In the Night Moderators (
inthenightmods) wrote in
logsinthenight2019-11-16 06:24 pm
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Entry tags:
- !event,
- armitage hux (hebe),
- aziraphale (xy),
- buffy summers (amy),
- castiel (inky),
- daylight vis lornlit (melly),
- elektra natchios (carlee),
- elizabeth (li),
- goro akechi (luna),
- jo harvelle (dee),
- kol mikaelson (jade),
- maes hughes (erica),
- sarissa theron (bella),
- villanelle (zeb),
- wanda maximoff (margot)
EVENT LOG: ENTER MR. SANDMAN (DREAMERS)

EVENT LOG:
ENTER MR. SANDMAN (DREAMERS)
characters: all characters that signed up as a dreamer for the event.
location: dreamland feat. beacon of the past.
date/time: november 16-29.
content: the dreamers investigate beacon as it once was.
warnings: psychological/existential horror. further cws will arise depending on the location; mods will cw tags appropriately, and you will too!
say your prayers, little one.
Hello, dreamers. Welcome to Beacon.![]()
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Below, each group has a toplevel ready and waiting for the investigation to begin. Feel free to tag in however to establish a tag order, and mod responses will begin once each character has tagged in. If you need a refresher on how the event will work, give the OOC info another read!
As for those of you in thesin binopt out area...
The Beacon of the past isn't all too different from the Beacon of the present, frankly, except for a few notable exceptions. For one, it's far better lit: daylight leaves everything feels a lot brighter and more sensible than eternal night does. Several advertisements for community theater in the Invincible are hung up (Tryouts for the Ice Man Cometh! Cometh try your luck!) and minor lost and found posters are tacked to a community bulletin board nearby. Oh, and a merry little tune is playing on loop from a record player set up outside the Invincible.
It's cheerful, if not a little off-putting. But the signs of life are clear, even if the forest still looks darkly oppressive over yonder.
Additionally, since investigation threads 1) rely on mod responses, and 2) will likely move on the slow side given the nature of the event/size of the groups, if you would like to have your characters "mingle" in their assigned location, please feel free to write your own toplevels! We ask that you post them as separate toplevels not in response to the mod toplevels (so our inboxes don't get super flooded/we don't accidentally miss stuff). Remember that groups may only interact with each other during the event, but you're welcome to assume timey-wimey shenanigans to excuse why your characters are mingling instead of searching for clues—they do have two weeks in this dream, technically, and dreams are not always linear. If your investigation thread has not yet progressed to a point in which you've got enough of a handle on the setting to write a separate mingle starter, ask the mod you're working with! We'll fill you in on some OOC details so you can mingle accordingly while still allowing for characters to discover those details ICly in the investigation thread.
If you're still jonesing for more threading action during the event, we encourage you to check out the TDM!
QUICKNAV | |||
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no subject
If this is a horror movie, splitting up is maybe a bad idea?
[She figures saying it is enough of a performance. She doesn't actually care if either of them were to be hurt, but she's just remembered she ought not to be showing said lack of care too obviously. Still, despite Peter's comments, nothing here seems dangerous. It's all so quiet, welcoming.
She follows behind Peter, she doesn't have his spidey speed and she's not rushing in any case. The church is peaceful, the sunlight hazy, even the insistent ringing isn't enough to break her from her dreamy pace. If there are other doors or openings along the staircase, she'll peek in on her way up.]
no subject
Meanwhile, Peter and Villanelle find it an easy enough trip up the steps to the top of the belltower. There aren't any other doors or exits: it's a one way trip upward, and it feels long. Longer than it likely should be. Far longer than the tower appeared to be from the outside. If they look back, they'll find they can still see the door. It would almost seem as if they haven't actually been making any progress, if the sound of the bells weren't getting louder and louder until they're practically on top of the pair.
And then they reach the top, abruptly.]
no subject
He moves towards the door to the stairs, left open behind his companions, and calls up to them-] No trapdoor.
Can you see the rest of the town?
[He isn't ready yet, to leap to conjecture, and Bruce's gaze returns to the room he stands in. The pews and the sunlight filtering through the windows, throwing colors and patterns across the floor. It's strange, but he can't even say that it reminds him of home. Gotham has always seemed perpetually grey; in this way, Beacon's unending night was more familiar.
