Lost Carnival Mods (
ringleaders) wrote in
lostcarnival2017-11-11 10:17 pm
Entry tags:
- !event,
- 9s,
- @heartstone manor,
- alphys,
- amethyst,
- cole,
- commander syrlya,
- doll,
- five,
- ginko,
- gongenzaka,
- hinawa,
- ichigo kurosaki,
- john childermass,
- joker,
- jonathan strange,
- julien delacroix,
- junko enoshima,
- lambert,
- lauren,
- mari makinami illustrious,
- miko nakadai,
- papyrus,
- reira akaba,
- rita mordio,
- sans,
- sora,
- susan,
- tallisibeth (scout),
- tyki mikk,
- yotsuba tamaki,
- yūya sakaki,
- zangetsu
⇨ THE PRINCE IS DEAD
Who: Everyone!
When: Day 178 - B1: Day 6
Where: The Carnival and sometimes on top of the Heart of Stone.
What: Now that the Prince is dead and gone, there's a lot left to sort out. As the remaining servants are liberated and those captured by the Prince are tended to, it's time for recovery and goodbyes.
Warnings: Nothing in particular.
When: Day 178 - B1: Day 6
Where: The Carnival and sometimes on top of the Heart of Stone.
What: Now that the Prince is dead and gone, there's a lot left to sort out. As the remaining servants are liberated and those captured by the Prince are tended to, it's time for recovery and goodbyes.
Warnings: Nothing in particular.
HOME GROUND↴![]() At long last, it is over. The Prince is dead, and all of his stolen Names have been restored - all that's left to do is treat the wounds and move on. For the first day or two, the Ringmaster will be arranging passage for the servants that are left, all of which have remembered their names for the first time in years. The earth elemental that had been trapped and forced to serve as the Prince's manor, the Heart of Stone, is happy to help for the moment. It appreciates the Ringmaster's mercy, and is free after untold eons of imprisonment. Yet, there are plenty of aspects that are far from simple. There are still servants left mad and transformed into beasts, with no easy way to change them back. The Prince's spells outlive him, and those bearing his poison and his curses will have a difficult road ahead of them. Though most of the bestial servants have been rounded up, and a large number that had been reduced to unmoving statues returned, even the Ringmaster can't return them to normal so simply. The next week is for rest and for settling remaining affairs. If you want to bid farewell to any particular NPCs, or assure care is given where it's needed, now is the time to do it. ► A CURE: The Ringmaster will tell everyone simply - there is no simple way to undo another fae's magic. The Prince's powers were essentially on par with hers, which means that those who have been transformed to stone and those that were cursed into beasts and driven insane are not something she can trivially fix. It will take the work of the carnival and a couple weeks of treatment to shed the curse of stone, and the maddened servants are an entirely separate matter. She will do what she can, but for the most part she is arranging for the Prince's servants to be cared for elsewhere. At least for now, the Ringmaster will be animating the stone portions of people's bodies with magic, though those portions will still be a bit clumsy and numb feeling. ► THE NEW HEARTSTONE: In the absence of the prince, the Heart of Stone will be taking over the remains of the Prince's realm and preventing it from collapsing into void. As it turns out, the manor had been an earth elemental all along - a form of Wyld Fae almost on par to the Prince and Ringmaster themselves. How the Heart of Stone was enslaved is a long story presumably, but the Ringmaster considers it to be a sign of the Prince's own depravity. The Heart will be allowing visitors for the first couple days of this period through the portal, but keep in mind you are essentially just walking around on its body. At least the realm has a floor, now, instead an endless abyss surrounding it. |


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She really wants to know how the hell their bodies work. But at least she got a straight answer, and that seems to clarify a few things. Maybe. Actually, hang on.
"What's the deal with you monsters, anyway? If you're not undead, then... what? You weren't always skeletons, were you?" He said before that he wasn't a zombie. Was that to say he isn't an animated corpse? But... what else would a skeleton be?
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A lifetime of being Sans' younger brother... Thus why skeleton and bone puns are so very, very aggravating; he's heard every possible one. At least, without branching into other languages. Years of them.
"But, really, the important part is monster. I think we monsters are more like each other, regardless of form, than like anybody else... Doctor Alphys might have more sciencey-answers for you; she's a scientist."
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"A monster scientist...?" Wait... that reminds her of someone. "Do you mean that lizardwoman with the lab coat? She's from the same place as you?" She said something about being a monster, from underground... At the time, Rita didn't think of monster as a particularly specific classification, but it looks like it may have had a distinct meaning after all.
