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logsinthenight2022-01-01 11:57 am
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Entry tags:
EVENT LOG: AULD LANG SYNE

EVENT LOG:
Auld Lang Syne
characters: everyone.
location: Everywhere
date/time: December 31-January 1
content: Another year gone by, and a sunny future ahead
warnings: n/a
Most of a year has passed since the World Eater was defeated and light began to trickle its way back in to the world. Spring brought new green growth, summer brought the first few pale flowers, and fall saw ever-longer days even as the crispness of frost returned to the air. Now, the longest nights of winter have passed (which still were shorter than those in that first spring), and as the sun rises on the new year, it does so with reassuring warmth that cuts through the ice and snow.

we've wandered far beneath the stars
Many left in those early days, lured by the chances to take the portal home, or to new worlds - and hopefully they made it successfully. The few who stayed behind in Beacon have worked hard on making the place into a home, or at least a solid base of operations for future work, whatever that might entail. Exploring has become easier thanks to the longer, brighter days, revealing a seemingly endless expanse of forest pockmarked by ruined, overgrown cities. Beacon stands at the center of it all, somehow harbors the brightest light, and so out at the edges of the explored areas, forest spirits still linger. They're generally friendly and curious, encouraged by stories spread by the spirits who fled Beacon and its sunlight in order to carry news of the lantern-folk and their success at bringing the aurora to the ground.
All right, so the story may not always be accurate, but it has been told.
And given the spirits still understand the emotional meaning to the start of a new year, counted not on a calendar they follow but on one they barely remember, they begin a strange sort of pilgrimage in those long winter nights. On the night of December 31 they swarm the darkened town of Beacon with whoops and hollers and gifts of ancient decayed (but possibly still viable) seed packets looted from broken cities, crude jewelry made of bones and shards of pottery, and something that looks a bit like it was probably modeled after bread, but are actually buns of baked clay. Before the sun rises, they depart again, leaving Beacon quiet in the snow except for the strange, eerie noises of ice breaking around the edges of the lake.
Should anyone, intentionally or by mistake, break one of these clay buns, they'll find there was something inside. Is your luck good or bad, or will their token object be too obscure to decipher?

and we ran into the night
You probably have your own way of celebrating, too. The portal works, and experimenting with it and the old lighthouse keeper's notes have provided a means to bring in gifts, food and drinks, and even sometimes living creatures, plants, or fungi, though things don't always go intended (an order for goats one day instead brought in a pair of these).
Those who live in Beacon have generally agreed not to bring in new people, but accidents sometimes happen. If you're new on the new year, this must all be awfully confusing, but if you've been here a month or so, maybe you've had time to settle in. It's certainly been made easier by those studying lantern repair over the last many months, as small dents and cracks can often be patched back up, usually with good success (but sometimes with temporary side effects).
Enjoy the new year from the shore of the lake, the warmth of The Invincible, or wherever you like - you've chosen to stay, at least for now, and Beacon isn't a bad place to call home.
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no subject
A question that still plagues him. It feels like there must be some sort of magic at work in this world sometimes, even if it's at a very minimal level. Meanwhile, the magic brought by other people from their homes sure works here, and works well. But he had always learned that there was no such thing, back where he came from.
no subject
"The old dangers aren't so much a problem anymore, not as many witch hunters left." He saw to that personally. "But at this stage in our history, suddenly revealing such a powerful tool to all humanity would be... not the best idea. It would flip the balance of power overnight, or so I'm told. Realistically we'd have to make a concerted effort just for the public to believe anything, but that's beside the point." And what is the point, exactly? He takes a draw off his cigarette before continuing, as if he wasn't just in the middle of something.
"All that's to say, maybe it does exist where you're from, and you're just not in the know. Or maybe it looks different to you. All magic is, it's just will and power. It can look like a lot of things."
no subject
Individuals can keep secrets. Entire regimes can't, though they can spend a lot of money and manpower to cover them up. In between, the average population of people can't do either one.
"I shouldn't discount it entirely just because I've never seen that, but I've never seen an island get up and start walking, either." Though maybe that's a bad comparison, given he's heard the legends about Zunesha like anyone with a basic interest in mythology has. Or anyone who's met a mink, for that matter, but they're also few and far between.
no subject
"It's quite rare where I'm from, or at least the sort that's enough to cause a problem." Anyone can curse an ex with bad luck for a week, it's another thing entirely to light fires with your mind. "It tends to run in families, so it's fairly easy for us to keep track of. That said, you're right, accidents happen, but most people in my world chalk it up to coincidence, or some other natural force. They're more likely to believe in a far-fetched conspiracy than what's right in front of them. Never underestimate the human ability to rationalize." Correctly or very incorrectly, as the case may be.
