groundrules: (Default)
let's set d o w n some ([personal profile] groundrules) wrote in [community profile] westwhere2023-05-15 05:49 pm

the sunken | part i



THE SUNKEN






Welcome to the first log of Arc VI: the Sunken, which covers 15 May – 2 June and doubles as a test drive meme.

Back/forward date as needed! The calendar date suggestions are indicative.

The TDM is open to everyone! If you decide to apply to the game, you can get an invite from current players or the upcoming enabling meme — or participate in the test drive meme and get in touch @ [personal profile] groundrules to chat things over. We currently have 13 slots available for new players.

Test drivers can use this post for logs and network posts — old timers, please make your network posts at [community profile] eastbound.

LOST AT SEA | TEST DRIVE TOURISTS


You wake, gasping, in a stormy sea, your thoughts slowed to a confused trickle. Skill, floating wood or a kindly stranger — who you can’t understand — help you to reach shore.

Villagers discover you collapsed on sand and provide critical (if rickety) communication and translation devices. They say you are in Sunken Yancai, a fishing village progressively overtaken by waters and cursed by the secretive ‘ladies of the lake’ to transit through time.

■ Rescuers group newcomers and supply questionable village couture, warm meals and accommodations in abandoned, half-flooded homes or spare small boats anchored in Yancai’s waterways. Huddle up, recover your strength and don’t think too hard on why your memories are hazy over the next three days.

■ Come morning, you visit village leader Quanze Tsaymien, then the sorceress Karsa — who explains you are otherworlders summoned into Akhuras by undead lords who wish to weaponise you in their battle against humans and one another. Karsa is an associate of the Merchant, who leads otherworlders towards ancient transport beacons east.

■ One such beacon rests dormant in Yancai. The group must infiltrate the village and wait a few weeks until it shifts to a point back in time when the beacon was active.

■ Newcomers are handed passport papers with their new identities in Yancai, where they may be known as a bankrupt merchant, perpetually drunk sailor, whale hunter, raft surveyor, mermaid who has just gained their legs, crab collector... feel free to invent a dutifully hilarious apt role for their seaside sojourn.


OLD TIMERS | THE DRIFTING


You dragged yourself here in a haze. You arrived long ago, as if in a dream. You were born and bred in this village. In truth, your memories of reaching lively Yancai feel nebulous and alarmingly inconsequential.

Characters are facilitated new identities and dwellings by the Merchant, or believe they have had them all along.

■ A weary Karsa warns to say nothing to party members with altered memories, until the sorcery that affects them runs its course.

■ Memory-altered characters progressively regain their memories within three to five days (by 20 May). They have their memories partially or fully back at night ( midnight to 5 a.m.). Throughout the day, memory regains can trigger migraines, eerie confusion and paranoia.

Hauntings begin once characters have fully regained their memories.

■ Once everyone is ‘back to normal,’ Karsa explains that Yancai periodically transits through time. The memory alterations are a magical solution endorsed by the village council, which ensures locals mentally weather these shifts. Villagers continue to blithely accept you as part of the community.


(DON'T) HOLD YOUR BREATH


Karsa reunites the existing party and newcomers, issuing first assignments. The Merchants’s information suggests the beacon of Yancai will be online once the village travels in time within weeks. A dubious Karsa asks the party to check on the beacon, located in the former House of Commerce of the largely inundated merchants’ district. Reach it by rowing boat.

■ Villagers say the Master of Commerce, a famous musician, took precautions against intruders.

■ All ground and lower floor entryways of the palatial House were boarded to restrict flooding. To enter, pick locks or climb the putrid stairwell towards upper balconies.

Inside, the hissing of running water — and, in the lower levels, of thin, slippery leeches whose bite numbs your limbs, while they attempt to feed. You seem to experience pronounced vertigo when entering any decaying rooms covered in black mould.

■ The beacon is located on a dais in the basement vault room, where water rises near 1 meter. Only a few scattered scrolls and golden decorations remain among decorations, while a large ceiling carving writes, greed deafens man to the cries of his conscience; music sets him free.

