forwardmomentum (
forwardmomentum) wrote in
faderift2020-05-04 08:17 pm
Entry tags:
[ open log ]
WHO: Miles Vorkosigan and YOU
WHAT: Weird little space man enters orbit, immediately breaks arm, generally gets in the way
WHEN: From Cloudreach 30 through the first week of Bloomingtide
WHERE: The Gallows
NOTES: Miles's info post is here! i'm sorry, you're welcome
WHAT: Weird little space man enters orbit, immediately breaks arm, generally gets in the way
WHEN: From Cloudreach 30 through the first week of Bloomingtide
WHERE: The Gallows
NOTES: Miles's info post is here! i'm sorry, you're welcome
rift entry (first come, first serve)
It's a classic dream: Miles, back in his academy days, suddenly finding himself sitting an exam he hasn't studied for and is drawing dreadful blanks. More ridiculous still that it's a test on a book he already knows inside and out. It's sitting right in front of him, even. His hand is shaking, gripping the light pen a little too hard. He's been sitting here far, far too long without having written a single thing. Oh, god, he's starting to feel dizzy. His palms are suddenly slick with sweat. The room feels like it's tilting on him -- no, it is tilting -- and then the room vanishes away altogether.
By the time Miles realizes he's falling, it's already too late. He tries to curl in on himself and hit the ground rolling, but he connects with it at entirely the wrong angle and lands on his left arm with a sickeningly familiar crack. Dammit, the fall couldn't even have been that far for how fast it happened. Miles gurgles out a curse, only barely registering the unfamiliar scenery and just how strange the air smells amidst the shock. Oh, that's a broken humerus right there.
The odd-looking little man rolls over onto his side with a groan. Too tall and too skinny to be a dwarf, but at only about 4'9, still much smaller than the average adult human. It isn't until he takes a look down at his cradled arm that he notices the bright glowing green fucking shard in his hand.
"What the hell," he wheezes, trying to sit up, "kind of dream is this?"
those who can't with this guy, teach
Miles is a quick study, and not a terrible student, especially with his abrupt and avid interest in all things Thedosian. Part of it is a transparent and desperate attempt at distracting himself from the situation at hand, the rest genuine interest. Everything here is so new, so different and familiar all at once. There is so much here that reminds him of home in odd, fractured ways. Learning more about this place will smooth those edges, break it down into things he can understand.
He will devour just about any subject matter, but the things that will grab his attention most are military history, politics, and magic. Oh, man, he's got like, a million questions about magic. Maybe your character finally has a willing audience to babble on about their pet subject of choice, or maybe your character's just unlucky enough to have been drafted to give the new guy the Thedas 101 course. Either way, Miles will only stop asking questions long enough to breathe.
sleep? in this economy?
There's a lot about this that's hard to swallow. He's a pretty flexible guy as far as his sphere of belief goes, or at least he likes to think so. Sure, this could all still be a dream, but his broken arm feels pretty fucking real. Hell, where he's from they jump through wormholes. He can take this at face value, at least for now. The only part he's having a hard time stomaching is the part where he doesn't go home.
The trick is not leaving himself any room to think about it. Sleep? Way too much room to think in there. So mostly, at first, he doesn't, except in short shifts when he's exhausted enough to pass directly into blissful unconsciousness. So late at night, when there's no more lessons or real work to keep him occupied, he haunts the library. It's late, and he's generally disinclined to ask for help, so when something is out of his reach, he's more likely to try and scale the shelves himself, as one with a broken arm does.
put that thing where it came from or so help me
Miles's Thedas 101 only goes on for so long, and then he is left to stew in frustration over not being able to join most of Riftwatch on the sudden rescue operation. It seems that as quickly as he'd gotten here, some shit had hit some fan somewhere, and everyone's off on a mission. And he can't go, because quarantine.
Realistically, he understands. He can even admit to himself that he probably wouldn't even be able to contribute much, with his broken arm and only nascent understanding of this world. (Mostly the arm.) But that doesn't leave him any less vibrating in idleness, and he's spent a lot of time in the library, and when Miles doesn't have anything else to engage him, he is at the whim of his own curiosities.
What is he doing? Great question. Probably something he's not supposed to be doing, somewhere he's not supposed to be doing it, although he may or may not be aware of that fact. Feel free to find Miles with his nose in anything mildly illicit, awkwardly personal, or hey, unexpectedly benign.
wildcard
[ feel free to find miles anywhere around the gallows or hit me up at

no subject
The more you know.
"I think we've gained a lot from Rifters trying to make leaps, myself. Though we're necessarily limited by raw materials and the fact that you all seem to be from slightly different places, or different times, or both. A lot of trying to re-invent different tools from different starting points."
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He drifts off on that, his eyes going slightly out of focus along with his mind as that thought winds down. Then he blinks and sits up straight as though having just received an intravenous shot of espresso, gray eyes bright. Belatedly, it has occurred to him that Julius might be the first mage he's met since his little history lesson with Byerly. "Hey, so what's it like to do magic? I mean...how does it feel?"
no subject
"I don't have the grounds to speak for anyone else. Personally, it's... hm. Are you familiar with lucid dreaming?" Either by concept or experience; he doesn't specify which.
no subject
He rocks back in his seat thoughtfully. "I'm familiar with the concept, though I can't say I've ever experienced it. It'd be a useful skill, though. My dreams tend to have nightmares." He gives Julius a slightly sick smile, though in good humor. That's not necessarily something he'd tell someone new, but Julius is proving to be a rather comfortable person to be around, and Miles does tend to babble when he's tired. "Is that what it feels like, then? Like...passing through a dream?"
no subject
"Mages in Thedas don't dream as I understand other people do. Humans and elves — and possibly Qunari, there's a debate about that — enter the Fade when they sleep, but they don't have clear memories of it when they wake. Impressions, fragments. Mages are conscious of being in the Fade when we're there, absent any sort of interference in our perceptions. We also have ways of journeying there that are more controlled and deliberate than falling asleep." He smiles, almost sheepishly, and adds, "I know it's a very roundabout way of answering your question, but I am getting to it, I promise."
He sits back in his chair. "Most of the time, casting spells doesn't involve actually traveling into the Fade. But it always involves tapping into it. For me, doing magic is like... you're very focused, but you're also relaxed. You feel a current of sorts, and you need to work with that current, rather than yanking against it, if you don't want it to snap back in your face. It's what makes runes and glyphs so interesting to me, really; you're tapping into that power in such a way that someone else can tap into it again later, which is very useful, but also very challenging."
no subject
"I can only imagine." He blinks, a little owlishly, but his left foot is tapping animatedly. "Borrowing power from dreams. It sounds a bit like the accounts of wormhole travel I've heard from jump pilots, the ones who actually stay awake for the journey while the rest of us barely experience a blip in time -- colors you can only see in the five-space tunnels, extradimensional sensations almost impossible to put into words. The sort of thing for which you must have a special sixth sense in order to experience, so to speak."
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It hadn't actually hurt him, though that had been lost in the retelling within the family.