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#lots of ocs
lyranova · 10 months
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Can we have more interactions between Alister and some other next gens? How does he get along with his peers!!
Hiya anon! Of course I can, I’ll admit this ended up focusing on Alistar and a couple of other Next Gen’s and then it turned into an Alikari fic towards the end 😅. So if you have a specific OC Next Gen that you want Alistar to interact with please let me know 🥺💕, and I hope you enjoy! Btw the links below are of the outfits some OC’s wore, and if anyone wants to put what their Next Gen would wear to a ball below please feel free to add them 😁💕!
Leon and Cyra belong to @thoughtfullyrainynightmare , Avalinia and Nymphadora belong to @koneko-pi , Hikari Einar and Hana belong to @eme-eleff , Cory belongs to @hybridanafrost and Vivi Dusk and Sirius belong to @loosesodamarble !
Word Count: 2,676
Warnings: None
Alistar, Hikari, Miku, Kito, Kya, Hana, Einar, Ezio
———
Alistar quietly walked to the ballroom. Earlier that week his father, William Vangeance, had told him that there was going to be a ball for all of the Magic Knight squad children, the Captain’s Children, and for the other royal and noble kids from the Suit kingdoms. Along with Hino. Alistar had scoffed for a moment, knowing there had to be an ulterior motive for this ball, and he was proven right.
The reason for the ball was for the relations between all the kingdoms to be repaired or to begin. If their children got along and made connections with each other, maybe in the future they could become close allies. That was King Augustus’s theory anyway.
Alistar rubbed the back of his neck. He liked being able to catch up with his friends from other squads at events like this, but at the same time he hated having to go to events like this, mostly because of the stares people gave him when he walked into the room. It made him self-conscious
He was pulled out of his thoughts when he stood in front of the oak doors. He cleared his throat, straightened his suit jacket, made sure his normally messy white hair was still parted to the side like it was supposed to be before he opened the doors.
As soon as he opened the door soft, sweet music floated in the air past him. People were laughing, talking, and dancing happily. He had to admit, it had been a while since he had seen everyone look so relaxed and cheerful. Everyone had been stressed out about taking the Magic Knight exams and going on missions that they really hadn’t been able to let loose. Alistar nearly chuckled, maybe he was wrong, maybe the real reason the adults had come up with this ball was just for their kids to have fun.
He quickly looked over and saw the Black Bulls standing around being their usual selves. They were loud, joyous, and of course chaotic. The Faust siblings and Corduroy tried to get the others to calm down, but that wasn’t an easy task.
Alistar walked over to the drinks, grabbed a glass, and moved to lean against the wall beside the table. He noticed all of his friends and peers were there, except for one: Hikari Yami.
She was supposed to be there with her squad and siblings since she was their Vice-Captain and the oldest but she wasn’t. Maybe she was running late? Or maybe she was sick? No, her siblings would have told him she was sick. As he got lost in his thoughts he felt someone come to stand beside him, he turned and smiled.
“ Hello Leon,” Alistar greeted the oldest Vermillion warmly.
“ Hello Alistar,” Leon greeted warmly before he took a sip of his drink. “ Quite the party our parents decided to throw for us isn’t it?”
“ It is. But our parents weren’t the only ones who set this up, there are kids from Heart, Spade, Diamond, and Hino as well.” Alistar pointed out as he saw the Grinberryall and Deomine children standing and talking amongst each other, Leon nodded in agreement.
“ I hear you’re on the short list to become Vice-Captain of the Crimson Lions,” Alistar said after a moment, he noticed a small smile appear on his friend's face and he shrugged a bit.
“ I’ve heard that as well, although I’m not sure how true that is.” Leon admitted softly, and Alistar patted his shoulder.
“ I’m pretty confident that it’s true, and before you say something like ‘I don’t know if I’ve earned it’ or ‘I don’t deserve it, someone else does’ I’m going to tell you right now that you’ve worked hard and that you have earned it.” Alistar said quickly and with his signature smile, Leon scoffed and shook his head.
“ We’ll see, but I think I’ll keep my expectations in check though, just to be safe.” Leon admitted as he took another sip of his drink. “ Where’s Hikari? Shouldn’t she be here with the rest of her squad?”
“ I don’t know, everyone else is here except for her, I’m hoping she’s alright.” He muttered softly, his voice full of worry, Leon patted his friend's shoulder.
“ I’m sure she’s just running late, there’s no need to worry.” Leon said warmly and before Alistar could respond two of their other friends walked up to them.
“ Good evening Alistar, Leon!” Avalinia Silva, daughter of Nozel Silva, said cheerfully as she walked up to the two. They smiled warmly and greeted her happily.
“ Good evening Leon, Alistar.” Nymphadora Silva, daughter of Nozel Silva and sister to Avalinia, said more calmly.
One could easily tell that Nymphadora was here at the ball out of a sense of duty, whereas Ava was here to have fun and because she truly enjoyed these kinds of events.
“ Wow you really look like a Prince Charming tonight Alistar!” Avalinia said with a bright smile, Alistar’s face suddenly went red as Leon chuckled from beside him.
“ O-Oh, thank you Avalinia.” They all turned as Nymphadora scoffed.
“ If father were to hear you say that, he would think you were flirting with Alistar.” She said with a small grin at the mental image of their father glaring at the young men. The two visibly shuddered as they also got a mental image of Nozel glaring at them.
“ I didn’t mean it like that Nymph! I meant it in a general and friendly way, and if you would have let me finish I was going to say the same thing to Leon.” Ava said with a pout, causing her sister to laugh.
Alistar suddenly felt someone pull on the hem of his jacket, he turned and looked down slightly to see the young Vivian Faust standing there. He smiled and bent over a little to be more eye level with the young girl.
“ Good evening Vivi, you look very lovely tonight.” He said warmly and the young girl nodded.
“ Thank you, my Aunt Discordia provided the fabric for the dress and my mother sewed it.” Vivian explained matter of factly as she smoothed out the front of her dress. “ May I ask my flower knight for a favor?” She suddenly asked and he frowned a bit but nodded.
“ Of course you can, Vivi.”
“ Can you make me some Pelargonium peltatum please?” She asked, and Alistar nodded before he looked around, in order to make her those flowers he would need a pot of dirt. When he turned back to face Vivi he saw her holding out a pot for him, he laughed, she was always very well prepared.
Alistar grabbed the pot and used his World Plant Magic to make her the flowers before handing it back to her. Vivian suddenly grabbed a handful of the Ivy Geranium and began to make a small bracelet with it.
“ Here, the flowers mean ‘your hand for the next dance’, so after you dance with Hikari you can dance with me.” Vivian said as she placed the flowers around Alistar’s wrist and the young man blushed a bit and rubbed the back of his neck.
“ Of course Vivi,” He agreed and the young girl tilted her head a bit.
“ Are you burdened by my asking you to dance? Or is it my brothers glaring at you that has you feeling awkward?” She asked and Alistar looked over Vivian’s shoulder and saw Dusk and Sirius glaring at him, he smiled and shook his head before patting her hair.
“ I don’t feel burdened Vivi, and your brothers glaring at me isn’t making me awkward at all.” Alistar said with a small laugh, and Vivian looked at him seriously.
“ You’re a bad liar,” She told him bluntly before a ghost of a smile appeared on her face. “ but that’s what makes you a great knight.” The smile disappeared from her face before she turned around and walked back towards her family and squad. Alistar stood back up and noticed Avalinia and Nymphadora had walked away to go see their other friends, Leon smirked at his friend.
“ And you wonder why you’re so popular amongst people.” Leon said with a chuckle, and Alistar snorted.
“ Last I checked you were the one with the biggest fanclub.” Alistar said with a chuckle, which caused Leon to shake his head.
Suddenly the ballroom doors opened and in walked Hikari Yami, Alistar turned to look and his eyes widened and a bright red blush appeared on his cheeks.
She was wearing a beautiful floor length black dress with a slit on the side, the fabric had beautiful designs of flowers native to Hino printed on it, and the top of the bodice as well as the sleeves were also made to look like leaves and flowers from Hino. She had her dark hair swept to one side of her face and she wore simple yet beautiful jewelry designed with blue gems to look like roses.
She looked absolutely beautiful.
“ Looks like your bodyguard’s arrived, which means I can leave you alone to go mingle and dance with Avalinia and Cyra as I promised.” Leon said before he walked away, Alistar nodded numbly at him but his eyes never left Hikari.
“ Sorry I’m late, my dad was being a pain about the dress. He said it was ‘too revealing’ and that maybe it would be better if I stayed home, luckily my mom set him straight.” Hikari explained as she walked up to Alistar, she frowned when he didn’t respond. “ Hey are you okay? You can’t already be that tired.”
“ O-Oh sorry I was just thinking,” Alistar said quickly as he shook his head to get his thoughts in order. “ Honestly I’m surprised Captain Yami let you out of the Hideout in that dress.”
“ Yeah well he didn’t have much of a choice when my mom told him how it was unfair to let Einar and Hana come to the ball and not me, she also pointed out that I’m not a little kid anymore so I can go out wearing whatever I want, while also pointing out that someone needed to keep the brats in line at this party.” Hikari said with a shake of her head as she watched her squad. “ Speaking of, have they been behaving themselves?”
“ I think so, they’re acting as they normally do.” Alistar explained with a shrug and Hikari nodded before turning back to look at Alistar.
“ You look nice, you know how to dress to impress,” Hikari said with a grin as she looked him up and down. “ Although I’m not a big fan of the hairstyle.”
“ Why? What’s wrong with it?” Alistar asked as his hand reached up towards his hair, he thought he looked nicer with his hair out of his face, it made him look more mature and more like a noble.
“ There isn’t anything wrong with it, it’s just that…I like your messy hair more in your face is all.” She muttered with a grin before grabbing a glass of water and taking a sip. Alistar rubbed the back of his neck a bit awkwardly.
“ You don’t clean up too bad yourself, I half expected you to show up wearing your everyday clothes.” Alistar joked with a chuckle, he didn’t dare tell her his true thoughts, that she was the most beautiful woman in the room and that she looked breathtaking. So instead he decided to joke as he usually did. Hikari rolled her eyes and playfully shoved his shoulder.
“ Believe me I thought about it, but my mom and Hana said I had to look nice in order to give off a good impression to these nobles and royals. But I don’t really care what they think about me, they can like me as I am or just not like me at all.” She said with a shrug before putting her glass down and grabbing Alistar’s hand. “ C’mon let’s go dance!”
“ W-Wait Hikari!” Alistar tried to say but she ignored him and dragged him to the dance floor.
“ What? Scared I’m gonna step all over your toes?” She asked jokingly as the two stood in the center of the dance floor, Alistar snorted and shook his head.
“ Of course I am, the last time you and I danced I think you broke at least two or three of my toes.” Alistar joked, causing the woman to glare at him.
Hikari was as graceful as her mother on the battlefield, but on the dance floor? She was as graceful as her father was when he danced.
She placed her hand in his and her other hand on his shoulder, Alistar held her hand in his before placing his other on the small of her back. He cleared his throat and tried to hide the blush on his cheeks, if the two were any closer he worried that Hikari might be able to hear his heart beating in his chest.
The two moved and glided across the dance floor. This was one of the few times Hikari let him lead, since he was a slightly better dancer and knew more of the steps, but there were times when she would switch things up and take the lead.
Alistar stared at her as she looked down at her feet, concentrating on the steps and movements. The way she was dressed, the way the warm light shone on her face, and the way she smiled in joy as she made the right step. It made his heart melt and oddly made him want to kiss her right there and then but he shook his head, no, now wasn’t the time to get swept away by his feelings for her.
He liked her, and she was oblivious to it. Much like her dad was to her mother’s feelings. And Alistar wanted it to stay that way, at least for a little longer.
Suddenly a loud boom rang out through the room, causing everyone to stop what they were doing and turn their heads in that direction. It was the Black Bulls, as everyone had expected, apparently a few of the kids grew bored and decided to have a sparring match in the middle of the ball.
“ Seriously? Sorry Alistar, you’ll have to excuse me for a moment.” Hikari muttered, and just like that her serious Vice-Captain look appeared on her face as she made her way over to the group.
“ What do you brats think you’re doing? We’re supposed to be on our best behavior right now and you guys are acting up. This is why I can’t take you kids anywhere. Do you really want everyone to think we’re a crazy and chaotic squad?!” Hikari shouted loudly as all the Black Bulls knelt in front of her, just like they would when their dad was scolding them.
