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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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At the Grave
He's fairly morose, knowing you're dead and being confronted with your own mortality are two different things. Also there is the very sudden, gut-punching knowledge that the Lin Kuei die with him. He was the last one. Smoke is a revenant and Cyrax is offline. There aren't any others.
The clan is no more.
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He took the rest of the time avoiding the general area of his grave marker, and it was then that he stumbled upon Kuai's. He wasn't sure if he was subconsciously looking for it or he just happened to stumble upon it. Either way it didn't matter.
His movements paused and he stared down, partly tempted to destroy the marker if only for the annoying inscription and Lin Kuei symbol. But he almost seemed frozen, unable to move and didn't seem to notice the shadow clone split from his form and knee beside the grave.
Nor did he notice it drop something at the grave, which he should have as they were essentially the same person. He was just far too focused on the grave itself so when the vision itself hit him he stumbled, dropping down to one knee.
It wasn't the death itself or that he cared, his mind simply became overwhelmed with a lot of sensations some of which he hadn't felt in quite awhile.
Was that how Kuai died? Demons could brutal and this death was no different than ones he's seen in the Netherrealm. Experiencing it was another story though.
hi, i'm sorry.
It was strange to think that he had never truly experienced mourning. He had spent years trapped in a cycle of hatred and grief and rage, in the hope of finding justice for the wife and child he’d lost. He had cut down countless in their name, committed atrocities for the sake of vengeance, but that was not true mourning. There was no solace in violence, much though he tried to find it there.
It pained him to think of it now, but… they’d never actually had graves of their own.
That Beacon was lacking in supplies was no real supplies, but it did present certain obstacles; tradition had needed to be bent somewhat, though given the circumstances, he imagined that it could be forgiven. Incense were reliant on fire, even if they’d had them. He had already heard Kuai’s… opinions on the tea, and the notion of leaving anything edible seemed erroneous anyway; the markers spoke of deaths past, and those they represented still walked among them. Still, he felt it only appropriate that he leave an offering, out of respect.
He set his lantern down and knelt in front of the stone marker, placing a small paper frog, nowhere near perfect, among the other offerings. It felt a bit ridiculous now, but he had worked with what he had — Perhaps not traditional, but a relic of the man he’d been once, and the one Kuai had helped him to become again. One who could think of his family without losing himself all over again.
Origami was a skill Harumi had tried to teach him, though he’d participated more for the way she’d laughed at his attempts, than out of any real interest in the art. His hands were better suited to more deadly pursuits, but she had always been patient with him. This was the only one he remembered; she’d often tucked one away for him, with the insistence that it was meant to ensure one returned safely from their travels.
It was too late for that now, for all of them. Seeing the name carved above the Lin Kuei symbol was proof enough of that.
He had yet to speak with anyone about the appearance of the graveyard, and thus, was unprepared when the vision hit him. It took a moment before he fully understood what was happening, thrown by seeing the familiar setting from eyes that were not his own. Everything about it was wrong, invasive somehow — He knew he shouldn’t be seeing this, feeling emotions that were not his to experience.
As it ended, Hanzo drew back from the grave as though the earth itself had burned him from touching it. And perhaps it should have — It was trespassing of the worst sort, and even now, he was having difficulty trying to extricate his own thoughts from the onslaught of those brought on by the marker. It seemed a cruel joke, to bear witness to a battle he should have been part of, and yet, remain powerless to change its outcome. As his younger self had been forced to see his future end, now he felt firsthand the grief his passing had wrought.
Maybe it was for the best that Kuai was not present. Hanzo knew that he should see him, especially if he had experienced something similar; undoubtedly, the other man would have sought to do the same as he had, and likely be met with similar results.
But not yet.
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"I, uh,...."
A swallow.
"....I'm sorry."
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But he eyed it now, to have something to look at that wasn't the small slumped over figure next to him, "There is nothing to apologize for. We are all seeing things we would rather not. And we all died before coming here."
Knowing that isn't the same as seeing though. As feeling someone elses emotions.
"It will be alright. Eventually."
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It's partially an attempt at deflection through a joke. It's easier than going into the feels, right? But there's truth there. This guy never seems to be thrown. Not by death. Not by some weird afterlife town with no light...not by small electric rodents.
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Death. Afterlife town with no light. Electric rodents. Anything.
His expression softens a little as he continues, "It's not always effective, though I've had decades of practice."
Kuai has never been too good at keeping emotions off his face, though he has mastered keeping his voice even so at least while speaking nothing he's thinking is betrayed.
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The first is Kuai's own by pure luck, it turns out. And the scene is pure horror - ships encrusted with skeletal giants, on a literal sea of blood. Their war is truly against monsters, and not the men he's battled who are called monsters but still human, fishman, or another type of person underneath.
But it isn't the battle that he feels, as Kuai fights his way through the horde. What he feels most is the man's longing for someone who isn't there. And he can't help but wonder, as things begin to fall apart - would it all have gone differently if this Hasahashi had been there with him? Can two men turn that tide together, rather than apart?
