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redmarsshit2019-10-24 11:41 pm
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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.
no subject
"I understand wanting to get away from yourself, but maybe you need something I dunno.. magical?" Did that make sense? He felt like it did - yet he didn't really know what Carlisle's world was like. He assumed everything was magical, some sort of Harry Potter land but far more dangerous and real. He can hear the disappointment in Carlisle's voice though, and he definitely knows the sensation of wanting to drink the pain away.
no subject
"That is an idea," he notes. "I had thought that the tea I'd tried before hadn't worked because I lacked the proper plants, and that may be a part of it, still... but with this not working, I believe you are right. There may be more to it, and an enchantment may be the answer. Perhaps such concoctions do not work on the living, and more is needed to make them affect a man who is otherwise."
Determined to rule out just outright drinking it, he brings a finger to the top of his mask, hesitating for only another moment before he gives it a tug, drawing it below his chin. Pratt knows what must be beneath there, he reminds himself: ink stains trailing all the way from his eyes to his jaw, matching the one on the side of his mouth where the skin isn't torn away; a completely missing nose and dried, dusty musculature, the layers of his skin worn all the way to the bone closer to his teeth; a dull light glowing from the depths of his throat, a sign of the magic that keeps him alive -- or some semblance of it.
He avoids the deputy's eyes all the same as he brings the mug to what remains of his lips, taking a sip.
no subject
He's still not sure that drinking it is a good idea. How would he digest it? But he figures that Carlisle will know best.
"Maybe one of the fancy contraptions in the kitchen can make something that'll work. It's not magical, it's just advanced tech but who knows. Unless this works?" He sounds vaguely hopeful, because he just wants Carlisle to have at least one good thing in his life.
no subject
Unfortunately, he doesn't get that temporary relief just yet. He sets the mug down and pulls his mask back up, wanting to spare Pratt from having to see his marred face for any longer than he has to. "I will try the kitchens after I try glyphs," he says tiredly. "But I believe the true problem is what I am."
He gets a piece of paper and his pen, starting on a glyph, pausing as he considers the inscription needed; his eyes flick to the mug with the least amount of sap in it. "Do you mind testing this? Not a whole swallow, but enough to see what I should be feeling."
no subject
Others had been eating it with no real ill effects, so that was promising. But others had also eaten all the 'meat' at the Veteran's Center just like Pratt did without dying. Much as he wished he had.
There's real hesitation as he takes the mug and stares into it, smelling the sickly sweet aroma of the sap. "This smells like pure sugar."
Something he would normally enjoy, but right now he's stalling.
no subject
"Wait wait wait," he mutters, going to snatch the mug from Pratt's hand before he can drink any of it. "Let me enchant it first, then you take a sip to see if it works on you. Logically, if I'm changing the structure of it through magic, it shouldn't, but I'd rather you have a clear head to see."
And back to writing he goes, trying to make the glyph cleaner this time. His skeletal hands don't make holding a pen easy, so he slides his right one back into his glove, the extra padding giving his fingers more purchase. He gets halfway through that glyph before tossing it aside, grabbing another sheet and starting a third time.
"All right," Carlisle starts in, having given Pratt hardly a second to get a word in (or himself enough time to realize he was stalling on drinking) as his thoughts turn over and over in his head. "Better idea: I enchant it, then let it rise as steam, and we see who is affected."
no subject
"This works better in a car." He's aware that Carlisle won't get the joke, but he's just relieved he doesn't have to actually eat anything. He hated Bliss too, the cult's airborne drug that made people compliant and hallucinate, but that was preferable to Jacob's mystery meat that was in no way a mystery.
"So potentially I'm gonna get high as fuck in a few minutes? That might not be a good idea?" Though the more he thought about it the nicer it sounded to not think about anything and pass out on Carlisle's floor.
no subject
"Potentially, yes," Carlisle reiterates, "though with my modicum of knowledge in glyphcrafting and any luck, I will be the only one getting 'high as fuck.'" He's just going to assume that means what he thinks it means.
