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
but the thing is, the war was just a thing what happened. it needed fightin', so he fought it. maybe his weapons were sulfa an' cigarettes an' quiet calm an' steady hands but he was there. in it just as much as the next man, an' the next after him. he don't mind the sympathy — folks find peace in the givin' more than he's ever found in the reception, but there ain't many here who understand the soul an' scope of the matter.
men killed themselves when they were declared f-4. the whole damn country was ablaze with the desire to serve, he weren't special on that account. he an' wade were called on, an' they stood up. and in the standin', they came here. too fuckin' early, they came here.
(he wishes he'd known what else wade's life could'a been like. what he could'a done. would he've gone on to be a doctor too? he's got the disposition for it. maybe married, a kid or two of his own. in some sunny place in california, far removed from the war.)
but the war never wore him down like this. there were cruelties aplenty, but. the simple act of turnin' into the sun, feelin' it sink down into his bones was altogether like sittin' by the fireside of a settled soul could excise that weariness. he's witnessed death, said prayers over those that passed on, spent weeks with blood and viscera on his clothes when there weren't no way of washin' but there ain't never been anythin' so awful as this forced reckonin'. livin' out your own death was trauma enough to these folk, but. bearin' them out yourself all because of an intended kindness is the worst sorta malice he can imagine.
he's lost in that when he hears irwin, an' he glances up at him, his hand stillin' on the foldin' of a bandage. there's somethin' off in him, some whisper of instinct with a clarion bell in the back of his mind alertin' him to a manner of wrongness. his first thought's for injury, but. he's walkin' all right, not favourin' one side of the other. no blood, steady breath. little pale, but that could just be the dark at work. still, gene's jaw works to one side as he comes around the pew an approaches him plain. )
Got plenty of those. What can I do for you, Doc?
no subject
subtle, nauseating dread washes through his core as he arranges the apology in his mind. gene would be well within his rights to be upset - it's a violation, accidental or not. and—
while it's not as though irwin hasn't made any friends here... doc hicks would be the worst to lose. if he's to be honest with himself, doc hicks would the worst person to lose even if he wasn't another medic, even if he wasn't the only person here with a true frame of reference where his life is concerned. but he is, and that makes this even worse.
funny how abruptly a person can get attached in situations like these. irwin takes a slow breath against the tightness of his chest and silently exhales before speaking, keeping his voice quiet so it doesn't echo in the high rafters. ]
Gene, when I was... When I was walking over, I saw that your tags had fallen. Figured I'd put them back, but it turns out that qualifies as an offering. [ he pauses, collecting himself, sick with some ungodly combination of foreboding and guilt. ] I saw your death. I thought it was only right to let you know. ...I'm sorry.
no subject
if it had to be anyone else, he supposes he's glad it's irwin. least his death was quick. painless by contrast with what it seems like most everyone else has been through. he's just sorry about his part in puttin' wade back in the war. he closes the distance between them, drops a hand down against the man's shoulder and squeezes. )
S'all right. This place has that way about it, huh? Sorry about the cold. Worst winter on record for the last forty years in Europe, by all counts.
no subject
it's a relief - the apparent lack of animosity or hurt, the anchoring touch. wade glances down, collecting his thoughts, then meets gene's eyes again and attempts a comforting smile that's barely more than a slight lift of the corners of his mouth. ]
You don't need to apologize, Doc. You're the one who went through it.
[ he wants to ask about the SOE fellow he'd seen prior to experiencing gene's death, and the unsettling detail of his apparent ability to seamlessly walk through solid stone, but wade paces himself. right now it's enough to just know that by some miracle their tentative friendship hasn't been obliterated in one fell swoop.
he doesn't shrug off the weight of gene's hand on his shoulder, fully intending to let him keep it there as long as he'd like. wade's never been overly fond of being touched, but in this context, in the overwhelming isolation that comes with realizing that you're truly, permanently cut off from the living world, compounded by the depression and discomfort of nicotine withdrawal, the small physical reassurance is welcome. ]
...Your boys really cared about you.