Not-Chryssa
She/Her
27
May 1
Eterna City, Sinnoh
Panromantic
radio host
agent
as flies to wanton boys are we to the gods; they kill us for their sport
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chryssa glasgow
alien abduction [m][c]
POSTED ON Apr 30, 2021 7:42:52 GMT
Floating above it all, Chryssa felt the sense of doom drain from her body, leaving her exhausted. After weeks spent in the hospital, the feeling was almost as familiar—and infectious—as the fear. Her dangling legs found solid support as her Probopass blasted up to meet her, bladed red nose spiraling like a compass needle. She settled on his head, still clinging with one arm to the Mini-Nose like a lone water wing in the sea of night. Below, a tapestry of Teleport decorated the dark grasses. Psychic power flared again and again, brilliant, as Lulu Flint pursued the streak of blinking diodes like a comet chasing traffic lights.. Red. Yellow. Yellow. Green. Red. Yellow. Yellow. Green.
The girl leaned forward, suddenly incredulous. Her eyes widened. Was it just her, or was it actually— “Hold still, Arran. My, my, isn’t that something...”
The alfalfa was cool and dewy beneath her bare feet when the girl finally landed, the grass tickling her ankles. She’d lost her boots midair. “That’s mission complete,” Chryssa said, resting one hand on the rock-type for support as she made her way over to the winded (and triumphant!) woman. “I have something I’d like to show you before we leave, though. I thought you ought to see it.”
The girl held up her cell phone, on which she’d taken a time lapse photo from above. Like a living drone, she and Probopass had gotten a clear view of the pasture from a bird’s eye perspective. “Enhance,” Chryssa said, zooming in like a normal person could generally do on their smartphone. “Enhance... enhance... there!” Even in its desperate flight, the Beheeyem had been calculated. It had painted a portrait with its path, criss-crossing the field to form a starlit globe, its surface streaked with greens and golds. But then there was another shape— something strange and angular, asymmetric, an anomaly in an otherwise perfect crop circle. Something red as raw meat, scribbled through with jagged scarlet veins. Perhaps this, at last, was what Beheeyem had been trying to show the livestock it had levitated. A view no one else could see. A message no one else could read. A picture—one only a camera could capture. “I don’t know what this means,” Chryssa said, her eyes bright. Her fingers curled around the screen and the mosaic preserved there, pixel-by-pixel, transcribed in light. “But I hope you do.”
Feeling lightheaded from the night’s excitement, Chryssa let out her breath, then pocketed her phone with a sudden, infectious smile. “Let’s meet again, Ms. Mystery. Don’t leave me hanging next time. I’m still waiting for your weakness.”
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