cozen: (Default)
Bastien ([personal profile] cozen) wrote in [community profile] faderift2022-01-03 11:47 pm

open | holiday spirits

WHO: Whoever, plus some spirits.
WHAT: Everyone spends an evening regretting the past. So basically a normal night.
WHEN: Wintermarch 5-6
WHERE: A castle in the mountains north of Kirkwall
NOTES: OOC post including less vague/pretentious haunting mechanic descriptions. Fantasy violence and swearing and so on are assumed, but please use content warnings in your subject lines for things like explicit gore or sex, slavery content, body horror, etc., if you go any of those routes.




THE CASTLE

Their convenient shelter from the unexpected blizzard that whips up around them in the mountain pass isn't too convenient. Anyone with a reasonable detailed map will find it marked there; reaching its clifftop location requires a slight detour. When they approach, it has no warm ethereal glow or suspiciously welcoming lit torches. The windows stay dark. The portcullis is raised just high enough to be ducked under, but the heavy doors of the keep don't swing open to welcome them.

The only immediate sign that something is amiss is the thorough, all-encompassing emptiness of the place, and it might take some investigation before that begins to feel strange. The fortress' abandonment seems recent and abrupt: ample firewood has been cut and stacked for the winter, nothing has been done to protect the furniture or strip the beds, the kitchen is fully stocked and even has some perishables that do not seem close to perishing, the stables are equipped to comfortably keep any animals along for the journey, and a chess board before the hearth in the (humble) grand hall seems to have been left mid-game. But there are no messages, no bodies, no footsteps dimpling the crunchy layer of old snow accumulated in the bailey beneath the fresh snowfall.

As they search, the castle's visitors may begin to find signs that the castle hasn't been entirely abandoned. It begins with whispers emanating from the dark ends of corridors, voices they recognize and others they don't, or faces both familiar and unfamiliar flashing in still water or window panes when firelight hits right, or forms moving on the edge of vision but vanishing before they can be looked at directly.

By the time this becomes worrisome enough to drive anyone back out of the castle, the portcullis has fallen shut and won't budge. Neither will any other doors to the outside. The windows won't break; doors won't give way even to makeshift battering rams. The only walls that can be climbed or reached by stairs face out over a deep ravine. It might be a survivable climb, if the wind and weather allowed, but it would not be a survivable fall.

THE SPIRITS

--so back inside, then.

The keep is built like the Gallows' towers, square and tall, and it won't take long for Riftwatch to notice that whatever is wrong is more wrong the higher they climb. The whispers and glimpses on the lowest floor become voices and lingering shadowy figures on the second. Someone might turn and find their hand briefly held by an unfamiliar man's, warm and real for the moment it takes him to say, "Come with me." Or behind them, a woman's shocked and seething voice says, "What are you doing?" Or maybe it's a hand they do know and a voice saying something they've heard before.

As people venture to the higher floors--whether intrepidly seeking the source or involuntarily herded onward by spirits--these moments will begin to last and linger and repeat. And those who don't dare venture higher won't be exempt, confronted by stronger spirits that emerge like ants from a kicked hive as the upper floors are disturbed.

As they approach the uppermost floor, reality will begin to slip away from them. They may find themselves lost in a maze of rooms, even though that shouldn't be possible in so few square feet, and ultimately enveloped in comforting worlds where they didn't do that thing they regret and that, like dreams, feel real until they suddenly don't--until something is too unbelievable, until someone interrupts, or until a demon is holding them under the water of the warm bath they were tempted into, shoving them off a balcony, or whispering into their ears and minds, let me in and you can keep it.

The hauntings will continue until morale improves the eldest, most powerful demon has been dealt with.

THE END

When it ends, it ends abruptly. Weaker spirits vanish; stronger ones retreat into the dark. The lesser demons on the upper floors linger, and some may put up a last-ditch physical fight, but without their superior, they've lost most of their mental pull and emotional sway. The castle has changed, too. Its abandonment no longer looks so recent. The food and firewood is gone, along with any sense of warmth or satiety anyone used them to acquire earlier. There is dust where none was before, mildew and rot, and a few scattered, unfortunate skeletons.

The sun is not quite up, the sky a faintly luminescent grey. But the weather is survivable, though it will be slower travel than it would have been without the fresh snow. The doors will open, and the portcullis will raise. Everyone can set off on their cold, hours-long journey back to the city. Talking about their feelings or avoiding eye contact the entire time: the choice is theirs.
ipseite: (126)

[personal profile] ipseite 2022-02-15 07:30 am (UTC)(link)
“I have been led to believe that giving such constructs what they wish of you is unwise, in Thedas.” Despite herself, she cannot quite help the faint smile that Davidias' visible consternation produces— her hand falls away from the obelisk and she lifts her skirts enough not to trip on them as she steps up out of the pyre-pit.

She averts her gaze from him to Bastien. The shrug is elegant,

“Thedas has shown me such things before. Madame d'Asgard witnessed my death. Enchanter Julius, an imagined end for my queensguard,” a tip of her head, “at the hands of my husband. Miss Jones, upon the same occasion, was told quite a tale by his shade—though he did not mention my death, nor his part in it.”

She says, “I am as much a ghost as they. I think it would be different, if I were newer, or imagined that the Fade might send me to anything but wherever that body I remember was interred.”
ipseite: (071)

[personal profile] ipseite 2022-02-16 11:15 am (UTC)(link)
It is, indeed, the natural assumption. It is certainly a death with which Petrana was threatened,

but behind her, the spirit wearing Davidias as a costume ripples. The hair lengthens, darkens. The height is the same — formidable, indeed — but the build is different, leaner, still broad-shouldered but cut from a different cloth. More a Loki than an Amos, as rifters go. He holds a little girl in his arms, blonde and pale-eyed and young enough to forget what she's seen, the plain clothes she'd been dressed in contrasting sharply with the understated finery of his.

Petrana is becoming so used to reliving the worst parts of her life, but when the shadows lengthen and stairs stretch either side of them, she isn't expecting the spirits that grasp her by the elbows, the burst of effort all they need to force her backwards and to her knees. It catches her off-guard with its familiar violence and she has cried out before she knows she's going to, panic that she has tasted before clawing up her throat, fear and anger mingled.

“My own heart,” Marius says, cradling Thaïs, his voice thick with grief and taut with anger held on a tight leash. “Only give me your hand, and I will make all of this stop.”

“But it is your doing!” It rips out of her, torn out of her, this moment dragging her suffocated into its grasp as the other did not, her face twisting. “And you have made it mine—”

“Poor little Saint Petrana,” he mocks her, circling Bastien, sweeping his free arm out expansively. “My nagging conscience given form and figure, and my darling, what a figure, but are you not tired of battling me?” His expression softens. “It doesn't have to end that way.”

In the distance, the violent sound of a body hitting stone.

“Thaïs doesn't have to grow up motherless. Relent, and I will love you for it.”