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redshift: tdm #5

Redshift: Welcome to the v͖͕̺̲̘̱̜͎o̴̦̣̠̦̘̹͞i̯̖d̛̪̬͈̱̦̝͍̕.
▶ Click here to read what characters will experience when arriving in Anchor.
▶ All TDM threads can be considered game canon, and current players are welcome to either top-level on the TDM so prospective players can tag them, or use the prompts for logs or network posts on the communities. All threads on the TDM can be used for Activity Check.
▶ All TDM threads can be considered game canon, and current players are welcome to either top-level on the TDM so prospective players can tag them, or use the prompts for logs or network posts on the communities. All threads on the TDM can be used for Activity Check.
a. don't be a sap.
Good morning, October 25th! Whether you're a confused new arrival or a current resident, you probably had some plans for today, right? Grab breakfast, visit a friend, pick some fruit, explore a new part of the massive city.
Well. Too bad. Because, as every single bot in the city will be telling you the moment you show your face, it's GOOP FESTIVAL DAY! What? You've never heard of it? Preposterous, everyone knows about the Goop Festival, it's one of the most anticipated holidays in Anchor! Haven't you been preparing for this for a week now?
The Goop Festival is a harvest celebration, in particular, a celebration of the sap-producing trees that grow wild in the Park, thick around the edges of the south side of the lake. The bots have been hard at work setting up the festival grounds in the shade of the trees in the balmy fall temperatures. There are spiles tapped into trees with buckets placed underneath that are already half-full of a thick, viscous, amber-colored sap. The bots have also set up troughs of shaved ice with long sticks nearby, with which they will demonstrate for excited residents (you are excited, right?) how to cool the sap in the ice and wrap it around the stick to make it a sort of taffy candy. That's not the only sweet surprise waiting, either.
A long table set up in the grass is loaded down with all sorts of delicious sap-related goodies, ranging from cupcakes with thick globs of sap-flavored frosting to sap-flavored jerky to sap sugar candies, and just about anything else you can imagine. There are a wide variety of offerings that would taste good coated, flavored, or glazed with the sap, which tastes sort of like a caramelized toffee. Another table is laid out that has row upon row of cups, each half-full of the sap, heated lightly to a thinner consistency and served similarly to hot chocolate - at least, if hot chocolate gave you a floaty, happy, hazy sort of feeling. Everything made with this sap does, actually, with the cups of pure sap having a stronger effect and items with less sap content having barely any effect at all.
Does this not sound like your cup of weird tree sap? Too bad. This is the GOOP FESTIVAL, and everything is shut down for this lovely paid vacation day. Spa? Locked down. Kitchens? Locked. Bar? Nope, totally shut down and the server bots are all down at the park. VR Gaming? Too bad, the computers are all shut down. Even roaming the halls and trying to stay out of the way won't help much...be prepared to be dragged down to the park to participate in this mandatory festival! Isn't it exciting?
Well. Too bad. Because, as every single bot in the city will be telling you the moment you show your face, it's GOOP FESTIVAL DAY! What? You've never heard of it? Preposterous, everyone knows about the Goop Festival, it's one of the most anticipated holidays in Anchor! Haven't you been preparing for this for a week now?
The Goop Festival is a harvest celebration, in particular, a celebration of the sap-producing trees that grow wild in the Park, thick around the edges of the south side of the lake. The bots have been hard at work setting up the festival grounds in the shade of the trees in the balmy fall temperatures. There are spiles tapped into trees with buckets placed underneath that are already half-full of a thick, viscous, amber-colored sap. The bots have also set up troughs of shaved ice with long sticks nearby, with which they will demonstrate for excited residents (you are excited, right?) how to cool the sap in the ice and wrap it around the stick to make it a sort of taffy candy. That's not the only sweet surprise waiting, either.
A long table set up in the grass is loaded down with all sorts of delicious sap-related goodies, ranging from cupcakes with thick globs of sap-flavored frosting to sap-flavored jerky to sap sugar candies, and just about anything else you can imagine. There are a wide variety of offerings that would taste good coated, flavored, or glazed with the sap, which tastes sort of like a caramelized toffee. Another table is laid out that has row upon row of cups, each half-full of the sap, heated lightly to a thinner consistency and served similarly to hot chocolate - at least, if hot chocolate gave you a floaty, happy, hazy sort of feeling. Everything made with this sap does, actually, with the cups of pure sap having a stronger effect and items with less sap content having barely any effect at all.
