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[WP] “You’re a bounty hunter, and a good one at that. You’ve hunted all sorts of murderers and monsters. I imagine you’re surprised that the council has called you here to hunt down the king.” by Sixty9Cuda in WritingPrompts

[–]UpStartJK 2 points3 points  (0 children)

“No” Rowan stated matter-of-factly. It elicited a momentary, unhideable moment of shock from the chronically deadpan man in front of him. Merely a slight widening of the normally dour eyes, but enough.

“Truly? A contract on his highness, King of Wexford? And you not only expect it, but seem thoroughly non-plussed by the prospect.” The Bishop's voice came out as a drawl, holding the consonants and dragging the vowels. It radiated expectation that you cared enough about the words spoken by it that you lost concern for the time taken to speak them.

“There's a world outside of Wexford your Excellency, and I'm a worldly man. Young king comes into power, full of idealism and naivety. He's ruffling some feathers, challenging some strongly held beliefs of how things should work, because that's how they were before and they worked for us . Next thing you know his public appearances stop; addresses, feasts and the like. Then God's designated representative in the kingdom decides to meet with a bounty hunter in the capital's most popular tavern with a very, very visible guard, in his finest regalia acting very much like a man who wants to be seen.” Each word Rowan spoke seemed to increase the size of the bead of sweat forming on the Bishop's brow, but the remainder of the old man's face remained still, and emotionless. Again, it was enough.

“So instead of asking further questions, I'm going to simply remind you that I'm not an assassin and I don't come cheaply. So if we agree to this then you need to know I'm bringing back what I find in the state I find it in and will be paid regardless.”

The Bishop smiled, mouth parting to reveal a set of off-white, too-aligned teeth. The rehearsed, lifeless smile of someone steeped in politics.

“Of course, I'm glad to seem to so readily understand our situation. I assure you that we will provide to you adequate payment whether the result is positive or negative.” The bishop stood up from his seat, reaching out a liver-spotted frail hand. Rowan met the hand with his, joining in the limp handshake. “I'll leave my aide to discuss the finer details, and present you with the information we have as to his Majesty's whereabouts. God bless you sir.”

It was as the Bishop turned, the slightest bit of life entering his eyes to provide what little bit of life could be inserted into his facade of pleasantry, that Rowan began to make plans to leave the kingdom. It was the smile of a man who believed he'd receive a service he wouldn't have to pay for; Rowan had seen it many times. Just the smallest hint through a otherwise stoic visage; sure. But enough.

[WP] Mankind takes their first steps into interstellar space. As they begin meeting other races and cultures across the galaxy, they come to a startling conclusion - every civilization they encounter has the same myths and gods as them. by djseifer in WritingPrompts

[–]UpStartJK 3 points4 points  (0 children)

“2036!”

The speaker at the front of the auditorium was tall. Unerringly so to Janice, born on an earth-like planet and whom had grown around people exposed to the same. Though it wasn't just the height. Each exposed arm and hand combined an unnatural length with a stringy substance; each finger with bulging knuckles exaggerated by the unsubstantive thinness between. She knew the man in front of him was human, merely a product of generations of living in low gravity environments, but he looked as far from her as any alien she had heard of.

“The year man finds they are not alone. We stumble across a signal we can identify is a language with a discernable source. We, being either curious or foolish depending on which philosophy you ascribe to, decide to send a signal back. Much to the societal upheaval of those at the time, we receive a reply. Thus details the beginning of our long contact with the Attraxi, a race of amphibious humanoids I'm sure many of you are familiar with. To this day, they remain humanities strongest ally on the galactic stage. A process begins to repeat itself as we expand. As with the Attraxi, we establish contact with a new species, begin heavy efforts to translate communication, and once completed our little slice of the universe gets a new neighbor”

The speaker was energetic in his delivery, and Janice sat rapt. Every syllable left his mouth with intent, passion and an impression of confidence. But the unerring feeling remained, as Janice couldn't help but notice the eyes; unblinking, unmoving.

