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Fandom Jujutsu Kaisen: For Which Death Has Died

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Under an erstwhile moon, ancient starlight dances. The century is numbered fourteen, and at its turn, three stars convene.

The night had been long. Long, and awfully dark. At its core burned a star, one that burned with a brightness that was brilliant and then more brilliant still. So bright and terrible was its radiance, so all-consumingly blinding, that even its own light was drowned out. Brightness unto brightness turns onto itself, and so the deepest of darkness is born.

It fell hard and fast over the lands of Europa, spreading out vast and fast across its innumerable nations. So long was the light-turned-shadow's breadth that it even threatened the shores of mighty Albion, where the wild folk peddled in their ways of yore, undisturbed for centuries untold. Only then did the old world retaliate. The West Star bloomed, and her bird-headed guard crowed and cawed at the oncoming blackness with all their fervour, but it was for nought. Even in their valiance, their feathers were stained with death, and so the shadow trudged onwards.

Next rose the South Star. Within the darkness, it naturally thrived, but so deep had the shadow's ocean grown that even a whale would drown in it. Blood ran thick and heavy on that day. Rivers of red snaked out across Europa, and where they convened their minds meshed and melded, but it too was not enough. To stain black, after all, is a fool's errand, and even that most essential ichor of life is little but dust in the wind in the face of death itself.

Finally, the East stirred, shaken from her seclusion by the ruckus of a child that fancied itself a god. The East neither shone nor rose, for it was always there, distant and twinkling. With a snap of its wizened fingers, the stars West, South and East stood side by side, and then the Star-Turned-Shadow was no more.


"At least, that's how the story goes."


The ferry pulled into its dock under a sky dyed with a sickly shade of grey. To your eyes, that grey stretched as far as the eye could see, a sign of doubtlessly bad weather to come, and literal rain on a not so literal parade. Strange, then, it might have seemed that only minutes earlier the sky shone blue, a picture of pure, beautiful clarity stretching from horizon to horizon. The engine ran silent, only the gentle washing of tides upon old cobblestone walls could be heard as the island's shadow fell over the ferry's metal canopy.

Fortress Dour. That, once, had been the name of the structure that loomed above the ferry and the batch of transfer students nestled within, but much like the island it sat upon, that name had become forgotten. Now it was branded with a name much blander: The Baltic Isolated United Curse Academy.

Along the dock's breadth, a number of figures bustled back and forth. Some were old, others young, but each hurried about to put the final touches of their preparation into order, and by the time the ferry met with the dock proper, most of them had already scurried away.

"Hello there!" It wasn't long after the ferry's gangway dropped that a booming, yet cherry greeting filled the ferry's cabin. It had only taken him a few strides, which rang out heavy and loud, to clear the twenty-something steps that separated the cabin from the world below, and as he stands before you it isn't hard to see why. The greeter, as it were, is an absolute monolith of a man. His legs were like tree-trunks, his frame bulky, and his height towering enough to where he needed to bend over to even stand within the ferry's rather spacious cabin.

"You're the new blood of the year then, eh?" As he spoke, the man's eyes lazily scanned over the room, pausing for a moment whenever they found an occupied seat, making some invisible assessment, and then moving on. "It's good to be havin' ya!" A light accent was audible in his words, which while hard to place exactly, clearly came from at least one of the British Isles. "If you'd all do us a favour and follow me, that'd be grand."

With that, he flashes you all a grin, gives you a moment to collect your things, and then leads you from the vessel. At his heel, you're led along the docks, up a weathered path, and through the gates of the Fortress-Once-Called-Dour. All the while, he speaks over his shoulder, pointing out a path to the student-village, which splits off from the one you stand upon about halfway to the gate, and then another path which burrows into the island's soil, apparently leading to a great system of caverns below.

It isn't long before he's led you inside. It's not hard to tell how ancient the halls you're standing within really are. Its walls are either decorated by raw stone or dreadfully overcomplicated wallpapers, and you can even spot a few ancient, sun-stained tapestries decorating them on occasion. The place is not totally absent of modernity; electric lights hang from the ceilings, and power ports are thankfully a more common sight than the tapestries, but those comforts of the modern age have been quite obviously retrofitted onto the building, and stick out like a sore thumb as a result.

"Now then. Take a seat where ever you're feelin' like. This ain't a kindergarten, so there's no need for arrangement or what-like." As you enter the room, the man's tone shifts. A hint of his previous joviality is still there, but it's clear that the time for ramblings and tourism is over, and it'd be in your best interest to pay attention. The room he addresses you in is quite clearly a classroom. A chalkboard stands at the head of the room, and several desks are splayed out before it, each of them very clearly worn away at by years of use.

"I ain't much for meetin' and greetin' so I'll keep this quick. The specimen speaking to you right now is one Alastair Sarka, you can call me whatever you like so long as it ain't Sir." He grumbles as he spits out that last word, a brief frown flashing across his features. "Can't stand that pommy shit."

"Anyway! On to business!" Alastair's previous cheer is quick to return to his voice, his momentary bother at the proverbial man clearly already passed. "I'm glad to be the one welcoming you all to our little slice of nowheresville. Usually, they don't let me do these on account of me 'poor grooming', but it looks like I made the cut this year!" He parrots out the quote about his grooming in childish imitation of an unknown party. It's not hard to see why this is his first time getting the job. The man isn't dishevelled exactly, but there's something about his combo of ripped jeans and biker jacket that doesn't exactly scream "Professional Educator".

"I know the place might seem like a bit of a let down compared to those big fancy schools you all came from, but you'll warm up to it eventually. Everyone else has, at least." Alastair's voice trailed off as his attention clearly did the same. With no degree of subtlety whatsoever, he took several moments to produce a pocket watch from the depths of his jacket, eyeball it, stare out the window, and then look at the watch again.

"So, uh, if I recall correctly, next on the schedule is talking amongst yourselves to build bonds and team spirit. Personally, I think that's a bit of cock, so let's just give it five minutes, huh?" To punctuate that, he snaps his pocket watch shut, and returns it to his jacket. "Let's pop to it then, eh?"


 
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Aranea
Perhaps she was still in mourning. That, or she just didn't feel a particular need to chat with anyone else on the ferry. She could just barely make out excited gibberings just above the music blaring into her ears, but she was not interested in partaking in any of that communion. There were a handful of other characters that had boarded the ship with her, three of which she noted had remarkably Asian features, and one of those being an acquaintance from a while ago. She didn't quite remember his name, and his face was fading quickly from memory, but she was certain that she may have had aided him in a previous venture of his, that he was Japanese, and that he came from the Kosaka family. What a small world. Her eyes did drift across to the others in the ship, and her studies of well-known families across the globe provided her with some service on who they were. Or at least some suspicion.

It was but a passing interest, to tell the truth. She had no particular desire to serve under any of them, unlike the rest of her family. She was a Sorceror, first and foremost. Still, it wouldn't sting to be a little more pre-informed of special cases. However, for the time being, she would withhold her judgements. Family names ill described their members, after all. She hesitated to count herself amongst that number, but she could name a few who did.

Her demeanour changed little, even when they arrived at the little rock in the middle of the sea they called an island, though the disposition of her white earpieces have changed somewhat, with one draped around her neck rather than in her ear, just so she could listen to what the instructor was saying. Well, was prattling about, at any rate. That accent was remarkably light, just bare enough to be distinct, but his choice of words placed him as a native of perhaps New Zealand or Australia. Perhaps. Wilfully ignorant of the others around her, she followed the instructor, taking mental notes of the layout of their home base as she tailed behind him, silent. HIs gesticulations, his behaviour, his brash attitude were bemusing, to say the least, but anyone who survived this long to become an instructor must be gifted with extraordinary luck, with extraordinary power, or at least an equal distribution of either. She was tempted to bring to mind a quote about old men and professions and something about dying young, but she decided against expending too much mental energy to do so.

The small tour group shuffled their way through the dilapidated halls of the fortress, and she brushed a finger across one of the cobblestones, before quickly dusting her blackened finger. Dusting was probably a never-ending chore to be had here, and it would entertain her greatly to take on that task. After all, it would certainly take her out of everyone else’s hair, and them out of hers. She offered a small smirk at the idea. A modern Sisyphus in a dress. Quite the amusing thought. The curl of her lips flattened out when they finally arrived at their...classroom, for a lack of a better word. Tables and chairs were strewn in an unrecognisable pattern across the room. She placed her belongings on the chair closest to her, uncaring of where she was situated amongst the crowd. Next would be the introductions, she surmised.

Thankfully, the instructor was not much for standing on ceremonies. Good. She unplugged her earpiece, and tucked them neatly into a little hidden pocket on the side of her apron. If socialising was the will of the instructor, she could put in the least amount of effort to follow his commands. She clasped her hands in front of her, and bowed politely to the others, who were no doubt just about to open their mouths and blabber to each other. She straightened up, her eyes betraying no hospitality or warmth and spoke, her voice clear as glass. "Aranea Fortinbras. I live to serve. I would be remiss not to furbish all of you with my family legacy." She paused to let the silence sink in, then bowed again, this time a little shallower. “So be it.” She then, very quietly, brought herself down to her seat, patting her skirt down as she did. She really must insist on clearing all this must and dust.
 
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Leonardo Aquila
Location: BIUCA Classroom
Interacting: Aranea ( simj26 simj26 ), fellow classmates

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Such a dreary day. A soft sigh escaped his lips as cobalt optics scanned the somber area around him. He was going to have to get used to days like these, although his last two years spent in the heart of Romania weren't too disparate from what things looked like now. As the traghetto Leo had boarded began to slow, and eventually came to a halt, only occasionally rocking back as a result of the tide beneath them, his lips curled into a smile. Not because he had survived long enough to get to this point, or because he would be making new friends, however-- but because he was one step closer to being able to hunt again. A bad habit he was beginning to develop, he found himself cracking a smirk at even the slightest thought or mention of it. He stopped surveying the skies for a moment to reach into his pocket, pulling out a pack of cigarettes that had yet to be opened, still wrapped in that same old restrictive plastic. His thumb and index fingers reached for the red tab that would be pulled to remove the plastic wrapper. He'd have time to at least get a few puffs in, right?

Wrong. Much to his dismay, a sonorous voice interrupted his would-be smoke break. On request, he rose from his seat and followed after the unnamed giant who had forcefully burrowed his way into his life just moments earlier. The small crowd of students surrounding him would mean nothing to him until he had learned their names, as he wouldn't be able to terrorize them until he at least learned the simplest things about them. The timeworn appearance of the building didn't bother Leo. If anything, they gave him a feeling of tranquility as he picked a random seat in the classroom and rested his head on the palm of his right hand. Their instructor's name was finally revealed to be Alastair Sarka, but what really caught Leo's selective attention was what came at the end of the man's sentence, more specifically '...call me whatever you like'. A snide grin was hidden behind his hand as he thought to himself. Okay, I'll call you Mister Ogre, then.

