applesaucemod: (Default)
The Big Applesauce Moderators ([personal profile] applesaucemod) wrote in [community profile] applesaucedream2013-10-05 05:39 pm

A Day Late and a Dollar Short



As far as dreams go, this seems surprisingly...normal. True, the dreamers of Manhattan and beyond will find themselves stranded in the middle of the ocean on a fairly deserted rocky island, but it's nothing so unusual as the labyrinth from last time, and no one appears to have become an animal or reverted to an insane past (or future) version of themself. Besides, well, rocks and grass, there's nothing here but an abandoned lighthouse, the doors and windows broken, and the spare furniture worn by the weather. You can go up the spiral staircase to look at the view, but there's nothing to see but the endless ocean. One might almost think tonight was a night for simple socializing via the telepathic current.

As if anything to do with the rift is ever that simple, you silly bumpkin. How quickly each person realizes what is unusual about tonight's dream will depend in large part on their personality. Some might go the entire night without noticing (except from the distress of others, naturally), but some will find out the instant they open their mouths to converse with another dreamer. You see, each and every dreamer will be completely unable to tell a lie for as long as the dream lasts. The truth might be evaded by omission, but any attempt to say that which is untrue will result in the corresponding truth emerging instead.

Good thing it's just a dream and everyone's going to forget in the morning, right? Right??


[Mod note: As usual, players can choose to have their characters remember or forget anything that happens in the Dreaming. As per usual party rules, both members and non-members are welcome to play any character in this post, regardless of whether that character is currently in the game. Unlike usual, tonight's theme is not optional; all characters will be subject to the enforced truth-telling. Have fun!]
semioticallyspeaking: (the world is wide (and full of wonders))

[personal profile] semioticallyspeaking 2013-10-15 05:48 am (UTC)(link)
Silently, Cosima is amused by his flapping, as well as somewhat smugly vindicated. Any and all self-satisfaction gives way to sheer, blunt curiosity when he launches into his explanation. Briefly, she wishes she had a notebook with her, she'd love to take notes on this; but with no such thing to hand, she'll simply have to do her best to take it all in.

She nods along with him, eyes going wide and impressed when he describes the process of regeneration. There are creatures on Earth with what's called biological immortality, usually very simple animals that can regenerate cells, or that one jellyfish with the ability to revert to sexual immaturity before it dies and repeat the cycle over and over. But for something like it to occur in a complex, sentient being is astonishing.

When he pauses to ask if she's following, there's the beginnings of an avid smile twitching around her lips. Possibly that's inconsiderate? Given that the guy's telling her the doubtlessly traumatic tale of how he came into being, but that's just frickin' cool.

'Yeah,' she assures him. 'Like, um, transdifferentiation? Though obviously on a massive, massive scale. Was that a natural development in the species, or was it engineered?'
bluesuit_hoofy: (thinking | hmm)

[personal profile] bluesuit_hoofy 2013-10-15 06:18 am (UTC)(link)
"Exactly." Handy breaks out into a smile. It's not often he explains this, and less often that he can explain it in any really meaningful way. 'Stuff happens and I'm new again' is usually the extent of it. "It's...well," he says, considering. Here's one point where telling the truth means he needs to pick his way through carefully, lest he start sharing some unfortunate historical facts. "Engineered, but in all likelihood building on traits that had been starting to crop up naturally. It's...complicated. Politically complicated."

He makes a face, as if to say 'and do we really want to talk politics?'
semioticallyspeaking: (discovering shit (geek monkey))

[personal profile] semioticallyspeaking 2013-10-15 06:32 am (UTC)(link)
'Hah, I bet,' Cosima snorts. She's never been hugely interested in politics beyond the broad strokes, but it's not hard to see that any group of people which could engineer in themselves the potential for effective immortality would become a huge political presence.

She also makes note of the fact that Handy's able to evade giving a comprehensive history of what exactly made it politically complicated. So, you can't lie outright, but you can talk around the truth if you're careful. She doesn't prod any further in that direction; fascinating as it would be to learn the history of an alien species, she's focussed on the matter at hand.

'Ok, so, the accident this Doctor of yours had-- it induced regeneration?'
bluesuit_hoofy: (interested | chatting)

[personal profile] bluesuit_hoofy 2013-10-15 01:33 pm (UTC)(link)
See, he's had practice at this. Of course, it could have turned out things were different here, but it seemed a fairly safe bet that the spell psychic field would have the same limitations as the trueberries.

"Oh, that wasn't the accident," he replies breezily. "No, that Dalek definitely shot him on purpose. No -- and it gets more complicated. There's a lot of energy associated with regeneration, as I'm sure you can imagine -- sort of a hodgepodge of energy forms, let's just call it regenerative energy, very useful stuff -- very volatile stuff. So, ah." And here's the part where he has to explain the hand, and that's really sort of embarrassing. "Well. Right after -- almost right after the last regeneration, he'd sort of gone and got his hand cut off." Swashbuckling and so forth, you know how it is. "Clumsy swordfighting, and you've probably got no idea where I'm coming from with this."

Handy sighs. "Not what I meant to say. But this hand was in a jar under the console of his ship -- don't ask how it got there, really, just don't."
semioticallyspeaking: (discovering shit (geek monkey))

[personal profile] semioticallyspeaking 2013-10-17 02:57 pm (UTC)(link)
Sort of gone and got his hand cut off. It's the most casual attitude towards dismemberment Cosima's ever heard, and both her eyebrows are up now. It's definitely true that she has little idea of clumsy swordfighting and losing hands, but she's drawing connections anyway, mind flitting from possibility to possibility as he speaks.

She huffs a wry little laugh through her nose at the embarrassment in his tone about the hand in a jar, and shakes her head a little. 'Wow, and I thought my life was complicated. Ok, so, lemme get this straight; this Doctor gets shot, which triggers the regenerative process, but-- the hand introduces an extra variable? Or--'

She can't really imagine how a severed hand in a jar would interact with an internal biological process in such a way as to produce a clone, even if the process is one which releases a lot of energy. Unless, and she exclaims softly to herself, 'Or, oh, oh, if the hand came into contact with the Doctor, then would all that volatile energy kickstart cellular regeneration in the hand as well? That, I mean, that's crazy, but, well, this whole thing kinda is already.'
bluesuit_hoofy: (interested | chatting)

[personal profile] bluesuit_hoofy 2013-10-18 04:28 am (UTC)(link)
Handy hasn't even thought to clarify that the Doctor grew the hand back. It doesn't occur to him that Cosima might assume he went about for an entire regeneration sans right hand; he was within the window of opportunity, so of course he grew a new one.

His eyes light up and he gives an undignified little prance at her deduction. "You're close!" he exclaims, delighted. "Really, that's very close -- it's along those lines. See, he aborted the process -- you can't see it now, but we'd got a good face and really good hair this last time round. Handy biological receptacle right there under the console, perfect match on the cellular level and everything, so he just...funneled the energy off. Normally stopping a regeneration will just kill you for good, but time it perfectly and bleed the energy away before the process can go beyond initial repairs to damaged cells, and you can heal without changing. The hand was only supposed to store the energy, let it leak out and dissipate on its own. But, well."

But, well, that was the painful part of the story, because it involved him only coming into existence because Donna had unwittingly put herself in harm's way. Maybe he didn't need to share that part, though. It ought to be enough that it had been an accident; Cosima had heard at least part of the mechanics behind the event. "Here I am," he finished lamely.