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  • Old Guild Username: Maiden
  • Joined: 11 yrs ago
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    1. Maiden 11 yrs ago

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Bio

Hi hi hi there ladies and gentlemen, boys and girls. I am Maiden, aka Maiden of a Million Words. I've been a member of RPG since 2010, and before Guildfall I was a notorious long-poster with a post count over 3000. In recent years since I haven't done much roleplaying; I don't trust myself to post consistently for long periods of time. Instead, I've been writing short stories and novellas whenever I feel the urge to make magic with twenty-six letters. Still, fond memories and a sense of nostalgia keep me coming back to the ol' Guild... even if all I do is post a new signature set and have a bit of a read through Advanced.

I'm a middle-aged female currently living in the Southeastern United States. I have a pretty average/boring clerical job. In addition to writing and roleplaying I enjoy hiking, horseback riding, shooting, graphic art and napping. If there's something you'd like to know, feel free to PM me and ask... I'll get back to you eventually.


Most Recent Posts

KALLEH!!!1!! *glomp/attackles/hugs* Of course you're welcome back, and of course you can use a re-made version of a patient from the last run. Pum is going to re-run Simone, I'm using Buck (but not Remy)... so would you hate me if I said I'm hoping you're re-writing McKenzie? (If it's Clay or Red, that's super cool too though!) I'm so excited that you and Pum are both back!! *does happy dance*

@ Syblyx:

Well, it's not that Xodus is especially demanding or anything, it's just that I consider him a very good writer/roleplayer as well as a friend, and if you're writing with him I'm confident I'd enjoy writing with you too. That's all. ^_^

The thing about how Rak manifests the shadows is only important because I enjoy coming up with credible ways for the Institute to restrain/injure him. This ties in to your Shadowborn nurse, too. If the Institute has a way to deconstruct manifested shadows, possibly because Rak is not the first Shadowborn that's been housed there, then we don't need a special extra nurse to do this. Also, again, we prefer a "beating the patient into submission" approach, and would likely just laser the shit out of those shadows until Rak calmed down.

I was about to refuse you the Shadowborn nurse completely, but I came up with a compromise... a compromise I can use later, for my own benefit, that should also be a fun collab for us. First, I am still disturbed by your lack of faith in the ability of the Institute to control their patients. Second, as Rak is more powerful than any of the other Shadowborn on his planet, a Shadowborn nurse shouldn't be able to defeat him on her own... especially if he's in such a state that all of my horses and all of my men can't put him back together again. (Do you see what I'm saying? Your nurse would have to be able to defeat him all on her own, which would make her like a god-level character.) The best I can offer is that the Institute already has a Shadowborn nurse on staff, who works in the Lower Complex, and who will be called in to consult after the first time Buck gets hurt trying to deal with Rak. We can collaborate on a small Character Sheet for her, and take turns writing her. We can discuss privately what my super-secret purpose for her is. ;) Deal?

Also, I just sort of realized that this best-submission crap makes me look like a pompous ass. I don't want to discourage good players from applying because competition stifles their creativity or something. (Also, since I've just auto-accepted two Alumni, it's not really reasonable anymore lol.) I'm in the process of writing the IC opener right now, and will open the IC in six days.

Syblyx, you seem like a reasonable and flexible player, and I like Rak. You're approved. Welcome aboard!

Everyone, if you'd like to submit a character sheet, please toss it at me. We have three patient spots still needing to be filled! The IC will open Friday, March 21st!
Hello and welcome, Syblyx! Glad to see a new player excited about this roleplay!!

So, as promised, some comments on your character sheet. Overall, I like him, good first impression. Nice choice on the mental illness: we've had schizophrenics before, but never the catatonic variety. The appearance is quite well done, I like the spooky/misty physical presence very much!

I have a few things that I'd like clarification on, if you don't mind. Rak is different than most Shadowborn in that he can control shadows within 100 feet of himself instead of 25. Rak is largely in control of his shadows except during catatonic episodes and when he crosses the shadow of a corrupt man. Are both of these statements correct? Regarding his powers: how does he enable the shadows to physically injure other, non-Shadowborn creatures? How does he give them enough substance/mass/density to puncture a physical being?

Another question I have: if a nurse were to try to sedate Rak, would they succeed if they injected his physical body? Or would they need to find a way to give his shadow the medicine? I have a great idea for helping to control Rak, which involves lasers. As a highly powered/concentrated light, I would think that they could be used to form a barrier he couldn't cross. Since I'm assuming that regular light (flourescent, incandescent, sunlight) has only a weakening effect on him rather than a truly damaging one, would you agree that the more powerful the light, the more potential it had to hurt him? Does that sound reasonable to you?

