Entry tags:
- * dreamy,
- * npc: agent young,
- * npc: commander grothia,
- * npc: sergeant chiron,
- * setting: base,
- achilles [fate],
- akira kurusu [persona],
- arthur [inception],
- ashitaka [princess mononoke],
- daenerys targaryen [asoiaf],
- hei [darker than black],
- henry cooldown [no more heroes],
- keyleth [dungeons & dragons],
- kylar stern [the night angel trilogy],
- mordred [fate],
- noctis lucis caelum [final fantasy],
- ryuji sakamoto [persona],
- siegfried [fate],
- soldier 76 [overwatch],
- travis touchdown [no more heroes],
- yoshitsugu otani [samurai warriors]
all this energy calling me
WHO? Everybody!
WHAT? Welcome home, nerds.
WHEN? Outside time and space, in the aether between dimensions.
ANYTHING ELSE? Violence, as always. Please warn in subject lines for anything beyond physical violence, and move to a personal journal if things go beyond PG-13.
WHAT? Welcome home, nerds.
WHEN? Outside time and space, in the aether between dimensions.
ANYTHING ELSE? Violence, as always. Please warn in subject lines for anything beyond physical violence, and move to a personal journal if things go beyond PG-13.
TOUCH BASE;
backfill armed services echelon
COST re-appropriated vehicle 854A-5.2
COST re-appropriated vehicle 854A-5.2
read the base setting infopage
DEPARTING FRANCE
The order comes out the second day after the Tuileries is sacked:
PACK UP, GET READY TO MOVE OUT. WE'VE DONE ALL WE CAN HERE.
DEPLOYMENT: BASE. WE NEED TO RESTOCK. BE PREPARED FOR MORE TRANSFERS ON ARRIVAL.
STAY SAFE. TIME-STEP EXPECTED TO BEGIN WITHIN THE HOUR. FOR THOSE OF YOU NEW TO COST: FIND A SECLUDED SPOT, AND TRY NOT TO EAT ANYTHING BEFORE THE JUMP.
The Time-Step
The transfer begins, and it starts like a vibrating heat on the collar bone, not painful, not to start with. Just a hum of sensation. But the vibration spreads. Veteran COST soldiers often refer to this phenomena as 'the buzz'. The sensation builds, feeling not unlike standing near a great engine, or the wind rattling the branches of a great tree. There is long a moment of motion sickness, and one cannot always be sure if it is you that is shaking from the inside out, or the world that is shaking you from the outside in. It may just be better to close your eyes against the growing nausea as the world blurs out of focus. A star shines in the distance. You may hear the faint rustling of leaves. Some swear they hear voices in this moment, indistinct words echoing off nothingness. Some swear they feel a touch of the divine; the eyes of the eternal look down upon you. Ancient bones rattle just out of earshot, cold and brittle. Or maybe it's an illusion brought on by powerful technology grafted into your skin.
One thing is for sure: One moment you are here, and the next, you are not.
Nausea is commonly accompanied by this shift. One moment, you're in the cold of France. The next, you're in a temperature regulated hallway, looking not unlike a very poorly put together space station. Droids rush up and down the long hallway, fixing broken bits of machinery or just chattering with each other. Crows sit on high ledges, looking down, watching.
(For those of you who just apped in and didn't participate in the TDM, you'll appear alongside your comrades now, standing in this long hallway filled with droids and crows and men and women in clothing from 18th century France. Of course, you'll be wearing the minimal COST athletic issued underwear, and holding whatever one item you were allowed to bring. Surprise!)
At the end of the hall is a long table with heaps of used clothing on it. The sizes and styles vary, along with color and detail (AKA none look exactly like the linked pics, they're just a baseline, use your ~imagination~). One thing's for certain, all the clothing has been used before, with holes darned and worn edges. They're all clean, though, and each bears a single patch with the words 'KNOW YOUR RIGHTS, THE FUTURE IS UNWRITTEN' and 'COST sewn into the side.
They're not exactly high fashion, but they might be more comfortable than the late 18th century digs you're still wearing, if you showed up in France. Or, you know, the underwear.
Meet the Drill Sergeant
There is the echoing sound of hooves, and a strange creature emerges from a nearby room: a centaur. He smiles kindly, happy to see you've arrived. He has a significant limp in his back left leg, causing his hoof-beats to pitch an irregular rhythm as he walks slowly through the hall.
"Hello, all!" His voice is kind, but it's pitched to carry. "You may know me as Sergeant-- I am in technicality a drill sergeant. You may call me Chiron, if you wish, though I'm to understand some may know others with the same name." He laughs, amused. "In any case, welcome home. It is not much, but we have tried to make it hospitable for you in your time here. Your room assignments have been uploaded onto your BCEs, along with some technological upgrades we've been testing out. There are a few prototypes and experiments you may find in your rooms as well. Our agents are..." He looks up at the crows. "We are a curious people."
