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( introlog #5 ) strangerer things
You have spent the last few days on Thesa Station, taking in the knowledge that your world is no more. Perhaps you've made some friends (or maybe an enemy or two). Either way, you aren't expected to spend all of your time on the Station. El Nysa needs you, after all, and you promised you'd help the planet thrive. Are you ready?
Submit an AC-eligible thread with a new character as a participant for 2 OLYMPIA REP POINTS OR 2 WYVER REP POINTS, respectively, HERE or HERE. THESA STATION
All refugees on the station are called to the hangar where a large-scale teleporter has been set up; everyone will be sent to the planet together. Simply step onto the space between the arrays and wait. Before they depart, all new refugees will be given a starter kit!
You may have heard about earlier technical difficulties, but don't worry. I promise everything is in perfect working order this time. I'd say I tested it myself, but since that's not exactly possible, you'll just have to trust me! (Please.) The older refugees will also be there to guide you to ensure no one is left confused... or behind. Make sure you wait for them — I've been detecting something odd so I'll be having them meet you at the landing site. Good luck, refugees! Not that you'll be needing it or anything... The arrays begin to hum and glow, quickly building into a brilliant wash of light. It creates a column that travels all the way from Thesa Station to the surface of El Nysa. With the night sky as a canvas, the beam can be seen all the way from Olympia and Wyver — a view that has the natives whispering of blessings. As a sudden but beautiful aurora splays across the sky, the refugees down on the planet receive a message asking them to travel to the landing site — and warning them to prepare for what may come of the strange readings Zasere's gotten from the teleport itself. ON A BEAM OF LIGHT ![]()
Traveling through the light leaves the impression of blinding starlight, a strange sense of weightlessness, and a disorienting moment of total sensory deprivation. The radiance of your teleport hangs bright in the sky above you, a shimmering aurora that reflects off the calm waters below, visible for miles all around.
You've landed on a peninsula to the east of the South Outpost. There's little here — scattered trees on spring-barren plains, with a few overgrown, dilapidated structures poking out of the brush. All is quiet save for the keening of animals and the gentle lapping of waves against the shore. This lonely desolation is hardly the bustling cities and vibrant cultures you were promised back on the station... BY CAMPFIRE'S GLOW. But waiting for you is a group of your predecessors, and with them, a veritable tent city, with portable stoves, coolers of food and drink, comfortable bedrolls, and cheerful rings of bonfires — all that you need to make merry of the night, courtesy of Overseer Voss, who has, thanks to his interest in blessed meteorological phenomena and refugees, decided to make a holy expedition of the affair. CLOSE ENCOUNTERS ![]()
Despite going off without hitch, the new refugees' arrival isn't entirely without incident. It seems that the "blessed" beam of light that brought the refugees down to El Nysa brought something else along with it — a sliver of the Storm. At least the beam was short enough that only a small fraction managed to squeeze through.
But it's enough to wreak a little havoc around the landing site and along the road back toward Olympia and Wyver — and even, for a few days, in the cities themselves. THE TRUTH IS OUT THERE. The Storm is an undeniably destructive force, and that's proven with this small sliver's effect as it ripples across the continent. While there's no visible sign of its presence, strange phenomena soon begin to appear, corresponding with Zasere's odd readings. DECISIONS, DECISIONS... ![]()
The time is coming to make a choice — perhaps not a permanent choice, but unless you want to spend the rest of your nights out under the stars, you'll need to pick which city you will initially spend your time in. On the horizon, you will see that people have arrived to help you make that decision...
A FORK IN THE ROAD. Refugees and the hyper-religious wishing to hear Voss speak are not the only ones out and about under the light of the aurora. Citizens of both Olympia and Wyver have flocked to a point on the road midway between the cities and where the refugees have appeared, and they all have the same goal in mind: convincing the newcomers who have just descended in the blessed light of Thesa to come to their city and not the other.You've chosen your path, refugee, but that doesn't necessarily make it a permanent one. Watch out for the strange effects of the Storm, which linger still in the two cities and everywhere in between for the next few days before dissipating just as mysteriously as they came, but otherwise enjoy the welcome and make yourself at home — after all, this is home now. FINAL OOC NOTES
An AC-eligible thread with a new character as a participant for 2 REP POINTS FOR EITHER OLYMPIA OR WYVER may be submitted from this log. SUBMIT THE THREAD FOR OLYMPIA OR WYVER HERE AND HERE RESPECTIVELY BY APRIL 29th 11:59 PM EST.
We will no longer be providing overflow posts. In an event where the post hits CAPTCHA, players are advised to move threads to an overflow post on their character journals or create their own catch-all post. These threads remain eligible for AC, AC Rewards, and REP. 1 SILVER = 1 US DOLLAR. |
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[ That's - unexpected. Highly unexpected. By had anticipated mistrust at worst, interest at best, and a lack of understanding all the way through. He had not anticipated empathy. And it is empathy, in truth; that's not pitying, just understanding. Understanding on a rather deep level. The sort of understanding he wouldn't even get from many Vor.