Now, onto the issues I see with the CS. There are two. First is the size of his room. If it needs to be large enough to house a 100 foot diameter circle of bright light, it would take up between four and six of the Upper Complex patient rooms. Which would probably mean that the Institute would house him in the more spacious Lower Complex. I do have a nice, neat way to resolve this. I asked about the lasers above because I was thinking that there could be a laser grid along his walls in a standard patient room to keep his shadows in at night or when he was wigging out. Or an electrical current in the walls/doors/windows. Since it wouldn't allow him to fully expand his shadows without suffering damage, you'd get the added bonus of him feeling caged/confined in his room. How's that sound to you? The second problem is with his Shadowborn nurse. I know I said that you guys would have NPC Nurses, but I meant nurses that are already existing as staff at the Institute. They'd come into Rak's room with tasers/cattle prods/light sabers/phasers set to stun, of course, and beat him into submission if need be. (That's just how we roll at Osmond's.) So I'm hoping that the assigned nurse won't be a deal breaker, because I can't let you haz. Sorry.

I'm hoping all of these adaptations sound good to you. As always, if you can come up with something that works as well and will be more fun for you, give me your pitch. Although I must say, I'm already sort of attached to the idea of giving Buck a cattle prod. That just sounds like SO much fun!!

Also, sorry if I'm rambling, and for potato. :)

P.S. I see you're in Chrono Asylum, too! I played a team on OldGuild, Marc and Lena, I've forgotten what their numbers were and lost the CS in the Guild Crash. Speaks well of you that Xodus let you on board. ;)
Thanks, Pum! If you've got suggestions for additions or changes, you know they're welcome! :D
Okay, so, this massive OOC is now OPEN! If you've found your way here from the IntChk thread, feel free to post interest or inquiries directly to this thread. Hopefully Pumirya will be arriving before too terribly long: he was the last active player on the original Twisted, and is thereby an auto-accept with his character, Simone.

Aaaaand now I just have to sit on my hands, patiently waiting for some of you excellent roleplayers to join!


------

Hello?
Is there anybody in there?
Just nod if you can hear me,
Is there anyone at home?

------


It was four-thirty in the morning. Nurse Buck was an hour early for work.

This time of the morning, the Institute was as quiet as it ever got. Most creatures eventually fell into the rhythm of sleeping during the lights-out period, and waking during the lights-on one. It was a sleep cycle Buck still struggled with, being naturally nocturnal, and he was not alone: so it was never actually silent in the asylum.

At least, it never used to be silent in the asylum. Now that there were thirteen patients instead of the eighty-nine Buck had once helped care for, it was almost eerily quiet at night… and at times just like his first moments that particular morning. The vacant rooms were starting to fill with a pale, silvery blue pre-dawn light. It leaked dimly into the Institute’s hallways through the undarkened windows, adding an almost ethereal glow to the dim and recessed lighting that made the hallways navigable during lights-out. For just like there was never a time when all the patients slept at once, there was never a time when all the lights were truly out at Osmond’s Institute.

Though he was technically an hour early, Buck was running behind. His petite frame did not lend itself to large strides but he walked faster than much taller men without seeming to hurry. His yellow and black sneakers flashed in silent rhythm across the black and white checkered linoleum of the patient care areas. Clad in all black, the Cainite was little more than a rapid shadow making a beeline for the Central Nurse’s station.

Morgan Osmond had a very bad habit of dumping patients on the nurses with no notice or advance preparation. Buck could only be grateful that his boss had thought to send word last night that another group of the committed would arrive this morning. Buck had not had a chance to look at their files or do any sort of preparation in gearing up for their care. Morgan was fond of making people squirm: both the patients and the staff. It infuriated the little vampire. He hated being ill-prepared for anything.

So he’d meant to get in at three-thirty instead of four-thirty, giving himself a chance to thoroughly review the files. Since he’d been effectively living in his third floor quarters for a year now, it shouldn’t have been difficult… but then there’d been that fight with the alarm clock.

He waved the apparently blank white keycard attached to his shirt pocket in front of an equally blank looking black square on the door to the station. It unlocked with an audible click and Buck proceeded inside. There, on the counter just inside the doorway, was the stack of new patient files.

