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multiversallogs2011-06-27 12:24 pm
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the little one stops to shut the gate :: [OPEN]
Who: A whole lot of ants and YOU!
What: Exploring houses overrun by giant ants! Interacting with ants!
Where: Three specific ant hive houses have cropped up in Baedal.
When: The ants become visible late Sukkardi, so any time after Shundi will do.
Notes: To organize expeditions into the ant hives and to see what your characters will find there, please see the OOC post. NPCs, general GMing, and mod guidance are all available upon request.
Warnings: Bugs! Possible horror. Will update as needed.
When the ants come out of the ground it happens very quietly and it happens at night. Baedal wakes up to chitinous sound of insect labour. At first there is some panic - memories of strange creatures emerging from below to attack the city fresh in everyone's mind - but it is soon evident that the ants, while curious, pose no immediate threat to the City. They seem content to work and live inside the houses they have occupied; houses no one has noticed or cared about for years.
Soon, the ant-occupied houses begin to change. The ants are building something on the rooftops, something like towers, stretching towards the heavens. Birds that fly too close to the buildings quickly disappear.
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Somehow, she knew, long before she arrived, that something was amiss today.
When she arrived at the shop, she saw the creatures. Her first instinct was to consider them fellow citizens. After all, she had gotten her fill of talking animals (and blue things) back in Rowan. But the way they were moving, Cassandra somehow doubted that they were sentient. And she was a little more than afraid that they weren't terribly friendly, either.
The woman standing in front of the shop seemed like a better bet.
"I don't suppose you know if this is ordinary?" she asked.
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She steps aside momentarily to let by one of the ants. "That, and this just unsettles me the tiniest bit. In any case, looks like the shop's closed indefinitely," she adds, noting that the other woman looked like she was on business here, rather than looking to investigate.
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She took a moment to size up the other woman. Although she looked mature, Cassandra estimated that she was a bit younger than she appeared. It was all in the voice. She wasn't terribly fazed by the creatures. She must have seen a lot.
"Are you new here?"
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"I've never heard of Chicago," Cassandra said, watching her. "Is it anywhere near Los Angeles? I knew some people from Los Angeles awhile back."
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She moves to enter, and then looks back at Cassandra. "Um, I don't know if you..."
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She walked over to Jones, assuming the air of someone who did this sort of thing often, if only to bolster her own confidence.
"My name is Cassandra," she said politely. "If we're going to be killed together, I figure you should at least know my name."
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And then she's through. And looks like they're not all over the floor, in any case, although there seems to be certain paths they're traveling regularly. "Come on," she says, poking her head around the door. "It's safe over here."
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"Death isn't what it used to be," she deadpanned. "I died once."
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Secretly, Cassandra was beginning to enjoy saying things like that. As someone who so often observed people, she enjoyed watching their reactions. They ranged across a wide continuum from utter shock and disbelief to complete acceptance, like it was the most natural confession in the whole world. Based on what she had seen of Jones so far, she was guessing something in the middle, erring on the side of acceptance. There was something about this woman. She had seen...things.
"As you can see, my health has improved."
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"I've been dragged through three separate worlds," she explained, stepping aside as an ant scurried past. "The first world that took me...the process of being taken somehow healed me. There were two other people who arrived directly from moment of death. We formed a club."
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More things in heaven and on earth, as they say.
She's still thinking of what to say when something occurs to her, looking around the room. She takes a cursory glance around, frowns, and then moves toward Cassandra and the door, as if to go back outside.
"Hang on a second, there's something... strange here. I need to check something, to see if I might be right."
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Damn that curiosity.
"What should I do?"
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She stretches out with her arcane senses, feeling for a deeper understanding of the gross matter around her. And... yes. She was right. There's more to the house than there appears, in a literal sense—there's not enough room inside to fill up the house. Something's hidden.
More confident of the ants' marching patterns now, she jogs up the walk to return to Cassandra.
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In the absence of such an ability, she would be forced to resort to another method of learning the truth.
"Were you using magic?" she asked.
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When Cassandra was honest, she was brutally honest. And that generally cost her a lot of friendship and social collateral. But she liked to think that it allowed her to maintain some dignity.
"I used to be able to perceive auras on people. And all it took was looking at them." Cassandra shrugged. "Or maybe I'm round the bend. All things are possible."
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"It was really more... taking measurements," Jones explains. "Although there was a little bit more to it, you're right. I have a bit of a sense for... well, I think there's something hidden in here. And I'm not sure what a sewing machine repair shop would need hidden rooms or storage space for."
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The counter seems like the logical place to start. Thankfully, the ants haven't built on top of it yet (although it certainly seems like they're working on it, and they've gotten around the back), so Jones is able to hop up on top to get a better look at what's behind it. "Over here."
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But that didn't mean she didn't have questions.
"Is your Chicago a place where magic is common?" she asked. "Or uncommon? Where I grew up, it was rather natural. But you seemed quite surprised when I asked. As if you weren't accustomed to being asked something like that."
Oh yes, Cassandra was good at observing people.
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Nothing much else here except a bunch of bobbins and a few partially-burnt candles. Actually, thinking about it, she's used up her seance candles, hasn't she?Seems like a good enough opportunity to replace them. Jones picks one up and—
—startles almost enough to topple off the counter backwards, though manages to retain her balance.
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"What is it?" she hissed, looking around and seeing, of course, nothing.
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