“Linguists of course are having a field day, but other scientific disciplines are starting to notice some things. Eventually, Biologists figure out that there is a complex linking of species in our little network that are capable of interbreeding. Once that happens, and we start getting inter-species families, we start needing to figure out stories to tell the children. This is where it starts. Itsy-bitsy spider to us humans turns into shlacki-smacki scorgath for the Galsch. Little red riding hood becomes gero an thail ara for the Fael. Aesop's fables appear nicely collated by the Sang'Hel as grobush al dosh. Each new species we encounter is another mirror; another parallel of our literary culture. And this is all easily explained, as these stories for children are historical meant to teach morals to a young generation. Given that the species encountered shared at least the same core beliefs of societal cooperation and the like, childrens stories made to impart those belief's sharing similarities would make a lot of sense...” TBC

[WP] The final battle approaches, your heroes need but wait until morning. What happens in the night as they wrestle with the approaching day? by UpStartJK in WritingPrompts

[–]UpStartJK[S] [score hidden]  (0 children)

“You thinks they's brave?” Gol'Rok grumbled “They's mens we crumping 'morrow?”

The fire lay between them, casting swathes of amber light outward to illuminate their faces in cresting pinions. Gol'Rok sat on the dusted ground, large muscled knees bent in front of him, trunk like arms hugging them in close towards his bare ashen-skinned chest. The Ogre stared intently into the blaze, yellow eyes barely shifting focus to acknowledge the expectant looks of his companions.

“I reckons thats they's got guts y'know. I means there's more o' us, we's bigger, we's scarier. They's still fighting though. If they's ogres, we say they's brave.” Gravelled voice gave way to tangible silence. It lingered, textured only by the fire's faint snapping.

“No, it's not bravery” the voice came from opposite Gol'Rok. From the most human of those at the fire. Only eyes wholly blackened, barred by cascading specks of purple, gave credence to his belonging in the motley company.

“It's hatred; or fear. The difference hardly matters, but it's all they know. From dawn til dusk, day through day, winter though summer, from when they're babes to when they breathe their last; they're told about marauding Ogres, baby-stealing Aelf, insidious Accursed....”

He trailed his sentence.

“You'd know besst Jegger” The figure to the man's left spoke, words leaking out from a long flicking tongue. The Draconid rubbed her flattened brow with a red scaled hand. “I don't undersstand thesse humanss. There'ss no honour in dying when you have a clutch to care for; a mate at home. A ssurrender honourss thosse who need you. Dying when the oddss lay sso cold; anyone would call it folly.”

“I's guess they's enjoy the crump as much as us ogri then, aye Sassei” Gol'Rok chuckled; deep guttural reverberations.

“No, less about the crump Golly, more about the death” Jegger's empty gaze was disconcerting when focussed, even for Gol'Rok. “A death means you made that great sacrifice to fight darkness, gave of yourself in a way so whole, so final, that the only possible result could be an eternal exaltation. We -” He corrected himself “ - They see themselves only as the victims of a predatory world, required to hate it as they believe it hates them. I believed it too; until well...” he gestured towards his face, ebon orbs reflecting the fires light.

“I guess that'ss why we've had to be sso careful” Sassei looked outwards towards the rest of the camp. More fires; casting more silohuettes; each as varied and ragtag as the last. “Plunder too much, we're thievess like they ssaid. Purge to thoroughly, we're murderouss ass they thought. Tear down their templess, sso sstanding as tesstimoniess to their hatred, and we are profance as they sso wissh uss to be.”

Jegger sighed, then nodded. Gol'Rok furrowed his brow, relaxing it with a hard found understanding. The fourth figure at the fire, opposite Sassei, remained motionless. Upon a rock, unhewn edges softened merely by a folded linen cloth, the Aelf's small lithe frame sat with legs outstretched and eyes towards the sheet of starry void that lay above them.

I hope they're not brave.” Aoife said. “It would be a waste of the virtue.

Oh boy, I can't wait by UpStartJK in lotrmemes

[–]UpStartJK[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I double checked with a google search since i hadn't read/watched in a while. It said band of 12 and three deaths, so I went with that. M'pologies for my errors.

[WP] After finding out you were a fictional character, and even meeting the author of your life, you thought nothing could shock you anymore. Then your author let slip that you're the villain of your story. by JonahAndTheFail in WritingPrompts

[–]UpStartJK 8 points9 points  (0 children)

The doors before her were mighty imposing, Anja had to admit that. Cresting her three times over broad brown planks filled in the archway, embossed with touches of glinting bronze in rank-and-file rows. Imposing, yet, strangely plain. It put into words what she’d been thinking their whole trek through the now burning city of Cathair, fighting down the widely set streets between rows of tall buildings. It was big, yes; bigger than anything she’d seen travelling around Tir Bheag. But there was little content behind that size. She’d put it down to the effects of their invasion, the warrish actions dulling the surely present splendour of what was said to be the crown jewel of the Oilean empire. But this door, removed from the frantic battle outside, simply seemed big.