The vampire opened them all, laid them out on the counter, and began unlocking cabinets as he referenced the sheets of paper. Some species were unfamiliar and some he knew well. For the common species he knew which medications to procure; others required guidance from the files. He was working with frightening speed. Syringes were ripped from their sterile little packets, filled from the assorted vials Buck had pulled from stainless steel cupboards, and the needles then re-capped. As each chemical cocktail was completed, the petite nurse assigned them a carefully written label.

‘Rhorak’, read one. ‘Aniella’, said another. Then, ‘Simone’, ‘Hanneli’, ‘Aleksandrina’, 'Dante' and 'Alice'.

They were just names now, letters and numbers on sheets of paper. Soon enough they’d be faces… voices… sad, cruel stories… heaps of hurts and harms lost in their own shattered psyches. From patient files to patients. Patients he didn’t want to see slip away. Though Morgan had assured Buck -once, long ago- that the comas weren’t a result of anything he was doing wrong, it still left the taste of failure in Buck’s mouth.

Once all the syringes were filled and primed they were neatly arranged into a slim, rectangular, plastic case clearly designed to hold them. All their labels faced up. Having a sedative injection prepped and on hand for each new patient had proved incredibly helpful for him in times past. Even on occasions where he hadn’t needed them, Buck had never felt like he wasted time on the preparation.

As he was putting the last of the vials back in their places, the plastic case in his front right pocket, Buck heard the door to the central nurse’s station click to unlock again. The petite man sighed inwardly. This time of the morning, in this room, it could only be one person.

“Good morning, bloodsucker.”

Buck rolled his eyes and said, “Good of you to show up a whole five minutes early, mortal.”

Jean St. Croix huffed, stuck out her tongue at the back of Buck’s head, then hopped up to take a seat on the counter… planting her ass on the vampire’s neatly organized file array. He heard the sound of paper rustling, turned, and frowned at her.

“Really?” the petite man said, a touch of weariness coloring his voice. “I don’t like you any more than you like me, but I don’t go out of my way to make your life difficult.”

“You could have left the vials out for me,” she observed coolly, leaning back on her left palm… and twisting it a little, to wrinkle up the paper.

Buck shut the cabinet firmly, locked it, and then turned to look at Jean. Though she knew better, for a moment the female nurse really did forget who she was dealing with. She met his stare, and found that she couldn’t break it when the moment drew out. Jean couldn’t turn her head as Buck approached. He stopped about three feet from where she was sitting on his stack of files, and Jean could do nothing but stare down into his luminous golden eyes.

“Move.”

It was a small word, soft and not at all threatening, but Jean found her body moving before the syllable had even finished leaving the vampire’s lips. She hopped lightly off the counter and took two steps to the right. Then Jean stood motionless as Buck smoothed out his mussed files, closed them, stacked them neatly, and gathered them to his chest. He waved his badge in front of the black key box and it popped open, allowing him to return the medication cabinet key to its place inside. He knew as well as Jean did that if he didn’t log the key back in that way, any shortages or a missing key would be his fault. He shut the box, then pushed open the door. Jean couldn’t see Buck at all, but she could hear the smile in his voice.

“You now have twenty-four minutes to gather your injections and get your team prepped for the new arrivals before lights-on. Good luck.”

The thrall broke when the nurses’ station door clicked shut. Jean’s legs buckled and she collapsed into a shaking heap on the floor. She was dizzy from the momentary spell and quivering not with fear… but anger. It would take another minute for her to regain the ability to walk.

“You’ll pay for that, little man,” the woman growled through gritted teeth.

------

Come on now,
I hear you're feeling down:
I can ease your pain,
And get you on your feet again!

------


Buck and his team were gathered near the gymnasium end of the hall. Although he’d prepped injections for all the new patients, he and Jean divided the new arrivals into two groups their first day. She watched over half, and he watched over half. Much as he disliked the woman, she did a passable job and managed to be less bitchy to everyone else than she was to him. She and her team of three male nurses would see to the first three new patients, while Buck and his team of two female nurses would see to the second three patients.

The two women who stood facing their ancient vampiric supervisor had the same face. That was to say that their facial features were exactly the same; they were painted, however, with different colors. Farrah was blonde and had eyes that were a subtly unnatural navy blue. They didn’t glow or anything, but who had blue eyes so dark they were almost black? Her skin was medium toned and tanned on top of that. She was five foot eight or so, taller than he was, and built like a gymnast. Clara had the same nose, eye and brow shape, lips, jawline, and ears that Farrah did. But her hair was like liquid copper, eyes a light though entirely natural shade of green. Clara’s skin was milky white, limbs slender and graceful, and she was petite in stature, at least three inches shorter than his own five-six. Not at all athletic like Farrah was.