He looks over to the table stacked with clothing. "Please pick out what suits you, and make adjustments as needed. If you have any complaints, and wish to change your rooming situation, your username, anything of that nature, please send me a request. I am also known in some capacity as a trainer-"
One of the crows caws, and it sounds almost sarcastic.
Sergeant Chiron ignores it. "Hm. If you wish for me to make a training regiment for you, to better your skill in this organization, please let me know. But for now: I am to understand your last mission was... tumultuous. Please, rest and acclimate yourself to BASE."
He turns to leave, before stopping-- "And please be kind to the crows. They remember slights."
The crows' cawing sounds like laughter.
HOTSPOTS
There's been some technical difficulty since the prognosticators had their little meltdown. Coolant is in short supply, and some of the corridors of BASE are a little warmer than others. Pleasantly warm. Comfortably so, like walking through a sunbeam. In these hotspots, it feels comfortable and snug.
Characters walking through them will feel the urge to lie down and rest, maybe take a quick little nap.
Sleeping in these spots will cause unsettling or confusing dreams, but not nightmares. Dreams in these hotspots-- and sleeping in these hotspots will never be dreamless-- will be hard to remember upon waking, but they seemed very... strange. Almost as though you were intruding on something important but private.
Yet you can't quite remember it when you wake.
If you're clever and watchful, you'll notice the crows avoid these areas, so you can avoid them as well before you're seized by the urge to lie down and nap.
Particularly watchful characters may notice the hotspots are growing in size and number as the days wear on.
(More information about these and the forthcoming December plot will be coming in an infopost on the 12th, but if you have any questions now, feel free to ask here!)
read the base setting infopage

I
The automatons caught his eye, of course, but Chiron was much more interested in knowing the overall layout of the place first.
But when he saw Ashitaka watching the little things, Chiron stopped to take a better look. They were clever things, and in hearing an unknown word, there was curiosity.]
I can't say I've heard of kodama before.
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The kodama, though... The men from Irontown had even seemed confused and unconvinced from his explanations even when one of the creatures was right in front of him.
He tries, nonetheless.] They are forest spirits, where I am from. They live within healthy trees.
[He considers it for a moment and continues,] Though I suppose these are the ones keeping this place healthy.
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Ah, I see. I've met plenty of nature spirits myself.
[He smiles, quite at each with the conversation and with watching the robots go.]
I suppose it'd be just as easy to label these creatures as aether spirits.
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Ashitaka might not actively recognize it now, but this stranger seems to exude an aura markedly different from that mindset, something far more similar to what he had felt wandering in the land of gods.]
May I ask more about them? [Call him a little homesick - and by "home," simply something that wasn't metal and stone and civilization.
He considers that; he supposes it could be true, but something about it feels a little off. They weren't so much aspects of whatever was outside this vessel as they were for the vessel itself.] Or spirits of metal. [Pause.] If such things could have spirits.
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[Chiron folds his arms across his chest, head tilted slightly towards Ashitaka. His eyes are on the droids still, but he seems to be more than happy to begin speaking of home, so long as he has a place to start.]
I see no reason that metal could not. It is as much a product of the earth as anything else.
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[Chiron brings up a very good point, however; one that causes any argument Ashitaka might've managed to die down before he even thought to give it voice. He knew that he was right; he had seen the forges in Irontown himself, had even helped the women working the bellows there. It was a complicated topic for him, however. That iron had been mined at the expense of the vitality of the forest and the mountains, and then that iron had been made into bullets which had poisoned both Nago and Noro. But it felt true that the metal itself, as a product of the land, wasn't to blame; it was simply how humans had purposed it for violence and greed.
He nods after a moment's thought.] You are right. [His gaze had drifted, but he returns it to his companion.] I feel we are so separated from the earth right now, it is difficult to remember that.
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But metal spirits were a novelty. He breathes out, then walks over to get closer to the droids.]
It isn't something that feels instinctual, I suspect. Metal has more man hours worked into it.
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Even Ashitaka's limited knowledge of the spirits and creatures of the forest pales in comparison to how many different entities that Chiron seems to be aware of.] Perhaps start with the first, then? [He doesn't continue because "satyr" would be rather difficult for him to say. Honestly, all of them would...
He tags along as his companion walks back to where the droids were chattering among themselves, working on some corrosion in the metal.
He nods.] Its creation makes it feel like something more of man than the earth.
[He remembers the bellows, the massive facility that smelted and forged in Irontown. He would've never imagined such a place with his scope of understand limited to his home village, but every day he had spent away from it had opened his eyes considerably.]