Alistar began to suppress his laughter, if no one knew better they would think it was Captain Yami Sukehiro himself standing in front of these kids. When she was serious and wanted the Black Bulls to fall in line she turned into the spitting image of Captain Yami but with the face of her mother Charlotte.
“ Vice-Captain Hikari is a little scary isn’t she?” Corduroy Swing, son of Magna Swing, said with a sheepish laugh as he came to stand beside Alistar, and on his other side stood a pale faced Ezio Roulacase, son of Finral Roulacase.
“ ‘A little scary’? Try a lot scary! When she gets like this I swear it's like she becomes her father!” Ezio said, and suddenly Hikari turned to look at them.
“ Hey Boy Scout, Taxi Jr. Get your asses over here!” Hikari shouted sternly, and both boys instantly nodded and ran over. Hikari began to scold Cory about how he shouldn’t have taken his eyes off of them, and that Ezio needed to control himself and stop flirting with every pretty girl he saw!
As Alistar watched this he suddenly couldn’t help himself, he suddenly burst out laughing, causing everyone to stare at him in confusion.
———
Thank you all so much for reading and I hope you all have a good day~!
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sunset-peril · 20 days
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Here we go! A 20K word story for your weekend enjoyment. I tried to remove all the typos from the original publication, and I changed a few things around. Let me know if typos/inconsistencies exist.
Technically a sequel to Trial of the Zora Armor, but I think it can be (at least mostly) read without reading Armor first.
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byz-was-here · 1 year
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For the sake of my sanity, I'm making a timeline and overview of my Sea Nomads of Aqua Manga AU here. The post that inspired this whole mess can be found here (thanks to @crystaltoa)
General premise is that a group of Agori with living ships manage to survive on Aqua Manga after the shattering, and eventually encounter the Island of Mata Nui and its matoran inhabitants. Butterfly effect ensues.
Ficlets:
(Ao3 Link)
Out of the Mists of Avalon
A Boat beneath a Sunny Sky
The Aged Aged Man
Size and Tears
Speak Roughly to Your Boy
A Sea Dirge
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kenziedrawz · 10 months
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oooh you wanna ask me about my chaotic little pjsk canon divergent au don't you? you wanna do it so much...
please.
but yeah anyways it's basically a bunch of random cards thrown into a high school setting because it's silly Tsukasa and Saki are basically the only 'normal' people there it's so fun and stupid and I already put them on an island-
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joezworld · 2 years
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An Ill Wind
Traintober Day 9 - Brace For Impact
So, this is the long one. There always has to be one. I hope this is the only one. As a note, this isn't horror, per se, but rather ominous dread at the most. At time of writing everyone reading this has lived through These Times. We all know what's coming.
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As a housekeeping note - this story relies upon a lot of stuff I've previously written or it won't make much, if any, sense. I've tried to link everything in the first place it's mentioned. Please let me know if you're confused at any point.
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This is also a very long story, with explanatory paragraphs that sometimes become Very Dense. I also wrote it exclusively between the hours of 11:00 PM and 4:00 AM over two consecutive nights. (A bad decision on my part - don't do that.) Please bear with me if there are any glaring errors - I did check this over but I'm not omniscient.
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Summary - An ill wind blows from the East, and Sodor prepares for the oncoming storm.
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Mid February - Tidmouth
“-and you’re sure that this isn’t an engine that British Rail… missed? Your father didn’t shove her behind a shed or something?” The insurance agent said, looking over his papers at Stephen. “Engines don’t appear from nowhere.”
“Tony, as much as I would like to believe you, in this case she did.” Stephen said seriously. “There are records of her being scrapped.”
“So you’ve showed me.” The agent was from Lloyds of London, and was used to people trying to ‘finesse’ their way out of a claim, but everything that he’d seen so far, and his many previous experiences with the NWR, was making this far more believable than he was comfortable with. “So I take it you didn’t pay for this engine?” 
“No.”
“Of course. Do you have any idea of what something like Daphne would be valued at?” 
A few papers were shuffled, and Stephen’s notepad emerged from the clutter on the desk. “I have tried to purchase several Deltics over the years. Depending on whether you wish to base the valuation on Alycidon, Tulyar, or Royal Scot’s Grey and Gordon Highlander together, Daphne is worth somewhere between fifteen million pounds, thirty million pounds, or, and I will quote directly here: ‘absolutely priceless, I will never sell either of them.’” He ran his finger down the paper. “He sold the two of them less than a month after I inquired. Everyone seems to think Jeremy Hoskings is a better owner than I am, to my continued bafflement.”
There was a snort from the insurance agent, followed by a sigh. “My department manager knows Hoskings. We’ll confirm the valuation with him, but for right now I’ll leave it at… twelve?” 
“That sounds appropriate,” Stephen said, pleased that he’d come to more or less the same valuation before the meeting.  “Is there anything else you need from us right now?” 
“No, I can’t think of anything else at the moment.”
“Well then Mr. Kwon, we are done for now. You must excuse me for leaving so quickly, but my attention is needed all over the island. You do know your way out?”
“Yeah…” The insurance agent said, suddenly engrossed in his phone, papers half in his briefcase. “Excuse me.” He said, suddenly shoving everything into his case before bolting for the door. Stephen and his secretary watched as the man receded down the hallway, speaking rapidly into his cell phone in an unknown language. 
“What was that all about?” His secretary asked, watching as the man vanished around the corner. 
“I don’t know.” Stephen said as he shrugged into his overcoat. “Hopefully nothing.”
--
As it turns out, it wasn’t nothing. Stephen had a meeting with the Barrow City Council, and was making his way to the first class compartments of the Limited when he came across Tony Kwon in a coach vestibule. He was still talking into his phone, the language foreign but the tone urgent. He paid Stephen no mind, but when Stephen eventually reached his seat, he found the Insurance Agent’s case and coat sitting in the seat opposite his. 
The train was almost to Kildane when Kwon eventually came back, his face flushed. “Is everything all right?” Stephen asked, concerned. 
“No.” The man all but collapsed into the seat, as if the life had been drained from him. “My brother… he works for Toyota, in Yokohama. Last week he went out to China for a conference, and now fifteen of the people he went with have come down with this… strange pneumonia.” He tilted his head back to stare at the ceiling of the coach. “He’s a hypochondriac, so between that and the cruise ship I’m having to talk him off a ledge - metaphorically, of course.”
‘My goodness.” Stephen had no idea what to say to that, and offered some brief consoling words. 
“Thanks, but there’s nothing you can do about this.” Tony blew out a breath resignedly. “Fuck, there’s nothing I can do.”
He looked like he wanted to say something else, but his phone rang, cutting him off. “クソ地獄, it’s my mother.”
He exited the compartment, and remained on the phone in the vestibule until the train reached Barrow.
Stephen left via a different door, and didn’t see the man again, but felt strangely ill-at-ease for the rest of the day. 
----
A few days later - Near the Hatt Family Estate
The credit card machines at the petrol station were out, and Stephen was forced to go in and pay for his fuel in cash. As he waited in line, the rack of newspapers caught his eye; while the local Sodor papers were focused on the Lord Mayor of Suddery having some sort of extramarital affair, The Daily Mail featured a prominent picture of a cruise ship, with the equally bold headline of “PLAGUE SHIP”. 
The woman in front of him seemed intent of paying for her petrol in pound coins, and Stephen tuned out the furor this was eliciting from the rest of the line of patrons, reaching for the newspaper. 
The byline read ‘Yokohama, Japan’, and within a few sentences, alarm bells were ringing in the back of the Fat Controller’s head. He read through the rest of the article, and was only brought out of the paper by the clerk trying to get his attention. “Sir? We’ve run out of cash to make change, so right now, we’re-”
Stephen needed to be elsewhere, now, and he pressed a hundred-pound note into the clerk's hand before walking out, paper under his arm. 
Something is happening. I can feel it. 
-----
The next day - Tidmouth Station
The usual clutter on Stephen’s desk had been rather abruptly piled on the floor. In its place were newspapers and website printouts, their topics all on the eruption of a virus in Southeast Asia. 
The Fat Controller himself was engrossed in a phone call when his secretary stuck her head in the door. “Rolf Tedfield to see you, sir.” 
Still on the phone, Stephen waved at her to let in his visitor once the phone call was over. “-yes, Secretary, I understand but- no, I understand perfectly. Yes there is a problem! Mr. Secretary, Grant, for the love of god, do not brush this off! Something is happening! What proof do I have? THE NEWS! Good God man, just listen to the BBC! Or read the Guardian! Or the Financial Times! For god’s sake, I found an article about this next to a page three girl in The Sun!” There was a pause as the man on the other end of the call - The Secretary of State for Transport - said something, and Stephen’s head dropped almost to the desk. “It is not like Ebola. It will not go away on its own.”
There was another pause, and his head met his desk. “The position of the government is that this disease will not be a threat to the United Kingdom. Do you mind if I quote you on that? Considering that Hong Kong has a land border with China, I feel very differently. Yes, I am aware the border has been closed for a decade but considering there’s a steady stream of asylum-seekers going through there I feel like it may not- yes, Mr. Secretary, thank you, Mr. Secretary. Goodbye.”
He hung up the phone as gingerly as he could before staring at the ceiling and counting down from ten. When he reached zero he called in the visitor. “Rolf. What can I do for you?”
The manager of Crovan’s Gate works sat down with a distracted sigh, his eyes scanning the papers on the desk. “I think you’re already ahead of me.”
Stephen followed his gaze. “You’re following this too?”
“Aye. I’m from Hong Kong, got most of my family there still.”
“I didn’t know you were from there.”
“My parents went over from Pembrokeshire in ‘49. Anyways, my sister and my brother still live out there; few cousins too, and they’re scared, Stephen. Whatever this is, it hasn’t been sitting around at the Chinese border.” He tapped at his phone, and pulled up an image from a messaging application. It was taken from a high-rise building, showing a group of helicopters and rescue boats surrounding a ship.  “Five days ago a Chinese trawler got run over by a ferry. Coast Guard went and picked up the crew, took ‘em to Queen Mary Hospital. Now the entire place is on lockdown. Everyone thinks it's SARS but… sir, from what I’m hearing it’s worse than that.”
Stephen felt suddenly sick, and then realized that he should probably start using a different expression. “When was this?” 
“Last night, well, it was daytime there. We’ve not heard anything because it’s still the middle of the night there.”
“And they’ve only now locked down the hospital?” 
“Yeah. For all the good that will do.” Rolf seemed to be on the same page. “S’like waiting until after the zombie bites you.”
The Fat Controller took a deep breath, and steadied his nerves. “Thank you for bringing this to my attention. As you might have heard before you came in, I was on the phone with the Transport Secretary trying to convince him of the seriousness of this, and I was not successful. I feel that we are going to have to act on our own.” He rose from the desk, already composing an email as he walked, and swung open the door to his office.
“Sir?”
“Rolf, I don’t know what I am going to do just yet, but I want you to - very quietly - start pulling all the coaches we have available in the out-of-use lines and the P-way trains and start making them habitable again. Interiors, then mechanicals. Focus on the buffet and sleeper cars first.”
“Yes sir. Why sir?” 
“At the moment, I’m not sure yet, but I feel that having spare beds and hot meals will only help us. Aside from that, I want you to make sure that the works is stocked on spare parts and other consumables, and stop all new work on the engines and coaches.”
“Sir?” 
“I mean it, Rolf. Finish everything that’s in progress as quickly as possible - use as much overtime as needed - but unless an engine catastrophically fails I don’t want anything or anyone in pieces right now. Something is happening. I’m just not sure how bad it will become.”
With that, Stephen left, his coat flapping out behind him dramatically as he marched towards the door to the station proper. Rolf watched him go, and blinked owlishly before pulling out his own cell phone, taking careful notes on what had just been said. “Did you get all of that?” He asked Stephen’s secretary, who was used to the Fat Controller’s occasionally abrupt departures. 
Without a word, she shoved a piece of notebook paper into his hand. On it, in neat handwriting, was everything that had just been said. 
“Thank you, Gladys.” 
------
A few days later - Suddery
The Sodor Regional Council - the governmental board in charge of Island-wide affairs - met in a lecture hall at the city’s technical college. Usually they met inside Suddery’s Government Hall, but the short notice of their meeting meant that the hall was being used for other business. The atmosphere inside the room was decidedly tense - the unusual surrounds and urgent nature of the meeting meant that everyone was ill at ease even before the proceedings began. 
