fight scene
@advkiko
Joy is… following her.
Not stalking, definitely not; it’s not like people stalk absolute strangers, and, well, she’s not stalking her. She’s just following the woman, that’s all, harmless walking that just so happens to be constantly behind her.
She doubts she even knows she’s there, hidden in a crowd of forgettable faces; today seems to suit her purposes just fine, and Joy figures – no one will even realise what she’s doing. And, hopefully, this means it will all go according to plan.
She’d chanced upon her entirely by coincidence; the woman had easily fended off some thief who’d gotten away with her bag (and by the end of it, left only with a black eye). The woman is curiously strong, and skilled, having made easy work of that poor unfortunate soul. By no means is Joy weak, but she’s found, to her absolute discontent, that she isn’t the strongest.
Joy has always relied on her speed and strength for far too long, never properly training her body to deal with threats. The basics are there, of course, easy enough to master through simple practice and just watching the fights she’d had a hand in engineering. She’s always assumed it was enough – it was not. Not with the last time she’d found herself in a fight.
So here she is, tracking the stranger she’d seen fight pretty darn well. She’s reached a relatively quieter street; it’s not totally isolated, but there are much fewer people around. It’ll bring much less attention to any sort of commotion that might happen here.
Joy revels in the quiet for half a beat, then sets to destroying any semblance of it, within a three metre radius around her. She sticks a leg out and trips some scrawny little kid, beleaguered by their books and bullies enough that they whip around unexpectedly to the group of teenagers, their swagger artificial and cruel. “Fuck you,” they hiss, and the group of prepubescent kids manage to take down quite a few others with them.
Her target is just slightly off centre to the locus of her bloodlust, but it’s enough for her to start something; the fight blooming seems to have caught her in its warpath, cacophony of shrieks engulfing half the street.
Joy keeps herself to the side, watching the other woman. If she’s right (and she knows she is), she can take care of herself handily – and then she could, maybe, pull part two of her plan.