Probably not, realistically, seeing what they were up against. The depth of their partnership is something he has never felt, himself, and expects he never will. Whatever happened to result in Kuai regarding that Scorpion as a stranger runs through the whole vision like a broken cord, something to be fumbled along that doesn't really go together the way it should.
When it ends, he places the white-laced stone down beside the shells, and sits, rather than leaving immediately. He'll go on his own time. If Kuai finds him before then, that's all right too. The weight of so many deaths experienced in the last few days is starting to wear on him and he needs a moment to get over this one.]
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But while walking around solemnly and looking at the graves of others he does keep coming back to it. This time someone is in front of it.
He stands there silently for a moment, arms behind his back as he watches the candles flicker.
"Dying in battle is what I always desired. Unlike many, I at least got that."
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"That makes both of us," he replies with a slow shake of his head. Both died in battle, that is, but he'll leave it vague. "Your battle was immensely larger than any I've seen."
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Sometimes he wondered what those other lives had been like for him.
"I don't know the outcome. I truly hope we were victorious, but the odds were never in our favor. I suppose, being here, that I will never know."
And that's a hard thing to live with.
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"Do you mind if I ask about one person, though? I believe you said he was here, the other Grandmaster. Is he faring well enough?"
As in, what's his deal? In the vision, someone else had fought under his presumed title if he was understanding things right. The one here must be the one Kuai felt the absence of so strongly.
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"Grandmaster Hasashi, yes." He's stalling, trying to recall what he'd been thinking before he died. He hasn't rewatched his own death, it seemed unnecessary, but now he's wishing he had. Had he been thinking about Hanzo? He didn't think so, but maybe. Oh no.
"He's fine. Or as well as any of us can be after death. He died before me, before that final battle." That is not what Rosinante is asking and he knows it. "I'm not sure what you saw but the man in yellow, Scorpion, that is a younger version of him. We were fighting a Titan with the power to fracture and manipulate time."
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God, but that's crushing, and he lets out a breath slowly. In some ways, Rosinante recognizes that he's fortunate that he was the one who died first, of those few he was close to. If Law had been the one to die out there in the snow, he's not sure he would have found the strength to go on. It would have broken him. Kuai, though, lost that person he was close to, and then had to live through a version of the man who didn't have the bond they must have formed later, through the joint defense of their world. No wonder his thoughts were so focused on Grandmaster Hasashi.
"Then - as difficult as death is, I'm glad you were able to find him again here," he says with sincerity.
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Too late now.
His voice softens as he replies, "As am I." He almost leaves it there, feeling odd saying any of this outloud. But eventually he continues, "We were enemies at the time that Kronika pulled him from. I also initially thought he was the one who had killed Grandmaster Hasashi, so I attacked him. And he has no reason to trust me."
Fighting alongside a stranger that you've known for decades was a distressing experience.
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Also, how many stories of time travel has he heard now? At least two, possibly three. It must be more common than he would have thought, much like magic. These people live in such strange and difficult worlds.
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"No back in my world. I attacked the younger version because I thought he had killed Grandmaster Hasashi. I was wrong - he hadn't. But the damage was done." His voice is soft as he recounts that meeting, not liking to admit to his mistakes, but too honest to lie about them. "It is in the past now. And since I'm dead there's nothing more to be done."
There's another long pause as he looks elsewhere, "I hope he is well."
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"He's well here. That's what matters now. There's nothing we can do about the worlds we left behind," he reminds Kuai patiently, because he knows it's what he reminds himself when he's worrying about Law. Law, however, is a child, all alone and terrified. Not a grown man and a warrior. Perhaps he was slow to realize at first, but the nature of Kuai's interest is becoming clearer to him.
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"I suppose we simply move forward. It serves nothing to dwell on the past. Though I sincerely hope there aren't many situations in the future where we relive each other's deaths." Or anything worse.
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"Since this world is all we have now, we should try to understand it. Maybe we'll discover how these graves and shrines came to be. We can find who's responsible, and find out what they want. That's the only way to put an end to it." And that may not work either, but they won't know until they try.
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Kuai definitely doesn't like the finality of this world being all they have now, it may be true, but it doesn't sit right with him. Probably the eternal optimist in him fighting hard against the crushing despair of reality. "I don't know what brought them, but I do know that one who destroyed their grave had it reemerge the next day. So it seems we can't even impact the things that do occur."
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"That's... even stranger than their appearance," he says with a frown. "That makes it seem malicious. Spiteful."
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But who needs honor, right? It's never something he sought. If it was, he wouldn't have nodded along and echoed Kuai's sentiments just now. He's glad he saw everything he did, even if it was hard. Information can be vital and collecting it isn't always noble.
"So they - it - whoever, has set us up not only to see each other at the ends of our lives, but then also has set us up for conflict at the site of the grave itself. There are people here who sit and guard their memories, who'll fight before they'll let anyone pay respects."
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"I saw that as well. It won't do them any good if someone is determined to see it. And it seems suspicious that anyone would be so adamant that no one see how they died." He naturally assumes that it means they died dishonorably. All honor, all the time with Kuai.
"Though I would have preferred to not be forced to feel other's emotions."
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