■ Some tiles of the marbled floor stand out as you wade — step on one, and all doors abruptly slam shut, while dozens of obscured holes in the wall start to rapidly spill water, threatening to fill the room to the ceiling within the hour. You hear the tinny, waning sound of a village song played from a hidden source.

■ To stop the pouring water and open the doors, sing the song you hear, or find the music box that produces it amid debris on the water-covered floors. Wind it, and it plays its song in reverse, revealing the voice of a laughing elderly man who says, Depressingly, Anurr was right to worry.

■ Don’t forget to check the beacon — and report back to Karsa that it looks structurally untarnished.


THEY SLEEP


After surprising revelations at previous citadels, Karsa tasks you to investigate just how… permanent death is in Yancai. Villagers share that their dead are buried in a strange rite at sea — part of which will take place within days.

■ The dead are ‘entombed’ in one-man sarcophagi ships with carved and chained lids that depict their likeness. These burial boats are set at sea on the first day of each season and return three months later.

■ Join the harbours around 22 May, when mourners gather to receive the burial boats. Characters must pretend to be greatly anguished relatives, acquaintances or debt collectors to join the grieving.

■ The boats float towards you, seemingly of their own volition. Gaze afar and spot a boat carrying a man in black — the same who haunts some characters — who observes until the last burial ship has reached the piers, before he disappears.

■ Sailors draw up the boats and unpeel the untouched chains and lids, to reveal… no corpses. Peer closer and find neither biological signs (stench, liquids) of discomposure, nor the magical chillness of spaces where cadavers have lingered long. Scratch marks litter the inside of some boat lids.

■ Mourners seem grateful that the waters have ‘accepted’ the bodies. Some say that their relatives whose boats have yet to return must have been stolen by the ‘ladies of the lake,’ a villainous witch coven. Speak to mourners or sailors for clues.

■ Linger long near opened burial boats, and you feel tempted to throw yourself into the sea, slowly losing consciousness — until someone rescues you.


AMONG US


On 25 May, village leader Quanze Tsaymien drags the chained and half feral mistress Miang-si to households and Yancai’s largest market square.

The young woman, he says, was seduced by the ladies of the lake — the furtive witch coven that condemned Yancai to time travel. Luckily, the village elders have… coaxed Miang-si back onto the righteous path.

Miang-si is brought door-to-door to point out her 'accomplices.' Ill at ease, villagers whisper of similar witch hunts leading to false accusations and blood-curdling repercussions.

■ Both men and women are suspected and brought before Miang-si. Perhaps she takes an eerie interest in you, getting especially close to catch your scent, touch or remark on (in)visible hurts, or even dotingly kiss you. If you whisper quickly while she’s near, you might be able to ask one question.

■ If you are patient and kind to Miang-si, she briefly squeezes your hand as she withdraws. Within the hour, you find blood writ on your palm that warns, Our fat moon rises red.

■ If you are agitated, or if Quanze rushes her during your visit, Miang-si erupts into sudden, side-splitting cackling — while you find yourself croaking like a toad, or transforming into one and retaining human speech. The spell dissolves after eight hours.

Quanze’s long-suffering men say this sorcery breaks faster if you kiss one of the curmudgeonly emerald toads that hide in some of Yancai’s lakes. Catch one such delightful, slime-spitting creature or barter it from merchants at a costly premium.


ILL MET BY MOONLIGHT


A full moon is set to rise within days of Miang-si’s visit, on 27 May — just as Yancai shows signs of time shifting. Villagers are prone to stilling and staring askance, seeming lost or adrift.

The village itself evolves: one moment, the same house appears freshly new, then drowned, while waterways overfill with water, then seem barren. Overall, the village deteriorates.

■ That day, the sun suffers a midday eclipse, while droves of black birds circle the woods and village outskirts, attacking those who come close.

■ The waters increasingly thicken and darken, preventing boats from entering certain waterways.

■ An exceedingly bright moon and a diffuse lunar replica rise with nightfall. Come midnight, the village is alive with the sounds of ripping, structural collapse and shrieks. Tar-covered corpses emerge from the waters, clawing on and climbing up piers. They swarm, drawing passers-by into waters to drown them. Help them — and foremost, yourself.

