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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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Hang on, how did he get here?
He turns in a small circle on the spot, frown dimpling his forehead. Hmm. That's a little odd, a little worrying, but he can soldier on, can't he? It's like a great labyrinth of greenery. That's not so bad. It's actually rather pleasant.
He can't seem to remember how he got here, though, no matter how he strains to. There's the horrible nagging feeling that he's lost something important and there's something he's got to remember - if only it would occur to him.
But on the other hand, there's a fountain, like, right there. He wanders over to it, leaning close over the water -
Too close.
He's pretty sure he actually goes head over heels in a clamorous splash that leaves him undignified, gasping, and wholly drenched as he tries to unsuccessfully right his mistake in scrambling out of the fountain. He tripped. He must've! Who does that?
His first attempt to rise simply sends his hands skidding across the slick, wet surface of the rock pathway around him, and he plunges unceremoniously in again.
[ooc: so Daniel is still a little scrambled post-Ascension, as seen here. To whatever extent is really up in the air at this point since it IS dreamland, so he's probably got some basic grasps of English again and also more of his memories are starting to trickle back.]
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She's swooping down to say hello, in a cheery parrot shape, when he takes a spill. It's quite the tumble, actually; she might have suspected him of doing it on purpose if he didn't look so bewildered when he came back up for air. When she sees how much trouble he's having righting himself, she lands with a clatter of wingbeats on the pathway alongside the fountain.
Daniel? Oh, dear. Down he goes again. Daine quickly shifts into polar bear shape, plunging her forepaws into the water - at least it's not deep - and thrusting her head beneath Daniel's chest until she can lever him upright. Up you get, she says cheerfully, waiting for him to get his feet back under him.
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After a few minutes of terse inspection of the environment, cautiously prodding the dense, springy brush and leaping back warily at the first hint of anything that could be a danger sign, Tim has to reluctantly, bemusedly concede that this is exactly what it impossibly appears to be: a nice dream.
Maybe that's not weird, though. His first dream was pretty okay, after all. Aside from how he'd managed to convince himself that the Jay he was talking to was purely hallucinatory. Yeah, that kind of put a damper on the whole thing.
Tim's hands chase up and down his arms as he half-hugs himself, darting nervous looks at the artfully arranged flowers and trimmed foliage. He feels like it might be some kind of fancy rich person garden, maybe, but he's never known what those really looked like. He's never been to one.
Regardless, he's not really sure he likes the look of it, or even the feel of it. Too many thick-packed leaves surrounding him. No sign of an exit.
Guess it's gonna be his job to find one.
He sets off for the nearest gap in the bushes, ducking beneath the overarching limbs. Maybe if there's a weak spot or a dying bit of greenery somewhere - if he could just get through -
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"Hey," he says. "Welcome to the garden party."
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She flexes her toes delightedly in the cool green water of garden pool beside which she found herself, reveling in the texture of water against skin. Her shoes she has perched beside her in in a neat line by her hip, her weight on her arms as she supports herself with the pressure of palms to smooth stone walkway.
Mako laughs once, a low, clear sound, and the memory is tinged with melancholy when it skates the fringes of her conscious mind, but for a moment she is lost in the sheer joy of remembering the ease of her life in Tanegashima. For now, it is not so bad. She will take it.
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Glados hates it.
She approaches the noise until she locates the noisemaker, at which point she arches a steely eyebrow - a motion she's now accustomed to enacting on purpose, and which she tolerates for its subtlety.
"What is so funny," she demands.
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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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He unequivocally loathes it.
He locates a particularly thorny limb protruding from the surrounding vegetation and snaps it loose with a brusque crack and the sharp smell of split branch. He does not anticipate it being highly useful or readily applicable, but he refuses to wander this sort of environment or any environment undefended and he has this as an ongoing policy and with the pointed lack of military individuals with a propensity for shooting anything that so much as twitches oddly, he will have to take the responsibility upon himself.
Ideally no species of flora here will be fucking sentient or parasitic.
Resolute, he targets one of the compact walls of shrubbery and begins hacking at its exterior.
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And everything is pretty frigging perfect until a shadow falls across her. Sunshine doesn't even bother opening her eyes to see who it is. "Whyyyyy?" she
whinesasks, expression crumpling into a pout. She is hard at work, here.no subject
He's not really on the lookout for anyone in particular, which is why it's kind of a shock when he nearly trips over someone.
