Fade Rift Mods (
faderifting) wrote in
faderift2019-02-10 08:03 pm
RIFTER ARRIVAL: Guardian 9:45
WHO: New rifters, rescuers, and anyone else
WHAT: New arrivals are collected and transported to Kirkwall
WHEN: Mid-Guardian, 9:45
WHERE: The hills north of Starkhaven
NOTES: This log contains prompts for the ARRIVAL and RECOVERY of new rifters, as well as the subsequent QUARANTINE period. All prompts are open to anyone.
WHAT: New arrivals are collected and transported to Kirkwall
WHEN: Mid-Guardian, 9:45
WHERE: The hills north of Starkhaven
NOTES: This log contains prompts for the ARRIVAL and RECOVERY of new rifters, as well as the subsequent QUARANTINE period. All prompts are open to anyone.

no subject
"How'd it get in the way?" She's altogether distracted from her previous annoyance now, far too focused on the curious condition he's in.
no subject
The boy in the cell rolls over onto his side then. He props his elbow on the hard stone of the floor, sets his chin in the upturn of his palm. Not the glowing one. That hand remains right where it is flopped on the ground as if he can ignore that it's attached to him, thank you very much.
"Now why on earth do you think I would tell you that?"
no subject
"I'm hardly your enemy, after all."
no subject
"Well Kitty, I believe we hardly know each other. Why, who's to say you're telling the truth in this very moment? Oh certainly - you might seem like an upstanding, bright young lady with her head screwed on in the right direction at first blush, but who's to say you won't surprise me with some secret ambition in a moment I least expect it?"
no subject
"I don't think we do hardly know each other. I think we're much better acquainted than that." She reaches up to push the hair from her face, tucking it behind her ear. "You're Bartimaeus, aren't you? The spirit Bartimaeus?"
no subject
"What gave it away? The stunning good looks or my sparkling temperament?"
no subject
"The looks threw me off a bit, actually." She tilts her head very slightly to the side. "Your human guise doesn't usually look like that. You look older than you usually do." A beat. "The attitude is exactly the same, though."
no subject
And for good measure: "For the record, I preferred it short. It made you look far more grown up."
And then because, Hold on a second, come to think of it--: He squints at her, suddenly very suspicious indeed. Something in the boy's face closes entirely, and while it's very hard to lean back while lying on one's side with your face propped in your upturned hand, Bartimaeus somehow manages it. "How long have you been here?"
no subject
"It's been - about six months now. Why?"
no subject
"Huh."
Well isn't that something.
no subject
Bartimaeus is being dreadfully uncooperative, and so Kitty tries to switch tacks again. See if this might get him to be a little less sullen.
"I've been doing what you said, by the way." Which sounds a bit silly, when it comes out of her mouth. Rather childlike. Which is bloody irritating, but what can you do. "Reading. Everything that I can. Not back home, obviously, but here. History, politics, all about these cycles of violence and hatred - 'cause it's like that here, too. Even though it's a different world, with different people, they still fall into the same patterns."
no subject
The dripping sarcasm is automatic, but the boy in the cell doesn't seem terribly fixed on making it as biting as it could be. In fact, he seems rather distracted as he peels himself off the stone floor and sits upright. He spends a moment wiggling the fingers of his sore hand--
Six months. That doesn't exactly hang together like it ought to, but let's face it. That's apparently going to be a regular thing. So, time to get a few sneaking suspicions out of the way from the get go.
Bartimaeus turns to Kitty and gives her a good evaluating squint. Awfully fresh, isn't she?
"You were awfully quick to jump to conclusions, weren't you? What made you think to come down here to see me?"
no subject
For the first time, she lets herself feel the first prickle of disappointment. When she'd spoken to Bartimaeus before, it had been exciting. Invigorating. He'd sparked in her so much curiosity, so many thoughts she'd never considered before. Oh, he'd been obnoxious and frightening and boasting and dangerous, but he'd also been like a breeze cutting through the miasma hanging over the Thames on a hot day. Is this hostile, surly creature really the same demon that had inspired her?
"Why wouldn't I?" Maybe an appeal to compassion will return him to his former state. "Humans, they get people sticking up for them, but nonhumans often don't get the same care. I heard there was a spirit stuck down here, I wanted to make sure it was taken care of."
no subject
The boy twists around to face her, rearranging his limbs to sit cross-legged. He's quite straight backed now, focus cutting away from the prospect of poking the metaphorical wound of all of this and toward-- well, he isn't quite sure yet, honestly. But he knows potential when he smells it.