Bruce frowns thoughtfully and tugs at the fabric around each elbow, pulling his long sleeves up just an inch or two. Alright. There's no trap door. There are candles in places along the atrium but there's no altar lined with them- which suggests that those two details are specific to Beacon as they know it. And then, because he's alone and perhaps also because this is who he is- Bruce begins checking the pews for false boards or personal belongings. Begins checking the walls for gaps and begins searching the adjacent rooms.]
no subject
the answer seemed to consistently be not a lot, and his expression had settled into a perplexed, irritated frown right before he found himself at the top.
(geez.)
he stops abruptly. he thinks he hears bruce's voice from below, indistinct and unclear compared to the sheer noise of the bell; before stepping forward into the room, he turns back to villanelle, lips quirking into a wry smile. ] Hey, so in Vertigo, the main character has acrophobia, which is what most people refer to as vertigo — a fear of heights — but vertigo's more a sypmtom of the phobia... [ he continues, conversationally. ] At the end of the movie, he tries to confront his fear — there's a church, a bell tower, and— [ peter gestures vaguely, not bothering to finish the remark. (it is a little morbid, alright, and he'd rather not tempt fate.)
he doesn't step immediately towards the bell; instead, he circles around the room, peering out of the windows and looking out across beacon, searching for differences and for buildings that have become far more familiar than he'd ever wanted them to become — the general store, the invincible, the square. he doesn't say anything else, features settling back into a frown. there's still no tingling at the base of his skull that says something's wrong, and yet—
it is, isn't it? they shouldn't be here, wherever and whatever this is.
(ugh.)
and more than anything, the question is how were the bells being rung? ]
no subject
Perhaps because of this, she doesn't bother looking out the windows. She doesn't know Night Time Beacon well enough to compare it to this Daylight one. Instead she goes directly to the bells. This close, their tolling resonates right through her bones, jarring her thoughts and filling her mind until it's hard to think.
Peter's monologue on Vertigo - a film, of course - doesn't help in that respect. Maybe he's scared of heights or something?]
There's got to be a way to stop them.
[She has to shout to make herself heard. Of course she could simply have walked away from the church, the noise would have lessened the further she got. For some reason, that solution doesn't occur to her.]
no subject
It's similar to what happened with the church's door. It's not that the bell stops ringing. It's that it just isn't ringing.
In fact, how it was ringing in the first place is a good question, because it isn't attached to anything, isn't hanging like it should be. It sits, dusty and forgotten, on its side, on the floor, large and heavy and covered in dried, rusted fingerprints.
Outside, the windows show everything as it should be. Well, as the peaceful daytime Beacon apparently should be. Except, it's a bit darker now. The sky glows a lovely orange-and-pink sunset.
Back in the main area of the church, Bruce, at first, finds nothing of particular note. At least until he finds a note, folded and peeking out from one of the many unremarkable bibles.]
no subject
If he's honest with himself, those days don't feel completely behind him. He's learned to choose differently, to wait, but it's not really the same. He wouldn't call it 'easier.'
Walls clear, Bruce makes his way through the pews, slipping two fingers inside the small shelf behind each one, opening and thumbing through bibles, returning them to their places. It's a methodical process, but Bruce's deliberate nature ensures that each item is left as he found it. And then, quite suddenly, he's aware that the bells have stopped. He pauses and his head lifts, turned in the direction of the stairs, and Bruce finds that against the ringing that had echoed in his ears, he's not sure when, precisely, it ended.
His brows pinch and Bruce nearly turns, intending to make his way to the foot of the stairs and call after them again. But he's stopped before he ever gets that far by a small piece of paper. He makes a mental note of the pages between which it was placed, and unfolds it.]
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day-to-day, he makes an effort to make his movements as natural as he can — a little less fluid and a little more clumsy; a little slower than any movements he makes without thinking about it. balancing in unnatural positions is easy and left entirely to his own devices, he quite often ends up perched halfway up walls or on ceilings. sometimes, when he's caught unaware or by surprise; when his spider-sense warns him of a threat entirely suddenly, he forgets.
now is somewhere in-between, and he rests his weight on the balls of his feet; he looks comfortable and at ease, and he reaches out and runs a finger through the dust. (gross, what was he really expecting, right?) he wonders, briefly, if there's anything beneath the upturned bell, but he supposes that it's too heavy for puny ol' peter parker to move out the way.
(the perils of a secret identity.)
with a sigh then, he stands back up. ]
So much for answers. [ he glances at villanelle out of the corner of his eyes. ] You know, I wish I could say I was shocked and surprised by [ he gestures vaguely at the bell ], but given everything... [ mostly the waking up in a version of beacon that's not shrouded in darkness, he means.
he wipes his hand on his trousers, and looks back towards the entrance. exit. way back downstairs. ] We should see how Bruce is getting on.
