of a shooting star...”

 

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