"But let's test the other option. Are there any people in your world with strange abilities at all?"
no subject
He coughs a little on the unexpected and very abruptly inhaled smoke, then laughs. "We didn't really get much chance to talk before, did we? Yeah. I know people with abilities. They're not magic, though."
Been a long time since he got to show off, so while it's absolutely not the most impressive power in the world, he can't resist snapping his fingers and cutting off the sound of the breeze and the strange pinging and booming of the ice on the lake.
And then he leans wayyy down to see if he can spot where the hell that cigarette went to, just so he can make sure it gets put out.
no subject
"And you're sure that's not magic?" He makes a very small gesture, no more than twitching a finger up, and draws the fallen cigarette to his own left hand. He holds it out for Rosinante to take. "They look the same to me."
A quick ritual, and a result beyond the normal. Intent and power. Magic. It seems very straightforward to him.
no subject
Ah, well, who needs grace. He clears his throat and sits himself upright on the floor, there, before scooting back onto the bench and claiming the cigarette.
"They might look the same, but they're not," he says, straightening his hat and then dusting off a sleeve. Then, with another snap of his fingers, the sounds abruptly come right back. "My powers are due to a change in my lineage factor that lets me dampen sound waves. I don't know all of the science behind the details, I'll admit that, but it's nothing mystical or unexplainable."
no subject
"Hm, maybe it means something else where you're from, but magic doesn't have to be unexplainable. It's just a word we use for a certain kind of power. I'm sure there's some explanation behind it. Something about brain waves and physics, probably— science is not my field." As if that weren't obvious.
"I seem to remember some research in the '60s, but— that doesn't mean anything to you. Anyway, it never came to much, and as I said we're not very public. Hard to study things that don't want to be studied." And without a single break in step: "What's a lineage factor?"
no subject
"You know what genetics is?" Maybe his is yet another world that uses that alternate word. "Same thing, from what everyone tells me here. Or, um. There's one with letters. I forget, some kind of acronym. Might start with a D." Because of course it does. It all comes back to them in the end, doesn't it?
Nah, that one has to be coincidence.
no subject
"So what you're saying is that there's something in your genetics that allows you to do that." He makes a vague gesture to indicate that. "I did say magic runs in families, that makes it genetic." Probably. "So once again I'm failing to see the difference here."
They might use different words for it, and they might think of it in different contexts, but it still sounds much the same to him. Magic and... whatever this is called. "What do you call it, actually?" He wonders if it works the same way, too.
no subject
"Call what, our abilities in general? Just, abilities. Powers. They come from eating devil fruit, since those can modify lineage factors, but then you have to learn to make use of them. It's not always intuitive, and the better you understand the science behind your particular power, the better you're able to use it, usually," he explains, feeling equally bullheaded after how the conversation has gone so far. Oh, it's a good conversation, an interesting one, but he sticks to 'lineage factor' and insists on pointing out once again that it's based on science when he doesn't necessarily have to do either.
no subject
"Well, there's the difference. A difference, anyway." Alright so maybe he's not completely letting it go. It hasn't completely been proven false yet. "We don't get ours from eating anything, we're just born with it. Technically everyone is, to an extent, but most of them can't manage more than a parlor trick or two, at most. The real power is innate." Aside from that, though—
"You do have to learn how to use it properly, how to use it at all, and the more you know about how the world works, the easier things get. Someone trying to heal a wound does much better if they work with the body's natural healing instead of without it. That requires some foreknowledge." So he's not saying it's the same thing, but he's basically saying it's practically the same thing.
"Of course I'll admit it's more intuitive than not. That's what makes it nearly impossible to teach; everyone's experience with it is completely different. All you can really be taught are generalizations, and the rest you have to figure out yourself."
no subject
"Sounds to me like the way your world defines magic is different from how it's defined in my world," he says with a shrug. "A lot of it sounds similar, but there are plenty of differences, too. Sounds like it'd be really interesting if someone managed to really work out what's going on with powers in your world, but that wouldn't change them into science if that's not how you guys think about it."
no subject
But if Rosinante thought that would be the end of this discussion, it most certainly is not. Gregor still has a thousand other questions.