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Why's it covered in dust? Are we in the same time as before?
[Could time have changed? It sounds made up, but then, all of this seems made up. Still, she feels a little foolish asking. She looks up at the windows, reddening light creeps along the walls, day fading into night. Should she be worried about that? Or is that a sign it things are returning to normal? Some kind of normal. She circles round the bell to try and get a look in the hollow, maybe just to check if there's even a clapper inside.]
Was there a point to leading us here? Maybe someone wanted to separate us.
[The thought that Bruce might have met a sticky end is intriguing and she perks up a bit at that.]
You're right. We should go and check.
[Her wide eyes may not accurately portray concern as oppose to excitement.]
no subject
...and up, and down...
Every step creaks. The walls are covered in fingernail scratches.
Downstairs, Bruce unfolds his note. It says:]
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Beacon is, in this too, uneven.
He looks back at the place where it was found and then, because he is only human, checks the rest of the pages for anything else. Holds the paper up to the light to see if any words might have been written and then erased. The sun is beginning to sink and it changes the aesthetic within the chapel- the color from each piece of stained glass is beginning to wane, to shorten it's slide across the floor. He folds the note back up and tucks it into his pocket- resumes inspecting the church until he's satisfied that he hasn't missed anything else that appears to be left behind.]
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he looks up and over at her. ] There's a possibility we're in Beacon's past or its future. [ beat; concession. ] There's even a possibility we're in its present, but it's an alternate timeline — one where different decisions were made, maybe one where the World Eaters are less of a threat. [ breath of a pause. ] There's really no way of knowing.
[ not for the first time, he finds himself wishing bleecker street was just down the road and he'd be able to get doc strange a call. he'd have some idea of what this was and how to fix it — as it stands, all peter's got is guesses, and the majority of the answers (quote unquote) that they've been given seem to rely on "magic!" as rationale; and it's not that he dislikes magic, it's just that—
okay, it's that he dislikes magic. he does, he really does. couldn't it just be something nice and simple and scientific? god, it's like when ezekiel decided to tell him that he'd been chosen by the spider and — yeah, okay, so spiders don't actually have a spider-sense, but it's a metaphor, right?
regardless, if he notices the slight offness of villanelle's expression, it's not reflected in his expression or his manner. he hesitates for a moment at the top of the stairs, a sudden lack of surety flashing across his features. had the stairs looked like that on the way up? had he just been distracted by how unending they'd seemed to notice?
several steps, then— ] Uh, —Villanelle, right? I don't want to seem jumpy, but— [ are those fingernail scratches? (he remembers, suddenly, waking up buried beneath the earth, crawling back to the surface with only the thought of mj to spur him on.) a stair creaks.]
—does this seem different to you?
[ —god, bruce—. he barely waits for an answer before picking up his pace in a rush to the bottom. ]
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We could just leave.
[Villanelle calls down to Peter and Bruce too if he's still alive.]
[She skips lightly down the stairs, counting steps, waiting to see if it'll stretch just like before. Things are getting strange, she twitches her nose, sneezes at dust. Things are getting interesting. In the absence of fear, she tends to see the funny side of things. Anyway, apparently they're all dead already. What's the worst that can happen?]
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And when they do, Bruce will just have noticed a splash of red underneath one of the pews. It's hard to make out what it is, exactly, but there's definitely a marking there. Paint, maybe? It's definitely something else to look into, as the note seemed innocuous enough, no further clues arising upon a deeper inspection of it.]
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He must, against his nature, trust them.
He doesn't hear the drumming of their feet on the stairs but perhaps it's a testament to light-footedness, or the insulation of the church- or distraction. Bruce isn't immediately visible to his companions but that's because he hasn't just paused over the strange streak of color. One hand reaches out and he touches the tip of two fingers to the edge of the mark, testing its wetness but also its texture. Any lingering scent.
