Difference between revisions of "Bad Luck/Prologue"
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Her voice is like waterfalls and tinkling diamonds and mirrors breaking. | Her voice is like waterfalls and tinkling diamonds and mirrors breaking. | ||
HER | |||
It's time. | It's time. | ||
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Her voice sounds like thunder to Bartleby. Or like the purring growl of that cat - Moonfang? - from before. He jumps in his seat, turning to look for a source, but seeing nothing. It's just that voice. | Her voice sounds like thunder to Bartleby. Or like the purring growl of that cat - Moonfang? - from before. He jumps in his seat, turning to look for a source, but seeing nothing. It's just that voice. | ||
HER | |||
(echo) | (echo) | ||
It's time. | It's time. | ||
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Finn feels the kiss against his ear, soft as flower-petals, but there are thorns to the voice that follows it. He doesn't need to turn his head to know there's nothing there. In his mind, his resolve not to paint must've broken down, for suddenly he can see the next painting perfectly before his eyes. The background is all that remains; a hedge of thorns. The subject is gone. | Finn feels the kiss against his ear, soft as flower-petals, but there are thorns to the voice that follows it. He doesn't need to turn his head to know there's nothing there. In his mind, his resolve not to paint must've broken down, for suddenly he can see the next painting perfectly before his eyes. The background is all that remains; a hedge of thorns. The subject is gone. | ||
HER | |||
(echo) | (echo) | ||
It's time. | It's time. | ||
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== Part 2 == | == Part 2 == | ||
<screenplay> | |||
Cynthia faints, dropping the glass and keeling over. The glass shatters against the floor, spilling salt water everywhere - except it's probably not salt water anymore, because it's hissing and quickly evaporating into a green fog, blowing against Cynthia's face and waking her. The whole spectacle takes mere moments. | |||
Meanwhile, the barmaid is hurrying towards a door marked "employees only" calling for someone named Tom. | |||
Rose, the activist Cynthia came with, is ignoring her fallen friend (or at least drink-mate) and walking purposefully towards the door. | |||
The singer Finn talked to earlier is cutting right in front of her, tears streaming from her eyes. Some of the patrons watch her go with a puzzled expression, others grimly. Some are too drunk to care about anything. | |||
Bartleby bravely clutches his Equalizer and goes for the door, post-haste. | |||
Finn Kovlovsky stares into the room - and seemingly into the distance - trying to process the scene and fighting with every ounce of will that he has to stop from rushing back to the apartment to paint. | |||
''(resolve+composure-2 circumstances=1 success)'' | |||
Once he’s wrestled control of his own mind, he walks over to the woman that seems to have fallen over. | |||
Cynthia Hawk wakes up dazed, remembering what she saw but… not knowing how to understand it. She looks around and doesn't see her friend Rose anymore. Perhaps it's better to leave and head home to think about it. | |||
Finn Kovlovsky approaches her, leaning over very slightly. | |||
FINN | |||
You alright, lady? | |||
Cynthia Hawk looks up at the man - or should I say, dwarf – leaning over her. She recognizes him – he’s the one she buys artwork from. | |||
CYNTHIA | |||
Yes… I think I am alright. Just had a rough day it at work. | |||
''(manip+socialize-3 Finn’s composure=3 successes on convincing Finn that she’s okay)'' | |||
FINN | |||
Why, uh...why're you on the ground? Need a hand? | |||
CYNTHIA | |||
Well..I think you can see that tiredness and alcohol don't really work together. | |||
FINN | |||
Well, be careful. People'll put shit in your drink. You, uh...you see anything weird in here just a minute ago? | |||
Finn Kovlovsky offers a hand to try to help her up. | |||
Cynthia takes the offered hand and climbs back up her feet. | |||
CYNTHIA | |||
(Looking at the dwarf) | |||
I did see...Something, but it might have been the alcohol. | |||
FINN | |||
Yeah...yeah, maybe. | |||
Finn Kovlovsky doesn't look like he believes that at all, but doesn't press the issue. | |||
Cynthia gives the man a critic look. | |||
Cynthia Hawk hopes distracting him, will make him forget about asking more about what happened. | |||
CYNTHIA | |||
Aren't you that artist that lives here nearby? | |||
FINN | |||
Maybe. What of it? | |||
CYNTHIA | |||