The Mayor of Kirk Ronan spoke first. He was a svelte man of about forty, in his youth a multi-time gymnastics medalist at the Commonwealth Games. “Look, we all know why we’re here, and we all know what’s going on. Let’s dispense with the pleasantries and get down to it: There’s a sickness coming, from China, Japan, Iran, and now Italy from what I heard on the car ride here.”
A few murmurs came after that, and he held out his hands for quiet. “Now I’m sure that almost everyone here has called down to London at some point, and they’ve all said the same thing, haven’t they?”
“Yeah,” came one voice in particular - the Barrow Harbormaster, who watched five ferries a day pull into his port, each one loaded full with French and Irish passengers. “That we’s gonna ignore Hong Kong bein’ loike The Walkin’ Dead and just hope tha’ the Border Force can do bet’er wit’ t’is  than theys do wit’ the moigrants.” 
London seemed to think that, like Rabies, Termites, and asylum-seeking refugees, the width of the English Channel was all that was needed to keep the mysterious ‘asian flu’ out of the British Isles. Frustrated mumbles broke out as everyone tried to recount to their neighbor the lies that their contact in London had fed them. 
“Thank you, thank you, I know what it was like, I phoned them too.” The mayor signaled again for quiet. “I know we are all frustrated. I know that we are all in the dark. I know that we’re all scared.” And for a moment he let his guard down, and showed his true emotions on his face, before continuing. 
“But we aren’t some helpless home county who can’t do anything themselves. We’re Sodor, damnit. London hasn’t given a monkey’s arse about us in a thousand years and they’re not about to start now. So what are we going to do about it?” 
Despite his best efforts, Stephen Hatt’s lifestyle and means of employment meant that “punctuality” was something he only ever chanced into, rather than it being a regular occurance. In this instance, James-related issues at Tidmouth had meant his arrival at the hall was almost ten minutes after the meeting’s already-delayed start time. 
Fortunately, chance often smiled upon Stephen, and he hadn’t gotten this far in life without being quick on his feet. “If I may,” He called out as he strode through a side door near the lectern. “I do have some suggestions.”
--
Two hours later
The meeting had gone as well as a crisis planning session could go, and the participants filed out with brimming notebooks both physical and digital, their faces grim with worry or steeled against what would happen next. 
The parking lot of the technical college backed up against the city marina, and a cold sea breeze whipped across the tarmac, rustling papers, tugging at clothes, and teasing hair. Stephen took refuge in an enclosed bus shelter to organize his notes, and was joined a moment later by a man he knew more from reputation than meeting - the head of Wellsworth’s St. Tibba’s Hospital, the largest and best hospital on the Island. Stepehen knew very little about the man - his first name, (Dembe), his nationality (English, to Ugandan parents), that he was a paediatrician by training, and that he’d been appointed head of St. Tibba’s over several local candidates whose CVs may as well have been written in crayon when compared to him. He’d sat through most of the meeting in complete silence, only answering questions when asked directly. 
“Doctor.”
“Mister Hatt.”
There was silence, broken only by the doctor pulling out a carton of cigarettes and a silver lighter. 
“Your ideas are sound.” The man said only after he’d puffed a Dunhill into life. “But it’s not going to be enough.”
“Do you really think that?” Stephen kept his expression neutral, staring out into Suddery Bay rather than at the other man. Fittingly, a storm was brewing on the horizon, huge clouds rising into the sky.
“I do.” The cigarette smoke came out in measured smoke rings. “We haven’t got enough beds.”
“Surely the-”
“It doesn’t matter how many train cars you give us, Stephen. It doesn’t matter if there’s a line of them going from one end of the Island to the other. We’ve only got two hundred fifty beds across the entire Island, and our staff levels reflect that.” Another, more violent puff of the cigarette followed. “Give us all the beds you want, but what we need is doctors. And you can’t build those out of an old train car.”
“What would you recommend we do then?” The storm was beginning to worsen, and lightning crackled across the high tops of the clouds. 
“Honestly? Pray.” With that, the man raised his collar against the cold wind, and walked across the parking lot to a mid-sized saloon car at the back of the lot. 
Stephen waited another moment, carefully adjusting the papers in his folio, before heading off. 
He’d just opened the door to his Audi when his cell phone rang. He waited until he was inside the car before answering. Intriguingly, it was Louisa Duncan, Fergus Duncan’s daughter, and new controller of the Arlesdale Railway. She’d been in the meeting with him, and had left not even ten minutes prior. 
As he answered, the skies opened up, and a torrential downpour thundered down onto his car. At first, it was hard to understand what Louisa had been saying; her voice was broken with tears and sobs. 
By the time he understood, the rain was pounding hard enough that his own sobs couldn’t be heard. 
Less than a month ago, on the fourth of February, Ivan Farrier, the Chief Mechanical Engineer of the Arlesdale, had gone on a long-awaited holiday to the Italian Alps with his wife Amanda. 
It was now the twenty-seventh, and both of them were dead, killed by the ill wind from the far east. 
---------------------------
March
For the next week or so, everything went quiet, but it did not go gentle.
In Crovan’s Gate, the works threw itself into overdrive; and seemingly every useful piece of rolling stock, from first class coaches to old General Use Vans left over from BR’s discontinuation of newspaper trains in the 1990s, were being scrubbed and painted to within an inch of their lives. Bafflingly (to them), once their interiors were refreshed, they were shoved outside, onto the storage tracks, while more coaches were pushed in to take their place. In the locomotive depots, the engines undergoing overhaul were suddenly being kept up at all hours of the day, as their repairs went on around the clock. Dane, one of the electric locomotives, would later remark that his overhaul was so quick it had taken three whole days off of the official Works record. 
At Wellsworth, St. Tibba’s hospital was receiving deliveries of everything from life-saving medicine to whole hospital beds, much to the irritation of the higher-ups at the National Health Service, who were under orders from London to minimize any potential panic. The hospital director found himself keeping his supervisors at bay more and more. His usual tactic was forwarding them email chains and whatsapp screenshots from colleagues in Hong Kong, who had been caught effectively off-guard, and were now paying a heavy price. As the days went on though, he wasn’t sure if it was calming or terrifying that the complaints slowly trickled to a halt.
At Tidmouth, strategy meetings were being held seemingly every hour. No detail was left to chance, with the limited information they knew being factored into their plans for the future. Engine cabs were being measured, much to the confusion of the engines themselves, platform signage was reassessed, and staffing requirements were being examined with a fine-toothed comb. A huge sum of money was spent from the company’s discretionary fund, and arrived in the form of a heavy goods vehicle, which backed up to the station’s sole loading dock and disgorged pallet after pallet of masks, gloves, soap, and disinfectant, to be distributed as needed. 
In one of the upstairs conference rooms, a pair of 70-inch televisions sat on one wall, the joined displays mostly empty. They displayed the master list of scheduled trains for the railway, a vast, spreadsheet-like document that documented every train movement on the railway’s February-May spring timetable. Daily trains were often “booked” months in advance, and the chosen rolling stock was altered as required. In an ordinary March, trains would already be scheduled out until the end of the spring timetable in May. Now, only train 3B00 - the Flying Kipper - was scheduled beyond the end of the month, its nocturnal run sitting alone on several score of date markers, going all the way to the bottom-right corner of the screen: MAY-1-2020.
-
In the sheds, the engines grew more and more concerned. The “minor virus”, as London still called it, was now making the headlines of every television, newspaper, and social media platform in the country. While the general public still viewed it as something that was happening to other people, there were many in the NWR fleet who remembered the Spanish Flu of 1918, or, more recently, the mass hysteria that had surrounded the SARS outbreak in 2002. 
“Something vicious this way comes.” Edward muttered one morning in the sheds, as the news showed the ever-unconcerned Prime Minister giving a news conference on the state of the lockdown in Hong Kong. 
“It’s not coming,” Thomas said grimly. He was old enough to remember 1918, and even if he hadn’t, Tornado was connected to the Internet, and found increasingly-distressing posts about the disease on social media with every passing day. “It’s already here.” 
-
Meanwhile, on the main line, one green engine came to another.
“You’ve heard about the virus?” Tornado asked, trying her hardest to be subtle and discreet.
“Yes..?” BoCo answered. “So has everyone else. Why are you whispering?”
“There’s something I wanna talk to you about.”
“Oh?” 
“I hear they’re holding a diesel gala at the Crewe museum next month.”
“Tornado, there’s not going to be a next month at this rate.”
“That’s not what I meant.”
“Okay…”
“They’re taking diesels from all over the country for this - they wanna show off engines that need restoration funds.”
“Oh good, a sideshow. How modern and progressive of them. I’m sure PT Barnum would be honored.”
“Who?” 
“Nevermind. Is there a point?”
“You’ve been seeing how the economy is going away again?”
“Yes.”
“Well nobody’s gonna have any money to fix them, innit?” 
“And..?”
“We’ve gotta do something!”
“About what? The virus? The economy? Tornado, we’re engines!”
“Not that! Our brothers!”
“What?” BoCo’s mind spun for a second.
“They’re bringing your brother, 05, down to Crewe for this gala - he might already be there, and they’ve got Peter, my brother, there too.” Tornado looked more scared than BoCo had ever seen. “If they run out of money… they’re never gonna get fixed up.”
“What do you propose we do?” 
A mischievous glint filled her eyes, and a pit suddenly opened up in BoCo’s crankcase. “There’s a container train going to the Crewe Freightliner yard right down the tracks every Wednesday and Sunday. I say we get on that train and steal them!”
--------------------
Two Weeks Into March
The Prime Minister had finally started to show concern whenever he appeared on the telly. Mass panic in Hong Kong forced the Queen to make an address to the nation. On Sodor, the early stages of the Regional Council’s plans started to come into effect, and public events were canceled or majorly curtailed by government order. Supermarkets began self-imposing purchase limits, and all Universities on the Island began transitioning to online-only classes, with the local school authorities following in their wake. 
Slowly, the NWR began to cancel off-peak trains, and office staff began figuring out how to take their work home with them. In the midst of it, someone made a “meme” - a form of image-based joke - about the drivers taking their work home with them, using an image of Thomas’ infamous crash into the Ffarquhar stationmaster’s house. (In a sign of how deathly serious the times were becoming, even Thomas himself found it funny.) The harbours at Knapford and Tidmouth, which were controlled by the NWR, began influencing quarantine protocols on incoming freighters, and several cruise ships were denied entry. The harbourmasters at Kirk Ronan, Barrow, and Tidmouth began impressing upon the ferry companies the importance of canceling their services, to limited success; the international ferry services from France and Ireland stopped, but Northern Irish and Manx ferries all continued with minimal delays or curtailments. The airport at Dryaw, however, was more than willing to comply, and all but two passenger flights to the Island stopped before the 14th, with cancellations lasting for two weeks. All cargo flights, save for the mail, stopped as well.
In all, it seemed like the Island was weathering the oncoming storm well, and those in seats of government - who had been expecting criticism for their overly cautious approach - were instead receiving praise from London. If the entire country acted like they did, they were told, this whole thing may blow over in a month! 
-
Then the wheels came off.  
-
It started in the United States. President Trump declared a state of national emergency on Friday, and state-by-state declarations of emergency put nearly the entire country in lockdown by the end of the weekend. The already-down global financial markets fell through the floor on Monday morning. 
In the United Kingdom, those who watched the Prime Minister’s daily briefings on the virus swore up and down that they could see him sweating, and later on in the same address, he announced a recommendation to avoid unnecessary travel. 
And on Sodor, the tipping point was reached. 
Several days earlier, an outbreak occurred in a council estate in Slough. The source, or ‘index case,’ of the outbreak was found to be a Polish truck driver, who lived in Ireland but had decided to ride out the impending quarantine at his British girlfriend’s flat. He’d picked up a load bound for England in County Kildare, presumably contracting the virus at the same time, entered the UK through the Northern Irish border, and then boarded the Tidmouth ferry. 
According to all the contact tracing done in those frenzied days before the world came to a stop, he had been aware that he may be contagious, and had worn a mask and gloves the entire time. He didn’t leave the cab of his lorry, nor did he stop for fuel or food until he was well east of Barrow. 
But he was contagious. 
