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6 mos ago
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Watch out.

The gap in the door... it's a separate reality.
The only me is me.
Are you sure the only you is you?


DON'T TOUCH THAT DIAL NOW, WE'RE JUST GETTING STARTED

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Completely appreciate that all of the proposed games divert from the initial foundation of 'School for Superpowers' that P.R.C.U. is based in, however Wraith has already mentioned he's uncomfortable handing the reins over to another in his stead (which I completely understand, given that the setting is nearly a decade's cumulative work forged into a singular brainchild), and as a creative myself I am often cautious around ripping off existing ideas (often to the point of self-sabotage). I can't speak for Hound, but I would assume he feels similar, and would be uncomfortable essentially re-branding P.R.C.U.

I understand that we all came together for the Academy setting, but the objective of this thread is to find something that's close, but not the same, and also get the majority feeling from the group so that it's as close to a collective decision as we can manage. The consensus on Discord was to carry on with super-powered individuals, and Hound and I have tailored what we felt would be (and our instincts are proving correct so far) the most popular pitches accordingly, but I also wanted to throw out some curveballs just in case there was appetite for something radically different. After all, you don't know until you ask!
Thanks for the votes so far everyone. I've been subtly tracking choices and trying to weight votes appropriately - in hindsight I probably should have said something like 'spread 6 points across your top 3 picks however you like' but we move on (and I think I'm keeping track of priority picks well enough).

I'm also tracking who's popped in to vote - inevitably I think some amount of the roster will fall away but it would be nice to carry forward as many of us as possible!

So far it's looking like 2 is out in front, which honestly Hound and I anticipated. We'll start looking at the structure needed in closer detail.
Crucify me if you want but I am not a Zelda fan. Never was, never will be.


Put 'im on the cart, boys.
Hello!

This interest check is mainly for those from the recent P.R.C.U. game; due to major life events, the consensus has determined that the game will, sadly, come to a premature end. However, we've formed a close-knit group and writing together has been extremely fun, so let's keep that going!

With that in mind, the key objective for this thread is to take a poll on a number of premises from the P.R.C.U. group, and find the most popular setting to re-launch a new game.
Those people, in no particular order, are:
@Lord Wraith✓ // @Hound55✓ // @Tackytaff // @Mao Mao✓ // @Junkmail // @Kuro✓ // @psych0pomp✓ // @PatientBean✓ // @Zoldyck✓ // @Skai✓ // @Jarl Coolgruuf // @webboysurf✓ // @earthtogab // @Wei Wuxian✓ // @Pirouette✓ // @Theyra // @Lawful Newtral✓ // @Nemaisare✓ // @Hillan

However, I don't want to dissuade further interest from those who weren't in that game - but please, if you're coming in fresh, understand that you may get overridden on your choice of game if the majority of P.R.C.U. players want something else. Votes are weighted differently, basically. That said, if there's extreme interest in multiple settings we might see what we can swing.

With no further ado, please find below a list of 'elevator pitches', for free voting/discussion/brainstorming/what-have-you.
Based on the results of this thread, @Hound55 and I will take the most popular concept(s?) away and expand them out for a full game.

1. Post-Apocalyptic Superpowers ||||\ |
A virus has ravaged the human race, leaving only those with a specific gene mutation behind; in the same incident, this virus caused the gene mutation to warp the very biology of its bearers, granting them wild and powerful metahuman abilities.
In the wreckage of the old world, the survivors are forced to band together, but when some begin hearing voices and seeing strange visions - not always from the same sources - it begins to look like the soul of humanity is at risk just as much as the species itself.


2. Ju-V ||||\ ||||\ ||||\ |||
Juvenile Vigilante System/Program

In a world of great tension between superpowered people and regular humans, Ju-V is a last ditch effort by a desperate society to prevent the cataclysmic results of more superpowered "villains" being created by a society which all too often sees an "Us and Them" divide between those with powers and those without.