Instead of upending the pew to examine it directly, Bruce's tendencies have been shaped by the people around him- who were, in no small number, detectives themselves. Whatever it is he's going to see, he wants to see it in context. So he sinks down onto hands and knees on the floor, lower now than the rows of seats around him, until he's all but laying on the ground- looking for the mark.]
no subject
bruce's lack of immediate visibility is momentary startling and peter shifts his weight, glancing over the tops of the pews and towards the door. maybe he'd left? unlikely, given what peter had ascertained of his personality from their previous interactions, but not out of the realms of possibility. still, what else? it's unusual, to have nothing from his spider-sense — it's ordinarily a constant, a kind of background noise that warns of him tiny threats that frankly barely deserve recognition; peter had commented once to mj that he could write a book on the many, many dangers of new york city that no-one ever thinks about and the same had seemed to hold true for beacon so far.
peter thinks that, perhaps ironically (and not in the alanis morisette way), it's more unsettling than having it at all. ]
—Bruce? [ beat; a moment of consideration. he continues conversationally: ] There wasn't anyone up there, [ punctuated by a pause, and peter takes several steps forward, scanning the rows of pews one by one ], and the bell looks like it hasn't physically been used in years.
no subject
[She jumps off the bottom step and walks into the church.] Oh, has he gone? [Was Peter talking to an empty room?]
[Bruce already tried the doors, maybe he tried them again while they were upstairs and walked out. Or maybe he's dead, only, there's no sign of struggle. Either way, since the doors have already been looked at, she decides to go in the opposite direction, to where the altar would sit.]
Shouldn't there be more things in here? [Soviet Russia has never been big on religion, so church going didn't feature in her childhood, but she has an idea of what a church should look like and this one seems lacking.] Aren't churches supposed to have those wooden stands for the preacher to go up and tell us we're all going to burn in hell. [She spins on her heel, directing the last to the others, her fingers waggling in the universal 'spooky' gesture.]
no subject
As Villanelle approaches the front, as she makes her statement, the walls between the stained glass begin to ooze.]
no subject
Bruce's brows come together despite the otherwise stillness of his body, despite the way his gaze follows the shape until he can't follow it any further. A puzzle piece then. He'll need to move it. Around the corner and presumably still on the staircase, he can hear the creak and groan of a well-worn step. It's the kind of demonstrative performance he would expect from Mary, a child seeing the details separated from the context.
Their voices continue conversationally and Bruce's palms find the stone floor underneath him, a point of leverage to push himself up.]
Your observations suggest that the passage of time happened in seconds. But perhaps they didn't change at all.
[For the angle and for his height, it means that only his hair and the top half of his face are visible around the pews.]
Those hallucinations just finished. It's possible that the stairs and the bell have been like that all along, that they haven't changed and instead only our perception of them has.
[This isn't a difficult leap for him to make. Of course it seems less possible for time to run in reverse and then move in fast forward, treated like a cassette tape of Beacon's history meant for only their viewing. But Bruce has seen less-possible things happen hundreds of times in Gotham. He's seen people do things they shouldn't be capable of, he's seen people die only to walk down the city streets again. But it's more plausible, he's found, to control people than to control a space. It wouldn't be unlike Crane's fear toxin; the mind has always been more powerful than the body.
He climbs to his feet and lingers there, too close to the pew.]
Peter, could you help me move this please?
no subject
[ when bruce's head pops out from behind a pew, peter finds himself relaxing a little; at bruce's request, he makes his way over the pew and eyes it just for a moment, and then eyes bruce. peter tends to opt for layers: loose shirts and sweaters worn over t-shirts; it had never been a conscious decision to hide the fact that he's not quite the skinny nerd he'd been pre-spider bite, but the result is the same. ]
Lift with your legs, right? [ it's easy enough for him to move, but as with everything, it's a careful balancing act of making sure it doesn't seem too easy, otherwise you get marnie watching your bedroom window and discovering you're spider-man, all because you carried some groceries up some stairs because some people don't like elevators. ]
There was a— [ the corners of peter's lips twitch in slight amusement ], I think he was a special effects artist, back home. [ beck seems like a safer topic than kraven the hunter, even if kraven's jungle potions are a little more on the nose than quentin's illusions. ] I think he died. [ it didn't stick, but when does it ever? that beck's still alive isn't relevant to the conversation at hand. beside, he's died, both actually and technically, and it didn't stick — and now he's here and it's debatable whether it'd stuck this time. ]
He ended up pursuing crime because he was tired of not having his genius recognised. [ beat. peter still wishes all of this — beacon, from beginning to end, was the work of mysterio or arcade. it'd make things so much easier. ] His thing was illusions. He mostly used hallucinogens and robotics, and they were all pretty large scale, worst fears kind of thing. [ peter shoots bruce a glance; if he leaves it at that, there'd be a question. ] I covered him a couple of times for the paper I used to work at. It's possible this is something like that. [ semi-agreement then, with bruce. he's doubtful that's the full story, because he should have noticed, but it's a loose, workable theory, although the more important question right now is why. ] We were all at the party, right? Something could have been in, or released into the room, and now— [ they're here. peter's attention flickers briefly to one of the walls, then away, then back again.
oh boy, is that—? ugh. once the pew's been set back down, he starts to edge towards one of the walls. ] But for the record, I don't think we're in Vertigo any more.
no subject
[She watches them lift the pew but doesn't offer to help.] Hallucinations? I did say it was drugs... but, not any drug I know. They don't usually work like this. [Then again, her pharmaceutical expertise is limited to poisons and knockouts, not hallucinogens.]