And that’s all that mattered to the people of Sodor. To them, Pestilence, the first horseman of the apocalypse, had come through their land riding not a horse, but a shining white mechanical steed with the name of Scania.
This was someone that they knew about. And he’d tried to minimize his risk. They were a tourism and travel hub for the entire North-West of England and with the rest of society only now seeming to realize that anything was wrong, if nothing was done, the people of Sodor would soon be at the mercy of not international lorry drivers, nor the general public, but the worst, most careless form of humanity known to exist in the United Kingdom: The British Holidaymaker.
The end times were clearly upon them, and the Island reacted accordingly. 
-----------
The Ides of March
The container train rumbled into Crewe at half past ‘fuck-me-it’s-late’ in the evening, long past dark, but still before the start of a new day. “Signaling issues” was the official excuse given by the train - some nonsense that would have Network Rail crews working all morning and into the afternoon to solve a problem that didn’t exist.
The electric engines in the yard were fast asleep, and few, if any of the people on the platform at Crewe station were aware of the engines that had led the train in. 
BoCo, quite honestly, couldn’t believe that anyone had believed them at any point, but wasn’t about to quarrel with a trouble-free journey. Once the very tired crews from Freightliner had uncoupled them from their train, he and Tornado slipped across the main line into the old diesel works. It was now a heritage steam facility, owned by a very rich businessman, and the Fat Controller had a contract with them to supply his engines with coal, water, and fuel when they took trains to Crewe. 
Being railway enthusiasts, they were overjoyed to see BoCo, and thrilled beyond reason to see Tornado, and many selfies were taken before the refueling was done. All at once, someone (Definitely not an employee who was also an A1 trust volunteer, who most certainly hadn’t been sent an email by Tornado, asking them to be at this place at this time, not at all.) remembered that, wouldn’t you know it, Blue Peter, the only other Peppercorn-designed locomotive in existence, was in the works right now! It was quickly asked if he’d like to see Tornado, and before anyone could say anything else, Tornado had pulled her brother out of the workshop and proceeded to start crying hysterically, claiming that she missed him. This put somewhat of a damper on the jubilant attitude of the staff, and they made themselves very scarce, very quickly. 
The instant they were gone, the waterworks stopped, and Tornado beamed at Blue Peter, who was quite surprised at both the sudden start and abrupt end of the hysterics. 
“Come on,” she whispered quietly. “We’ve got to go.” 
“Go?” The older pacific asked, quite confused. “Go where?” 
“Sodor, Silly!” she said, in a voice that she probably thought was secretive. “We’re breaking you out of here!” 
“What? Why?”
“Haven’t you heard the news?” BoCo broke in. “The world is ending.”
“wha-I, when… it is?”
Blue Peter looked entirely too overwhelmed by the deluge of information, but managed to stutter out. “Ye-yes. They took him up the line to the museum for storage.” 
“Yes, quite soon too. We’re taking you back to Sodor and by the by have you happened to see an engine that looks identical to me, by chance?”
BoCo’s face fell. “ That’s on the other side of the station. Damn it, how will we get him out of there?”
“Don’t worry,” Tornado’s eyes fairly twinkled as she said that, and both BoCo and Blue Peter began to think that they really should. “I can take care of that, but let’s go before anyone sees us!” 
“Wait,” Said BoCo. “What about the couplings?” 
Their crew had quite graciously agreed to see nothing and hear nothing in the Freightliner crew break room until it was time to leave. (Tornado may have annoyed them into submission. Maybe. Possibly. Yes, she did, and BoCo helped.) However this meant that they’d be unable to couple or uncouple anything once they left the depot. Fortunately, Tornado Had A Plan. 
“Oi,” she whispered to the A1 trust volunteer. “Wanna have the night of your life?”
(BoCo and Blue Peter both nearly had their eyes pop out of their sockets. Tornado ignored them.)
The young man spluttered out a yes before he even thought to ask any follow-up questions, and very quickly coupled the three engines together, with Tornado and Blue Peter bracketing BoCo. He climbed into Blue Peter’s cab, and as soon as the dispatcher granted Tornado permission, the cavalcade was across the West Coast Main Line and into the Freightliner yard again. 
Quickly stopping on their assigned road, Blue Peter was positioned at the rear of the container train, while Tornado and BoCo ran around to the front of the train, the young volunteer helpfully throwing switches (and returning them to the position they had been in afterwards) as needed. BoCo was now at the front of their odd little consist, and the volunteer had to stand in his cab with a radio to tell Tornado what signals were ahead, once she’d lied to ‘control’ about why she needed to go out on the main line again. 
Unlike the heritage depot, the Crewe Heritage Centre was empty, it being long past their business hours. What little security there was, was focused inwards, not expecting sneak thieves to use the rails.
The museum grounds were small, nestled in between the V of two converging lines. Historic diesels in varying states of disrepair were scattered about the facility’s tracks. A small banner above the entranceway of the site’s sole building read “DIESEL DAYS - COMING 13 APRIL!”
BoCo’s brother - D5705, was easily visible from the tracks, parked next to a line of yellow, white, and red coaches that had clearly seen better days. An eye slowly opened as Tornado ‘peeped’ her whistle as quietly as possible. “I see that the Final Train has a sense of humour.” He rasped, his voice shaky and uneven. “Is it finally my time?”
“No!” BoCo said, much more firmly than he’d been intending. “It’s me, Fives. This is a jailbreak.” 
The other eye slowly opened, the ruined diesel coming to wakefulness. “What odd company you keep, Two, and strange timing you have. But I will not be opposed to your plan.”
The Volunteer (who hadn’t introduced himself to BoCo, claiming that “the less you know, the better” like this was an actual criminal enterprise) hopped down, and quickly made the necessary connections. 
“Go. Go with glory and make your life fruitful, oh-five.” Groaned a voice from the next track over.
The Volunteer looked around the diesels and his eyebrows shot into his hairline. “Oh wow! I forgot you were here!”
BoCo looked around his brother, and an eyebrow rose in surprise. “You’re not Ward… and what are you doing here?” 
“I beg your pardon?” The partial APT-P set said, blinking the sleep from his eyes.
-
Ten minutes later, and a very chilly trainspotter with a cell phone arrived at Crewe station. He’d received a text from a friend - apparently the NWR had sent down a diesel and a steam engine on a container train to Basford. Hopefully he’d be able to get them when they-
A single solitary ‘peep’, and the sound of chuffing steam was the only notice he had the train was coming, and he almost fell off the platform when he spun around to see 60163 Tornado, 28 002 BoCo, D5705, and an ATP(?!) rolling quietly through the station. 
Hie tried desperately to fumble for his phone’s camera app, but the dark conditions and poor-quality camera on his phone meant that he got a blurry, dark, and  grainy smear of an image that showed nothing comprehensible at all. 
He still tried to tell his mates, and posted the picture online, but nobody believed him - some laughed at him, and it was quickly forgotten about. 
Tornado and BoCo had performed their heist without a hitch.
-----------
The Ides of March, Plus One Day
Bloomer was a notoriously slow riser. Even with a full head of steam, there would be mornings where he would have to be roused multiple times before he was fully awake. The crews got around this by just moving him while he was still asleep, and the old engine didn’t find it unusual to be finally woken up by the stationmaster “accidentally” spraying him with water while watering the plants on the platforms. 
This morning, however, he was woken by an unfamiliar sound,and cracked one eye open to find himself in the yard - and it was in total disarray. “Land sakes!” He croaked as he woke up fully. “Lad! What’ve you done!” 
In an effort to help out heritage rail organizations, the Fat Controller leased older engines from their owners for duties that the NWR had on the mainland. For example, the Barrow yard shunter was a revolving door of small shunters that came from various preserved lines across the country. For the past month, a quiet but dedicated class 06 had been doing exemplary work, and it seemed likely that his contract would be renewed for a few more months. 
“It wasnae me!” The shunter protested, and Bloomer had to blink more than once to confirm what he was seeing. The shunter was chained down to the top of a low loader wagon, ready for transport back to his home railway. “They said Ah’m a-goin and quick! It’s the yon diesel tha’s makin the muckle disaster!” 
A growl answered this, and a red Class 60 emerged from the depths of the yard, a line of stone hoppers trailing behind her. She was a low-numbered 60, number 003, and a nameplate was affixed to her cabs: PRAETOR. “Ignosce. I am not well suited to such tight confines. Would I happily leave the duties to this peritissimus faciens, but alas I must convey him home with the speed of Mercurius.” Her expression darkened. “There is an ill wind coming, and we all must seek safe harbor.”
She’d stopped to allow the yard crews to hand throw a switch, and the instant they finished, she pulled away out of sight, giving both Bloomer and the shunter the distinct feeling that they’d just been dismissed. 
“Alrigh’,” Bloomer blinked again. “Ignoring that, they’re really sending you home?” 
“Aye,” The shunter answered, grunting slightly as his flat car rocked - the 60 had taken the line of hoppers and backed them down onto his low-loader. The guard was already affixing a rear lamp to the flat wagon, indicating that the train was getting ready to depart. “An’ it’s no just me - they’s sending everyone home - ye as well. Something’s going doon, an’ it’s happenin’ now laddie.” 
With a stately horn blast, the 60 set off as soon as the colour light signal changed to green, and within a few moments the train had vanished from sight. 
“What does he mean? I am home.” Bloomer said somewhat indignantly to his driver. 
“It’s not like that Blooms,” the man said. “You know that virus thing we’re all panicking about? It’s happening now. Mr. Hatt is packing up everything in the yard and I mean everything.” 
“Surely you jest!” Bloomer retorted. 
“Don’t believe me? Wait ‘til the yard empties a little more and we’ll get our train. Then you’ll see.” He said ominously, before leaving the cab and walking across the sleepers to the station building, leaving Bloomer alone in the yard as he built up steam.  
 With the outbound track now empty, Bloomer had a prime viewpoint of the yard, and what he saw began to confirm his growing fears. 
The trains were arriving, and were doing so out of order. 
Usually, at midday on a monday, the only inbound mainland train (other than the odd slow goods train that wasn’t on the schedule) was the Scottish Motorail, which took automobiles and their drivers on a non-stop trip from Edinburgh all the way to the ferry docks at Kirk Ronan. The next several hours were mostly goods trains which ran as far as Barrow, before leaving their trains for Sodor engines to take later; the last of which was a container train from the Freightliner yard in Crewe. The Sodor Motorail came after that - it ran out of London a few hours ahead of the night express, with auto carriers bound for Barrow, Kirk Ronan, and Kildane; it would drop the Barrow and Kirk Ronan cars at the special motorail platform just outside of the station, and continue on down the mainline, while another engine would come up the line and pick up the cars for Kirk Ronan. Finally, just before dark, the evening Express, with Pip and Emma powering it, would glide into the station, stop to pick up and let off passengers, and depart as fast as it arrived.
That was the usual order of things. 
Today, the Scottish Motorail pulled into the station right on time at 11:55, with a single Class 37 leading it. The engine was tuxedo black, with yellow warning panels and small leasing company logos by the cab doors, a serious expression on his face. Curiously, the train didn’t continue on to the Motorail platforms, and instead stopped in the station’s run-through track. 
Bloomer expected the train to continue on at any moment, and was baffled when over a half hour passed with no movement. “Signal troubles?” He called over to the 37. 
“No.” The engine called back, his London accent fit for the BBC. “We await another train. The ferries will hold for us, don’t worry.”
Bloomer eyed the large number of automobiles lining up at the Motorail terminal, but said nothing. 
A further half hour after that, one of the platform signals dropped, and Bloomer’s eyes almost popped out of his head as Pip appeared in the distance. “Aye?!” He spluttered as the HST screeched to a stop at the platforms. Unlike the usual song and dance of disembarkation, where passengers departed the train and transferred to semi-fast trains for their final destinations, or took the pedestrian underpasses to the exits into Barrow, there was instead what could only be referred to as a stampede, as passengers - many wearing clothes over their faces and mouths - stormed off the train en masse, charging down the platform stairs to the underpasses with a clatter of voices and luggage. The instant the last ones had gone (a group of wheelchair users who were herded off the train and into an electric cart brought out by the station staff), the doors to the station waiting room opened, and an identical exodus of people came charging down the platform - easily two or three trains worth of people, who crammed into the coaches while mumbling about ‘distancing’. They were heavy enough that some of the coaches groaned from the strain, and when Pip and Emma set off again, their engines howled from the excess load. 