Not a superpowered Academy/School, but a "rehabilition system" to instil morality and allow identified powered "Persons of Interest" (either from criminal act, wonton destruction, or a scenario primed for retaliation which would exacerbate the superhuman/human divide) the opportunity to learn how to control their powers and either not use them in the future, or display a newly gained sense of morality over when to use them. It's a place designed to prevent the worst case scenarios of superpowered villainy from being unleashed on society as a whole, with a focus on personal control and self-restraint.


3. Post-Apocalyptic Modern Fantasy ||||\
In a world where a cataclysmic event has destroyed the ability for people to route between major settlements without getting lost, ending up where they came from, or being utterly desecrated in mind and body, a select caste of people - ‘Navigators’ - have become the only remaining links between pockets of civilisation, able to depart from one city and arrive at another, completing the journey to their intended destination.

A select few of the select few have been able to charter their journeys and make rudimentary maps - ‘Cartography’ has become a type of pseudo-magic skill, the maps making travel possible for non-Navigators perhaps once or twice before the map loses its efficacy; but there are rumours of an Atlas, a definitive map, permanently effective that would allow humanity to guide itself across the globe once more.


4. Inter-Apocalyptic Dark Fantasy ||||\ ||
Premise + Setting info

5. Wild-card Zelda RP ||
Premise + Setting info

6. Wild-card American Gods/The Wicked and the Divine-style RP ||||\ |||
Premise
look stop fucking around, finish this:
roleplayerguild.com/posts/5407558

and this:
roleplayerguild.com/posts/5331852

and put them together, and then come up with a plot.
Honestly, Wraith's in a lose-lose situation here. Either he waits until September for his planned hiatus due to the arrival of his first child and drops the RP and we all get mad, or he gives us a heads-up now - and the choice to keep going until his hiatus if we're enjoying ourselves! - and we all get mad anyway.

Ultimately yes it's a bummer but cut the guy a break, it was a week-ish break while he worked on a narrative piece (and some other, equally severe life events were/are occurring to other players) and also allowing players more time to make important IC decisions and, again, he is preparing for a baby, it really doesn't get much more important than that.

I'd also like to say that the feeling of being 'abandoned' is also unfair, and while the majority player-base may not have been privy to such discussions, I'd like to vouch for Wraith and say he was working on and refining further narrative ideas to drive the game forwards post-team swap/house selection.
He's also had to work with a lot of curveballs and has done an excellent job of adapting to the evolving player base and narrative direction so, again, let's give some credit where it's due.

As Hound has mentioned (and the sentiment is shared among a lot of us it seems) we are workshopping new ideas to pitch to the wider group and find something to carry on writing with this group, so stay tuned for that this weekend, and I for one am looking forward to continuing to work with you all, and with Hound in a GM capacity.
Cult of those who have gone out without Navigation and gone mad/been twisted physically, 'The Wayward'? Follow the tenets of the cult leader, a single man, 'The Lost Child'? or should it be 'The Lost Children/Disciples' lead by 'The Wayward Man' or just 'The Wayward' or something similar?

In any case they're the main threat (along with terrestrial beasties who've gone a bit strange in the wilds) when Navigating. They think being 'lost' is a good thing and think the cities should come down so everyone can be 'Lost' and live among the wilds again.

This is because the main leader is actually the one who CAUSED the cataclysm? He was mapping out beyond Earth and realized there are alien races/cosmic creatures/celestial beings waiting for Humanity to leave Earth/become space-faring in order to prey on them/enslave them/etc. 'The Monsters In The Dark'? the 'dark' being space. something that the cult talk about a lot, but is dismissed either as insane rambling, or mistaken for being self-referential?