It throws him for a loop. If he were a bit more together, he'd summon up a bit of irony, a quip. But he's thrown to the point that the best that he can offer is a somewhat unsteady - ]
For the greater good of the Imperium.
[ A little blink, and then he works up something closer to a quip: ] And His Majesty was correct. I was out for revenge.
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But more importantly:]
But it was still through the job. And there was real reason to be concerned, especially if your emperor was doing the asking. Would you have hunted him down off the clock? Just out of spite?
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It wasn't through the job. [ A slight hesitation - ] My cousin Dono was up against Richars for the Vorrutyer countship. Dono was entitled to it by right of birth and by dint of his superior experience and competence. But he had to be confirmed by the Council of Counts, a squabble in which the Emperor - and ImpSec - was officially neutral. The Council was going to vote for Richars rather than Dono, so I decided to put my hand in on my own private time, which I think I had every right to do, being as I was a very interested party. And, yes, I did draw on some of my ImpSec resources to do so, but it's not as though I was pilfering the petty cash. But I still got in trouble for it, because things are so dreadfully unfair.
[ A theatrical pout. His foppish persona is still there, if perhaps a bit subdued compared to his usual clownishness. Non-murderous-non-magical-charming-and-witty-clownishness. ]
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[Richie tilts his head, puzzled. The letter jumble of foreign names makes it easy to lose threads, but he tries to keep up as best as he can. It's not as bad of a mouthful as some stuff he's heard (and shamefully, he has to admit he struggled more with Earth-based monikers like "Kitagawa" or "Kurusu" than he did with Richars and Dono. But then Byerly's lineage came from that same vague latin circle. Europe never stopped conquering, old habits dying hard.)
Even so, he's finding it difficult to believe that Byerly was truly in the wrong. Imagining a nut like Henry Bowers coming into a position of power makes sympathizing all too easy.]
And what would Richars have done if he got in?
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[ A shrug. ]
To be quite honest, I don't actually know. I can't really keep track of Countly power. What are they permitted to do? What aren't they? It's quite dreadfully convoluted. But one thing's for sure - he'd have kept being a complete son-of-a-bitch. And this time, he'd have been a son-of-a-bitch swelled with the validation of a room full of old men telling him you matter, we voted for you. One shudders to imagine the lows his popping ego would have led him to.
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Then it sounds like you did the world a favor. Or galaxy. Whichever. There's too many bullies in politics to contend with already. One less sadist should be a blessing.
[But then again—]
You didn't kill him, did you?
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Kill him?
[ The question is uttered with just a little too much surprise for the whole I'm-a-big-bad-hardened-killer routine he'd been trying to pull off in their earlier encounter. ]
No. I ensured he saw the inside of a prison and nothing but the inside of a prison.
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No, he likely could be dangerous when called for. Byerly was still skittish and overcautious, protective with a venomous bite. But bloodshed for the sake of a quicker fix? Thank the twinkling stars above, it turns out that's not his style. There's plenty of folks around here that seem too fond of their own trigger fingers. It's a daunting space to navigate. Sometimes Richie felt like the only Regular Joe in a sea of Sly Stallones.]
Well it's settled then. The son of a bitch finally got off the waiting list and into the jailbird suite. You might have snuck around to get it done, but hey, sometimes the ends do justify the means.
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[ By puts his hands in his pockets, and doesn't quite look at Richie; he studies, instead, Gregor (sitting, now, at his desk, working quietly on something, looking more like an accountant or a lawyer than the liege-lord of a three-planet empire) and that well-appointed office. But there's a pleased sort of cant to his lips. Spies are not beloved or respected, to be sure; to be given some small piece of approval is...Well. It doesn't matter that much, but it is something of a pleasure.
And so, with a hint more sincerity: ]
I do understand now. Why you didn't tell me about your mad butcher. I'd have thought you mad yourself, I suppose.
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There's more than one reason.
[His gaze too draws to the emperor. It's a quiet, thoughtful scene. A safe one. He supposes it would make sense to try for the door again, see if they can't find their way out eventually, but what if—
Want to play some more, Richie?
(Henry Bower's rumpled corpse on the motel floor. The shrieking comet from a time before man. Their return trip to the house on Neibolt street, the rock war to save Mike's skin. Stan's head in the fridge.)
He doesn't want to go further. Richie wets his lips.]
Byerly, I don't... [Richie squirms on the spot. He pinches the bridge of his nose and takes a deep breath.] There's some things you should know.
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What a delight. There's nothing I like better than knowing things.
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So I've gathered.
[He pauses, lost for words. It's a hell of a haystack he has to fish through to get that needle. The problem is so convoluted and he still doesn't have the full fucking picture.]
