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applesaucemod) wrote in
applesaucedream2015-03-31 06:55 pm
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Entry tags:
- character: asmodia antarion,
- character: daine sarrasri,
- character: eliot waugh,
- character: greta baker,
- character: iman asadi,
- character: johnny truant,
- character: peeta mellark,
- character: rashad durant,
- character: sunshine,
- character: the balladeer,
- dropped: daniel jackson,
- dropped: jay merrick,
- dropped: mako mori,
- dropped: seth,
- dropped: tara maclay,
- dropped: tim wright,
- party post,
- retired: bee,
- retired: melanie,
- retired: peter vincent,
- retired: yuri kostoglodov
Between the Roots and Branches [Open to All]

Don't worry, dreamers of Manhattan. There will be no humiliating episodes of sudden-onset-clumsiness tonight - at least, nothing more severe than what you might experience naturally. Your physical and mental faculties will be left perfectly intact. What a treat! And what luck, because if you do lose your footing, it's a long way down to the forest floor.
But hey, who wants to be on the boring old ground when there are so many wonderful treehouses to explore? There are dozens of them spread throughout the surrounding forest, connected by a series of bridges and catwalks (some, admittedly, a bit more stable than others). It's easy to forget - or fail to notice - that there really is no easy or conventional way down to the ground when you're surrounded by such splendor.
The houses' styles range from charming and rustic to modern and sleek, with many falling somewhere in between. There are viewing platforms for bird-watching or simply taking in the scenery (trees, mostly, though if you venture high enough, you'll be treated the sight of the forest canopy stretched across a valley far below). But the insides of the treehouses are comfortably furnished to varying degrees as well, so there's no need to immerse yourself in nature if you'd really rather not. Some are complete houses in their own right, with all the amenities of a Manhattan apartment and then some.
Go for a climb, or kick back and relax. The only enemies you'll find here are other dreamers... and, potentially, gravity.
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This is just fine.
"I don't think I'm familiar with the one you're from," he continues, scooting along his branch with a desperate, rapid energy. He's getting closer, he just needs to - not look down. Keep going, and not look down, and soon he'll be close enough to pull himself to solid ground. Relatively solid ground. Does it count as solid when it's still suspended in the trees? He makes the command decision to leave that question where it is, thanks.
"Assuming you're not from, uh, from Earth." His brows knit together as he reconsiders. "Which might be an entirely untrue assumption. I don't, ah, I don't actually know. You're not, are you?" He squints at her, abruptly transitioning from uncertain to blazingly incisive.
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"No," she says, making a face. She really does stick out like a sore thumb, and it's not fair when almost any of her friends could have walked among the humans of Earth without immediately being assumed foreign. "It's called Golarion. Are you really -- are you really saying you've traveled in the dark tapestry? You're not making fun of me, are you? Because I'm not stupid, whatever I look like. If you've been out there, how are you not dead?" Equally important: "Or insane? You're not a cultist, are you?"
He can have a penetrating look right back even as she stretches out an arm, fingers coming up a few inches too short to grab at his shirt.
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"If by 'dark tapestry' you mean like - the night sky? Intergalactic travel? In which case, yes, yes I have." His expression settles for something between perplexity and faint amusement. "Though I wouldn't say I haven't died. You could, uh - in fact, you could call it a habit. I just happen to not be dead - now."
He closes the remaining distance between them and closes one hand gingerly around hers.
"Ah." Immediately the added stability gives him the leverage to swing his other hand up to grip the corner of the platform she's perched on. "Much better."
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Reassuring that he says he's not a cultist (from what she's heard they tend to be proud of it). Not as reassuring that he's died before, nor that he didn't answer how he could possibly have traveled out there. Her grip on his hand is firm, but she really hopes he doesn't actually fall because she's not completely sure she'd be able to haul him up. She tightens her grip with her tail, suddenly afraid he is going to fall and take her with him.
"You shouldn't make a habit of it," she says, looking at him like he's grown a second head. "Come back too many times and the wrong kinds of gods are going to start paying attention."
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He's got to thank eight years of spending entirely too much time with the military, because after a minute of struggling against the terrifying pull of gravity, he heaves himself upward and fully onto the platform. Immediately he rolls onto his back, panting slightly, and decides that he is really quite comfortable, sprawled like this on this odd wooden construct, potential for splinters be damned.
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"Are there many false gods where you come from, then?" she asks too airily. "You don't look like a god-slayer."
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He gets himself propped up on one elbow, belatedly coming to realization that this is probably one of his less stellar introductions between the amount of information and the severe, severe likelihood of misinterpretation. Whoops.
"Tougher than I look," he assures her with a hopeful lift to his eyebrows, just before they knit sharply down again. "Er. Well. No, actually, I'm probably exactly as tough as I look. I just seem to have a lot of trouble staying dead."
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She's still not really clear on what he means in general, either. At least she can grab after familiar terms like slavery-based economic structure; dismantling one of those is pretty promising. She sits primly nearby him, knees up and her body generally tucked in on itself as she eyes him with a mixture of unease and bemusement. "And this was...on other planets," she seeks to clarify, unsure about the general scale and setting of what he's claiming to have accomplished.
