Mythological
07:58:56 Crowley | Myth
Embryos*
Mythological
07:58:11 Crowley | Myth
I have 2 more embyos to pull and 42 ebs.
Jasmine23
07:55:49 
Yeah I can im just not feeling well and wasn't feeling like sitting at the laptop hha
Jasmine23
07:55:06 
Might just get on it on pc and see if it's my phone being mean later
Bug in a Rug
07:54:56 Bug | KPH
jasmine
I'm guessing it's your phone or browser. Can you access HEE on a computer or change browsers?
Jasmine23
07:54:33 
I'm guessing it is, but logging out didn't fix it unfortunately
Jasmine23
07:54:12 
Yeah It won't don't know why
Tabantha Bridge
07:53:21 Tabantha
Jasmine

You should be able to scroll down past your two foals...
Bug in a Rug
07:52:42 Bug | KPH
jasmine
can you scroll down in the Offspring box?
Mythological
07:52:23 Crowley | Myth
Could be a bug Jasmine.
Jasmine23
07:51:29 
Is my phone just a literal butt?
Mythological
07:51:17 Crowley | Myth
Daiper applied for the 3rd time within half an hour.
Jasmine23
07:50:54 
What the heck why can I only see two of mine then?
Bug in a Rug
07:49:25 Bug | KPH
myth
if that's what it takes😅
Tabantha Bridge
07:49:12 Tabantha
Myth

Oof.
I will restrain from killing you for a little longer XD
Nightshine Stables
07:48:53 
Jasmine, I can see 18 other foals from him from this year
Mythological
07:48:35 Crowley | Myth
I am going to glue the fuckin daiper to her.
Bug in a Rug
07:47:42 Bug | KPH
myth
well you said 'kill me', so ask and you shall receive >>;
Mythological
07:47:12 Crowley | Myth
Jeez a homicidal chat. O-O
Mythological
07:46:01 Crowley | Myth
KPH
Wow...

My female yorkie is in heat
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Forums > Roleplay > 1x1
  1

Avenoir x Belle May 17, 2022 03:16 PM

Avenoir Acres
 
Posts: 4798
#989064
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for myself and Belle :) please don't post unless one of us!
Avenoir x Belle May 17, 2022 03:16 PM

Avenoir Acres
 
Posts: 4798
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name: valens caiazzo
age range: middle adult (25-40)
personality: stoic, calm, reserved, brooding
job: a higher-up in one of america's federal security departments
nationality: italian, moved to the u.s. as an adult
appearance: tall, messy brown hair attempted to be slicked back in an effort to appear professional. muscular build, but not excessively so. grayish eyes. always appears solemn.
other: drives a moped. divorced. dead / missing daughter. has a lil squad from italy on "his" team bc he's biased.
more to be added as we write :)

Edited at June 2, 2022 10:46 PM by Avenoir Acres
Avenoir x Belle May 17, 2022 03:16 PM

Avenoir Acres
 
Posts: 4798
#989066
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save
Avenoir x Belle May 17, 2022 03:16 PM

Avenoir Acres
 
Posts: 4798
#989067
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save
Avenoir x Belle June 3, 2022 11:13 AM

Belle
 
Posts: 6105
#993181
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Name: Aria Niethe
Age range: middle adult (25-40)
personality: Impulsive, charming, secrative, somewhat untrustworthy.
Job: Unknown
Nationality: Brittish; lived in london for the magority of her life before relocating.
Appearance: Physically, Aria is in good shape. While she isnt packed with muscle, she has a naturally leaner frame. She is of the average height of 5'5ft. Her skin is ivory in shade, with dark auburn hair that falls just past her shoulder blades in oddly straight locks. She has a rounder, more feminine face shape, that paired with a dark brown eyes, give her a very innocent look.
other: Unknown for now.
Same goes for me, I'll add more later on!

