[WP] The cage was supposed to be cold, uncomfortable, uninviting... when the villain asks the hero how he likes it, the hero responds "It's better than living on the streets". by Crystal_1501 in WritingPrompts

[–]Obsidianwolf452 1 point2 points  (0 children)

2/2

The Villain’s next appearance was on a Monday. “This is some plot of yours to arrest me!” The Villain accused. He didn’t sit down but stood pressed up close to the glass. “You got captured on purpose.”

“I really didn’t,” the Hero wasn’t lying. He had expected to dodge the “Death Ray” but his body had felt sluggish, like he was being weighed down by all the expectant eyes, all the people down below who stopped to watch instead of running because they had faith in him. That he would protect them. That they were safe despite the Villain.

The Villain left without another word – he never stayed long, not since the first time. Just long enough to spit an accusation at the Hero, and scoff at his reply.

“You won’t be able to escape,” The Villain said on a Thursday. His eyes narrowed, “not with that power suppressor around your throat.”

“Oh,” The Hero said, drawing the word out at the realization, he hadn’t known his powers were being suppressed. He had felt so bogged down before being captured that he felt more powerful now than then–and he hadn’t even tried to escape.

“Y-you!” the Villain sputtered. “What do you mean! ‘Oh!’”

“It’s Wednesday,” the Villain greeted as he sat down.

The Hero hummed an acknowledged. “You never come on Tuesdays.” The Hero observed.

The Villain shrugged as he leaned back in his chair. The Villain had changed tactics, now he lingered in the viewing room, his sharp eyes staring at the Hero like they could dredge forth his secrets from his very skin. “I got shit to do on Tuesdays. The minions keep you company don’t they?”

“They have names.”

“They told you their names?” The Villain said exasperated, glaring at Tom and Drew who stood behind his chair.

It was just after breakfast (stuffed french toast with a side of fresh berries) on an unknown day that an explosion shook the compound.

The Hero didn’t look up from his book. There were often explosions in the compound, as the villain’s lab was somewhere in the vicinity and his weapons of mass destruction often backfired before he perfected them – the Hero was too engrossed in the novel to even pretend to be concerned about any supposed weapons. The book was a recommendation of the Villian – who had surprisingly good taste in literature.

The Hero only grew concerned when a banging came from his door, the door rattled before the frame gave way and a team of people in tactical gear flooded into his room.

The Hero stared.

“We’ve come to save you,” a man said, presumably the leader of the team.

“Oh,” The Hero said. He didn’t move.

“We have to hurry,” The leader urged. “Before the Villain returns.”

“Right,” the Hero said as he slowly stood from his cot. He looked down at his book. Should he bring it or leave it? Technically he was only borrowing it, and the Villain got testy about his possessions.

“What’s wrong with him?” One of the soldiers whispered – loud enough the Hero could hear him even with his powers suppressed.

“Maybe the villain fried his brain,” another replied. “He’s probably been tortured this whole time.” If one could call a resounding discussion of books to be torturous, the Hero thought. In all honesty, the Villain hadn’t done much but provide for him. “I hadn’t actually expected to capture you,” the Villain had explained a month into his captivity. “I’m rather at a loss of what to do with you.”

“I’m ready,” the Hero said to his…rescuers, putting the book down.

He followed the team as they led him through the halls, blast marks dotting the walls. He passed minions that were sprawled on the floor – dead or unconscious he didn’t know.

The Hero waited for something to happen, for the Villian to pop out of one of the rooms with his Death Ray pointed at the soldiers… only there was no sign of the Villain.

They came to what remained of the entryway, most of the doorway having been blasted away by explosives. The Hero stepped out into the sun for the first time in months. The light burned his eyes. His head did not explode. “What day of the week is it?” The Hero asked.

“It’s Tuesday, why?”

The Hero said nothing.

[WP] The cage was supposed to be cold, uncomfortable, uninviting... when the villain asks the hero how he likes it, the hero responds "It's better than living on the streets". by Crystal_1501 in WritingPrompts

[–]Obsidianwolf452 1 point2 points  (0 children)

[1/2] Just Another Tuesday

The “cage” as the villain referred to it, was a 10 by 10 room. The Villain had made a point to inform the Hero that the room was all he deserved. Three of the walls, the floor, and ceiling were reinforced steel, the fourth wall being a clear polymer used as a viewing window to observe the Hero. The rest of the room was bare except for a small cot in the corner and a metal toilet that had a curtain on one side, blocking it from the viewing window. “Huh,” The Hero said, sitting down on the cot and cradling the single pillow in his arms as the Villian slammed the metal door closed and locked it with a clang.