■ Light and fire keep the dead at bay. On some waterways, wildfire now spells, WHAT IS WET WAS WRONGED

■ Weaker alone, fresh corpses climb into your rowing boat, pretending they are innocents who seek shelter. They betray themselves by speaking very slowly, struggling to keep track of the conversation or obliviously peppering it with details of their death. They stubbornly ask questions about you, repeating your answers, and become violent if you say they are dead. Push them into the water at first opportunity.

Quanze Tsaymien and other men of the village take arms, urging villagers to barricade in the nearest home, harbour or warehouse and weather the night. They advise to be silent and beware the dead who imitate living voices, warning not to touch any black mould or water that suddenly appear in your home — which alert the dead of your presence within.

■ Some dead try to tear you apart, while others seek to feed you a disgusting, tar-like black mould. A small taste of it makes you sluggish and feeble for two-three hours, while an entire fistful can kill.

■ If the undead infiltrate your house, hold your breath, do not move and keep from screaming. The dead have weak sight and olfactory senses and might pass you by, as long as you stay silent. It can be more efficient to fool than kill the dead.

■ By 5 a.m., houses start to replenish themselves, gaining a new appearance, while water and mould retreat. The dead withdraw into waterways. Outside doors have been marked with blood: vertical lines tell how many living people remain inside; horizontal ones count how many within died overnight.

■ You step to seize a brave new day — while Yancai enters a new time period (further details due in the next plot update).


NOTES

■ The game enabling meme goes up on 25 May.

Hit up available NPCs here or in their new inbox!

QUESTIONS.

downswing: (十二)

[personal profile] downswing 2023-05-21 09:09 pm (UTC)(link)


May the Heavens be long, prosperous and good, a power overwhelming. May they stretch gargantuan and all-seeing, forgive his hurts and wants, may they take mercy upon him, may they keep Lan Wangji in their grace. May they lend him patience, the roll of his eyes an obscene exertion of muscles he did not think he possessed to roll his eyes in new and incredibly persistent rotations.

His husband, so often a menace, is now merely a storm of stubbornness. Very well. Where Wei Ying cannot be troubled to entice his temporary kin and kind, Lan Wangji inserts himself neatly in the empire of fern and nettle and the great waxed spread of lotus leaf clinging to his feet, where leaves have shored, taking the knee to loom large and ominous over the lake's side.

One hand holds the toad in his collar close to heart — toads eat other toads, and they've dripped in proximity — and he plays out a song from the arsenal of plaintive, syrupy, astringent melodies that so often coax interest and kindness from living things. The Lan are not only of Clarity, for all Wei Ying has decided their purpose. The songs of the dead do not suit animals, but the honeyed start of a melody appears to drag the toads out for investigation. Some croak back. A few hop forward, on sunken claws of trees, on hard leaf.

"How many within leap's reach?"

He cannot stop, cannot look up, cannot be seen to watch until he is ready to strike. Now, Wei Ying...

weifinder: (wtff | inside of me)

[personal profile] weifinder 2023-05-22 04:27 am (UTC)(link)

Wei Wuxian crawled forward, blinking eyelids, then eyelids again, as he traversed his husband to the edge of his lapel, crawling out, over, finding the lack of neck meant he couldn't turn his head like his natural inclination instructs. One eye alone judges distance well, and he finds, to his surprise, that the difficulty of some close focus he'd been suffering and presuming to be the way of life for the toads of the world proves clarity inducing with distance.

He blinks two sets of eyelids again, sticking toes spread, lifting up on his front legs and shifting himself to the right, to the left. Taking in the surprising array of what he can see, the shapes, the colours, the stronger inclination toward blues and greens he had not seen with his human eyes looking upon these waters.

He inhales sharply, the airsack of his throat inflating and wheezing out a grumbling sigh when his mouth opens, all unintentional. He swipes a foot at his face, dragging it over one eye, pushing it down, foot sliding further and off his nose, eye opening again without pause.