Does this not sound like your cup of weird tree sap? Too bad. This is the GOOP FESTIVAL, and everything is shut down for this lovely paid vacation day. Spa? Locked down. Kitchens? Locked. Bar? Nope, totally shut down and the server bots are all down at the park. VR Gaming? Too bad, the computers are all shut down. Even roaming the halls and trying to stay out of the way won't help much...be prepared to be dragged down to the park to participate in this mandatory festival! Isn't it exciting?
b. familiar ground.
Every year in Anchor near the end of October, there's a very strange interaction between the protective dome over the city and seasonal radiation surges that happen in the wastelands. Some complicated combination of refraction and reflection means that for the last few days of the month, residents will experience some of the more benign effects of the red shift inside the city.
Did we say benign? Because while there may not be any dangerous radiation to melt your skin off, there are some mind-bending dangers. Characters experiencing the shift will find the world becomes distorted, warped, impossible to navigate; they are enveloped in auditory and visual hallucinations, and can become so disoriented that they can't even recognize people they've known for years. And characters will find that the citywide shift brings in slivers of other universes, little slices of places characters have never seen before...or places so familiar they make the heart beat hard with joy or fear.
And just like in the wastelands, the things that show up in these shifts are all too real. Characters may find themselves walking through a door into a scene straight from home, or from someone else's home. Whether it's a favorite place to share with a new friend, or the nightmare landscape you almost died in, complete with the monster that almost killed you, be careful. Everything you experience here is real, and if you die in the shift, you die for real.
Of course, the city has its own safety measures in place - residents experiencing the hallucinations and appearances of items and places from other worlds may find themselves locked down in the room they're in, trapped with the otherworldly effects of the shift.
Did we say benign? Because while there may not be any dangerous radiation to melt your skin off, there are some mind-bending dangers. Characters experiencing the shift will find the world becomes distorted, warped, impossible to navigate; they are enveloped in auditory and visual hallucinations, and can become so disoriented that they can't even recognize people they've known for years. And characters will find that the citywide shift brings in slivers of other universes, little slices of places characters have never seen before...or places so familiar they make the heart beat hard with joy or fear.
And just like in the wastelands, the things that show up in these shifts are all too real. Characters may find themselves walking through a door into a scene straight from home, or from someone else's home. Whether it's a favorite place to share with a new friend, or the nightmare landscape you almost died in, complete with the monster that almost killed you, be careful. Everything you experience here is real, and if you die in the shift, you die for real.
Of course, the city has its own safety measures in place - residents experiencing the hallucinations and appearances of items and places from other worlds may find themselves locked down in the room they're in, trapped with the otherworldly effects of the shift.
c. the virus.
A few weeks ago, people in Anchor started getting a case of the sniffles. While some of the earliest cases might be clearing up, there are still a few people suffering, or people freshly infected by those who were sick earlier, including some of the new arrivals who may not even be feeling it yet.
Which may make the cause of some unexpected 'glitches' around the city a little unclear. Residents who are feeling the effects of the illness, or who are infected but not showing symptoms yet (or anymore) will find that their access to certain parts of the city are restricted. Suddenly, automatic doors aren't opening for them, as if they were ghosts, particularly when they try to access anything that may facilitate transmission of the virus. Suddenly, only some of the residents of the city will find they can't get into half of the MedBay, or the spa, the kitchens, the VR or games rooms, the bar...anywhere people gather or eat or sit close together.
Residents may put together that it's related to the illness some of them have been experiencing over the past few weeks, but it might take a while, since these safety and security measures are affecting people who are showing no symptoms yet. Be prepared for a few days of paranoia while seemingly perfectly healthy people are locked out of common areas. What does the computer know that residents don't? Are these people security risks? Is it a system glitch? What could be going on?
Which may make the cause of some unexpected 'glitches' around the city a little unclear. Residents who are feeling the effects of the illness, or who are infected but not showing symptoms yet (or anymore) will find that their access to certain parts of the city are restricted. Suddenly, automatic doors aren't opening for them, as if they were ghosts, particularly when they try to access anything that may facilitate transmission of the virus. Suddenly, only some of the residents of the city will find they can't get into half of the MedBay, or the spa, the kitchens, the VR or games rooms, the bar...anywhere people gather or eat or sit close together.
Residents may put together that it's related to the illness some of them have been experiencing over the past few weeks, but it might take a while, since these safety and security measures are affecting people who are showing no symptoms yet. Be prepared for a few days of paranoia while seemingly perfectly healthy people are locked out of common areas. What does the computer know that residents don't? Are these people security risks? Is it a system glitch? What could be going on?
c. the network.