"Am I to believe that, as far as you know, I'm the only spirit being held by the Inquisition? If so--" The dark eyed boy cocks his head thoughtfully to the side. His attention on her is quite keen now. The last time they'd spoke she'd been very honest indeed about what she did and didn't know, who she'd been taught by and what her intentions were. Also, hadn't she been a little sharper in the face? If he didn't know any better (because what he suspects is fundamentally not possible) and if he trusted his ability to gauge the age of bright eyed teenage girls, he might almost say...
Well. It doesn't hurt to be careful. And for some reason, that flicker of uncertainty has him skirting away from the obvious questions: Why did you try to summon me again? And here of all places? That makes the most sense, doesn't it? That somehow, something had gone strange and crooked with how she'd last dismissed him and now here she was in a different place entirely, snapping him back out of whatever formless inbetween place he'd gotten stuck in. That, he thinks, almost makes sense.
But what if none of this makes sense?
It would be a real shame to be the one to give her ideas, wouldn't it?
"In which case," says Bartimaeus. "I wonder if you have any theories as to how I'm here now."
no subject
She reaches up and gathers her hair behind her head (is it too long? She feels self-conscious about it now, which is stupid, because what's a demon know about style, anyway) and lets it fall.
"I haven't got any way to confirm it, or deny it. No one has. But what they think is that - The realm you came out of, the greenish one that the other dem- spirits came out of with you, is called the Fade. It's where all magic comes from in this place. It's also where all dreams come from. So what they think - what they say - is that we were at some point dreaming versions of ourselves that manifested in the Fade. Then magic brought those dreams to life. And that's what we are, essentially - a sort of new version of ourselves, born out of our own imaginations."
So, there. The complete story. How's that for helpfulness? (Not, it must be admitted, all that great. The story sounds completely ridiculous, and it only half makes sense. But she still stares at Bartimaeus once she's finished with her shoulders squared and a face that reveals no embarrassment at all.)
no subject
Then:
"Well if that isn't the barmiest thing I've heard in my whole life, then I don't know what is."
no subject
"Believe me or don't. But it's what I've heard, and for my part, I don't see any reason not to believe it." Then, with a shake of her head - "Here, they think everything about our world is mad, so I don't know if we're really in a position to judge."
no subject
A pause.
Hm. He regards the miasmic glow of magic in his palm.
You know, saying it aloud like that (and not hearing it from out of the mouth of a girl who wouldn't know a binding rune from a lewd hieroglyph) and suddenly it does seem a little less unintelligible.
"Well never mind. Let's move on to the better question: Is the person, place, or thing making swiss cheese out of everything present and accounted for?"
no subject
"Swiss cheese?" She shakes her head, puzzled. "D'you mean the person who brought us here, or...?"
no subject
"This isn't a pick and mix, Kitty. --Unless of course it is, I suppose. Yes, that's exactly I mean. Who summoned us here? Was it on purpose? If so, I can't imagine they got what they paid for with you. No offense, but you're not exactly an Afrit now are you."
He's got a few bones to pick, you see. Preferably out of his teeth after finishing with the summoner in question.
no subject
She tries to release her frustration with a long breath. Be helpful. "And no. There's no summoner. Not as far as we know. If there's anything, it's this." She raises her hand to show the green fleck. "We can control portals with these - portals into the Fade. So these things- they seem to be what drew us here. But if a person was involved...they haven't made themselves known yet. Which, by this point, they ought to have done."
no subject
Purely hypothetically speaking, of course. He's never thrown a rock through a window in his life. He has however thrown quite a few other things through and out them, the grossly short list being: himself, a spear bound with the spirit of the great Afrit Ukba (not as disrespectful as it sounds, really), a wheelbarrow full of bricks (not technically rocks), and a certain crown prince of Numidia.
Anyway. Not the point.
"I assume someone's already tried just jumping back through the nearest portal, eh?"
no subject
"I ended up dragged along on that trip. There wasn't any way back through there." She sighs and shakes her head. "Anyway, don't magicians generally order you about soon as you're summoned? Isn't that how it works?"
no subject
"Well generally, sure. But generally I don't fall out of a hole in the world, down a flight of stairs, and into a brawl either. If I had to hazard a guess, I'd say I've been somehow lost in transit."
Here, the boy pauses. Maybe if he holds a moment, the nonsensical shape of it all will suddenly unknot itself and present a clear solution. He waits maybe a second for it to do that. When it stubbornly resists, he pivots:
"You know, this all seems like a conversation that would be much better to have outside of a cell."
no subject
"I expect it would. Not something I can take care of, though."
(no subject)