Before you is a pooling mass of a black oil like substance. It shimmers in the light and quivers in the breeze but with a sudden twitch it will pull itself up, entwining tendrils of goo into a form reminiscent of a humanoid. As its form slips together, congealing into a single body it would begin to form itself into what would look like an otter. This oily lutrine is named subject No.3 This creature was cloned and mutated from a an albino otter. White in color, the original was quite surprised to see his third clone spill out of its pod onto the floor in a black pool.
As he approached he was even further surprised to find the pool quivered and began to pull itself into a formless blob. At full height its form began to sharpen, thin tendrils keeping it in one piece as arms and legs split as well as it's thick tail. Its original called it Indenki, photo negative in Japanese because of it's black color and gooey nature. He was only able to say the name once however before the clone enveloped him, trapping the original in its oily form as it slowly broke him down, absorbing any information it could.
When it was done nothing remained of the other otter but a vibrant mark on No.3's body, manifesting on his 'torso' or at the center of his pool. This same being has manifested itself in the park lately. He may be playful with those he chooses but one should always be on guard around this being. He is never to be trusted unless you're one of the few he actually respects.
His name is 'Negative' for a reason ya know?
As a note for the swastika type mark those of you who are foolish enough to think it is only associated with the nazis are complete fucking morons.
The word swastika came from the Sanskrit word suastika, meaning any lucky or auspicious object, and in particular a mark made on persons and things to denote auspiciousness. It is composed of su- meaning "good, well" and asti "to be" suasti thus means "well-being." The suffix -ka either forms a diminutive or intensifies the verbal meaning, and suastika might thus be translated literally as "that which is associated with well-being," corresponding to "lucky charm" or "thing that is auspicious."[1] The word in this sense is first used in the Harivamsa.[2] As noted by Monier-Williams in his Sanskrit-English dictionary, according to Alexander Cunningham, its shape represents a monogram formed by interlacing of the letters of the auspicious words su-astà (svasti) written in Ashokan characters.[3]
The symbol originally had a meaning of protection. Do research before you call me a nazi dicks >>
Player's arts of Indenki please do not reuse copy or alter any image as they are copyrighted to player.
"For those days when I simply can't pull myself together."
A
Legion_Alt