The thing is, you might have skated by just fine before. I wasn't being facetious when I said you were too old to worry about it. But now?
[He gives a helpless smile. You've seen it, buddy.] The thing is, you can't see It unless it wants to kill you. And the more you know, the more likely that'll be.
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What - your mad butcher? It's trying to keep its existence secret?
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Sure, the murders made the local papers, but the news stopped there. Nothing ever made it national. Nine, ten, eleven dead kids? More? All ripped apart with no lead on the case? That should make national news, but it never did. Not now, not in '59, not in 1930-whatever, or any time before. Every twenty-seven years or so, the whole town takes on this stupor, and it's been doing that since the first stupid pilgrims set foot in that valley.
[Richie takes a thin inhale.] And there were times when you could be crying for help, and all the people around you would simply look the other way. Can't explain it themselves. Didn't seem like big trouble to them, not until it's too late. The last day there...the place looked like a ghost town. Just the seven of us and Henry Bower's gang. It didn't want an audience so everyone just became busy.
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And the origin of this stupor is...magical. Not financial or criminal. Something deeper than that. [ A little purse of his lips. ] That's why your bully - Henry - why he went mad? Got blamed?
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He did kill his father. I...I think It told him to.
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The turtle wouldn't let it.
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Uh - beg pardon?
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Hmm?
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Who's - the Turtle?
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[Richie gives him a sound squint.
He looks the door over again. His earlier apprehension is dissipating. Somehow this office is starting to wear at his nerves. Prickling. Claustrophobic.]
Maybe we should give it one more try.
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You just did. You looked like you were a hundred kilometers away and then said that the Turtle wouldn't allow it.
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Seems to me the boy's lost his marbles.
[He takes strides to the door, as if compelled by a bravado bigger than himself. He flings it open and for a half mad second, expects to see the wide plastic face of Paul Bunyan leaning down to peer inside. "I'm gonna eat you right the fuck up—"
But instead, it's the woods. Darkening skies, and a small boy approaching an abandoned Amana fridge with a coil of clothesline clutched tight in hand. Blood has been splattered along the path up to its door. Too much blood.
The boy was the same one from the bicycle, Big Bill Denbrough. Stuttering Bill as the rest of the school knew him. Stuttering Freak, Mushmouth.
Another voice floats through to the Emperor's office, from a gaggle of children out of sight. "You could bring Chief Borton and Mr. Nell and a hundred other cops down here and it still wouldn't matter."
Richie stiffens in the doorframe.]
Stan?
[He ducks through as his own self chimes in, pitch upped by baby vocal chords but with the same cavalier shit he slung as a grown up. "Nope, they wouldn't see a frockin thing. How's your arm, Bev?"
"Hurts. Would my Mom and Dad see the hole that thing made in my arm?"
"I d-d-don't th-think s-s-so. Get reh-ready to ruh-ruh-run. I'm gonna t-t-tie it uh-uh-on."
When Byerly deigns to join him, he'll get the full view of all six children. Beverly, preternaturally beautiful with her red curls pulled back into braids and a crimson patch of gauze held over one arm. Mike with his dark skin that made him a bullseye among easy targets, owl-eyed and in his farm overalls. Richie in his dweeby glasses, Ben Hanscom in the sweater he used to disguise his wide gut and flabby boy tits. Grown up Richie has beelined to a fastidious looking boy, whose shirt is buttoned to the collar and wears less scrapes and scuffs than the rest of the lot, even the curls atop his head were neater than a child's should be. A tiny adult among reckless youths.
Richie stands by him, unable to look away. Jaw clenched tight and his hands in his pockets.]
...It's supposed to be seven. Eddie's still in the hospital.
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[ Aren't they a raggedy bunch. Not in the way children should be, either. There's a certain look that kids have when they have scraped knees, when they've pushed each other to the ground, when they're in nasty little scuffles. There's a different sort of look when they're absolutely at the end of their rope. He remembers it from his cousin Donna's face, after Richars had talked all the grown-ups into believing that she'd killed her own puppy in a hysterical fit. A look of such utter exhaustion and despair that it seemed like she wouldn't even go on. It hadn't eased until Byerly had gone to her and told her, quietly, I believe you.
God. "Would they see the hole it made in my arm." This goes beyond adults' idiocy, their susceptibility to smooth-talkers and sociopaths. Not just being fooled - being completely unable to see. There's something chilling about that, something far more terrifying than a slavering wolf-thing. He imagines, for a moment, being one of those adults, standing beside a child getting ripped apart, ensorcelled, unable even to notice, and he wants to heave.
Richie's warning, that knowing puts him in danger - well, to hell with that. He's glad to have seen it, glad to know of its monstrosity. To be blind to evil is worse by far than to fall to it. ]
Good heavens, those glasses truly don't suit you. You've really come up in the world in terms of sartorial choices.
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