Nothing much, I just remember I bought some things of you. You looked familiar to me, it's the only reason. | |||
Finn Kovlovsky chuckles darkly with a cough. | |||
FINN | |||
Surprised you recognized me, with how well I blend into a crowd. | |||
Cynthia giggles, giving the dwarf a look over. | |||
CYNTHIA | |||
Mhm, you blend in so well. Most people don't seem to notice you. | |||
Finn Kovlovsky rolls his eyes with a grunt. | |||
Finn Kovlovsky | |||
You HAVE had too much. Look - you want someone to walk you home or somethin'? Or you plannin' to sleep in the booth? | |||
Cynthia Hawk | |||
I was planning to head home. Although it might be getting quite dark outside… | |||
The barmaid comes back with a man - a handsome fellow, who without looking like the barmaid at all looks very much like her. They have a certain… sleekness to them. It's not in appearance so much as posture. They give the two patrons a suspicious glance. | |||
Cynthia Hawk looks around the bar, trying to see if anything is out of place. Noticing that the barmaid is back with some else. And they don't really look quite friendly. | |||
Finn Kovlovsky looks at the pair as they walk in. | |||
FINN | |||
You want somethin', or are you just gonna gawk all night? | |||
The barmaid looks pointedly at the man, then back at her two patrons. | |||
KEENE | |||
Alright. Which one of you kids triggered it? | |||
Being not much older than Cynthia, this choice of word seems… interesting, you might say. | |||
Finn Kovlovsky raises an eyebrow, as he's neither a kid nor does he remember triggering anything. | |||
Cynthia Hawk raises her own eyebrow at the pair. What is she talking about, she can't know… Can she? | |||
FINN | |||
Triggered what? | |||
TOM | |||
Just answer the lady. We don't want any trouble with the Beldam here. | |||
FINN | |||
Tell her to start makin' some damn sense, then. | |||
CYNTHIA | |||
Beldam? What do you mean? | |||
The barmaid turns to the man, shaking her head. | |||
KEENE | |||
They don't know, do they. Maybe one of the others triggered it. They're all gone now, though, poor sods. | |||
Tom looks grimly from her to you and back, then shrugs. | |||
TOM | |||
Well. Little we can do, then, isn't it. What she wants, she gets, and there's little we can do about it. | |||
He turns back to the pair, authoritatively. | |||
TOM | |||
It's high time you left. We don't want any trouble. | |||
And he turns on her heels and leaves. The barmaid looks sad, and more apologetic. | |||
KEENE | |||
I hope we're wrong. And that you'll just think of us as mad. Best of luck, either way. | |||
Cynthia Hawk still has an eyebrow raised to the pair. Strange… | |||
Finn Kovlovsky huffs grumpily. | |||
FINN | |||
Leavin' sounds like a fine idea. | |||
Cynthia Hawk looks at the dwarf. | |||
CYNTHIA | |||
Shall we go, then? | |||
FINN | |||
You can do whatever ya like. I'm outta this place. | |||
Despite seeming rather annoyed, it's clear Finn doesn't really want to leave - or at least, doesn't want to go home. | |||
CYNTHIA | |||
(shaking her head) | |||
This place is not the best place for now. | |||
CYNTHIA | |||
(noticing that he doesn't want to leave) | |||
Don't you want to head home after this? | |||
FINN | |||
No. | |||
Finn Kovlovsky slowly heads toward the door. | |||
Cynthia Hawk follows the dwarf. It seems wrong but, he reminds her of her father. | |||
CYNTHIA | |||
Hey, if you don't wanna head home we can walk around for a while, or… This might seem weird, but you can crash at my place for the night, if you want. | |||
Cynthia Hawk doesn't really want to be alone after what happened today, and being near the person that reminds her of her father might help. | |||
Finn Kovlovsky stops and sharply turns on the cane, which looks more awkward than anything. | |||
FINN | |||
I ain't sleepin' with some drunk chick just because she buys some art. I'll take ya home, but don't get any ideas. | |||
Finn Kovlovsky sharply turns on the cane again and begins walking again. | |||
Cynthia Hawk sighs acting drunk before didn't help now. | |||
CYNTHIA | |||
Very well. | |||
She then walks to the dwarf and starts walking with him. | |||
They exit the bar. | |||
The moment Bartleby stepped out the door... He was assaulted. A multitude of furry bodies pounced upon him, pinning him to the... soft, dirty ground? He barely had time to wonder where the asphalt'd gone, though, as all he could see and hear and smell and feel was cats, cats, cats everywhere. They're clawing at him and wailing and - whispering... | |||
CATS | |||
(purring) | |||
Stories, | |||
Spin us stories! Hungry, soooo hungry...! | |||