By causing the cataclysm humanity would be cut off from itself but also the things waiting beyond Earth, and therefore safe.
Finding the Atlas will not only re-map the Earth for Humanity, but also map the stars and the solar system and lead Humanity on an inexorable journey beyond the planet - and towards the things waiting there for them.
Luce's righteous fury had been summarily quelled upon reaching the medical wing and being turned away, Banjo not even present, no wiggle room given for further zealous tantrums. She'd been burst like a balloon, deflated completely and with no recourse left to her to seek recompense and pseudo-confession to placate self-pity. And that's all it was, in the end; more trauma, more turbulence, more that Luce was unequipped and unwilling to deal with, instead seeking an external forgiver to shoulder the burden for her. Once that had been denied, there was no more energy left and she felt all the anger - comfortable, exciting, anxiety-drowning anger - drain away to be replaced by familiar despondency and loneliness. She had nothing left to turn to, no further distractions from the swelling grief within her and taunting ghosts around her. There was only one place she could think of that might offer some solace; swiftly, she turned away from the ward, blinking furiously to fight off tears as she made her way back to the communal gardens.


Location: Community Farm - P.R.C.U. Campus
First Class #2.46: She's In Her 'Rebel' Phase

Interaction(s): N/A
The greenhouse was still a mess; more so thanks to the efforts of her last visit. Where shattered glass had previously been relatively localized, it was now scattered across the floor and amongst the plant-beds, with soil similarly dispersed from Luce's previous scrabbling around. She took a deep breath, trying not to feel that same crushing despair at the desecration of her solitary safe space as she had at first discovery; her hands itched where she'd scratched and scraped them on the glass in her frenzied attempt. She surveyed the scene, trying to keep a cooler head; dead plants wilted in the dirt, broken stalks lying haphazardly, withered sprouts dying on the vine. But there was something untouched, something that stood proud and vibrantly green among the debris.

The aubergine stalk she'd planted two weeks ago stood strong and proud, and from the doorway Luce was astounded to see the tell-tale white-to-purple blended bulb of a ripening fruit. It seemed like a steadfast bastion against all the wreckage that surrounded it; Luce couldn't help but feel a flicker of warmth within her, and just like that she was resolved to clear up and return the greenhouse to her hard-earned glory.

She grabbed a waste bag and donned a pair of thick gardening gloves, beginning her clean-up by carefully picking up the larger shards that lay around the glasshouse; there was clear vinyl tarp available somewhere, she was sure, and a couple strips of that plus some well-applied duct tape would seal up the broken panes in the ceiling nicely. With the big shards cleared, she moved on to sweeping the soil and small fragments from the ground, collecting the detritus and binning that as well. Next was the glass in the plant-beds themselves, tiny twinkling stars amidst the rich brown of the fertilized earth; kneeling on the stone tiles of the floor in front of the wooden log that bordered the bed, she took a garden sieve in hand, and began the thoughtful, methodical process of sifting out the remaining glass, returning pure soil to the bed. Glancing over her shoulder, she noticed a pile of compost bags, recently dropped off and lying innocently one on top of the other just outside the greenhouse door.

By the time she'd finished the sifting and had set the sieve aside in favor of a new bag of compost, replanting the stalks she was able to save, and carefully fertilizing and watering the surviving eggplant, Luce was quietly weeping. These were not the racking, panic-induced sobs she was used to, with heaving breaths and a shaking chest; instead, it was a gentle stream, a ceaseless but soft flow of tears from her eyes, down her cheeks, running down her jawline to culminate at her chin and drip into the soil. It felt cathartic, expulsive, a steady drain of every awful thing Luce was feeling, had felt, would feel. She wept for her dead brothers, for her lonely mother, for the fear she'd felt at Hyperion, for Jim, for Tad. For the turncoats from Eclipse, who felt so spurned that a terrorist's megalomania was the better option for them. For Katja, and her murdered parents, torn from her for no better reason than hatred; for Banjo, rejected by his missing parents, never getting the opportunity to find a real home; for Haleigh, buried alive beneath her own, un-asked-for power; for Calliope, forced to deny her own reality by a father more concerned with ambition than family until she had a nervous breakdown; for Iñigo, detained and imprisoned in a strange place for nothing more than their nature, before being dumped off out-of-sight, out-of-mind. For herself, and the other survivors. For Cass. For Cass.