"My leap or yours?" He asks, because he has to ask something, before he responds, "Five. One to your left at the shore, on top of several dead leaves, another to your far right, near shore and peering above the water. The loud one is further back on a log thrust up out of the water, on the second branch above the water, curved to the left and spread like fingers on an ancient hand."

The questing guoguo, the craoking, the quiet kero of Lan Zhan's chorus of admirers in miniature, one more frog, smooth backed to the pebbling of Wei Wuxian's own, swimming closer, head breaking the surface to be nearest to the curious sounds of Lan Zhan's making.

A ribbit that matches a creature fifteen times its size emerges, rolls through them both, chest rattling. Wei Wuxian pushes himself up higher with his front legs, then some with his back, as if poised to leap — yet he would not leap.

That one, he knows with the surety of a man who know very little about these specific frogs and toads, but very much about general behaviours of animals similar to these, that one would swallow him whole.



downswing: (guanxi)

[personal profile] downswing 2023-05-22 05:40 pm (UTC)(link)


Ah, his beautiful, witty, charming, skilled husband is — ...balking at the heft and impunity of their callous visitors, one of whom has taken to approaching close enough to whisper of its intended dalliance. He hears what he is yet to see, both appreciative and apprehensive, turning to coil a hand around Wei Ying and summarily...

...stuff him down his collar, between layers, in the most explicit exposure Wei Ying has ever suffered with the mountains, valleys and bridge-spreads of his skin. The feeling of this slippery seduction is easily the most gut-twisting, clammy and disgusting sensation Lan Wangji wishes to experience, in this life or the cursed next. The things one does for love.

"Wei Ying." Soft, gentle, like powdered and settled snow, like silver dust, to keep the chorus of his spectators from stirring, startled. "Do not duel toads."

He plays, and his spectators join in, some having seemingly discovered latent talents as flower girls and wishing no more and no better than to sing along. Delightful.

As a... matter of courtesy, one of principle, one of cultivation mercy, and, dare he say so, one of strategic convenience. Perhaps do not battle and slaughter the creatures they are intended to entrap.

"Do any... call to you?"

...to Wei Ying's lips, in particular. Blindly, now that he has been sunken in the whirlpool of Lan Wangji's robes. A trifling challenge and disturbance.

"Heed your heart."

weifinder: (hide | with my heart on fire)

[personal profile] weifinder 2023-05-23 05:30 am (UTC)(link)

He has, perhaps, dreamed of something like and utterly unlike this, in half remembered moments or passing daydreams when a specific, particular kind of tired. One where creativity is distilled to quietly observing his husband with a half smile on his lips, and his eyes have perhaps lingered heartbeats too long on the length of his throat, the crossed front of his robes.

He did not specifically imagine being shoved down into them, being so divorced from a sense of his own body to find it overwhelming and stifling and weirdly comforting to be slipped, shoved, slid down, warmth of Lan Zhan's skin warming him further, taking the chill and the vestiges of dampness that lingered away.

No toads in here, and he braces small feel against the expanse of Lan Zhan's chest, the thud of his heart louder than before, or is that Wei Wuxian's heart? No, Lan Zhan's, he knows it, because his own pitiful toad heart beats that much faster. He hunkers down, presses himself flat as he can against his husband's skin.

"I can wait," he says instead of making any call for a heart that experiences no swaying toward the enthralled chorus of Lan Zhan's frog and toad admirers. "Right here, for hours."

Heed his heart indeed.

downswing: (correction)

[personal profile] downswing 2023-05-23 10:58 pm (UTC)(link)
"...eight of them," he reminds conversationally, with the ease of a man who has combatted, deflected and summarily dismissed juvenile propositions with great success in the past. He has, after all, raised a son and countless others of Cloud Recesses' less sophisticated children. He knows the farce of patience before a beggarly, infantile request.

"Fearful." It will not fade, after all, for all Lan Wangji gently coaxes his hands into the familiar, plaintive sequences of qi-imbued songs of clarity, of contentment. Wei Ying, a monster of ingratitude, will perhaps yet complain, even of this. "Hunted. Restricted and inconvenienced."