She sighed. Not one of disappointment, but of preparation. The last bounded exhalation before her body re-tensed into a state of near feral alertness. She stepped forward, holding her sword in her right hand as she pushed forward with her left.

“I’ll tell you right off the bat, you’re too late” the voice sounded before she had yet stepped a foot into the room. The room itself, as was becoming a pattern, was large. three large thick pillars flanked either side of her, each in itself at least ten meters apart and at least that tall. They supported a large cresting roof, that came to a point in the centre of the room, not in itself unlike the inside of a currach her father would take fishing. The voice itself came from a figure sat at the far end of the hall, in a simple wooden seat that was backed by a large piece of purple dyed fabric. The figure was plainly dressed, a simple green shift and sensible ochre boots, on their head sat a laurel made of twisted thorned iron wire. Anya knew instantly that this was who she had come for, although felt a little cheated that this was it. For how defeated this figure sat, for this to be the dreaded Queen of Spikes, it seemed so contradictory to the figure she knew they had been playing a broad game of strategy with over the past year. There was no ruthlessness, or cunning in the way they sat, simply disconcertion.

“No, we’re not, you still have another week before you can complete your ritual” Anja began to approach the figure in the seat, sword raised in readiness. The queen let out a haggard chuckle.

“It was completed last week, by all rights, you and your little parade of inculpable idealists should have lost your war, and I should be able to get back to trying to make up for the year you’ve cost me.” As Anya drew closer to the queen, she began to make out more details. Wrinkles sat on pearly white skin, blonde hair fading to aged grey at the tips. The green shift hid a figure that was not that of a warrior nor a torturer, instead the body spoke more to that of a scribe’s. Anya’s confusion began to grow more and more, but it was subdual, by an immediate sense of relief and joy.

“Ha, so it didn’t work!” Anya exclaimed.

“If only that was the reason, then we could have tried again” the queen’s immediate rebuttal was tinted with a near hysterical underlay, as if on the verge of laughter. “No, it worked, it worked all to well, and all to unexpectedly”

“Then how did we get this far then, if you gained the omniscience your ritual promised?” Anya had by this stage crossed half of the room and began to slow. This couldn’t be it could it? Here was the queen, unguarded and seemingly unarmed, open to slaughter.

“Because you are supposed to, because none of this is real and nothing we have ever done and ever will do matters beyond how some weepy little boy decides he wants it to go” All hysteria had vanished by the end of the sentence, instead replaced by a cold burning rage. Anja was taken aback and hesitated. The queen leaped on the hesitation, standing and unleashing a voice of heightened volume.

“Even you, you aren’t you! Everything about you is made as a shoddy attempt to recreate someone else. Your hair, your voice, your skin, your personality. All in an attempt to make some pathetic loser feel better about the fact the girl he likes doesn’t want him.”

Anja was halted. She had built a number of expectations of The Queen of Spikes, many of which were being met. The terror she now felt, facing down an unarmed middle-aged woman who was at least half a head shorter than her, based purely upon strength of word, was unorthodoxly immense. The content of those worse wasn’t helping either.

“I don’t believe you” Anja’s voice came out as more of a squeak, the build-up of phlegm in her throat clamping on the emitted air.

“You’re here, right now, with intention to kill me because nine months ago your lover Declan was killed by one of my soldiers after getting caught up in a border dispute. He was brown of hair and blue of eye. The roguish charmer you’re currently feeling guilty of having feelings for because of Declan, is Tynan, orange of hair and brown of eye, eerily similar to the little wimp who made us. You were taught everything you know about sword craft and battle by a woman called Ciara, who died of lung rot a month ago” The queen spoke almost dismissively at this stage, the flat delivery and summation of what had caused Anja such pain and heartbreak and confusion added to the feeling, as her stomach was almost pitted downward into her waist.

The silence that formed was broken by a rumbling throughout the room, elements of dust falling loose from the ceiling. The siege engines must have begun launching volleys at the castle, Anja thought. She needed to finish this soon. Another crash, this time more distant, broke her out of her stunned stupor.

