Author Topic: LOGAN HUNTER (c) v RYAN KEYS - ROULETTE TITLE  (Read 500 times)

Offline SCW Staff

  • Administrator
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 1697
    • View Profile
LOGAN HUNTER (c) v RYAN KEYS - ROULETTE TITLE
« on: February 23, 2026, 08:20:04 AM »
Please post all roleplays here! Have fun and good luck!

Offline RyanKeys

  • Newbie
  • *
  • Posts: 16
    • View Profile
Re: LOGAN HUNTER (c) v RYAN KEYS - ROULETTE TITLE
« Reply #1 on: February 27, 2026, 10:21:17 PM »
Let's Make It Interesting
Ryan drops his phone into his pocket and just stands there for a second, that grin already spreading like he’s holding something good behind his teeth. Late afternoon sun cuts across the parking lot and catches on the thin chain at his collarbone. Black joggers, fitted charcoal tee, hoodie hanging open. Relaxed posture. Easy shoulders. But there’s that low hum under everything — the kind that means he’s not drifting. He’s lining something up. Not forcing it. Not rushing it. Just letting it build. It’s the kind of energy that makes the air around him feel a little thicker, like the moment’s already shifting before he even says a word. He rolls his neck once, feeling the warmth of the sun on his skin, the faint breeze carrying the smell of hot asphalt and distant traffic. There’s a quiet certainty in how he stands there, feet planted solid, eyes scanning the lot without really looking for anything specific. It’s like his mind’s already mapping out the next few hours, but not in a frantic way — more like a river finding its path downhill, natural and inevitable.

Jessy shuts the truck door with a solid thunk, boots heavy on the asphalt, ball cap low over his brow. He slows when he catches the grin, his own expression shifting from neutral to mildly suspicious. He adjusts his faded jeans with one hand, the gray tee clinging a bit from the drive, and takes a couple more steps before stopping fully. There’s history in the way he approaches — no rush, no hesitation, just the easy rhythm of two guys who’ve shared enough miles and moments that words don’t always need to lead.

“That smile mean trouble?” Jessy asks, eyeing him with that deadpan drawl, the kind that cuts through any pretense without trying too hard.

Ryan laughs under his breath, spreading his hands like he’s been caught mid-crime. “Man, why does everybody jump straight to felony charges the second I look happy? I’m just existing. I’m hydrated. I slept eight hours. Suddenly I’m planning a hostile takeover.” He chuckles again, the sound light and rolling, like he’s genuinely amused by the accusation. He shifts his weight, one foot tapping lightly on the pavement as if testing the ground, his eyes sparkling with that reflex mischief. It’s not forced; it’s just how he processes the world — turning questions into invitations, turning suspicion into banter. He glances over at Jessy’s truck, noting the faint layer of dust on the hood from whatever backroad detour his friend took to get here, and it makes him smile wider. “You drove all the way out here just to accuse me of white-collar crime? That’s dedication.”

Jessy folds his arms, his stance solid like the truck behind him. “That look means you’re already three steps ahead.” There’s a hint of amusement in his voice now, buried under the drawl, the kind that only shows up when Ryan’s energy starts pulling him in. He shifts his ball cap slightly, squinting against the sun, watching Ryan with the patience of someone who’s seen this routine play out a dozen times before — the grin, the easy deflection, the way it all circles back to whatever’s really brewing.

Ryan doesn’t deny it. He just grabs a cart from the row nearby, the metal clinking softly as he pulls it free, and gives it a test push, watching the wheels roll straight across the faded parking lines. He adjusts it once, making sure it doesn’t wobble, his fingers drumming lightly on the handle like he’s already imagining the momentum it’ll carry inside. “Not ahead,” he says lightly, his voice flowing without pause. “Just… aligned. Like everything’s clicking into place without me having to shove it there.” He pushes the cart a little further, testing the glide again, and laughs mid-thought. “You know how sometimes you wake up and the coffee tastes better, the drive feels shorter, and suddenly the whole day feels like it’s got your back? That’s this. No scheming required.”

Jessy snorts, unfolding his arms and falling into step beside him as they head toward the entrance. “That don’t mean anything.” But there’s no real bite to it — just the familiar push-pull they’ve always had, Jessy grounding the energy while Ryan lets it build. He glances at the store doors ahead, the glass reflecting the lowering sun, and wonders briefly what exactly that phone call stirred up this time. Ryan’s got that spark again, the one that usually means something’s shifting, and Jessy’s content to ride along until it reveals itself.

“It means,” Ryan continues, steering toward the entrance with the cart rolling smooth, “I don’t feel rushed. I don’t feel like I’m chasing. I don’t feel like I’m trying to prove something. I feel like I’m stepping into something.” His words flow easy, circling the idea without landing too sharp, like he’s thinking out loud and inviting Jessy to fill in the blanks. He gestures loosely with one hand while keeping the other on the cart, painting the air as if mapping out an invisible path. “You ever get that vibe where the pieces are falling together on their own? Not because you forced them, but because you stopped fighting the flow? That’s where my head’s at. And yeah, maybe it’s got a little to do with that call, but it’s more than that. It’s the whole setup — the match, the moment, the way everything’s lining up without me having to micromanage it.”

He pauses just before the doors open, the sensors humming faintly as they sense their approach. Ryan lets the cart stop naturally, turning slightly to face Jessy, his grin softening into something more thoughtful. “Logan’s structured. He’s deliberate. He doesn’t waste motion. Every step he takes in that ring looks intentional. That’s why he’s champion. That’s why people talk about him like the throne’s already carved in stone.” There’s respect in his tone, no bitterness or edge — just acknowledgment, like he’s sizing up a worthy puzzle rather than an enemy. He rolls his shoulders once more, feeling the late sun warm on his back, and imagines for a second what it’ll feel like stepping into that arena light, the crowd’s energy mirroring this hum he’s carrying now.

The automatic doors slide open and cool air hits them, spilling out with the faint scent of produce and baked goods from inside. Ryan nudges the cart forward again, wheels whispering over the threshold, and the transition feels seamless, like stepping from one chapter into the next without missing a beat.