Five minutes for introductions sounded fair. It wasn't as though they were regular students in a regular classroom, after all. For all he knew, any random person in the group around him could turn up dead as early as tomorrow morning, including himself. It definitely wouldn't be best to waste time becoming buddy-buddy with people who's lives weren't promised to them. Leo, on the other hand, could care less. He'd befriend who he wanted, regardless of lifespan. His eyebrow raised as a fellow student stood for her introduction, beginning her greeting with a bow before presenting herself as Aranea Fortinbras. Ahh, so you're from that little butler-maid family! I see, I see. He rose from his seat as Aranea returned to hers, offering her a light, obviously sarcastic applause for her introduction.

"Molto Bene, Signorina Aranea! " he praised, slowing and eventually stopping his standing ovation with a wide smile. "Come amore a prima vista. I'll be sure to contract you for service someday. I'd love to witness it firsthand so I can leave a five-star review! Oh, where are my manners?" he dramatically cleared his throat, now addressing the entire classroom as he spoke. "Leonardo Aquila. Strong as a lion, with the sight of an eagle. At least, I'd like to think that's true." he laughed to himself with closed eyes for a moment, only opening them to inspect his new classmates for the first time. "In case you couldn't tell, I'm from Italy. But, I went to Bucharest for my studies. It's needless to say..." his eyes curved slightly upwards with his smile as his eyes landed on two especially familiar faces, before his voice rose once again. "...That I'm undoubtedly the best Bucharest has to offer." The shenanigans had already begun, and he was immediately loving every second of it.

"With that being said, if you need anything, don't hesitate to ask! It may cost you, though." ending his introduction, he gave a mocking bow, similar to Aranea's, and sat back down.
 
Ira Graves
Tags: Wxnter Wxnter Nobody Special Nobody Special
In the rocking of the ship, he found comfort. The gentle sway of the ship, if Ira closed his eyes, seemed like that of a mother's rocking. At least in a broad stroke, it helped him calm down as his nerves inched closer to fever pitch. Deep breathes, soft sways, a drey grey sky that he couldn't see but knew was there for him: all helped to keep him calm. But one thing above all could quell his rising anxieties, or rather, one person above all. Ira opened his eyes.

It was with the softest of smiles, lips turned up by a nominal measure, that Ira looked upon his classmate, his friend. Nyx. The two sat across from each other, and as the ship drew closer to its destination they shared erratic banter. A comment about the weather here, a joke about the quality of the ship there. Their interactions were brief, sudden, quaint. They were what Ira focused on, they were what helped Ira feel as though he wasn't stuck in some unfamiliar world, yet again.

It wouldn't be long until a man of impressive stature entered the ferry's cabin. As introductions were made Ira looked to Nyx, gesturing to her to make sure he wasn't the only one who noticed and appreciated the man's frame. Ira was quick to follow as they all left the cabin. He and Nyx walked side by side, and Ira was sure to point out every mundane aspect of the island that caught his eye. Making note of places that might make nice spots to find some privacy, to calm down.

It didn't take much pathfinding to arrive at their classroom. It was old, dusty, almost unmistakable as the site of abandonment. It was perfect. Ira took his seat at the head of the class, finding a reserved giddiness from how the chair creaked under his lithe weight. It didn't show on his face, emotions rarely did, but he was happy enough to start bouncing as the dingy atmosphere pleased him. Pleased him enough to distract him from the fact introductions were continuing. Or, rather, he registered it in the back of his head, but didn't fully focus on it. Until, once voice rang out in particular.

Pride and arrogance were tones that pushed themselves into the forefront of Ira's focus without fail. Coating the words that entered his ears with a negative basis that already brought him to assume the worst of whoever was talking. His eyes trailed to the man who was running his mouth, they stayed locked. As soon as his introduction was over, and his seat taken, Ira stood up. He held his hand, palm against his chest, and stood tall. Mustering what showboating grace he could.

"I must ask that the self-proclaimed best act with more decorum. An introduction ought to be more reserved." Ira took a slight bow facing the class, he closed his eyes. A second passed, and he straightened himself back up, brushing some wayward strands of hair from his face, just for show.

"My name is Ira Graves. I look forward to learning with you. All of you." Ira's gaze fell onto the boastful boy as he spoke his last few words. He sat back down, never dropping his self-satisfying grace for an instant. His expression showed nothing more than slight satisfaction. But inside he was elated that he could be reminded what it was like to speak up and have everyone understand him. Even if he was mostly speaking to one. Especially since he was mostly speaking to one.
 
Adina Dio Ostraca
Interacting with: Rantos Rantos Nobody Special Nobody Special
Grey reflected grey as Adina stared into the cloud cover above. Her hair was draped out the window with her neck arched back to match, entirely uninvolved with the other passengers with whom she shared the ferry with. She recognized a pair of faces from within the crowd, but had a feeling that it wasn't mutual. Neither of the two, at least, had exactly seemed like the sociable sort, what with their expressions painted with solemn shades of duty and righteousness.

She clicked her tongue and then listened to the noise careen off into the distant sea. It was meant as some sort of a self-tutting, a reminder that she'd be better off not coming to hasty judgements about people she barely knew.

Even if they did look like they'd had their outfit picked out by a penguin.

Adina's eyes flicked down from their skyward watch-duty as the island drew nearer. She knew well enough what awaited her and the other transfer students on those shores. The ancient Fort Dour, the darkened caverns beneath, the twisted woods abound, and she even had a rough idea of who would be staffing the lonely outpost of a school this year. It was, quite frankly, incredible just how much dirt you could dig up if you just knew who to ask, and how to ask them.

As they pulled into the dock, Adina jerked her head back into the ferry in a flurry of lavender hair, let out a lengthy yawn, stretched her legs, and then, finally, hopped to attention. She was the last to follow after that giant oaf of a man that was calling himself Alastair, and lagged a few arm lengths behind him as they strolled their way to the fortress. Her head darted to and fro, and it was clear enough to anyone paying attention that she wasn't paying much attention to Alastair's tour. As was appropriate for any aspiring youth, she was much more interested in figuring out the places that they weren't supposed to go, as opposed to whatever milquetoasted attractions that a teacher was going to point out.

By the time they'd seated themselves in the classroom, Adina's eyes were off her surroundings, and onto he classmates. So far, she counted two dreadful types, and one person who seemed to be at least a little bit of fun. She wasn't exactly sure what kind of fun, but that was down to whether or not that fat head of his had any basis in reality or not.

"Oh come on, Mister Pomp and Circumstance." Adina spoke at Ira with a sneer. She sat atop her desk rather than in front of it, meaning she was able to look down on the self-satisfied not-so-little choir boy as she spoke. "We're in a classroom not a chapel, you can drop the stiff-man act. The big guy ain't watching all the way out here." She let her jab hang in the air for a moment as she hopped down from her perch and then gave an over-exaggerated bow.

"Adina Dio Ostraca. Pleased to be acquainting with you all. I might have come here from sweet, dear Paris, but by heart is forever with my homeland." She spoke her entire piece while still arching herself forward, only lifting her head to address the class. Only when she finished did she snap back up, turning her attention to Leonardo in particular. "And I suppose that, Monsieur Leonardo, makes us countrymen. Or would you prefer Signore Aquila?"

Sliding into her seat, Adina shot the boy a sunny smile, comfortable with the knowledge that she was never going to call the boy either of those stuffy-ass names.
 
Ren Kosaka
Filtering out the quiet chatter that filled the cabin, Ren silently turned the pages of his book. He hadn't said a word since he boarded, content with keeping to himself as the sway of the ship soothed him. After a long week of preparing for his transfer, he preferred to spend this time relaxing, only having to worry about the words on the page. Things were bound to get rough as soon as the ferry docked, so he wanted to enjoy a rare moment where nothing crazy was happening. That seemed to be the case for most of the students, only a few of them choosing to strike up a conversation. After leaving their previous schools and being sent out to some island in the Baltic Sea with a bunch of strangers, it wasn't surprising that they wouldn't be in a very talkative mood.

Ren hadn't spent much time in London, so he never developed an attachment to the place he briefly called home. For him, it made no difference where he was, so long as he was far away from his family. Besides, it wasn't like there would be many changes. He'd still be learning, fighting, training, and living the way he wanted to. As he quickly found out after departing, he'd even be doing so along some of the same people as before. Not everyone here was a stranger to him.

He didn't even need to see Aranea's face to know it was her. There weren't many people who walked around in a maid outfit, especially among sorcerers, so a case of mistaken identity was extremely unlikely. Well, he knew of more eccentric people in this line of work, so it's not like he'd judge her based on her appearance. He was aware of her family circumstances, so it wasn't too strange. If anything, he found her behavior to be more unusual. Even now, he wasn't sure how giving a few language lessons was equal to her helping with an annoying mission. It worked out well for him, so there were no complaints on his end, but it still made him wonder.

Despite seeing someone he knew, he wasn't eager to get up from his seat and start talking about the good times they had going through hell in England. She hadn't approached him yet, so she probably wasn't in the mood to chat either. After hearing about what happened during one of her previous missions, he could understand why she might want to be alone for now. Sudden deaths were natural in this line of work, and sorcerers were forced to accept that harsh truth. However, even if they accepted it, that didn't mean the loss of life was any less impactful. He still didn't know Aranea very well, but he knew what it was like to be in her position, and how difficult it could be to deal with it. Things like that change a person. Because he knew, he wanted to give her space. If she ever felt like talking again, he'd still be around.

Before he could finish the rest of his book, the cabin door swung open, bringing the salty scent of the sea into the room. Breaking the previous silence, a hulking, middle-aged man called for everyone's attention and welcomed them to their new home for the foreseeable future. Ren didn't have much of a reaction, only standing to grab his luggage as the man led everyone outside. Aside from his cursed tools, he didn't have many possessions, so everything he needed for the remainder of his stay was kept in a single duffle bag.

As he stepped outside, Ren took in the gloomy atmosphere that contrasted their guide's cheery attitude. When he left London, he remembered seeing a blue sky and clear waters. Now there was only gray. The look of the fortress itself did little to improve the atmosphere, giving off the same vibe as a haunted house. It seemed like a fitting base for people who trained to use cursed energy, but he would've preferred a place with soft grass and warm sunshine. It'd be harder to relax with nothing but soil and stone around.

