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Hathaway. ([personal profile] futurologists) wrote in [community profile] epidemiology2017-11-10 06:00 pm

EVENT ★ SEASON FINALE

ZYMANDIS CASTLE


The castle -- no, the entire world, small as it is -- is too peaceful. It isn't the atmosphere one would associate with a villain's lair, even with it looking as sinister as it does. Crumbling chunks of earth float in the air, threatening to hit anyone who isn't paying attention to where they're going. It is quiet around them, like the castle is entirely without life.

Cassie, Cherenkov, Crowley, Dagny, and Uruz stand beside Audentes, proud that their sister team has come so far. Each of them have offered words of encouragement, even the cats... in their own special way.
Cassie is short and sweet: “Give 'em hell.”

Cherenkov and Crowley have combined their efforts to create regeneration nanobots that whisper positive messages to one's psyche and gifted them to the entire team.

Dagny says, “I couldn't be prouder of you!! You have done much good, and come so far, and your future is so very bright, and -- oh, may I please hug you?? I'm going to hug you now!” and sticks gold star stickers on the foreheads of various team members.

Uruz says, “Pull through, Audentes! You've always been brave, headstrong, and united! This will be nothing for you lot, nothing at all. But be careful, if only for me. I want to see you all again after we're through.”
The group pushes forward. The moment they do, a loud, brassy sound blares throughout the castle grounds. The world comes alive again. Enemies begin to scale down the castle walls, pop out of windows, and burst through the doors, which slam shut behind them. A dragon circles above, raining fire down upon its enemies. A small squad of goblins brandish swords. Some enemies look human but pale, frenzied, hungry; they're out of control. Others resemble Qorral bandits. The enemies call back to their past missions in some way. A way of letting them know Zymandis had been one step ahead every time. ALASTAIR was simply the cleaning crew, picking up the mess they left in their wake.

Halfway through the battle, a small, pale creature with inhumanly large eyes manages to make his way through the crowd (mostly) unscathed, waving a white flag he seems to have fashioned himself out of his own clothes, judging by the large hole in his shirt. He looks too thin and too tired. He falls to his knees. “Please, o Holy Liberators!” he exclaims, kissing the ground near their feet slavishly. “It does not want to be here anymore. It wants to go home. It has information the Liberators must want. It will give it to them.”

ALASTAIR strikes a deal with the creature, who reveals his true name to be Edgar, although Arbatel -- the Leader -- refers to all of his servants as nothing but 'it'. Edgar draws a childlike map to a mine entrance not far, and explains that the mine itself connects directly to Arbatel's laboratory. “It has-- I... have cleaned it many times. Master was captivated by the mines. Master had men in the mines day and night.” His voice drops to a whisper. “The Liberators need be careful. The mines claim many lives. Master does not care if they are dangerous.”

With that, the group has a new plan. Some of the other teams stay back to distract the rest of the fighters, but Audentes and Kittypaw continue on. After all, Audentes is their little sibling team. Even though Audentes has been a full-fledged team for two years now -- time certainly flies! -- they've still got to look out for them. It's time to head to the mines.


THE MINES


The trek to the mines is a hard one. The group has to be careful to avoid lava geysers and giant, seemingly bottomless chasms, as well as panicked, violent animals. By the time they finally make it to the mines, there's a good chance their legs are aching, but there's no time to rest. Dagny has brought along a few potions she brewed herself that will help dull the ache, however.

Inside the mines, no one has to worry about lava geysers. However, vision is obscured, and there's a feeling of gloom hanging over the area. After all, the mine did claim many lives. Some might even pass some bones, if they're unlucky. Arbatel isn't interested in sending corpse clean-up crews.