He could find neither of them attractive because of that face. It was the face that told him the bone structure was the same. While the body type, eye color, hair color, and height could change, their faces did not. It was subtle enough that it had taken a while for even Buck to notice that all the new nurses were actually somehow the same woman. And not just the same woman, the same man on the flip side of the coin. The male version was more attractive than the female, with a square jaw and fine, sharp facial features. He wore different beards and shades of stubble, different heights and hairs like the women, but he had that same faintly handsome, somewhat reserved face. It had been disturbing, to say the least. Some of the patients (especially those who hallucinated frequently) never noticed it at all.

Buck wasn’t the sort who talked about personal matters with his co-workers, so he’d never really asked about their families or pasts. By the time most of the other nurses had been replaced with these same-face supernaturals, the vampire was pretty sure he didn’t want to hear the answers he might get.

Clara was mildly gifted as a magical healer, and like all the Sibling nurses, much stronger and faster than a normal human. She was soft-spoken, and with her small stature it was sort of deceiving. She could be rather brutal physically, and had a bad habit of strangling her patients… until she had killed one by mistake six years ago, and had come to work the next day almost a different person. Since then, Clara had sometimes struggled to do the things Morgan asked of her. Farrah was a very weak telepath, and had somehow managed to develop that talent into a super-effective psychic block. Her particular brand of cruelty was more in the channels of psychological torture instead of physical methods.

“I’m going to handle the Ragdoll, Aniella, this morning. Her native language is Italian, which I speak, but according to her file she has an aversion to males. If she panics at the sight of me, I’ll have to send one of you for Regianne.”

The two women nodded in unison.

“Farrah,” Buck continued, “You’re going to be dealing with Hanneli this morning. She’s a non-Earth patient, so be sure your translator is on in case she can’t speak English. She’s also a powerful psychic talent, and her gifts are directly involved with her illness. Be very careful, and make sure you read her file thoroughly. She’s the only one in the group who’s a transfer from downstairs.”

Farrah nodded, took the file Buck offered, and continued listening as he handed off the next file to Clara. “You’ve drawn Aleksandrina today. She’s a witch, but without the light of a full moon she shouldn’t be too difficult to manage…”

------

…Relax…
I'll need some information first.
Just the basic facts:
Can you show me where it hurts?

------


It was five forty-eight AM, and Jean was handing out files to her team of nurses in the Central Station. She was sitting on the counter again.

Her Siblings were three males, absolutely identical except for their facial hair. Six feet tall, broad-shouldered, with deep chests and heavy bone structure. Their hair was jet black, their eyes dark violet. One was clean-shaven, one had a goatee, and one had a full, thick, well-trimmed beard.

“Okay, so, first off we have Rhorak the Shadowborn,” Jean said, and offered the manila folder to the goatee wearing nurse. “He’s all yours. Got your new flashlight?”

The man took the file with one hand and pulled the overpowered penlight out of his breast pocket with the other. “Yes ma’am,” he replied.

Jean smiled, and nodded.

“Then we have Simone,” she intoned, offering the file to her clean-shaven Sibling nurse. “Tony, you’ll be dealing with her. She’s some sort of wolf…vampire… bat… thing. Wait, why did I not give this one to the bloodsucker, then? Anyway, be careful.”

Tony nodded, taking the file and skimming over it.

“Last but not least, we have Dante the Magician.” Jean handed the file to her bearded subordinate. “He’s an illusionist, but he can’t cast without an incantation. If he starts acting up, show him how real magic is done, okay?”

The bearded man nodded… and grinned.

“So, we all know the deal, right?” Jean asked, meeting each of their indigo gazes in turn. “For the first twenty-four hours, we have to play nice which means no marks and nothing out-of-control verbally, unless the patients act up. I’ll let you know when we revert to standard operating procedure.”

Just as Buck’s two Sibling nurses had done, Jean’s three nodded at exactly the same time. Since they were so physically similar, it looked particularly eerie on them… in a way that the female nurse rather liked.

------

Okay.
Just a little pin prick,
There'll be no more AAAAAAAH!
…But you may feel a little sick.

------


It was ten minutes before dawn when the lights came on at Osmond’s Institute. That was just the lights in the main hallways and all the rooms downstairs, however, and the moment at six o’clock sharp when all the patients’ doors unlocked at once. Buck, Jean, and their crews of Sibling nurses stood at the ready. Buck’s duo simply re-locked the doors to the new patient rooms, while Jean’s three went right into their new charges’ quarters.

