«We Could Be Legends»

Wolfram gave a animalistic like snarl, cradling his head in his hands. A raging migraine gripped his head with sharp talons, his skull seeming to pound rapidly.
He growled softly, his raging thoughs not helping his migraine at all.
Where did Bleddyn go?
Is she safe?
How bad did I hurt her?
Why did mom never tell me about the key?
Where is Mapleshade?
Is she dead? Or ransacking my moms apartment?
How come it all went downhill from Friday night?
Where's Lily? I hope she's safe....I can't forgive her for what she did but I can still care about her......right?
 
*5pm*
Frankie sat at his desk filling out paperwork, trying to connect everything that had happened over the last few days. Some how a bunch of teenagers had been dragged into something that was bigger than he imagined it could be.

The kids that had been taken from River Loson's house, were friends of Sherri, they must have been the same kids that had been at the park the day before, where he had first met her. He sighed, River was a she-wolf and could have been the one he spotted leaving the tunnel. He clicked up the info he had available to him on the computer, River had been arrested before under suspicion of murder. The charges had been dropped with no explanation put in the file but both her and her family had been fully described along with photos of them. A list of associated inhumans were named in her file, all people she had been associated in the so called "heroes" group. He clicked away to look at a few others, again Names, descriptions, inhuman abilities, and pictures of both the person and their children.

He frowned at the screen, why was there so much information on people who had been quiet for 20 or so years? And their children, they seemed to be their most recent school photos, why would the police need to know what their children looked like? He took a deep breath and puffed out his cheeks slowly breathing it out before chewing at his lip. So far he hadn't seen anyone he recognized from the day before.

River's brother, he clicked on Thomas about ready to give up on any of it this actually connecting. Another picture popped up he looked normal enough. Nothing of note in his file really. He had two daughters, Camilla, and... He recognized the other, Alice, as the girl who had been hiding in the corner of the little shop at the park. No known powers. That was strange normally a child of an inhuman would have powers as well. Maybe she was good at hiding it or it was possible her mother was a normal human. He clicked on the name of their mother Tayn another name that had been on River's description. She was inhuman too.

His radio, fizzed to life and read out the same address as what he was reading on his screen, a home invasion. He wasn't supposed to be on the road his shift was almost over. But two people who know each other, who were related to each other, having their homes broken into back to back, that wasn't just a coincidence. Frankie jumped up and grabbed his jacket off the back of his seat.

Frankie left Rudy behind, he was most likely in the break room sipping a coffee as slowly as he could to avoid the paperwork. He'd probably have to come back later and actually finish what ever was left.

-----

*5:30pm*

Frankie stepped under the yellow police tape, flashing his badge to the nearest officer that was in charge of keeping people out. The heavy rain clouds blocked out what was left of the sunlight, making it unusually dark even for this time of year. The house flickered blue and red in the light from the emergency vehicles.

He stepped inside expecting it to be a disaster, it was stranger than that. Through the entry was an eerily tidy kitchen. A black cell phone sitting on the island counter top being the only thing that looked out of place. To his left was the doorway to the living room, where shattered dishes had been piled up. Had the intruders swept before they left? Why would they do that? He walked over and peered into the living room, books had been ripped from their shelves and were strewn across the floor, a lamp leaned haphazardly against a wall it's bulb shattered. The couch cushions were tossed across the room too. It looked like someone had been looking for something. He stepped back his feet crunching on the broken glass. He could hear voices upstairs, he slowly walked to the back of the kitchen where the stairs were glancing into the other rooms off to the right a dining area that had been converted into an office, was also torn apart.

Bits of broken glass were stuck in the carpet of the stairs, someone had walked through the broken dishes before going up the steps. He went up careful not to touch anything. There was an open area around the top of the stairs, with four doors, likely going leading to bedrooms. He walked to the furthest door where there were two officers talking.

"Hey." He said as he approached, letting them know he was there. They both stopped talking to look at him.

"Hey." The darker skinned officer answered. His brow twitching down as he studied Frankie's face. "Were you called in?"

"Uh, no." Frankie said awkwardly. "I'm working on a related case. What happened here?"

The two men exchanged glances before moving away from the door the same man gesturing for him to go inside. Frankie stepped forward and peered around the door frame. His heart sank as his eyes fell to the woman laying on the floor in a pool of her own blood.

