Entry tags:
- !location: sensoriums,
- !status: open,
- 779/splicer,
- allenby beardsley,
- anwei ayles,
- applejack,
- billy cranston,
- gaignun kukai jr./rubedo,
- gandrayda,
- hank pym,
- hellcat,
- hit girl,
- howard bassem,
- jamie mccrimmon,
- kali,
- kang,
- kanoe zouichi,
- kaya,
- lash,
- mindf**k,
- negi springfield,
- nokosi,
- pinkie pie,
- punchy,
- rachel berenson,
- rarity,
- ronnae,
- ruffnut thorston,
- samuel henderson,
- sasami masaki jurai,
- satellizer el bridget,
- scarlet witch,
- shoutarou hidari,
- son of satan,
- soren,
- starfire,
- stature,
- sumeragi lee noriega,
- the vision ii
Enchanted Aquatica---the Prom [WIDE OPEN Y'ALL]
The day had finally arrived for her big event, and Starfire couldn't be happier---or more nervous, actually. She was certainly not an expert on the inner workings of a prom, but it couldn't be too terribly complicated, right? As long as the people could eat, dance, and talk, it should be a reasonable success.
With that in mind, her decorations sprung from her mind into the large dome all around her, transforming a grey Sensorium into a beautiful underwater world, one with clear waters and free from the possibility of a shark attack.
The first change was the scent of the air, shifting into the comforting salty scent of the seas. Then the ground beneath her feet became a hardened sandstone, maintaining the gritty texture while remaining easy to walk upon---except for the smooth dance floor, of course. The grey dome transformed into a flowing bluish-green, rippling all around with fish of all colors passing in the background. Some of the 'sky' faded into a violet tone over the dance floor, lit by glowing circular lights in every color. Suspended in midair, they almost looked like motionless fireflies, though they sometimes swayed in tune with songs.
Tables arose from coral in all colors, rising from the ground and twisting to provide a flattened surface on the very top---rounded ones for guests, and long tables off to the side containing shell-bowls of food. Chairs were large floating clam shells with well cushioned interiors, some large enough to hold two people. More comfortable spongy places to sit were also littered across the area, notably by the large shell-shaped enclosure that was the promised swimming pool. It too was lit by the floating lights, providing what she hoped was a romantic atmosphere.
Finally, the glowing stage above the dance floor couldn't help but attract attention with its chairs. Six royal thrones and one plush chair of all colors directly in the middle rested in the back of the stage, leaving the front open for announcements. Just off to the side of the stage stood the DJ's table, with even that machine painted to match the soft underwater glow of the scenery.
Everything finally seemed pleasing to Starfire. With one last change, dressing herself in the formal attire of the prom, she sent out the signal to everyone and waited. She hoped they would have a wonderful time.
With that in mind, her decorations sprung from her mind into the large dome all around her, transforming a grey Sensorium into a beautiful underwater world, one with clear waters and free from the possibility of a shark attack.
The first change was the scent of the air, shifting into the comforting salty scent of the seas. Then the ground beneath her feet became a hardened sandstone, maintaining the gritty texture while remaining easy to walk upon---except for the smooth dance floor, of course. The grey dome transformed into a flowing bluish-green, rippling all around with fish of all colors passing in the background. Some of the 'sky' faded into a violet tone over the dance floor, lit by glowing circular lights in every color. Suspended in midair, they almost looked like motionless fireflies, though they sometimes swayed in tune with songs.
Tables arose from coral in all colors, rising from the ground and twisting to provide a flattened surface on the very top---rounded ones for guests, and long tables off to the side containing shell-bowls of food. Chairs were large floating clam shells with well cushioned interiors, some large enough to hold two people. More comfortable spongy places to sit were also littered across the area, notably by the large shell-shaped enclosure that was the promised swimming pool. It too was lit by the floating lights, providing what she hoped was a romantic atmosphere.
Finally, the glowing stage above the dance floor couldn't help but attract attention with its chairs. Six royal thrones and one plush chair of all colors directly in the middle rested in the back of the stage, leaving the front open for announcements. Just off to the side of the stage stood the DJ's table, with even that machine painted to match the soft underwater glow of the scenery.
Everything finally seemed pleasing to Starfire. With one last change, dressing herself in the formal attire of the prom, she sent out the signal to everyone and waited. She hoped they would have a wonderful time.
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"Man, I'd have switched clothes with him if it would have kept him from sulking about it. Except those stupid breakaway robes saved my ass." Besides, it must be hell to run in those types of shoes. There's a reason Howard treasures his sneakers, bitten, blood-stained and battered as they are. "Maybe Zwei could make a tent out of it. Or a hot air balloon. I think that dress weighed more than I do, and I wasn't even wearing it."
He bites his lip, then swallows another piece of fish. Having a friend go mad...he doesn't want to admit to himself that he's seen it, but crippling, violent rage and depression pretty much qualifies. And while Orc's stupidity made him easy to control, it also made him more dangerous. Still, the idea of an insane AI is much more daunting. "Not Horanckk, right?"