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[Chiron's happy to watch their attempt to work the metal, and smiles as the corrosion is slowly, steadily worked away. There's a new shine to it, and it's remarkable to see in real time.]
It makes sense. Especially when it isn't men working it anymore, but machines.
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[(Nymph and nereid are also not super simple for him to say.)
Watching the worker droids continue to heal the ailments of the vessel continues to reinforce in his mind that this is something very similar to the organism of a forest, or at least something living (by some loose comparison).] That seems to make sense. [He seems pensive.] Creatures of metal keeping an environment of metal healthy. It makes people seem like an outside element.
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Nymphs are usually forest spirits that take the form of young women. Nereid are their ocean dwelling equivalents, and usually have crowns of coral.
[They're incredibly basic explanations, but Chiron knows it's easiest to start small.
There's a little smile on his lips at the idea of metal healing metal making people seem like an outside element.]
And in that, they've proven how natural metal is, if man seems outside of it.
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These manifestations seem to make a little more sense to him, though he finds something rather interesting.] Do many of these spirits of nature take human form? [The kodama certainly had a humanoid shape, though they were small and almost childlike, with faces that could intimidate one who had never seen their kind before. Apart from the legs and horns of the satyrs he had mentioned before, it seemed that these spirits were largely humanoid, and all the gods that he had seen took the forms of beasts.
Ashitaka seems pensive at what Chiron continues to say, his mouth turned slightly downwards into a frown.
Has it progressed to a point in the future where it is so simple to rule man as a creature set apart from nature? That was certainly how it had seemed outside of his own village, even moreso in Irontown. The trend shouldn't surprise him, and in a way it doesn't, but it does sadden him.]
It is regrettable that that is the case. [His words here are a bit softer, the facade of something larger to him. He would be a fool to think he could change the tide of humanity's progression, but it would be a thorn to him; more proof than he had already had that the Emishi were a remnant of times long past, soon to be swept away.]
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That's a question that Chiron's never stopped to consider before, but once it's articulated, he...can't help but realize that the answer is largely, yes. Humanoid is the default, or so it seems.]
It's the most common form. Even for myself.
[What was a centaur, after all?
Chiron's eyes remained on the droids, who had only just finished their work on the corrosion. What charmed him most was that they seemed to be celebrating in a way, walking around in a little circle and waving appendages.]
What makes you call it regrettable?
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Ashitaka eyes him closely, not necessarily suspicious but certainly interested.] You are one of these creatures? [That does seem what he implied, and for some reason it seems to fit. There's something in sharing a conversation with Chiron that reminds Ashitaka of something from back home - perhaps the moment he had seen the great forest spirit at a great distance, though he could be mistaken.
His attention turns back to the droids, which were celebrating their victory over the corroded metal.
He simply offers in response:] Man need not be an element separate from nature. [Even if it already seemed to be a done deal.]
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[There's no point in hiding identities. Not when his fellow Heroic Spirits arrived, and now it's even more pointless. Chiron's smile and shrug is an easy thing, and he looks quite content to be honest about it.]
So how would you propose that such harmony be achieved?
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Ashitaka's eyes grow a little spacey for a second as he pieces together what the man said. Of course he remembers the sergeant, but what does he mean himself.
Let's just say time travel has been stretching his mind enough; multi-verse and other versions of selves is a little far out of his reach right now.
So he says, slowly:] You... mean to say that you are the same type of creature as the sergeant? [No, wait. Not exactly. Revision.] No, the same person?
[He supposes they share some similar attributes, some very baseline character traits and demeanors, but he still looks quite confused.
It doesn't put him in much of a mental space to answer such a heavy question. He shakes his head.] I am not sure if it is so easily attainable now. I have seen that men think themselves not only separate from nature, but superior. That it is something to be conquered and controlled.
[He remembers the desperation and anger in the voices of the gods as they planned their final assault on the men and women of Irontown. He falls silent again, his mouth a thin line.]
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[Time, space, and Grail Wars. They are one hell of a combination, and while it's plenty easy for Chiron to understand how this could come to pass, he knows it is't the same for all. He pauses before explaining further.]
Your people seem to interact with your gods a great deal, from the sounds of it. Am I mistaken?
[The mention of forest spirits seems like the question is a logical extrapolation. It is where he will start, and where he can build out from.]
That is the nature of many men. And for that, I can't say I blame the natural world for any desire to protect itself.
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He sets the thought aside, having been answered a question. He shakes his head.] How I was raised, it was a matter of respect and distance. [The gods of the forest typically did not attack if not provoked, allowing man to live in their own lands.] I left and found that this was not true elsewhere, and that men had begun to war with the gods.
[It was the reason he was cursed now - that, and his own hand in the death of a god.]
I cannot either.
