A Shadowy Cabal (Mod Acct) (
synergismus) wrote in
multiversallogs2011-04-30 09:21 pm
Entry tags:
- @ mog hill,
- @ mog hill: valhalla inn,
- dean winchester,
- dominica norrington,
- hellboy,
- integra hellsing,
- jack benjamin,
- lucius malfoy (jr),
- lyla tzigano,
- martel,
- npc,
- rachel conway,
- rodolphus lestrange,
- wolfgang einhorn,
- { nazca barsavi,
- } adrian veidt,
- } apollo,
- } ashley barton,
- } balthier,
- } cassandra of troy,
- } ianto jones,
- } jack harkness,
- } james norrington,
- } jysiri,
- } lex luthor,
- } malcolm sandhurst,
- } mina barrett,
- } robert lewis,
- } sita
How many goodly creatures are there here! :: GAME OPENER
Welcome to Baedal.
These are the first words newcomers hear when the door opens and they are invited into their new world. Some fuss, some fight, some need time before they have the courage to step outside. Others, shell-shocked or jaded, go quietly along with the proceedings.
They are given brief instructions; a repeat of what's described in the pamphlet and a door key.
Please stay in your room. There will be dinner soon.
It's been almost a day for some. For others, only an hour's wait. The latest newcomer is lead straight from the arrival room to the dining hall where candles and lanterns have been set out to compensate for failing electricity. (Those who have been here longer explain about rolling blackouts.) The food, however, is warm, varied and plentiful. Seating is open, and less conventional chair are available to those who need them.
There are many strange faces around the table, the majority of these recent arrivals. The proprietor of the Valhalla Inn is here, as is some of her staff. The Sheriff of Mog Hill is introduced, his function detailed. The reason for the dinner is explained:
It's a celebration. A new cohort has finally been officiated; CeidaryBlue523. Your cohort. Please. Introduce yourself. Mingle. Get to know your fellows, they will be your brothers and sisters for as long as you live in this city.
((OOC post for discussion and coordination.))
These are the first words newcomers hear when the door opens and they are invited into their new world. Some fuss, some fight, some need time before they have the courage to step outside. Others, shell-shocked or jaded, go quietly along with the proceedings.
They are given brief instructions; a repeat of what's described in the pamphlet and a door key.
Please stay in your room. There will be dinner soon.
It's been almost a day for some. For others, only an hour's wait. The latest newcomer is lead straight from the arrival room to the dining hall where candles and lanterns have been set out to compensate for failing electricity. (Those who have been here longer explain about rolling blackouts.) The food, however, is warm, varied and plentiful. Seating is open, and less conventional chair are available to those who need them.
There are many strange faces around the table, the majority of these recent arrivals. The proprietor of the Valhalla Inn is here, as is some of her staff. The Sheriff of Mog Hill is introduced, his function detailed. The reason for the dinner is explained:
It's a celebration. A new cohort has finally been officiated; CeidaryBlue523. Your cohort. Please. Introduce yourself. Mingle. Get to know your fellows, they will be your brothers and sisters for as long as you live in this city.
((OOC post for discussion and coordination.))

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"No families," Apollo responded. "I'm Apollo. Just Apollo, of--well, of Delos, I suppose."
This time, he flashed her the most charming of the smiles, giving her a view of his set of straight, white teeth. "And no, I don't turn people into trees."
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"Well," she said uncertainly, "what would be the fun in that? If you wanted to transfigure someone, you should at least transfigure them into something useful. Like a tommy gun or a Rolls or a grand piano." She smiled slightly. "I'm rather fond of boats myself, although I imagine that would take quite a bit of power."
Mina tilted her hat back so that he could see her eyes. She considered Dominating him, but she had to think of an appropriate question first. "I've never heard of Delos. Where is it?"
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"It's an island close to Mykonos," he went on, though chances were, she'd never heard of that either. Still, he gave a friendly smile. He hadn't heard of the places she'd mentioned either.
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"I suppose that'll have to wait a bit, won't it?" She smiled wryly. "Apparently, we're long-term visitors here." She didn't let it show in her voice how much that annoyed her. Mina was terribly good at sounding bright and breezy. She could recite Hamlet's death scene and make it sound like a bubbly nursery rhyme.
She folded her arms across her chest. "Do you sail? Certainly, you must if you come from an island."
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Long term visitors. Internally, he sighed, though his face remained casual in expression. Why were people so quick to jump to that assumption? They'd been here for no longer than a day, and already everyone was assuming they'd settle down for years. Apollo wasn't entirely unconvinced that tomorrow morning, he'd wake up somewhere else entirely.
"You should make sure to visit when you're back in your world again," he advised. "Perhaps I can show you." He flashed his teeth at her again, nearly wolf-like. "I'd be happy to take you to some of my favorite spots."
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"I love sailing," she answered. "Travel of any sort, really. And I'm from England, of course. You can't be English without a certain respect for the sea." Her chest always swelled with pride thinking of home. Ironically, she had not returned for such a long time. Not since...
Well, no thinking of that tonight. Not when they were a bloody dazzling man occupying her attention.
"I would love to visit Greece," she gushed.
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And the people were inland. People fascinated Apollo. The water was too big and empty.
He leaned against the wall, gesturing absently in response to her comment about her home. "So tell me about England, then. Is it an island?"
