don't drink the water
#1
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Someone I don't have a current thread with or someone I haven't had a thread with recently, please.

     She was here.
     He knew that the moment he had come from the west, traveling with no purpose except for those he found along the way. Ahren had needed space, and he had done well to make himself scarce. For more then two weeks he had been following the highway, as his father before him, finding the silent answers indifferent stars and hostile strangers could give him. Before the rains had started, he had begun a quiet and desperate change; in appearance, this was very minor—the ragged, road beaten cargo shorts, the fading army backpack, the black leather eye patch. There were new scars on his body too, these from the faceless men he had passed along the way. He had fought his own war, in some way, and come back like a forgotten son.
     As he aged, and as his fourth birthday approached, the blonde had begun to darken. He was no longer a new star, but the color of dirty sunshine and no-color dust. He was, by all means, trying to intentionally disappear. These were not his people; he belonged with the highwaymen and the drug addicts that called themselves prophets. That much he knew was true, for not all that long ago he had been one himself. He was covered in holy signs and smelled like asphalt and smoke. A prophet in his own right, except the message had been wrong, or lost in to the dragon that even now held him in its grip. He would never admit this, as he would never admit he was an alcoholic, never admit that he needed touch, never admit that he was slowly killing himself.
     Instead, Ahren de le Poer sat on the rocky outcropping above the sea and smoked. His bag sat at his feet and his hair, now grown out past his shoulders, was tousled by each passing breeze. He stared at the ocean, trying to define where the sea and the sky became one, and held in a dismal resentment because of that tiny, little, frustrating fact.
     She was here.





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#2
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I'll PM you that I've replied =)

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Hel made her way towards this part of coast, to find some solitude, some well-needed time to think. She was almost certain now, that soon she would have pups. There was still the matter of telling Styx. But then, what if she wasn't and all this was in her mind? It would break their hearts, both of theirs, because nothing she did would be good enough to make up for such a mistake. She glanced out to sea and remembered just how the crossing had felt, the salty drops on her fur, the smell of seaweed, the rolling waves. Her bow slung over her shoulder, her quiver needing new arrows, her footsteps echoed on the shingle. The hood of her cloak, a dark blue light material, drawn up to hide her face, her belt hidden by the air blowing the fabric around her, she stood out like some fae of old, except that she was taller, stronger and not quite so graceful.


The rock she sat on faced the sea. Spray from the water had not touched the wood and she took a cutting knife out, ready to make herself arrows. The bow she left by her feet and soon her movements were precise and devoted, her mind one with what she was creating. In this way, blocked off from the world, she could see and hear very little. Engrossed in her work, as Loki once put it, made her vulnerable to all kinds of attacks. She raised her head and looked out to sea again. If her doubts were confirmed, she would give birth to Loki's grandchildren away from Asgard, away from her mother and away from her brothers. Hel couldn't help but feel that in some small way, she had disappointed her family.




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#3
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     It was the cloth he had noticed first. The fabric had moved like a fallen bird, and drawn his attention in the same fashion. When the figure had taken a seat below him, he had spotted the bow and arrows. That had really been interesting, given that he had not seen this in anyone in the new world carrying the same weapon style he did. Pushing himself to his feet, pushing away that ragged and resounding fact, he began to make his way towards the figure. The cigarette in his left hand would give him away long before his noise, but the woman was engrossed in something.
     “What are you making?” He asked suddenly, leaving himself a few feet from the stranger. Just in case. Always just in case.





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#4
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Hel stared out to sea, as if the moving waves could give her some sort of answer. She tried to imagine herself telling Styx about the pregnancy in a million different ways, none of which were right. She tried to imagine herself back home. Her father, Loki, with his stone-like appearance and mother Angrboda, with her obsession for subtle death and plotting. She was a part of their world. Looking down at her arrows, she realised that no matter how far she fled, she would always be in their world. Their grip on her, her parents', her brothers', would never waver. Resolve hardened in her. They would always be her family. Just like she would always be a fighter, a warrior, a killer.


The smell hit her nostrils before the sound made her ears perk up. Before his voice sounded in the relative silence, broken only by the crashing waves on the shore. She turned around suddenly, the hood falling off her head. Piercing blue eyes stared at the wolf before her. She noticed the weary look of him, the dust, the backpack, the lack of scent. A loner. She knew that she smelled of Styx, but wondered how much Phoenix Valley had rubbed off on her. Getting to her feet, Hel tried to steady her heartbeats. He too had a weapon. A crossbow. It was that which troubled her. So far, she had not seen anyone with such knowledge of weaponry. Keeping her voice steady, she replied, Arrows. I'm making arrows.


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#5
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     The elder members of the de le Poer house were dead. Mab was the only one left, and she had removed him a long time ago. Ahren had no family save those he had created here, and of them, the majority were full of wavering hatred and love, and knew that owed him nothing outside of their bonds. The blonde smiled faintly, though his eyes turned to her work, glimmering with interest. “You’re the first person I’ve seen do that here,” he said calmly, making no sign to move forward.







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