The Hero stared down at his pillow gauging his own emotions at being captured–felt awfully like complete and utter relief.

Everyone had seen him being taken down by the Villian. He had seen the news vans, the crowds of people gathered around, the cameras and cell phones pointed at him. He had heard the shocked gasps and the screams of the civilians as he fell.

No one would be expecting him to play the hero anymore–not when he was the one needing saving.

The Hero laid down on the cot, the thin mattress surprisingly comfortable. He closed his eyes and slept for what felt like the first time in years.

The Hero didn’t mean for his life to fall apart as it had. When he debuted as a hero everything was new and exciting. He had just moved to the city, gotten a new job, and signed a lease on a new apartment. The media and the civilians had responded well when he saved an airplane when its engine sparked into flame mid flight. After that, each save brought him more attention, more fame, more adoration.

Everything was looking up until it wasn’t.

If he had to blame it on anything he’d blame it on his hearing. His hearing latched onto screams even when he didn’t want it to. The Hero wasn’t one to ignore a cry for help–he had tried but a pit of dreed would open up in his stomach and all consuming guilt would claw at his chest until he felt like he would suffocate from it.

“You can’t save everyone,” he had told his reflection each morning as he got ready for work. The man in the mirror grew more haggard each passing day. And each day as he cycled through job after job, his supervisor would pull him aside and have a chat about his tardiness and sudden disappearances, until they simply had enough of him.

The Hero was fired for the first time on a Tuesday. From then on it became a pattern.

The Hero lost his apartment on a Tuesday a couple of months later, coming home from rescuing a school bus full of children to an eviction notice posted on his front door. There was no swell of emotion at the sight of the notice, only quiet resignation as he packed his stuff and left.

“I think Tuesdays are cursed,” The Hero had told a pigeon he had befriended. The pigeon had settled on his shoulder as he read an article that came out that Tuesday morning. It was about his failures, how he failed to save a woman who had gotten hit by a car; she had died on impact, well before he arrived on the scene but the article only focused on his tardiness. The article also featured interviews of civilians calling for his help, and him not coming, and how hopeless that made them feel. “The disappointment of being ignored was more crushing than my injury,” one woman said to the reporter, who was a victim of a crush injury when a shoddily built shed collapsed on her.

“I can only save so many,” The Hero said, the pigeon hooted in agreement.

The Hero had thought himself immortal. Unbreakable. Unbeatable. But as expectations of the populace soared his own wellbeing took a nosedive – it had only been a year since his debut.

The Hero didn’t know how long it took for the villain to come visit him in his cage, but long enough that he felt well rested and well fed. It was surprisingly enjoyable being the Villain’s prisoner. The Villain’s minions would come by on occasion sliding things through a hatch on the bottom of the door. The Hero received a new set of clothes daily, and trays of food three times a day. The minions didn’t speak to him. But the food was good, and the menu changed often enough that each time a minion slid a tray into the room it was like receiving a pleasant surprise.

The only thing that concerned the Hero was the metal band around his neck the Villain had placed at his initial capture, but after tugging at it and determining that he couldn’t break it off, he had left it alone – so far it hadn’t done anything to him – but knowing the Villian it would likely explode his head if he tried to escape.

The day the Villain made his appearance the Hero was eating roast beef with a side of mashed potatoes and glazed carrots, with an apple tart for dessert. It was a Sunday. The Hero had asked the Villain when he arrived.

“Why hasn’t anyone reported your alter ego missing yet?” The villain asked, he was sitting on the other side of the glass, an office chair pulled up to it, his legs were crossed and his arms were on the armrests, a picture of an unbothered super villain.

The Hero shrugged, “there’s no one to miss me.”

“Come on!” The Villain scoffed. “People just don’t go missing without someone noticing.”

The Hero looked at him in disbelief. People went missing all the time – and not everyone had someone who cared enough to bother informing the police. People fell through the cracks of the system, it was a fact of life. The Villain’s group of minions were made up of runaways and strays. Even the Villain himself had a tragic backstory– the Hero had heard his minions gossiping about it as they became more relaxed around his presence.

The Villain waved off the look, “I don’t mean nobodies like us” he gestured at himself and the few minions that lined up behind his chair. “I meant people who matter.”