"Uh," says Tim, immediately shuffling back. "Uh." He raises both hands, half-defensive and half-apologetic. "Didn't mean to interrupt?"
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He's aware - distantly, avoidantly - that the house has been keeping him more and more often. But he doesn't want to think about that now. It's distant, easy to brush away. He does. Please, he thinks in a quiet little prayer to the rift, let him just enjoy this one.
He wanders until he comes upon a little waterway in soft, smooth limestone, soothing and quiet. He stands on the steps for a moment, just looking at the water, before settling down and dipping a hand into it. It's cool, comforting. This is nice. He feels himself crack a smile, letting his guard lower for the first time in ages.
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All right. Calm down. There are explanations for everything.
She wobbles slightly on her terrible human legs and looks around in moderate alarm. This is - she is reasonably certain - not Manhattan. She can't see any buildings in the distance. She was given to understand leaving the island was not possible.
Even more distressing, she remains incapable of recalling how she came to be here.
"Whah-at," she snaps at nothing. Her voice seems a little more like its old self here. Something is very strange. Something is very wrong.
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"Not a fan of dream-gardens, then? Or is it just one or the other?"
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The absence of distant screaming is a positive development. The absence of a charging dinosaur more so, though perhaps only in the short term. The absence of her companions -- very bad.
The absence of the quiet, insistent voice in the back of her mind, while a relief, is likely the worst development of all.
Ecks gazes about herself at the neatly manicured lawn and sculpted bushes, one hand clutching what appears to be a cane with the air of someone who expects to do something quite violent with it in the near future. They didn't have a plan for anything like this, and without knowing what this is she is momentarily stymied as to the correct course of action. She silently runs through likely scenarios, recalling the last several times she appeared somewhere unexpected without warning, and weighs the probability of this being some sort of vision against the improbability of none of her compatriots being included.
"Bottle-God?" she ventures after spending a few moments literally frozen in indecision. That is not his name, but she will not speak his name in case this was not his doing and there are others listening. He will know she means him if he is listening. "Did you do this? Are you here?"
[OOC: Please note that Ecks is pretty alarming in appearance. She's
Frankenstein's monsterflesh golem stitched together out of parts of a lot of different people (even different species), and she's wearing battle-worn leather armor. She doesn't really do facial expressions, and her voice remains near a monotone when she's not making a particular effort to emulate emotive speech.]no subject
So after a moment, Jay lets himself down awkwardly and takes a few steps around a cluster of little trees, trying to get a peek at the speaker.
He couples his approach, thoughtlessly as usual, with a ventured, "Hello?"
Then he sees her, and he immediately regrets this decision.
She's tall - several inches on him, and that's not the most imposing thing about her, not even close. She looks - well, hellish, visibly sewn together like some kind of monster.
He staggers back unsteadily, breath catching hard in his throat.
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She comes upon another lifeform, which is, fortuitously, Durant. All right, yes. She can work with this. He does not like disorder as much as she.
Why isn't he losing his mind about this?
"If I didn't know any better I'd think you were having a good time," she snaps, coming up behind him.
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Wheatley rubs his nose sullenly with the back of one hand, gazing morosely at what was formerly a proper marble statue, carved in the shape of a tiny little human with wings. He's not sure what sort of nightmarish hybrid was meant to be represented there in sculpture, but the fact of the matter is that, in an event that could have happened to anyone, he'd crashed slap-bang into the thing and sent it toppling.
"Probably did everyone a favor," he says to absolutely no one, now trying for affronted. "Ghastly thing. Lookit that - humans don't come so small, now, do they? What sort of genetic experimentation was at work here? Terrible. An insult to nature, I say, didn't like the old thing anyway. All for the best. Gshchh!"
What sort of biological nightmare is this? His whole respiratory system keeps seizing and shivering him with an awful judder, sound the alarms this is a crisis, and he doesn't know why! He hovers, wiping his nose on his sleeve, wanting nothing more than to leave the disaster in pieces and let it be someone else's problem, as he became well-accustomed to doing in the derelict Enrichment Center, but along comes the nagging feeling that she wouldn't have done that. She would've fixed the problem with her usual locked-down, silent efficiency. She would've -
Wheatley sighs, folding his long legs in a disorderly sprawl as he hunches over the mess and starts nudging hopefully at the pieces in the vague hope that some of them will simply snap back together again - what sort of shoddy technology is this, honestly - shooting nervous looks over his shoulder on the off-chance that someone might see and have the sheer gall to blame him for this, as if he could have any control of over this whatsoever.
