The Big Applesauce Moderators (
applesaucemod) wrote in
applesaucedream2015-08-28 09:05 pm
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Entry tags:
- character: asmodia antarion,
- character: daine sarrasri,
- character: greta baker,
- character: iman asadi,
- character: johnny truant,
- character: peeta mellark,
- character: rashad durant,
- character: sunshine,
- character: the balladeer,
- dropped: daniel jackson,
- dropped: glados,
- dropped: jay merrick,
- dropped: mako mori,
- dropped: nicholas rush,
- dropped: the tardis,
- dropped: tim wright,
- dropped: wheatley,
- dropped: zagreus,
- party post
What's Stopping Us From Breathing Easy [Open to All]

Dreamers of Manhattan, you've lucked out. Rather than finding yourselves in some kind of dystopian nightmare, you'll end up in a series of formal gardens on a lovely day, the air filled with birdsong and a cloud-scattered sky arching overhead. Some of the gardens look a bit wilder than others, in an artful sort of way, but it's clear that all of the gardens are well kept and frequently tended. Aside from each other, dreamers aren't likely to run into any creature larger than a rabbit. True, there are no actual exits - every doorway or arbor leads to another garden - but that's hardly a problem. It's beautiful, it's safe... what could go wrong?
Well, that depends on the dreamer's honesty. No uncomfortable truths will drop unbidden from anyone's mouths like last time, but the dreamers will find that any time they attempt to lie or prevaricate, they'll be beset by a sneezing fit. A tiny lie by omission might only prompt that uncomfortable feeling of an impending sneeze; a larger, more significant (or more stubborn) fib will lead to a sneeze attack so crippling that the dreamer might just need to sit down for a minute.
You could try to pass it off as allergies, if you could get the words out without making everything worse. But while telling the truth is not compulsory, lying is punishable - and pretty well obscured - by sneezes.
[OOC: Usual dream party rules apply. All are welcome to participate regardless of whether they've been apped in the game or not. Dreamers can remember or forget the events of the dream at the players' discretion.]
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It's lovely, though, isn't it? Greta spares herself a wistful little sigh - she wouldn't mind having grounds like this to wander - but... no. This isn't for her. The longer she lingers here, the more likely she is to be interrupted by a sounding of trumpets and a clatter of hoofbeats, and goodness knows how she'll excuse her presence here if one of the Princes finds her. Did she just... wander in, accidentally? She must have. What was she thinking?
Greta turns about, heels scraping over the gravel path. For the moment, at least, she is alone. With a little luck, she might be able to find her way out before whoever owns this place discovers her.
"Right," she whispers to herself before setting off at a brisk walk.
All goes well until she reaches an arched doorway covered in ivy, and there she stills uncertainly. What if there's someone on the other side? She presses herself close to the ivy, worrying her lower lip between her teeth. Then, with as much caution as she can muster, she starts to edge through the doorway, awkwardly caught between trying to hide in the ivy and trying to peer past it to what might lie beyond.
well I wouldn't say Iman is going to "lie" beyond ( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)
Is this a dream? It might be a dream. Who cares?
Why is she so-
Oh.
She looks down at her left hand. A hand again, not the metal claw she's had in so many recent dreams. She wiggles her fingers. Flexes them. She smiles.
Rush fixed it. She remembers now.
A sudden rustling draws her attention and she turns to look behind her, finding an ivy-laden archway she hadn't noticed, and sort of tucked into it, like a child trying to play hide-and-seek, is-
"Greta!" she grins broadly. The only thing that could have made this nicer. She reaches out with both hands to draw her into the open. "I'm so happy you're here!"
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That's a relief. Well, the garden's presumed lack of ownership is, anyway.
"Iman!" She belatedly returns the grin, taking Iman's hands - she has both of them again! - and letting her friend draw her out into the sunlight. Her gaze drops, both in response to the glare and in general embarrassment. (There would be more of the latter if she knew just how much greenery was currently caught in her hair.) "I was so certain I was trespassing," she admits, smiling down at the new-old symmetry of Iman's hands, giving the left one a fond brush with her thumb. "Thought you might be a royal guardsman for half a moment, there."
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"Finally a good dream," she remarks. "Honestly I think this is the best - best possible-"
She can't continue, overcome by a very sudden, very intense itch that turns into a loud sneeze. She lets go over Greta's hand to catch it with her wrist, doubling over and just holding that position for a moment, blinking in surprise.