Thankfully, the interior seemed well-maintained. Everything was clean, and there were even some modern fixtures to go along with the original furnishings. It was nothing like the London branch, but everything seemed fine, and looks were hardly the most important thing. He may have had certain preferences, but he didn't care about the school's appearance very much. All that mattered was that he had a place to train and sleep.

After a brief walk through the halls, he and the rest of the students were led into an old, but fairly normal-looking classroom. The disheveled instructor wasted no time, quickly introducing himself as Alastair and urging everyone else to identify themselves as well. It was pretty standard for an orientation, even though the person running the show was anything but standard. Five minutes didn't seem like enough time for everyone to really bond, but as things kicked off, he began to think no amount of time would enough for them to develop the team spirit the school wanted to see. Not now, at least.

The icebreaker started off fine but quickly devolved into everyone taking shots at each other. It was nothing too serious, but it definitely wasn't a great start to their relationship as a team. He could see where everyone was coming from, but it didn't really matter to him if someone's introduction was too formal or too arrogant. He just didn't want to get caught up in whatever mess this was. It made him miss that quiet, peaceful time he spent on the ferry.

Instead of following the trend of attacking the person before him, he decided to keep things simple. Hands in his pockets, he took a step forward and raised his tired-sounding voice for the first time in a while. "Ren Kosaka. Just Ren is fine. Looking forward to it." He considered omitting his surname, but decided that it'd be problematic if he went through with it. As much as he hated being associated with the people he left behind, he recognized that not sharing his full name would lead to complications. He wasn't petty enough to ignore things like that just so he wouldn't have to think about his clan.
 
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NYX STARFORGE
Location: BIUCA Classroom | Interactions: Ira


Once again, there was a shift in the atmosphere. A low, rhythmic buzzing in the air made her senses tingle. The fluctuations were moderate and gradual at first, but as the ship drew ever closer to its destination, she nodded with finality.

'It's going to rain…’ she thought, tapping a finger against her lips.

Traveling by sea was not her preferred mode of transport. This was evident in the subtle knitting of her brows whenever the ship danced amidst large waves. A tinge of discomfort nestled in her stomach, but the heiress remained as poised as ever. A raised chin, squared shoulders, emerald eyes that were sharp and focused. Not even a single strand of her raven hair was out of place.

Over the course of their voyage, she had kept herself distracted by forecasting the weather and engaging in light conversation with Ira. She kept an attentive eye on the gentleman as she aimed to unravel his thoughts. Sat across her, his hair swayed across his features, delicately adorning a visage of tranquility. Indeed, he was a man with calmness in his mien and a gentleness of manner — a face devoid of worries — yet throughout the journey, he wore another facet. She thought she sensed a tinge of worries, so she kept her eyes peeled for social cues.

'Hmm…’ Such as the way his chest heaved as he took deep breaths, the way he opened his eyes to look at her, the way the corners of his lips raised ever so slightly when their eyes met — Ira was feeling anxious; and he saw her as a source of comfort and familiarity in this new world they were being thrown into. Nyx pursed her lips as she held back an amused smile. The more they bonded, the easier it was for her to see right through him, and yet, there was still much to ponder and reach. How curious.

*​

Soon they reached their destination, where a man of impressive physique greeted them with infectious ardor. Nyx and Ira exchanged glances, their thoughts in sync as per usual. She chuckled, and they continued to walk alongside each other.

As they were led inside the caverns, her eyes roamed the intricate designs of the wallpapers, the sun-stained tapestries, and the incongruous electric lights. Her head inclined slightly. She had expected silent antechambers, romanian tapestries with traditional patterns, antique sconces in lofty bronze sockets. It would soon be clear to her that such expectations were out of reach, as they arrived in a classroom and were greeted by mean walls, worn chairs, and undusted floors. Disappointment threatened to smudge her features, but she managed it. After all, adapting to one's environment was an important skill to have for sorcerers such as herself. The appearance of the classroom hardly mattered, the knowledge shared within was more important.

Although the place was in dire need of refurbishment, something about the island was charming nonetheless. It was different — quaint. On a clearer day, she would love to explore the island from a bird’s-eye view.

Nyx sighed before realizing introductions had begun, perhaps it was due to her mind trailing along so far into thought. Her eyes focused on the woman who introduced herself as Aranea Fortinbras. The young maid's gentleness of speak demonstrated an air of finesse; and her poise was refined and tempered, almost like a calculated machine. Aranea's habits seemed mild and humble, her features not completely absent of delicacy, and yet she was rough around the edges. It was something Nyx did not seem to understand in correlation. Speaking to her would perhaps allow Nyx to have a better grasp of her complexity.

It didn't take long before another person stood up to introduce himself. Leonardo Aquila. His eyes were a brilliant shade of blue, complementing his dark hair. There was a deranged look in his piercing eyes, like a predator looking for its next prey. They depicted a hunger for power, victory, thrills. The ringing of his voice reverberated into words directed at the students in the classroom. His wide smile displayed his confidence and amusement, his introduction lacking humility. An interesting personality he was, yet she wondered if such confidence was mere bluster or displaced arrogance on his part. She would first have to see him on the battlefield and reserve her judgments for later.

Ira didn't seem too pleased, though, and had no qualms about voicing his thoughts. He stood tall as he introduced himself to the class, displaying his natural delicacy and instinctive elegance. He seemed to be in high spirits, finally. Nyx's lips curled up into a small smile. She was happy to see Ira communicating and expressing himself freely with others. It must have been frustrating and monotonous, only being able to converse with her.

A woman's sneer, however, broke her out of her delight. Nyx recognized the lavender-haired woman to be Adina Did Ostraca, a fellow student from Paris. Although they saw each other around school quite often, they never really spoke to each other. Now... why didn't they? Perhaps they were too consumed by their training. Nevertheless, Nyx should have at least exchanged a few words with her. After all, building lasting bonds with the people you're supposed to work with was just as important as honing one's blade. Trust and teamwork were important factors that could dictate the success of a mission, and most importantly, their lives.

Moving on, Ren Kosaka's introduction was quaint — straight to the point. There was not much to gather from his introduction. He was calm and collected, a person of few words. People like that were usually the ones with a nimbleness of wit. Nyx found him interesting already. Without saying much, he exuded an aura of being sharp and competent. Time would tell.

The heiress nodded to herself. Her mind began to ravel on the thought that this team was certainly an oddity. A mixture of unique and interesting characters, where things could either go right or very wrong. There was already tension present between some students, but tension coupled with a competitive spirit could be important factors that would lead toward fruitful training.

However, getting to know each other would be the first step to having a harmonious school year ahead. Having said that, Nyx rose from her seat and smiled.

"My name is Nyx Starforge, hailing from Paris. It's a pleasure to meet all of you."
 
As the U.C.A's newest batch of students talked amongst themselves, the grey canopy that hung above Fort Dour shifted. Both imperceivably slow and blindly fast, it fell down from the skies, draping itself across the ancient structure's breadth. What was once a cover of clouds now stretched across both the building and the island beyond as a dense fog, blotting out the windows like an enormous grey barricade.

"And that's time." Alastair spoke from the front of the classroom, only a few moments after Nyx rose from her seat. He gave the two remaining students, the Zantong and Wakiya kids, a sympathetic look, but after glancing at his pocket watch another time, remained quiet.

"I don't suppose any of you guys have ever heard of hazing, have you?" Alastair started, speaking with a sound of tired resignation in his voice. As he spoke, he made his way across the room, stopping by the now totally grey window. At this point, the fog was pressing down on it with such intensity that it seemed to bulge under its weight. "Stupid practice if you ask me, but I guess there's something to be said about honouring tradition. So, here's the skinny. I'm gonna pop open this window, and then you're all gonna have an hour to find your way to the student village, got it?" The gruff-looking man's eyes flicked between the students with a speed that made it clear that he wouldn't actually be taking any questions.

"Coolio! See you the-." He addresses you one last time, but it's before he even finishes speaking the fog engulfs his frame. Its entrance announced by the sound of shattering glass, it only takes moments for it to engulf the classroom in its entirety, and its density is so thick and heavy that you can barely see your own feet. The room's furnishings are knocked clear out of place by the fog's advance, tumbling off to somewhere else in its unknowable grey void, and it quickly becomes apparent that you are now alone.

Or, perhaps, not quite.

In the distance, you can make out a shape, and perhaps even a sound. It seems impossibly far, considering the size of the classroom that you were in only moments ago, but within the density of the fog you can make out another figure, just at the edge of your vision. The fog shimmers, as if to urge you towards them and them towards you, and then it stills.


Hey everyone, sorry to put an OOC note in here, but I thought I'd better be clear. The party has been temporarily split, and you find yourself in a grey void that may very well be endless. Fret not, though, for you are not alone. One other student has been stuck in the same situation as you, so hopefully, you can work together to figure this predicament out. You can find your pairings below. Please get along well.

[Aranea Fortinbras & Nyx Starforge] - [Leonardo Aquila & Ira Graves] - [Adina Ostraca & Ren Kosaka] - [Tomoaki Wakiya & Fu Zantong]
 
Aranea
"You'll be hard pressed to find a place to etch those five stars, Signore Aquila," Aranea remarked. There was a hint of snide sarcasm in the young man's voice when he referred to her, but it wasn't anything she hadn't heard before. A witty follow-up to elicit some chuckles was the best option. She didn't much have the energy to get into a row with him. With that out of the way, she turned her attention towards the rest of the class, taking note of their names. Kosaka, Starforge, Aquila, Graves. A veritable menagerie sat before her. Even the one without a prestigious family name was of some importance. Adina Dio Ostraca was from one of those renown coven of Witches, a completely different branch of sorcery. She glanced at the two remaining sorcerors who had yet to introduce themselves. Though they had not spoken much, it was good chance they were of some sort of prestigious pedigree. Was that why she was here too? If so, then they had obviously made a mistake. If she existed in this very space because of her family name, it would distress her so. Thankfully, she was confident that her being here was not by any request by a fellow family member.

The allotted time came to an end, and the instructor turned to open the windows. From where she was seated, Aranea could just barely see the clouds above beginning to roll and toss unnaturally. Her unspoken question was answered by the instructor. No doubt, the clouds were about to be part of the next phase of their introduction to the Baltic branch. Her suspicions proved true in the next moment, when the clouds began to fall from the sky, and began to fill the classroom, crawling in like an ethereal, formless creature.

Aranea stood up, drawing her tactical vest out of her bag, and slipped into it. There was not much point in doing anything about the fog except prepare for what was going to be the next leg of her journey. The visuals of a barrier technique happened long after the actual technique had already taken effect. Even if she were to move now, it would be useless. She popped a strip of gum into her mouth as the clouds of fog swept past her, swallowing her surroundings and her companions whole. The instructor vanished with a cut off farewell, and, all at once, the world around her fell still and quiet.

