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47 posts
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tod
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Neutrals
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Post by LUPIN WOODSLY on Apr 8, 2015 0:23:21 GMT
A loud howl rang through the air of the night within the forest, the moon was high and normally the sound of wolves were lovely this wasn't. It didn't sound like it was singing, it sounded like it was crying. The pitch was off and that was cause enough for Lupin to try and find it. Eventually he came across the black and grey wolf, a male that was full grown and rather large looking though still in the good size rang. It was clear what was wrong, it was laying there, it's paws caught in snares that pound the beast to the ground and since all four paws were held firmly by the trap. The beast snarled at Lupin as he approached slowly, golden eyes staring at em, watching the man's movements. "Easy, easy." Lupin said in a low voice as he got closer. Despite being pinned down, it tossed it's head about snapping at thin air. Lupin backed up a step, waiting for it to lower it's head. Hackles raised up as it put it's head on the ground, growling at the man as he started to walk around it. Toward the snares, he bent down and started to try and pull them out of the ground. This wasn't working and soon he was stuck taking a knife out and that didn't please the wolf. A loud snarl like bark went out and it lashed about. Only for it's fangs to hit his shoulder and a hiss of pain left him. "Stop it! I'm trying to help!" Lupin said to it as he moved, trying to pry it off, the wolf soon lost it's grip though due to positioning and it's head fell down. Still growling and rotating his shoulder, as blood left it he put the knife to part of the snare around the wolf's ankles. Cutting the rope one by one and once done, the wolf took off. Resulting in Lupin standing up though he wasn't alone at all. CLAYTON HARRISON SAVAGE(Sorry if this isn't good)
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Post by CLAYTON HARRISON SAVAGE on Apr 24, 2015 7:21:55 GMT
[presto] Clayton's snares he often considered to be his best friends. Well, actually more of a creation as he made every single one of them with his bare, hard hands. Traps that were homemade were more sturdy, reliable, and longer-lasting than those found at the general store. They could get the job done, catching food and then some. Clayton had seen a gigantic cat caught in one of his nooses one time. It was a mousy brown-gray and its calls were spine-tingling, sounding almost like those of a woman in pain and distress. It had filled him with a rush of excitement to kill it and put it out of its misery. Someday, he would go and roam the woods, looking to hunt and stalk another one.
But the elusive cat would not be his prey tonight. No, he thought, as he grabbed his trusty shotgun and slung it over his shoulder. He was going out to check the traps, and check the traps only. That was the train of thought that had gotten him going about the snares in the first place. Sidling out the door, closing it softly behind him so he wouldn't wake Helen, Clayton started off toward the woods. The night was calm and peaceful for a while, the stars and the moon shone brightly overhead; certainly some little animals would be roaming around, as well as bigger game that could be shot, taxidermied, and prized. It didn't take long for the quiet to be broken by a howl of pain and suffering. Indeed, Clayton could identify the wail of a hurt animal. He was a hunter, after all, so he had to be skilled in that kind of thing. But there was also a feral instinct, that he knew came from somewhere deep inside of him. He also knew, somehow, that before his memory wall, he had used that instinct and capitalized on it greatly. However, he could not remember how or to what degree he was successful, if at all.