“It’s bad out there!” Emma called as the train cleared the platform. “Euston’s a ghost town! We’re one of the only trains with passengers!” 
A tight ball of worry had begun to form in Bloomer’s firebox, and with this it just grew larger. 
As soon as the train cleared the bridge, the signals dropped and then rose again, to ‘slow ahead’. With a ‘peep peep’ that caused Bloomer to swear in surprise, Henry slowly rolled through the station tender first, a short line of wagons used for transporting steel coils following behind him.
The stationmaster met the train on the platform as it rolled through without stopping. “You get them all?”
“Yes,” Henry said he counted the trucks again - yes, they were all here. “They found one of them in the far sidings, but we checked thoroughly before we set off.”
“There’s nobody else!” The lead wagon confirmed. “And I’s not just sayin’ that. Everyone else belongs to the Shipyard, not Sodor!” 
“All right,” The stationmaster said. “You’re going to Ballahoo - they’ve got enough space in the goods shed for this lot.”
“Right!” Henry whistled as he picked up speed, and soon crossed the bridge. 
As soon as he cleared, the signals dropped and rose for the third time in a row - this time with an added signal for the goods yard - and a horn sounded in the distance, followed immediately by a steam whistle. “What now?!” Bloomer asked himself in frustration and worry. 
‘What’ in this case turned out to be the container train, which had BoCo leading, and Tornado not only as the second engine, but facing backwards to boot. They led the train into the far side of the yard and stopped just long enough for BoCo to get pulled off the train. 
Almost immediately, the freight yard staff sprung into action and pulled the couplings for the first ten container wagons, which were bound for Barrow. Tornado quickly puffed away with them to the unloading tracks, where they were set upon by the yard’s container handlers. 
In the meantime, BoCo reversed away to the fuel track, which was close enough to Bloomer for him to ask questions. “What in the name of god are you doing?” He hissed to the diesel. “The world is apparently ending and you both go gallivanting off to the mainland?” 
BoCo was unphased as the fuel was hurriedly piped into his tanks. “We’re fine, Bloomer. I’ll explain later.” 
“You had better!” Bloomer wanted to question more, but the signals dropped and rose for a fourth time, and finally, the Sodor Motorail clattered in. 
If the double-header of BoCo and Tornado was unusual, this train was downright startling, as both Daphne and Delta were pulling hard as they rumbled into view.
It was easy to see why Sodor’s two strongest diesels were needed for this train - the Motorail operations required some extra rolling stock to be kept at the terminal in London for emergencies, and it seemed like all of the emergency stock, along with every other motorail wagon that wasn’t on the Scottish Motorail, were on this train. 
And they were full. 
Not a single space was to be seen on any of the open wagons, and every passenger coach was filled to standing with passengers. The train was so long that when it pulled ahead of the switches to the Motorail terminal, it was not only on the bridge to Sodor, but Daphne and Delta were actually on Sodor proper before they backed the train into the terminal. 
The motorail trains set down coaches and wagons here, with the car wagons on one platform and the coaches on another. With so many coaches and car wagons on this train, neither rake fit into the platform, and stuck out over the edge quite considerably. 
Not that the passengers noticed or cared. Much like the Express, they streamed out of the coaches that were on the platform like rats from a sinking ship, and swarmed the station building to pick up their cars. As each wagon was unloaded by the stewards, people would hurry to their cars, oftentimes wielding cleaning wipes or disinfecting spray, and then leave the station so quickly that the tires chirped. One young man was reunited with his fluorescent green motorcycle, and proceeded to leave the station grounds with his front wheel in the air, before vanishing into the distance at assuredly unsafe speeds, his bike’s engine almost louder than Daphne’s motor. 
Speaking of Daphne (and Delta), once the last passengers had disembarked, they quickly pulled forward, taking about half of the coaches with them, and then backed down to pick up half of the car wagons - only the rear half of the train was for Barrow or Kirk Ronan, with the forward section going to Kildane. The guard blew his whistle, and the two diesels roared onto Sudrian soil and quickly disappeared into the distance. 
“People need to get home.” BoCo, who had been watching the proceedings with Bloomer, remarked simply. 
“What?” 
“It’s the last Motorail to Sodor - there’s no more trains after today.”
“Good lord.” Bloomer’s eyes widened as the full weight of the situation came down on him. “How bad is it supposed to be?” 
“Edward says it’s like the early days of the Spanish Flu.”
“Half the world got that!” 
“I’ve heard worse.” Called the 37 as he carefully shunted the Scottish Motorail into the platforms. Fortunately, the train had been put together in such a way that automobiles could travel down the length of the car wagons with the use of gangplanks between wagons, otherwise the train would have been much more difficult to put together. “The rumour up north is that the government has been deliberately under-reporting numbers so as not to cause a panic.”
“I’d say they didn’t succeed there…” Bloomer scowled as the doors to the station opened, and passengers swarmed the train. There was pushing, shoving, and shouting, and it took longer than usual to get everyone corralled into the lengthy train. 
There was a whistle behind Bloomer and BoCo, and Tornado appeared, still running backwards. “Right, I’m off! Best of luck!” Behind her, the ten container wagons and another fifty empty flatbeds, hoppers, vans and tankers clattered behind her - just about every truck and wagon left in the yard. With great care, she threaded her train around the Motorail, and into the distance. 
Bloomer was still goggling at the sheer length of the train when the end of it came by. “Eh?” 
“I will tell you, later.” BoCo hissed as the rear of the train, which consisted of a brake van, a steam engine that looked a lot like Tornado, a diesel that looked exactly like BoCo, and… “Ward? What are you doing here?”, passed by. 
“Who is Ward?” Asked the electric intercity train as he disappeared into the distance on the end of the train, a red lamp dangling off of his face. 
There was a long pause as both Bloomer and the 37 on the Motorail absorbed what they just saw. “BoCo… did you and Tornado…” Bloomer began, but when he looked over to where the secretive diesel had been, he found that BoCo had driven away!
“Be seeing you! Stay safe!” The green diesel called from the yard, as he was quickly connected to the remaining container wagons, before powering across the bridge as soon as the signalman would let him. 
“Thieving youngsters...” Bloomer grumbled to himself as the red lamp at the end of the container train vanished from sight.
“Very crafty, elder.” The 37 whispered respectfully, as the last of the cars were loaded into the wagons. 
As the 37 started reassembling his train, Bloomer’s driver re-emerged from the station, fireman in tow. “Right-ho, we’ve got a few pickups to make and then we’re off.”
“Pickups?” Bloomer looked around the yard. “There’s nothing left!” 
As it turned out, there was, just a bit. On Sundays, the railroad ran ‘period’ excursion trains down the main line, and they’d procured a pair of reproduction LNWR open carriages for when it was Bloomer’s turn. The coaches were expectant, apparently having been told what was happening by the shed staff. “Quickly please!” Maribel, the lead coach said. “We don’t want to get left behind!”
“Nobody is going to leave anyone behind!” Bloomer said firmly, ignoring a creeping sense of being ‘out of the loop’ - this was not the first time that someone had been worried about being left behind, as if the drawbridge were going to collapse or somesuch. He worried he was missing something important. 
Following them was Lilly, a former passenger coach that had been turned into the kitchen coach for the Permanent Way train. She was a full sized Mark 2, and was now laden down with literal tons of kitchen equipment. Bloomer groaned a little as his coupling stretched out under her weight. “Too small for this nonsense…” He grumbled. “Should’ve had the thieving idiot do it.”
Next was a piece of little-used rolling stock: the railway’s scale test car. Named Ingot due to his weight and shape, he sat behind the shed unless a yard needed to re-calibrate a weighbridge used for weighing goods wagons. “This must be serious if you’re taking me with you.” He said as Bloomer dragged him out of his weed-covered siding.
“Steel, actually.”
“It, erf, seems, agh, that way!” Bloomer gasped as he lugged the heavy wagon into motion. “Do they fill you with lead?”
“Agh.”
Then, there was a very long trek out of the yard, (“Heavy, fucking train..”) across the station throat, (“Look Blooms, the Motorail left a wagon behind for us.” “Oh. Joy.”) and back down a track that ran around to the far side of the station, (“When did this get put here?”) a little used siding that P-way trains sometimes parked in… oh dear. 
“Oh thank goodness!” Marion the steam shovel gushed as Bloomer pulled up to her. “I thought I’d be left here!”
Bloomer ignored her, staring at the siding in disbelief. “You all do see my driving wheels? How there’s only two of them?” He glared at the yardmaster and the stationmaster, who looked at him  like he was the mad one.
There were four cranes/shovels - Marion, Eh & Bee the breakdown cranes, and Jebediah - a diesel crane who worked with the P-way team. Each one of them was a heavy beast in their own right, and Bloomer would probably wear a groove in the rails before he got them moving, let alone Ingot and Lilly. 
“Don’t worry, we’ve got it covered.” The yardmaster said, climbing into Jebediah’s cab. 
“What’s he gonna do? Push?”
“Yes, actually.” Jebediah glared. “I’m self-propelled and mighty strong, you’ll do well to note.”
Bloomer was entirely too out of his depth at this point, and mumbled a thanks as the already heavy train was coupled to the line of cranes. Blowing his whistle, he pulled away slowly, expecting his couplings to go tight and stay that way, but he was pleasantly surprised to hear Jebediah’s motor rev up, and then feel the weight go from “immovable” to “manageable.”
They made for a bizarre sight as they rolled out of the siding and backed into the station. When they first got moving, Bloomer had felt ridiculous and vaguely self-conscious, but that faded as he stared out over the yard, and found it totally empty. Between all the frantic train shuffling, and the reduction in traffic over the last week, there wasn’t a wagon, coach, or engine to be seen anywhere. 
It was honestly quite spooky, and that was before he looked into the station building, which was empty as a tomb despite it being the middle of the day. Only the staff were left at this point, and they were leaving the station too, carrying personal belongings and certain company items. 
Somewhere in Barrow proper, a clocktower bell chimed twice, and everyone looked towards it. “I didn’t know there was a bell in the town.” Lilly murmured. 
“It’s because usually you can’t hear it.” The stationmaster said as he shoved a porter’s trolley loaded with cases of company documents and the cashboxes from the ticket booths into the Kitchen coach. “S’not supposed to be this quiet ‘ere.”
Bloomer had thought that the full severity of the events unfolding around him had sunk in, but as he listened to the tolling bell, while also watching the assistant station master lock the doors of the station, he suddenly felt like the world was ending. 
Honk-honk
The spell was broken by a horn sounding from the junction behind them, and everyone who could do so whirled around to see a small diesel multiple unit roll into the station.  
“What in the absolute fucking hell is that doing here?!” The stationmaster swore as the train came to a complete stop next to Bloomer. 
“Hi.” Said the DMU - her number identified her as 170 640 - with some amount of embarrassment. “Sorry I’m late. Signaling issues.”
At this point there was some amount of shouting. It turned out that this train was the 0910 service from Manchester to Norramby, and was supposed to have already departed Sodor in the other direction by now. In fact, it had been so long, with so little notice given about it, that both the NWR signalman and the Barrow stationmaster had assumed the train had been cancelled. 
When the multiple unit meekly said that her railway always got the train there, no matter what, there was a further round of shouting about blasted Open-Access Operators! 
Like every other train that day, she was heavily laden with passengers, and the station staff had to guide everyone who wished to depart the train through a side gate on the platform end as the stationmaster stomped up and down the platform, bellowing into his phone at someone.
This turned out to be most of the people on the train, and once the stationmaster calmed down a little, he addressed the multiple unit and her driver. “Alright, here’s the skinny - you go over that bridge, there ain’t a promise you’re coming back over any time soon. The whole Island is locking down tonight. Unless you can get there and back in the next thirty minutes, you’re up without a paddle.”
“Well I suppose there’s nothing else for it,” The 170 said, her weak voice surprisingly steely. 
“Yeah.” Said her driver. 
“We’re going over.” | “We’re dumping them here.”
“WHAT?”
Man and DMU stared at each other for a moment, and then there was more shouting and arguing, this time about cowardice and stupidity. It went on for some time, until eventually the DMU had tears at the corners of her eyes, and the driver was storming off down the station road in search of alternative transport back home. 
Bloomer looked at the little multiple unit with newfound respect. “That took some nerve. Good lass.”
“Thanks.” She sniffed weakly. “I can’t just leave - what would that make me?” 