Buck and his team cared for the existing patients first. Existing patients weren’t expected to get up until eight, but it was practice to check on them all through the windows in their doors at lights-on. Though most of the doors he peeked through were into darkened rooms where he could see patients still sleeping in their beds, at one door he was greeted with a bright light and a pair of black wings.

“Good morning, Jax. How are you feeling today?” the petite vampire asked, reaching into the inky black feathers to Velcro the Corvinian’s scrub top together around his unusual anatomy.

“Better than. Yesterday,” the raven-man replied. Though he understood English perfectly, it was still difficult for him to actually make the proper sounds to speak it. “Not. As good as. TomarRAAH!”

The last part of ‘tomorrow’ actually sounded more like the call of a raven, but Buck understood. It also sounded like something Jax might have been trained to say to his superiors wherever it was he was schooled.

“I suppose that’s one way to look at things,” was Buck’s only reply. He patted the last bit of Velcro in place and stepped back out into the hallway. “There you are.”

“Thank. You,” the birdman said.

“Of course.”

Then Buck was off again, peeking into all the occupied rooms to ensure that everyone was still sleeping. Jax made his way over to Cadie’s door just after the vampire passed, and peered inside. Buck frowned a little, but kept walking. That was a problem for another day.

Today, he had to finish checking on all the established patients, and then… he got to go deal with Aniella. He was genuinely curious about the Ragdoll: he’d heard of them during medical school, but had never actually seen one as they were quite rare. He was hoping that for once his unimposing physical stature would work to his benefit… although it had been a long time since someone had been terrified of him at first glance, and that might be a refreshing change.

-||- Cadence -||-

In the night ahead, there’s a light
Upon this house on a hill;
Living, living still.
Their intention is to kill,
And they will, they will.



Soft, warm sunlight was filtering down through the windows over the kitchen table as Cadence thoughtfully chewed a mouthful of scrambled eggs. She didn’t turn when her younger brothers came crashing down the stairs: the two of them sounded like a herd of elephants wherever they went. Chase went streaking by, spilling a glass of orange juice as he attempted to snag a piece of toast on the run. Her father leapt up from the table, and her mother turned from the stove to yell at the boy. Cadie rose from her place and stepped over to the fridge, grabbing the towel that hung from the handle. She found her mother’s hand on her wrist, and when she looked up at the older woman, the lined face was sad.

“Cadence, it’s time to wake up.”

It didn’t sound like her mother’s voice, and then someone knocked loudly on a steel door.

“What?”

Somehow, the word was lost in the darkness between dreaming and waking. Cadence tried to open her eyes and immediately cried out. While the right one came open, the left one only sent a stab of pain into the back of her skull and stayed defiantly dark.

“What…” she licked her lips, raising a hand to her face. “What happened?”

Her naturally soft voice was furthermore cracked and hoarse from all the screaming she’d done the previous afternoon. Cadie’s nurse probably didn’t even actually hear her so much as guess at what the mutant had said.

“Don’t touch it,” a cruel female voice replied. It was one of the two red-haired nurses, whose name Cadie had never bothered to learn. “You ripped the brackets off your therapy chair again, and this time you cut your eyelid. Then you had a seizure and bashed up your face.”

For a moment, Cadence wanted to sob. What had her life come to, that she’d torn her own eyelid open when her telekinetic powers desperately reached out to end the torture Osmond’s liked to call ‘desensitization therapy’? It was a cruel device that propped her eyelids open, making her unable to look away from the display screen. She’d broken it (and hurt herself breaking it) many times before… but that was part of the therapy, she supposed. She only had to learn how to tolerate it and not hurt herself. Of course, some guidance would have been appreciated… but they just strapped her to the chair, time and again saying nothing as they left the room.

“Oh,” was the only thing she uttered aloud, little more than an exhaled breath. She licked her lips.

Then bony fingers found their ginger, flinching way across her face. A heavy pad was laid from her left cheekbone to her eyebrow, the sensation beneath a tangled mess of pain. She could feel how swollen it was. A gauze wrap was wound around her head to keep the pad in place. The young woman felt cold, suddenly, and realized that she was wearing nothing more than a paper gown.

“So,” the nurse said after a moment, “you don’t get your morning sedative because you had a shot late last night. Instead, you get pain medicine. You’re not supposed to wear a scrub top, you can use this tie-gown as a top instead. Wear it with normal pants.”

She dropped the pink gown onto Cadie’s knees. The young woman was still laying on her side in bed, looking up at the nurse.