She couldn't feel anything around her. She was standing on flat ground, yet she couldn't feel it. Was the fog somehow scrambling her senses? She flicked her hand upwards, sending a knife straight up into the air. An illusion-based barrier technique, perhaps? No, not quite. Curiouser and curiouser. She snatched the knife out of the air as it returned to her. There had been no impact. The ceiling had disappeared. How very odd. Perhaps they had been transported somewhere else? That was some high-level technique if so. How should she proceed like this…? She started to chew on her gum, letting the cogs in her mind turn.

That was, until she was alerted to the presence of someone else in her vicinity. While her own Cursed Energy was limited to a humble trickle, the others with her had exhibited much stronger radiations. It wasn't too hard to feel their presence, even if they were behind her. Aranea turned around, and barely made out the silhouette of a person in the fog, standing a distance away. With an iota of wariness, she drew one of her knives and approached the figure. Though the distance seemed far initially, she closed it with considerable speed, much to her own surprise. As she did, she could now discern more qualities of the figure. With the slender frame, long, flowing hair, and unmistakably elegant wear, Aranea had an idea of who it was before she approached her. The fog finally broke away, revealing the beautiful features of the prodigy of the family of swordsmen, her eyes as sharp as the swords they wielded.

"Madame Starforge, a pleasure to be in your presence," she bowed with as much courtesy as she could muster when the lady finally came into view. "It would seem we are within a barrier technique of sorts, but I trust that you may have already identified it as such. Furthermore, initial reconnaissance suggests that we are, perhaps, out of the classroom that we had started in. If I may be so bold to suggest, we may have been whisked away to parts unknown." She glanced around her, then scowled. A stray thought had formed in her head. Hazing. Fog. How very droll. Whoever thought this up should not quit their day job, which, hopefully, was not being a comedian. She shook her head disparagingly. "In any case, we should probably make our way to this village. Allow me to send a scout while we deliberate over our options."

She reached into one of her pouches and drew out a paper talisman. With a flick of her hand, she dispelled the talisman, causing it to explode into a bright, sickly green flame, from which a black bloodhound emerged, its eyes aglow with the same green light. She patted its head, and, without further prompting, the dog dipped its head in a tiny nod, and trotted off into the fog. Aranea watched it leave, then turned towards the swordswoman, and gave another small bow as she addressed her. "Any ideas come to mind, Madame Starforge? I will attempt to assist anywhere I am able."

Wxnter Wxnter
 
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Leonardo Aquila
Location: BIUCA Classroom
Interacting: Aranea ( simj26 simj26 ), Adina / Alastair ( The One Eyed Bandit The One Eyed Bandit ), Ira ( Rantos Rantos ), Nyx ( Wxnter Wxnter ), Everyone Else

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The response from the dark-eyed maid prompted a light snicker from him. "I'll figure something out, I'm pretty good at that. Don't worry."

Just as Leo had taken his seat, another student stood from his and prepared to introduce himself-- or so he thought. Instead, the young, light-haired man was ridiculing him for the nature of his presentation; something that caused his cigarette-deprived lips to lower into an ever-so-slightly irritated scowl. Being scolded wasn't exactly high on his list of preferences, and the fact that his classmate had begun scolding him before even revealing his own identity had invoked an indignant attitude that Leo hadn't expected to show the others until they were much further into their semester. The name he had been waiting to hear finally made itself known, and his temporary adversary could now be identified as Ira Graves. As Ira returned to his seated position, Leo opened his mouth like a tank gun ready to fire out his rebuttal-- only to be interrupted by an unfamiliar voice before he could even get one word out.

His mouth closed and his eyes bounced over to a mauve head of hair, attached to the head of a young woman who was sitting on top of her desk. Apparently, she was coming to his defense, as every word that had left her mouth so far was a stab at Ira. His eyes remained locked onto her, and her counter-assault against his 'attacker' was more than enough to kill his annoyed expression and arouse a satisfied, playful smirk. He was beginning to notice a pattern of slandering or mocking the person that came before oneself, and he was, of course, all for it. His smile widened even more when Adina mentioned her Italian background. He wasn't expecting to meet anyone else from home, so it truly was a delightful surprise for him.

"Che figata! Just Leo is fine, Signorina. Although, I'd personally prefer 'Mi Amore', if you don't mind." a cheesy wink and smile later, he was facing Ira-- all of the animosity he had been holding against him suddenly disappearing into thin air. "Perhaps you're right, my dearest classmate. Next time I introduce myself, I'll be sure to do much better. I'll even take a video and send it to you!" the mocking tone of his voice made it clear that he wasn't being serious at all. He decided to pipe down and let others introduce themselves, as this little three-way spectacle had probably taken at least a minute out of the five they were given. The next one to go was Ren Kosaka. His stoic demeanor and the fact that his family name was the second one he was able to recognize gave Leo the impression that he would be fun to mess with. The same went for Nyx Starforge, although she seemed more distinguished than aloof. He clapped his hands together once she was finished, considering he already knew the last two that were set to go, and raised his voice to address the class. "Well, it looks like I lucked out. I'm happy that all of my classmates are so interesting, and some so beautiful." He shot a finger in Nyx's direction before continuing. "That being said, how are we doing on time, Mr. Ogre-- I mean, Mr. Sarka?"

As if his question was a cue for their instructor's line, time was called right then and there. As they were instructed on their 'hazing', a choice of words that forced Leo to wonder whether or not it was a stupid play on words, he listened with excited eyes. Sure, he had a distant memory of the student village from when they were shown it on their way to the classroom, but he had no idea of which direction he'd have to go in to make it there. Putting one of his markings there would have made things much easier, but, alas, it was much too late for that now. He raised his hand, looking directly at his teacher and voicing his inquiry. "So, Sir, as for the time limit. What would happen if we fail to reach our destination in--" he was cut off by the swift disappearance of the burly figure that was standing in front of him moments earlier, the room he was in now completely clouded by a thick, blinding fog. "...time?" With a sigh, he reached down into his bag and pulled out his weapon-- just in case.

As he carefully stood up from his seat, struggling to keep his footing as he couldn't see what he was standing on, he placed a hand to his chin and quietly thought to himself. So, it's a barrier, then... If this is the work of Mr. Ogre, then maybe I shouldn't mess with him as much as I planned to. His eyes caught a glimpse of a shadowy figure not too far away from him. The long, flowing hair and sleek figure of the silhouette could only mean one thing. He rushed towards the outline and placed a hand on its shoulder, words of excitement spewing out of his mouth. "Meno male, if it isn't the lovely Nyx Starforge! What a grand surprise. I wasn't expecting us to end up together. It has to be fate, no?" his pleased grin disappeared almost instantly when he realized the person who's shoulder he was gently gripping wasn't who he thought it was, and he retracted it, bringing it to his side with a quiet 'tch'.

"Ah. It's just you, Ira." he uttered, crossing his arms and suddenly getting straight to business. "Naturally, I'd suggest we look for residuals. There's no way that vegliardo can navigate his way around here without using some sort of cursed technique. My guess is he's already at the village, or close by, at least." his eyes were eerily serious and focused as he spoke, but quickly softened when he looked back at his 'partner'. "Like following a Quaglia to its nest so you can hunt even more of them, hm?" after he finished speaking he immediately crouched down and focused on finding any residuals. "I'm open to any ideas you may have. Ah, well, that's assuming you want to work with me, of course." he spoke once more, not turning to look at Ira as he spoke this time. "If you'd rather work alone, that's fine by me." His eyes stared intently at the ground, and narrowed when no traces of cursed energy revealed themselves. Nothing. This is pretty advanced...
 
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Ira Graves
Tags: Nobody Special Nobody Special
Mr.Pomp and Circumstance. What was it about that name that brought a belying smile to Ira's face? It could have been the acknowledgment of the effort Ira put into his appearance. Perhaps even the ironic justice of critiquing only to be critiqued. Nay, it was the feeling of speaking directly to one and hearing a response from another. Just another firm affirmation that he was among those who understood him in the only way he wanted, amazing.

Ira was sure to listen to every introduction to wrapped attention. These students, though sassy, arrogant, reserved, or what have you, would be his comrades. He was excited, beyond what the jittered tapping of his foot would suggest. As the introductions continued he was excited to see how the remained would introduce themselves, but their time for pleasantry was cut short.

So, hazing was it? An hour to find your way in the mist sounded doable, if not a bit of a hassle. He turned to Nyx, nodding at his partner in crime, a reassurance that whatever came next, they would probably be fine together. Though, he found it weird that the starting pistol would be the classroom window. Would they have to leap through it one at a time once open? A thought juvenile enough to bring a smile to his face. And distracting enough to help the sudden breaking of the window catch him off guard. As the fog filled the room, Ira's instincts demanded he reaches for Nyx's hand. His frantic action however bore no fruit as when his fingers clamped down, they clamped on nothing more than nothing at all.

Ira swung his hands to the side, they whooshed in empty air. His legs kicked out, to the sides where chairs should have been, only to find nothing more. Was it teleportation then? At worst an innate domain or barrier. Ira kept his eyes open, his feet still, a finger on the trigger. First thing was to find out if his life was in danger. To that end, his breath was still whereas his eyes were anything but. Though to Ira's shock, that brought him out of his state of panic was the last voice he wished to hear.

Leonardo Aquila, the man couldn't make his intentions any less obvious. Ira found his clear disappointment upon not being with Nyx to be, irksome. No, that wasn't the right word. Irksome should have been what he was feeling, but the emotions welling in Ira took three unwarranted steps beyond that. Ira didn't trust this man, his personality, his intentions, nor his eye for Nyx above all. As Leonardo lowered himself, Ira's arm raised. The muzzle of his gun stopping in line with Leonardo's back as the trigger was subject to an unceremonious pull.

"Tch."

Should he have been disappointed or pleased that his momentary loss of temper was rewarded with a blank? Watching the shot of cursed energy disperse harmlessly on Leonardo's back brought those kinds of mixed emotions.

"I believe we're stronger together, even if our presences offer a mutual disappointment. Your plan is sound. But if you can't find anything down there then our best bet is to just get moving." What else was there to do, if not keep moving. Ira himself at a cursory glance wasn't noticing any residuals. Mr.Alastair no doubt had enough skill to cover his tracks.

"We might be able to find a cursed spirit in these woods. It would be apropos for a test, and they might be a bit more liberal with their trails. So if you're done down there, let's move, Aquila."
 