Edited at June 14, 2022 12:39 AM by Belle
Avenoir x Belle June 13, 2022 11:53 PM

Avenoir Acres
 
Posts: 4798
#995396
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It was an unusually cold January day, with thoughts of the holidays long gone and little warmth in the climate or the ambience. Valens had taken a redeye from Chicago, where he’d been on a work vacation studying some cold cases he had been consulted for. One of the higher-ups had heard about his work on similar cases, and thought he might had a lead. Just as he was about to begin an investigation back in the states, he’d gotten a phone call–hundreds, actually–and now he was here, drinking the most godawful cup of coffee he’d ever had in his life, waiting for one of their cars to show. He was getting an escort straight to the scene in order to cut down on any kind of inefficiency. Colorless snowflakes fell against a deep gray sky, landing in his dark brown hair, on the bridge of his nose, and just about everywhere else. He couldn’t contain his annoyance at the climate, which wasn’t much different than what he’d just come from. Below-freezing temps, some kind of miserable precipitation that made living unbearable, gray skies: he missed warmer weather, especially that of home. He hadn’t been back in Italy in almost three years.


After an inefficient commute that left him more on edge than the caffeine ever could, Valens reached the headquarters and immediately fell into a swarm of people seeking to debrief him. There was a translator, a security escort, and a gruff, older man he assumed was someone he should know the name of. Not that it mattered all that much, considering his primary job was to get this Jane Doe on American soil after learning all of the Russian intel. He had been cleared to complete this mission by any means necessary, and he knew he would need to.


The taupe sweater hanging over his built frame irritated him too, but he tried to keep it out of his mind. It was old and rugged, the first turtleneck in a long line of purchases. A gift from his ex-wife, who had stitched it by hand. He’d never been one for homemade gifts. Still, it was too warm to be put to waste. “How much of this has been communicated to our Jane Doe?” He was referring to the long strands of information given to him by the translator. For all the choppily delivered syllables he’d spoken, he’d really said little: we found a woman, we believe she is a woman presumed dead halfway across the world decades ago, and we have no idea how she survived, why she has absolutely no recollection of anything, and why she doesn’t appear to have aged in decades.


“None,” came the reply, first from the man, then from the translator. “She’s been in custody for less than a day, and we thought you would have a lead.”


He stopped in his tracks, studying the man’s face. Without looking away, he spoke to the translator, wondering if he knew what Valens thought he did. “Ask him to clarify that statement.”


The man waved his hand, indicating no translation was necessary. He looked Valens in the eye and replied with a single word. “Carlotta.”



Valens approached the cell, opening the door casually. As soon as he entered the room, his demeanor softened, movements slow. His expression lost its harshness, giving him a younger, kinder look. Or, so he’d been told by his team, a million times. They frequently joked that if he walked into a room full of women the way he walked into an interrogation room, he would have remarried years ago. Or, at least, had the option. Everyone knew Valens Caiazzo had no interest in women. Or men. Or anything outside of his job and his home country. Most people had simply stopped trying to change him. It seemed impossible.


He sat down calmly on one side of the room. He’d chosen the floor because the Russians, in all their intelligence, had put her in a room with nothing but an old couch that looked like it smelled bad. It reminded him of the kind of furniture you would see on the side of the highway in America, and it was all they had given her since she’d been here. He wasn’t even sure they’d fed her. Based on the quality of this experience for her so far, he was beginning to think that gaining her trust and convincing her to follow him back to Richmond with him was going to be easier than he thought.


Carefully, he pulled a bag out of his overcoat, which had been folded and hung over his right arm. He slid it across the cramped cell to her. It didn’t even attempt to appear homey in any way. “There’s some food in there. I wasn’t sure if you’d eaten, and the more you’re exposed to, the more you may remember.” He folded his coat back up and glanced away, allowing her time to look through the bag if she pleased without feeling self-conscious. After a few moments, he glanced back to her. “My name is Valens, I traveled a long way to meet you.” He wasn’t looking for gratitude, he was simply stating a fact. So please make it worth my while, was unsaid, only spoken through his tone and demeanor. “He didn’t even try to relay any secret messages to her, knowing the sheer mass of people staring at them from the other side. Some were watching on cameras placed inside the cell, others simply staring from the outside. The walls were made of glass, and the cell was placed in the middle of the room. The idea of being stared at made him deeply unsettled, and he couldn’t begin to imagine what she might be thinking. At the moment, there were two categories: her, and the Russians. If she separated him from the Russians in her mind, he’d already have a headstart on his work here in Moscow. If she placed him in the same category as the Russians, he was done for. It was his job to make sure that didn’t happen.


