The Mods of LifeAftr (
lifeaftr_mods) wrote in
aftr_stories2018-10-19 08:54 pm
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Entry tags:
- ;event: storytelling,
- dear evan hansen: connor murphy,
- final fantasy xv: ardyn izunia,
- final fantasy xv: ignis scientia,
- fragile dreams: ren,
- hollow knight: the knight,
- hyper light drifter: the drifter,
- marble hornets: tim wright,
- mass effect: legion,
- red vs. blue: agent washington,
- the league: jules dagger samari,
- voltron: keith kogane,
- voltron: takashi shirogane,
- ✖ captive prince: damianos,
- ✖ captive prince: laurent,
- ✖ ffxv: gladiolus amicitia,
- ✖ ffxv: prompto argentum,
- ✖ hollow knight: troupe master grimm,
- ✖ hyper light drifter: the guardian,
- ✖ no.6: shion,
- ✖ pacific rim: newton geiszler,
- ✖ persona 5: ann takamaki
[MU] - FEELING LIKE A GHOST (PART II)
"No, no...no!"
The Storyteller's voice cuts through the inkdrop-dark, frantic and scrambling. A distant blot of campfire gutters in the far distance - far from where you are. The disorientation of the week preceding this one has translated into Mu, and everything is hopelessly out of place. The Storyteller sounds muffled, clearly addressing someone or something else, their voice cushioned by the uniform, void-like night.
"Stop it. Stop it! I wasn't gone for very long at all. You can't behave for two weeks? You have to make it all...all...wrong? I can't keep this up - not with what I've had to do since returning - !"
Gradually, however, the shadowy campsite solidifies into being. Or...a semblance of it does, in any case. Four glistening pyres rear out from the shadows, each glowing a different color. The strange material that domes them almost resembles worked steel, forming different patterns against their multicolored backdrops.
"Will you let them at least make the choice I left to gave them?" When there is no response, they sigh. "If you can hear me...I can't make it clearer than that, at the moment. Pick one. Pick one, quickly, and try to get out before it decides to make things worse! Just add a stick to whichever one looks best to you!"
Unfortunately, whether you abstain from voting or make your choice, that's not all there is to this night...
Tonight's Storytelling, further warped by Mu's capricious nature, will likely feel familiar to those of you who were with us in December of the year prior. Only this time, you don't get much choice in what kind of story you're telling...or, indeed, any choice in the matter at all. As you wake by the Storytelling campfire, Mu shifts to form three separate events from your character's present - which is to say, within one full year of their current canonpoint - in the most stark and painstaking of detail. There is no altering the memory, nor is there any preventing it once it's begun to play. You will simply have to witness memories that are not your own this go around.
Furthermore, stories that take place in worlds other than LifeAftr will be, frankly, inevitable. Those memories, too, will be recreated, to be relived by the teller and lived by the listener.
While the initial setting will be familiar for oldcomers, and newcomers will recognize it from the introduction they received in their dreams, things will be far more similar to the memory share that occurred in December. All memories must be from within one year of your character's canonpoint. For questions, please refer to our OOC event post!
Even those who prefer not to voice their stories aloud are not safe this time around. The memory does not need to be willingly recalled in essence in order for Mu will shift to accommodate it in full.
Just like the last time this happened, all memories will be worth two offerings each, as if in compensation. So at least there's that!
The Storyteller's voice cuts through the inkdrop-dark, frantic and scrambling. A distant blot of campfire gutters in the far distance - far from where you are. The disorientation of the week preceding this one has translated into Mu, and everything is hopelessly out of place. The Storyteller sounds muffled, clearly addressing someone or something else, their voice cushioned by the uniform, void-like night.
"Stop it. Stop it! I wasn't gone for very long at all. You can't behave for two weeks? You have to make it all...all...wrong? I can't keep this up - not with what I've had to do since returning - !"