The danger of the mines becomes apparent when Audentes and Kittypaw meet their first challenge. The twists and turns of the labyrinthine mines begin to break up the group. With the teams separated, Audentes will find themselves feeling... angry. Perhaps vengeful. As if there were spirits influencing them. They will begin to turn on whoever they're with, deciding now is the time to air their grievances. (This can affect all characters in a thread or just one.) Only once characters are aware they're being controlled will they be able to resist, and only once they are able to strongly resist will they be able to break the spirits' hold on them. But be careful: if you stick around too long afterwards, the spirit might try to take vengeance on you.

Audentes and Kittypaw finally manage to meet back up when the paths converge once again, but their luck does not last for long. Cassie leads the group fearlessly ahead, but is forced to stop when a shadowy figure crawls in the darkness. And another one... and another one. The large beetles and spiders who live in the mine have come out of hiding, surrounding the team from all angles. Their bites are venomous, and they spit acid that burns to the touch. Their skin is hard, like metal, and nearly impossible to pierce. It's no wonder so many miners lost their lives down here with these monsters preying on them.

The numbers are too overwhelming and the creatures too strong. The group has no choice. They have to run if they want any chance to get to Arbatel and the TIMELINE.exe. The creatures follow in fast pursuit, hungry for their next meal now that Arbatel is no longer sending miners to their dooms.

The more they run, the more apparent it becomes that escape is futile. It seems there is only one option left: become these monsters' food. At least, that's how it seems; the group stops, barely fighting off their attackers, and Cassie says, “Go, now!” She reaches into her pocket and shouts, “Hey! Over here!” as she runs in the opposite direction, diverting the creatures' attention long enough for the team to get a head start. She takes her hand out of her pocket and raises it, holding an explosive. “Eat rainbows and die!” Flamboyant as ever, her explosion causes a beautiful, swirling rainbow effect, knocking Audentes over. When they regain their bearings, the area where Cassie and the monsters stood is caved in.

Cherenkov, Crowley, Dagny, and Uruz are quiet for the rest of the walk.

The group finally comes across an area of the mine that is significantly more sculpted than the rest, hollowed out around a large, glowing crystal. Around the crystal is a catwalk, with a ladder leading up to it. On the catwalk are tables containing various arcane items, blueprints for inventions, computer parts, and other strange materials. This is certainly Arbatel's lab. Now it's time to find the man himself.


FINDING ARBATEL

The castle is falling apart on the inside, too, despite the servants he has put to work. Some of them resemble Edgar, but others seem to belong to other species; some are even human. All of them are pale, malnourished, and cower in Audentes's presence. None of them appear to have any sinister motive or put up any sort of fight, although they're all too afraid to speak as well.

The castle is full of oddities: a bookshelf full of books in languages no one has ever heard of, paintings with colors no one has seen before. It's worth it to inspect everything. In fact, one inspection in particular is particularly lucky -- one removal of a book from a bookshelf causes a wall to slide back, revealing a set of stairs that ascend upwards. Hey, all secret lairs need a secret door.

Start up the stairs, and a woman in gold and white armor appears at the top. She waves her hand and the wall quickly slides back into place, blocking the staircase again. Except, unfortunately, for the two who happened to be in front: Jon and Loki are now trapped on the other side of the wall with the mysterious woman. No matter how many books are removed, shuffled, or shoved back into the shelves, the wall won't open again. The team will have to find another way to get through.

Meanwhile, Jon and Loki are left alone to confront the woman, who introduces herself as Hagith. She is Theodor Arbatel's younger daughter and, unlike her long-dead sister Ophiel, completely loyal to Zymandis. Enhanced with cybernetic bones and organs, she is gifted in magic and is a dangerous foe even for Jon. While they're engaged in battle, an older man appears from a door just beyond the landing. Loki, sure this is the man they've been looking for all this time, wields his sword of truth at the ready...

As for the rest of the team, poking through the rest of the castle will eventually find a small passage behind a painting -- it's six feet up and roughly the size of a ventilation shaft, so the only way to get up there is teamwork, and the only way to get through is by crawling, one by one, through the pitch black labyrinth. The passageway conveniently ends right on the other side of the wall, where -- luckily for the claustrophobic on the team -- there is a lever that will make the wall slide back again, revealing the hidden stairs.