[She's about to join them at the pew, ask why exactly they're rearranging church furniture, when she notices movement from the corner of her eyes, turns in time to see the walls lose their form.] All right, I take it back, maybe it is hallucinations.
[She takes a step toward the walls. The oozing slime is thick and dark, black and reflective like an oil slick. Makes her think of dead birds, fish drowning in an ocean suddenly turned hostile. She licks her lips. Up close, the walls seem to glisten. She breathes deep, has the smell in the church changed? No longer dust and disuse, there's something almost organic about the way the slime drips down to the floor. She turns to look at Peter, smirk on her lips.] What did I say? Going to hell.
[She walks back to the pews, picks up a bible and, completely casual, rips the cover off. Then she returns to the wall, and runs the cover up it in an attempt to scrape off some of the gloop.] This is a lot more dramatic than a crying Madonna. [Her tone of voice says she approves. This place is fucking strange, but she appreciates the change of pace. True hell is boredom.]
no subject
And there are more candles, now, scattered around, like they'd always been there. Not an altar, not yet, not exactly, but clusters of wax in different stages of use, lining the walls, away from the center of the room.
Villanelle will be able to scrape it off without any issues. Removed from the wall, it seems to grow thicker and sticker still, foul smelling, like tar.
When Bruce and Peter move the pew, the design stretches on to the next one. Literally, it stretches itself, growing as the space is revealed, racing forward in an arc, almost as if urging them on.]
no subject
Still, this concern for tandem is exercise is the reason that he nods in the direction they should put it down, instead of interrupting Peter's train of thought. This seems to be a thing he just, does. Elaborating. Filling the space. Bruce wonders what it is he's trying to avoid- what the silence represents that prompts him to it.
The pew comes down and wood creaks quietly, it doesn't groan. Unfortunately it reveals only a small fraction of their puzzle, the necessity of moving a few more. Bruce straightens and looks over at Villanelle, watches her approach the wall without apparent reluctance or fear. He makes a conscious choice, to keep his expression clear. To nod instead in the direction of another pew to be lifted- to take his position and trust Peter to join him.
He makes a similar choice not to look at the candles that have manifested. They have enough distractions at the moment.]
What drugs were those, by the way?
no subject
whilst the sun outside is setting and the church should, in theory, be darker than it had been when they first entered, the increase in candles is a sudden, valiant attempt to create a little more light. peter's never been good with surprises — part and parcel of being, ostensibly, difficult to surprise, at least negatively, which means he stiffens; a mild look of distaste and discomfort grace his features, though he manages to remain silent, at least for a moment.
it's not always a deliberate ploy, spider-man being funnier than peter parker: sometimes it's simply that the mask hides the minutiae of his expression. for all intents and purposes, peter's an open book — his emotions are almost always plain and easy to read, if not in his face than in his mannerisms and his body language. now it's hard to deny that he's less than happy with the situation at hand. the design beneath the pews is — well, it's certainly something, and as peter moves towards a second bench, ready to lift it again with bruce, he looks up at the ceiling. maybe it'd be easier to work out what it is from up there — easy enough for him to do, less easy for him to explain.
perhaps there's a feasible vantage point slightly higher up. ]
no subject
Sickness.
[She hisses the word. It's not exactly fear that tightens here expression, but it's something very close. She can imagine little worse than hacking and coughing your way into an early grave. She wipes her hands on her clothes, studies her fingertips carefully. Did any get on her? She's distracted, still studying her hands when Bruce's question comes.]
Chl- [Chloroform] Coke. [She recovers, it's only a small slip, unfortunately for her, she's in a room with the kind of people who'll notice. She's supposed to be keeping these things a secret, isn't she? She had a plan, didn't she? Before today, before they ended up here.] Maybe some E. [She turns, and her grin is all bashful party girl.] Just a little, you know, to get the party started. [She gives Bruce an obvious once over.] Okay, maybe you don't know, but you do right? [She turns to Peter.] Takes the edge off.
[Subject change please.] There's something on the floor? Oh that's what you're doing. [She approaches them, a wary eye on the walls.]
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