He followed the howls to one of the snares nestled deepest in the woods, and got there just in time to see a dark-haired man cut the dog free. It bounded away. Clayton was overtaken by a sudden fit of rage. Who would be daring enough--let alone brave enough--to free an animal from a trap? He tramped through the brush, not caring if he was silent, and rashly confronted the stranger-man. "Excuse me, what are you doing here?" [/presto]
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47 posts
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Authored by
tod
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Neutrals
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Post by LUPIN WOODSLY on Apr 24, 2015 17:52:21 GMT
The sound of someone walking was very audible thus Lupin turned to see a man. Clearly a hunter and that was enough to make his blood boil. Even if they were without the gun the fact that they weren't happy with him freeing the wolf was the other clicker. Only a hunter would be unhappy by that. "I'm freeing a creature that doesn't deserve this from your traps as well as others like you!!!" Lupin replied. "You just hunt them for sport, you can't even use the meat on their bones and you over hunt them. Go after something else but leave the wolves alone." Lupin was serious and his voice was staring, everything was reflecting he was serious on this matter. The way he glared back at the hunter and his stance, he wasn't just saying this he was telling the man it. CLAYTON HARRISON SAVAGE
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Post by CLAYTON HARRISON SAVAGE on May 20, 2015 5:27:31 GMT
[presto] At the moment Clayton didn't care that it was obvious he was a hunter. Even when he didn't have his shotgun on him, people asked if he shot and killed things for a living. To most he would say, 'yes, I'm the game warden'; a position so amazingly suited for him that he wouldn't quit even if he was offered a million dollars higher salary a year to take another job. "Well aren't you being the good Samaritan?" The immediate and vengeful rage in the other man's countenance got Clayton riled up, too. Oh, so he thought he was doing the wolves a favor by setting them free and that it really would matter if Clayton put a few out of their miserable lives? That was a whole bunch of bullcrap. "Yeah, I hunt them for sport. But why do you care? Were you raised by them?" He sneered, clenching a fist. Hunting the most dangerous animals was the best kind of hunting. Because he actually got satisfaction out of it. Rabbits? Mice? Squirrels for God's sake?!? No, small game was not as satisfying as seeing the life-light flicker out of a dangerous animal's eyes.
Clayton was serious, too. He met Lupin's gaze evenly, intensely. Things were about to go down. [/presto]
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47 posts
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Authored by
tod
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Neutrals
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Post by LUPIN WOODSLY on May 20, 2015 15:16:23 GMT
"They'd no doubt be much better parents than stupid brutes like you an the idiots in the village." Lupin replied. "What were you raised by? Arrogant toads with a pocket full of coin? Naw you're more the rat type than a toad."
Was he insulting him? Yes. The guy was asking for it pretty much and Lupin wasn't scared by this guy. He was ready, waiting to see if this guy would snap. Sure he only had a knife compared to Clayton who had a shotgun but still. At least he wasn't a over hunting rat who hunted for no real reason at all!
@brytois Sorry for poofing, harddrive died took forever to get a new one, and when I did I couldn't remember the website url.)
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Post by CLAYTON HARRISON SAVAGE on May 20, 2015 20:48:34 GMT
[presto] Ha. Fun (and Clayton told himself that very sarcastically). The other man was matching his spirit perfectly. It had been a while since he had gotten himself into an argument like this. So now he was personifying the animals. That was great. Everyone knew that creatures like that had no feelings. They just did what they could to keep themselves and their species alive. They didn't care like a human could. There was a reason that man was given dominion over them. Ooh. Then he compared Clayton to a toad. And then a rat. The villain's jaw stiffened, but he didn't let his anger get the best of him yet. A rash villain was not the best one. "Well if I'm a rat, you're a weasel!" Clayton recalled from-somewhere? school, perhaps?- that the two were both rodents, but rats were just mean, nasty, and dirty, but weasels were mean, nasty, dirty, and had a sharp set of teeth that they used with deadly force. Not to mention their reputation for being clever and cunning, in a bad way. "I'm entitled to my catch. You're a coward for standing up for them. They don't matter anyway."
Lupin didn't have to worry about Clayton's gun, the hunter wouldn't shoot unless it was a deadly game. No fun in murdering anyone face-to-face anyway. [/presto] (OH! I have to add that in no way does Clayton's views on hunting and animals not having souls reflect those of my own.)
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47 posts
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Neutrals
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Post by LUPIN WOODSLY on May 21, 2015 15:34:29 GMT
Oh they did care, people were just too stupid to be able to understand em. His eyebrows narrowed further.
"Wrong, I ain't a coward. I stand up to brutes like you who just do as they please and trample about." Lupin snarled back. "Everything matters rat, if you had no deer, no rabbits, birds, or chickens, you would have no meat an eggs. Without a cow you'd have no milk or butter. Wolves have their place to keep things balance, you're just too stupid to understand."