He finishes the glyph after one more attempt, setting the mug with the middling amount of sap atop it. "Ready? Actually, would you prefer to do the honors? You seemed unsure if glyphs would work for you before. This one is fairly benign, and would be a fair test."
no subject
"Do I just touch it?" He eyes the glyph, trying to remember what Carlisle had him do for the rock. There's a hint of hesitation as he reaches out to do so, part of him a little fearful that it won't work. That the glyph won't respond to him because he's a boring, non-magical human who isn't even good enough to power a piece of paper let alone a rock that will keep his plants temperate.
no subject
But he does pick up on that hesitation, on how Pratt asks for instruction despite logically knowing what he should do; it gives Carlisle himself a moment's pause. "Is there something wrong, Deputy?"
no subject
There's almost a sigh of relief as he feels it 'catch' drawing out his energy and flowing through the glyph, lighting it up. Well that's reassuring, he's not a complete waste of a human apparently.
"I've still got it." He smiles, holding his hand there until he can feel the symbol almost let go of him when it has enough power. "That's good to know."
no subject
"Were you truly worried you'd not be able to activate a glyph? Or was it that you feared your rock would no longer work?"
no subject
Which sounds stupid now that he says it out loud, but he was honestly scared that maybe he'd lost something since being in Hadriel and wouldn't be able to power it anymore.
"I dunno what makes someone magical, but I don't think I have that thing."
no subject
He shakes his head, not wanting to think about it. Those are the kinds of thoughts he's trying to escape from, hence his determination to make this enchanted tea work.
"I believe the magic you just performed would say otherwise, Deputy," he reassures.
no subject
"And now we see if breathing it in works?" He doesn't feel anything yet, but it always takes time. At this point he's a pro at the whole: nothing is happening, no wait - I need to go to the hospital - that teenagers keep pulling on him.
no subject
Carlisle cuts himself off as he leans toward the now-steaming cup, his hand gripping the desk as he finds that he suddenly needs help keeping himself steady. He waves away some of the steam reflexively, scooting his chair a few inches from his desk.
"Oh! Oh oh all right right right right, that- that worked. That did work. I can- I can feel something?" He sounded unsure for a second there, like someone who hasn't felt something -- anything -- in a while and isn't sure what the experience is like anymore. He nods, the light in his eyes unfocused behind his glasses. "I feel something!"
no subject
"Hey! That's good then. How's it feel? All nice and floaty?" From the way he's babbling he guesses it's something like that. "Lemme know if you need to lie down."
no subject
If he has to ask if he shouldn't make it too complicated, then no, he probably shouldn't.
no subject
"Well I'm not feeling anything, so I think whatever you did worked and it's only affecting you. So that's good. You're not going to hotbox the whole barracks level."
no subject
Don't answer that Pratt, as he goes right into the next thing -- it's as though in freeing his mind of his worries, he has plenty of brainpower to think about other things, like potentially stupid ideas.
"No wait no wait no wait, now that I know how to affect someone like me with this, I should- I should find other uses. Do you think I could sleep with this, if I enchanted it right? Do you know how long it's been since I slept?"
no subject
"I think you're getting ahead of yourself, first see how long this lasts and if there's any side effects before you start doing all kinds of stuff with it." Pratt is starting to feel like a Deputy again here, being the voice of reason talking someone down from doing stupid things. "Can you sleep? Or would that be more like knocking yourself unconscious?"
no subject
That likely does explain some of the stress he's under, especially when that's all on top of his being-an-undead problem.
no subject
"That sounds like torture. But see what happens with this first before you knock yourself out." And Pratt can figure out what they should do if it turns out Carlisle sleepwalks.
no subject
He eases into a seat on the bed, his fingers tightening on the comforter as he tries to keep himself steady. "In good news, I feel good. Not as good as I could, but I believe I can work on the enchantment. If- if I could make a magic rock, I can do this, can't I? If you would help me?"
no subject
"Hey it's a start though right? You're setting your baseline so you know how to adjust it next time." He feels a little odd about his, like he's talking someone through their first dose of heroin. It sort of goes against everything in his police training. But he's not home, and these are extraordinary circumstances. Not to mention Carlisle is technically dead so he's probably not bound by the Montana Penal Code anyway.
"Definitely. I think you got this. But you should enjoy it while it's happening, not think about the future. That's kinda the whole point of getting high. Being in the moment."
(no subject)