[It was said automatically. He did not judge the gods for them feeling the need to defend themselves. He had simply wished that they and Eboshi would listen to reason.]
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I see. The gods I've dealt with in the past are just...their personality traits are decidedly human. There is respect, but the gods are also creatures of whim and that makes a great deal of difference. They meddle, they have children with men, they fight and drag humans into their conflicts. [The contrast was stark, if Chiron had to guess.
But fighting gods was something that ended poorly. A thought that now rattled in his mind.]
Do you believe that yours can repair the relationship?
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He has known that they know different gods since Jerusalem, when he demanded to see the gods that the people warred for and against only to receive strange stares. It's not strange to Ashitaka that the gods have seemingly human traits — there were emotions within the gods he had seen that could be seen as human, though perhaps they were simply shared between them without being intrinsic to one or the other. But the meddling, and the intermingling with humanity... Noro had been, in a way, derisive and almost disgusted with San for humanity, though he knew that the god cared for her in a way that he could not understand.]
The gods that I have seen are great beasts of the forest, powerful both in body and mind. They seemed more akin to animals than to man, and in that they did not show this capriciousness you have mentioned. They merely acted as nature might dictate, as animals might.
[Not that they were stupid, but that they knew their place.
His mouth sets into a firm line as he considers the question. After a short time he shakes his head.]
I am not sure if the damage is something that can be repaired. While in the company of those gods, I heard that their power and influence seemed to be waning. That the beasts, their subjects, were growing stupid and tame in the face of humanity's expansion. [He grows silent for a moment, then continues.] I have heard that in the future of my own country, they no longer exist.
[He feels more sharply than normal the weight of the demon mark, thinks of Noro and Okkoto, and the divine creature he had glimpsed through the trees in the heart of the forest. All, gone.]
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[Chiron is quiet for a long while. In a way, these are gods that seem much easier to deal with than the pantheon of Olympus. There is no Trojan War from gods like these, no cursing men for a husband's infiedlity. But it seems too rash a conclusion to declare one better than the other.]
Prior to the damage, what was their relationship like with those who paid homage to them?
[That was the real question, wasn't it? Chiron was interested in that, but he was equally concerned at the mention of waning power. In speaking to himself, the other Chiron had indicated that this exact thing had caused a number of gods to make rash decisions.]
Did you hear this from reliable sources?
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His answer to this question wouldn't be the best. He had mostly heard about this topic from the older men in his village, about how the gods of the forest used to be much more widespread and a much more dangerous threat to anyone who ventured too far to lands untamed.]
Neutral, at best. [He looks thoughtful.] Paying respects to the gods was usually enough to assuage their anger for occasionally hunting creatures of their own clans. This was from before I was born, however, so I can only tell you what I was told.
[But it wasn't like the gods offered boons or curses to humans often. He isn't even sure if the forest spirit would've given him life renewed from his bullet wound if San hadn't acted as an intermediary.]
Back then they used to be more numerous. It... was relatively recently that man invented weapons that could begin to kill the gods.
[And the more their lands were stolen from them, the more it reduced their strength. It was a war of attrition in which they had little ability to regain ground.]
I am not sure. It could be a difference between our worlds, but speaking to him made it seem more apparent to me that that is what was happening, even in my own time.
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Neutral is something I would have never associated with gods in the past. [At least, not with the gods he existed with.] But I also cannot imagine the men of my time being able to kill them.
[Now? Now he isn't so sure, after talking with Chiron.]
If it was not the same thing happening in your own time, then I think it is fair to say that it was something very, very similar. Regardless, the concept is frightening.
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[They were like spirits — like the kodama and others — of the forest made flesh, powerful and ancient and intelligent so that they could guide their clans of creatures, though they were not all-knowing or all-powerful. There were even rumors that the great forest spirit could be killed now that others had been, though even to think of that made Ashitaka's stomach turn.]
Men of the past most likely thought the same. [A beat; his mouth presses into a line.] But times change, as do men.
[He remembers Eboshi, silhouetted against the night sky with rifle in hand, firing rounds into the charred landscape to frighten off the apes below.]
It is. [He looks about the room as the group of dactyl droids scurry further away towards another maintenance job in needs of attending to.] But I have noticed this since I was taken from my own time. A lack of spirits, a lack of gods. If this is the same world, something must have happened.
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[He wants to be sure the guess is correct. Regardless, the changing hearts of men is something Chiron does know and understand. That is a universal matter, one impossible to not understand.]
It seems as if the exercise of this all is to underscore that as men change, gods suffer. The impact of that suffering on man remains to be seen. [Chiron is unsure of how it will all play out. He isn't sure he wants to.]
Even if it not the same world, it means the matter is not limited to one place or time. That's cause for concern as well.
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