There was a sizeable gap in the soil where the un-salvageable plants had once stood. Luce wiped her face, the flow of tears finally staunched, standing up with a groan as her knees ached and joints protested. Her dress uniform, this morning pressed and pristine, was now filthy, creased, caked in dirt and stained by sweat, but she paid it no heed; instead, she dropped the trowel she'd been using, rushing from the greenhouse before it hit the ground, possessed of sudden and inescapable purpose.

Perhaps ten minutes later, she reappeared, a plant pot held carefully under her arm as she scooped up the fallen trowel and once again bent down on complaining knees, digging and replanting with a zealous fervor. The flower came out of the pot, went into the ground, got composted and watered, given space to spread its roots and bask in morning-to-noon sunlight; planted with pride-of-place, Luce stood up and took a step back, unable to stop herself as a soft smile blossomed across her face, a final few saline drops falling from her chin. In front of her, a brilliant blue orchid stood vibrantly in the earth, with everything it needed to flourish.



A couple hours passed before anyone came searching for Luce, but when they did they found her still in the greenhouse, covering the missing panes, sweeping the corners, trying to re-organize and reset. It was Victoria Roth that came looking: Aiden Roth’s wife, and a well-respected professor for H.E.A.T. with her own good standing within P.R.C.U. With her was some gruff-looking faculty member Luce hadn't met; it was clear that the both of them had been given a good suggestion on her whereabouts from none other than Gila Mercia, with whom Luce still hadn't decided whether or not to repair their patient-therapist relationship after their disastrous last setting.

"Ms. Calder!" Tori started, making Luce jump and stumble backwards from where she'd been standing on tip-toes, patching some tarp with tape. Luce turned and faced the staff, Victoria's tone indicating nothing less than an incoming scolding from teacher to wayward student. "Do enlighten me as to why you've declined to attend the Team Swap and House Selection ceremony this afternoon?"

Luce's hackles were up; she'd had something of a cleansing afternoon following her turbulence post-funeral, and didn't much appreciate the intrusion based on some nonsense ceremony.
"Pointless. Don't care what team I'm on or which house I'm in. Doesn't mean anything anymore."

Tori sighed, pinching the bridge of her nose, while her accomplice simply rolled his eyes.
"Attendance is expected of all students, Ms. Calder, regardless of their very vocal disagreements. Is it also 'pointless' to remind you that while investigation into the incident is H.E.L.P.'s purview and well outside of the academy's jurisdiction, P.R.C.U. is nonetheless strengthening our security measures, and doing all we can to assess how to better improve our defenses and protect our institution?"

Luce shrugged, turning back around to continue patching over the loose tarp.
"Sounds like hollow promises and buzzwords to me." She said dismissively, eliciting a groan from Tori‘a colleague and an irritated "damn disrespectful kids these days..." muttered beneath his breath. Victoria shot a glare at him, before returning a similarly hard expression to the back of Luce's head.
"Regardless of how you feel the academy is handling the situation, you are a student here at P.R.C.U., and expected to behave as such. If you find yourself incapable of acting within academy policy, then perhaps it is not in either of our best interests that you remain a student here."

Luce paused, dropping her arms to her sides. There was a tense, silent stand-off, and through the air one could feel conflicting emotions coming off of Luce in waves. Luce thought of what was waiting for her back in Houston; a town that thought she was a undead freak - a mother who looked at her and saw only the sons she'd lost - a social circle that hadn't existed before the accident and never would exist since the accident - a lackluster education leading to a forestry or mining job that would gift her a paycheck-to-paycheck livelihood. It crystallized then and there: however incompetent the leadership, however frustrating the inaction, however absurd the mandatory traditions - P.R.C.U. was Luce's single best opportunity for a fruitful future and an explanation about her very nature. There was simply no other way around it.