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Judging by the slight start he gives on seeing Wheatley, these haven't involved very many other people.
"Oh, hello! Don't remember seeing you..." he muses aloud, wandering over. He doesn't actually recall seeing most of this. The thought nags at him, like something he's forgetting. "Breaking things?"
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Normal person. Normal person Asmodia. Normal people don't break stuff just because it was too neatly organized.
She takes a deep breath, steels her nerves, and hurries past the neatly trimmed bushes, down the perfectly straight pavement. There has to be somewhere less...just less. She breathes a sigh of relief when she comes to an area where the trees have been allowed to grow into a scraggly archway over a curving, worn brick path. This is fine. It's still very deliberately laid out, but it's not so harshly symmetrical, so unforgivingly structured. She reaches up, knocks a few flowers and leaves loose to flutter to the ground...and at the sound of someone coming from the other direction, attempts to dive into the foliage to the side of the path, not wanting to encounter whoever's responsible for this place. She can't remember how she got here (botched teleport?), but it's occured to her that this is almost certainly a garden in one of the upperscale neighborhoods over on the mainland. They have a few friends here, to be sure, but most of those people have never been quite at ease with the gunworks off the coast or its motley residents.
Unfortunately, the key word is "attempt." The plants in question turn out to be backed by a hidden trellis, and while she does succeed in breaking said trellis, she doesn't quite succeed in breaking through it and finds herself stuck in greenery and splintered wood.
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He's reminded, though not forcefully, of the Capitol gardens. Those were much more ostentatious and unnatural feeling than the one in which he stands. The colors and arrangements and plants there had been chosen to create the same effect as the clothing and hairstyles of the people who strolled through them. The garden he is in now is much less extravagant and strange. He turns to stare down the trellised walkway again, which has an element of wildness to it that he never saw in the Capitol gardens.
Intrigued, he starts down the path.
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She's hopping along the top of the arbor in starling shape when she recognizes the top of Peeta's head passing below. Momentarily forgetting herself - or forgetting where they are, more like - Daine pokes her head down through the foliage and lets out a burbling trill to get his attention.
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He lost track of Leon a while ago. That usually happens when he leaves the Temple of Music. He invites him to come with every time, if only because he knows perfectly well he'll be turned down; some people just don't appreciate getting out and seeing the sights! But it's no big deal. He'll find him when he needs to - it doesn't feel close to his cue, and even if he's a tad lost now, he's never missed it before.
For now, these gardens are beautiful! He takes a seat on a bench near a bunch of yellow lilies, leaning back and inhaling appreciatively. He's painfully aware that his clothes still smell of wood smoke and tobacco. He'll take these moments where he can.
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So she sits down next to him, not in the habit of waiting for invitations to place herself anywhere. "Hello again," she greets with a small smile, for the moment forgetting that he isn't likely to recognize her in return.
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The stones now lead across a generous pond, topped in places with impressive water lilies, revealing the brief glimmer of fishes in others. Small birds dart in and out of the water and the occasional frog offers a soft croak. It's all just a bit too Terran and neat for the TARDIS; her own gardens boast a much broader variety of flora and fauna, and she'd afford the wild flowers a much bigger space so visitors could actually get lost in the pleasant wilderness. The transition is nicely done, though, not separating different habitats into their own rooms as she tends to do. Perhaps if she had someone to impress, she could liven up this dream a little with her own ideas... But for now she busies herself with carefully balancing on the first stone in the water, slowly making her way across.
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She emerges from under an overgrown arbor to find herself at the shore of a pond. That's not what's interesting, though. What's interesting is the woman out on the pond, balancing on a stepping stone. "Oh!" says Asmodia, stopping short at the water's edge. "Uh," she says, glancing down at herself. No disguise today. Why isn't she disguised? Next she'll be going outside naked.
She's really, really lucky that she doesn't have enough subconscious control of this dream to make that errant thought a reality.
"Hi."
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Todd didn't panic easily, far too old and experienced for that, and besides, it was a garden, not a Genii prison. All right...a very large garden...With no distinguishable exits.
The place was obviously too well kept to be natural so someone had to be here. So, he'd find them and demand answers. Simple.
He set off down the nearest hedgerow, as one seemed the same as the last with no clear signs marking that any which way was better than the other.