“A Bad Engine.” The coaches and cranes, and P-Way equipment said firmly. Bloomer and the station staff still on the platform looked at each other for a moment at that, suddenly confident that wherever this unit ended up getting stored until she could be sent back, she would be well cared for. 
The last passenger - a man on crutches - was escorted out of the station on an electric cart, and with that the station doors were securely locked. A spare driver had been part of the station staff, and he hopped into the DMU, taking her across the bridge just before the clock tower tolled 2:30.
“Hopefully this all blows over!” She called to Bloomer as she receded into the distance.
“I can only hope…” Bloomer said as his odd train set off for its last stop. 
There was a single Motorail wagon left on the platforms. He was an older flat wagon, with Whitewall stenciled on his front end. The electric cart from the station bounced across the staff crossings with a porter at the wheel, and its charger cable bouncing around in the cargo tray. It joined a Mercedes Unimog lettered for the P-Way gang, the stationmaster’s personal car, a huge porter’s trolley the size of a Mini, and a few motorbikes and bicycles belonging to the station staff on the back of the wagon. Staff jumped out of the coaches and quickly strapped down the cart and went around checking the other straps. A few of the Motorail staff came over and boarded the train as well, while one man (who shouted that he lived in Barrow when asked why he wasn’t boarding) locked up the station and dragged a gate across the automobile entrance before walking off towards the city bus stop on the corner. 
The stationmaster got out of his seat in Maribel, and marched forward to take a spot in Bloomer’s cab. “Go forward nice and slow. We’re stopping once we clear the switch.”
“Sorry?” 
“Just a few more people.” 
Orders now given, Bloomer and Jebediah slowly pulled and pushed the train out of the motorail siding and onto the main line. Once Whitewall had cleared the switches, they clunked into place, and Bloomer and the rest of the train watched in astonishment as every signal in the yard and the main line dropped to red. Soon thereafter, the signalbox door opened, and the signalman came out, a bag over his shoulder and his face hidden behind a paper mask. He turned off the lights in the box and locked the door, before coming up to Bloomer. “You’re the only train for two miles. Treat everything between here and the bridge as green.”
For effect, he unfurled a green flag, waved it, and then clambered onto the train, sitting as far away from everyone else as he possibly could in the crowded open air carriages. 
Once again, Bloomer was struck with the sudden sensation that the world as he knew it was coming to an end. With a subdued whistle, he set off again, leaving Barrow-in-Furness station and yard as quiet and empty as a tomb. 
The train slowly rolled over the bridge, and Bloomer gasped as he saw the difference between the island and the mainland. Sodor was quiet, the streets of Vicarstown still except for a bus and a police car driving along the waterfront. A few people with cameras were in the park by the station, photographing his approach. 
Barrow was alive and noisy. Traffic rumbled and roared, the sound of people talking and chatting from bus stations and bike baths was audible even over his own chuffing. In the distance, the Jubilee Bridge was choked with traffic - police cars on the Sodor side of the bridge were stopping each car, and forcing most to turn around and leave. Those allowed through the bridge were almost all cars with license plates from Sodor or the Isle of Man - any one without had a large sticker applied to the back, although what it meant wasn’t immediately obvious. As the train went by, a flurry of radio calls, some of which were audible on the cab radio - meaning the railway’s dispatch was involved to some degree - went through. On the road bridge, the police began waving through what traffic there was - it seemed like most, if not all of the Sodor-plated automobiles had gotten through already - and then made some kind of waving motion to the bridge operator. Red lights began to flash, and the road bridge began to raise, cutting off Sodor’s road network from the mainland.
Meanwhile on the railway bridge, a man stood aside the tracks, a yellow flag in his hand. It was the bridge operator, and he hopped onto the footplate as Bloomer steamed by, a bag in his hand. 
“Thanks.” was all he said, and Bloomer had another pit-of-his-firebox moment as he realized that he had been out of the loop, somewhat badly. 
The bridge control cabin was on the mainland side of the bridge, but there was a small emergency panel on the Sodor side. The driver applied the brakes, but didn’t stop, as the train drove by the small electrical box. The bridge operator jumped down, ran to the box, wrenched it open, and in one smooth motion jammed a key into it, turned it, and pushed a yellow and black striped button, before removing the key and slamming the box closed. He was so quick that he was able to clamber onto Jebiediah’s cab steps as the diesel crane rolled by.
Behind him, a klaxon sounded in the distant bridge cabin, and an automated gate closed over the tracks. A pair of massive locks proceeded to open, and with slow mechanical precision, the Walney Channel railway bridge began to cycle open, severing the last link between the mainland and the Island of Sodor. 
Bloomer, pulling what the media would later refer to as “The Last Train,” felt a chill go down his boiler as the massive bridge span locked into the upright position. The world has just changed, He thought. And it won’t be for the better.
------
A few days later, as the Virus hit the mainland in force through packed Chunnel trains and repatriation flights, and as the first few cases sprung up inside the Island’s hospitals, Bloomer knew he was right. 
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wreywrites · 7 months
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Tiger Shark
Part 2: The Sea
Chapter 6
There is grass all around. In front of me is the cornucopia, to my left, the boy from Eleven, to my right, the boy from Six. I can just see Mako on the far side of the cornucopia, not quite blocked by its imposing bulk. He gives me a tiny nod.
There are hills in the distance. I want to look around more, see what is behind me, but the sixty-second countdown has already started, and I cannot afford to lose focus. I shift my weight, ready myself to run, force myself to block out all the other tributes, all the distractions.
I take a deep breath. I am the Tiger Shark of District Four.
The cannon sounds.
~~~                               ~~~                               ~~~
I am not the first to the cornucopia, but I am the biggest. I physically throw someone out of my way to get to the small cluster of spears in the back. All around is chaos. Shouting, screaming, clanging metal. Something warm splatters my face as I pull one backpack on, already reaching for a second. Someone yanks a spear out of my hand. Luckily I look before stabbing; it is Mako. He stabs the spear into the girl from Five and grabs the backpack she was going for. I hurl a spear at Farroe, who is standing in the opening of the cornucopia, blocking our way out. The spear sinks into his chest, knocks him backwards.
Mako and I run. On our way past Farroe, I yank the spear from his body. I finally see what was behind me. A long stretch of grass, and in the distance are trees. We sprint for the trees, away from the chaos of the cornucopia.
We are nearly to the trees when something hisses past my shoulder. I don’t slow to consider the implications, but as soon as I reach a tree big enough, I duck behind it, gasping for breath. To my left, Mako has done the same thing. He has the other five spears and tosses me one. An arrow hisses between our trees.
“We know you’re in there, Four!” Tychus shouts.
“Then come get us!” I shout back.
Peeking around my tree, I see him start toward us, but he only gets a few steps when Andromeda, who is a fair distance back toward the cornucopia, screams, “Tychus!”
He whips around, and I risk leaning a little farther out to see what is happening. Back at the cornucopia, a pair of tributes are rummaging through the weapons. We are too far away to be able to tell who they are, but they are each wearing one of the large, brightly-colored backpacks like Mako and I have.
Tychus swears and sprints toward the cornucopia, but before he or Andromeda can get anywhere near it, the other pair clear out, running in the opposite direction toward the low hills on the far side of the arena.
The cannon sounds. Five booms echo around the arena before it falls silent.
“That’s not as many as I would have liked,” Mako says.
“True, but I’d rather have it be five and know about it than have seven and be dead.”
He nods, and we push farther into the trees.
~~~                               ~~~                               ~~~
We walk in more or less a straight line until the sun is directly overheard, its light filtering down through the trees to dapple the forest floor. We stop to take stock of our backpacks. Mako stands guard as I unpack them and sort our treasure trove. There are two small tins that contain five matches each, a tarp sleeping bag, three cannisters of water, three extra pairs of socks, a roll of gauze, a tiny fishing kit, a long coil of rope, a blanket, two boxes of water-purifying tablets and instructions for use, two bags of beef jerky, two bags of raisins, a pair of night-vision glasses, and a six-inch knife.
“Not a bad haul,” I say, taking a small sip of water. I’d hate to drink it all before we found a reliable source.
Mako nods and takes a sip from one of the other bottles. I divide the spoils, making sure each bag has some food, a water bottle, a tin of matches, and a fishhook, then dividing the rest as it fits.
Mako sits next to me, our backs against a large tree, and says, “So, where’s the water?”
“Not sure. There has to be some, somewhere, but I don’t know… I don’t know if it’s going to be deeper in the trees, or out in the plain somewhere, or…” I stop.
Mako and I look at each other and say at the same time, “The hills.”
This means going back. Back through the trees, which could be hiding all seventeen of the other remaining tributes, just waiting to kill us. Back across the grassy plain and the cornucopia, where there is sure to be more food, more weapons, more supplies, but just as sure to be at least some of the stronger tributes.
In the end, we decide to go back to the edge of the trees and follow them around the middle of the arena as far as they will take us. We each take another sip of water, then Mako puts one backpack on his back and the other on his chest and takes four of the spears. I take the third backpack and a spear in each hand, and we have taken no more than two steps back the way we came when a silvery parachute drifts down in front of us. Mako opens the little box to find a pair of cream cheese rolls.
He smiles. “Guess that means we’re going the right way,” and tucks the box and its delicious cargo into my backpack. “We’ll save those for supper.”
“Sounds good to me. You want to take the lead?”
Now that we have a plan, we progress quickly through the trees. When we reach the line between trees and grass, I notice that we are closer to the hills than we should have been.
“Must not have followed our trail exactly,” I glance at Mako with a grin.
He smiles ruefully. “Guess not. But I’m not complaining, we’re closer than we thought we’d be.”
We each have another sip of water, then trade loads so I carry two backpacks and four spears, and Mako takes the rest. It works well. Even the larger burden is quite bearable, though it leaves whoever is carrying it vulnerable, since four spears is too many to wield in any useful fashion. But the other has a spear in each hand and only one backpack, allowing them the mobility to fight. Having all six spears isn’t necessary, but I couldn’t bring myself to leave any of them in the cornucopia, and I’m certainly not going to leave a trail of weapons now.
We walk along the tree line all afternoon. Just before the sun dips below the horizon, we retreat a little way into the trees and find a large bramble patch to camp in. We end up crawling into the middle so as to break as few branches as possible and minimize the possibility of another tribute stumbling across our trail. We decide not to risk a fire.
No sooner have we settled in the middle of the bramble patch than the Capitol anthem plays. With some creative neck craning, I can see the projection of the pictures of the dead tributes. Farroe, the girl from Three, both from Five, and the boy from Six. This also means, I realize, that the only deaths today happened during the bloodbath.
Mako volunteers to take the first watch. I don’t argue, and get out the sleeping bag. It has gotten chilly since sunset. Mako takes the blanket and wraps it around his shoulders, nibbling one of the cream cheese rolls. I have a piece of jerky and my roll, then curl up and fall asleep almost instantly.
~~~                               ~~~                               ~~~
I wake to a hand pressed over my mouth. Mako’s face is hovering over mine, wearing the night-vision glasses, a finger pressed to his lips. I nod, and he removes his hand from my face, then points out of our bramble patch to the right. I can see shapes moving, three or four tributes, but I have no idea which ones. They walk within twenty yards of our bramble patch, talking quietly, though I cannot make out what they are saying, and then disappear off to the left. They seem to have the same plan as us, except in the opposite direction. This makes me question the wisdom of going to the hills, but water runs downhill. If there is anywhere to find it, I still think that is our best bet.
I am wide awake after the encounter with the others, so after many long minutes of sitting silent and still to make sure they are gone, I trade Mako the sleeping bag for the blanket. He hands me the glasses and is quickly asleep.
I put the glasses on and look around. Mako would have been able to see exactly which tributes walked by. Not only that, but he would have seen them coming long before he could have otherwise. I wouldn’t have seen them until they were nearly on top of us had he not pointed them out.
I let Mako sleep the next morning. He took more than his share of the watch, so it is the least I can do.
Mako wakes with a start when the sun is a fair distance above the horizon. Judging from the sun, it is perhaps nine in the morning, though I have no real way of knowing that. It can be whatever time the Gamemakers want it to be in the arena. We re-pack our belongings, crawl out of the brambles, and continue along the tree line. By noon, we have run out of trees to follow. We decide to brave the grass; the hills are so close.
After perhaps another hour, we reach the top of the first of the hills and stop short. “I think we found the water,” Mako says.