Adjusting his position on the cold floor, his gaze glossed over her again. He hadn’t really looked at her when he’d first entered, he didn’t really care. He had been told she looked like a woman who had gone missing decades ago, and he trusted the thousands of people who’d told him that. She could have had blue skin or orange eyes, for all he cared, and he might never have noticed. Still, he forced himself to try. He didn’t see much. Ivory skin, dark, innocent eyes, reddish brown hair, average height. If they put her in a lineup, he wouldn’t be able to differentiate her from anyone else. If he passed her on the street, he wouldn’t know she’d been missing for decades, or that one day she walked out of the Russian wilderness with no recollection of anything.


“I know you’ve been asked a lot of questions and you’re probably at your breaking point. So, I brought you a book. No underlying significance. Just thought you might want something to do.”


He slid her a book. “Anna Karenina. Seemed appropriate, all things considered.” He bunched his coat up like a pillow, and slid his back against the wall. “I’m going to catch up on sleep, and if you remember anything, or you have anything to say to me, you’re welcome to wake me up. I’m a light sleeper.”


He heard the intercom buzz, but no one spoke. It seems whoever had wanted to question his antics had been told to remain silent. If anyone had any doubts, they were the intelligent ones. The book, which had been snuck in without any level of questioning, contained all of the words Valens couldn’t say with his tongue or his eyes in front of such a crowd of trained officials.

Avenoir x Belle June 14, 2022 03:42 PM

Belle
 
Posts: 6105
#995510
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June of 1972. It had been said to be the coldest June of the century. Our dame could feel the bitter frigidness, the wind, rain, and hale all too well. Always gnawing away at her fragile skin, cracking at breaking it to the point where blood could have shed. Still, it was better than being so stiff, so inert. It was a shame that the one-lasting memory had been so God awful. It should have been sitting in front of a warm fire; sipping a warm tea and watching a movie on the boxset or maybe reading a good book. If only she weren’t some unknown, but ever-so-sick experiment.

Being frozen had taken such a long time and a stressful one at that. Held in place until she couldn’t move anymore, no matter how hard she thrashed about, or how she wailed, no one came to release her from her icy prison. She had been conscious for days before hunger overwhelmed her and the cold turned her fingers and lips ice blue. Her brain seemed to have shut her body down, yet she could hear everything. She could hear scientists observing her, and even once or twice other candidates coming and going; so why wasn’t she being let go? Being so bored for so long wasn’t a specialty of hers. The young woman, more than being scared or worried, was bored. But eventually, people stopped coming, she couldn’t hear any more scientists chatting and the buzzing of the old electrical equipment stopped ringing, leaving her to be all but cared for. After a while, her brain slowly started to shut down, leaving our damsel’s both brain and body standing dormant, waiting for the chemical-filled ice to melt away – to let her walk free once again.

--

Months, maybe even years would pass before she regained a clouded consciousness. Darkness had surrounded her for so long, and although her eyes had been closed, every little light felt as though it could blind her. Everything was so… Amplified. Everything was loud, all the little blinking lights seemed so much brighter than she remembered, and more than anything she was yet again… cold?

It had been so long since Aria could feel any sort of coolness - or heat for that matter. As she slowly tried to recollect what was happening, she let her hand stiffly roll into a fist, feeling a rough surface scrape against her nails. Her breath caught a little at the movement, and at the feeling of anything but smooth ice. Brown eyes carefully opened to find herself laying sideways on a hard concrete floor, surrounded by clunky old computers. Water dripped from the ceiling, echoing through the building every time a water droplet hit the ground. Shards of ice surrounded her, melting away in little pools, all running down to a small drain that had been conveniently placed in the middle of the dark room.

Aria carefully tried to sit up, using her arms for support. Her clothes seemed like old hospital gowns, knee-length, a navy rope tie white with ghastly navy polka dots. Her knees, fingers, and arms were lightly painted with purple frost. Yet again, she wasn’t scared, but more confused. Her recollection wasn’t amazing, and she was cold, so instincts seemed to overtake her. The woman pushed up from the ground, wobbling for a moment as blood rushed to her head before finding a side to lean onto. A heavy breath escaped her before taking a few steps forward, trying to get used to the movement, and eventually, she began walking with slightly more ease.