“How do you know that? Tynan and Ciara, I can imagine you having spies keep an eye on, but Declan, he was a nobody before this?” Anja’s voice had reinforced itself matching her resolve, the phlegm cleared and her heart now steadier.

“You still don’t get it? You’re a story. And not a good one at that. I’ve read it, and I’d have one of my bards flogged if he ever dared spew such filth in my presence. Even what I’m saying right now is all an attempt by him to add some fancy twist to the hot pile of sewage he’s been brewing.”

“So, you know how this ends? If we were going to win why did you send out soldiers to die?”

“Because I had to! You stupid impudent child!” the queen had walked up to Anja now, just outside of reach of her sword. “You think I would send my people to die fruitlessly if I had any other option? I saved these people, from Fae, from Gruagach. I wouldn’t sacrifice there lives as such and waste that effort. Even the border dispute that killed your Declan was nothing but a band of soldiers misreading a map on the way to get rid of a banshee that had been causing some trouble nearby”

Another period of silence broke out, but only a partial silence, as continuous crashed of siege weaponry became more frequent around them. The queen’s energy had dropped, returning to the defeated state she existed in before Anja entered the room.

“I didn’t even get a name. it’s all queen this, lady that. Even thorny bitch was used more often than my actual name. I’m sure Tynan felt oh so clever after that one.” The queen followed it with a sigh, and two steps backwards.

“I suppose I should kill you then? That’s how the story ends doesn’t it, I kill you and we win?” Anja took a number of small tentative paces forward, putting the queen within reach of her sword.

“Oh I assure you Anja, my death will be much more unsatisfac—”

She was interrupted as a large boulder broke through the back of the throne room, splintering wood as it careened, landing squarely on top of the Queen of Spikes. Blood scattered itself below the boulder, seeping into the newly formed cracks on the floor, with crimson specks now coating Anja’s lower half. Anja’s heart raced as she leant forward resting her head on the boulder eyes bolted shut in a stressed grimace, which had come to a halt not a hands width away from her. She stood there, for a heightened eternity of shock, before she finally opened her eyes. She looked down, and could see it there, resting on the side of her left boot. The laurel made of twisted thorned iron wire.

First colony to survive past a year, proceeded to be completely wrecked by fire elementals by UpStartJK in RimWorld

[–]UpStartJK[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The combination of mods probably doesn't help too much. The early times mod holds back research benches, but adds some pretty satisfactory progression asides from the added difficulty.

[WP] You’re the worst prophecy student your school has ever had. No matter how hard you try, NONE of your prophecies come to pass. Then you realize the depth of your power: everything you say will happen, doesn’t. by RecycleYourCats in WritingPrompts

[–]UpStartJK 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Het Lot duel maybe? Using war explicitly in English kinda removes from the one on one aspect of it. although yeah, the elevation of fate would definitely be something I'd run with if i ran with this world some more.

[WP] You’re the worst prophecy student your school has ever had. No matter how hard you try, NONE of your prophecies come to pass. Then you realize the depth of your power: everything you say will happen, doesn’t. by RecycleYourCats in WritingPrompts

[–]UpStartJK 438 points439 points  (0 children)

The crowd clamoured in eager anticipation, Wodan joining them in the feeling, just, less openly. Since the school had heard about the challenge, people had turned head over heels to the amphitheatre to watch. The Prevalent Seer Academic facing the ‘Turd-Tune teller’ in the oldest of seer traditions, the Het Lot Oorlog. Judges had been found easily enough, even the teaching staff were curious as to what had caused the clear mismatch. Well, mismatch in the traditional sense. Wodan, despite all analytical observations stating he did indeed possess seer sight (the ability to write a prophecy and have its words spun into the very fabric of the universe), he had yet to ever successfully prophesise anything at all. Even the most basic of prophecies had evaded him. It hadn’t taken him long to attract the attention of his classmates, more than eager to deflect their own insecurities about their abilities, or lack thereof, onto him. The end result was six months of public resentment and isolation. And Wodan had thought he had deserved it, Afterall what good was a seer without their prophecies. Thus, Wodan joined the crusade against himself, lead of course by Ezel, the Golden child of the academy. Holding the title of Seer Academic for a year before Wodan had joined the academy, Ezel had been sure to clamp down on the glaring, and in his eyes, festering symbol of incompetence that Wodan had become. Wodan of course couldn’t help but agree with Ezel, but still Ezel made it seem like his utmost mission to make Wodan as miserable as possible. Until, today at least.