“I still don’t know what kind of match it’s gonna be,” Ryan continues, pushing the cart slowly down the first aisle, eyes scanning the shelves without really committing yet. “And that’s fine. I’m not stressed about it. I like not knowing. Because when you don’t know, you can’t overthink. You just move. You don’t tighten up trying to predict every sequence before it happens.” He laughs lightly, grabbing a random bottle of water from a display and tossing it into the cart with a casual flick. “Overthinking’s the killer, man. It’s like trying to dance while staring at your feet — you trip every time. Me? I’d rather feel the music and let my body figure it out. That’s where the magic happens, right? In the adjustments, the little shifts that nobody sees coming until they’re already there.”

Jessy glances at him, keeping pace without effort. “That call got you movin’.”

“Yeah,” Ryan admits easily, no hesitation, his voice warm as he veers the cart around a display of snacks. “It did. Shook something loose, reminded me I’ve got more gears than I’ve been using.” He rolls his shoulders once, testing the stretch, feeling the faint pull of old training sessions, the way his body remembers the grind without resenting it. “It reminded me I’ve been playing it a little safe lately. And safe wins matches. Safe keeps you consistent. But safe doesn’t take titles. Safe doesn’t walk into Blaze of Glory and look the champion in the eye and mean it.” There’s a spark in his eyes now, the grin deepening as he talks, circling the idea of the match like he’s savoring the buildup. He grabs a pack of protein bars, reads the label absently, then drops them in with the water. “Safe’s fine for the mid-card grind, but against Logan? Nah. You gotta bring something that disrupts without announcing itself.”

Jessy’s eyes flick toward him, reading the shift.

Ryan keeps going, his words flowing as they turn into another aisle, the cart picking up a little speed now. “And if I’m stepping in there with Logan Hunter? Safe isn’t enough.” He bumps Jessy’s shoulder lightly, the contact friendly and familiar, like punctuation to his point. “He’s not some random draw. He’s not chaos. He’s structure. He’s rhythm. He’s someone who settles into control early. First lock-up, first exchange — he wants to dictate that tempo.” Ryan mimes a quick wrestling hold in the air, his hands moving fluid and precise, demonstrating without overdoing it. “You feel that in his matches — the way he measures every step, waits for the opening instead of forcing it. It’s smart. It’s why he’s got that belt. But it’s also why there’s room to play.”

Ryan smiles — more focused now, his energy building without spiking. “So if I’m beating him? It’s not luck. It’s not noise. It’s not a fluke.” He taps the cart handle once, the sound light against the hum of the store. “It’s disruption. The kind that comes from staying loose when he expects tension, from reacting a half-beat faster because I’m not carrying the weight of prediction.”

Jessy studies him, his own grin tugging faintly at the edges. “You plannin’ on out-movin’ him?”

Ryan shrugs lightly, circling the cart around a family loading up on bulk items. “I’m planning on not freezing.” He slows the cart again, pausing to grab some tape from a shelf, unrolling a bit to test the stickiness before adding it to the pile. “You know what beats certainty? Comfort. The kind that doesn’t crack when the rhythm shifts. The kind that doesn’t panic when something misses. The kind that doesn’t brace when the pace speeds up.” He laughs mid-thought, shaking his head at the simplicity of it. “It’s like driving in the rain — if you grip the wheel too tight, you spin out. But if you stay relaxed, feel the slide, you correct without overcorrecting. That’s me in there. Feeling the slide, making the adjustment, keeping the grin because why not? It’s supposed to be fun, right? Even when it’s for the gold.”

He nudges the cart forward again, wheels gliding easy over the tile. “I feel good right now, man. Not loud. Not dramatic. Just good. And when I feel like this? I don’t hesitate. I don’t second-guess. I don’t overreach.” His voice carries that warm swagger, inviting without demanding, like he’s sharing a secret that’s too good to keep bottled up. He glances over at Jessy, eyes sparkling with that reflex grin, the one that says there’s more layers to peel back if you’re patient. “It’s the difference between chasing the moment and letting it come to you. Logan chases control. I let the flow bring it my way.”

He flashes that grin again, brighter now as they weave through the aisles. “Let’s make it interesting.”



Steam curls thick against the glass, the mirror surrendered to fog, water hitting tile steady and controlled. The camera sits high on the counter — shoulders up, nothing below the line. Ryan steps into frame under the spray, hair slicked back, water running down his neck and collarbone. He reaches forward, taps record, then leans back into the stream, letting the hot water cascade over him like a reset button. The sound fills the space, rhythmic and soothing, drowning out the distant hum of the arena prep outside. He closes his eyes for a second, breathing in the steam, feeling the tension from the day melt away without effort.

“Alright. Blaze of Glory. Logan Hunter. Let’s talk.”

Water runs over his shoulders as he wipes his face.

“You carry yourself like someone who’s already figured out the ending. Like this is another chapter in a reign that keeps rolling forward. Like the throne’s solid. Like the cement’s dry.”

He nods slowly.

“And that confidence? It’s earned.”

A beat.

“But confidence and certainty aren’t the same thing.”

He steps slightly closer to the lens.

“You’ve built your reign on structure. On discipline. On measured movement. You slow the pace early. You control position. You test distance before you commit. You don’t swing wild.”

Water keeps falling.

“And that’s smart. Real smart. It’s why you’ve held that belt as long as you have — turning potential threats into footnotes.”

A faint grin spreads.

“But structure has patterns.”

He taps the side of his head lightly.

“And patterns can be read. Not in a chess-master way, but in the feel of it — the way a match breathes, the way momentum ebbs and flows if you let it.”

He smiles slightly.

“I’ve watched you. The way you settle into a match. The way you tighten control once you feel someone hesitate. The way you build pressure instead of chasing it.”

A steady look.

“It’s impressive, man. But I don’t hesitate. I don’t chase. I flow with it, adjust on the fly, turn your pressure into my opening.”

A small beat.

“And when I don’t hesitate? The rhythm shifts. Not dramatically — just enough to make the structure feel a little less solid.”

He leans in slightly.

“And let’s not pretend you’re walking into this alone.”

A faint grin.

“You’ve got Brooke. You’ve got Marissa. You’ve got that whole orbit around you that makes everything louder. That buys seconds. That creates distraction.”

He nods once.

“Brooke knows when to tilt a moment. She knows when to step onto the apron and pull focus. She knows how to change the temperature.”

Water continues to run down his arms.

“Marissa’s still finding her timing. There’s a half-beat sometimes.”