Even as they tear him bloody they keep demanding to be fed. Truth and lies. Stories. Feed them, or be eaten. | |||
BARTLEBY | |||
Um. Er. | |||
BARTLEBY | |||
There was a lady, in a lake. Her dearest wish was to marry a man, because although she was a lady, she wasn't a woman. | |||
So she sang a song her mother had taught her. A song that should be known, but not sung. But the poor lady had been waiting so long, and thought that it couldn't hurt to sing it, just that once. | |||
And as she did so, there happened a young woodcutter. A handsome fellow, he was. | |||
And when she finished the song, she found him there, staring at her, entranced. But the poor lady had never /seen/ a man before, and she discovered that she was terribly shy, so she hid in her lake. | |||
As the tale goes on the cats become less violent, but they're still clinging to him like a second skin, purring deeply. It's getting hard to breathe, but he keeps talking. | |||
BARTLEBY | |||
But the poor man, over the agonizing days and nights that followed, realised that he could not get the strange lady out of his mind. He could not sleep. He could not concentrate. | |||
And so he vowed to find the lady, and put his mind at rest, no matter the cost. The witch would pay. He tooks his daddy's best axe, and his ma's best biscuits, and set out one morning, to the lady's lake. | |||
Now, the Lady of the lake was in the habit of getting up early, to wash in the dawnlight. | |||
He crept up, and saw her in the light, and realised that she was no woman. So, as was the custom in those lands, he asked her a riddle. | |||
BARTLE | |||
What is green, hangs on a door, and whistles? | |||
Now, can any of you lovelies guess what it was? | |||
''(strength+athletics=3 dice yields 0 successes)'' | |||
Bartleby tries to break free from his hungry captors while they ponder his riddle, but to no avail. He squirms under his living fur-coating, but they have their claws in him, and he cannot get away. | |||
CATS: | |||
(purring) | |||
Lies! | |||
Riddles! | |||
You, you are the answer! | |||
Tie you in thorns, nail you to the door! | |||
Whistle, wordweaver, whistle… | |||
(manip+persuation=6 dice yields 2 successes for making them solve the riddle) | |||
BARTLEBY | |||
Oh, but lovely little cats. A riddle is not fun if I tell you the answer! | |||
Where's the chase if the prey walks into your mouth? | |||
They step through the door, Finn first and Cynthia close behind, and... then stop. The door slams shut behind them. "Where's the chase if the prey walks into your mouth?" says a voice in front of them, as several shadows flee into the hedge of thorns that's rising high all around. The voice belongs to one of the people from the bar - that beggar who tells stories in the park. He's lying prone on the dirty ground, blood seeping from several tiny wounds. | |||
Bartleby Johansen gasps for air and lies there a moment, before struggling to his feet and cursing. | |||
Finn Kovlovsky grips the cane tight and steps back a moment. | |||
FINN | |||
The hell is this?! | |||
Bartleby Johansen spins round at the sound. | |||
BARTLEBY | |||
CATS! Watch out! They're probably still here! Keep a story in your pocket! | |||
Bartleby Johansen grips his stick and squints at the hedge with his one good eye. | |||
Cynthia Hawk takes one look around and wonders where they are, and why they are there. She then notices the man; he is wounded. Before she can think of it she walks towards the wounded man. | |||
CYNTHIA | |||
Does anything else hurt? Except the tiny wounds you have? | |||
Finn Kovlovsky scans the hedges and notices the woman walking toward the babbling man. | |||
FINN | |||
Hey, you crazy? Get back here lady! | |||
Bartleby Johansen takes a step back. | |||
BARTLE | |||
I most certainly am not, dwarf. | |||
BARTLE | |||
(noticing the woman hovering about him) | |||
No, just the cat-holes. | |||
Cynthia Hawk looks back at the dwarf. | |||
CYNTHIA | |||
I am a doctor! And this man is wounded. | |||
FINN | |||
You're also drunk! | |||
Whatcha gonna do, slap a band-aid on his face and stumble into the bushes? | |||
Finn Kovlovsky narrows his eyes | |||
Cynthia looks at the 'cat-holes'. They are small but they can still infect. | |||
CYNTHIA | |||
Oh, I’m not drunk; as you saw I walked in a straight line. Don't question my medicine schooling though. | |||
FINN | |||
(mumbles) | |||
Psh. Heard that before. Whatever - suit yourself. I'm gettin' outta this place. | |||
BARTLEBY | |||
I'll go to a hospital when I know where one is. Or where here is, for that matter. | |||
Pretty sure there wasn't so much... greenery when I walked in. | |||