Need to get hold of someone, call for help, ask the city at large a question? Need to warn a friend not to leave their apartment unless they want to be forcibly press-ganged into the Goop Festival? Maybe you need to hold your sat phone up to whatever crazy thing you're seeing and send out a recording to double-check if your eyes are deceiving you and what you're looking at is real?
Whatever the reason, the network is going strong, so feel free to include a post to it in your top-levels.
Whatever the reason, the network is going strong, so feel free to include a post to it in your top-levels.
Mod Note: The "familiar ground" prompt will be active between October 29th and October 31st; "the virus" prompt will be active until the next introductory mingle, which will be kicking off the second part of the illness plot.
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He's still mad about that, too. He eyes the vertical tube, deciding it does stand out just a bit, and hoping he doesn't have to end up in there.]
I- [He clears his throat, trying to bury his nerves and will himself past the threshold. He's still just standing there, but at least he's not leaving at the mere sight of all the mechanical gizmos.] I assume you are not friends with that Kabal fellow.
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He helped me out of a pinch once, but no, we're not friends. Frankly, I don't like the man. [ It reminds him too much of trying to wrangle Survivor. ] But I do think he could be useful, given the right incentive. He's manipulative, and cleverer than he seems, but not as clever as me.
[ Or as manipulative, but shhhh. ]
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I applaud your confidence, truly, but I fail to see what use a cur like him has. Of course, given he practically held me hostage, I assume I did not witness what beneficial skills he possesses, nor would have recognized them as such due to the fact he was threatening me the entire time.
[Also, again, they could've killed everyone if his necrotic energies had slipped too far from him and he'd ruined the generators. He's now sour about that in hindsight.]
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... That could complicate things when he has to get in the tube. Cross that bridge when they come to it, though. The door slides shut automatically behind Carlisle, and Qubit heads toward his workbench. ]
It's precisely that he is a cur. You'd be surprised how many problems can be solved with the proper application of muscle. And, as you've discovered, he does have a certain talent for intimidation.
[ He examines the shield generator again as he speaks, then sets it down. ]
But a cur can be tamed. He's a mercenary sort, at his core. Find something he wants, and you can easily put him to work for it.
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Well, he seemed very invested in pilfering whatever we could find, no matter what the value. I can only assume some of it was of actual use. He insisted we would 'own the network,' as if that were possible.
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[ Kabal's after power, of a sort. He wants bargaining chips, favors he can call in, resources only he can access. To secure his own comfort, even at the expense of others. It's probably best he nip this in the bud, make it clear to Kabal that being an asshole has consequences.
But that can wait. ]
Anyway. He's not what we're here to discuss. [ Qubit faces Carlisle, folding his arms and meeting his glowing eyes. ] What happened?
cw: vague suicidal ideation
He still doesn't want to talk about this, even if he's the one who called Qubit to begin with, but he knows good and well it's not a matter of wanting so much as a matter of needing. He needs to talk about this, and he needs help, and he needs to make sure it cannot happen again. Not to his patients, not to his friends, not to complete and utter strangers, not even to someone as foul as Kabal—
Okay, well that last one might almost deserve it. A man of the church or not, Carlisle isn't that forgiving.]
I was called to heal a man whose eyes had been gouged out. It was more than I was able to handle, and I lost control over my energies.
[He pushed himself too far is more accurate. He nearly— no, he chastises internally. It needs to be said, confessed, no matter how horrible the truth is. It paints him as the monster he is, as a problem to be solved. Carlisle knows how he would do it, but he's afraid he'll just make things even worse if he even tries. That's how he got here, isn't it? Movements made with the best intentions, only for everything to turn out so, so wrong. It's equal parts frustrating and frightening, and Carlisle isn't sure how much longer he can cope with it on his own.
Qubit seems to be a problem-solver; better to let him, at the very least, try. He has been patient and understanding, and deserves that much.]
I nearly— [He pauses again, pulling in a breath to steady his voice.] I put them all at risk. I nearly killed everyone. Horribly.
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His eyes were - Who was this? When? How?
[ And how is this the first he's hearing of it?! Damn it, he's supposed to be staying on top of these things! There aren't even fifty people here! How could one of them sustain an injury like that, in his station, without his knowledge?
No, not just that - Carlisle lost control of his powers, and that's even worse. It's no longer a hypothetical - that could easily have killed everyone in Anchor. Qubit lets out a long breath, running a hand through his hair. Yeah, no, this is Priority One effective immediately. ]
Who was injured? How many?