Sat patiently in the corner of the room, was a thick overcoat, black with grey buttons only just clinging onto it. Aria found herself scrambling towards it at speed and throwing it over her shoulders as soon as she could. Her arms swiftly filled the sleeves and did the buttons up before hugging the warmth into herself desperately. There was a door at the top of some unforgiving stairs, marked with huge letters ‘exit.’ This, of course, caught her attention and so she cautiously climbed the stairs, using the rails on each side to pull herself up every single rise.

A tedious war with the exit occurred before the door swung open, allowing a gush of fresh air to rush past her, unsettling the historic building’s timeless belongings. The new wind caught our Dame off guard, having blinded her momentarily before the pure whiteness of the Russian winter filled her view. Snowflakes were gently falling and making their grave over her face, before melting and running away down her cheeks, leaving a sluggish pattern down her face.

Aria drew in yet another deep breath, before walking onwards, trudging through the thick snow until she found a small, man-trodden path, going towards a small, modern-looking building, that stood up above the snow on long, thick beams. It almost looked otherworldly. She walked around, trying to find a door of sorts, though the only ones she could scout were large, green, hanger-like doors, with a large, oddly dressed man, with a thick beard and a largish head. She decided that he was the best chance of figuring out what in the world had happened – or know someone who could help, so waddled up and explained everything she could remember; that she had been packed in ice and that was just about it. Not that the man knew what she was saying, but there were at least a few things he could pick up, maybe her frequent use of ‘help,’ was one of them, as soon enough he had called the authorities. A man and a woman had shown up, driving a large undercover 4x4. Neither of them had astonishing English, so trying to communicate her issues was rather difficult. Eventually, they had gotten out a translator, who then got a doctor, who then got in contact with the media.

Everything from then on seemed to happen so incredibly fast. There had been at least 100 top doctors and scientists observing her in the space of 5 days, making sure her vitals were all good and well, that she wasn’t underweight or anaemic. She also found out she was legally dead. And at least 78 years old, give or take. Well, legally, at least. She had gone missing years prior, and after about two years, her whole case went cold with no leads. Well, she went missing from the Southernmost part of England and had somehow ended up in Russia, perfectly intact, and looking not a day over 25, though when the doctors had first encountered her, they had aged her between 25 and 30. After undergoing basic tests, they also found that she still had a similar mental age. It was as if time had fast-forwarded and she had been left behind Whatever she had undergone to preserve her body so perfectly, seemed to have worked.

They didn’t treat her as though she were a person though, more like a wild animal. She was kept in a cell, surrounded by tainted glass. The door was pretty much always locked, ensuring her escape wouldn’t be possible. The small room wouldn’t have been much bigger than three by four and had an old rotting couch in the corner, along with two scratchy knitted blankets. By choice, she would set one blanket on the cold floor, and use another as an insulator. She had been given a loose shirt and some slacks to replace her gown, but that was about all. She was just being treated as though she were someone who had committed a callous crime.

For the first two days, everything was focused on experimenting on her - lots of blood tests and a few fitness tests. The other three days had just been for the media. The news had briefly touched on her, investigators would come in and try and pry things out of her, drilling their questions into her and them blowing up when she couldn’t answer, others might just come in, have a brief chat, take a picture of her and then leave. Some didn’t believe that she had effectively been frozen in time, so didn’t even try to interact. Still, no matter who it was, what the questions had been asked, or what piece offerings they gave her, her answers would remain the same:

“Yes, in ice,”

“I’m sorry, but that’s all I can remember.”

And other variations of the same sentences to keep people happy. Though, her utter lack of memory was enough to displease anyone the way it was. Aria didn’t appear to be a loud person, nor completely outgoing, but now and then, if she were to come across a reasonably chatty interviewer, just to match their personalities, she would seem to flip to such, in an attempt to seem more friendly.

---

The locks on the small cell door twisted slowly before a stranger had walked in. She had been briefly made aware of another investigator coming to talk to her, but she hadn’t been told a specific time… Well, it wouldn’t have mattered, she didn’t have a clock anyway. Her eyes followed him in and watched him sit on the other side of the boxlike room. His demeanor seemed calm and relaxed, as though prepared to stay a while. She had a name thrown at her, a bag with food and a book – quite a tasteful one at that, though she could recall the name to a point.