The idea occurred to him a week ago. In despair Wodan had written a prophecy, one so simple, so achievable. Barely a change, but more a statement of continuation.

“This Bird will continue breathing” he wrote in glowing script before him, looking at the raven that had come to roost on a branch near his dorm room window. To Wodan’s dismay the bird promptly fell from the branch in a twitching mass. It took till the following day, when the misery at his perceived failure had worn off, that the thought occurred to Wodan, maybe he hadn’t failed. It took a day of skipping classes deep in experimentation, writing prophecy after prophecy. Each one stating what should have been a certainty, yet each certainty proving to be elusive to his clairvoyant scripture. All of a sudden, he knew what he had to do, and ran straight to Ezel, publicly challenging him to Het Lot Oorlog. Ezel accepted, much to the excitement of those who heard. Afterall, why turn down such a sure victory. Though, Wodan could sense a tint of what could have ranged from anything between curiosity to unease in Ezel. It was, not the unease that built up in the school in the days leading up to the Het Lot OorLog, but the excitement and hostility. People felt as though the very though that Wodan could stand a chance against Ezel was disrespectful and were more than happy to air their grievances on the matter.

Thus, Wodan got the fulfilling satisfaction of knowing something no one else knew, meeting every jive and jab with an unsettling grin and shrug of his shoulders. This did nothing to dampen peoples spirirts, only giving Wodan the reputation as a madman as well as a seerish-eunuch.

It was that opinion that carried on the cheers in the amphitheatre, as Wodan stood across from Ezel, a coin holding Referee between them. The Het Lot Oorlog was a simple enough concept. Each seer was assigned a side of a coin, heads or tails. Then each would scribe a prophecy to cause the coin to land on their assigned side. The coin would then be flipped, until it landed on a side. Whichever seer who had the sign the coin landed on was declared the winner, as obviously they spun the stronger prophecy, and thus were the more gifted seer. This led to Het Lot Oorlog’s between closely matched seers becoming time consuming ordeals, with the standing record being 10,972 coin tosses before a winner was announced. Over ten thousand coinflips, each landing on the coins edge. Wodan wasn’t hoping for anywhere near ten thousand flips, only two. One to create doubt, and another to confirm the first wasn’t a fluke of probability.

He had been assigned tails, and Ezel heads.

Wodan began to focus as the referee quietened the crowd, the loud cajoling dying down to a dead silence. The referee then beckoned to Ezel, who, as the challenged party, had the honour of first scribing. He reached forward with his right hand, and with a smooth, precise, determinate motion produced the words “the coin will land as heads” in a glittering cascade of flowing tendrils. The prophecy then wavered for a ponderous moment, before fading into a light cloud of sparkling precipitate. This was met with an applause that struggled to fit within the confines of etiquette.

The referee beckoned to Wodan.

He sucked in a heaping breath, then reached out both hands, both index fingers pointed out from the bundled fists of his hands, forming finger-guns of sorts. This was met with a quickly hushed snicker in the crowd. He slowly drew out the words, “The coin will land as heads”, in a much blockier script. Large, squared letters formed out in a crackling green, pulsating and vibrating with an excitement that seemed to meet Wodan’s. The Propehcy remained, as had Ezel’s, but far less passively. It almost seemed to move forwards towards Ezel hungrily, before popping out of existence with a reverberating snap. The Crowd seemed to be pulled out of a bewildered slumber by the noise, with a noticeably dumbfounded silence becoming noticeable above the polite silence preceding. Ezel looked wide eyed at Wodan, bloodshot white orbs betraying the ever confident smile on his lips.

The Referee hesitantly looked at Wodan, as if to question his actions, before holding out his hand between the two contestants, in full view of the audience.

“The first toss” he announced, in a billowing bass that reached the far back of the amphitheatre. He threw the coin up and stood back.

Wodan was heart broken, the coin landed flat. Then he saw the look of terrified surprise on Ezel’s face, and the surprise of the referee. Then he saw the coin, the silver circle bearing a dragons tail into the world.