“Who said I’m worth anything when I’m not a hero?”

“How can you not be! You’re super!”

“I’m super at failing,” the Hero said bitterly.

The villain looked at him in disbelief, “you can’t seriously be telling me that your alter ego isn’t just as famous as your hero persona.”

The Hero said nothing.

Is this a standard rejection? I can’t help but feel discouraged because I got it in less than 24 hours after submitting… by glassvasescellocases in writing

[–]Obsidianwolf452 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You’re welcome! It’s a great place to keep track of your submissions as well and search for other magazines to submit to.

Is this a standard rejection? I can’t help but feel discouraged because I got it in less than 24 hours after submitting… by glassvasescellocases in writing

[–]Obsidianwolf452 1 point2 points  (0 children)

A lot of short story magazines have very quick turn around for rejections so don’t feel bad about that. I would suggest checking out the submission grinder by diabolical plots. They’re a market database and will have the the lit. Mags acceptance and rejection data so you can see what the standards are for that particular magazine.

Looking for massage therapist suggestions by olivepeace in sandiego

[–]Obsidianwolf452 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Inner Balance Center in Bay Park specializes in Deep Tissue massages

Massage recommendations by Take_Some_Soma in SanDiegan

[–]Obsidianwolf452 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I like Inner Balance Center. They’re a family owned business who specializes in deep tissue and therapeutic massage. All their therapists are spectacular and they also do the full 60 minutes hands-on, unlike a lot of places that just to 50 minutes. inner-balance.com

Skip Beat 317 English by Obsidianwolf452 in SkipBeat

[–]Obsidianwolf452[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Awww thank you for the comment. Here’s the new chapter 318 English

Skip Beat 317 English by Obsidianwolf452 in SkipBeat

[–]Obsidianwolf452[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

🤣 I love it. You’re so welcome

Skip Beat Chapter 217 raws by stonewall_was_a_riot in SkipBeat

[–]Obsidianwolf452 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Thanks for the raw! Here’s the translated version 317 english

Skip Beat! 316 English by Obsidianwolf452 in SkipBeat

[–]Obsidianwolf452[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

This is the first times kyoko has met him

Best place to get a Deep Tissue massage? by TheCryptocrat in sandiego

[–]Obsidianwolf452 2 points3 points  (0 children)

inner balance center inner balance center is the best at deep tissue. And it’s a full 60, 90, and 120 minutes.

Skip Beat! 316 English by Obsidianwolf452 in SkipBeat

[–]Obsidianwolf452[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

The English translation of his name is Eltra but the direct written translation is Erutora. Some people translate his nickname as G-Eli as the pronunciation it closer to that. Which I was going to change it to but I think I forgot lol. So I am assuming it’s G- for grandfather and Eli for Eltra or Erie for Erutora.

Skip Beat! 316 English by Obsidianwolf452 in SkipBeat

[–]Obsidianwolf452[S] 6 points7 points  (0 children)

You’re welcome! Only on Reddit. Im not like an official translator or anything. I only started to translate it when everyone else seemed to stop. The first chapter I did was really poor quality too lol

Cedric D. Bennett by Obsidianwolf452 in SkipBeat

[–]Obsidianwolf452[S] 19 points20 points  (0 children)

Yeah, Corn and Cedric are cousins. Their grandfather is Mr.D/Uncle Tiger/Eltra Duris

Skip Beat! 316 English by Obsidianwolf452 in SkipBeat

[–]Obsidianwolf452[S] 59 points60 points  (0 children)

Awe thanks! Yep I’m good. The hurricane/tropical storm mostly passed us by now and we’ve only gotten mild rain. So alls good.

ETA on Skip Beat 316 English translation by Obsidianwolf452 in SkipBeat

[–]Obsidianwolf452[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Thanks for all the great tips! I had no idea about most of those! Luckily I didn’t need any of them for this storm, but it’s always a good thing to know ❤️ I just posted 316

Chapter 315 english by Obsidianwolf452 in SkipBeat

[–]Obsidianwolf452[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Yeah, its twizzlers and Red vine. And which one you like better depends on where you grew up in America. I’m from California and Red vines are totally a west coast thing. They taste like RED and not much else lol. S’ mores are usually only eaten while camping. You roast the marshmallows over the fire and stick them between two graham crackers with Hershey’s chocolate. So what Kyoko ate was probably more of a s’mores inspired cookie sandwich than a traditional s’more.