It's just in time, too: a wounded Jon stands over the dead knight, her windpipe crushed, watching as Loki needles a distinguished-looking man with Gram, the sword of truth. It's a disquieting scene, but it's necessary: the man is Arbatel, the Leader of Zymandis, and he owes ALASTAIR some answers.


“This blade is doused in Dragon’s Blood,” Loki says as he turns the sword in Arbatel’s wound; “it forces someone to tell the truth. It always hurts.” Arbatel gazes at his daughter’s body as he answers all questions posed to him, both from Loki and from those shouted from the expedition:

His true name is Theodor Arbatel, and that has always been the truth. He comes from a world that he has long since forgotten, his lifetime lengthened to thousands of years by personal experimentation with a sort of proto-magitek. The longer he lived, the more chaos he saw in Zymandis’s attempts at solving the Cataclysm; it would be better, in his eyes, if the entire multiverse were purged and purified, allowed to start anew, instead of simply bandaging an already sick and chaotic thing.

And when he updated the TIMELINE.exe machine, its new calculations only proved what he thought: the universe would start again if ushered to a total collapse. As the rest of Zymandis followed his machine’s update, he rose through its ranks to become the Leader; those who didn’t believe in the truth were executed or run out of Zymandis until a faction that would become ALASTAIR stole an earlier version of his creation and fled. Including, he notes with distaste, his daughter Ophiel.

His quest to end this tainted universe and usher in a new, better universe had millions -- possibly even billions -- of casualties, he estimates. He recalls all the miners he remorselessly sent to their deaths in the pursuit of the temporal crystal in his laboratory. Arbatel has studied such crystals for centuries; there are many types, he explains, but only one of this particular kind. It is the only one capable of undoing all of Zymandis's work. His life's work. He would send ten times as many miners to die if it meant protecting that crystal. He would have killed his own daughters.

As Arbatel’s confession continues, he becomes more and more affected by the blade of Gram, as to suffer this blade is to suffer the truths one has denied. The way he has twisted his own nihilism into being the only truth, refusing to look for other alternatives, ignoring the pleas of his elder daughter. As Loki told him, the truth hurts. And in this case, the truth has killed Theodor Arbatel.

He falls to the ground, lifeless.

With this bloody business done, there's a few minutes to rest and patch any lingering wounds. The rest of the expedition begins to filter in at this point, missing a few of their number and looking a little rough around the edges. From the ex-Zymandis agents' wristwatches, the Ophiel AI speaks: the TIMELINE.exe is in the next room.


TEMPORAL STORM


Behind the door, now unguarded, is the Mechanical Room -- a gigantic warehouse stuffed with cables and gigantic computers and hundreds of CRT monitors. The room is warm and there's a constant whirring of machinery, ever present but quiet enough that it can fade into the background like white noise.

Upon entering the room, recruits will be greeted by the monitors all flashing threatening messages in unison: GET OUT and INTRUDERS and ALERT, among others. Outside the door, Arbatel and Hagith's jewelcomms beep frantically: the TIMELINE.exe is asking for assistance that will never come. Thankfully, the corrupted TIMELINE.exe machine has no actually effective means of defense, so ALASTAIR is free to do what must be done: upload TIM's new update, the ver. 1.0.03 file.

Installing the update is a simple task, but will require every ALASTAIR recruit's participation: extend one's jewelcomm toward the TIMELINE.exe, and the magitek will do the rest. The interfacing is ephemeral and beautiful, strands of visible code streaming through the air like beams of sunlight. It only takes a moment, and once it's done, the TIMELINE.exe's screen go dark.