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His smile adopts a self-deprecating twist as his expression relaxes. "I realize that - that probably wasn't the best introduction to my universe. Guess it's pretty different from yours, hm?"
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"Is the one we're in much like yours?" she asks, wondering if this 'space' travel is something she just hasn't learned about yet.
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"A bit," he admits. "Hard to tell when you can't leave the city. But we had a Manhattan and our continents more or less lined up. Just with more programs devoted to galactic exploration, and fewer Rifts screwing up the general progression of space, time, and spacetime."
He cants his head to one side, sympathy clouding over his look of interest. "It can be kind of a big shift, I know."
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"For a lot of reasons," she agrees, not volunteering any of those reasons. "But I'm going to find a way back. It's...it's important that I get home."
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"I know." His stare falls away, breaking off to examine the array of woodland with apparent fascination. "If we ever figure out how to get home, well. Let's just say it's everyone's priority."
There's an almost imperceptible shift, something registering in his demeanor, when he glances back at her again, frowning. "Your name wouldn't happen to derive from 'Asmodeus,' would it?"
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His question breaks her out of dark thoughts edging toward the truth, and she lets out a surprised, rueful little chuckle. "You know, you're the first person in this world to ask me that," she says, almost feeling oddly pleased if only because people not knowing who the gods (and devils) are is one more enormously alien aspect to this world. "Yes. It is." She levels an expectant look at him in return, some measure of suppressed amusement coming to her expression as she waits to see what he's going to make of it.
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"Here it's not - necessarily a good association," he says delicately. "Which is fine, by the way, there's no way you could have known but - 'Asmodeus' usually pertains to a, a very powerful demon. In Earth literature." He winces. This is certainly a spectacular introduction he's making.
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And then, as he finishes, she finally gives in, unclenches her teeth, and bursts into laughter. "Your face!" she cackles. She indulges in her laughter for a few moments, having enjoyed briefly leaving him to twist in the wind, but eventually calms herself enough to explain. "It's not a good association where I come from, either. And he's a devil, not a demon -- he's an infernal prince, not an abyssal whatever."
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She's not taking the news the way he'd assume one would take the news that they are named after a (literal? are demons a thing here? you know, they just might be?) demon, but at least, well. It's a better reaction than the one he'd been imagining.
"I mean," he starts again, though the clouded frown over his face hasn't quite faded. "Just - as a word of warning? We have those here, too. Actual devils. Well, just the one, really. Satan, Lucifer, the Morningstar, etcetera and so forth." Hey, anything he can say that will keep anyone from making his mistake upon meeting the literal Devil - and not taunting him or outright challenging him - is a warning well worth divulging.
no subject
"I don't...I have not heard of that one," she says delicately, not immediately dismissing the earnest attempt to tell her about something dangerous. "Is he a major devil?"
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He doesn't want to scare her, but the warning is, he feels, pretty much necessary, if only to keep people on the alert.
"And he's in Manhattan. Physically he looks human but he's - he's not. He's really not." He grimaces, recalling the prickle of horrible darkened wrongness he'd seen shrouded about the man before he'd even gleaned what sort of terrible thing he might be. "Just as a word of warning. I didn't realize what he was when I met him, and that nearly cost me." He rubs one arm, rueful and self-conscious, not quite managing a smile to even out the sincerity of his warning.
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Hopefully he's enough like the major devils of home not to take any special interest in a fiend-tainted mortal who doesn't make it her business to be his business, or she'll have yet another reason to regret how badly she stands out in this world. She starts as Biscuit diplomatically puts his front paws on her tail and gently holds it down to stop her thumping. "He's manifested, then?" she asks, all humor gone from her voice. "You're certain his attention is on this region?"
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"But yes," he continues, wrenching himself out of that disturbing line of thought. "He's, well, he's subject to the same constraints we all are. Can't leave the city, and I suspect he can't really do a whole lot of damage to it, either. Could be he just can't be bothered. Or it - could be the Rift's keeping him in check somehow." It would be one of the few things he'd have it to thank for.
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If he's going to warn her, she'd like a little more information on how to take full advantage of the warning.
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Daniel's still trying to figure out what exactly went wrong there. He shouldn't be surprised, not really, not when he makes the general habit of challenging every god he encounters.
"Just giving warning," he reiterates, making an effort to soften his tone somewhat. "It's highly unlikely he's gonna do much to target you or anyone specifically. He has other angels to worry about." Assuming Asmodia knows about angels, which - actually, does she know about angels? Are they a thing where she comes from? Maybe he should have saved that bombshell.
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And just a subtle jab there re: Daniel's belief that there's something that can be called The Devil and that it's not Asmodeus.
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He drifts, grasping for a less dense, more linear way of explaining, and ultimately failing.
"Look," he says tiredly, "in my universe devils or angels don't exist period. Not in the conventional sense, anyway. In others, they apparently do. Obviously whatever rules that might, to you, typically apply aren't gonna necessarily bridge that interdimensional gap."
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