"Fine. I'll come to your ceremony. I'll think it's dumb, but I'll come."
Tori shook her head slightly in pure vexation from Luce's ceaseless attitude, holding her hand up to stop Luce in her tracks as she moved to follow them out of the greenhouse and presumably to wherever the ceremony was being held.
"You misunderstand, Ms. Calder. You've missed the ceremony. Your breach of tradition and academy policy has waived your right to the choices afforded to you by said ceremony. You're to be escorted to your dorm at the intake house, at which point you'll be given your team and house. All the other students got the opportunity to decide their best environment for their time with us; if you feel like that opportunity is of no use to you, then we will make that decision for you."

Luce took a moment to sigh internally, realizing how self-sabotaging she'd really been in her knee-jerk anger. Who knew where she'd end up, who she'd be paired with, which dorms she'd end up in. Surrounded by strangers again? Forced to apologize to peers she'd vilified in her outburst? Some worst-case mix of the two? And what about those she hadn't alienated, those that she'd finally found some common ground with - was it effort wasted by an afternoon of petty frustration? She cursed herself inwardly, nodding meekly to Professor Roth to indicate she understood. Luce felt humbled, embarrassed, childish.

"Good. You can follow my colleague here. Dr. Mercia has penciled in a follow-up session at the start of next week, when you're also to be assigned additional community service." Victoria held up a hand to stop Luce's protest before it began. "It's that or detention, so take your pick. But that's next week. For now, you'd best hurry back to your dorm - you'll have a strict curfew until you've been assigned." This time, only a finger was needed for Luce to close her goldfish-esque gaping mouth. "Remember, Luce - this is a school with rules - not a holiday camp. We want you to make the most of your term here. We also want you to co-operate. There are many young persons out in the world who aren't afforded quite such a sanctuary."
Luce hung her head, admonished, following behind the staff, all the way back to the intake house to await her sentencing.
In a world where a cataclysmic event has destroyed the ability for people to route between major settlements without getting lost, ending up where they came from, or being utterly desecrated in mind and body, a select caste of people - ‘Navigators’ - have become the only remaining links between pockets of civilisation, able to depart from one city and arrive at another, completing the journey to their intended destination.

A select few of the select few have been able to charter their journeys and make rudimentary maps - ‘Cartography’ has become a type of pseudo-magic skill, the maps making travel possible for non-Navigators perhaps once or twice before the map loses its efficacy; but there are rumours of an Atlas, a definitive map, permanently effective that would allow humanity to guide itself across the globe once more.
"How are you feeling today, Luce?"

Luce sat quietly, coldly, staring Dr. Mercia in the face as the psychiatrist looked back, poised over the edge of a clipboard, pen in hand and sympathetic smile waning as the tension in the room built. Luce had been silent since she'd entered the room for her weekly session; this was not unusual. Gila was used to having to prompt Luce. But the silence this morning felt thicker, heavier on their shoulders, and somehow grimy and unfriendly. It had changed, not born from Luce's previous meekness and anxiety; instead, this silence was the result of the sheer animosity that radiated from Luce in red-hot waves, an invisible but very-much present-and-felt barrier between patient and therapist. Gila Mercia knew all of this, and knew that the relationship between them had been fundamentally altered, and would likely never be repaired. And yet, she couldn't simply give up on Luce; she had a medical duty to her patients, and more pointedly a moral duty to the people who had suffered from this fresh trauma. Some of them were beyond help, she thought darkly - those who remained deserved to put themselves back together.

"Fine." Luce offered back, short and terse like Gila was used to but with venom that hadn't been there in their last session. Their session before the plateau incident. Dr. Mercia's hand flitted across her clipboard as she made quick notes. 'Angry'. 'Hostile'. 'Guarded'. On reflection, it was all very obvious. What was the point? Posterity? Record-keeping?
"Have you been taking your medication?" Gila asked, feeling like she was merely going through the motions - but the motions had reasons to be gone through. Normalcy was a rock in stormy seas; she needed to offer Luce what she could.
"The Xanax? Sure."
"And have you found they've been helping?"
Luce smiled an unsettling smile. "Not at all."