"So how does your power work? Is it an internal thing, or an external thing? Do you just think about it, or do you have to do that?" He mimics the act of snapping before giving him the weirdest one: "What does it feel like?"
no subject
"I used to have to think about it more, when I had less experience," he says, starting with the simplest of the questions first. "Now it depends on what I need to do. Usually it's no harder than thinking about the diameter of the barrier I want, or focusing for a second on what I'm trying to mute, if it's not myself. That's the easiest, just making me the only target. ... Never thought it really felt like anything, though. It's the sounds that stop." Which maybe means it's an external thing, but he's not exactly sure if that's the right answer to that particular question.
Also in around half a day he'll learn newer answers to these things when messing with water, but until then, Gregor will have to make do with whatever he gets here and now.
But before Gregor can ask more questions, he's curious too. "What about you and your magic? What does that feel like?"
no subject
"It doesn't feel like anything?" That one's more rhetorical. He's not sure how you'd connect to something you can't feel, but then maybe connection isn't how that works.
"It's difficult to explain, because it's different for everyone. It's a bridge between you and everything else, so it depends on how you interpret the world around you. For most people that translates to some sort of energy transfer, heat or electricity, because that's what you'd think it would feel like." Most people now, anyway, in an age when the transfer of energy is just a given concept.
"For me, it's a river." He almost leaves it there, but Rosinante probably wants as detailed of an answer as he gave, so it's only fair to explain. "Water flows in one direction, unless there's something to block it, and then it has to go around. So if you want to change its course, all you have to do is stick your hand in. The more water you want to change the direction of, the more you need to divert the current, but everything continues on whether you touch it or not." He's talking a bit with his hands now, making small gestures that may or may not seem to correlate to what he's saying.
"If you put in enough effort, you can shift the course of the river permanently. If you try especially hard, you can reverse the current itself. It's about as easy or as hard as it sounds." And surely all of that makes perfect sense.
no subject
Gregor, meanwhile, has a very thorough answer, which he appreciates especially because it's easy to visualize. Sure, he's probably missing out on all the finer details of the actual experience, but it's got to be close enough.
"And you're just born with this. When did you start trying to use it?" he asks. "Did your parents tell you, or did you discover it on your own?"
no subject
"I always knew it was there, but not the way I do now. Knowing and knowing are two different things. The relationship gets clearer over time. As for when I started, probably as soon as I understood words. Wouldn't you?" It would've been harder to keep him from trying, honestly.
"How do you get yours? You have to eat that fruit, but how do you get those?" Do people just give their children devil fruit? Are they bought? Do you have to just be insanely lucky and find one?
no subject
"They're not common," he says with a shrug. "But some are considered more valuable than others. People will hunt those ones down and sell them to the highest bidder, especially if they already have one. You can't eat two, that'll kill you. When I found mine, though, it was just by mistake. I was a dumb kid. Thought I was swiping something like a custard apple. I think it got mixed in with them. Looked pretty similar."
Yeah, he'll admit to casual theft at that age, because what eight year old hasn't tried to steal something pointless at least once just to see if they could? He'll leave out the part where he was starving, it's not relevant.
no subject
"So two is too many." He wonders briefly if you could mix them with other kinds of abilities, but even if it were possible to try, he wouldn't want to. "There's no hard and fast limit with magic, but you can certainly kill yourself biting off more than you can chew." Not that he'd know anything about that. Not that he's come close to doing it multiple times.
"Can each one only do one thing? Or give one ability, I guess. And why doesn't anyone cultivate them?" Unless they do? But then they wouldn't be nearly as rare as they sound.
no subject
"Cultivation's tricky for reasons I don't understand. I know it's been tried, and that it fails. I've heard rumors of scientists trying to engineer them directly too, but I really don't know the first thing about it."
no subject
"It's a shame they only do one thing, but like you said, some people can get very creative with a single specialty." Which sort of makes it not a single specialty, but whatever. "When people turn into animals, do they stay the same size, or can they get smaller?" It's an oddly specific question but he's... probably going somewhere with it.
no subject
Which is strange, regardless of what Gregor is thinking. Where does all the extra... body stuff go? Do the cells themselves shrink down? Way outside his wheelhouse. When Sengoku goes all golden Buddha, does he draw material in from around him to sustain the enormous size increase? Can't say he ever thought to ask, since the man didn't exactly go parading around like that, saving it only for dire circumstances.
no subject
He thinks for a second. "I guess they could just be getting rid of the excess, but cutting yourself down to mouse size sounds more than a little fatal." And like it would take way too long to be practical. "Either way, it's never looked like a very pleasant process to me. Not something I'm eager to try."
no subject
This is definitely not a serious or important question, he just wants to know. The description of more everything gives too many wild possibilities. Hoping for a good story, he tops off his drink, then holds the bottle toward Gregor, ready to pour him another as well if he'd like.
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