bombra bombra
Hyper
关注数: 29 粉丝数: 139 发帖数: 7,899 关注贴吧数: 39
无聊写文:Leo-Lynn-Kaikruen “概概酱的事吗?”阿卡夏抿了一口酒,回忆起来: “我到辽宁时,已经是深夜了,出了站,本想随便找家旅馆混一晚上再说,但是,或许是缘分吧,就在我经过滑铁卢桥时,遇见了那个改变我一生的人........" ”当时我看到桥下一个人倒在一片血泊之中,看不清样貌,我强压住心中的恐惧,靠近过去......" 阿卡夏看到的,是一个病弱,猫耳(下垂式),萝莉属性的女孩,她倒在那里,血染红了1米见方的土地,周围还可以见到各种内脏的碎块,同时有一股腥臭传入他的鼻孔。 就在这时,女孩突然睁开了眼睛,看到了正准备更进一步观察的阿卡夏,阿卡夏还没来得及反应,女孩就以虚弱的声音对他说:”坏....坏人,还..还是不会放过我....吗?我还真是...天真....啊..." 说完像是失去了全部力量似的,又闭上了眼睛,没了声息。 阿卡夏从震惊中恢复过来,准备去看她是否还活着。他伸出手,慢慢靠近女孩的鼻孔。30厘米....20厘米.....10...9......8........7....这时突然一束强烈的白光照过了来,阿卡夏瞬间失去了视野,等到他恢复过来,才终于看清了光的来源------军队的探照灯 “那边的小子!看到了不该看的东西就别想跑了,跟我们走一趟” 话虽如此,阿卡夏却知道被带走肯定没有好下场,当机立断,拔腿就跑. 然而人终究是跑不过子弹的,看到阿卡夏准备跑,领头的二话不说就开了一枪 ,击中了阿卡夏的背部,阿卡夏感到一阵剧痛,晕了过去。 等到阿卡夏醒来时,他已经在潮湿而黑暗的监狱里了,同样在里面的,还有那个女孩。 此时她已经醒了,让阿卡夏惊讶的是,此时她已经完全恢复了,明明之前还几乎要死的样子... “你醒了”女孩说道,显得很是平静。阿卡夏正准备回答,却突然发现他此时根本不知道该说什么,于是便不明不白地回了一句:”嗯,醒了“ 接着监狱又陷入了死一样的沉寂。 最终阿卡夏实在耐不住了,却又不知道该说什么,便支支吾吾到:”那个....我叫阿卡夏,你呢?“ 出乎意料的,女孩回答了他 "里奥-琳-概概论”
【本吧头衔说明及其他】 1,Cyane In Greek mythology, Cyane or Kyane (Κυανῆ "dark blue" in Greek) was a nymph who tried to prevent Hades from abducting Persephone, her playmate. Upon failure, she dissolved away in tears and melted into her pool. In a slightly different version, Cyane was the Naiad (i.e. the fresh-water nymph) of a spring in the Sicilian town ofSyracuse. After witnessing Hades's abduction of the goddess Persephone and trying to prevent it, she was turned to liquid by Hades. 2,Eurydice In Classical Greek mythology, Eurydice (/jʊˈrɪdɨsiː/; Εὐρυδίκη, Eurydikē) was an oak nymph or one of the daughters ofApollo (the god of light). She was the wife of Orpheus, who tried to bring her back from the dead with his enchanting music. 3,Salmacis In Greek mythology, Salmacis (Ancient Greek: ∑αλμακίς) was an atypical naiad who rejected the ways of the virginal Greekgoddess Artemis in favour of vanity and idleness. Her attempted rape of Hermaphroditus places her as the only nymph rapist in the Greek mythological canon (though see also Dercetis). 4,Echo In Greek mythology, Ekho (Greek: Ἠχώ, Ēkhō, "echo",[1] from ἦχος (ēchos), "sound"[2]) was an Oread (a mountain nymph) who loved her own voice. Zeus loved consorting with beautiful nymphs and visited them on Earth often. Eventually, Zeus's wife,Hera, became suspicious, and came from Mt. Olympus in an attempt to catch Zeus with the nymphs. 5,Dryope The most prominent Dryope was the daughter of Dryops, king of Oeta ("oak-man") or of Eurytus (and hence half-sister to Iole). She was sometimes thought of as one of the Pleiades (and hence a nymph). There are two stories of her metamorphosis into a black poplar. According to the first, Apollo seduced her by a trick. Dryope had been accustomed to play with the hamadryads of the woods on Mount Oeta. Apollo chased her, and in order to win her favours turned himself into atortoise, of which the girls made a pet. When Dryope had the tortoise on her lap, he turned into a snake. She tried to flee, but he coiled around her legs and held her arms tightly against her sides as he raped her. The nymphs then abandoned her, and she eventually gave birth to her son Amphissus. She marriedAndraemon. Amphissus eventually built a temple to his father Apollo in the city of Oeta, which he founded. Here the nymphs came to converse with Dryope, who had become a priestess of the temple, but one day Apollo again returned in the form of a serpent and coiled around her while she stood by a spring. This time Dryope was turned into a poplar tree. 6,Daphnis In Greek mythology, Daphnis (Ancient Greek: Δάφνις, from δάφνη, daphne, "Bay Laurel") was a Sicilian shepherd who was said to be the inventor of pastoral poetry. According to tradition, he was the son of Hermes and a nymph, despite which Daphnis himself was mortal. Daphnis is also described and shown as an eromenos. His mother was said to have exposed him under a laurel tree, where he was found by shepherds and named after the tree under which he was found. He was also sometimes said to be Hermes favourite or beloved rather than his son. 7,Euterpe In Greek mythology, Euterpe (/juːˈtɜrpiː/; Greek: Eὐτέρπη [efˈterpi] Ancient Greek: [eu̯térpɛː]; "rejoicing well" or "delight" from Ancient Greek εὖ 'well' + τέρπειν terpein 'to please') was one of the Muses, the daughters of Mnemosyne, fathered by Zeus. Called the "Giver of delight", when later poets assigned roles to each of the Muses, she was the muse of music. 8,Urania Urania (/jʊˈreɪniə/; Ancient Greek: Οὐρανία; meaning 'heavenly' or 'of heaven') was, in Greek mythology, the muse ofastronomy and a daughter of Zeus by Mnemosyne and also a great granddaughter of Uranus. 9,Erato In Greek mythology, Erato /ˈɛrətoʊ/ (Ancient Greek: Ἐρατώ) is one of the Greek Muses. The name would mean "desired" or "lovely", if derived from the same root as Eros, as Apollonius of Rhodes playfully suggested in the invocation to Erato that begins Book III of his Argonautica.
首页 2 3 4 5 6 7 下一页