“Well, come on,” the nurse prodded, grabbing the younger woman’s bicep and jerking her upright. “I haven’t got all day.”

The swift movement sent a jolt of pain through Cadie’s head, and a low moan escaped her lips. She felt nauseous, the edges of her vision turning grey. The nurse gripped her elbow and twisted her arm, forcing the telekinetic to expose the vein on the inside of the bend.

“Quit your whining. You’ll feel fine in just a second.”

Between that second and the promised one, a needle tore an expertly brutal hole. Cadie ground her teeth to keep from crying out again before the momentary burn of medicine dissipated into pleasant warmth throughout her body. Bitchy as the nurse was…

“…you’re right.” Again, they were words so soft they would not have been heard except in the silence of Cadie’s room. She licked her lips twice.

The redhead grinned wolfishly. “Yeah, enjoy that shit. And go get yourself some breakfast. You’re authorized for the elevator today.”

The nurse released Cadence, and the girl sank back down into her bed. She had no idea what sort of pain medicine that was; it made her feel disconnected, dizzy and… light. Her body and face were comfortably numb but chemicals couldn’t dull the hurt in her soul. If this was a proper hospital, they would have had brought her something to eat in her room. Unfortunately, this was Osmond’s. Even though she was hurt and now doped up, she was on her own to get breakfast.

And Cadie needed her breakfast.

Luckily for the young woman, a black beak -and the feathery head attached to it- was peeking around the edge of her door.

------

In this house on a hill,
The dead are living still!
Their intention is to kill,
And they will, they will.

------


Jax had waited patiently outside as Cadie struggled into her clothing for the day. Her gown was tied under where her breasts should have been and again around her bony, boyish hips. The medicine coupled with her slight stature made her cold so she had the blanket from her bed folded up and draped around her shoulders. She’d chosen dark purple pants and black slippers to complete her ugly outfit. The mutant hung on to her Corvinian friend’s arm for balance as she shuffled through the main hallway. Jax had offered to carry her, but being cradled in his arms was more than Cadence could handle.

Her palm opened the door to the elevator, which had no buttons and only went down one level. Still, it meant she didn’t have to tackle stairs today… that was good, because with one eye bandaged her depth perception was definitely off. This time of the morning, the cafeteria wasn’t crowded. She was pretty sure that she saw one new face, but she wasn’t interested in talking to anybody. She didn’t need to talk to Jax: he knew what should be done, and did it.

After depositing the wobbly telekinetic at a table, the raven-man went to the steam lines. It took him three trips to bring all the food Cadie would eat for breakfast. Heaping plates of scrambled eggs, sausage, bacon, hash browns, bagels with cream cheese, a chocolate chocolate-chip muffin, oatmeal with butter and honey, a bowl of fruit salad, coffee, orange juice and milk. Jax took one more trip for himself, returning with a tray of assorted gruels he poured down his beak.

Cadie supposed that having a bird mouth and a human stomach posed some issues.

It also wasn’t like she could judge anyone on anything about eating, ever. Wings included, Jax was easily three times her weight and ate half of what she did. Though she tried not to cram too much into her mouth at once, it disappeared with frightening rapidity. Generally she’d make a trip to the lines, eat what she’d got, then return to the lines… but since she wasn’t capable of that today, she just had to try to eat the warm things before they got cold. Back home, she’d eaten in her room, alone: she couldn’t handle the stares she’d gotten from the other patients upon seeing the content of her meals. Here in Osmond’s Institute, a boyish waif of a mutant consuming enough food for three grown men hardly even registered as unusual.

So, it meant there were bright sides to be found, if one looked for them. She wasn’t a freak for her eating habits here, and she’d somehow managed to acquire a bodyguard/personal assistant to help her out on rough days. And even though Cadie couldn’t count Jax as a friend…

“Thank you,” she murmured, pausing with a spoon halfway to her mouth. Soft green eyes found his familiar, feathered face. “For helping me today.” She licked her lips twice.

Cadie suspected that ravens heard better than humans, because Jax never seemed to miss her barely-uttered words. He couldn’t smile with his hard beak, but the faint puffing of his feathers at the base of his neck could easily be translated into something like pride or affection.

“Welcome.” Jax croaked, turning one of his black eyes at Cadie. “You. Woulddo. Same.”

“I would,” the mutant whispered, nodding and licking her lips. Inwardly, cringingly, she couldn’t help but think that she actually wasn’t able to take care of Jax the way he took care of her. Without her telekinesis, she couldn’t have supported his weight down the hallway. In making her too weak to do damage, the Institute had also rendered her incapable of helping if she wanted to.