Gila decided to change tack. "Have you been sleeping?" She asked, knowing the answer and again scribbling on her clipboard. 'Medication insufficient'. 'Sleep difficult'.
Sleep was difficult for everyone.
"In pieces." Luce answered. "Usually not by choice."
Many students had been seen micro-napping in cafeterias, classrooms, libraries. A biological result of sleep deprivation brought on by PTSD-driven night terrors. Luce had had issues with sleep even prior to the incident.
"Have you returned to the greenhouse?"
"Once. The panes had shattered. Plants didn't survive the storm." Luce broke her rancorous stare to glance briefly at her hands, taped and band-aided to cover paper-thin scratches and scars where she'd shredded her fingers scrabbling in glass-filled soil trying to replant and save even a handful of seedlings. She'd failed. Just another failure to add to the list. She folded her hands in her lap, and returned to staring bitterly at Dr. Mercia.

There was a pause between them. Shocking Gila, Luce was the first to break it.

"Is this really the best you can fucking do?" She asked, her tone accusatory and dangerous.
"I'm sorry?" Gila responded, unable to catch herself before the shock of Luce's words and tone wore off, a knee-jerk reply to something she'd never expect from Luce.
"Feelings? Pills? Sleep? The fucking greenhouse? Is this really the best you can do?"

Dr. Mercia floundered, blind-sided by this unexpected salvo. She set the clipboard down, her mind racing to find the words to retake control of the session.
"It's important to maintain a routine, a baseline - it helps return a sense of control and normality-"
Luce sneered. "What the fuck is 'normality'? Are you serious? Cassander is dead. Dead. To the hands of a terrorist who controls storms, multiplies, makes people fly with a thought. What's fucking normal about any of this?!"
Luce had risen from her seat as the anger took hold, her voice raising to never-before-used levels. She was frightening herself, though she'd never admit it; to Gila's credit, the doctor remained calm and seated. Luce breathed, and returned to her seat, her face fading into an emotionless mask.
"This place is full of fucking liars."

That was something Gila could pivot on, a focal point for the session.
"What lies do you feel are being spread, Luce?"
"About this academy being fucking SAFE!" She suddenly shouted, and from beyond the office door the usual hustle-bustle of passing students and faculty momentarily paused before resuming, slightly more subdued than previously.
"I understand you feel vulnerable - the incident was unprecedented, unpredictable. No one saw it coming."
"No one even fucking thought about it. You all thought the school was untouchable. Promised to keep us safe. You can't even keep yourselves safe, let alone your students. Rude fucking awakening, wasn't it? Good thing no teachers got killed, right?"

Luce's face was turning red, and her hands were trembling. Dr. Mercia recognized the signs of rage, and this anger was threatening to spill over and derail everything, at which point Luce would be inconsolable and any progress completely undone.
"I understand. The academy has stood many long years, and takes its security very seriously. The incident was on a level beyond realistic projectio-"
"I want to see Dr. Lehrer."

Gila gently shook her head. "The Chancellor is extremely busy, evaluating what happened and taking measures to make sure it never happens again. He will have time for everyone, but not now."
"Let me see Jonas, right fucking now."
Gila shut Luce down. "No. You're highly-agitated, spiraling into rage, and you will take that emotion and turn it into fuel for something you will regret. You need to sit down, let go of anger, and then when you're calm, Dr. Lehrer will be happy to diarise a session. He could even join one of ours-"
"You're a patsy. Jonas' fucking lapdog. Think toeing his line will get you in with the clique? I know you're not a hype. Must sting. Must be alienating. You're just a tourist here, aren't you?"