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It's just a dream, after all. No one is actually tending this place.
"Oh!" she says, startled by the sudden sneeze. "Goodness. All right?" She gives Iman's back a gentle pat. It's not hay fever or something, is it? Can that even happen in dreams? Even if it could, she doubts that's the culprit; Iman's never had issues around flowering plants before.
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She feels a bit odd. Something about that did not seem normal. But she's not quite ready to analyze it yet.
"I don't think I've ever sneezed in a dream before," she hazards. "But then again there's a lot of things that happen in these dreams that... you know, wouldn't, usually." And a fair few things she wishes would happen in real life. She clears her throat. "So, uh, what do you want to do? Explore? Find a shady spot?"
It's odd to have a dream with no apparent goal - no objective to be met. Seems like it's been a while. She aims to goddamn enjoy it.
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Especially with a setting this lovely. Now that she's no longer afraid of being caught out, she allows herself to really look around the garden with an appreciative eye, and listen to the volleys of birdsong being traded back and forth. It's a garden worthy of a Queen, and she and Iman get free rein over it. That's worth an inexplicable sneeze or two.
"Let's explore," she says with a grin, reclaiming Iman's hand. "I never imagined I'd--tschoo!" She blinks into the crook of her own elbow, then slowly lifts her head. "Um. Pardon me." That came on awfully sudden. She sniffs, then tries again. "I was just saying, I'd n--" she feels it this time, a tell-tale ache in her sinuses, and she pauses, waiting for the sensation to pass, before hazarding, "never..."
It's back. Greta falls silent, lips pressed together in consternation as the feeling fades.
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More or less like what just happened to her, she realizes. But what ties these events together? What did their two aborted statements have in common? They were both claiming things, in fairly declarative ways. Could it be exaggeration that triggers it, or-
Or...
Oh no.
"Oh," she says, realizing abruptly that Greta has finished. Suddenly she's tense. Uneasy. This is terrible. If she's right, this is terrible. And it has the potential to get much worse. If Greta figures it out. If she asks the wrong question - if Iman says the wrong thing-
"You okay?" she says, forcing a smile. "Hah. We could just rest, if you like. That would be f- fine with-" She yanks her hand back again to catch the sneeze and groans immediately afterward.
This cannot be happening.
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Iman sneezes again, and Greta scowls. "I don't want to rest," she says with just a touch of petulance. If that's the Rift's plan - give them a nice setting to explore and then distract them with sneezing fits so no one gets to actually enjoy it - she won't be giving into it that easily. "I want to have a look 'round." Also, apparently, unobjectionable. She casts a suspicious look up at the sky, then drops her gaze back to Iman. "Don't you?" she asks, the question hard-edged with determination. If they both want to explore, then they're doing it, whether the Rift wants to make it easy for them or not.
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This will be fine. She just needs to avoid stumbling onto dangerous topics. Like how she feels. And what she wants to do. Like. In addition to exploring.
Oh god.
She grits her teeth, steels her resolve, and moves onward. She can do this.
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After a minute of silent meandering unbroken by any such fits, though, Greta cautiously relaxes a little. "It's beautiful here," she says. It comes out easily, no tell-tale itching, and she breathes out a little more tension. Maybe it was just some... freak spell, or something. She looks over at Iman and smiles. "Does your universe have anything like this?" Honestly, she wouldn't put anything past a universe that had produced Iman, but she also sort of assumes it's all sleek and extra-new-looking, a step or two above Manhattan.
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Dirt flies as she comes bursting back up out of the earth, swaying in slightly drunken surprise. She drags one foot out of the churned-up earth to plant it on firm ground, looks around, and stops before she can use the leverage to haul out the second foot. "Oh, it's you," she says to one of the women before her. Then, after only a flicker of thought, "I see how it is. Well, we all die eventually. Come over here and help me out. Come on, come on, come on!"
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Why is she here? Why is she here?
The Witch looks at her with the usual disdain, and then--then there's talk of dying, and Greta's grip on Iman's arm tightens to a probably painful degree.
"Wh--" she starts, at a complete loss. She certainly makes no move to help. "I..."
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"Greta?" she asks in a low voice. She covers her hand with her own, trying to draw her eyes. Greta obviously knows her, but she doesn't want to ask who it is directly, doesn't want to risk causing a sneezing fit if Greta doesn't want to answer right. She steps out as much as Greta's hold will allow, trying to move subtly in between her and this new woman, but she can't pull her arm free. "Greta, it's gonna be-" She feels the telltale tickle at the back of her throat and shuts her mouth sharply, eyes widening, her blood running ice fucking cold. No. No.