Ren Kosaka

Seriously? Surrounded by the thick blanket of fog, Ren let out a sigh of exasperation. He had a feeling that things would get rough as soon as he arrived on the island, and he'd quickly been proven right. At the very least, he'd been lucky enough to avoid the exploding window. The last thing he needed right now was a shard of glass in his eye. Alastair hadn't been as fortunate, and the sight of the man being caught off guard made Ren wonder if this was supposed to happen. If it was, it might not have been in the way their instructor was expecting. Either way, it didn't change the fact that he was stuck in this situation and had to find his way to the village. Unfortunately, that was easier said than done.

Right now, Ren had no sense of where he was. He was left alone with the dense, endless fog, unable to see anything beyond the gray veil. If he aimlessly walked through the void by himself, he'd just be going in circles. Moments like this made him wish he possessed a convenient cursed technique, something that could just warp him to his destination. Sadly, that wasn't something he was capable of. Still, there were a few things he could do to help guide him through this ordeal.

Rolling up his sleeve, Ren looked to the prayer beads wrapped around his wrist. As he channeled his cursed energy into the bracelet, he watched several of the wooden spheres detach from the string that held them together. Each of them grew in size as they floated in the hazy air, slowly moving up and down until they were as big as softballs. Satisfied, Ren sent the five oversized beads into the fog, keeping his eyes on them until they were completely obscured. This cursed tool wasn't intended to be used for surveillance, but sending them ahead would be a decent way to get an idea of his surroundings. If nothing else, it'd prevent him from running into any unseen walls. Maybe even a classmate or two would come across them.

Reaching into his pocket, Ren removed one of the many talismans he kept on hand. Once again, he channeled his cursed energy, pouring it into the white slip of paper until a red flame appeared on the surface. The talisman quickly burned away, reduced to a small pile of ash that fell to the floor. From that ash, his shikigami was given life. Its black body writhed as it poked its head out from the remains, revealing slit pupils. Immediately after escaping the ash, the snake grew in proportion to the amount of energy it'd been given, now half as long as its summoner.

Bending down, Ren ran a hand over the snake's dark scales and watched as it flicked its tongue in response. "Uwa." Hearing its name, the snake quickly wrapped itself around Ren's arm and crawled until it reached his neck. With Uwa twisted around his body like a silky scarf, Ren placed his hands in his pockets and let his cursed tool container scan the area. It'd be much easier to find his way through the fog with Uwa's sense of smell and ability to trace heat. Maybe I should've made him bigger. If he let Uwa reach his normal size, he could probably just ride on his back until they found the village. He mulled it over, but didn't have enough time to reach a decision before something else caught his attention.

There was someone nearby. He only felt their presence at first, but as he squinted in an attempt to see through the fog, their approaching silhouette became much clearer. While initially wary, he lowered his hand when the dark figure turned into a familiar face slightly obscured by purple hair. He was relieved to see that it was one of his classmates instead of an opponent that had been prepared for this test. Things would've been a lot more troublesome if he had to fight while trying to find the village.

"Ostraca, right? Looks like we're in this mess together." Scratching the back of his neck, Ren approached the girl calmly, not wanting her to get startled and take a shot at him because she thought he was an enemy. He didn't know much about her, so it was best to play it safe. All he could gather from her introduction was that she was from the Paris branch and wasn't a fan of how Graves conducted himself. She may have been the energetic type that didn't mesh well with prim and proper people, but that one moment wasn't enough to give him a good idea of what her personality was like. Not that it really mattered. The fact that she was transfered to this school meant she had just as much skill as everyone else, and that's what was important right now. They had to hurry and get out of the fog.

"So, any ideas on how we can find the village? I've got this guy and some drones scouting ahead, but that's about all I can do right now." He was open to any ideas that could help get them out of this situation. He'd been calm the entire time, but he didn't want to deal with this for much longer. Rather than feeling worried, he was mildly annoyed, treating the fog as an inconvenience more than anything. He'd been looking forward to resting in his room after the long trip, but it'd still be a while before he could settle in. The London branch didn't have any traditions like this, so this was his first taste of hazing. So far, he wasn't a fan.

The One Eyed Bandit The One Eyed Bandit
 
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NYX STARFORGE
Location: Endless Grey Void| Interactions: Arenea

Nyx had felt it before the introductions came to a halt, a profound buzzing in the atmosphere as the air that blanketed their surroundings started to behave erratically. It all happened without a smidge of warning.

As the windows shattered, her hand swiftly made it to the hilt of her sword, slashing the air and blowing away the glass shards that flew in Ira’s direction. By the time she whipped her head to face him, he had vanished. But it wasn’t just him.

The heiress looked around her in a collected manner, her face visibly undisturbed despite the confusion present in the back of her mind. There were no traces of the classroom they were in just moments ago; instead, she stood alone in an unfamiliar grey void. The density of the air was much thicker here, and despite all the fog, the air felt unnaturally still; but those clues were hardly sufficient enough to provide her with knowledge of the precise nature of this technique. Whether it was teleportation, an illusion, or a barrier technique, it was no ordinary one — as to be expected. Anything less would have been disappointing.

Without wasting another moment in thought, Nyx eased a step further along the path, moving carefully through the density of the fog. She perked her ears and kept a sharp lookout, her senses on high alert.

Nyx was alone from what little she could see, however, she felt someone else’s presence from a distance. It was difficult to pinpoint the exact distance between her and this person — the fog was messing with her perception.

An enemy..?’ She pondered but dismissed the thought. There was no foul intent coming from this entity. A part of her hoped, though, that it would be Ira. However, the chances of that being the case were slim. ‘Only one way to find out.

Nyx’s hand reached for the「Death Iron Fan」strapped to her hip. She spread it open and enlarged the fan just enough to summon a strong gust of wind to clear the surrounding fog. As the fog momentarily dispersed, she saw an endless grey void, but it didn’t take long for the fog to return. However, she also saw a familiar silhouette approaching. Nyx strapped the fan back to her hip as she prepared to greet the person.

Arenea Fortinbras spoke first. She greeted Nyx and bowed politely, and the heiress responded with a small bow of her head in return. She found Arenea’s soft, yet straightforward manner of speaking highly pleasant.

Well-mannered and refined.’ Nyx thought. They would get along well.

Nyx watched with great interest as Arenea summoned a black bloodhound and commanded it to scout the area. A useful technique, and one which required a skilled user. She watched the young maid with a scrutinizing gaze, studying her closely. Arenea's movements were fluid, yet sharp. She had slender yet capable hands and an array of knives in her possession. She must be capable with a blade.

“Any ideas come to mind, Madame Starforge? I will attempt to assist anywhere I am able." Aranea said, breaking her train of thought.

Nyx shook her head in response, she only knew as much as Arenea did. It was too early to tell, and she did not want to provide her with inaccurate information. Only one thing was certain, they were being evaluated. Their skills were being put to the test, and how they handle this situation would help the higher-ups determine how they were as sorcerers. It would be best not to act hastily for the time being, as they needed to conserve their energy and use it wisely. Things were only getting started.

Nyx sighed, then started to walk alongside her.

“Drop the formalities, Aranea. Call me Nyx.” She smiled and offered the maid a firm hand to shake.“Let’s use some of this time to get to know one another, shall we?” A better understanding of each other's abilities would help them strategize accordingly.
 
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Leonardo Aquila
Location: Inside of a cloud
Interacting: Ira ( Rantos Rantos )

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Once his bombardment of sentences finally came to a close, Leo's body twitched at the sudden sensation he felt. An extremely light tickle could be felt on his back, and it didn't take long for him to realize that something had happened to him. Sapphire orbs drifted downwards towards Ira's hand, immediately making out the large, pistol-shaped figure that was held tightly within his grip. Had he just... been shot?

No way. Of course, he'd been shot at before, but his relationship with lady luck had always protected him from actually being hit. His colleagues from his earlier days in the family, however, always complained about the extreme burning sensation and pain that came with a bullet wound. Was this it? There was absolutely no way that what he had just felt was a real bullet. He slowly lifted his head to face his shooter with a puzzled look on his face, accompanied by an equally confused smile. It was clear that Ira had shot him-- probably out of frustration due to the fact that Leo had originally mistaken him for his female classmate-- but with what? It was indeed a firearm, but it obviously wasn't a regular one. A cursed tool, then? Leo shrugged it off. Even if the light-haired man had intended to harm him, he wasn't hurt, so it didn't matter for now-- getting to the village was their main priority.

He promptly rose from his crouched position, pushing off of his bent knees and standing straight. "Nothing. I had figured that this assignment would be as easy as finding the correct set of residuals to follow back to the village, but it seems like I was wrong." he listened as Ira spoke, looking him in the eyes and nodding as he voiced his suggestion. "We'll check the woods, then. If we run into any curses, I just hope that your cursed tool will be able to do more to them than it did to me." The pair of sorcerers were now in motion as Leo led Ira towards the woods, now moving cautiously as they entered the thicket of the woodlands. His hopes of escaping from the thick fog that obscured his vision were killed the moment he stepped under the first tree, as the unrelenting mist was still as present and ferocious as it was when their assessment began, although this time accompanied by the shadowy darkness that always came with a forest.

It felt like the perfect time for a completely inappropriate inquiry. One to lighten the tense mood that he felt when he stepped into the new area. "Say, Ira. It's question time. When did you lose your virginity?" before he could even give his partner time to compute-- let alone answer his question, his mouth kept moving. "I lost mine when I was fourteen and a half. Not exactly a model age, sure, but I was legally allowed to, so I did it. What about you?" as they continued to walk, he raised his index finger to bring up an important aspect of his quiz. "Oh, you can ask me anything you'd like after you answer. But you must answer. I won't allow any 'no's, my friend! Maybe I'll just leave you in this seemingly endless void of fog if your answer doesn't fit my standards." his smirk wasn't too malicious, almost as though he believed the absurdly personal question he was asking was completely normal and appropriate.​
 
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Adina's blade cut a swath through the fog like a knife through butter. For an instant, it sat poised and ready, only a single thrust's breadth away from running it through. In that same instant, Adina's eyes flashed with hostility, but it was quickly hidden away as the girl's very serious-looking expression turned into an embarrassed cringe.

"Oh my god, I'm so sorry!" Adina blurted out, quickly dropping her weapon arm to her side. "My bad, dude. I thought they were gonna make us go mano-a-mano against a Cursed Spirit up in this fog, so I already had my defences primed!" She half spoke and half laughed out the justification for her hostility, quite clearly trying to cover up the fact that she'd been about five seconds away from making a Ren-kebab. As Ren went on about the procedures he'd already take to scout out the area, she relaxed a bit, and then opened her mouth to respond only to be interrupted by a loud and proud "Baaa"

Nudging its head into Ren's waist, a particularly dopey, bald, and mutilated looking goat appeared from the fog. Both of its flanks were torn clean open, revealing the yellow-white bone of its ribcage, but it seemed entirely unbothered by its wounds. In fact, it was far more interested in making a meal out of the hem of Ren's shirt than it was its own health.