And then, a second later: Hello World ( ´ ▽ ` )ノ

It's a success: Zymandis's machine has been overwritten by TIM. Without a leader or their destruction-focused TIMELINE.exe, Zymandis is dead. But before there can be much excitement, TIM uses his new monitors to explain that there is still the matter of the impending destruction of this world and its universe, owing to the temporal crystal deep in the mine under the castle.

The temporal crystal must be destroyed. The energy it saps simply to sustain its own existence keeps the universe fractured; when all of the research conducted by both ALASTAIR and Zymandis scientists is combined, TIM is able to hypothesize that shattering the crystal and releasing the energy into the universe will cause a surge large enough to charge a merging.

After the Cataclysm, each universe continued to split into thousands of fractured universes, all nearly identical save for small differences. The energy meant to sustain one universe was now split across thousands, ebbing and flowing and never quite enough. The merging, however, would combine each of those identical universes into one... allowing them to run on full energy. In short: destroying the crystal should merge the fractured universes, allowing them to sustain themselves without ALASTAIR intervention.

The solution is simple, but will require a lot of elbow grease: using materials found throughout Arbatel’s lab, create a positronic bomb and detonate the temporal crystal. The resulting explosion, as Arbatel said, will be the opposite of destruction.

Once the bomb is all set, it’s probably a smart thing to head topside before its detonation. Don’t worry about leaving TIM behind -- his consciousness in this machine is linked with the machine in Oska, so he won’t be harmed. The same is not exactly true for the rest of the expedition.

When the bomb goes off, there’s a blinding blue flash and a deafening silence. The world -- the universe -- no, the fabric of reality shakes and trembles; the sky swirls; the ground churns. It only lasts a handful of seconds, but the turmoil seems like an endless epoch. And then everything clears; the ravaged, once-crumbling world is still and silent. Though the platforms of earth still sail peacefully through the air, there is no more lava and no more shaking. The destruction of this universe has been halted.

More than that, though, the instability of the multiverse has been halted. Instead of a sprawling, infinite multiverse filled with infinite timelines, the minutely different universes have been merged. This may result in some nausea or confusion as the expedition’s own minutely alternate realities meld with their own, though there won’t be any identity crises or conflicting memories. You’re still you.

But more importantly, this means the multiversal energy crisis is over. ALASTAIR can use its rift machines without needing to conserve precious energy. You can go home, if you’d like... but you might want to head to Oska first.


LATER...

After what might have been the longest day of their lives, the group returns to Oska for a well-deserved celebration... after any injuries are tended to. They are, of course, commended by the rest of ALASTAIR for their bravery and dedication. There's a feast, but considering how tired everyone is, there's no wild party. Just quiet contentment.

An older ALASTAIR member, a man with dark hair and a prim demeanor, stands up to give a speech. “For thousands of years, we have endeavored to right the wrong caused by the Cataclysm. Tonight, we have finally achieved that goal. ALASTAIR's purpose was solely to maintain order as best we could, even in the face of impossible odds. Now, that is no longer necessary. This is a beginning of a new and better multiverse... but it is an ending, too. I suppose it is time to disband ALASTAIR, once and for all.

The crowd murmurs. It's all a blur of words, but the general gist can be picked up. Should they really disband ALASTAIR? Could they? There isn't anything left for them to do, after all. We could all go home to our families.

“This is not a loss. This is a win. I vote that today be ALASTAIR's last official day of operation. Those who agree with me, raise your hands.” A large majority of the crowd raises their hands. “The matter is settled, then. Tonight, we celebrate. Tomorrow... tomorrow, we go home.”

He sits and resumes speaking to those sitting beside him, and it seems the discussion is over... until a red-headed girl barges in through the double doors, eyes wild. To say she looks frazzled is to put it kindly. “You guys have to hear this. The merging? It worked. No more energy being drained. But the universes, they're... having trouble adjusting, I guess. Look.” She projects her magitek onto the wall, showing clips of protests, fires, war. In one world, two queens vie for the same crown. In another, dinosaurs seem to roam the earth again. “We've gotta do something, right?”