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It was an empty promise, she supposed. As empty as his promise to show her Greece. Whether or not they were permanent residents of this place, she could not say, but no relationships lasted forever. And flirting was not about sincerity.
"Nothing quite matches England in the summer." Like a fog, wisps of memory crept into her mind, visions of a warm summer night on a hill. It had been so long ago.
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"How is it that the sun never sets?" he asked curiously. That seemed odd.
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"It's just an expression," she answered. "The British Empire spans all the way from India to the Americas." She paused. "But you probably wouldn't know India or the Americas, if I'm so very far advanced of you. I don't suppose you can tell me what year you're from?"
It didn't really matter if he could, or not. Mina was not fantastic with history. She knew the history of her covenant and that had always been more than sufficient. Well, apparently not so anymore, but she still wasn't too keen on considering the whole situation permanent.
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Must have been pretty far in the future. She was right. He hadn't recognized any of the places he had just mentioned (although what ridiculous names. America? It hardly rolled off the tongue)
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Mina really had no use for religion, but she supposed that wasn't something one ought to say to a god.
"Perhaps you're still around in my time," she mused. "I've never encountered a Greek god before, but I have met with many a fae in recent months. Not to mention a mage or two. Why not?"
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Of course, there could be multiple reasons for that. They could have been in disguise, could have started going by other names, could have decided to separate themselves from mortals for any multitude of reasons.
Then again, they could have all been destroyed somehow.
"So tell me about yourself," he said, changing the subject. "What were you doing before you showed up here?"
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"And what about you, my golden friend?" she countered. "What were you up to when you were abducted?" Mina smiled, trying to remember her mythology properly. "Seducing young shepherdesses while playing the pipes of pan in some gloriously beautiful, sunlit meadow?"
no subject
After a brief, puzzled pause, Apollo turned his attention back to Mina and gave her a distracted smile. "But I'm fairly certain that there were no pipes or shepherdesses. I tend to remember those."
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How she envied Joseph Brown his amnesia. That would have been delightful, at the moment.
She paused a moment. Please, God, don't let this person be another Joseph Brown. That would just be too, too much for her to handle.
"I hope there's some kind of music around here," she murmured, hoping to distract herself from that thought. "I simply cannot live without any ostentation. Life is so dull without it." She lifted her arms over her head, twirling around. "Music is necessary."
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"Luckily, I brought my lyre along with me," Apollo offered. Then, a frown. "Strange, though. I didn't think it was on my person at the time I was brought over here. I must be forgetting about something."
Between that and Cassandra's bow, he had a feeling this was something of a trend. Strange. It had happened on Willaknepp too. The worlds must have been connected somehow, even if Cassandra didn't think so. "What about you?" he asked. "Did you bring anything with you?"
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She enjoyed survival too much.
Mina glanced around the courtyard. "I think music is precisely what this party needs. Everything is so dreary." She turned to him. "And I can't say I've ever heard a lyre before."
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Effective, he was sure, but somehow it all struck him as horribly unpoetic. There was nothing beautiful about them at all.
Of course, Ares would have probably thought otherwise. Then again, there was nothing poetic about him either. He probably would have done well in this sort of world, though. Fought his way home, or at least to some position of authority.
"I'll be sure to play for you sometime," Apollo skirted past the question. He didn't want to seem rude and turn her down, but he didn't want to be forever remembered as that strange man that had started playing music the first uncomfortable day of their arrival. "But only if you promise to dance."
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The truth of the matter was Mina danced just fine. The problem was that she always wanted to lead.
"You seem like a fun sort," Mina continued, the chuckle wearing off. "Do you enjoy other sport?"
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"My impressive wooing abilities aside, I'm not half bad with a bow and arrow," he said. "And I enjoy outdoor games. Running and swimming and the like."
He swept another glance over her. "And you? You look like you stay active."
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Mina clasped her hands behind her back. "I enjoy sailing too, of course. I can't do it nearly as much as I used to, sadly. But every once in awhile, I like to go out onto the lake at midnight and watch the sky." She glanced up at the stars. She hated how strange they were. She missed Orion and the Dippers and most especially Andromeda.
What else? She supposed running for her life from dragons or fire or fae didn't really count as sport. "Really, I like most anything that gets me moving."
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He shrugged a shoulder. "You'd just have to find out if there's a body of water around here to sail on." Frankly, if there was, it would be encouraging. There would be hope of sailing home from there.
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The reality of it, of course, had lacked much of the romance. The life of a pirate was often filled with long stretches of boredom, to be broken up by intense, terrifying engagements. And then there was the food. And the smell. Nothing smelled worse than a lot of men all in close quarters together. Storms at sea. Wicked cold. Lingering, terrible diseases. And yet, Mina would always miss it a little. Mostly because of Anne. Especially because of Anne.
"You can be my first mate," she said. "You'll take the helm. I'll take the crow's nest."
no subject
"Who, me?" he questioned incredulously. "No, no, I'm afraid a pirate's life wouldn't be good for me at all. Not nearly comfortable enough. And surrounded by far too many sweaty, unkempt men for my taste."
As a rule, Apollo preferred cleanly young virgins to old men.
And he was flexible on the virgin part.
"You have at it, though. I'll help you build a ship."
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