The place, as it stands, is a rough path – barely wide enough for two and a half person, though it widens as it moves away from the door, through this thorny hedge-place. The door is still behind them, looking very much out of place. There’s no sign of the rest of the bar. The hedge itself is made of leaves and stems and buds of flowers… but there is also more thorns than in any other hedge, ever. | |||
CYNTHIA | |||
Why go to the hospital when you have a doctor here? | |||
CYNTHIA | |||
I heard that, dwarf! If we want to get out of here, staying together might be a better option. | |||
FINN | |||
Hey, why don't you both fuck off and stop callin' me that? | |||
BARTLEBY | |||
You are one. I’m not calling you giant. | |||
CYNTHIA | |||
Tell us your name, then? | |||
Finn tries the door to the strangely absent bar. It’s locked. | |||
BARTLEBY | |||
Now, where the hells are we? | |||
Bartleby pokes experimentally at the nearest bit of hedge with the Equaliser. The hedge doesn’t seem to care much… Though he thinks he heard a whispering and saw a shadow moving in there, but somewhat more to his down-side. Away from the door. | |||
Finn Kovlovsky scoffs and throws an arm into the air in visible disgust. | |||
FINN | |||
You two wanna stay here and play doctor, fine. I'm getting’… the fuck was that? | |||
BARTLEBY | |||
Probably talking cats. | |||
CYNTHIA | |||
Talking cats? I do believe it was a bigger shadow. Whatever it was, it went the other way, away from the door. I rather not go down that way. | |||
BARTLEBY | |||
Well, it’s the only way forwards. So I'm going to see what's going on. Shall we? | |||
FINN | |||
(rolling eyes and mumbling) | |||
Talkin' cats? And I thought I was messed up… | |||
FINN | |||
Look, whatever this is, it's not funny. Get us out of here before I call the cops. | |||
{{spoiler|Cynthia is having a feeling, without quite knowing why, of having been there before. Or, while maybe not quite that, she feels a… familiarity to the place.}} | |||
BARTLEBY | |||
You overestimate me. I'm as stuck as you are. Unless you think I can build a forest of thorns in a moment. | |||
BARTLEBY | |||
And if you can call the police, please do so. | |||
Also the fire brigade. | |||
And whatever else you're entitled to. | |||
CYNTHIA | |||
If you wish to call the cops, I still have my phone with me. | |||
Although I have a feeling, that they can't get here. | |||
'''''Frezak'': NO SHIT :p | |||
Finn walks over to the woman. | |||
FINN | |||
Call 'em. This is ridiculous. | |||
FINN | |||
I ain't gonna be part of some sick ...forest cult bullshit. | |||
BARTLE | |||
"Forest cult"? Why would you even say that? | |||
Cynthia Hawk looks around the place, it looks familiar in a way. Like something from a dream. How… strange. She shakes her head and looks to the dwarf. She then starts looking in her bag for her phone. Finding it she tries to activate it. But it falls dead. | |||
CYNTHIA | |||
(groaning) | |||
Great, the battery is dead. | |||
FINN | |||
(sighs) | |||
Of course it is. | |||
As Cynthia’s about to put the phone back, the display blinks. Buzzes. Then she receives a call. | |||
Cynthia Hawk looks with wide eyes towards her phone. It's dead, so how does it receive a call? | |||
CYNTHIA | |||
(thinks) | |||
I better take it, it might be someone that can get us out of here. | |||
She presses the green button (no iPhone for you) and puts it hesitantly to her ear. | |||
</screenplay> | |||
{{spoiler|class=screenplay| | |||
<screenplay> | |||
At first, she hears nothing. Then... a sort of windy sound, like someone breathing at the other end, but without the annoying buzz such a sound usually makes. And she swears she can smell salt water. | |||
And then a voice says, | |||
VOICE | |||
I'm so glad you've come back, my sweet. I thought you were abandoning me when you stole that body... But here you are! And you brought friends! But why stand around at the threshold? Aren't you going to come inside...? | |||
Cynthia has chills going over her back. She doesn’t know how to respond. With wide eyes she looks before her. What can she do now? | |||
</screenplay>}} | |||
<screenplay> | |||
The two men can barely hear a voice through the phone. Well, something like a voice. Maybe. They can’t make out the words, but suddenly there’s a sound from whence they came. A click. Like a lock turning. | |||
Bartleby dives for the door, opens it, and – stands face to face with… himself. The doorway is filled with a mirror. | |||
Bartleby slams the door shut. | |||
Cynthia Hawk turns her eyes towards the sound. Seeing the beggar almost run towards the door and opening it. | |||