The room quiets. For a moment, it seems no one is going to answer her. Finally, a woman answers. “We've done all we can. It's time to stop interfering with other worlds. I'm returning home.” Others grumble in agreement. A select few disagree.

The girl scowls. “Oh, please.” She gestures to Audentes. “You just saved the freakin' multiverse. And it's all gonna turn to crap if we don't fix it. So...” She smiles sheepishly. “What do you say? Partners?”


OOC NOTES
And that wraps it up for Season 1 of Futurology! The action portion of the log will last roughly five IC hours. If you have any questions about this log, please direct them to the dossier. We know it's a long one, so don't be shy!

For those of you who will be staying with us on to Season 2, will be releasing a calendar on what to expect for the next two months sometime in late November.

For those of you who are heading off at the conclusion of Season 1 or those who have dropped already, thank you for participating in our game! Futurology is what it is because of every single one of you.

NOTE: HMD and AC will be posted on schedule (18 November and 1 December, respectively), so don't forget! Participation is mandatory if you would like to remain in the game.
tolight: (pic#11383923)

[personal profile] tolight 2017-11-13 12:21 am (UTC)(link)
[ Somehow, it doesn't occur to Lucina that others could be... struggling. Because the choice had been black and white for her — and thus, her answer has also been black and white ( stay, or leave ). There's no in between, no lingering "what if"s of returning to a timeline she doesn't belong in ( or another, that's dead ). It's just here, in ALASTAIR, and what she would like isn't necessarily what she can have.

So— there's a brief pause, as she considers Sieglinde's answer. Then, just as measured as before: ]
The other worlds — our job is not done yet. [ And she'll take it upon herself to finish what they've started, no questions asked. ]
grunehexe: (hoping)

[personal profile] grunehexe 2017-11-13 12:30 pm (UTC)(link)
[She says it so... simply. Sieglinde doesn't even seem to think Lucina had answered the question at first, staring up at her as if waiting for more until she actually realizes that... that was it. Their job wasn't done yet.]

... you do not-

[She stops herself for a moment. Lucina's world... it wasn't the sort of place, perhaps, that you'd want to go back to. Perhaps the reminder wouldn't be pleasant. But.]

... You do not want to go elsewhere?

[Maybe not "back home", but.]
tolight: (pic#11645544)

[personal profile] tolight 2017-11-14 02:14 am (UTC)(link)
[ The real question is where else could she go? There is no timeline she truly belongs in, anymore ( at least in her head ). This is her closest thing to home, and that's feeling more and more the case every day — why let go of a perfectly good thing, with a perfectly good purpose? ]

My home is... safe. [ One of it. Which is all that mattered, in the end. ] I'd like to see this to the end, for as long as I am able.

[ And then, after a short pause— ] And yourself? What do you think?
grunehexe: (bit back)

[personal profile] grunehexe 2017-11-18 02:33 pm (UTC)(link)
[Sieglinde had known that Lucina's home situation was... not the kindest. Not the sort that made much sense, to someone not of that world. But even so, she was surprised at how sure the older girl sounded, fingers lacing somewhat awkwardly in front of her.]

I-

[Her voice is too quiet, and she clears her throat as if a cold might be the problem here, not her own uncertainty. But she can't come up with anything that sounds like a good stall or excuse, and in the end, she has to admit the truth.]

... I do not know.
tolight: (pic#11645541)

[personal profile] tolight 2017-11-29 04:00 am (UTC)(link)
... It would be strange, if you had an answer so quickly. [ There's a lot on the line, here. The ability to return home versus the responsibility of righting the wrongs in a multiverse. Sieglinde is not a selfish, cold person — Lucina knows this, firsthand, and the hesitation... it makes sense.

