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
Madam Rosalind Lutece's headstone was the first one Nate did this for, the first one that struck him square in the chest with electricity that crackled over his skin and pressed into his body. The forlorn sort of regret at knowing another person who was close, closer than anything and anyone and the loss of that person as it eats away at you, festers. When Sam let go of Nate's hand fifteen years ago, too weak to be pulled up the side of the wall and Nate watched him fall through scaffolding and corrugated metal, he remembers the agony of having part of his own heart torn out.
When you had no one else to start with, it cuts all the deeper. ]
That's pretty good.
[ He says before he can help himself, catching the drawing before the page turns and he knows the motion well - he's done it himself, wanting to avoid having people know his private thoughts even as he commits them to paper. Nate lifts his lantern as he seats himself next to her. ]
Need some more light?
no subject
Always, here.
[She sits up. Sits back, her gaze drifting over him. It's odd, having seen what she's seen. She wonders if her other self knew, and then wonders what she might have thought of it, had she. Or if they were far too distant for such things.]
And what have you witnessed tonight, Mr. Drake?
no subject
At the question he rolls his shoulders in an easy shrug, making eye contact. ]
Enough.
no subject
[She keeps her gaze sharp. He looks strong in many ways, but there's no one that can match her when it comes to sheer force of personality. And, occasionally, some pretty passive-aggressive expressions.]
A number, Mr. Drake.
no subject
Tell you what.
[ He raises an eyebrow right back. ]
I'll give you a real answer if you promise to stop calling me Mr. Drake.
no subject
Nathan, then.
no subject
We'll work up to "Nate."
[ He's at least confident of that. Nate chews the silence for a long moment, glancing over the blank paper in front of her. ]
I kinda lost track of the number, but...I looked at more than a half-dozen.
[ After a while trauma starts to bleed together. ]
no subject
And was mine one of them?
no subject
Yeah. You see mine?
no subject
[It's simple. Yes, she'd seen it. She'd hated it, frankly; it was one of the worst deaths she'd seen. Not for the level of brutality, not the phantom physical sensations, but the sense of betrayal, and all that it brought up in her. All that it still brings up, frankly, nagging at the back of her mind.]
I'd tell you I'm sorry, but that wouldn't help, would it.
no subject
[ Which is about as self-aware as he's capable of getting, under the circumstances. Nate's attention is again drawn to the book in her lap, clasped tightly, protective. He places his lantern between them instead, leaning back on his hands and watching the fire. ]
Thought he died, once. [ Sam. ] Thought he was dead for fifteen years.
no subject
What happened?
no subject
[ Teasing, a little. The smile he flashes in her direction is thin, but warm. ]
Would hate to scandalize you with my prolific criminal career.
no subject
A bargain: I'll do my best not to shriek or faint in horror so long as you don't spare the details, hm?
no subject
[ Nate tips his head in acquiescence. His tone is conversational, pat, as though he were discussing the weather. ]
I was a treasure hunter. A good one. It's not the kind of profession that falls under anything remotely resembling the legal, but when we weren't doing our own projects, we'd pick up acquisitions requests from clients. Burglaries, basically. Tomb robbing.
[ No need to mince words with someone who seems to do a lot of verbal mincing. ]
Sam was the planner. The negotiator, the organizer. Anything needs climbing, or brute-forcing, puzzle-solving...I was the point man.
no subject
So how did it end up that you thought he'd died, if you were the one out in the wilderness?