FINN | |||
Hey! That was our way out! Why'd you close it?! | |||
CYNTHIA | |||
That was the door towards the bar. Why did you slam it shut? We could have gotten out of here! | |||
BARTLE | |||
I believe the term to describe our situation is 'batshit'. | |||
BARTLE | |||
Okay. You open the door and tell me whether you want to to touch a mysterious magic mirror. | |||
I think I’ll take my chances with the thorny path, thank you. | |||
FINN | |||
Whatever. Let’s go this way, then. | |||
Finn Kovlovsky points to the path that leads through the hedges. | |||
Cynthia Hawk raises an eyebrow towards the… little man. | |||
CYNTHIA | |||
You sure you want to head in further? | |||
FINN | |||
You got any better ideas? | |||
CYNTHIA | |||
(shaking her head) | |||
No not really. Wait what? What do you mean mirror? | |||
Cynthia heads in the opposite direction as the men take on the path ahead, and she, too, opens the door and sees the mirror. | |||
{{spoiler|But the reflection she sees is the same as from her dream. The stick-person. With the eyes of broken green glass.}} | |||
Cynthia raises an eyebrow to her reflection, holding back a scream, then slams the door closed and runs after the other two. | |||
The group walks down the path, soon coming to a bend. It keeps turning for what seems like a very long time. It feels like they’re going in circles, except they never cross any other paths. Sometimes, twigs grow out into the path and they have to duck under them or attempt to bend them away as they pass. Bartle is not the only one with tiny wounds as they walk on, and on, and on... | |||
And then, suddenly and without warning, the Hedge parts before them. And they’re standing on a small hill, on top of which stands a grand castle. Well, one might call it a castle. It is a structure of some kind. And it is huge. And it is made entirely out of broken glass and mirrors. | |||
BARTLE | |||
Well, shit. This is getting worse and worse. | |||
FINN | |||
You got that right... | |||
Finn Kovlovsky stares out toward the castle, eyes wide. | |||
Cynthia Hawk raises an eyebrow towards the castle-like structure. She is not liking this at all… | |||
CYNTHIA | |||
(nodding) | |||
This doesn't seem to get any better. | |||
The hedge gives way to a sort of garden around the castle, though the giant structure is definitely dominating the scene. The path stretches straight up to the castle, and to its left, beyond a bed of strange flowers, is an arbor, within which our heroes believe they might make out some moving shapes. | |||
BARTLE | |||
What do you two think? Front or back door? | |||
CYNTHIA | |||
Mhmm... Someone – or something – is obviously waiting for us inside; I say the back door. | |||
FINN | |||
(shrugging) | |||
Sure. | |||
We're pretty fucked either way. | |||
And so, keeping a weary eye on the shadows in the woods, they step off the path and into the garden. | |||
Soon, they’re surrounded by sweetly smelling flowers. They’re like blue-bells, but made of glass, making a lovely tinkling sound. | |||
Bartleby quickly stuffs his fingers in his ears, and his companions both follow suit. Bartleby takes the front while Finn brings up the read, looking around both in amazement, nervousness and insecurity. | |||
The group walks carefully through the field of flowers. Well, mostly carefully. Bartleby is managing to tread on one of them, causing it to break. | |||
A wail rises up, piercing through their attempt at shutting out the sounds, and the rest of the flowers start glowing ominously red... | |||
Finn immediately stops. | |||
Finn Kovlovsky looks around frantically. | |||
FINN | |||
The hell is goin' on?! | |||
CYNTHIA | |||
(glaring at Bartleby) | |||
What did you do?! | |||
She stops with walking and takes some steps back. | |||
BARTLE | |||
Hells. RUN. | |||
Now the red glow has spread to the whole field, and one of the shapes in the arbor has noticed. | |||
[GM: You decide yourselves which way to run. You could run up to the castle wall - that's closest (strangely, as you went off the path much closer to the hedge than the castle), down to the hedge (though it seems like a veritable wall of thorns from here), to the woods, or to the path - the path being about 3 times as far away as the woods.] | |||
Bartle runs towards the castle wall. | |||
''(stamina+athletics=4 dice yields 2 successes)'' | |||
Cynthia runs for the woods. | |||
''(stamina+athletics=2 dice yields 0 successes)'' | |||
Finn follows Cynthia. | |||
''(dex+athletics-1 leg=4 dice yields 0 successes)'' | |||
