exequy: (Default)
Kostos Averesch ([personal profile] exequy) wrote in [community profile] faderift2024-12-21 10:00 pm

open | merry & bright

WHO: Anyone!
WHAT: Everyone lives happily ever after, forever, for real, wait don't look behind that curtain—
WHEN: Late Haring
WHERE: The mountains
NOTES: No one is late to this. Feel free to get around to it in January. Or February! And if you have questions you can ask me here, but for any question that's "can I do this within my character's dream?" the answer will be yes! You can do anything.


The snowstorm that blows up around them in the mountains isn't unexpected and isn't a disaster. It only dashes some thin hopes that it might not come on so strong or so swiftly. But they've almost reached what they're aiming for — a cave along the cliffy coastal road that's associated with the disappearances of several caravans and now said to be home to a rift — and there's a village up ahead, glowing warmly through the snowfall once they're near enough.

They're not the first waylaid travelers here. The one little inn is full to bursting, with just enough room for Riftwatch's contingent to squeeze in at tables if they get creative about the seating, the lower floor so packed that body heat and the little fire combined make things outright toasty. The beds are all spoken for, but the innkeeper, a warm, upbeat woman with frizzy hair escaping a bun, says not to worry. She's not turning anyone out into the cold. Blankets on the floor is better than that. If anyone finds it too uncomfortable to sleep curled with old blankets on a creaking wooden floor surrounded by the snores of colleagues and strangers — no, they don't. It's comfortable. It's warm. The sniffles and rough coughs from the other side of the room have the rhythm of a lullaby, and the snow-covered roads and the rift and the missing are all problems for a tomorrow that does not immediately come.

They wake, each of them, in a world where there is nothing of significance left for them to worry about. Not the road or the rift or the missing. Not the war; that's over now. Not poverty or obligation or illness. Between them and the life they've always wanted, the way has been cleared of obstacles, and there is nothing left to do but enjoy the comforts of a well-earned easy life — and if something is a little off, no it isn't. Shh. If the victories feel hollow, or the details blur, or the seams begin to show, the world will tighten around them like hands around a wounded bird who needs to be kept from thrashing, whispering that they don't need to worry. Everything will be fine. Just hold still and let it take care of you.

The first to pull free of the delusion on their own will find themselves in the twisting grasp of a lucid dream that's trying very hard to snare them again, stumbling out of their happy endings into the worlds of others'. They might be pulled beneath the surface for a time: the entity saying, all right, if that didn't work for you, maybe this? But the more of them who congregate together, with their incompatible wishes, the more the fabric will begin to fray, until at last it rots away altogether and they find themselves waking on the floor of a cold, abandoned inn, covered in moldering blankets and lingeringly queasy from half-rotted food eaten at least a day earlier, surrounded by the bodies of the inn's other occupants in various early states of decay.

And after, because rest for the weary really is just a dream, they do have to go find that rift.

ooc | Final confrontation with the spirit that allows breaking out into the real world will happen via a log in here I will link when it's happening. But you're also welcome to say your character wasn't involved in that part and went straight to waking up!
elegiaque: (036)

[personal profile] elegiaque 2025-01-21 04:38 am (UTC)(link)
For a moment, the beauty of that view is disorienting.

She recognises the Gallows in her memories of Rifthold, but unlike many who wear Riftwatch sigils (still? do they? no—) Gwenaëlle hadn’t gone first to Kirkwall. No, it had been Skyhold she’d been sent to — wailing at the injustice of it — and she had had her own room, with her own beautiful view of the Frostbacks, and gazing out at the stunning view of Astrid’s happily avvar after—

for the first time, something feels wrong. All of these things don’t make sense together, and there is something about Skyhold, something that tugs at her memory, something uneasy and urgent that she should know

Why didn’t Asher come with them? She holds him in her mind’s eye (pale and drawn, a sheen of sweat on his brow, weary, no, this isn’t right,) and tells herself: of course it’s just for her and Morgana and Astrid. What sort of child would she be to need him by her side always,

“She watches over you always, but it’s certainly easier when you’re this close,”

but this is important for Morgana, wouldn’t he want to be here? She has always seen crows, since she left Skyhold,

what is it that the Lady keeps for her. Something. It’s on the tip of her tongue, frowning, her gaze caught on the horizon as Morgana tugs at her hand.
brennvin: (pic#16945233)

[personal profile] brennvin 2025-01-27 11:55 pm (UTC)(link)
It weighs a little more uncomfortably on Gwenaëlle’s shoulders. There are more factors in her equation to add together, more incongruous pieces of the whole to fit together, trying to make the edges line up.

For Astrid, who called all of this home until only very recently, it melds more easily. If the Gallows tower stairs wind in circles and then inexplicably become a mountain, what of it? Sometimes you carve a staircase into a mountainside. If the everyday details get a little hazy on the specifics of her uncle’s work because she’s not a magic-user herself, then what of it? She’s not paying especial attention to that when there’s so much else to occupy her: the pleasant burn of hiking up to the peak at dawn, pleasant liquor to share with friends, pleasant men to warm her bed.

(It presents a distraction, and she is distracted.)

And when Gwenaëlle’s frown deepens and her focus drifts, then Morgana pulls harder, a sharp and almost vindictive yank to haul her attention back to heel, but when her mother turns to look then the girl is all smiles again. “Can you do it? I want to see you do it. So I can copy.”

Astrid gamely flips her hunting knife. Holds it out to the other woman hilt-first.