Offline Logan Hunter

  • Newbie
  • *
  • Posts: 37
    • View Profile
“The Death of the Party!”
« Reply #2 on: February 27, 2026, 10:49:10 PM »
Logan lost the champion vs. champion match to HB Carter but not before Brooke slapped Tempest, who had been brought in as Carter’s countermeasure against Brooke, resulting in the youngest of the Shields Twins getting Powerbomned through the announce table! Now Logan had to deal with his first defence of the SCW Roulette Championship and it was seeing him defend against Ryan Keys! Can Logan get the win?

Medic’s office, Everett, Washington
Sunday the 15th of February 2026, 21:00pm

Tonight did not go as planned.

Brooke, my beloved future wife and current manager, was Powerbombed through the announcer’s table and now we are in the medic’s office as she is getting treated, meanwhile I lost the match against Carter and with the defence against Keys and the Fatal Four Way Ladder Match between Bill Barnhart, Zayvion Lyons, Ciaran Doyle, and Brayden Williams to determine my challenger after Keys looming?

I do not need this distraction!

”So Brooke, you trying to set a record or something?” Marissa asked with a smug grin on her face as her younger sister lay on the bed in pain. ”Like Speedrun the “Holy Shit/WTF Moment of the Year Award any %?” because I can’t think of any other reason why you’d slap Tempest!”

”Shut the fuck up Marissa!” Brooke groaned as me and her older sister watched on. ”I was doing my job when that bitch attacked me! That slap was self-defence!”

”You call slapping a woman who’s as tall as Logan and as strong as an ox Self-Defence?!” Marissa asked incredulously as she shook her head. ”What’s your follow up going to be? Getting angry at a driver for running you over while jaywalking?!”

”Can you not rub this in so much?!” Brooke protested as the medic checked on her. ”Your twin sister is in pain after being run over by a human tank and you’re mocking me?! Mari, we’ve literally know each other our whole lives, we were in mom’s womb together for fuck’s sake!”

”Just because we’re twins doesn’t mean I can’t call you out for stupid decisions Brooke! And tonight was especially stupid!” Marissa added as she walked closer to her sister’s hospital bed. ”YOU SLAPPED TEMPEST! Even setting aside that the follow up cost Logan the match against Carter, I’m going to rub that in so hard that you’ll think it’s one of your OnlyFans vids!”

Even I had to bite back laughter at that and he medic nearly choked on his spit. ”Okay first off: I don’t do that stepmom/dad/bro shit when I’m filming porn! It’s too weird! Second, eww! And third why was THAT the first thing you said?!”

”Because you make yourself such an easy target whenever you do stuff like that!” Marissa countered not realizing that a certain older woman heard her. ”So get used to…………….”

“That was a lovely sentence to hear out of context Marissa!” Evelynn cut in and everyone in the medic’s office suddenly turned to her. “Please, continue to describe your ability to rub things in!”

”I’ll pass.” Marissa responded dryly as she turned to the older woman. ”Is thus about Blaze of Glory or did you just happen to be wondering by.”

“Both, Logan? Your match against Ryan us set, try not to chase off another wrestler.” Evelynn told me and I simply nodded. “And Brooke? Tempest won’t be punished!”

”LIKE HELL!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!” Brooke snapped as she sat up abruptly forgetting for a moment that she was in pain. ”I WAS DOING NOTHING WRONG! TEMPEST WAS AT FAULT!”

“My decision is final.” Evelynn added as she turned to leave. “See you three at Fort Worth for Blaze of Glory.”

Evelynn left before Brooke could say another word. ”Fucking ridiculous! Hey, can I go or not?” Brooke demanded as she turned to the medic. ”Well?!”

“Err, you can go.” The medic added and we left the medic’s room and the arena for the hotel.

Logan and Brooke’s home, Las Vegas, Nevada
Wednesday the 25th of February 2026, 14:00pm

Needless to say? Tempest’s attack on Brooke has left her in no condition to help me train aside from spotting for me while I bench press, and since Marissa is the only resident of the house who doesn’t have wrestling training? This is far from ideal.

”We will worry about Brooke’s condition later.” I insisted as I motioned to Brooke and the two women nodded, Marissa was sitting on the couch stroking Sir Pursalot as the Maine Coon Cat sat in her lap, meanwhile the Irish Wolfhound Aolfie lay at Brooke’s feet. ”Right now we need to put the Tempest situation behind us and focus on the defence against Keys!”

”Didn’t realize that being the Roulette Champion came with the power to state the obvious.” Marissa commented as she rolled her eyes. ”What about the Fatal Four Way Ladder Match between Brayden, Zayvion, Bill, and Ciaran? If you retrain against Ryan than the winner of that match is next ln line, presumably at Into the Void.”

”I will worry about that after Blaze of Glory! Frankly? I don’t see Barnhart or Williams winning..” I stated as I folded my arms. ”Zayvion was robbed against Alex, he’ll be motivated Brayden hasn’t done much of relevance since he came back.”

”And they have to be desperate to book those losers in this match.” Brooke added as she leaned back. ”As for my injuries? PUH-LEASE! I feel more sore than this after the average shoot with a guy!”

”And you called me gross for the OnlyFans joke.” Marissa muttered as she shook her head. [color=#ff0000”And the medic did say take it easy!”[/color]

”Err, duh, what do you think I’ve been doing over the past few days!” Brooke added with a satisfied grin. ”You let me worry about that, I know what I’m doing.”

”And that’s what worries me most.” Marissa muttered before the conversation drifted off.

Logan and Brooke’s Home Gym, Las Vegas, Nevada
Wednesday the 25th of February 2026, 21:00pm

*promo time*

Just because Brooke can’t train with me doesn’t mean we can’t use the space.

”The time has finally arrived, my first defence of the Roulette Title, the first defence of my true reign and the poor unfortunate soul that has been offered up to me is Ryan Keys!” I scoffed as I folded my arms. ”Ryan, you’re the Life of the Party in SCW, the fun loving wrestler beloved by the cretins that make up our audience, well, let’s get one thing straight.

I am the Death of he Party.”
I declared as I smirked at the camera. ”I have left many broken bodies in my wake Ryan and you are the one who is brave enough to step up and challenge me? You see it as an opportunity, I see it as your death warrant!”

Despite still being sore from Tempest’s attack Brooke still chimed in.

