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applesaucemod) wrote in
applesaucedream2014-11-28 03:50 pm
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Can't Stand the Distance, Can't Dream Alone [open to all]
The sleeping rifties might have a difficult time realizing they're dreaming this evening, in part because tonight's dreams are atypically vivid, even compared to the rift's usual efforts. Perhaps that is because it's drawing so heavily from the memories of the dreamers, themselves, and using that information to recreate their home worlds in stunning detail. And that is the real reason the dreamers might not be eager to accept the unreality of the situation: the situation is one that many of them have been hoping for for months or even years. In their dreams tonight, the rifties are going home.
Perhaps they arrive in the same moment that they left. Perhaps months have passed at home, or they might even find themselves arriving before their departure point. But those are small details when compared to the overwhelming realization that they're back where they belong.
They're not alone. Many dreamers will find the rift has given them a companion for the return trip. Well, an uncomplicated return home is probably more than anyone could have hoped for, anyway. And for the unwitting visitor, perhaps another universal displacement will be easier to bear with the addition of a local guide.
[ooc: usual dream party rules apply; all are welcome, and dreamers can remember or forget the events of the dream at the players' discretion. Also at the players' discretion: when their character arrives in their 'home universe,' and how many (if any) locals they'd want to run into.]
Perhaps they arrive in the same moment that they left. Perhaps months have passed at home, or they might even find themselves arriving before their departure point. But those are small details when compared to the overwhelming realization that they're back where they belong.
They're not alone. Many dreamers will find the rift has given them a companion for the return trip. Well, an uncomplicated return home is probably more than anyone could have hoped for, anyway. And for the unwitting visitor, perhaps another universal displacement will be easier to bear with the addition of a local guide.
[ooc: usual dream party rules apply; all are welcome, and dreamers can remember or forget the events of the dream at the players' discretion. Also at the players' discretion: when their character arrives in their 'home universe,' and how many (if any) locals they'd want to run into.]
no subject
The Morning Star, bright enough to be seen at dawn.
NO. he says, and a wall comes crashing down in the space where Johnny used to be. YOU ARE NOT THE ONE WHO WILL STRIKE ME DOWN. IT IS NOT YOUR PLACE.
Michael is the only one with the right to destroy him. Michael, Michael whom he loved, the brother who raised him, is the only one who can cast him down again. It's a cruel and inevitable fact of his existence: if he is to die, it must be delivered to him by the hand of his beloved. Each man kills the thing he loves, and as it is on Earth, so it must be in Heaven.
Lucifer spreads his wings to their fullest reach, raises some of his many pairs of blind-bright limbs, and strikes.
no subject
This, it occurs to them, must be because they have never encountered celestial energy such as this before.
It is a peculiar feeling.
The pain feels exactly as a holy weapon ought to, tempered and branded in searing metaphysical fire. Yet there is Hellfire, dark, hollow, persistent, ridging the impact of many piercing divine swordlike limbs.
This will not deter them.
On the contrary, it makes them angry.
Illyria roars their displeasure, whips appendages and darkened eldritch energy to surge directly back at the blazing thing. They meet in aberrant harmony, crackling oscillation, humming thickly and full of cold-bright-hot. Two substances opposed.
The battlefield floods with dichotomous light.