Gila bit her tongue.
"I think we should end today's session there."
She stood, putting away the clipboard in a drawer in her desk and walking to the locked medical cabinet in the corner of the room, pulling out two new bottles and a prescription pad.
"I understand you're angry. Anger is natural when mourning. But you need to be calm and constructive and co-operate with these sessions, or they won't be of any use to you."
She sighed, looking her patient in the eye with a weary sadness that deflated Luce's fury. "I don't want you to end up hurting yourself." Gila said softly.
"Don't worry about that, doctor. I don't." Luce answered. Gila pushed the two bottles across the desk toward her. Luce glanced at the labels: Fluoxetine. Clonazepam.
"If you experience prolonged nausea, vomiting, fever, diarrhea, or elevated heart rate, call me. If you see or hear anything that isn't there, come to my office immediately. Either myself or one of the medical staff will help you." Gila handed the bottles to Luce, who studied the warnings splashed across the label. "These should help stabilize your mood to a better baseline and ease feelings of panic. Two of each a day after waking, with food and water. No more than two a day, okay?"

Luce popped the lid on both bottles and swallowed a mouthful of each before Gila could react, smirking as she replaced both caps. The expression was uncharacteristic, and pulled Luce's face in ways that looked off and uncanny.
"I feel better already." Luce lied. "And I don't really need to worry about OD'ing, do I?"


Location: Northern Cove - Dundas Islands
First Class #2.18: Staring, The Abyss, and How I Became Haunted

Interaction(s): @Kuro, @psych0pomp, @webboysurf, @PatientBean
Previously: Corporate Retreat

Luce stood at the shore of the beach in an icy silence that had become her new familiar. The boat holding Cass' body slowly drifted away from the lapping tides of the coast, and as Luce watched the flames grow brighter and fiercer, licking at Cass' pallid skin and beginning the slow process of cremation, she pictured herself in his place. She felt selfish doing so, twisting the tragedy of the loss into her own personal self-loathing party, but it was almost reflexive. She'd done the same at her brothers' joint funeral, considering - wishing - herself in their position, a trade of places, giving all involved parties what they each deserved. Instead, Luce lived, again, another body in the ground beneath her twice-dead feet.

Storm, rain, whipping wind. Surrounded. Luce's face was warm, and she couldn't see quite right. No pain, though, but Luce had long-since learnt not to trust pain, or the absence of it. She raised a hand to her face. Something was jutting out some 2 inches from her cheek, and Luce followed it up her face, over her eye, and found the end of it halfway up her forehead. She frowned, drawing her hand back from whatever shard was now embedded in her skull, and only then noticed the shattered bone jutting out from her forearm. She flexed her fingers without impediment on the same arm, wiggling them in front of her face as her vision swam and re-sharpened, her system already compensating for the loss of her eye using other senses. She'd tried to stand, but stumbled, off-balance - quickly attributed to a snapped ankle. No bother. The protruding tibia functioned perfectly well as a homegrown peg-leg.


Absent-mindedly, Luce traced her finger down the fresh scar that ran from her forehead to her cheek-bone. The eye was fine, having healed as easily as her broken bones and torn skin. Three new scars. One new ghost. Luce wondered how many more of either she would accrue before finally being able to join Cass, or James, or Owen. Luce wondered if she'd ever be able to join them. She'd failed twice already.

She shook her head. It didn't matter how long she stared at Cass' corpse; she couldn't will herself into feeling grief instead of the yawning nothingness that ached inside her. Tears staunchly refused to flow, in contrast to much of those in attendance; Luce knew she looked insensitive, or apathetic, but she longed to be in their place, weeping for the tragedy of Cassander Charon, ripped away before his time for nothing more than trying to make a difference. A difference she had abjectly rejected attempting herself, once again despite forces that deigned to make her uniquely capable of weathering such an attempt. And there it was; once again, circling the drain, trapped in a loop of self-loathing. She couldn't stand here and stare any longer. There was no point to it. She turned on her heel, briskly walking away from the shore and back toward campus, not really sure where she was going; she just had to leave the ghosts and their arraigning glares behind her, at least for now. She'd likely see them again this evening, tossing and turning in her bed, failing to sleep, a third figure joining the established double-act.

She pushed through crowds, keeping her head down and avoiding attention, staring at feet clad in dress slacks and over-polished shoes. It was by sheer chance that she looked up and saw perhaps the only faces in the audience that held a semblance of recognition to her.