"Maybe you know who she is? We need to notify family before word starts getting around."

"Y-yeah. I do. That's Tayn Fleur. What's with the dishes? Did you guys do that?" He asked.

"No, everything is how we found it. You said you were working a related case?"

"Her sister in laws house was broken into yesterday, and some kids were kidnapped. No one died though. One of the parents said the kidnappers were part of a group called the Pure. Ever heard of them?" Frankie asked finally turning away from the doorway.

"Nope." The older officer sighed, "There's more." He said pointing up the hallway to another door. Frankie frowned worriedly at the other officer who to this point hadn't said a word to him. Then nervously up the hallway to the partially open door that glowed from the light behind it.

He walked over and pushed the door open with an elbow, it looked like a normal teenagers bedroom aside from a few things that stood out. The clothes strewn across the floor were normal. The body laying on top was not. He took a choppy breath in. Both parents. What had these kids gotten their hands on?

"You recognize him too?"

"Yeah, it's her husband. Thomas Fleur. It's his sisters house that was broken into yesterday. River, uh, Loson. Has anyone notified next of kin yet?" Frankie responded trying to remain detached.

"Not yet."

Frankie nodded stepping away from the room. "Looks like he put up a fight. Do you know if their kids were home when it happened?"

The officer shook his head, "Don't know, they aren't here now." Frankie nodded.

"So we could be dealing with a kidnapping. I'll try to track down his sister and see if she knows where they are." He said, and headed down the stairs. He pulled his phone from his pocket and looked up the contact info for River.
I am not liking this.
 
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*ring ring*
River gave a quiet snarl, before going deathly silent as she saw who was calling.
The police.
Crud, no. Please don't get involved in this. She slowly raised the phone to her ear after answering begrudgingly. "Hello, this is River Katrina Fleur." She said shakily, taking a breath to calm herself.
 
River gave a quiet snarl, before going deathly silent as she saw who was calling.
The police.
Crud, no. Please don't get involved in this. She slowly raised the phone to her ear after answering begrudgingly. "Hello, this is River Katrina Fleur." She said shakily, taking a breath to calm herself.
"Hello, this is Deputy Fredrick Chapman," He said walking down the stairs and through the kitchen, he was both relieved and anxious that she had answered the phone. "Last night, your home was broken in to correct?" He paused waiting to make sure he was talking to the right person.
 
"Hello, this is Deputy Fredrick Chapman," He said walking down the stairs and through the kitchen, he was both relieved and anxious that she had answered the phone. "Last night, your home was broken in to correct?" He paused waiting to make sure he was talking to the right person.
River paused, her gut twisting. "Yes, that is correct." She said stiffly, forcing calm into her voice. Please don't ask questions, please don't ask questions.
 
River paused, her gut twisting. "Yes, that is correct." She said stiffly, forcing calm into her voice. Please don't ask questions, please don't ask questions.
"I see, uh," He paused not sure exactly what to say. "I need to talk to you in person, as soon as possible. Are you at home now? Or are you staying with a friend?"
 
"I see, uh," He paused not sure exactly what to say. "I need to talk to you in person, as soon as possible. Are you at home now? Or are you staying with a friend?"
River silenced a groan. "I'm over currently watching some friends' teenagers." She said, pausing. "Has something other than my house being broke into happened?" He's got to be trying to contact me to tell me about Tayn's death. But why me? Shouldn't Thomas then Ash be contacted? Maybe that was why Ash was-- No. I know when Ash is just ticked at me, and when she lost someone dear.
 
River silenced a groan. "I'm over currently watching some friends' teenagers." She said, pausing. "Has something other than my house being broke into happened?" He's got to be trying to contact me to tell me about Tayn's death. But why me? Shouldn't Thomas then Ash be contacted? Maybe that was why Ash was-- No. I know when Ash is just ticked at me, and when she lost someone dear.
"Y-yes. Your brothers house actually. I'm looking for his daughters, I met one of them in the park yesterday following an incident, I have reason to believe they may be in danger. Are they with you?" Frankie continued walking while he was on the phone out into the rain, and then ducking into his car.
 
"No! You listen, Ash, you'll make things worse." River snarled, mentally wincing as Camilla's cries slid through the phone also. "You need to just comfort your daughter, and let her explain. I... Have other problems right now." She growled, letting her gaze wander to the kitchen, where the numerous teenagers were freaking out. "I don't have answers, I need answers. And you coming here will make it harder to find out." She suddenly yanked the phone from her face, hitting the end call button.

