Talk:Flow Kelp/@comment-34646505-20180310230940

You're a deep sea diver. Just out from your hometown, you leave the coast line and make your way out into the vast sparkling blue oceans. You've been swimming in these parts all your life, and you had a strong goal in mind to keep. Your brother went missing 4 years ago when he swam out too far into the oceans, you tried to warm him of the storms but he didn't listen, he was too stubborn. Just like him, your mother told you to stay home, but you decided that his disappearance was your fault, so you are responsible for looking for him.

Somewhere deep down in your heart, you know he's out there, still lost. But god knows where.

Once you're out far enough that the island you left is a blurry fog in the distance, its time to dive. Already in your suit, you put your breather on and check all of your gear. Then, you drop the anchor into the wavey waters, letting it drop down somewhere deep enough to keep the boat from floating off. You sit, and fall back into the water. everything is blue suddenly and you begin to sink slowly, and you adjust your vision under your goggles.

You denied the possiblity of him being dead, for some reason you really believed that he was somewhere down here.

So you followed the chain down and down. The currents were getting stronger and it was getting darker. And the chain is ranked around as if something at the bottom caught hold of it. Suddenly a strong current knocks you off the anchors chain and you are sent plummeting into the darkness. Automatically your visor lights up and you're able to see vague shapes spinning around you, or rather you were the one spinning out of controll. Your back falls into what feels like a spongey spiderweb, sticking to your suit. Your tanks oxygen meter is getting to the middle mark, and you suddenly feel wavey strands of Kelp tangle over your frost side. Its a Flow Kelp Monster

You still have your tools, Your anchor chain is lost in the darkness and all that is visible is your own body and the small sparkle of light above.

What do you do?