In the Night Moderators (
inthenightmods) wrote in
logsinthenight2019-07-12 01:00 pm
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Entry tags:
- !event,
- billy russo (laws),
- coraline li (jejune),
- daylight vis lornlit (melly),
- dick grayson (jin),
- hanzo hasashi (abel),
- irwin wade (lauren),
- javert (rachel),
- jo harvelle (dee),
- jon snow (rachel),
- kuai liang (sydney),
- m.k. (shira),
- melisandre (mina),
- nathan drake (alex),
- number five (z),
- peter parker (laura),
- rafe adler (sammo),
- raylan givens (bobby),
- riku (dubsey),
- rosinante donquixote (lauren),
- shadow moon (kas),
- will ingram (leu),
- zihuan cao pi (gemini)
EVENT LOG: GRAVES

EVENT LOG:
GRAVES
characters: everyone.
location: Bonfire Square.
date/time: July 12-19.
content: mysterious shrines appear and bring visions of death.
warnings: likely violence and potentially gore.
time to pay your respects.
It happens when no one is looking, when most of the town is asleep and the rest are inside. A makeshift cemetery has come to Beacon, taking up residence in the middle of Bonfire Square. Each monument, shrine, and altar is dedicated to someone who now resides here, a memorial of their previous life.
Some may be drawn by curiosity, others by fear, and some may simply have to pass through this strange graveyard to get to the Bonfire itself. Whenever a person gets near, the altars beckon with a mysterious urge— an urge to approach, and an urge to leave something behind. They will feel compelled to make offerings at the various shrines, but doing so has a curious effect; it causes one to experience the death of the person whose grave they've honored.
Whether you resist the compulsion or give in willingly (or something in between), you'll also have to wrestle with the fact that a grave exists for you. Will you let your death be known, or try your best to keep it secret? Destroying it sure won't work, as it will return— with a duplicate somewhere else in town.
However you choose to deal with this, one thing is hard to ignore— this a tangible reminder of your death, and the fact that it's probably permanent.
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no subject
( The question throws him off balance a little. What does he know about Valjean, other than what he gleaned from police reports? He considers it for a moment, his expression serene and thoughtful. )
He was— not too dissimilar, I would say. He was always insufferably gentle. Every time he thought I was working too hard, he would fret. And when I was critical of myself, he would be encouraging.
( It annoyed him, of course. Not just because he thought the man was a outlaw, but because Javert hates being coddled. He frowns a bit, then continues roughly, )
Nearly all of his business fortune went to charity. The town prospered greatly from this, as you can imagine. There was very little crime in Montreuil-sur-Mer. Most of time as inspector was usually spent settling disputes about rain gutters and other such frivolities.
no subject
Insufferably gentle, and she'd hated Robert for his softness, his kindness, Rosie you cannot possibly be so callous, I know you, he would be encouraging, just as Javert says, Rosie we have to fix this, earnest eyes and then all steel, because Robert was kind but he was not damp, and when pleas hadn't worked he'd blackmailed her, because doing the right thing was more important than anything, even his beloved, even the woman for whom he'd given up everything.]
It sounds incurably dull.
[And restful, which may be the point. She doesn't say it sneeringly, but rather gently, something not quite a joke.]
. . . what was his name?
no subject
He was the only one alive who knew who Valjean really was. Maybe that's why, when Rosalind asks for his name, Javert stiffens in hesitation. Dare he say it? What is the harm? It is not as if Valjean is here. And Javert doesn't know if he can lie on his behalf again. )
His name — ( He begins, licking his lips, which suddenly feel very dry. ) His real name is Jean Valjean.
( He says it softly, with no small amount of admiration and respect. Javert must not have noticed this, for he doesn't make any attempt to change the subject or clear his throat. Instead, he just sits silently, staring at the fire for a moment before asking, )
And what of your husband? What was his name?
no subject
[Robert and Rosalind, and she only ever called him his full name, but the nicknames he'd come up for her . . . Rosie my Rosie, only ever in private, but he adores being sweet like that.
It would be easy to get lost in that. She might even tell Javert a bit more, although not to excess. But it's hard not to notice how stiff he goes when he says Valjean's name. How he says the name, the intensity with which those two words are uttered.
She wants to know more. But pressing too hard will make him retreat, and anyway, that isn't their way.]
Mm. One area in which his kindliness did not extend: his name. He had a friend who would never fail to get under his nerves when he called him by a nickname. A rival would do the same, albeit for much pettier purposes. Robbie sounds childish, he would tell me, and he wasn't wrong, but he'd get so petulant about it.
no subject
I can scarcely blame him. A gentleman deserves to be called by his proper name.
( He doesn't know what else to say. Personal conversation has always been a difficult thing for Javert, and companionship even more so. Before Rosalind has a chance to say anything more, he stands and grips his lantern tight in his hand. )
Excuse me, madame, I should not take up more of your time.
no subject
They'll talk later. She's certain of it.]