"Ah. Sorry about him. The little guy is a 'scout' of my own, I guess. That is if scout translates to 'useless idiot' in some language I've never heard of." She joked, and shot the goat an unamused glare. It didn't seem to notice.

As she rambled on, the fog shifted. Its twisting coils shifted and settled, and beneath Ren and Adina's feet, they stilled. The infinite folds of fog turned into equally infinite grains of sand, and just beyond that, the fog turned to waves of seawater, gently lapping up and across the beach's breadth. Above them, a dilapidated old dock sat, hanging only slightly above the taller of the two's head. The smell of the ocean would be quick to penetrate both of their noses, and before either of the two freshmen knew it, that grey void was gone, replaced by the ocean's calm.

For Ira and Leo, it was the scent of wood rot and soil that came to greet them. The fog surged upwards and outwards, transforming into pillars of ancient wood supporting a deep-green canopy of foliage. The air there was ancient, perhaps older even than the fort for which the island was best known, its age perhaps matched only by how still it sat. It was quiet, far too quiet; not a thing stirred this deep into the woods, not a moose nor a louse, and the two boy's presence alone caused it to invisibly ripple outwards.

The same couldn't be said for the mangroves. When the fog surrounding Aranea and Nyx settled, the stylishly traditional pair would, tragically, find themselves knee-deep in a brackish mire of water and mud. Around them, the buzzing of mosquitoes was quite distinct, and it only took a quick glance to see that the mangroves were not exactly lacking for aquatic wildlife either. Fort Dour towered above them, sat atop a coastal cliff face that cut a very clear divide between the pair and the ancient structure above. The cliff itself was dotted with caves, each one sitting upon its face like a blackhead in full bloom.

Finally, Fu and Tomoaki stood at a border. It was where woodland turned to flatland, where the primal part of nature gave way to that which had been neatly tamed and groomed by man. A few trees sat at their rear, gradually giving way to a denser forest as they went on, but they were not of the same ilk as those that surrounded Leo and Ira. They were lively, painted with vibrant greens and healthy browns, and were home to all the manner of wildlife that one would expect. Snaking out of the forest's depths came a long, dusty dirt road, extending through the woods and all the way across the plains until it eventually fell behind a hill's crest.
 
Aranea
Drop the formalities? Get to know each other? "I'm afraid I won't," Aranea replied curtly to both requests made by Starforge, and as politely as she could manage, bowing her head in apology. "There is little to know of me, and I would presume myself quite learned enough of your family and your repute." Aranea was not in the habit of disclosing her personal life to anyone, not even her family or the closest of her acquaintances, which numbered within single digits in the first place. Likewise, she was not in the habit of learning more about a person outside of what was on paper. Though she loathed to bring her family values into this, it was only professional to maintain a distance between herself and her quarries. After all, she was but a shade. It ill behooved anyone to learn the history of their own shadows, for they have no stories to tell.

The fog around her shifted. "Lo, the fog stirs." Twisting, coiling, then fading into clarity, displaced by the true scenery, the fog lifted from them, and she could feel water begin to sog her socks, seeping into her shoes. She made a sound of disgust as she looked down, finding herself bogged down by murky waters, not unlike that of a swamp or a bayou. She lifted her foot, and glared at her now dirty leggings. They were not an issue. It was her shoes that pained her physically. Cleaning the insides was, itself, a chore and a half. She turned to her companion, and nodded in an offer of apologies in place of their gracious hosts. "I hope you've brought a fair change of clothes, Madame Starforge. It is unbecoming of our hosts to treat esteemed guests such as yourself and Signore Aquila like this. I shall see to it that this matter is brought up to whoever is in charge of this...'hazing', if it so pleases you."

She returned her attention to her surroundings. In the far distance, she could just barely see her bloodhound almost haunch-deep in the water. She sighed. So much for scouting. She left him alone to let him continue in that direction. Hopefully, he'd find something of use. "That was quite the advanced technique," Aranea commented dully, looking up at Fort Dour that now towered above them. Whisked away from inside, and brought outside. Teleportation, perhaps? She noted the absence of the others. Were they brought to a different location? If so, why was she paired with Starforge? A funny thematic choice, perhaps? Either way, they were knee-deep in muck. Even if they made their way out of this place, it would take a while to commence a deep cleanse of her stockings and her shoes. "It would do us no good to remain here. I propose we go the opposite direction of where the hound now wanders. We'll more like cover more ground that way. By your leave, Madame."

Wxnter Wxnter
 
Dour Mangroves
simj26 simj26 Wxnter Wxnter
Creeeaaakkk.

Buried in the darkness, a great sound of wood bending echoed throughout the caves that overlooked the mangroves. The series of tunnels quickly became a megaphone as the sound bounced about its walls and then spewed out the cave system's many mouths, echoing out across the mangroves like some sort of deep, guttural growl.

For a moment, the ruckus stills. The air hangs calm, and the mangroves now sit silent. Where there was once a verdant overgrowth of life both terrestrial and aquatic, now only the waves and mosquitos dare move. It soon becomes apparent why, as the dull creaking emanating from the caves transforms into a murderous cacophony of splintering wood and spanning twine. At an impossible speed, just barely within what the eye can register, an oaken rocket comes screaming out from one of the cave mouths, soaring through the sky and rending the air itself apart in its wake. It arches through the air, seemingly harmlessly, before making a sharp turn, like something out of a comic book.

It drops into the bayou like a meteorite into the Cretaceous Period. The muddied waters are upheaved by the impact, forming a miniature tsunami so violent that dry soil is visible at the point of impact, if only for a moment. The wave sweeps through the mangroves at half the speed of the meteor that gave birth to it, which is still more than enough to swallow up all manner of fish, plant and mammal that called them home, transforming the wave into a mobile barricade of waterlogged brambles and trashing fish.

First, it bites into Baskerville, sweeping the abyssal hound up and towards a distant corner of the mangroves, and then it makes a fast advance towards his Master and her companion. By the time the waves reaches the pair, much of its violence is gone, only enough force left within the wave to shepherd the pair towards the cave-pocked cliff face looming above them. From within it, you hear the telltale sound of creaking start to echo out once again.
 
Ira Graves
Tags: Nobody Special Nobody Special
All things considered, even if Leo was the type to leave a sour taste on one's tongue, and eyes, he was a fair-sport. Not many people can take attempted assault and smile. A quality as worrying as it was respectable. Ira holstered his gun, it felt particularly heavy strapped in by his side. The weight of guilt, the retroactive realization of his sin. Though, maybe towards the wrong thing. As Ira crossed his fingers down and across his body, he begged the Lord for His forgiveness. He didn't seek forgiveness for doing the action, but for thinking about how good it felt in the instant, and only the instant, he pulled the trigger.

As the two walked through the thick of the fog, Ira stayed close. He listened to Leo's preamble as his mind raced to figure out a solution to finding their way. His ears splitting the focus between his eyes, causing Leo's question to register a moment after immediately. But once it did, Ira found himself thanking the powers that be for the fact the only color they could both see was white. He was thankful that infinite white did well to hide a growing red as his cheeks flushed with color and heat.

"I, see you have conversational skills that match your cadence to a T!" As Ira struggled to keep his composure, the fog started to fade. As did the calm in his voice. "If you must know. I still have my virginity. Though I am slightly honored that you assumed otherwise." As Ira thought about his brief flirtation with the idea of romance the fog thinned out completely. The veil of white rising just in time for Ira's face, beaten into a deep shade of red by his embarrassment, to take the stage.

Sure, he was happy to see two feet in front of him. And sure, he was worried about the fact the forest they found themselves in was nothing like the forest they walked through before. But what was more pressing to Ira is how unbecoming he must have looked.

"The only solace granted to me know would be to find out you were at least a hard worker. Not for any redeeming value, but because it would mean we could be free of each other sooner." Ira pulled his cursed tool back out. This time taking aim and silent shots at the trees around them. Blasts of violent cursed energy flying through the air with a muted whiz. As they hit the twisted wood that made for the canopy pillars, some vanished on contact while others splashed at the point of impact. Which was a curious reaction.

"We're surrounded by constructs of Cursed Energy." Ira coughed, trying to regain composure. He pointed towards a tree, a residual from his shot remained clear to see. "That's a real tree." He shot at another tree, and the bullet left nothing but a physical mark within the wood, a gash and nothing more. "That's infused with cursed energy. To me, that implies we were either teleported or inside an innate domain, probably without a barrier to restrict the size. Which... is kind of genius if you just to disorientate a large group." As he spoke, he started to mumble. The last part of his sentence almost seeming like nothing more than white noise to an ear that didn't strain to hear.

Ira walked towards one of the trees infused with Cursed Energy. Each footstep brought with it the crunch of dead and fallen needled from the pine branched above. The noises would have been innocuous on any other day. But the sounds of their breaking under boot seemed deafening, a testament to how still the world around them seemed. Ira placed his hand upon the tree as soon as he was close enough to do so.

"Let's see if we can find out something more though. Got any ideas?"
 
Twisted Woods
Rantos Rantos Nobody Special Nobody Special
Ira's gunshots ran smoothly through the air, only the sound of splintering wood marking their impact. The canopy above stirred in response, replying to Ira's wanton show of violence with a gentle, raspy whisper. The latter of his final two shots left a clean hole in its target's bark, from within which a vile, ichorous sap leaked forth. It stunk to the point of rancidity, but not of spoiled sap as it should've.

It reeked of iron and rot, filling the air with the sickly sweet aroma that could only ever belong to a corpse.

When Ira laid his hand atop the tree, it vanished. Though, vanished, might not have been the right word. It moved quickly, but not imperceivably so. It shot up out of the soil, retreating into the foliage above, leaving its wake the sort of crackle-pop-pop sound that you'd expect to hear from the knees of an old man who'd been sitting down for too long. Not long after, another tree moved, and then two more followed suit. One would shoot up into the foliage, and another would drop back down, each one hot-stepping in place as if dancing in a blind panic.

Then, they all came crashing back down in unison. It was now clear that the wound Ira had inflicted was not leaking sap, but thick, rotten and lumpy blood. It eeked its way down the crevices of the bark, intermingling with a slimy, transparent liquid that now covered the tree's length. It masked the smell of rot with a scent of its own, namely, the scent of spit. It coated the tree like a liquid membrane, dripping down and off of its surface onto the ground below. A wet squelch could be heard as the tree trunks all shifted once again, but rather than retreating, this time they bent. Not arching back or forth as they would in the wind, but instead at a pivot.