"I'm going to kill them." Haleigh uttered to the Blackjack member that stood beside her. She wasn't sure who it had been exactly. "Cass. Banjo. Jim. Tad. They're going to pay for everything."
Kuro

“Innit what Hyperion would want? Get angry? So, he can spout more stupidity about bein’ superior while we flop around like fish? Nah, I’m good. I ain’ bathin’ in blood for Cass. You can, though. You got the power to.” They held the hibiscus out to Haleigh. “Aren’t you more interested to find out why us? Why Tad? How did they know we were goin’ to be out in the middle of nowhere? This place has its secrets, too, and I’m not happy playin’ that they’re innocent in this, either.”
psych0pomp

Rory strolled over in their direction, lifting his hands to readjust his coat absent-mindedly. ”Trace is right.” Those words felt weird coming out of his mouth. Rory didn’t make eye contact with the two of them, and kept his voice down to avoid drawing too much attention their way. ”For now, at least. Cass tried, and I can’t do another funeral. I… I haven’t been able to stop thinking about it. Asking why. It doesn’t make any sense to me… but that’s not new.” Rory paused for a moment, out of habit. Negative self talk wasn’t going to help right now. ”I think we all deserve answers. No matter what it takes.”
webboysurf

Trace and Rory had spoken up, consoling Haleigh. Trace had a point. Why? That question wracked her own brain. "Hyperion is going to pay." Calli let her words hang there. She wanted to let this be about Cass' memory and not her own plans for vengeance. She got a notice that she was scheduled for therapy the following week. She felt her heart race again. She wrapped one hand around her wrist and took some deep breaths.
PatientBean

"I'm with Haleigh and Calli. But I'm not doing it for Cass' memory. I'd do it to say I did something, instead of all the nothing currently going."
Anger was bubbling up in her again, and she let it; it was exciting to feel anything, no matter how toxic. She didn't have the energy to repress it anymore today.
"All this pushing on like everything's fucking normal is insulting. It's insulting to Cass, it's insulting to Tad, and it's insulting to us - how stupid do they think we are? The veil's fucking lifted now, we're not safe, we never were. Go back to normal? What the fuck is normal about this place?!"
She was red in the face, but on a roll, and it just kept spilling out of her. Maybe this was the elusive mourning the faculty kept talking about; Luce didn't care. It felt good. She rounded on Trace and Rory.
"That 'keep-the-peace' attitude is bullshit. You want to just sit around and wait for Hyperion to come back? All that talk about betters and lessers, and you think the best way to prove they're wrong is by doing nothing? The 'why' is obvious, isn't it? Isn't it?! Because they could! Because P.R.C.U. is a sham, and they had their heads shoved up their asses, and they thought they were untouchable, and they thought nothing could threaten them right up until Hyperion did. And their vanity got Cass killed."
A tear rolled down her cheek, tracing the line of the scar until it hung off her chin.
"Hyperion and P.R.C.U. - both as culpable as the other. Both need to be taken down. This place needs a new leader, minimum, a chancellor who'll take security and the lives of those he promises to protect seriously. Worst-case the whole institution needs scrapping and rebuilding. We stand here, watching a peer and a friend get cremated at sea, and they expect us to file out and head to 'team swap' and 'house offers', like we're just coming back from recess?"
Luce wiped her face, aware she was out of control, aware she was embarrassing herself, aware aware aware but too far gone to stop it. Out of the corner of her eye she spotted Mackenna approaching, and found the concept of putting up with her particular brand of faux-cheery veneer to be simply too exhausting to handle.
"There's one team, one house, one side now - 'Kill Hyperion'. If you're not on it, you're on their side instead. And I am not on their side."
She took a deep, shuddering breath, steadying herself before turning to leave.
"If anyone else gives a shit about not letting Hyperion turn their 'new world order' bullshit into a living reality - you can find me in the ICU. I have to go beg forgiveness from the only living non-coward on campus. You should all think about doing the same."
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