Ash sucked in a breath, trying to keep herself composed after she was hung up on. "River, even after how long you've known me, you still think you can get away. Amusing."
She twisted sharply in her seat to pin a searching gaze onto her daughter. "Bleddyn, are we going to get anything out of you?"

Bleddyn remained still, her air intake becoming ragged from the influence of panic.

"That's what I thought. Change of plans, Connor, you're driving," Ash declared with an air of finality and flung her door open.

"Ash, wait, she's--" Connor's plea went unheard when the driver's door was slammed expectantly. He heaved an uneven sigh and looked down at his trembling daughter for a long moment. His voice was little more than a whisper when he spoke in the momentary lull that Ash had left. "Whatever's happened, it can't be good, can it, Dyn?"

The passenger door opened and Ash's face was suddenly right beside Bleddyn's. With firm fingers, Ash forced obscuring hair away from the troubled blue irises. “Bleddyn, if I don't get a protest, I'm going to assume you can sit in the back seat just fine?"

Bleddyn flinched back and kept staring ahead torpidly, the two hollow moons on her face giving nothing more away than the one in the sky.

"Alright, there you go. She'll be just fine in the back."

Connor knew better than to bother arguing with his wife when she was like this. He swung his legs out of the truck and slid down onto the pavement, letting Ash slip by to hop into the seat he’d just abandoned.
He propped Bleddyn on his knee while he messed with the back door of the truck and carefully hoisted her up. Her own hands shot out for the sides of the door and she brought herself the rest of the way up, surprising him. She settled herself onto the seat without a word. The frown on his face only deepening with every passing minute, Connor turned away and jogged around the truck.
He jumped into the driver’s seat, but his hand faltered before turning the key for a second time. He couldn’t keep his mind off of how out of it Bleddyn seemed.

He’d seen this before…long ago…he couldn’t deny it…nor forget it…but, oh, how he wanted to…

"What's with the sweater?" he teased, trying in vain to impossibly lighten the dark mood. He peered over his shoulder into the back seat, wishing just about any reaction onto his daughter's frighteningly empty face. "You look even more beautiful than usual."

For the first time, Bleddyn moved to meet his worried gaze squarely. Her face flushed to an even paler shade while she was facing him and her lips twitched silently for some seconds, as if she were fumbling to catch and announce words that were draining soundlessly.

“Please...don't go,” she finally managed in a hoarse whimper, sounding more like a petrified child who’d come face-to-face with her greatest fear rather than the hardened tomboy she was.

Her daughter’s unnaturally desperate plea then awoke true fear in Ash for the first time that day. She threw her palm down onto the control for her window, pitching the last of her stability into a command at Connor. “Just drive.”
The old icy claws of dread were tearing at her innards when she leaned out the window to employ the gift that’d destroyed her own childhood. With a regretful groan, she closed her eyes, subsequently closing herself out from her current world, and let her ears reach for the uncertain beyond.
It was a bit before her head filtered out the irksome interference of her surroundings, but all too soon, she was tuned into choppy conversations clear across town through the courtesy of the wind.


"I've had enough….”

…..Mom, can I go?…..”

“….here, Sasha, here girl….”

“…just another mile- come on, it’ll be fun…”

“…I’m at the park. Can’t it wait?…”


Ash flinched when an explosion of anxious commotion emerged from the heart of the town’s commonplace utterances and she reeled back into the truck, eyes still sealed shut. She sensed that the other occupants of their truck were concerned by her abrupt unease, but she forced herself back out and receptive to the streaming sound waves.
Lungs tight with apprehension, she commanded her attention in the general direction she’d recalled the disturbance to have come from.
The voices that the winds highlighted at her request were all too familiar, yet she didn’t have a wish to distinguish just any one.

Perhaps she didn’t want to.

It was nearly impossible to keep herself at the sheltering fringes of it all. There was so much riotous noise and it all wanted to barge through her mind’s cautious borders. Despite the emotional charge behind the chaos, none of it was particularly loud, vaguely clueing Ash in on how much distance was between her and it all.

And there was that unmistakable feminine rasp breaking through it all...

"...What? Has someone else's house been broken into?...."