LOL long horror story is long
"You were lucky with that robe. I think that whole mission came down to half luck." A sigh, accompanied by a bite of pastry. "Let's just hope that we don't get a mission in the future where Stacy tells me to wear that dress. Because by now I sincerely hope it's a matched set of pillows, bedsheets, curtains, and rag rugs."
"No. Not Horanckk." She lets her eyelids droop, her expression contrasting oddly to the friendly waving of the dress-tentacles. "I don't even remember his name. He wasn't a Ninth Empire AI, it was almost impossible to break the Empire's controls on them. And he wasn't Penn'ae either. Ibis maybe?
"He went on a mission, in a crack box. That's a shielded casing with a row of connectors on it, to protect the AI from being hijacked until it's hooked into another system. Somehow, in fighting the other AI, something in his mind - broke. And since AIs think so much faster than we do, his madness grew just as fast. He was sane when he left the ship; when he returned, his patterns didn't match what he had been previously at all, so we put him into the Black Hold."
Her eyes grew even sadder. "The Black Hold is where you store particularly nasty sentient code, and AIs that are in trouble. A whole section of one ship is made non-conductive: shielded walls, chemiluminescent lights, no wiring or electrical equipment at all, no memory or storage devices allowed on people inside. The guards don't even carry smartguns, because an AI might be able to tamper with them; just spears or spring-loaded projectile weapons. It's a place to hold someone who thinks a hundred times faster than you do. It's supposed to be sealed off, all the time. But by bad luck, on the same day we brought him back and locked him into the Black Hold, there was a new guard on duty who'd been given slightly higher access codes than he should have had. He was – young. Young and foolish
"The first we found out about what he'd done was the alarms had gone off: something taken out of its bracket in the Hold. So, Security goes down there, and sees this kid, and he's sort of staggering, towards the door. Arms out in front of him, and absolutely no expression on his face. He just kept staggering forward, even after they put the spearsbutts to him and tried to force him against the wall. He wouldn't go. They knocked him down and turned him over, and saw why.
"The crack box was grafted onto his spine. It had organic-compatible connectors, and it had just socketed itself into his body, taken over his brain, used him like a puppet to get him out of there. Not the best plan, really, but - the AI was insane. The kid was dead; no higher brain activity at all once the surgeons got the box off him. The question was, how had the thing gotten onto his back? It had been locked down, and the kid must have known that the connection would let the AI take over his brain, so – why?"
She waits for Howard's response, her expression suggesting she'd be just as happy if he said 'No more.'
Re: LOL long horror story is long
He listens intently, hoping that somehow there's some closure to this story that will let him put it out of his mind tonight, but knowing full well that there probably isn't. There never really is, in real life.
He pauses for a while, letting her wait on his response, finding some way to engage with what he was just presented with without just letting another horror story get filed away. He's seen too much to let it shock him.
"Back home, in the FAYZ, sometimes kids'd step out. From the whole thing. Probably to death, that was everyone's best bet. I mean...I almost did. And other ways, a lot of times, I mean, thought about it." He realizes he's not making much sense and makes a 'moving on' motion. "Point is, if you're already vulnerable and you've got someone you think can give you answers, who thinks a thousand times faster than you, who can maybe fix things...is it hard to believe?"
He shrugs. "Or maybe he was just curious. You know what they say about that and cats."
Re: LOL long horror story is long
"People said that of course, since he was new, the AI must have kept track of his interviews and tests, and known exactly what to say. That was the reassuring thing to say. Better to think that, than to think that an AI could cold-read someone and talk them into becoming their vehicle in four minutes."
She finishes off the last of her sushi. "Or maybe it told him it could upload him; turn him into an AI as well."
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He takes a deep breath and puts some more of the food in his pockets. "So after a while, she's completely hopeless, so she gets to going along with the psycho. Starts helping him kill people. This is after she breaks out of our basement. She just...goes with it. Crazy Bible-thumper before who would have cried if she stepped on a bug, and she's helping him torture little kids to death.
"Point is, if a crazy teenager can make someone do that in a few weeks, is it that crazy to think an AI could do that to someone in four minutes?"
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She had always been terrible at being responsible for others' lives.
"Or that an AI, with multiple points of attention and Instancing capabilities, could do it to as many organics as it wanted to, all at once." She shakes her head side to side, and then smiles. "The two of us always have such heartwarming conversations, don't we? We should record them for posterity, except that someone might listen to them and go mad. Maybe not in four minutes, but...."
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And stupid Sam couldn't even do a mercy killing or put up with jailing her. It was Howard and Orc, who were unpopular and unlikeable, who got stuck listening to Brittney wail all night and beg for death. Listen to a twelve year-old girl sob and scream and pray for mercy every minute. Howard and Orc, who eventually had to just get used to it. Ignore the well of misery in the basement, can I interest you in some cooked rat?