~~~                               ~~~                               ~~~
In front of us, glittering in the sunlight, is a broad river. On the far side are more, taller hills, and to the left is the tallest of them all. But as I look at it, I realize it is not a hill at all, but the enormous face of a dam. The river here is the water that has run out of the spillway into this valley, and there, far off to the right and deep into the trees, is where the river runs into the rest of the arena. Part of me wants to climb to the top of the dam. It is the highest ground to be had, but I also know how exposed we would be up there.
Mako points out a small patch of trees at the base of the dam on this side. “Probably as good a place as any.”
I agree, so we set off again, but not before drinking the last of our water and refilling all three bottles from the river, dropping a tablet in each to make sure they have as much time as we can give them. The instructions say half an hour, and without a watch, it’s difficult to tell. We decide it is better to be overcautious.
It is nearly dark when we reach the tree patch. We unpack what we need for the night, and I have just tucked myself into the sleeping bag when another parachute drifts down to our camp. This one contains a pair of cinnamon rolls that we immediately eat. The anthem plays as we finish licking our fingers.
“I don’t remember hearing any cannons today,” I say.
Mako shakes his head. “Me neither.”
Sure enough, there are no pictures after the anthem. “Slow day,” I say with a smile.
Mako snorts. “Let’s enjoy it while it lasts.”
****
****
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@avoxrising
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nintendork135 · 9 months
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Finally drew more of my robots!
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cutiemarkofcain · 4 months
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An assortment of my OCs from my rickorty series, A Tale Told By a Morty. Mostly the villains and villain adjacent characters.
The color schemes for their clothes aren't necessarily accurate; I was doing a Halloween thing.
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The Kumi Chronicles
A collection of oneshots set in the universe where Dabi and Hawks acquire a baby who accidentally builds a massive family. I mean, massive.
Kumi
The League meets Kumi
Auntie Himiko takes care of Kumi
Kumi (kind of) learns what ‘jailbreak’ means
Kumi’s parents have A Talk
A series of Kumi’s firsts
Kumi talks vigilantism
It takes a village to protect a villain
Kumi’s grandfather gets hit with a car
Mirko learns a little bit about Kumi
The Todorokis’ theories about Kumi’s parentage
Touya’s old family meets Kumi
Eraserhead talks to Kumi
Hawks tells the world about Kumi
Kumi attends a wedding
Kumi’s eighth birthday sure is something
Taiga
The news about Taiga
Minami Sakura is a good friend
The not so hellish Todoroki family (and co.)
Aizawa names his headache Kumi
Kumi’s first sports festival
The UA Demon: Vesta
Kumi adopts Eri’s sister
more to follow
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lablass-2882 · 1 year
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The Son’s of Clones
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Part 2 of my crazy crack au plan.
This came together a lot faster than I thought it would......Huh......
Anyway,
Second verse is same as the first. Except for Leo and Rosh, all of these fine gentlemen are the biological sons of Clone troopers. They are all currently soldiers in the Rebellion and have various roles.  
Most of them are in the crackfic I am writing, and I will drop a link below. 
Starting from left to right.
Lieutenant Arrow Fett. Code name Trigger. Like Tally and Nyx, Arrow's biological dad was a clone trooper from the 212th. Arrow grew up in a fairly typical village and had next to no clue who or what his dad was.... until the Empire came knocking. With his world turned upside down overnight, Arrow did the only thing he could think of, pick up his dad's sniper rifle and defend his home. This landed him in a holding cell alongside Gregor, of all people. Who immediately recognized him as a clone kid and practically kidnapped him when the Rebellion busted him out. He's been with the Rebellion ever since. 
Quirks
Amazing shot
Resident conspiracy theorist
Adjusting to being a big brother.
Twig Fett. Code name Due 2. Twig is Branch's twin brother and the son of a clone from the 501st. Like his sister, Twig is half Twi'lek and a stellar pilot. Unlike his sister, Twig isn't one for the spotlight and tends to just "vibe out" in the corner. Honestly, if it wasn't for his sister, Twig really wouldn't be in the Rebellion. When the Empire attacked their home, Twig wanted to run and hide with the rest of his family. But when Branch got captured, Twig went on a one-man mission to save his twin. He ran head first into Numa along the way.... who then later brought back to the Rebellion, and the rest was history. 
Quirks
A bit of a Quiet boy
Loves to cook
Is the accountant behind Branch's betting ring.
Max'sym Fett, or Max for short. Code Name: Fett (He could be more creative.) Max is the biological son of Dogma and a Mirialan woman. Raised in a strict but loving household. Max ran away from home to join the Rebellion after a few of his uncles paid Dogma a visit. Despite what his dad said, Max just felt like he had to help his family, regardless of the consequences. Dogma and Max haven't spoken since. He gets along pretty well with his mom tho.  
Quirks
Gets nervous really quickly. 
He is a Jack of all trades but most work as a mechanic.
Total mama's boy. 
Mako Ikaika Code name Bonito. Mako is one of the oldest of the Clone kiddos and the one who started it all. Mako's Bio dad was the medic for the Wolfpack who spent a wonderfully drunk night with a Zabark spice smuggler. They went their separate ways in the morning and never spoke to each other again. Fast forward to post-Order 66, and Wolffe needs help. This weird Zabark lady demands to talk with his long-dead medic about caring for their son. One very loud argument later, and Wolffe found himself the proud dad of one Mako. Things just exoculated from there. Wolffe deserted the GAR, ran into Rex, and found himself in the outer rim with a bunch of other clone deserters and one small child. Eventually, the group found an old abandoned base from the old republic and decided to make it their home. Wolffe named it "The Den," and Botta-bing botta-boom; the Clone Rebellion had a home base in the outer rim. Most of the Squad Kiddo end up at The Den at some point.
Quirks
Team medic
He is a strong voice. Like STRONG.
Takes after his grandpa Plo
Leo? Code name: Leo. Leo claims their full name is need-to-know, and no one needs to know right now. Yeah, the others don't fully get it, either. No one fully knows where or when Leo showed up in the fulcrum unit he just was just there one day. He works mainly as a code breaker and hacker for different fulcrum teams. Never really settling down with any one group or unit. That was until he met Nyx and Fae. Those two looked at this skinny loner and said, "Oh, we're so keeping him." Within a week, Leo was forcibly adopted by half of the clone units and glared at by the rest. He's not complaining tho. 
Quirks
Hacker voice "I'm in."
Lives off of coffee and Cheetos. 
Secretly loves and respects the entire clone unit but will never admit to it in a million years. 
Rosh Okoye. Code name: Usizo. Rosh is a bit of an odd duck in the clone unit. His family worked as healers, doctors, and medics in different refugee camps through the outer rim but never really crossed paths with the GAR or the Rebellion. That was until Mako showed up at one of the camps. Mako may have gotten a little (cough, cough, a lot) turned around while on a recovery mission. He completed the task, but it would take the squad another two or three days to pick him up. So, he decided to work while he waited; helping Rosh and his family out in the clinic. The two became best buddies, and by the time the squad swung back around to pick Mako up, Rosh decided to tag along. He figured that the Rebellion could always use another medic. 
Quirks
Tall Boy. Like very, very tall.
A bit of an airhead. He spaces out from time to time.
Love spicy food.
And! Now I am done. 
Good lord..... that was a lot.  
Anyway, I hope that you like the boys. And the girls. I plan on drawing them more here soon-ish...... but I need to recharge the old batteries before I do that.  
I should have a new chapter up for the fic here soon too. It's like 90% written, just needs some editing.
 Night Y'all. 
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grembliin · 11 months
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Fuck it oc dump
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peripheryofreality · 1 year
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Tad and Zumi
Zumi opened her door and ran across the hall to her brother’s door. She opened it and quickly stepped inside as she heard her mom raise her voice even louder. 
“Tad.” she pressed her back against her brother’s door and closed it softly. He sighed and turned in his chair to look at her. He obviously couldn’t sleep either. He turned back to his laptop and saved his game before he released his breath loudly. 
“They never fight,” Zumi said as she locked his door. She walked over to the recliner in his room and sat down, pulling her legs in tight against her chest.
“I know,” he finally said. Tad pushed his glasses up to rub his eyes.
“They’ve been at it for over an hour,” Zumi said. Tad nodded his head and moved over to his bed, laying down on his back and staring at the ceiling. 
“They’ve gotta know that they woke us up, right?”
“Were you even asleep?” Zumi responded, glancing at his computer. Tad shook his head no, muttering a soft “not really” in response. 
They both winced as they heard their dad yell back. “You know that’s not what I meant! It was years ago!”
“Then why didn’t you ever bring it up?” Chichi screamed. Both kids winced again when they heard something shatter. “Fuck!” their mom yelled. 
“Accident or purpose?” Tad asked Zumi. Zumi turned her head to the side, trying to decipher any yelling. 
“I think she got hurt. Doesn’t sound like she threw anything and dad’s not telling her to watch it.” 
Zumi buried her head in her arms.
“They’re probably gonna be okay, right?” Tad asked, turning his head to see Zumi start to shake. He quickly rolled over to his side and jumped to his feet, tentatively placing an arm around Zumi’s shoulders. “Hey, hey, hey, what’s wrong?” he asked. 
Zumi looked up at him, tears streaming down her face as she shook from sobbing. She moved her body to bury her face in Tad’s chest. “Do you think they’re gonna get divorced? They’ve been fighting for ever.” 
Tad awkwardly patted her back, ignoring his own tears that threatened to break free. “What? No. No way, it’s only been a few hours, it’ll-they’ll be fine”
Zumi shook her head no. “No, it’s been longer. It’s been a few weeks- ever since report cards came back.”
“What?” Tad interrupted her. Tad tried to remember when report cards came in, he knew he didn’t do well but they hadn’t said anything to him directly about being disappointed. His dad frowned and his mom seemed fine but they hadn’t said anything. 
“I think, I think they’re fighting cuz I’m failing” Zumi whispered. Tad shook his head no.
“No, they wouldn’t fight over something like that… and besides, I don’t think they’d fight over just you failing.” Tad tried to hide the shame he felt from hiding the fact that he was also on the verge of failing a few classes. 
“But we’re both failing” Zumi said, eyes widening. “What if they’re fighting cuz dad knows I’m dumb and he doesn’t think I’m his kid, and maybe mom cheated and maybe dad cheated too and-” Zumi started hyperventilating as she continued to speak, her pupils growing large with each hypothetical. Tad lightly shook her shoulders. 
“Zooms, snap out of it.” He hugged her tightly as she started crying again. Tad wasn’t sure if anything she said could be true but at the moment he didn’t care. He hugged her tightly as she cried on him. 
After a few seconds an attempt at a light knock came from his door.
“Tad, Zumi, are you in there?” it was his dad’s voice. Zumi pulled away and shook her head no to Tad. 
“Uh, just me, dad.” Tad said, swallowing hard. “Kinda in the middle of something”
“Nice try, Tad. We already checked your sister’s room,” His dad wiggled the doorknob. “Can you let us in?” 
“Us?” Tad asked as Zumi pushed away and grabbed a pair of Tad’s shoes. She shoved her feet in his boots, tucking the laces in. She wiggled into one of his sweatshirts as his dad responded. 
“Your mom and me”
Zumi muttered as she walked past Tad and pushed his window open. “They’re just gonna tell us they’re divorcing. Stall them for as long as you can” She crawled out the window and Tad stood up quickly to watch her crouch then walk along the roof before gripping the ledge and dropping down. She took off after that in a run in the opposite direction of their grandparents house. 
Tad looked around and tried to think of a way to stall. 
“Uh, what do you guys want?” 
“We know you guys are awake and heard the- the yelling,” his dad said. “Tad, what was that noise?”
“What noise?” Tad heard his mom whisper. 
Tad looked around his room and threw out a blanket on the roof. 
“The window, it’s stuffy in here.” He crawled out his window and dragged the blanket to the side of the window. He sat down carefully, planting his feet in front of him. 
“Tad, can we come in?” Conan paused a second before adding “Please”
Tad turned his upper body around to the window before raising his voice a little so they could hear him. “No.”
“Tad, we’re asking as a courtesy. We have a key, you know this”
“I don't really want to talk to you guys right now.” Tad rubbed his upper arms and tapped his foot on the roof. He didn’t know what Zumi wanted him to stall for or for how long, but he wasn’t about to start ratting her out now. 