Gradually, however, the shadowy campsite solidifies into being. Or...a semblance of it does, in any case. Four glistening pyres rear out from the shadows, each glowing a different color. The strange material that domes them almost resembles worked steel, forming different patterns against their multicolored backdrops.
[ ♆ ] The first glows a deep crimson, kicking scarlet embers into the dream-night air. Its pit sphere portrays a crowd of people in silhouette, heads bowed in genuflection - paying homage to some looping, many-coiled shape in the sky above.Beside each pyre is heaped a pile of sticks, colored to correspond to their respective flames. The Storyteller sounds agitated when they manage to speak again:
[ ♆ ] The second glows a deep orange. Its pit sphere is worked into the shape of a looming mountain, with what might be some sort of village or ruin sprawled at its base.
[ ♆ ] The third's flames are a rich green. Its designs are most abstract; the starburst patterns that swirl across the metallic composition of its fire pit sphere could be explosions, maybe...or something else entirely.
[ ♆ ] The fourth pyre is one bearing host to golden flames, amber sparks sprayed out from behind the shape of a set of scales nestled among a flurry of birdlike shapes.
"Will you let them at least make the choice I left to gave them?" When there is no response, they sigh. "If you can hear me...I can't make it clearer than that, at the moment. Pick one. Pick one, quickly, and try to get out before it decides to make things worse! Just add a stick to whichever one looks best to you!"
Unfortunately, whether you abstain from voting or make your choice, that's not all there is to this night...
Tonight's Storytelling, further warped by Mu's capricious nature, will likely feel familiar to those of you who were with us in December of the year prior. Only this time, you don't get much choice in what kind of story you're telling...or, indeed, any choice in the matter at all. As you wake by the Storytelling campfire, Mu shifts to form three separate events from your character's present - which is to say, within one full year of their current canonpoint - in the most stark and painstaking of detail. There is no altering the memory, nor is there any preventing it once it's begun to play. You will simply have to witness memories that are not your own this go around.
Furthermore, stories that take place in worlds other than LifeAftr will be, frankly, inevitable. Those memories, too, will be recreated, to be relived by the teller and lived by the listener.
While the initial setting will be familiar for oldcomers, and newcomers will recognize it from the introduction they received in their dreams, things will be far more similar to the memory share that occurred in December. All memories must be from within one year of your character's canonpoint. For questions, please refer to our OOC event post!
Even those who prefer not to voice their stories aloud are not safe this time around. The memory does not need to be willingly recalled in essence in order for Mu will shift to accommodate it in full.
Just like the last time this happened, all memories will be worth two offerings each, as if in compensation. So at least there's that!
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Is that...another island?
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[He's doing such a great job explaining.]
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Murders? What are you talking about?
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Your fiancé. Your happy ending. You...
[The words slow down, trickle, stop.]
You remember how you died, right?
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[ She almost laughs. And then she doesn't, because Wash...he doesn't joke around like this. He wouldn't.
There's a pause, a long silence, and then she speaks again, her voice calm and carefully measured. ]
I died in the Insurrectionists' command base, Wash.
[ The Insurrection. Charon. It doesn't matter, because they both know what happened, exactly where it had all gone south so quickly. ]
Tex killed me.
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[The word's drawn out slowly, as if that will make it any more or less horrifying: dawning realization, and the way that none of what he's saying makes the least amount of sense.]
You died here too. Do you remember how?
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Or at least, she'd thought it was. Now she's not so sure.
Wash doesn't explain further, though, and then he continues and she drops her head again in shame. That much, she remembers. ]
I was...
[ She trails off, and then frowns suddenly, brow furrowed in intense thought. ]
I was following...someone. We were trying to go...
[ Somewhere. Why can't she remember? It had seemed so important. She shakes her head. ]
...You were trying to stop me.
But I wouldn't listen to you.
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[There it is. That sinking feeling. That's her penalty. That's her drawback. That's her consequence for dying. The part where she doesn't get to remember any of it.]
[How much time does that have her missing? How many people?]