”You can count yourself lucky Ryan that I was BRUTALLY ATTACKED IN A TOTALLY UNPROVOKED MANNER by Tempest last Sunday Night at Climax Control!” Brooke declared as she glared at the camera. ”Why? Because I won’t be able to perform my regular duties for Legan as a direct result and the fact that Evelynn refuses to punish her makes it worse!

Then again? It’s been me and Logan against the higher ups since day one!”
Brooke added as she folded her arms. ”In case it wasn’t obvious? We didn’t come to SCW to make friends, we came to SCW to dominate and you will be no different Ryan! Trust me, when Logan is done with you a hangover will be the least of your worries!”

Indeed.

”If this is how I demonstrate that I chose to have Brooke help me? So be it!” I added as I paced around the ring. ”She is more than just my girlfriend, she is my soul mate, my muse, my guide, my judas!”

”Err, I’m pretty sure that’s not a good thing to call your girlfriend Logan!” Marissa chimed in and we turned to her as she filmed he promo. ”Just saying!”

”I KNOW WHAT I SAID! And Ryan? You will wish you had never returned to SCW to begin with when the dust settles on my first of many defences,” I said as I held up the title. ”For it is my Divine Rite of Kings to reign eternal and some party boy will never stop me, with or without Brooke’s help!”

It’s that simple.

”After all, after a year of waiting to get back what was stolen from me I will not and shall not relinquish this title from my hands so easy!” I added as I made a slit throat motion with my thumb. ”And at Blaze of Glory XV? You will suffer for your hubris,”

And with that I decided to wrap things up.

”I am the future of this company and I will drag it into the modern day! Kicking and screaming, you will not last.” I said as I walked up to the ropes. ”After all, I beat you once and I’ll certainly do it again, woe to the vanquished, for the lives of fools brave enough to step up shall never be mourned! Ryan? I COMMAND THEE KNEEL! YOU WILL NEVER CLAIM MY THRONE! And as the sun sets on my first defence? Ryan will embrace oblivion!”

Marissa turned odd the camera as the scene fades.

Offline Logan Hunter

  • Newbie
  • *
  • Posts: 37
    • View Profile
“Pleasure To Kill!”
« Reply #3 on: Today at 09:27:23 AM »
Blaze of Glory XV was almost here and Logan’s first Roulette Title Defence against Ryan Kays was drawing near, Logan was determined to make sure that his second defence but Ryan was not going to make things easy for the Aussie, can Logan continue his Supercard winning streak and, more importantly,, who will win the Fatal Four Way Ladder Match between Brayden Williams, Bill Barnhart, Ciaran Doyle and Zayvion Lyons?

Logan and Brooke’s Home Gym, Las Vegas, Nevada
Wednesday the 4th of Marach, 2026, 13:00pm

The time of my triumph is almost at hand.

I have been the Roulette Champion since Inception VI and I have waited patiently for my first title defence, now, my defence against Ryan Keys is days away and a match to determine my challenger after Ryan is happening the same night!

Frankly? I don’t care who wins between Bill, Zayvion, Ciaran or Brayden, they will all fall.

”There you are.” I commented as Brooke and Marissa came down the basement stairs, Marissa was accompanied by Sir Pursalot as the Maine Coon walked behind her did Aolfie, Brooke’s Irish Wolfhound, either way? The two beautiful women were soon with men in the gym, Marissa was on the phone with someone and not paying attention while Brooke was walking with a purpose. ”What took you so long?”

”I see you still haven’t lrearned how to greet your girlfriend.” Brooke commented as she rolled her eyes while Marissa sat down in her usual spot and was accompanied by the animals. ”Especially when my OnlyFans page is the main thing keeping this roof over our heads!”

”I don’t care.” I responded with a frown as I folded my arms and Marissa continued to chat on the phone. ”And if you’re recovered enough from Tempest’s attack to fil, that content then you are well enough to help me train for the matvj against Ryan.”

”We will discuss that later.”  Brooke insisted as she shook her head and I frowned. ”We need to do something other than train Logan!”

”Like what?” I asked bluntly at which point Marissa finally finished her phone call. ”Because if you interrupted my training for something trivial……………”

”She was talking about a double date.” Marissa vut in as she leaned forward. ”Me and Zara and you and Brooke!”

”Are you serious?” I asked incredulously and the twins nodded. ”What is the point? Everyone knows that me and Brooke are dating, same goes for your lesbian relationship.”

”Just because those are known facts doesn’t mean we can’t have a good time.” Marissa insisted and I looked right at the older of the twins as she continued to stroke her cat. ”At least give it a chance Logan!”

”Maybe I would’ve if you had asked me first!” I grunted as I went back to training. ”I have a title match to train for, I do not have time for something as foolish as a double date!”

”Oh, that’s the deal breaker for you?” Brooke asked as she folded her arms and I glared at the redhead. ”You either do the double date or I won’t help you with your training full stop!”

I stared a hole right through both her and Marissa, the twins weren’t even old enough to drink yet, their birthday wasn’t for another three months, but they could be persuasive. ”What time?”

”Pleasure doing business with you Logan.” Brooke commented with a satisfied smirk as she looked at her fingernails. ”Marissa? Book the table for 17:30pm and make sure Zara knows of course!”

”Already on the phone with the restaurant, don’t wiorry Logan, we’ll pay.” Marissa responded as she waited for an answer from the restaurant. ”Who knows? Maybe Brooke will reward your co-operation in the bedroom later?”

”PUH-LEASE! Like that needs any incentive from his end.” Brooke added as she glanced towards me. ”If anything? It’ll be a bonus!”

”This had better be worth it.” I grunted in response to before i returned to my training and soon afterwards? Brooke joined me.

Such foolishness before the biggest match of my year so far, who do these women think they are?

Guy Savoy, Las Vegas, Nevada
Wednesday the 4th of March 2026, 17:30pm

I cannot believe they’ve talked me into this!

The fact that they picked one of the most expensive restaurants in Las Vegas does not help and yes, the twins are trust fund kids, it’s why they are able to afford the house in the first place, but that doesn’t mean I have to enjoy it.

But now I have been dragged along for the ride.

“Good evening madam.” The Maitre D’ greeted Marissa as she led the group into the restaurant alongside Zara. “Table for two?”

”Four actually.” Marissa responded as she motioned to me and Brooke. ”We’ve got a double date going on with my twin sister and her boyfriend.”

“Ah very good.” The maitre d’ nodded as he looked over at me and Brooke. “Do you have a reservation?”