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"Yeah! A couple areas over, in Hotland of all places..." There are not many places, but that one's definitely the worst. "I know she was studying humans, she was always posting about it online... but she might know about monsters too." Since she is one, and that'd be the basis she's starting from.
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"So... Hotland." Rita wrinkles her nose slightly. That's a dumb name for a place. "That's... part of the underground? We're talking literally underground, right?" How big could these areas be?
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"I actually grew up in an underground city, myself. No volcanic activity in the vicinity, though. It was always nice and cool." There's a hint of fondness in her tone.
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But then, she's definitely human, and their underground lives were probably pretty different. "Were you able to go on the surface, and get it from up there?"
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"We used blastia... technology powered by magic. Aspio isn't just a city, it's also a research facility for mages. But yes, we could also go out and get supplies from outside whenever we needed." His asking if she was able to suggests that... "You couldn't?"
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Surely they couldn't just make it, and electrical magic was different than soul power. Or else a whole lot of monsters went through a whole lot of needless heartache, and Papyrus' reason for being here is... kinda silly. Rather than dwell on that, or souls and their acquisition, Papyrus crouches down beside the box and starts pulling food things out.
"But we used other magic, getting by. Like... fire magic for cooking. Except I don't have that." He pokes at the covered food container, and shrugs. "Do you mind cool food? I don't know how hot it is, anymore."
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Oh right, he just asked her about food... "It's fine. I'm not picky." Not about that, anyway. And she's definitely not going to complain about food after going three days without any... unless it's onions. She still has the strength to refuse those.
"Can you tell me more about that barrier?" she asks after a pause.
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"The barrier? Hmm. It's a magic seal, surrounding the whole cave system... And anything could pass through, in one direction!" Thank goodness for that, too. Whatever river system carried detritus from some human dump was essential for so much of their way of life. Some perfectly good things, some recyclable materials, and most of all: things that inspired monsters to make their own versions.
"But, just going out takes a powerful soul, more powerful than any monster's... and breaking it would take so much more!" And he knows exactly how much; seven human souls, harvested and held and used against their will. "It's been up... hundreds of years."
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"So people can get in, but nobody gets out..." she murmurs. And it's been like that for centuries...? Rita was quite happy to live underground, but she probably wouldn't stand it if she didn't get a choice in the matter. "Coming to the carnival... Was that your first time outside of there?"
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He hopes his brother managed to enjoy his first sight of the stars, for all that Sans had been mourning Papyrus at the time. That was a longtime, semi-secret sort of dream, after all.
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Maybe she should tell him why she's so interested in this... it might sound bad, but if it does, then so be it.
"Truth is, I specialize in that sort of thing. Magic barriers that repel monsters... I've done a lot of work with them before." She's not saying this to antagonize him, though. "Not monsters like you, exactly... but the theory behind it could be similar."
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"Oh? I see! Barriers like that must be very popular among humans..."
No wonder she was so surprised to see him. Lambert was too, and he professionally fights (and kills) the violently unsociable monsters from his own world. It would be like if Papyrus... uh... Well, there's no parallel for Papyrus. But it would be like if Undyne had come out here, and met a human without warning. Fear, alarm, and very aggressively defending themselves and others.
"We always used puzzles and traps, instead...? Maybe it takes human magic to power them. Or we really did want them to visit, and the puzzles were just a convoluted welcome mat."
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"Puzzles and traps... against humans?" Rita's raising an eyebrow. That's a weird tactic. "And... wait, why would humans bother going through the barrier in the first place?"
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"I don't know! I think it must have been on accident. But, a few of them did. Over a few centuries."
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"Anyway," she begins with a wave of her hand, trying to sound aloof, "I brought up my experience because... I mean, if you wanted to try dispelling the barrier, I might be able to help." Rita, of course, knows nothing of Papyrus's contract.
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"Oh! That's very thoughtful!" Papyrus praises, sweeping past any aloofness with gratitude and a hint of apology. "Dispelling it is already in the cards. It's my contract to! But if you're interested in studying it, you could talk to my brother. Or Doctor Alphys. Or, even the Ringmaster."
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Maybe it would be interesting to ask for more details, though... She'll keep those people in mind for later.
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Depending on the quality of the puzzle, of course.
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Although... the blastia formulas she loves so much aren't so different from puzzles, in some ways.
"I don't know... maybe if they're challenging enough."
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Even Papyrus' constructions were always more about the... basic experience, than any significant challenge.
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Interpreting ancient texts, magical formulas, mathematical equations... those are puzzles Rita can enjoy. What he's describing just sounds exasperating.
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