benji ryans. (
cestrumnocturnum) wrote in
multiversallogs2012-03-27 05:52 pm
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you can't rely on bringing people downtown, you have to put them there.
Who: Benji Ryans and You?
What: A transdimensional kidnapping might give anyone restless dreams.
Where: In your head. Or her head. Something like that.
When: Various nights through the week.
Notes: Please see the OOC post. Beneath the cut is a general idea of the setting in which you can tag in, but let me know if you'd like me to threadstart!
Warnings: Possible violence, depictions of ruined New York City.
Night and day casts grey both and presents different dangers. The bright lights of a rebuilt and prospering Staten Island seems like an eternity away, and fences that once defined and regulated spaces have been torn apart, cut open, climbed over. Abandoned attempts at construction are like a graveyard for hope. Unbelievably, some people still live here. Some people even live in the tunnels beneath the pavement of the intact buildings boarded closed. Hazard symbols are spraypainted on the faces of buildings.
They come out at night, the robotic hellhounds that breathes steam out their ribcages, whose eyes turn red when they sense you are near. Needles in their mouths, sharp feet, klaxon howls, seven hundred pounds of steel, and artificial intelligence networked between them that sees herself as a pawn and a herd at the same time but carries out her coded marching orders because she lacks a name.
Tanks in the streets, but these are rarely abandoned. A wind howls through the once crowded city streets. The dream is vivid enough to taste ash in the air.
no subject
"I-- hm," She was going to say she didn't have any, but something occurs to her, "The things in the dream, they couldn't really have hurt us, could they?"
She's thinking of the heat from the robot.
no subject
It's a good question, also, and she knows the answer; she just gives a moment's consideration to how to answer it. "No," Benji decides upon. "You'll wake up whole and healthy and barely even remember the pain at all, even if the images keep dancing in your eyes. But the illusion-- well, it's quite vivid, isn't it."
The wind, the grass, the smells from a nearby river they can't even see; everything could fool them into thinking they were standing in a real woodland clearing. "Pain can happen. I'm sorry if--" She cuts herself off, there, because she's already apologised, and let's out a sigh through her nose, frustration at being careless.
no subject
The answer is pretty much what she guessed it would be; she thinks it'd take very strong magic to hurt someone in a dream and have it carry to the waking world, "Vivid enough to fool me." There's no anger in her tone, more just a wry sort of amusement and she waves off the apology.
"It's okay, really. There's no harm done and hey, at least this dream ended in a nice spot. Most of my nightmares don't," There is a silver lining here, see!
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"There are nice spots, here," she says, with a crooked smile. "I don't live in the city, anyway. We're a little upstate, along the Hudson. Left to our own devices, I suppose."
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"Can I ask what happened?" To the city. She won't press if Benji doesn't want to discuss it, but she's definitely curious about what could have caused so much damage and why nothing's been done about it.
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But Benji doesn't evade by way of being coy. She's only just starting to meet people who don't know what is as common as World War II to others, except this one's at her doorstep. "A series of unfortunate events happened. In 2006, an individual destroyed a large part of the city with his powers - radioactivity. It was how we came out to the world, so I guess we kind of got off the wrong foot.
"After that, there was a rush to control us. It started with Registration, but--" She waves a hand, a flippant sort of gesture compared to the anger she is keeping under ice, barely transparent. "It would never end there, not with all the fighting. World war, for a while, but that ended about six years ago. Most of the damage you saw was the result of local terrorism."
A small shrug, not to dismiss, but to signify that that's all she has to say. "I'm from 2040. It takes that long for a place like New York City to fall, I suppose."
no subject
"I had a friend who was from your world, I think." She's not sure if it's the right thing to say, but she can't take it back now anyway, "I didn't realize it was that bad, and I know it doesn't mean anything, but I'm sorry."