Howard feels sick. Maybe it's just because he's been stuffing his face with sushi.
But he laughs anyway. "Seriously. Give us a topic about rainbows and butterflies and I'll bet we get to discussing misery and genocide in fifty seconds."
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She had once tried to map what something like the FAYZ would have been like on her world, and failed utterly. As soon as the adults were gone, she imagined, all of the children ten years and under would have been culled for food, and then the rest of the survivors would have turned on each other, fighting with hands and teeth and anything they could use as a weapon. The largest and fastest would have survived - one survivor. Until the call came, and they walked away and disappeared.
"We shall both become prize-winning horror novelists, rolling in money and groupies. And when people chirp, 'Where do you get your ideas?', our hands will shudder just-so, and we will whisper, 'You really don't want to know'."
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Everyone else seems so put together. People like Zou, or Rory, who either have everything figured out or don't need to. In a way it's comforting to find someone else with similar mannerisms.
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"Sorry, am I imitating you? Another disadvantage of growing up in a totally insular culture; you end up speaking alien body language. I learned fairly quickly after I left that I should not punch people to get their attention, or yawn at full gape to show them I was bored." She considered yawning in demonstration, but decided against it. Howard would probably try to stuff fruit in her mouth - say, a whole pineapple.
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He looks a bit disappointed, as if he's lost some idea of kin he had with her. "Oh, no, I thought you just did it naturally."
He probably wouldn't waste food like that, but there's no guarantee he wouldn't try to make Anwei eat a chair or something.
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She giggles. "My natural expression of nervousness would look like this." She puts her plate down on her lap (the dress-tendrils immediately start exploring it with curiosity), crosses her eyes inwards, and starts picking at the corners of her mouth with her little fingers. "Besides, isn't imitation a form of flattery?"
Chair-eating demonstrations would theoretically require that Howard wear white jodhpurs, a red coat and a top hat, and crack a whip.
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"In my home dimension, there was a sign language people used to convey body language between species - because it's tough to show sincerity to a species that does so by spreading their wings on high if you don't have any wings. And translations could always end up being imprecise, or misinterpreted, or just flat out wrong."
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"How does that sign language translate to people who can't sign? Like sentient puddles of blood and that stuff?"
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Not that he really could without surgery.
"With a sentient puddle of blood we'd probably use text-equivalents. The issue isn't something that looks very different from you, because your mind automatically tells you that their body language is different. The issue is something that's close enough to you that you can recognize each other's gestures, but they don't have the same meaning.
"If a blood puddle waves its cilia in a way that means 'I don't like you,' you probably won't be upset. But if someone who looks just like you except they have four eyes does this," she draws her finger across her neck, "because that means 'I so respect your opinion that I would give you my voice' and you read it as 'I'm going to cut your throat', well, that's an issue."
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"Besides, that'd have to involve me actually smiling, and everyone else around Medical says I scowl too much." He still maintains that a smirk counts as a smile.
"Oh, I get it. Like how the peace sign if super offensive in Britain."
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Cheeky!
She nods. "Exactly. So they came up with 'glinting,' which is an emotion hand-signal language. And even there, I know the five-finger one-thumb two-symmetrical-arms version; there's subdialects for people with no thumbs, or asymmetrical limb arrangements."
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He nods, listening close. "And what do the people with tentacles do?"
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"Most species with tentacles just would press four together to designate two arms and least and greatest fingers. The weirdest one I saw - I can't remember the species name - but they had just one tentacle, growing out of their front, and they insisted they didn't have any other limbs. Turned out their antlers were flexible, and they could glint with those, but it was totally taboo to discuss their antlers or even say they had them when they were about to shed them.
"So it would just stand there with its one tentacle pointing at you, and its antlers wriggling, and you would kind of roll one eye," she demonstrates, "to see what the antlers were saying."
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He shakes his head. "And everyone's fluent in this glinting? It seems like it makes more sense to just work on translator chips. Your planet seems advanced enough."
What with the decapitating people and keeping their heads alive on pikes and all.
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"Glinting was for the species outside the Empire, the ones that cared about negotiating and coexisting and working together, instead of just crushing everything in their path. Explorers, pirates, mercenaries, long-term investors: they invented glinting. The Living People just didn't care."
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"Here's an idea. When we save this whole universe, we stick your world and my world in the ring together and let them duke it out. Your world wins, of course, because like, technology, but maybe Space Jesus can take a few of your winners out too."
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"I'd prefer to keep our universes from ever meeting, if possible. An Imperial AI might crack open your FAYZ and let everyone go - or it might keep you there to play with. They can be quite sadistic, obviously, seeing who created them."
"Is Space Jesus the one that's four hundred feet tall?" She wasn't very informed on Jesii.
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"No, it's the one in the mines. Brainwashes you into killing people, leaves you totally crazy when it's done. It's cute."
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