Who is this woman? What is she going to do? What has she done? Iman turns on her with a flash of preemptive anger and tries harder to pull away, to storm over and confront this situation head on like she always does, but Greta won't let her go.
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She gives a surprised sniff, then shakes her head and concentrates on throwing her weight into freeing that second foot. It's the work of a moment, and then she's standing atop her own little dirt pile like a queen on a hill. Or like a raven on a grave mound. "Who's your friend?" she asks Greta, tilting her chin as though to look over the woman currently trying to put herself between them. "I don't remember seeing you in the woods. Let me guess: for you, it went a little something like splat!"
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"We're dreaming." The words fly out of her like arrows, or a protective spell. This isn't real. They're just dreaming. The Witch can't harm them.
But that doesn't stop her from scowling when the Witch turns her attention to Iman, sizing her up, another person Greta cares about in the cross-hairs. "And she is none of your concern," she says--growls, really, and some distant part of her is embarrassed by her own ferocity. She pulls Iman back, or pushes herself forward, placing herself between her friend and the Witch.
She knows she's being foolish - exceptionally so. Even if the Witch can't harm them, she might have answers, might be able to tell her how the others are faring, and Greta won't get them by challenging her. But even the hint of a threat to Iman is more than she can abide. "Haven't you done enough damage?" she asks bitterly.
Evidently not, if she's here at all.
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She reaches out slowly to rest a hand on her back. Neither of them is standing alone here. They're together.
"This is a shared dream," she interjects, forcing herself to stay subdued and fact-based. She doesn't want to complicate matters. "We're all dreaming, and all in the same dream. We aren't de-"
A sneeze bursts out of her, muffled quickly on the back of her wrist.
She stares in irritation at the ground, then at this intruding woman. Well, if she's dead, it stands to reason she'd assume the same of everyone else. Like this was some sort of afterlife. "Well, we're-"
She sneezes again.
What?
What?
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Rolling her eyes, she takes a moment to look around the garden surrounding them. "Could be worse," she decides. "Could be better. You never did answer my question."
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She wants to beg for more information. She needs to know everything. She wishes for a less pitiless source. It could have been anyone; why did it have to be her?
"I'm not dead," she insists, trembling beneath Iman's hand. What cruel nonsense. "I'm in a different universe, I'm not--I'm not dead." She makes a sound that might have aspired to be a derisive laugh, but comes out closer to a cough, or a sob. She fell, yes, but she landed safely, she was fine, just tragically far from home.
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Greta is having no trouble insisting that she isn't dead - but what are the rules, exactly, for this dream's absurd premise? Do people have to be aware they are speaking an untruth, or able to reasonably doubt? Or is it a technicality - that she isn't dead, currently, but perhaps - before she was taken-
Why is she even thinking along these lines?
"Who are you?" she asks the woman finally, her voice low and dangerous, if only to cover the unease she feels bubbling up beneath the surface.
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It's almost funny how the other two women keep huddling up against each other, each trying to stop the other from coming near as though physical distance has ever been a factor. She's getting more than a little tired of the denials, too. She has better things to do, surely.
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She's still shaking, a constant shudder she can't be bothered to classify. It might be fear. It might just as easily be rage. Iman's arm around her shoulders is a very distant comfort, and she leans against her friend instinctively.
"What happened?" she demands of the Witch. "Did you defeat the Giant? Did... my family, Jack, the Girl, are they...?" she can't bring herself to finish the question, to voice her deepest fears. What did they do without her?
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She smiles grimly. "Well, never mind. Let's just say it's not my problem anymore. Like I said, you'll probably see them soon enough. There's a Giant stomping around the kingdom, if you hadn't heard."
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Greta curls in on herself with a broken cry, as if the Witch had driven a blade into her. She can't bear it--not the thought of Jack weeping over her after the way she used him, not the thought of them all being left alone to face the Giant, not the fact that the Witch can't even tell her anything more, something helpful, something that doesn't confirm the worries she's been burying since she arrived.
"That's not... that can't be--" she starts, before a sneeze cuts her off, and she lets out a bark of frustration. Why is this happening now? "I--I'm not--" another sneeze, and she slumps against Iman, her breath coming fast and shallow.
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