• Welcome to The Cave of Dragonflies forums, where the smallest bugs live alongside the strongest dragons.

    Guests are not able to post messages or even read certain areas of the forums. Now, that's boring, don't you think? Registration, on the other hand, is simple, completely free of charge, and does not require you to give out any personal information at all. As soon as you register, you can take part in some of the happy fun things at the forums such as posting messages, voting in polls, sending private messages to people and being told that this is where we drink tea and eat cod.

    Of course I'm not forcing you to do anything if you don't want to, but seriously, what have you got to lose? Five seconds of your life?

Magna City Shining Congress – Side Halls

Oh. Jean started at Garnet's broad smile and tried to smile back, a little unnerved although she wasn't sure why. She was definitely not much like Mia, then.

She looked around. The steaming bricks looked brittle, and Garnet was building whatever she was building indoors. That didn't make a lot of sense. "Um... keep everyone safe from what?" she asked.
 
The Decidueye hardly acknowledged Andre, not taking her eyes off her doppelganger as they grappled together. Motes of light and darkness floated around them both, shimmering, reflecting, making each look like the other as they passed through one's line of sight.

"I am not dead," she hissed, beak parting in a silent screech. "Yet I am dead – the part of me which is Miwacha has been bleeding for months and years. No. Nothing is alright."

Miwacha... That was Tawenna's tribe, to which she belonged. She had left them behind to join the Covenant, then?

It looked like Andre had read the situation correctly. A conflict between native heritage and a position in a settler organization. Andre just wished he actually knew more about this topic instead of just what he'd learned in history class and gleaned from online discourse.

"Has something put your tribe and the Covenant at odds?" he asked. Better to start simple.

The Aipom turned to look at Ben with heavy eyes, glazed over with a dark-silver sheen.

"Heyyyy, buddy. Huh. We don't know each other." There was a long pause, as the tail-hand reached out. Grasping. "We aren't buddies, I guess. Anyway, no, not really. I'm thinking about offing myself, actually."

There was a weird smile on Roscoe's face.

"Sorry about the shitty first impression. With any luck, it won't matter."

"Oh. Oh, goodness..." Ben mumbled to himself. He really hadn't ever met someone who wanted to... oh, goodness.

Ben cleared his throat. He'd heard it from somewhere that the most important thing in these situations was to listen. "Well, what makes you feel that way?"
 
"Um... keep everyone safe from what?"

Garnet's face looked reverent, like something out of a church's stained glass windows.

"Everyone else."

"Has something put your tribe and the Covenant at odds?"

Tawenna spat a short, sharp laugh.

"The Covenant are the flight feathers in the wings of the Commonwealth," she declared. "I have tried to further their goals along paths that sidestep my people, but they will inevitably be swallowed like all the rest. Soon, everyone on this continent will look and talk very much like you."

She and her Blacklight apparition swung and shot at each other, aura-infused feathers shattering against stone and shattering glass.

"Well, what makes you feel that way?"

Roscoe tilted his head, and put out his paws in an exaggerated shrug.

"Look, I don't know what the fuck I'm doin' here, man. I'm so far outta my depth I'm walkin' on a lakebed, waitin' to drown. Nothin' I can say or do is ever gonna matter, and I'm killin' myself nice and slow already with all my vices. Who wants to read the rest of my story? – it'll just be one hell of a depressin' epilogue to a long, bad joke. Want a smoke?"

He took a packet of cigarettes out of his jacket pocket and held it out to Ben.
 
Back
Top Bottom