Yep, very very stupid. Lupin cared not about these hunters nor the people in the village. They were all stupid, caught up in their little world that never felt right. The woods is where he belonged perhaps before he lost his memory like everyone else perhaps he had been with the wolves? Perhaps..he'd truly been one in some way.
@bryois (Okay, I never once came to that conclusion but you're good. ^^)
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Post by CLAYTON HARRISON SAVAGE on May 25, 2015 6:06:12 GMT
[presto] Clayton blew Lupin off, waving his hand. None of the things this... wolfman said bothered him in the slightest. Yes, he was a brute who indeed trampled everything in his path; it was his pleasure. He probably had less feelings than the wolves themselves, and hurting others was the whole purpose of his existence. Yes, he also recognized that it probably was best that the wolves not be hunted, as the balance between man and nature was delicate and the canines were a huge part of that cycle. But did he care? Nope. Not a lick. "It's not like I'm hunting down whole packs and slaughtering them." Clayton stuck to his guns and kept parrying back at Lupin. "I think one or two won't completely make this world go to the dogs. Pardon my puns." He smiled wryly. At first this had been a huge joke, but now things were quickly starting to go downhill. The general atmosphere of the conversation was getting more and more intense. Why was he still standing here? He was going to get nowhere with this wolf-lover. Wolfman. The name came back to him again suddenly. Yes, that was what he would tell Wonderland. He was a wolfman. It wouldn't be lying. Those boring people could use a little exaggeration, though. [/presto]
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47 posts
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Post by LUPIN WOODSLY on May 25, 2015 6:33:13 GMT
"You are actually, you put up so many traps you can end up killing the pups or many of the pack members to the point the whole pack is wiped out." Lupin replied as he started to approach.
Stabbing this guy was a tempting thought yet he knew not to. He wasn't a killer, not of man at least. Sure he hunted a simple amount of deer an rabbit, to mainly just live off of. Not to kill for the sack of killing like this idiot. Once he was close enough he quickly made a fist and swung, aiming to land a hard blow to the smug hunter's face. Lupin was a strong man, due to living in the woods and hunting himself though whether or not he was stronger than Clayton, hard to say. The man deserved it. Truly did.
@brytrios
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Post by CLAYTON HARRISON SAVAGE on May 25, 2015 8:18:56 GMT
[presto] Initially, Clayton was not wary at all as Lupin got up and moved towards him. Sometimes people wanted to get all up in his face and chew him out. Well, actually that happened quite frequently; there seemed to be a bunch of animal sympathizers in Wonderland, and when some do-gooder caught wind of what he really did at work (when he was supposed to be protecting the animals that weren't in/were never in season) they often came into his office, irate. By now he was used to feeling others' hot breath on his face. It just felt downright natural, sometimes; was it because of his mom and dad? He couldn't remember them at all, but he had a feeling that one or both of them yelled at him like that.
Clayton would have replied to Lupin's criticism, which he thought was actually pretty theoretical, but suddenly found that he couldn't as he got a knuckle sandwich right in the eye and side of the nose. The realization swept through him rather quickly that the wolfman had worked up the audacity to lash out. Clayton's pain was quickly replaced with adrenaline; his rising anger finally got the best of him. Retaliating, he tried a left hook. He was tall, and wide, but that might not necessarily mean he had the advantage. Lupin was obviously strong and wily. This might go one way or the other. [/presto]
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47 posts
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Post by LUPIN WOODSLY on May 25, 2015 19:03:31 GMT
The blow landed and Lupin was honestly pleased, though he kept his eyes on Clayton the whole time. He just started a fight yes and this hunter wasn't the back off type. So to expect retaliation was wise for he quickly got it from the hunter. A left hook came toward him and Lupin used his arm to block, the blow landed and there was pain since Clayton was a strong being as well. This fight could go either way though unlike Clayton, Lupin was calm despite his frustration and unpleased nature toward the hunter. He was relying more on his clear heard than Clayton. Attempting to grab the wrist of the hand that Clayton had used just a moment ago, if he succeded he would then try to bring their arm behind em and twist it. Not hard enough to break it if he managed but hard enough to cause uncomfortable pain.
@brytois (Fight, fight fight!!)
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