”Marissa Shields.” Marissa responded and the maitre d’ checked the reservation list before nodding and leading us to the table. ”Well, we’re here.” Marissa commented as she sat down next to Zara and I sat across from them with Brooke. ”Let’s try not to make this too weird.”

“Weird? The guy who spends his SCW promos ranting and raving about thrones?” Zara snarked and I chose to ignore Marissa’s girlfriend. “Let’s get to the menu already, I’m starving!”

”Yes, let’s!” I responded before we picked uo the menu. ”Caviar, foie gras, black truffle? That would cost me my monthly pay check!”

”And we are paying for it, don’t worry!” Brooke responded as she looked at the menu and motioned between herself and Marissa. ”Anyway, I’ll have the colors of caviar, lobster and chocolate fondant.”

“Really stretching that trust fund Brooke? I’ll have the Tomato All Around, Iberico Pork and nuance of chocolate.” Zara decided as she looked at the menu. “What about you babe?”

”So many options but I’ll have the colours of caviar as well.” Marissa decided as she looked at the menu. ”The salmon and the coconut six ways, that just leaves you Logan!”

”I’m looking!” I responded as I considered my options. ”Artichoke and Black Truffle Soup, the surf and turf dish and the fondant.” I decided as I set the menu down and the three women gave me surprised looks. ”If the twins are paying or then I’m going all out! Simple as that.”

“Never knew a guy to order A5 Wagyu and Lobster out of spite.” Zara commented dryly and before long the maitre d’ returned to take our orders and from there? It was a matter of time before we got our starters. “So Brooke, how did you and Logan meet?”

”At the Go Gym on our first day of wrestling training.” Brooke responded as she brushed some of her dyed red hair over her shoulder. ”He hasn’t told me much about his life from before he came to America from Sydney but still.”

”And it shall remain that way.” I added as I folded my arms. ”Some secrets are best left buried.”

”And I still don’t know what my sister sees in you.” Marissa grumbled as she rolled her eyes and I just shook my head. ”As for me and Zara? We met at that party in the weeks leading up to Halloween.”

“Yep, and we started dating because you were tired of your crap luck when it came to dating guys.” Xara commented and Marissa gave her a look that screamed “please don’t talk about it” sp she quickly changed course. “How about we just worry about enjoying the meal?”

”Indeed.” I nodded in agreement before our starters arrived and the night continued uninterrupted.

It was the calm before the storm, and I was about to hit Ryan Keys with gale force winds.

Las Vegas Rooftop
Wednesday the 4th of March 2026, 19:00pm

*promo time*

The time is now.

”Las Vegas, the city of sin, the home turf of Sin City Wrestling and, of course, your home town Ryan.” I stated as I walked around the rooftop of one of the top hotels in Las Vegas with Brooke. ”And while our battle will be contested in Fort Worth, Texas, I wanted to show you Ryan one las shot of your home city before I did away with you.

After all, the men who dared to face me one on one on PPV before you have all met the same fate, they haven’t been seen in SCW since my match against them.”
I added as I slung the Roulette Title over my shoulder. ”And if you were wise Ryan? You’d back out now before it was too late.”

Brooke stepped forward to get her word in.

”Oh Ryan, whatever have you gotten yourself into?” Brooke asked in a mockingly sweet tone with a smirk on her face. ”Because Logan is quickly becoming the most dangerous man in the SCW Locker Room and you are the one thy sent to face him in his first of many Roulette Title Defences?

PUH-LEASE!! Even Stevie Wonder sees this for what it really is: this wasn’t a case of you being granted a title match just because Ryan.”
Brooke added as she looked at her nails. ”It was a case of the bosses sending a lamb to the slaughter and for the record? I like my lamb medium rare!”

I stepped forward again.

”This title match may have been a pleasure for you to receive Ryan but for me? It’ll be a Pleasure To Kill!” I stated as I made a slit throat motion with my thumb. ”They may as well call me the career killer at this point for I have ridden SCW of the likes of Caleb Storms, Justin Smith, a certain clown and Vincent Lyons Jr. and those bodies will only pile to the sky.

And when all is said and done?”
I asked mockingly as I linked my hands together. ”Your loved ones shall have no one to blame but the powers that be when the inevitable occurs!”

Brooke chimed in again.

”And don’t think for a second that we’ve forgotten about the contenders match between Brayden, Zayvion, Ciaran and Bill that will immediately follow Logan’s defence this Sunday because trust me, we will be watching!” Brooke added as she smirked right at the camera. ”Ryan? What Logan does to you on Sunday night will serve as a warning to those four fools should they think they have any chance at claiming gold because spoiler alert?

They don’t and neither do you Ryan!”
Brooke added as she flipped some hair over her shoulder. ”And the only thing better than Logan’s inevitable win? Is the post-match celebration that we will have!”

It’s that simple.

”Ryan, you are naught but a sacrificial lamb being brought to the altar of my brilliance for you will kneel before the lord of all that is golden!” I stated as I made a fist with my free hand. ”I was destined to be a champion from the moment I walked through those doors for the first time and I shall fulfil that prophecy no matter what it takes!”

And with that I decided to wrap things up.

”And the Roulette Championship is the crown jewel of my empire!” I added as I held up the SCW Roulette Title. ”And no party animal shall take it from me! Woe to the vanquished, for the lives of those seeking past glory shall never be mourned, Ryan? I COMMAND THEE KNEEL! YOU WILL NOT USURP THE THRONE FROM ME! And as you embrace oblivion? I shall reign eternal for it is the Divine Right of Kings!”

Marissa turned off the camera as the scene fades.

Offline RyanKeys

  • Newbie
  • *
  • Posts: 16
    • View Profile
Re: LOGAN HUNTER (c) v RYAN KEYS - ROULETTE TITLE
« Reply #4 on: Today at 06:26:20 PM »
Built for the Spin

Ryan keeps the cart rolling smooth down the main aisle, fluorescent lights buzzing overhead like a low-key arena hum. He veers left into the sports section without breaking stride, eyes scanning the shelves like he's already visualizing how everything could play out. The store's mostly quiet this time of day—couple shoppers milling around, faint beeps from the registers up front—but Ryan's got that focused energy now, the kind that's building without spiking, just layering on like steam in a shower.