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A man named Kieran. Eyes removed. Reformed, but nonfunctional. I was interrupted. [Two buttons, a black top, three wires. More on the other side, perhaps.] One fellow I didn't quite know, Ben. He could- manifest tentacles from somewhere. I couldn't see where. [The arm of one of the constructs from the baths. Removed purposefully, or debris from one being destroyed?] Deputy Pratt called me. He sustained injuries trying to- trying to h-help me. [Something that looks like a construct's hand. Metal skeleton, not enough fingers, flesh rotted away—
The image of Pratt's hand, the skin peeling away from necrosis, dances before his eyes; the light of them grows unfocused for the span of a breath. He described his misstep in how much he could manage as an amateur mistake; however, given what he now is and what he is capable of, it's far more than that. He feels his irritation with himself hot in the back of his throat -- his voice grates, his nose (or what's left of the skin around it) wrinkling beneath his mask as he continues.]
I sustained myself in my work by unconsciously reaching into the trees around us. They- they were decayed when I realized, already dead. It could have been them. It could have been any one of them.
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Which, in fairness, it was.
He didn't even know Carlisle could use his magic to heal people - although "could" is a strong word for it, evidently. Cisth, why'd it have to be the magic that went wrong first? ]
I know. I know. Let's just... remain calm, and go through it in order.
[ Order. Logic. Line the events up neatly. Someone gouged out Kieran's eyes, for God's sake. And when he finds out who - Remain calm. ]
Kieran was injured, and Pratt called you for help. [ His first thought is why, but that's something he can ask Pratt directly - provided Pratt's in any state to answer. ] You attempted to heal Kieran, but lost control before you finished. Is that right so far?
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I did not attempt to heal him. I did. I merely did not finish, but it is no easy task to rebuild the elements and organs of the body.
[Which isn't the point and he knows it, but he's clinging onto what little bit of his former self he can at the moment. It beats seeing himself as an entirely contemptible creature better put down than tolerated.]
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[ Sternly - ] You attempted to heal him, and mostly succeeded.
[ Just like that time Qubit attempted to build a portal home in De Chima, and mostly succeeded. He did complete the construction of an interdimensional portal, structurally and scientifically sound - but it didn't do the single most important thing it was supposed to do, which, as far as he's concerned, made it an unqualified failure.
So really, he's being very generous here. ]
But it took more energy than you expected, and to make up the difference, you started unconsciously drawing energy from your environment. And at that point, you were interrupted. By what?
[ Did he abort the process himself (or try to and fail)? Or was it something external? He doubts it was Ben's doing, since ... Carlisle's still in one piece and all. ]
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What does he have now? What purpose does he have? And is it worth dealing with the danger he presents just by existing? He'd asked himself these questions time and time again when alive, never knowing that the threat he was then, as merely a twice-cursed, would pale in comparison to what he would become.
He tries to keep his self-doubts above water, but it's easy to drown in them when confronted with the truth he's not ready to face, what little confidence he had remaining crippled. It's not Qubit's fault. He's just pointing out something Carlisle knows he should have accepted. He should have accepted many things sooner.
He sighs before he answers.] I interrupted my channel. I could feel myself slipping in... [He shakes his head, trying again.] I could feel that I was losing myself, if that makes any sense. Channeling the energy to heal counteracted the energies keeping me animated, and eventually, it became more than I could bear.
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And the asterisks just keep on coming. ]
"Losing yourself"? [ That had better not mean - ] You were reverting into a Revenant state?
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[He does know, and he knows he should elaborate if he wants help. He's just afraid of speaking the truth aloud, as though it will be all the more real if he does. He brings one stiff arm over to cling to the other, half-crossing them.]
In the last month I had before... Well. [Right. His death. The death for Carlisle, the death that specifically was the end of Carlisle, Carlisle's death. That death.] I would lose entire portions of my day. Minutes at first, then an hour, then more. I couldn't recall what I had done, or if I'd done anything at all. Sometimes, I would just find myself standing in the middle of my study, but it was the afternoon rather than the morning in the span of a heartbeat. I felt distant from everything when it happened, as though I were no longer there. And most prevalent was... anger. Resentment. A volatile remorse.
[All things characteristic of the undead, and Revenants in particular. His brow tightens, his teeth grinding together behind his mask.]
I tried to go with grace and humility, but I was damned regardless. How awful would my end be? Would I eventually lose an entire day? Or longer? What had I done to deserve that?
[He seems to realize he's getting worked up; he sucks in a breath, pushing it in and out. It quells his nerves just a little, that tremble in his arms slowing down.]