( And yet, she's made her decision so quickly, without hesitation. She pushes the thought out of her mind; this isn't the time. )

So she pauses. Struggles for the correct words to tell the girl in front of her, because there isn't anything that Lucina could do to make the decision for her. All she could do is—

She inhales, then exhales. Looks at Sieglinde with a level gaze, a hint of a smile on her lips, her voice softer than before. ]
No one would fault you for wanting to return home.

[ The next part takes a moment longer, but after a pause— ] But — the Audentes would be a different place without your presence.
grunehexe: (bad feeling)

[personal profile] grunehexe 2017-11-29 01:35 pm (UTC)(link)
It is not...

[Sieglinde starts to protest, an automatic gesture, but a silence overtakes her when she realizes that she doesn't quite know which words to use. It is too delicate and serious a matter to choose them rashly.

Stops.

Breathes a moment. Tries to smile back, and manages, fingers curling in the apron she wears over her voluminous skirts.]


... it is not wanting to return home.

[Masamune had asked her to go to his world, to be a princess among his people rather than return to a village of ash and dust. She had even accepted... on the condition that she had to return the cure she'd found to her world first. But whether or not that condition was even possible had become less important to her, after Masamune had been taken from her.]

... but I have duties.

[Yet even saying that... she didn't sound sure of which to side with.]
tolight: (pic#11383916)

[personal profile] tolight 2017-12-01 11:32 pm (UTC)(link)
... Duties. [ She repeats the word, slow. Not disbelieving, just ... wrapping her mind around it. She notes the reluctance in Sieglinde's posture, the way that she seems to struggle with what she wants to say.

And — Lucina has never been one to be good at ... speaking. Not like her mother, and certainly not like her father. Awkward and stilted when it counts, because while the desire to help is there, it's still... hard.

She's learning, though. Slowly. She watches Sieglinde's expression for a while longer; because she understands. To be so duty-bound to something that an alternative seems impossible, somehow ( yet at the same time, the idea that she could be away from Ylisse during the war is ... not a thought she wants to have ). She lets the silence stretch for a moment longer, before she eventually settles on a: ]


It would be unfair of me to ask you to abandon your duties. [ Honesty. For as difficult it is, there isn't much else she could do. This isn't a decision for Lucina to make on behalf of Sieglinde. ] But ... if you choose to remain here, regardless—

I'm afraid I cannot ask you to reconsider.
grunehexe: (hoping)

[personal profile] grunehexe 2017-12-06 02:44 pm (UTC)(link)
[Duties.

The pause between them extends as only that between two people equally unskilled at talking can. Sieglinde has her moments, usually when acting as the Green Witch, as she'd been trained to all her life, but this...

Despite her years with ALASTAIR, the many people who have declared themselves her friend, even like family... she still doesn't quite know what to do with these moments. With these people she finds herself caring about.

Duty, or happiness?]


I will... tell you when I decide?

[It sounds more like a question somehow. Like she's just checking if Lucina truly wished to know what she chose.]
tolight: (pic#11383911)

[personal profile] tolight 2017-12-08 10:49 pm (UTC)(link)
[ This is somehow the part that Lucina can say with startling bluntness. Because while talking about herself continues to be incredibly difficult, caring for others — that comes naturally. Somehow. Practiced and eloquent but also incredibly genuine, because this is something she's done for as long as she could remember. ]

Of course. [ With a nod. Because she genuinely wants to know. Yet it's not quite right for her to say she looks forward to it. So instead— ]

... It may not be my place to say — but I hope that whatever decision you make, it is one that you're happy with. [ Her, and not anyone else. ]
grunehexe: (content)

[personal profile] grunehexe 2017-12-10 12:38 pm (UTC)(link)
[One she's happy with.

And that's the tricky part isn't it? Trying to decide if she should choose duty or happiness. Trying to see if there wasn't any option that combined both.

But she tries to smile, at least, because it's Lucina, and she cared what her answer was.]


I hope so, too.

[And until she could decide... there was a bench in the courtyard calling for her.]