He grabs a roll of athletic tape from a hook, unrolls a strip, and wraps it loosely around his wrist, testing the give. "This stuff's gold," he says, voice warm and easy, glancing over at Jessy. "Keeps the joints steady if it gets technical, or... you know, handy for other things if the wheel spins wild." He laughs mid-thought, shaking his head. "Not that I'm planning on taping anybody's mouth shut or anything. But options, man. Options are what keep you ahead without trying too hard."

Jessy trails a step behind, arms loose at his sides, ball cap still low. He picks up a pack of resistance bands from the endcap, stretches one between his hands until it snaps taut. "Ya thinkin' it's gonna be one of them hardcore spins? Ladders 'n' chairs kinda deal?"

Ryan shrugs lightly, dropping the tape into the cart and steering them toward the hardware aisle next—tools and gadgets lining the walls like potential spot setups. "Could be. Could be straight-up chain wrestling. Could be something goofy like a blindfold or a pillow fight for all I know." He grabs a small flashlight, clicks it on and off, the beam cutting through the dimmer corner of the store. "This? Good for checking shadows if it goes dark... or signaling if things get weird. But honestly? I like the surprise. Keeps me loose. Keeps Logan guessing too, because if he's prepping for his usual rhythm, a spin like that throws everything off balance just enough."

He circles back to his point without pausing, gesturing loose with one hand. "That's the beauty of roulette—you can't lock in. You gotta feel it out, adjust on the fly. And me? When I'm feeling like this, that's exactly where I shine. No overthinking, just moving with whatever the wheel lands on."

Jessy snorts softly, tossing the bands into the cart. "Ya sound like ya already won." He spots a display of knee pads and elbow guards, picks up a pair, flexes them. "These'd hold up if it turns physical. Keep ya from bruisin' too bad."

"Exactly," Ryan says, grinning wider, adding a couple pairs to the growing pile—tape, bands, flashlight, now pads. He nudges the cart forward again, wheels gliding easy. "Not about winning before it starts. About walking in comfortable, ready to build off whatever hits. If it's standard, great—I'll flow with his structure until I find the crack. If it's special rules? Even better. Turns the whole thing alive, you know? Like the crowd's in on the spin too."

They hit the supplement aisle next, Ryan scanning bottles of electrolytes and recovery shakes. He grabs a few, reads the labels absently. "Stuff like this keeps the tank full if it drags out. No crashing mid-match because the wheel decided on no-DQ marathon." He laughs again, bright and unbothered. "And if Brooke or Marissa try pulling focus from ringside? I'm not chasing that noise. I'm staying on Logan, letting their half-beats work against them."

Jessy raises a brow, deadpan as ever. "Ya trustin' that call wasn't settin' ya up?"

Ryan doesn't slow, just flashes that reflex grin over his shoulder. "Enough to lean into it. Enough to know I've got my own orbit too." He bumps Jessy's shoulder lightly again, the cart rolling toward the checkout now. "Not blindly. Just... aligned. And that feels real good right now." He keeps the details of the call close, that mystery hum still there under his words—no names, no specifics, just the quiet certainty that whatever was said on the other end shifted things in his favor without needing to spell it out.

He pauses at the end of the aisle, eyes flicking to a random display of multi-tools—compact, versatile, the kind with pliers and blades folded in. He picks one up, flips it open and closed. "This? Could come in handy if the wheel spins something chained or locked. Or just for cutting tape clean." He tosses it in, then looks back at Jessy. "What do you think—grab anything else, or call this stack good?"

Jessy studies the cart, then nods slow. "Looks like ya covered the bases without overdoin' it."

Ryan laughs under his breath, nudging the cart forward one last time. "That's the point. Let's check out and keep building."

Ryan slows the cart near the end of the sports aisle, eyes landing on a display of protective gear tucked in the corner—shin guards, mouthpieces, and yeah, those cups. He pauses, one hand on the handle, the other reaching out to snag one off the shelf. It's basic, black, no-frills, the kind that's more function than flash. He flips it over, reads the label absently, then laughs under his breath, shaking his head like he's remembering a string of bad luck.

"Man... can't forget this," he says, voice warm but with that edge of self-deprecating humor, tossing it into the cart with a light clatter. "You know how it is—low blows keep finding me like they've got my address. More than I'd like to admit." He rolls his shoulders once, testing the imaginary impact, his grin spreading easy and unbothered. "Last few matches? It's like the universe decided my family's future needs extra testing. If the wheel spins no-DQ or anything south of standard, I'm not walking out funny for a week."

Jessy glances at the cup in the cart, then back at Ryan, deadpan as ever but with a faint smirk tugging at the corner. "Ya mean like that time in Tulsa? Ref didn't see shit, but ya sang soprano the whole drive home."

"Exactly," Ryan admits, laughing brighter now, nudging the cart forward toward the hydration stuff. "And the one before that? Swear it's becoming a pattern. Logan's crew might not play that dirty, but with Brooke and Marissa ringside? Who knows what distraction leads to a 'accidental' knee." He grabs a bottle of electrolyte mix, shakes it once, and drops it in. "Better to gear up and laugh about it later than limp through the afterparty. Keeps me comfortable, keeps the flow going—no bracing, just adjusting."

He circles the idea without lingering, steering them past a row of energy gels. "That's the thing with roulette—you prep for the curveballs, but you don't obsess. This cup? It's insurance with a side of comedy. If it saves me once, worth every penny." He flashes Jessy that reflex grin again, eyes sparkling. "Plus, imagine the story if I actually need it. 'Ryan wins the title, credits his junk armor.' Crowd would eat it up."

Jessy snorts softly, grabbing a pack of compression shorts from a nearby rack and tossing them in too. "Ya plannin' on modelin' it or what?"

Ryan laughs mid-push, the cart picking up speed as they turn into another aisle lined with more protective odds and ends—eye shields, mouthguards, even some lightweight gloves. "Nah, man. But while we're here, might as well think about the other cheap shots that sneak in. Low blows are bad enough, but you know how it goes—eye rakes come out of nowhere when somebody's losing control. Ref turns his back for a second, and bam, fingers scraping like they're digging for treasure." He grabs a pair of clear safety goggles from the shelf, the kind meant for workouts or DIY projects, holds them up to his face like a mask. "These? Could slide 'em on if the wheel spins something extreme, or just keep 'em handy to counter that sting. No blurry vision mid-match because somebody got salty and went for the rake."