The trees' movements all brought with them that telltale crackle-pop, each one bringing realization closer and closer to the pair that these were not trees, they were limbs. What they were hearing was the sound of creaking, weary bones. At their base, their unearthed 'roots' stirred, revealing that each trunk was capped off by a grossly oversized hand, reaching at least a meter in length. They too were covered in the same bark-like skin as their arms, which distorted and twisted itself as the fingers gently flexed back and forth.

At the center of it all descended a body. It resembled an incredibly emaciated man, only grossly distended to match its oversized limbs. From between its shoulders snaked out a vibrant length of green growth. It was the only spot of colour of the Cursed Spirit's entire mass, a meter long neck of fresh, sinuous plant matter, at the head of which sat a grossly oversized, well, head. Where the rest of the body seemed withered and old, it was the only thing that bore a semblance of health or youth. Its skin was smooth, and its features might have even been called cute if placed on a proper human body, that is if they weren't currently twisted into an expression of pure rage. Its eyes quickly fixed on Ira, and just as quickly the limb closest to him snatched upwards, attempting to snatch him up in its grasp before he had a chance to react.
 
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NYX STARFORGE
Location: ???| Interactions: Arenea simj26 simj26

“I must disagree, Aranea...” Nyx’s voice drifted as she watched the fog clear away, revealing a setting that was once not there. Simultaneously, she felt the unpleasant feeling of water rising to her knees and soaking the bottom part of her attire. She looked down at the murky water and merely sighed. Without so much as a pause, she tore away the lower fabric of her dress, revealing an array of knives strapped against her thighs with leather garters. Nyx cleared her throat, "...there is a hidden depth below every surface. To say there is little to know of you would be a disservice to yourself. You are more than the family name you carry, and so am I," she continued like normal after the brief interruption.

The heiress surveyed their grim surroundings. ‘Teleportation..? Hmm. Not quite that simple.’ Her eyes narrowed as she looked up at the coastal cliff. The structure that loomed above them was Fortress Dour -- but different. They were most likely in a domain constructed by someone powerful enough to sustain such a large amount of cursed energy, or perhaps she was utterly wrong on both accounts. Nyx was reminded, then, about the disparity in knowledge one is able to learn from books and actual experience. Indeed, she still had much to learn.

They were surrounded by water, unfortunately not the pristine kind, and the sound of mosquitoes were especially loud in her ears. It almost made her feel itchy. She felt a particular urge to blow the insects away -- or cut them into pieces -- but she managed to keep herself composed. What would Ira do in a situation like this? Nyx thought. Hopefully, he had found himself in better conditions.

“I hope you've brought a fair change of clothes, Madame Starforge. It is unbecoming of our hosts to treat esteemed guests such as yourself and Signore Aquila like this. I shall see to it that this matter is brought up to whoever is in charge of this...'hazing', if it so pleases you."

Arenea's open dissaproval caused an amused smile to spread across her lips. “That won’t be necessary,” Nyx replied kindly. The heiress briefly looked down at her ruined attire and exposed skin, “This is a minor inconvenience at most. Clothing can be replaced, and grime can be washed. Ensuring our safety is paramount.

Upon the maid’s suggestion to go opposite ways from the hound, Nyx nodded and led the way, all the while keeping her eyes trained on their ill-favored surroundings. It felt eerie, as if they were being watched. Their surroundings felt… alive.

As if on cue, a loud creaking noise echoed throughout the caves, causing her to stop dead in her tracks, her hands ready to unsheath her blades. The sinister sound reverberated in the air and sent shivers down her spine as she anticipated what was to come.

Then there was silence. The calm before the storm.

Nyx’s mind barely had time to register what had appeared before them as the wooden monstrosity suddenly came crashing into the bayou, the impact so great it gave rise to tidal waves that would have swallowed and washed them away if they had been any closer. As it swept away the poor hound and closed in on them, Nyx briskly swung her fan, and a wave of air imbued with her cursed energy weakened the force at which the waves were advancing towards them. It was vital to conserve her energy, so she had released just enough to buy her time as the fan grew in a size that could accommodate two persons. She had no time to utter a warning as she swiftly grabbed Arenea's wrist and pulled her atop the suspended fan, her weight supported by a gentle gust of wind beneath her that caused her skirt to flip upwards. Nyx suppressed a childish grin but offered no apology.

"Hold on tight."

The fan glided upwards, levitating just inches above the water, and when it calmed, Nyx allowed the fan to settle down onto its surface like a surfboard. The wave swept them towards the direction of the cliff laden with caves, and as they got closer, the fan soared upwards and hovered just above the cliff to prevent them from crashing into the rocky structures. After the water had dispersed, she hopped down towards the cliff and landed lightly on her feet. She waited for Arenea to follow suit before shrinking the fan back to its normal size and strapping it back to the garter around her waist.

The water initially placed them at a disadvantage, it wasn't great for mobility, and the surprise attack had caught her off guard. However, it had also warmed her up. Adrenaline was pumping into her veins, and she felt her mind shifting gears. She scanned the various caves that were spread out in front of them, and she felt movement within those dark tunnels. That familiar sound of creaking wood greeted them once again, echoing a warning of dangers ahead. Nyx unsheathed her swords and shifted into a defensive stance, planting her feet firmly onto the ground.

"Something's coming." She warned in a serious tone of voice, but there was a hint of excitement in her emerald eyes.
 
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Leonardo Aquila
Location: Who knows anymore?
Interacting: Ira ( Rantos Rantos )

________________________________________________________________________________

The priest's answer brought an upwards curve to Leo's lips, and he was mockingly laughing at him in no time. A laugh that he knew was bound to piss his partner off even more, yet he still wasn't able to hold it in.

"Dispiace, dispiace! I don't mean to laugh. There's nothing wrong with being a virgin. Seems as though you're some kind of church boy, after all." He most definitely did mean to laugh, but he continued speaking anyway. "It's just, something you did makes sense to me now." Whether they were just friends, or if it was some sort of schoolboy crush, mentioning Nyx was enough to piss him off. Leo would be sure to keep that in mind for the future. For now, there were more pressing matters at hand.

The fog had suddenly passed, scattering away as though on command. Leo wasn't too focused on the details of it, and was more interested in the fact that he could see more than a few feet around him now, along with the fact that the woodlands around them were fairly different from what he remembered stepping into. Fortunately, Leo was too busy feeling his own face (and trying to find a way to keep this sudden, rotten stench out of his nose) rather than paying attention to Ira's red one, although he did look back at him briefly once he began speaking. "Of course I'm a hard worker! I work as hard as I have to." A faux frown rested on his face as he listened to his pale-headed 'teammate'. "Mio amico, surely you don't hold any unrequited animosity towards me? That's hurtful enough to make me cry." Eyes landed on Ira's cursed tool once again, and before he had the chance to raise his hands in surrender, the weapon was not pointed at him this time, but instead the trees around them. "Don't worry, my friend. Your hatred isn't unreciprocated. Our feelings for each other are...mutual... for now, that is. Just know, I'm probably going to be the most entertaining one out of our category of gender. So, if you came here for a good time like I did, why not lighten up a bit?"

Ira's explanation of the situation the two had found themselves in were sure to erase any miniscule chances of 'lightening up' that there were, and it quickly became apparent to Leo that Mr. Pomp and Circumstance was now carrying their duet. He quietly sighed. It wasn't like he was going to figure out what was going on around them. After all, who in their right mind would walk around shooting trees at a time like this? Ah, that's right. Any other sorcerer. "Ideas, hm? Well..." As surprisingly intelligent as he was when it came to things like these, his mind had the nerve to betray him by blanking on such a simple question. He hummed to himself as though he were deep in thought, stalling for time as he cycled throughout various potential plans.

Then, like some sort of figurative savior, trees began to suddenly and violently jut upwards. What the hell? It had to just be some sort of cursed energy reaction, right? He tried to disregard it, but it was hard to do so when another tree would rise and another would fall each time he delved back into his thoughts. Just when he thought it might be over, he flinched as the ground shook from the sudden crashing of multiple 'trees'. The entire revelation that the forest they were in was actually some sort of huge cursed spirit disgusted Leo. He even made an 'ugh' sound as he looked on in revolt. It was clear that the shots Ira sent through it's limbs had severely pissed it off, and it snatched for Ira as Leo watched with a calm, but wary smirk.

...Wait, it snatched for Ira?

Immediately, a large, black marking appeared under Ira. Looking down at it would bear no fruit, as the mark itself was not significant in design or appearance in the slightest. In fact, it looked as though it were some kind of mindless, primitive scribble that one would find in the dark home of a stone-age caveman. Another mark appeared a foot or two behind Leo, and Ira was quickly sent to its position mere moments before his life was potentially stolen from him. "As much as I would have loved to sit back and see how that played out..." Clattering clashes of metal could be heard as he drew his cursed tool, grabbing a few inches of chain and swirling the sickle in a circular pattern in front of him lest the beast decide to try its luck again. "...I'm not ashamed to say that I don't think I'll be able to hunt this one down without your help. It looks like we now have a plan, Ira." The mark under Ira disappeared, and a new mark, similar in appearance to the previous one except now having a carving of an open eyeball on it, appeared on the forehead of the curse in front of them. "We will put an end to this eyesore of a prey, and if we aren't freed from this cage by then, we'll find this domain's caster and give them a stern talking to. Capisce?" Despite the threat they were facing, Leo's expression was fairly pleased.​
 
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Aranea
Her family! How dare she insinuate that she was at the behest of her family's coat of arms to behave as such! Even now, they haunted her so, the despicable parasites! Rather than her riding off their coattails, their reputation rode on hers! Even upon the act of professional distancing, her family name was held accountable! Could nothing she do be free of that accursed mob? How she loathed it! How she abhorred this very name of hers! A dark shadow passed across her expression as she quietly contemplated Starforge's words. No, she must not be distracted by a lapse of concentration. She returned post-haste to the discussion at hand.

She chose to keep her silence as the heiress provided mercy to their hosts. Once she was done, she bowed. "As you wish." Despite her current acquiescence to Starforge's request, Aranea thought it best that she should bring this up on a private account rather than for the others. "Of course," she continued to agree, this time to Starforge's comment on safety. Indeed, safety was of highest concern. Making their way out of this damnable place would solve that. That was easier said than done, of course. With barely any vision, and bogged down by water, this was a dreadful start to their mission.