Eight hours paralysed by the limitations of another form are a difficult notion, no matter how prone Wei Ying now proves, lairing up to seize his sleep. He must think (they both most think) this is a matter of bearing with a blister, not shying away from a burn. But sorcery only deepens its hold, claws sharp and cunning, and their claim a carnage.

"You will not resist." Feast upon this, Lan Wangji's faith in his husband's strength. A sight, a vision. Beyond, a triad of toads takes this opportune time to croak their sympathy, their agreement, or their understandable cravings for a midday meal.

weifinder: (concern | and you know)

[personal profile] weifinder 2023-05-24 08:25 am (UTC)(link)

"I can learn to take an eight hour nap on your chest," he says, the whining edge to his voice a genuine complaint over something he isn't comfortable with, but might manage to ignore through sheer mental fortitude. He holds still, peering through slit eyes, feeling it's not dark enough even sealed in close like this to his husband.

The amphibians that stalked closer, curious and not yet feeling threatened, offering commentary in silence and croaks and chirps. No, he doesn't wish to meet any of that horrid number.

What strikes is the creeping understanding of an indignity, a pressure which cannot be ignored. Small bodied, but possessing enough similar organs with similar responses to understand them with dawning horror, Wei Wuxian's large eyes open fully. No, there's a more immediate, insidious reason he won't be allowed the solace of his husband's breast. There's a base biology that asserts himself, and he forces limbs into awkward motion, crawling upward, the tickling slide off desperation aimed up, up, up. Frantic to squirm free, and if he does not face this gladly to resolve one concern, he does squeeze himself free to perch at the folds of Lan Zhan's robes to face it nonetheless.

He doesn't allow himself time to think. He huddles down, braces his awkwardly long hind legs, grips with the rounded toes of his front.

"I hate everything about this!”

Wei Wuxian leaps, soaring out in impossible slow motion, not a clean jump off a creature knowing best through a lifetime of learning how to move, how to conquer. He flies at an angle, front legs stretched forward, hind legs stretched back, the arc he intended not reached. For one hanging moment he seems he might not hit the way at all, before the pitiable smallness of his entrance into the waters at the shoreline is burst upon the world with its splash.

He darts forward in the liquid splendour of the water, a set of eyelids descending without his conscious thought, swimming with too human motions but enough Yunmeng finesse to make it under the safety of anchored, floating leaves.

Nature called. Wei Wixian simply decided he had to answer.

downswing: (wrist)

[personal profile] downswing 2023-05-24 10:22 pm (UTC)(link)


And then his soulmate, his husband, the most startlingly ingenious, beautiful, just, adept and strong man of the cultivation lands scuttles up, nestles close, drags his clammy, graceless, slimy legs and, in a spectacle of geometry and joy, leaps towards the Heavens —

...only to land, audibly, in the lake waters with a shallow splash, Lan Wangji passingly waving a hand to interrupt the summon of his guqin and stirring after him. He runs, only to find six toads rising with him, seemingly curious or bellicose, to investigate the intruder.

Wangji, being a man, possessed of wit and opposable thumbs, does the expected and picks up waxy, long, mellow lotus leaves, throwing them absently at the frogs who follow. They croak impatiently, swearing either a pox upon Cloud Recesses' long-absent cows or an end to Lan Wangji's already unfulfilled bloodline. Either way, he lands first, knees absorbing the shock and scratches of water pebble hitting his skin, as he drags his hands through water to find and net his wayward soulmate —

"Wei Ying —"

...only to discover he's collected the wrong toad — a fatter, brighter, emerald specimen, lips ready for a smooch. He blinks. The toad blinks. A long tongue slithers out.

Lan Wangji nearly swoons.

weifinder: (roosters | you've been told)

[personal profile] weifinder 2023-05-25 07:35 am (UTC)(link)

Wei Wuxian, relieving his needs, surfaces again with all the burr of unpleasant bother over the necessities of biology he'd prefer to ignore, or at least handle otherwise, the water sluicing off his pebbled, tiny head as he breaches the water's surface. His husband kneels on the shore, clearer now with the distance between them, holding up a emerald toad that sends its seeking tongue out, snatching a passing gnat out of the air and near touching Lan Zhan's nose.

