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applesaucemod) wrote in
applesaucedream2016-01-01 07:12 pm
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How dreary to be Somebody
Tonight the dreamers of Manhattan will not know where it is they find themselves, nor how they got thereā¦nor where they came from. They will not remember that they have been taken from their homes by the whims of a capricious Rift, and they will remember neither the people they've lost nor those they've met.
Tonight, the dreamers of Manhattan will not remember who they are at all.
What remains is a sense of how the world should be, minus an understanding of whom one is within that world. Some will know the hospital in which they find themselves for what it is, though they will not remember how they know. The long halls are lined with patients' rooms, doctors' offices, and locked doors to supply rooms and labs. Here and there one finds a common room or cafeteria with furniture that might almost be comfortable if only everything weren't so sterile.
The staff are largely absent; the only people who might explain matters are the minders at each door to the outside, but they aren't inclined to provide explanations. If asked, they will only say that the dreamers are here for their own safety. Attempts to leave will be gently but firmly blocked. Insistence on leaving will be dangerous to the dreamers, though the minders will be more than ready to grab anyone who actually makes it through one of the doors before they can float away into the void that's waiting for them on the other side.
They're all here for their own safety and good, after all. Too bad no one will say why that is.

[Semi-standard dream rules apply: players and their characters are not required to be members of this community in order to participate in the party. Unlike usual, however, all characters will forget the events of the dream upon waking.]
Tonight, the dreamers of Manhattan will not remember who they are at all.
What remains is a sense of how the world should be, minus an understanding of whom one is within that world. Some will know the hospital in which they find themselves for what it is, though they will not remember how they know. The long halls are lined with patients' rooms, doctors' offices, and locked doors to supply rooms and labs. Here and there one finds a common room or cafeteria with furniture that might almost be comfortable if only everything weren't so sterile.
The staff are largely absent; the only people who might explain matters are the minders at each door to the outside, but they aren't inclined to provide explanations. If asked, they will only say that the dreamers are here for their own safety. Attempts to leave will be gently but firmly blocked. Insistence on leaving will be dangerous to the dreamers, though the minders will be more than ready to grab anyone who actually makes it through one of the doors before they can float away into the void that's waiting for them on the other side.
They're all here for their own safety and good, after all. Too bad no one will say why that is.

[Semi-standard dream rules apply: players and their characters are not required to be members of this community in order to participate in the party. Unlike usual, however, all characters will forget the events of the dream upon waking.]
no subject
So! Now they're two humans. That changes things a bit - not a whole lot, but a bit. "There's not really anyone else around," he confides in a lower tone. "Just a few people guarding the doors. I thought if I found some clothes and looked normal, I could get one of them to let me out. I only tried the one door." That person hadn't seemed to recognize him personally - they wouldn't give him his own name. If the others don't know who he is either, they needn't know he's a patient.
It might make more sense for him to stay. He's obviously ill. They just don't seem like they're actually interested in helping anyone around here.
no subject
So, aside from pressing her lips together tighter for a moment or two, she elects not to respond. He doesn't really sound like he's making fun of her, at least (though she's not sure what it says about him if he thinks standing up is a praiseworthy deed).
"Where are the healers?" she asks as she takes a few steps away from the counter. It feels more natural the longer she stays like this, and her balance isn't so bad. "If this is a place for sick folk, there ought to be healers." That just seems like common sense. "Guards are for prisons."
no subject
"You'd think that, wouldn't you?" Oh, now he doesn't sound pleased at all. His knowledge of how hospitals work is a bit vague, but he's very sure there's supposed to be doctors. "They couldn't tell me why I was here, or who I was. They just said I wasn't allowed out. You're the first person other than them that I've found in here."
Does he have to tell her that this isn't normal? It's probably a good point to clarify. "There's...something wrong here. I don't know, I'm sure it's not supposed to be like this."
no subject
But if they both need healers, and this is meant to be a place for one, then where are they? Ill folk shouldn't be allowed to wander around like this. She might not know much, but that's just common sense. Someone ought to be looking after them, not just stopping them from leaving.
She lowers her hand. "You said you only tried one door. There are others?"
no subject
He doesn't miss that touch to her head. Does she feel anything unusual? Save for the amnesia, he feels perfectly fine himself. It's weird. Honestly, he'd almost rather his head hurt - things would make a little more sense then. "I figure if we can get out, we can find some actual doctors! Or...something," he finishes, uncertain. What will they do? They don't have anything outside either, as far as they're aware.
('We' comes easily enough that he doesn't realize he's doing it. They're in the same boat; they should stick together.)
no subject
"That sounds better than staying in here," she agrees. She doesn't miss that 'we,' but she finds she doesn't mind it. Even being with another person who doesn't know what's going on is better than being alone. And if all the doors are guarded, they'll have better luck getting out if they cooperate. "I don't like being penned up. If they're not going to heal us, why hold us here?"
Well. Maybe because she's fully capable of turning into a wolf and panicking folk. But if they really wanted to keep her caged, they would have done it properly, instead of giving her free rein and letting her panic the other folk inside.
no subject
Speaking aloud seems to help his thought process, at least, so he continues musing."But you've got amnesia too...maybe it's some kind of quarantine? I'd still expect a little more supervision. Or - signs or something?" His concept of disease control measures is pretty fuzzy. "And I guess the guards are way too close if we've got some sort of new memory illness."
no subject
Her brow furrows at amnesia and quarantine. What is he talking about? Memory illness is easier for her to parse, and she nods. If their illness was catching, the guards wouldn't want to go near them.
"We'd best find a door, then," she decides, padding out into the hallway. "If there's only one guard, we'd outnumber them." She glances both directions, but neither seems more promising than the other. "Which way is the door you already tried?" she asks. Not much point in going that way, whichever it ends up being.
no subject
As they pass another room, he opens the door and pokes his head inside. Empty. It's not a surprise at this point, but it's still a bit disappointing.
"Are you saying we should just fight them?" He asks, angling his head back towards her. It seems like a logical idea. Why's he suddenly so put off by it?