There was almost no doubt that her hapless search had prevailed. But if she’d truly found River and the hazardous mess that she was trying so hard to keep undiscovered, there was indeed reason for anxiety.
It was hard for Ash to set aside what she'd heard and focus on calculating the location.

Where….where….the edge of town….it’s not…anywhere I’m usually...but it’s familiar…it’s all weak…windows not really open…too immaculate…I know…I know this...

Struck by the place she’d gathered, Ash turned back into the truck’s interior. Her face was stricken enough to be a mirror to her daughter’s. “Davis' house. Go.”

Connor slammed his foot onto the gas pedal, sending the truck speeding down the street with a recklessness fed by his calm wife's jarring urgency.
 
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Wolfram forced himself closer to the corner between the wood door and the wall, shivering from...well, he wasn't exactly sure why he was shivering. He folded his arms across his lap, wishing he had a sweatshirt, or even a long sleeve shirt, and not a tattered, blood stained t-shirt. He sighed softly, his eyes flickering shut as he hearing subconsciously reached out.
Playful screeching laughter of kids playing in the rain echoed in his ears. He flinched, his eyes flickering beneath his lids. A girl calling her dog echoed a bit father away, and the dogs excited barking echoed even farther away. And then, the screech of tires and a truck accelerating very quickly. It couldn't have been very far away, because when his eyes flickered open for half a heartbeat he saw Scorch's ears prick up curiously.
Sure, the truck could have been a idiot speeding, but his mind drifted into scarier thoughts. Thoughts that it was two worried parents driving their bruised, battered and wounded daughter to get help.
He shuttered, a subconscious whimper escaped his lips as his thoughts drifted to Bleddyn unconsciously laying in his arms after the right in the part.
He swallowed hard, his eyes snapping open at he heard a soft whimper and then a cold touch to his arm. He looked next to him, and was met by Peterson's face, the beagles brown eyes wide.

Wolfram sighed softly, lifting his arm, drawing his fingers over the dogs brown, black and white fur. "Sorry buddy. Glad someone's worried about me though." He chuckled softly, lifting the small dog into his lap. Peterson let out a soft yip, nuzzling his head against Wolfram's chest.
A small smile crept across Wolfram's face, and he drew his hand over the dogs head. "Good boy. You're such a good dog, you know that?" He said softly, although Peterson only gave him a quick glance. "Of course, you don't know what I'm saying. You're a dog after all. Now I'm just talking to myself. I must really be going insane. Not surprised though, I would have thought I would have gone insane way before this. And there I go again, I really am insane." He muttered softly. "Not that you care." Wolfram mumbled. Peterson let out a soft whimper, looking up at Wolfram, his head cocked to one side. What's the matter? Why do you seem so sad? The dog's eyes seemed to say. "I'm worried about Bleddyn, that's all." He muttered, his face twitched into a frown. "I feel so guilty for punching her. I hate myself even more for hurting her. Everyone would probably taunt me for caring about her when she's shown pretty much nothing but hate towards me, when they actually try to help. But what I say to that? Screw them. There's just something about her...Not that you would know, you're a dog. But she just has something about her, different I guess. Not in a bad way either, I just can't pinpoint what it is..." He sighed, his gaze flittering over to Alice. He swallowed hard, looking away quickly. "How can she just sit there like that?! Her mom just frigging died! She probably doesn't care about her. Whatever. I won't waste my time dwelling on her. I'm going insane, I'm literally talking to myself." His eyes darkened, drifting into his thoughts silently.

'Dyn just listen to me, will you? We need to get out of here now. It's not safe!' Wolfram snarled, grabbing onto her hand. 'Please, Bleddyn!' He begged. 'We have to wait Wolf. She's around here somewhere...we'll wait for her. Attack when she doesn't expect it.' Bleddyn replied simply. He swallowed hard, the metal walls of the dark tunnel seeming to close around him tightly. Then, out of no where a ear splitting bang, and then a screech ripped through. Bleddyn fell at his feet, blood spattering the ground. 'Bleddyn!'

He jerked out of his thoughts, breaking out in a cold sweat. His breathing increased rapidly, hands holding Peterson tightly. His eyes went wide, and he could feel his heart ramming in his chest. Where had that come from? He had never had a thought so vivid and dark it felt like a nightmare. Bleddyn's shriek echoed in his ears, chilling him to the bone.
 

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