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But every time she tries to focus on that, every time she tries to call up a face in her mind, it slips away into formless mist. She shakes her head, frustrated. ]
I don't know.
[ And now she's starting to get scared. ]
What happened, Wash?
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[How does someone fix this? Is there a fix? It goes away after a little while, but how long? What's the typical time frame for this kind of thing?]
This isn't the first world you've been to. Do you not remember any of that?
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[ She shakes her head again, hair flying. ]
Who was I following? Where was I trying to go?
[ Why can't she remember? ]
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[What he wouldn't have given for that to be the case. Even if it meant she was gone, that would be better than this, wouldn't it?]
His name was Varric. You knew him.
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He sounds so certain, so serious, that CT feels suddenly cold all over. Because she doesn't remember any of it. Home? What does that even mean?
Home isn't Freelancer. It isn't the military. It isn't Charon. ]
I don't have a home.
[ No, that's not right, either, is it? ]
This is my home.
[ Wash is here. Carolina's here. She has a pet and a routine and she's making other friends.
It's not perfect, obviously. It's not even always safe. But she's alive and she's not alone, and most of the time, she's even happy. What else does she need? ]
I don't know any Varric. And I don't want to go anywhere else.
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[Stop being so goddamned cryptic, Washington. But even if he explained it to her, would she believe him? Would she have any reason to? He barely understands it himself, doesn't have nearly all the context - ]
Your memories. I'm...
I don't think explaining it will make it make any more sense.
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And that would be the end of it, and everything would be fine, except Wash keeps talking about things that make no sense. Except she can't remember the man she'd followed through the woods, or the home that had seemed so important. Except her "memories" might as well have been scenes from someone else's life...might have been, had she not seen herself clearly in them, laughing and dancing and talking to people she's never met before. Embracing strangers as if they were family.
She crosses her arms over her chest, curling in on herself. The thing is...it's impossible. A fiance. A future. None of it could have happened. ]
I was dead.
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[The first thing you learn, with the Reds and Blues, is that people who are allegedly dead are often far from it. It's seldom if ever that simple. We really need to stop saying that.]
[Sometimes it's for the best. Sometimes, not so much. It's almost always confusing.]
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[ But I don't remember. Or more to the point, she does remember - remembers dying, remembers washing up here. Nothing in between.
It's implausible enough that she'd ended up here. Having what sounds like a whole other life in between? She shakes her head. ]
Who's Varric, Wash?
Tell me what I forgot.
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[...]
[Nothing presents itself, and the question has gone unanswered for entirely too long.]
You...you said that you and him were engaged.
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That's impossible, for any number of reasons. Wash is hiding behind his helmet, and she wishes she could see his face, but she also really can't blame him.
Engaged. But to who? She still doesn't know who he is. How she'd met him. Anything about him. ]
...I can't be.
I'm with...
[ Someone else. But she isn't, not anymore. She'd died and left him behind. ]
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[Who knows her, from then? Fuck...Pyrrha? He doesn't know. She said she knew Ardyn, but he clearly doesn't know her, and very clearly doesn't want anything to do with her either, which has made being neighbors its own trial.]
I - Pyrrha. She and you, you seemed like you knew each other from back then. Does that sound familiar at all?
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[ Their neighbor. Her...friend, maybe? She'd always been nice, CT likes her, but...no. Of course not. ]
I swear, Wash, the only people I know from back then are you guys.
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[He doesn't even have the full fucking context. How's he supposed to explain this? He has no idea.]
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[ As if he doesn't know. As if he could have forgotten. ]
So what, someone brought me back and I - did what, Wash? Went out and found a new fucking boyfriend? Got engaged?
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[None of this is going to sound any more believable to her in the slightest. Why is he even bothering - bothering to explain it to her? Wake the fuck up - is this helping anyone?]
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[ It certainly isn't helping her to understand anything. She cuts herself off, going silent for a moment, before speaking again, quietly, urgently. ]
Wash, if this is some kind of a joke -
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