And the brightness she’d found moments earlier… faded.

------

Somewhere in the end we’re all insane,
To think the light ahead
Will save us from this pain!

------
Inactive Characters

Aleksandrina Ivanova, a/k/a Sasha, played by Elsa.
Elsa is on LOA due to life circumstances, anticipated return in 2-3 post cycles.

Former Players

Syblyx: Rhorak of the Queim Family, a/k/a Rak.
CJayxo: Aniella Kyara Pavia, a/k/a Nell, Ella, Yari.
Vampricprincessty: Alice Mallery.


Game Master Cast

Morgan Osmond, Institute Administrator
Main GM Player Character: Nurse Buck
(Upper Complex Head Nurse)
Jean St. Croix, Institute-Born Staff Nurse
Cadence Halstead, Patient
Jaxilian Darkstorm, Patient
"Sibling" Nurses: Greg, Kyle, Tony, Clara, Sarah, Farrah
Institute Gremlins




Simone
Played by Pumirya


Hanneli Zeihn a/k/a Anya
Played by Oblivion
*Currently on LOA for 1-2 weeks, until exams are over.


Dante Veniti a/k/a 'The Grinning Jackal'
Played by El_Tigre


Ivaniliana, a/k/a Lia
Played by Katelyn


Kevin D’Rockitto
Played by Kiddo


Ryn
Played by nonsequitur




Once upon a time, Osmond’s Institute was a legit mental hospital. While a bulk of their patients were too ill to ever hope for a full and real recovery there were a few who ‘graduated’ out into Orrace each year. Over the past fifty years, the releases have stopped almost completely. Patient abuse has skyrocketed within the asylum, general regard for the facility itself has dropped off, and the disturbing trend of patients slipping into unexplained and irreversible comas has grown each year.

There are very few staff remaining in Osmond’s Institute who remember what sanitarium life was like fifty years ago, and from that handful are only one or two nurses who are not unfailingly loyal to Morgan Osmond. The history of the Institute isn’t spoken of, or made known to the current patients or new nurses. As far as anybody in Osmond’s is concerned, things have always been the way they are now. And it can be dangerous for staff to suggest otherwise.

Something’s gone sideways at the Institute. The residents of Orrace know this, but none of the patients do. Nobody in Orrace knows just what’s wrong either… only that the complete radio silence is troubling.

Most of the new patients aren’t going to notice at first that this is not how an asylum should operate. They may chalk it up to alien cultures or their own level of madness and strength. Whatever their reasoning, it will probably take them at least a little while to realize that their lives could (and should) be much better. I plan for Buck to be an instrumental part in helping the patients to understand that something is terribly, horribly wrong.

A lot of the storyline rests squarely on Buck’s slender shoulders. He is not immune to the Wrath of Morgan just because he’s my main PC character. His job/my challenge is to help the patients become aware of what is going on and guide them forward without doing anything so drastic as to cause the Administrator displeasure. I intend to have him use subterfuge and manipulation to accomplish his goals… but be warned: Buck may not always want what is best for your particular character and has no qualm sacrificing one to save the rest if necessary.

There are two possible resolutions to the storyline: success and failure. Both could be fun, both could be bloody and violent, but only with one is there potential for a somewhat happy ending. I know you guys can guess who our villain is… but which side will your character take? Morality is relative, you know, and maybe on your home planet what Morgan’s up to wouldn’t be considered such a bad thing. Or maybe you’re chaotic evil and just get off on violence and destruction. Is your character too mentally weak to do much but be internally destroyed by what’s happening to them? Or is your character Superman gone mad, seeing a chance to redeem himself for truth and justice by helping his fellow patients? I’ve set the stage and have clear goals in mind. How this all goes down, however, will hopefully be a harmonious collaboration between seven or eight talented writers and roleplayers.


Sibling Nurses

Yes, you read this right in the IC. All the male and female NPC nurses have the same face. They are different heights, body types, hair and eye color, but all members of the same gender look like they are from the same family. It may or may not be obvious to your patients at first: since they are sometimes quite different physically, it’s not quite so noticeable that they all have The Face.

For those of you who participated in the first Twisted, you will remember the clone nurses. They were, of course, completely identical to one another. My Siblings are identical (most of the time) just in the facial features. (Sara and Clara, Buck’s redheaded nurses, and Jean’s trio, are the only instances where multiple nurses share the exact same combination of physical features.) The Siblings are more insidious than the Clones ever were, and are burdened with glorious purpose.