A loud creaking sound drew her from her thoughts. Perhaps to ask the what and why of it would be itself, an understatement. She needn't the words of her companion to know that nothing good was going to come out of that sound. Every fiber of her being tensed, one hand gripping tightly onto her knife.

Then came silence.

Then an almighty brown monster hurtled out of cave, smashing into the swamp in front of them. Nyx moved to intercept it with a grand wave of her fan, the wall of wind that it conjured up slowing the cascade down as it roared towards them. Very casually, Aranea drew a second knife, this one of a much more unique make than the rest, and with a swipe, bisected a piece of debris hurtling towards her, unimpeded by Nyx's wind wall. It did not, however, protect Baskerville from being sent flying away. Fool of a dog, he was making her look bad.

"Hmph." Such terrifying power, but ever so crass. Her cursed energy flared ever so slightly, and she threaded it into the hole of her Victoire's grip. By the time the wave would reach her and Starforge, either of them would have been gone. She twirled the knife in her hand, and cast it abov--

Starforge took hold of her wrist at that moment, and with one graceful movement, leapt into the air, calling upon the winds to being herself and Aranea onto her fan. "Wha--" Confused and bewildered, Aranea could only mutter half words when Starforge escorted them to the relative safety of the towering cliff beside them.

Once the maid found her tongue, however, she was not kind, initially.

With a dignified flick of her hand, she withdrew her wrist from Starforge's grip. What did she take her for, a petulant child in need of an escort? "A servant is wont to tend, not be tended to. I hope that was an act of kindness, and that you do not presume little of me." Aranea flashed a dark glower towards Starforge. Her words were polite, true, but the tone carried much venom. The bile but lasted a second, however, before it faded away into her usual disinterested, neutral expression. She sighed and shook her head in dismissal of the affront. People of Nyx Starforge's station would never understand the pride of a servant, and it would be a grave mistake indeed to assume they ever will. "Nevertheless, I thank you." She bowed slightly. They who live in the firmaments have their own brand of pride after all.

She took up position beside the heiress, returned her normal knife to its holster, then wrapped her ethereal thread around her now free hand, and gripped Victoire with the other. "Allow me to correct myself. There is little to know of me through words. My family, less so. My actions will prove myself more than any else ever can, just as yours have." Even if Nyx Starforge would never know it, Aranea had been insulted thrice over in the past moments, and she would not let that stand.

Wxnter Wxnter
 
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Fishing Hamlet
Lucem Lucem The One Eyed Bandit The One Eyed Bandit
Adina practically did a double-take when she realized where they were standing. The smell of the ocean and the flood of new visual information hit her at the same moment, and then she took another few to pace around on the spot to take in her new surroundings, her blade sitting poised as she went. Aside from the dock above her and Ren's heads, there were a few other structures populating the shoreline. All of them were just as crude as the dock, built out of what might as well have been driftwood and twigs, and none bigger than a spacious backyard shed.

"...They can teleport us, and they chose a dump like this to toss us into? What a scam, man." Adina's sword fell to her side, and then let herself deflate a bit. For all the flashy nonsense involved in getting them... Where ever this was, she was expecting to get jumped as soon as she showed up. "I'm gonna go give things a closer look. Cover me, okay?"

Sand crunched underneath Adina's feet as she marched her way across the beach, and towards the nearest building. As she went, she noticed that there were, in fact, quite a few more of them than she'd initially thought. What seemed to be a small hamlet stretched back, away from the ocean, stopping only when sand turned to dirt. Most of their doors and windows were either shuttered, or collapsed far enough in on themselves that may as well have been, but she could've sworn she spotted something moving within the depths of the house she was drawing the closest to.

Just as she was about to open her mouth to say something about it, a soft gurgle came out instead. She stopped for a moment, halfway convinced that it'd come out of her own mouth, before the sound repeated itself... Much more loudly.

In a violent, clumsy flurry of movement, a man charged out from within the nearest doorway. A twisted-looking harpoon lay grasped in his hands, wrought of brine-drenched wood and rusting metal, pointed straight in Adina's direction. She was quick to react. Her blade flashed through the air and her body followed suit, both of them weaving their way around the oncoming attack and then finding purchase in the assailant's neck. He was dead before he hit the ground.

"Fuck me!" Adina swore, perhaps just a little bit too late. "The shit is this guy?" Adina backpedalled a few steps away from the fresh corpse, and let her gaze fall on it. It became clear fairly quickly that what had attacked her hadn't been a man at all. It stood on two legs and wielded a human weapon, sure, but the coat of scales covering its back, the thick webbing decorating its hands and feet, and fishman head sitting on its shoulders quickly betrayed its nature as something different.

Adina's eyes then bludged, and her ears twitched. A familiar sound of crunching sand, and a less familiar one of slapping, wet flesh had started to come from within the village. From within the gaps between the buildings, and countless shadowed doorways another of the fishman creatures emerged. And then two, then four, then eight, then sixteen. Their faces and body were both warped, a mockery of both human and ocean life alike. They shamed forward towards the pair, an equally crude imitation of a series of different tools and weapons held in their hands.

Finally, a larger one emerged. Even with its back hunched, it stood at no less than twice the height of the other creatures, and its features were far less grotesque. It bothered not with a weapon, instead only flexing a set of razor-sharp claws that tipped its fingers. It stood silently for a moment, staring the pair of Sorcerers through a set of shrunken, beady eyes, until its mouth gaped open to let out a deep guttural roar. The rest of the creatures howled in response, flying into an instant frenzy as their slow shamble was quickly replaced by a full-frontal assault, bearing down on Adina and Ren like a gaggle of men possessed.
 
Ren Kosaka
As his feet sank deeper into the sand, Ren gently pulled the hem of his shirt away from the mutilated goat. Thankfully, Ostraca's four-legged scout hadn't taken any bites, but there was still some leftover shikigami spit. Ordinarily, he might've been a little more annoyed about his clothes becoming chew toys, but compared to what he was dealing with right now, it wasn't very important. Once again, he had been moved somewhere else against his will. Because it was the second time, it didn't feel very impactful. It was just another inconvenience.

"This is already getting old." Focusing on the beads that had been scattered around the beach, Ren had his cursed tools come closer. With all five trailing behind him, he followed after Ostraca. As she got closer to the horribly constructed buildings, he observed their surroundings, only pausing to occasionally check up on his new partner and make sure they didn't get separated by another sudden warp. This wasn't the same dock they had seen earlier when they arrived on the island, but with the sea so close by, he felt like they had a decent chance of finding their way to the village. However, that was only assuming nothing else went wrong. Considering that this was supposed to be hazing, there were probably more interruptions to come.

Unfortunately for Ren, this school and this test continued to prove him right. The sound of a low gurgle was immediately followed by a horrific merman pouncing on Ostraca, but it wasn't long before the shambling stopped and the corpse hit the floor. As his fellow sorcerer cursed and backed away from her kill, Ren came closer. His nose scrunched up as looked over the abomination, the awful stench matching its equally grotesque appearance. He'd seen a lot of cursed spirits over the years, but this was definitely one of the strangest ones when it came to appearances.

Before he could ask Ostraca if she was alright, Ren noticed Uwa quickly turn his head to the side. Doing the same, he focused on the area where the snake held his gaze. Shortly after, he heard sand crunch beneath webbed feet, followed by even more gurgling from the creatures that emerged from their hiding places in the village. They just kept coming, overpowering the smell of the nearby sea with their awful scent. As if large numbers weren't enough, one that was larger in size appeared and let out a roar that riled up the lesser fish. Like the behemoth, they all roared and began their attack.

"Uwa." On command, the shikigami unhinged his jaw and opened his mouth, now large enough for Ren to reach inside. He immediately grabbed two cursed tools from his living vault, now holding a red umbrella and a large, traditional-looking bow. Aiming the umbrella downward, he drove its sharp point into the sand and let it stand freely. With one weapon in place, he focused on the other, slowly pulling back the string of his bow.

"Ostraca, what are your techniques?" It would've been better if he asked this question earlier, but he didn't get the chance before being caught up in the fish frenzy. Even if it was a little late at this point, they'd be able to coordinate better if they knew each other's abilties. "Aside from healing, these cursed tools are all I've got. There's ten in total." As he spoke, three of the large beads that had been hovering near him floated toward Ostraca's position. At the very least, he could offer her some support and have the Jujuzu beads boost her defense.

"I'm gonna try to take out as many as I can right now. After that, we can handle the leftovers. I have feeling that the big one won't go down with just this." Filling the bow with cursed energy, Ren continued to pull back the string. The flame-like aura took the shape of a single arrow that rested on his index finger, and the blue glow intensified as he poured more power into it. As soon as he let go, the arrow split into several more and descended on the enemies like a heavy shower of rain. Before the last of them fell, he grabbed his umbrella, preparing to deal with what remained.

The One Eyed Bandit The One Eyed Bandit
 

Dour Mangroves
simj26 simj26 Wxnter Wxnter
"Slippery." Deep within the cave network, a voice mumbled to itself. Its surroundings were dim, but not pitch black, just deep enough into the cave so that its owner is safely tucked away from sight, and a bowstring sat taut in their hands, firmly gripped and ready to release. The pair had moved more quickly than they'd expected and had already drawn close enough to the cliff to be outside of their effective range. They let out a huff, and then threw their weapon aside, letting it drop to the ground to a hefty, wooden thud.

Beyond the cave, the mangroves now sat still. At the centre of the wave's radius now stood an almost comically oversized arrow, as large as thick as a tree, looking as if someone had just taken a log, sharpened it, and then seen fit to use it as a deadly weapon. The mangroves themselves were in shambles, a mess of mud and mangled plantlife, though it seemed like Baskerville had escaped the worst of it.

Aranea and Nyx's assailant surveyed the aftermath of their assault as they paced over to one of the cave's mouths. They let out a soft sigh, and cringed to themselves as they overlooked the scene, muttering something that sounded like a prayer under their breath.

The light next hit their frame, revealing a middle-aged woman, locked and loaded with a collection of bows of every shape and size. Long, short, compound, hunting, you name it, the woman had somehow managed to figure out a way to dangle it off some part of her body without inhibiting her movements. She stepped up to the cave's mouth, unslung a particularly long longbow from around her back, and then leapt from the cave.

As she dropped through the air, the twang of her bowstring rang out rapidly, a volley of arrows spitting out from the woman's falling frame and snaking their way up into the sky. By the time they cleared the cliff's head, they had already slowed considerably, almost dangling in the air before Nyx and Aranea, before slapping in their direction like a puppet on strings. Suddenly, all of their original speed had returned and then some, rocketing towards the pair with vicious intent.
 

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