“Tad, honey, please,” Chichi asked. Her voice cracked a little, Tad knew that meant she had been crying and yelling a lot. The desire to see his parents after their fight was starting to get to him. He carefully moved to lay down on the roof, mindful of keeping his knees bent and pushing up slightly. Tad threw an arm over his eyes. 
“Fine,” he yelled back. A second passed before the door opened. His mom came out the window first, carefully stepping around him to sit next to him. Conan came out next and sat next to him too. “Happy?” he mumbled, knowing that if what Zumi was saying was true, they were far from it. 
He felt his dad’s warm hand on his head before his mom gently placed a hand on his knee. 
“We’re not divorcing,” Conan said. Tad moved his arm to look at him apprehensively. “We’re not.” Conan added. 
“And, and we’re not, we’re not splitting up or taking a break or- or anything.” Chichi added nervously, stumbling over a few words where her voice didn’t crack.
“You guys have been fighting a lot,” Tad said. 
Conan let out a long breath and adjusted to lie down next to Tad. Chichi followed suit, wrapping her hand around Tad’s hand. 
“All couples fight, apparently,” Chichi said softly. 
“We wanted to apologize for keeping you both up and for worrying you,” Conan said. 
“We love you guys,” Chichi added, giving Tad’s hand a small squeeze. 
Tad sighed and tilted his head slightly to rest on his mom’s shoulder. 
“Are you guys fighting cuz we’re failing?” Tad asked. Conan let out a soft chortle. 
“Not even remotely,” 
“Is it our fault?” Tad asked. Chichi shook her head no. 
“Your dad, I uh” she paused. “Where’s your sister?” Chichi sat up and looked around. Conan quickly sat up too, standing up after a second. 
Tad stared at his knees intently. 
“Tad, where’s Zumi?” Conan asked. 
Tad stared at his knees more intently before mumbling “So, you guys are fighting over us?”
“Thaddeus. Where is your sister?” Chichi’s voice was raised slightly as she looked at him intently. 
“Uh. I told you she wasn’t in my room…” he said looking up, feigning innocence. 
“Your room. NOW” Chichi practically bellowed. Tad took his time getting up before his dad half picked him up and pushed him towards his room. They all crawled the window, practically pushing him into his room and on his bed. He sat down nervously. Chichi buried her face in her hands. She took a huge breath before looking back at Tad. 
“Where’s Zumi, Tad?” she asked. Conan looked around the room and picked up Zumi’s phone. 
“No idea,” Tad said truthfully. 
“What do you know?” Conan asked, unlocking Zumi’s phone. Tad frowned, he forgot that his dad had access to their phones. 
“A lot of things. Did you know that glass blowing was popularized by Dale Chihuly in-” Tad started before getting cut off by his dad. 
“About where your sister is.”
“Oh that.”
Chichi started looking around for her phone when Conan mumbled “left pocket”. Chichi pulled it out and started typing a number. 
“Start talking or you’re grounded for three days”
“Three days?” Tad asked.
Chichi piped up “A week. Elle, is that you?” she walked away from the room, her voice growing more hysterical by the second.
“Fine. I don’t know where she went!” Tad threw his hands up in the air. He pointed to his closet. “She started freaking out, grabbed my boots and sweater and said to stall you guys. She was convinced you guys were gonna tell us that you were breaking up and so she ran. Okay!?”
“Why did she think we were gonna break up?” Conan asked. Realization seemed to hit him as Tad responded.
“She said you guys’ve been fighting for weeks. She notices things, you know.” His dad sighed and sat down next to Tad. He put his head in his hands.
“I know. And I’m sorry.” he said. Tad didn’t bother hiding the shock on his face. His dad rarely apologized. 
Chichi came back in at this moment. “Barn’s gonna grab the truck and go looking for her”
Tad felt a pang of guilt as he realized his mom’s face was freshly red. 
“She’s probably fine,” he said.
“She’s twelve, how can she-” Chichi’s voice started rising before she took a deep breath and started over softly. “I’ll feel better when we find her. Conan?” His dad looked up. He patted Tad’s knee before standing up. He walked over to Chichi, and picked up one of her hands, Tad noticing that her right hand was wrapped up. 
“I’ll go looking for her,” he kissed Chichi on the cheek. “Do you wanna-” Conan paused “Would you like to come with or stay here and wait for her?”
Chichi leaned forward and Conan pressed his forehead against hers. “I’ll wait here with Tad in case she comes home.” 
“I’ll let you know if I hear anything, I promise” Conan pressed a kiss against her cheek before letting go of her hand. He turned to Tad. Tad shrank a little and looked down. “Tad,” he looked up to meet his dad’s eyes. “I love you. If you think of anything else, let your mom know, okay?” Tad nodded his head softly. 
“Yes, sir” he mumbled. 
“I’ll be back,” Conan said, quickly moving away from Tad’s door. 
“Am I grounded?” Tad asked, looking at his mom. Chichi sighed. “I don’t know, probably” she sat down on the bed next to him. Tad rested his head against his mom’s shoulder. She moved her head to rest on top of his. After a few moments she took a big breath. “Come on, we’re already up.” She stood up and grabbed his hand, gently pulling him into the living room. She sat him down on a kitchen stool before she plugged in her phone, turning the volume up. Chichi moved to the pantry and started pulling out items. 
“Tad, I need you to start measuring things while I make some phone calls.” 
Tad sighed but didn’t argue as he pulled the containers near him. “What’re we making?” he asked, almost afraid of the answer.
“Pelmeni and sfeeha” Chichi answered simply. She pushed some large mixing bowls next to Tad. Tad groaned, he’d rather be grounded than suffer his mom’s frantic stress baking.  
“And?” he asked as he pushed his glasses up to read the recipes his mom pushed in front of him. He groaned as she tapped it “Double it”.
Tad started measuring as he listened to his mom making calls, the phone balanced between her ear and shoulder. 
“Ma? Sorry it’s late, have you seen Zumi? No,” Chichi hiccuped a little as some tears slipped. “No, Ma. Couple hours. Yeah, Tad is here. He’s safe. Mhm. and sfeeha. Sure. Okay, I love you, Ma.” Chichi turned her head to Tad, switching to English for his benefit. “Grandma wants to talk to you, sweetie.” Tad sighed as he took the phone from her. Chichi started mixing the dry ingredients for the pelmeni. 
“Hi grandma,” Tad said slowly.
“Hi внук” Byeol said in English. Tad sighed in relief that she spoke in English. “Tad, be honest. Do you know where she is?” 
“No Baba.”
“Hm” his grandma took a few minutes to think. Tad started measuring water for his mom. “Okay sweetie. How’s your Ma’?” Tad glanced up at his mom, who was softly crying as she mixed the dough. 
“I don’t know, baba.” 
“I’ll be over soon. Pass the phone, sweetie.” Tad nodded his head and passed the phone back over to his mom.
“No ma, you don’t need to come over. Ma’, no. I’m fine, I’m fine. Conan’s looking for him. Da’ doesn’t need to go and look too, honestly, it’s fine-” his mom stopped talking and Chichi hiccuped slightly as she started crying harder. “Fine Ma’. See you soon”
Chichi put down the phone and wiped at her eyes with her sleeve. 
“Tad, sweetie. You can go watch TV on the couch, if you want” she said after a moment. 
Tad straightened up a bit. “Can I go to my room?” he asked hopefully. Chichi paused before shaking her head no. “No, I. I need to know that you’re safe and here.”
Tad slumped his shoulders but nodded his head. He glanced behind him and looked at the couch. He shook his head no and rested his head on his arms. 
“I’m sure dad’ll find her soon.”
Tad couldn’t remember when but at some point in the middle of the night, he fell asleep on the kitchen counter. He felt his mom carrying him over to the couch, and remembered slightly waking up as she tucked him in before gently pulling his glasses off and kissing him on the forehead. 
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clavainov · 1 year
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leonidasmmii · 1 year
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🤝 & ❤ one of those romantic ones better be one with anna.... 👀 JAKBJEGFH jk love you! 😋
Top five platonic OC relationships:
1. JOSH AND KAT. They love each other and show it by bullying each other. Josh pissing their father off when he's in a poor mood to make sure he goes off on him and Kat patching him up as she tears into him. Kat getting her heart broken again and again and Josh always just 'it's okay, I'm here, I've got you.' They're bitchy to everyone except their younger siblings this includes each other but they are also So Soft...
2. Marcus and Anna. They're not siblings but you wouldn't know it watching them interact. He's the annoying older brother who she goes feral around. For those who don't know, Anna is Very Shy. And Marcus just makes her go feral. She will wrestle with one (1) individual and it is because she hates him but she loves him. He's an asshole and she's a brat and they are So Fond of each other.
3. Jess and Anna. Same vibes, but Jess is very much the 'I'm right and you know it, shit head!' She will tease Anna relentlessly and Anna is just 'Shut your mouth or I'm gonna beat you up.' Will not wrestle, Anna might strangle her though.
4. Fia and Charlie. They're siblings, you may notice a theme here. They are also just 'I'll kick your ass.' *Someone says they'll kick their ass too* 'WHO THE HELL DO YOU THINK YOU ARE, YOU DON'T GET TO THREATEN THEM!' The 'I only I get to pick on you' vibes. Y'know.
5. Anna and Ginnie at Jess/Hannah. They look at these two idiots who pine for years while being so obvious and So Oblivious and just go 'yeah I'll suffer through this to be friends with you.' Jess/Hannah is sosososo stupid, the group has one braincell and Ginnie and Anna have to share it.
BONUS BECAUSE I WANNA TALK ABOUT IT 6. Kat and Anna. Anna is the nervous quiet one and Kat is the school ice queen and she runs into Anna and Anna is so ready to get ripped into but Kat's just 'I'm sorry, are you okay?' and Anna's genuine bafflement at this just has Kat going 'Oh you're pathetic. You're mine now.' Anna is a half drowned kitten to Kat, and Anna just looks at her buying things for her and goes 'Oh you don't have to' 'But I wanna' 'But-' 'And I'm gonna.' '...Okay.'
Top five romantic OC relationships:
1. IDIOTS POLYCULE. Jackson, the horny one, being a horrible influence on John and Anna, who are also very horny, but quiet about it. John, introducing Anna to Xanax and Anna's Whole world changing. Will just 'hi, have food. Have food. Have food. I made you this thing. Does it make your life easier?' and the entire group just melting every time. John writing poems and sonnets and stories about his loves. Josh just 'I can't say it but have this drawing of us as your favorite movie couple. I got hurt protecting you. You carved off a piece of my heart and you're holding it in your hands, do you understand?' Anna just. Leaning and holding hands and cuddling when she normally doesn't like touch because they're hers. Jackson is always gentle and slow and listening and. Do you understand? Do you understand what these buffoons do to me? Do you know the depth of love I have for them?
2. Kat/Cindy/Melody. Cindy and Melody are together and they look at Kat and go 'Should we? Would you be okay with that?' Cindy flirting outright with Kat, showing a little cleavage, and Kat later just 'but does she like me????' while everyone beats their head against a wall. Melody grabs her by the face and says they love her and Kat still manages to delude herself into thinking it's friendly. Cindy and Melody put up with So Much trying to bring this woman into their relationship.
3. Jess/Hannah. As stated before, very oblivious. Hannah sitting in Jess's lap, referring to her as Her Jess, very very flirty. Jess just 'My Hannah, No Touch,' clingy and possessive but never trying to stop her from doing anything. Everyone around them is just 'GUYS, COME ON' as they continue to be the most couple-ish not couple in existence.
4. Jackson/Anna in specific, because Anna will run away from him if he gets to be too much, at which point he sits outside the room she's locked herself in and whines at her like the dramatic slut he is. He gets her very horny and she is constantly embarrassed about it.
5. John/Will too. Because they're the cozies motherfuckers in the world. Homemade food and hot chocolate, curled up under a fuzzy blanket on the couch, John playing with Will's hair as he reads to him. They are So Domestic and So Cozy.
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omdrawings · 2 years
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A variety of 2022's ArtFight attacks and characters I've done thus far. Honestly wondering why I didn't do ArtFight years prior; it's quite fun.
Characters Featured in Order: (Top Left) reallybad-goodart's Sir Laurence Peabody II (Top Right) kurt_draws_'s Zee (Center) Fekuxziee's Kharon (Bottom Left) [My Character's Ref Image] Raven Ripper (Bottom Right) vanitasz's Spark
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mathmusic8 · 2 years
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Chapter 2 is up!
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