His husband sways, and Wei Wuxian calls out, a sparkle of laughter that echoes over the water between them, sending the other toads and their frog companions hopping sideways and away at the sudden loudness with no expected personage associated, retreating to the water but for the one Lan Zhan holds close.

"Lan Zhan! I thought I was the one you wanted kissing a toad, are you testing one out for me?"

He swims closer, legs kicking in a froggish motion, and clambers on shore, walking in awkward gait instead of hopping as a proper toad should. It's awkward enough he settles back into himself, the gnats at the water line idly bumbling past. Wei Wuxian doesn't think before his tongue, his body, reacts with a predatory instinct similar and starkly different from every trained instinct he's honed since childhood.

The rolling flick and thrust of his tongue darts through the air, striking a gnat and partly curling around it, the whole of his tongue pulling back in on the reliance of muscles that leave him gaping as it slams home, gnat crushed and disappearing into his maw as it closes. Wei Wuxian sits stock still, wide eyes even wider after the reflexive swallow ends, eyes having closed in the process and sunken before the moan of discomfort and his increasing distaste for this foreign, strange form builds, builds, builds.

"Lan Zhan," he calls out, the bemoaning cry of his distress one part performance for the sake of making clear he is not in danger, two parts honesty as water beads and rolls off his minuscule back, "A bug. I ate a bug, on purpose. Not on accident when flying, this body's tongue caught a bug on purpose."

Solve this crisis for him, one way or another, brilliant jade of his heart, warrior gliding in and out of chaos, intelligent and warm and witting in his pointed, questing, sly learned ways. Solve this horror of toadyism. He wasn't cut out for this life, not a prince or a pauper among men, cursed for another man's arrogance just as he has been again and again.

Out in the waters, the depths stir. A koi drifts closer. Another toad croaks, emerging from the waters to the floating leaves, three times his size. The insects flit and flitter past, alighting on Lan Zhan's exposed skin. The drone of heat and insects and water fill the background of their ears, and Wei Wuxian moans.

Edited 2023-05-25 07:36 (UTC)
downswing: (wrist)

[personal profile] downswing 2023-05-25 08:16 pm (UTC)(link)


"That body's tongue is your tongue," murmured to the side indifferently, for let it not be forgotten that Wei Ying's troubles and qualms are a product of misfortune and his own wretched design, alike. This world, alive around them, brims with humidity and humour, with a sense of undeniable, petty satisfaction at Wei Ying's ongoing, vocal plight. He compounds his woes with complaints.

Lan Wangji, by his nature the stoic of the pair, simply — coexists. First, with the heat that builds in steady, hefty increments, blanketing. Then, with the resonance of hums and croaked purring, with water clinking and dripping and echoing, shrill. With the hungry, rapid beats of his heart, the crackling of leaves, when grasshoppers and flies drift closer, from blades of lake grass and bracken.

The toad in Wangji's hand squeals one mighty sound that fills out its belly, then thins to wheezing, its eyes black and beady and wrong. He starts to pull back — a long, slick, pinkened tongue spears out — and he doesn't know how, or why, but he's immobile.

He feels the appendage land on his lips, crawl over the shape of them, thin. Swivel. Some part of him shrivel. More fissures. Finally, life sparks back in his limbs and he pulls back, barely refraining from releasing the creature, but summarily pushing it towards Wei Ying, its... mouth close to the smaller one of its husband.

It is at this time that, realising it is perhaps twice Wei Ying's new size and a few notches up the food chain that the captive toad thinks, ah. A fellow frog.

Its mouth opens wide, mean and hungry.

"Tsk," hisses Wangji, two spare fingers tapping the creature on its head, until its mouth snaps shut, grudgingly obedient. He nods, then, towards Wei Ying.

"Proceed."

Look it in the abyss of its starved mouth and kiss.