He tosses them in, then spots a mouthguard display, picks up a basic one and flexes it between his fingers. "And don't get me started on the real dirty ones—like shoving your ring gear down your throat or yanking it up for a wedgie that'd make a schoolyard bully proud. Happens more in those no-rules spins than people admit, especially if the crowd's egging it on." He laughs again, shaking his head at the absurdity, dropping the mouthguard in too. "This keeps the jaw locked if somebody tries choking you out with your own trunks or whatever nonsense pops up. Keeps me grinning through the chaos instead of spitting teeth."

Jessy eyes the growing pile, deadpan but amused. "Ya preppin' for a street fight or a wrestlin' match?"

Ryan shrugs lightly, circling the cart around to grab some anti-chafing balm from a nearby endcap—practical for long hauls or gear mishaps. "Both, maybe. Roulette's the wildcard—could be clean and technical, could turn into a barnyard brawl with every cheap shot in the book. Eye rakes, gear pulls, throat shoves... Logan's structured, but with his orbit around? Distractions open doors for that stuff. I'm not obsessing, just stacking comfort so I can flow right through it." He smears a bit of the balm on his arm, testing the feel, then adds the tube to the cart. "Keeps the skin from burning if somebody yanks or shoves—small thing, but it means I stay loose, no distractions pulling me off my game."

He nudges the cart forward one more time, the wheels whispering over the tile. "All this? It's not paranoia. It's just building options. Feeling good means prepping smart, laughing at the possibilities, and walking in ready to make whatever spin interesting." He glances back at Jessy, grin lit from the inside. "Grab those gels and let's roll—Blaze ain't waiting."

They weave through a couple more aisles, Ryan's eyes catching on a display of lightweight gloves—thin, flexible, the kind that protect without bulking up. He picks up a pair, slips one on, flexes his fingers. "These could cut down on those sneaky thumb-to-the-eye jabs or fishhooks if it gets grimy. You know, the ones where somebody's pretending to lock up but really just clawing for an edge." He laughs under his breath, adding them to the stack. "Not that I'm expecting Logan to go full heel like that—he's too deliberate for cheap stuff usually. But roulette changes the game. Spins extreme rules, and suddenly everybody's improvising, reaching for whatever's handy. Better to have the hands covered so I can grab back without shredding my palms."

Jessy nods slowly, grabbing a bottle of hand sanitizer from a nearby shelf and tossing it in. "For after, if it gets that messy. Ya don't wanna shake hands with the boys backstage carryin' who-knows-what."

"Good call," Ryan says, his voice flowing easy as they turn toward the pharmacy section, shelves lined with ointments and wraps. He grabs a tube of arnica gel, the kind for bruises, and reads the back. "This for the aftermath—if a rake leaves a mark or a gear shove turns into a scrape. Heals quick, keeps the swelling down so I'm not stiff tomorrow." He drops it in, then spots some saline eye drops, adds those too. "And these? Flush out the burn if an eye rake lands anyway. No rubbing, no panic—just rinse and reset. Keeps the vision clear, keeps me reacting instead of reeling."

He circles the thought, gesturing loose. "See, it's all about that comfort layer. Low blows, eye rakes, gear yanks, throat shoves—they're the little disruptions that throw off your rhythm if you're not ready. But me? I'm building in the buffers so I can laugh it off, adjust, and turn it back on 'em. Logan's got his structure, his certainty. I've got freedom—the kind that doesn't crack under the cheap stuff." He pauses by a rack of neck braces, chuckles, but passes them by. "Nah, not going that far. Don't wanna jinx it into a full-on hardcore mess. But if the wheel spins that way? I'm good. Real good."

Jessy studies him more carefully now, the cart nearly full—tape, bands, flashlight, pads, cup, shorts, goggles, mouthguard, balm, gloves, gel, drops, sanitizer. "That call musta been somethin', gettin' ya this dialed in without spillin' details."

Ryan flashes the grin, keeping the mystery wrapped tight—no hints about the new manager on the line, just that quiet spark from the conversation lingering in his energy. "It was enough to remind me I've got more room to move. Enough to build off without overexplaining." He laughs lightly, steering toward the self-checkout. "Timing's everything, man. Not today on the full story. But trust—it's aligning just right."

He scans the first item, the beep echoing soft. "Let's bag this up and head out. Blaze is calling, and I'm feeling ready to answer whatever it throws."

______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

The phone clicks off in Ryan's hand as he leans back against the headrest of the parked truck, late afternoon light slanting through the windshield and catching on the thin chain at his collarbone. Black joggers, fitted charcoal tee, hoodie unzipped like he's ready to move at a moment's notice. The cab smells faintly of fresh gear from the shopping bags piled in the back—tape, pads, that protective cup he grabbed with a laugh. He sets the phone on the dash, takes a slow breath, then reaches for the camera propped there, tapping record with a faint grin already forming, the kind that says he's holding something good behind his teeth but enjoying the timing.

He looks straight into the lens, voice warm and unhurried, flowing like he's thinking out loud while the world keeps spinning outside—the engine still ticking cool from the drive, distant traffic humming like a far-off crowd.

"Alright... just hung up with the guy who's gonna be in my corner at Blaze—the very man on that call. Contract's signed, sealed, and tucked away. Who is he? Nah, keeping that under wraps for now—timing makes the reveal hit like a finisher. But trust, he's the type who spots the tilt before it tips, keeps things aligned without shouting about it. With him backing me? I'm not rolling solo anymore. Got that extra orbit now, the kind that counters distractions smooth, lets me focus on the fun without the noise pulling me off track."

He laughs under his breath, rolling his shoulders once, testing the give like he's loosening up for a good time, the seat creaking softly under him as he shifts.

"Blaze of Glory. You and me, Logan. Been daydreaming about this rematch since I dusted off that dirt from our last dance—itching to see what the wheel coughs up. No DQ? Chairs swinging like party favors, tables waiting to crack—I'll snag one mid-chaos, use it as a shield while you're measuring your next spot, then flip it into a launch pad for something wild. Your deliberate game's solid in a clean ring, but when rules vanish? That's my sandbox, dodging the mess with a grin, turning your power moves into my quick counters."

A grin spreads wider, his eyes sparkling with that reflex mischief, like he's picturing the whole thing and already cracking up inside.