She waited for the man to settle before taking both the book and the bag of food and placing it next to herself, while the book was on her lap as she silently read the blurb. Seemed fitting. He seemed to have settled rather quickly, while she had only just gotten ready to speak. Her expression seemed to harden as she observed him.

“Valens, was it? Can you tell me what exactly you want? Obviously, you want answers, about what happened, and who was involved, but I’m afraid I can’t answer any of them. I’m sorry, I’m aware you travelled a distance.”

Her words were exactly how she wanted them to be: honest and direct, no messing. The intercom had buzzed, but no words had been said and no one appeared to unlock the door, so she just found herself relaxing her head back to rest against the wall.

Avenoir x Belle July 31, 2022 04:17 AM

Avenoir Acres
 
Posts: 4798
#1006309
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“Valens, was it? Can you tell me what exactly you want? Obviously, you want answers, about what happened, and who was involved, but I’m afraid I can’t answer any of them. I’m sorry, I’m aware you travelled a distance.”

“No matter the distance,” he replied in a neutral tone. His body language was rigid, that was normal. For him, anyway. He spent the majority of his life in situations that begged for danger, that required him to constantly remain on his guard for fear of his life. “I’m not here to ask you any questions that are different than the rest, I’m only here because my boss sent me, and to be honest, I’m a bit jet lagged and you seem a bit tired of being asked the same questions over and over again. So, I’m not going to do that. You see, Miss, I don’t play by the rules.” He looked directly into one of the security cameras as he said it. “But, if you value the vast autonomy you’re getting by sitting alone in a cage with blinding white lights and ear-piercing sirens on the floor below, I’ll leave you to it. You’re welcome to call me if you find out you remember something crucial.” His gaze lingered on her for a suspended second or two, as if he were trying to deliver a message to her that he could not outwardly say. He was, but the majority of it was written in the pages. Surely, in the next three hours, she’d get bored enough to leaf through it before the plan was to go into action.

As far as plans went, it was rather simple. Perhaps the most simple Valens Caizzo had ever manufactured. Underlying messages in the text of the book instructed her to enter the bathroom on the floor below at a roundabout time. Within ten or so minutes of 10:27 that morning. The bathroom was the only one they had, and, given the fact that the building she was being held in didn’t seem built for prisoners, he knew they’d allow it. They wouldn’t expect much from her in the way of sneaking out, it seemed highly unlikely that someone who seemed barely aware of her existence in this world would try to make it in the middle of the Russian January wilderness, especially after those rugged conditions had held her captive for the last several decades. Or so they thought, at this point. Nothing was certain. Nothing at all.

From there, Valens would be waiting to assist her escape. The bathroom had a large central window that would open with any hope. He’d already removed the outer screen hours prior, and nothing had been noticed. The building was entirely too old for the operations it was heading, and lacked any kind of security cameras on the perimeter. That would make their job easy, granted that the woman wasn’t afraid of heights. It wasn’t the most dangerous operation he’d ever headed, the window was only on the second floor. The building beside it had a flat roof with a ladder on one side for a fire escape, and it’d be no trouble to make it down and back onto solid ground. From there, a car would be waiting, driven by one of Valens’ most trusted teammates who’d flown in just behind him. Their intention was to avoid the major airport and the major roads, for the Russian government’s first move would certainly be to shut those down. Instead, they’d be taking backroads all the way out to a remote rendez-vous point where a private plane would take them to the outskirts of Ukraine, and from the airport in Kviv they’d make it all the way back to their soil.

What Valens feared was that she wouldn’t agree, that the perceived safety of the place she was in would cause her to falter. Even more than that, he knew that out of everyone watching her, someone would detect foul play at the slightest sign of suspicious activity. She had to sell it for the hours ahead, or the plan wouldn’t work. And he didn’t have that much faith in a woman he didn’t know, that had been far removed from the ways of the world for the past few decades. He didn’t have that much faith in anyone.

Still, there was nothing he could do but sit and wait. So, he exited the building, much to the relief of the security members there who undoubtedly had days of torture planned out for the woman in the interests of learning information. From there, he walked across the street, getting his own meal from the nearby cafe. He knew he was being watched, so he remained as calm and unsuspecting as possible, counting down the minutes until his plan either succeeded, or went horribly, horribly wrong before it could even begin. All he could do now was hope she would play her part well, and leave it up to chance, something he had rarely done in his life, and especially in his career.


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