I felt it then, when I extended my reach too far. I wanted to finish healing him, but that bitterness rose in me, tainting my energies. I couldn't control it -- it consumed me for but a moment, instinctual and reflexive, but if I had kept healing him then, I might have done more harm than good. More harm than I did, as it stands.
no subject
If that's the case, Carlisle may have been partially undead before he was even fully dead. And his inevitable death being agonizingly drawn out by some force beyond his control certainly didn't make him feel less bitter and resentful.
But it's lucky that he's familiar with that transitional state, because it meant he could recognize the feeling when it happened again. ]
At least you retained enough control to stop. As bad as this was, it could have been much worse.
[ That's about the closest thing to optimism he's got right now. This did not result in the death and reanimation of every living thing in Anchor. Always a plus. ]
So then what? [ He hasn't mentioned Ben's tentacles yet, or Pratt's injuries. ]
no subject
I tore myself away, but my energies reached out around me. There were- there were corpses, bones in the ground of animals, of men. They- they pulled themselves together, and became an abomination.
[And Qubit probably knows how that went.]
Ben used his- his abilities to combat it. I could hardly see, hardly think, hardly move. Pratt approached me, and I- I could not control the necrosis spreading around me.
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SHITTYBONES RIDES AGAIN!wait no this is a serious thread. ][ Qubit does wonder where the corpses came from - it seems unlikely that there'd still be human remains in the Agricultural Zone decades after they died - but it's a secondary concern at the moment. Why would Pratt approach Carlisle in that state? Did he not realize what was happening? If so, that probably didn't last. ]
... How bad was it? Is he all right?
no subject
His hand seemed to be all that was affected, but the skin was rotting away not even a minute after he'd approached me. It was decayed, sloughing off, revealing the muscle beneath. I- I know not if he is all right. He went to the medical ward, and I have not spoken to him since. I could not bring myself to do so.
no subject
I'll check on him, then. And Ben took Kieran, I assume?
no subject
I had caused enough trouble for one day. I left them along the way.
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Now what?
Qubit shuts his eyes, taking a moment to put his thoughts in order. This being Qubit, there are a lot of them. He'll need to speak to the other three who were involved - not to say he doesn't trust Carlisle's account of events, but he needs to be sure he's got the facts as straight as possible. The stakes are too high to go jumping in half-cocked. He'll still need to prioritize work on the psionic inhibitor, but considering the nature of the problem, he's not sure that'll actually fix anything.
It just had to be the magic, didn't it? How many magic-users do they have in Anchor, other than Carlisle? Two? Three? If they were on Earth-β, Sabriel would be his first choice, but they're not. Loki might have the expertise, but he's gone. Reynir? His wards might be able to contain Carlisle, but that's only marginally preferable to killing him. Wasn't there one more?
He'll have to check. This is officially out of his wheelhouse. He wants - no, he needs to help Carlisle. He just doesn't - know - how. ]
... All right. Backing up a bit. Can you tell me, more precisely, what -
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It's not a physical disturbance, nor a magical one, nor psychic. It feels totally different from any of those, yet similar to all of them, somehow registering to all senses and none simultaneously. The effect is intensely disorienting.
It passes in a second, leaving Qubit with both a wave of nausea and a much less physical Bad Feeling About This. He freezes in place, except for his eyes, which dart back and forth. ]
What was that?
no subject
What? What was what?
[Qubit's eyes dart around, while Carlisle's go past him to the far wall; he tilts his head, his eyes narrowing. Wasn't it covered in clutter just a moment ago? With shelves and gadgets of indeterminate make? And wasn't the wall itself of different construction? Or was he just imagining that? Given how his mind has been since the incident, he wouldn't be terribly surprised if he was seeing things, but still...]
no subject
It's difficult to describe what it's like, watching space and time cease to mean much of anything. The walls stretch and compress simultaneously. Up is down, left is right, parallel lines converge, c is not constant in a vacuum, and the visible spectrum shrinks to only its longest wavelengths, such that the only color the human eye perceives is red...
Qubit's never been caught in this phenomenon before, but the color tips him off. ]
A Redshift? Here?!
[ He turns back to Carlisle, but doesn't see his friend. The man standing in his place is a stranger. Startled, Qubit recoils, but loses his balance and staggers into a wall - but the wall is the ground, and always was, just as the man who surprised him is Carlisle again, and always was. His eyes narrow with determination, and on impulse he sticks out his hand. ]
Carlisle! Grab on! We must not get separated!
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cw: vague suicidal ideation
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