Memories of a better time

1 0 0
                                    

 — 07/18/2020 12:19am

BNHA idea... headcannon?

I thought of something sad(?) while watching some comic dubs of Boku no Hero. In a world where quirks can be incredibly dangerous and powerful, when villains and criminals get sent to prisons, do there have to be things to inhibit their quirks? If so what are they? Would they be considered humane? I've been watching a lot of One Piece recently as well; even made it to episode 346 so far. In this world there are people called devil fruit users who gain what can only be described as a superpower when they eat something called a devil fruit. However, these superpower wielders have a very prominent weakness, the sea. There's also a metal called kairouseki which will act similarly to the sea and inhibit their powers. So this, combined with my thoughts about what happens to quirk users in prison, the world of boku no hero academy, the devil in my head that causes me to give all of my characters traumatic backstories, various tv shows about the injustice in justice, and a glimpse of a certain deleted scene from Zootopia... I bring to you... this...


Hikari shivered. A cold draft had been coming in from the window for months now, always blowing snow and cold air onto the floor around her. She huddled further into the damp blanket, trying to warm herself and the cold metal attached to her wrists. The chain rattled around as she brought her hands up to her face to blow warm air onto them, but it just wasn't the same, wasn't warm, and just wasn't enough. An angry shout to "Quiet down!" came from further down the hall. Hikari wasn't sure if this shout was directed to her or not, but she wasn't here to play with risks or chances.


I never finished this, lol. I think it was just supposed to be a scene about remembering the happier times of life in a terrible moment. One where there's so little they can do to help themselves but escape into their own memories for a while, a time when they were still normal.

Writing for the Sake of WritingWhere stories live. Discover now