"Street fight? Oh man, that's pure energy—barricades bending, fans turning into part of the spot. You'd want to ground it, control the pace, but out there? I'm weaving through the crowd like it's a dance floor, grabbing a sign for an impromptu block, then slinging it back your way with a wink. Last street brawl I had, some fan handed me a foam finger mid-scramble—turned it into the dumbest weapon ever, poking the guy until he tripped laughing. If that's the spin, I'll make it memorable, keep the crowd roaring while your structure scrambles to catch up."

He nods slowly, wiping a hand across his jaw like shaking off a phantom hit, the light catching his chain again as he leans a bit closer to the camera.

"Bury your opponent again? Ha, you got me good last time—shoveling that dirt like you were planting a flag. But I popped out of that hole like a bad prank, brushing it off and thinking, 'Alright, lesson learned—next round, I bring my own shovel.' If the wheel lands there? I'll treat the grave like a timeout spot, bursting back before you pat it flat, flipping the momentum with a surprise dive. No grudge, just fun—because getting buried once? That's motivation. Twice? Not on my watch."

He chuckles mid-thought, shaking his head at the memory, the truck's AC kicking on with a soft whir that blends into his easy rhythm.

"Steel cage? That's the one I'm quietly rooting for—no doors, just walls rattling like thunder. You'd thrive in the grind, locking down position, but me? I'm climbing those links like a kid on monkey bars, springing off the top for a splash that echoes. Remember that cage spot I botched early on? Slipped halfway up, turned it into a comedy slide right into a roll-up—crowd ate it up. If that's the spin, it'll be pure, no escapes, just us trading until one rhythm gives. And with my corner guy calling from outside those bars? He'll spot the climb angles I miss, keep Brooke's apron games from turning the bars into her playground."

The grin turns playful now, his laugh brighter as he gestures loose with one hand, painting the air like he's sketching out the absurdity.

"Or if it's something ridiculous like a strip match? Come on, that's gold—us yanking gear mid-lockup, crowd chanting for every layer. I'd be dodging your grabs like a slippery game of keep-away, turning a fumbled boot pull into the goofiest suplex ever. Picture it: halfway through, I'm down to one sock, using it as a whip—laughing so hard the ref has to pause. Doesn't matter how silly; I'll own it, make it the talk of the night. That's my vibe—having a blast with the curveballs, keeping loose while your certainty wonders what hit it."

He pauses for a beat, the light shifting as a cloud passes, his expression settling into that warm swagger, confident but inviting like he's pulling Logan into the joke.

"Saw that Carter Miles match—Helluva Bottom brought Tempest to his corner, and she walled off Brooke and Marissa like a pro. Don't know her whole deal, but she shut down the distractions cold, let Carter stay in his zone without the extra chaos. Smart—turned their tilts into dead ends. Me? I'm hoping Jasmine St. John's refs ours—she's got that fair eye, calls it straight, lets the action breathe without favorites or fluff. Keeps the wheel honest, no sneaky thumbs tipping the scales."

He leans forward slightly, voice steady but laced with humor, like he's sharing a beer with the camera instead of cutting a promo.

"Defending the title, proving the reign, locking the crown down. Respect, man—it's earned. But me? I'm building light—freedom to swing a little wilder, to laugh off a miss and turn it into gold. With my new orbit, that guy from the call in my corner? Brooke's clever steps, Marissa's timing glitches—they become my setups, half-beats I dance around like puddles. I'll track you through the static, flow past the noise, maybe even toss a wink their way as I counter. Because distractions only bite if you bite back, and I'm too busy having fun to chase."

A small pause, his grin sharpening just a touch, eyes lit with that forward-moving spark as he thinks back to old tapes.

"I've been waiting for this—not pacing the floor or replaying losses on loop, just... simmering, letting the energy build natural. Like that indie loop years ago, wheel spun a pillow fight of all things—me and this big brute swinging feathers like they were kendo sticks. I kept slipping on the fluff, turned it into comedy rolls that had the crowd in stitches, pinned him with a pillow smother while laughing my ass off. That's the mindset: any spin, I make it mine, keep the joy in the grind. Your structure's tight, but when the wheel throws curve after curve? That's where repetition breaks—yours, not mine. I adjust fresh every time."

The laugh bubbles up again, bright and genuine, as he gestures wider, the cab feeling smaller with his building enthusiasm, bags rustling like they're cheering him on.

"That shopping run earlier? Stacked the cart with stuff that keeps me comfortable—tape for quick fixes on torn gear, pads to absorb the silly falls, cup for those 'oops' knees that find me like magnets. Eye rakes sneaking in? Flush with drops, laugh it off. Gear pulls turning into wedgie wars? Balm for the burn, mouthguard against a throat jab gone wrong. Low blows, throat shoves, all the cheap tricks—if the wheel goes dirty, I'm geared up with insurance and a punchline, keeping the fun rolling without a hitch. Logan's measured game meets my prep? Those distractions from his side turn into my setups, half-beats I flow around like water on glass."

A nod, slow and thoughtful, as the sun dips lower, casting longer shadows across the dash, the promo building like the evening ahead.

"Remember Carter's scrap? Tempest locked down the interference, let him breathe without the sideshow. My corner man's cut from that cloth—quiet, sharp, spotting Brooke's apron hops or Marissa's stumbles before they land, turning their heat into my fuel. Jasmine reffing? Gold—fair stripes, no bias, lets the wheel's whims play out clean. That's the vibe I thrive in: no heavy loads, just forward laughs, building stories that stick long after the three-count."

He leans back a bit, grin settling into something steadier, the warmth still threading through like a steady hum.

"You haul that title like it's your anchor, Logan—the cement, the certainty, all that deliberate weight. Me? I'm sails in the wind—risking the gust, shifting sails without snag, having a ball as the storm builds. I've waited patient, not grinding teeth over bury losses or cage slips, just letting the itch grow into this good feel. Any spin's a gift: I'm in it for the ride, the adjustments that feel fresh every beat, the laughs that echo louder than the slams."

The laugh returns, softer now, as he holds the lens a moment longer, the truck's shadows lengthening like the promo's close.

"So yeah, Blaze of Glory. With my guy in the corner, the orbit humming, the wheel itching to whirl—let's see what chaos we stir. No stress, just pure, aligned fun. Make it interesting."

Ryan taps stop, but the grin lingers, phone buzzing with a text he ignores for now. The mystery hums on as he turns the key, truck rumbling to life, rolling toward whatever's next—the bags rattling softly in the back, the light fading into evening, the energy building without rush.