That’s all I have to say about that... for meow.


* This post will be updated as more plot information is revealed IC.




Rules of The OOC

1. Abuse of other players will not be tolerated. There is no name-calling, shaming, or intentionally making another player feel bad. We’re here to abuse our characters, not each other.

2. Spamming of the OOC shall be kept to a minimum. I don’t mind a little bit of chitchat among players, but if I see 24 pages of one-line posts going up overnight I will put on my angry face and ban all posts not related to the roleplay. Don’t make me do it!

3. Player Activity

Players are expected to post IC at least once every two weeks. It is a slow pace so it must be steady for the game to progress. The post cycle begins and ends with me (Maiden), and I will post once every two weeks on Saturday or Sunday. Players have two weeks from that date to post theirs. If a player misses an IC post cycle, they will get a warning on the OOC. Missing a second post cycle gets them put on an automatic 2 week LOA, and GM will remove their character from play. If the player is still active OOC in this process, the LOA may be modified. If the player is not active OOC, they will recieve a warning PM from me (Maiden) after the second missed post cycle. Failure to respond to this PM within 72 hours will result in automatic ejection from the game. If the player does respond, but does not post within one week of receipt of the message, they will still be ejected.

Players who have been ejected from the game may or may not be allowed to reclaim their previous patients. I reserve the right to make you come up with a new one. They also must post at least once every 3 days in the OOC for two weeks before being allowed to rejoin the IC.

4. Your Game Master has the final say in everything, always. I’m generally open to discussion, but I reserve all my rights to do whatever is called for in the defense of the roleplay.


IC Rules, Regulations and Guidelines

1. No God-Modding. Everyone seems to have a different idea about what this term means, so I’ll give you my explanation. You may not, in attacking another character, assume that an attack connects unless you receive the specific OOC Okey-Dokey to do so. If your character delivers a complete beating in a single post, allowing the other player only to write reaction shots as their character gets his or her ass handed to them, you’re God-Modding. If your character suddenly has a universe-ender superpower that wasn’t previously mentioned or even hinted at anywhere, you’re God-Modding. If your character knows something that was mentioned only OOC and he or she has no reasonable way of knowing this IC, you’re technically metagaming but we’ll call it God-Modding for Twisted’s purposes.

2. Be mindful of the storyline. Twisted Redux does have an overall plot, and while I’m not talking about it much OOC, it will develop IC. I find that everyone has more fun if we do most of the plot reveals IC, but it only works if everyone is paying attention. I encourage side storylines but please endeavor to keep them secondary.

3. Players will play their own NPC nurses on many occasions. My first IC post will contain information about the NPC nurses’ appearance and behavior. Characters’ players are generally the best at hurting their characters, so many times your self-played NPC nurses will be the ones delivering medicines and escorting your character to various places around the Institute. Once the characters are familiar with their surroundings the NPC nurse use should drop off and my PC Nurse, Buck, should be able to handle a bulk of the patients’ needs.

4. Ask questions. If there’s anything you’re not sure about, or would like clarification on, please do not assume. All you have to do is ask me, and I’ll be more than happy to make sure you’re perfectly clear on whatever issue it is. Don’t do that ‘better to beg forgiveness than ask permission’ crap. I’m ten times more likely to make you delete/change something if you didn’t ask me about it first.

5. HAVE FUN. If you’re not having fun as a player, I’m doing something wrong as a GM. In the instance you are no longer having fun, notify me immediately so I can collaborate with the other players to figure out what’s gone sour. This also applies to situations where you're struggling to come up with usable material. We've all been bl--cked before (knock on wood) and a lot of the time it helps if you get a fresh perspective from someone else. We're a team here at Twisted! Let your teammates help you!

6. I am not a technical or scientific person. Much of our technology at Osmond’s works only because I say it does. I don’t have the brain power to wrap my head around how interdimensional travel or dimensional creation would theoretically work. (Plus, ain’t nobody got time to try to learn that ish.) You’ll find cloning machines, stasis machines, genetic manipulation laboratories, pharmaceutical testing/manufacture facilities, and similar things in Osmond’s Institute. Again, no idea what sort of pseudo-science is behind these things. If you are one of those technical people who could possibly contribute to scientifically sound reasoning behind Twisted Tech, I would appreciate collaborations and input from you. But don’t just scream that these things shouldn’t work without offering me a better alternative. Please and thanks.


** I reserve the right to add/amend the rules as it becomes necessary during the game’s progress. **
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