divus: (Default)
Plasmatio Mods ([personal profile] divus) wrote2019-03-03 01:40 am
Entry tags:

THE GRAVEYARD

THE LANDING
You’re having an out of body experience. That’s how it starts, dying. There isn’t any pain anymore, and for a moment, not much of anything else. Your thoughts are a dim hum in the back of your brain, the tips of your fingers seem miles away. Despite that, you find yourself moving, moving, moving from the last place you were in your own body and forward, until you reach a door that you haven’t seen since the beginning of the game. A door that wouldn’t open. A door cold to the touch and seeping with mist. It opens before you, and as if of someone else’s design you walk through it. As it closes behind you, you get the distinct feeling that if you turned around, you’d find it vanished.

What takes up most of your attention, however, is the tolling of church bells. They clang in rhythmic, almost maddening persistence--seems you’re just going to have to try and ignore them, as they show no signs of slowing or stopping, wherever they are.

Once the cacophony becomes easier to manage, the bong, bong, bonging evening out to a pulse inside your ears, you realize that where you are seems to be a world that's incomplete. The floor is nothing but a landing of invisible matter, a spooled red carpet leading you to a few rows of pews and a lone confessional.

You will notice, immediately ahead of you, a cute little mailbox fit for a suburban home. It bids you welcome, though the cheery paint job is a bit muted in this dark place.

Simple and neat furnishings dot the edges of where the landing seems to be: railings mark the unseen edges and draperies and sconces float in the void, giving an illusion of walls. Be careful, however, because they can easily be fallen through if leaned against. Fortunately, someone seems to have kept that in consideration, as a helpful sign warns just this.

On one side of the confessional, a room with bookshelves, a writing table, and pens and paper has been provided: a minimalist study for when you need a bit of privacy to think. On the other side, a wing of dorm-sized, lockable bedrooms provide another bit of space to oneself. There may not be enough for everyone, but nobody really has to sleep--so just take turns!

To the left of the pews, it looks like a miniature bar has been crafted with a small but decent selection of drinks. There's a small television seated on the counter, but it only seems to ever work two times a week: the week's opening announcement on Monday mornings, and Saturdays, tuning in at the beginning of the trial and tuning back out again at its conclusion. There's also a piano to one side of the bar, allowing anyone to provide musical accompaniment to their drinking.

Perhaps most interestingly, an ornate black doorway at the far end of the room leads to a curving hallway that ultimately leads to what appears to be a temple. It's similar to the altar room they'll remember from the living side, but there are no power inscriptions, and the only furnishings are wavering, grayscale candles on the walls that never seem to burn low and great sculptures of leaping rams. The two black-marble statues meet in the center, curved horns joined above a platform, decorated with nothing but a lone offering bowl. The dark marble of the item is cracked, but it seems like it'll still get the job done. Try sending something, if you wish!

Maybe this place is meant to be more. But for now, Patience is the only notable figure you have to place your attention on, and she comes forward to welcome you immediately.

"Welcome to my dominion," she greets in her usual, cheerful candor, and points at your hand, where you hold your godly token. "Now that you've been eliminated, I'll take that back and return it on your behalf. Don't worry, though, I'm not leaving you empty handed."

OOC NOTES
Hello, eliminated competitors, and welcome to the graveyard. Although it isn't much to look at, now, this area will be growing and expanding in time with the help of your characters' actions and participation in weekly events. What they unlock will have an impact on the living side, overarching plot elements, and ways to communicate between both planes!

When it seems like there isn't much to do, there's always one option left: gathering information. So sit back, enjoy the afterlife, and put on your thinking cap!

artificialhighness: (046)

[personal profile] artificialhighness 2019-03-25 08:49 am (UTC)(link)
I expected death. That was easy. It was only a matter of how long I would tolerate it.

[She surrounds herself in the eternal seeds which she has planted, as brazenly and as endlessly and as mercilessly as she can. Because no one else will plant them. Because no one else can even see the possibility anymore.

That has always been death: the end of possibility.

She's quiet for a stretch, before she raises her eyes again -- the gaze is as cutting as it is hollow, an endless and unyielding darkness.]

With enough time, and enough faces, and enough everything -- you realize that speaking of good and evil and all that is in between is merely a luxury. It is a way to run away from the truth. Life. Death. If you take away eternity, then those are the only two choices.

[Her voice is still smooth, though the reasoning may be coming out a little left-of-center at this point. Her fingers tighten, digging into an arm.]

There are things I would prefer not to do. But I will defeat death and bring salvation.
hymned: (yoυ coυld never wear мy crown)

[personal profile] hymned 2019-03-25 09:18 am (UTC)(link)
[ She fails to intimidate him, whether by her empty gaze or her words, and he simply meets her gaze with his own, expressionless and blank. It's rhetoric that he-- hasn't exactly heard before, but the general sentiment of it. The general direction of it...

He's so tired of all of this. ]


Good and evil are subject to human definition, that much is true. Evil was the word we used in our discussion then, but fire against fire is much the same content, and of lesser connotation. Regardless, I didn't want for us to get hung up on the semantics, so perhaps it's my fault for not simply leading with the wording I'd intended for this particular conversation.

[ Death, then, to combat more death. ]

You haven't answered me, Luna. You would have sown death in attempt to defeat it. How? Where would you have drawn the line?

[ If any at all? ]
artificialhighness: (059)

[personal profile] artificialhighness 2019-03-25 09:26 am (UTC)(link)
[To be fair, her intent wasn't intimidation -- it's debatable whether there was much intent at all, in most of her expressions. She's less deliberate here, and simply moves and speaks like the sounds reverberating off a drum. Distant and echoing.

She's a robot, and doesn't tire. Physically. She could do this forever, if she had to.

Julius simply gets a nod for his explanation, accepting his redirection. To her, it isn't just a matter of semantics. It's a matter of the concepts themselves, regardless of whether the definition is human, or robotic. And that, too, could take forever. She doesn't bother. Instead, quietly:]

I answered you. If there is a sickness in the harvest, then one may need to clear the field and start anew. There will always be seeds. That is how life is.

[There is no line.]
hymned: (everyone wιѕнeѕ ғor a genтler world)

[personal profile] hymned 2019-03-29 04:34 am (UTC)(link)
... Part of me wants to be appalled at what you're saying, but on some level, I think I can understand it. I don't necessarily agree, but maybe that's just because of my perspective as one of those fleeting lives that would be a part of said harvest, rather than the removed entity doing the reaping.

[ You start thinking of the big picture, and then the bigger picture that picture is contained within, and keep going and...

The trees that make up the forest don't matter, and the mountain of corpses you leave behind seem no more than molehills when the goal in the end supposedly eclipses it. To kill, and kill, and kill in pursuit of the ideal of protection, of sustaining life as a whole...?

Perhaps this is why he can't judge her, the same way he also was unable to entirely condemn Itachi and the other murderers among them. ]


What were you to your people, Luna?