Finn and Cynthia dash for the woods, but can't make it in time before the flowers rise out of the ground! Their stems become long, green snakes, coiling towards them and raising up red-glowing flowerheads, tinkling maniacally. They have the two of them surrounded. Bartle manages to get out of the field in time, standing by the wall. | |||
Finn starts smacking snake flowers with his cane like an old man fighting off children wanting his old man toffees. | |||
''(str+weaponry+cane skill prof.=6 dice yields 1 success)'' | |||
Cynthia takes out her beloved gun, Bianca (a present from her father), and attempts shooting one of the snake-flowers. | |||
''(dex+firearms+gun bonus+bianca bonus-3 snake=4 dice yield 1 success)'' | |||
They both hit a snake, dashing their glass-heads to glassy bits and making them fall broken and lifeless to the ground. However, the other snakes are still coming, and get in some vicious bites, piercing knife-sharp petals into their flesh. | |||
''(Cynthia and Finn take 1 lethal dmg each.)'' | |||
They try to fight their way towards the woods. | |||
''(Same roll, with -1 snake poison, yields 1 success for Cynthia, 3 successes for Finn.)'' | |||
While aiming does seem harder, at least they're certain of what to aim for, and Cynthia shoots a snake right between the petals, with Finn cutting through three more of the tinkling heads. | |||
As they thin the ranks of the flowers and get closer to the forest, they see the figure again, though. It's bigger than it first seemed, but human. Probably. It seems to be... singing, or something? At least the flowers are far more calm the closer you come to the woods, and as the two get some room to breathe, they can also see that Bartle has been drawing away some of the attention. With flower-snakes snapping at their heels, they both flee out of the fray. | |||
''(weaponry+stick+stick specialty+str=6 dice yields 3 success, and Bartle killed 3 snakes from his safe spot by the wall)'' | |||
''(Cynthia and Finn take another 1 lethal dmg each in the flight.)'' | |||
</screenplay> | |||
== Part 3 == |
Latest revision as of 15:32, 6 October 2015
Part 1
In a world not very different from ours, the continent of Australia was never quite «conquered» by the Englishmen, but rather the Aborigines – The People – allowed them to settle there, as long as some rules were being kept. Traditions must be upheld. The Stories must be told.
The continent kept its old name: Anangu.
Today, the White Man is still the dominant on Anangu – probably because there were never that many of The People to begin with. They keep mostly to the Red Centre, the desert that dominates the western middle part of the continent. Meanwhile, the coast is littered with White Man's cities.
One of those cities is Cairns, a small and seemingly insignificant town by the north-east coast, at the bottom of the Cape York Peninsula and the top of the Great Barrier Reef. Its main attraction is a university of which the administration is quite proud, in connection with a decent, if not particularly big, hospital. Like everything on Anangu, culture is important to Cairns, and they host a popular library and a theatre. The latter can boast of good relations with the local Aborigines, which is never a bad thing.
There is more going on in Cairns than meets the eye, though, although you could probably say that about any place on the continent, if not in the world itself.
And some unlucky few are about to get a closer look at exactly what goes on beneath the surface...
Cynthia Hawk
There is nothing special about you. Okay, so you're a unique individual with your own quirks and specialties, but so are everybody else. There is no reason why you should be having these dreams. Or is there? You can't help but think that there is something frightfully familiar about them, like something from a half-forgotten dream... Well, ha ha. That's exactly what they are anyway, right? Dreams. Maybe it's just some sort of Deja Vu – people have those all the time. It doesn't have to mean that you've met HER before; that horrible, magnificent, alluring, terrifying, magical Lady of the Lake. Besides, that's exactly it. These are dreams about magic. There is nothing scientific about it whatsoever. It's stupid, really, and you've tried telling your mind as much with several concoctions, most of them of your own invention. Tonics against sleep. Tonics against dreams. Pills to drive you so far into the sleep cycle that dreams become out of the question, and remembering them even more impossible. There are pills for everything nowadays, and you know how to medicate yourself. And science always prevails, right? So you keep experimenting. Your mind is your own, and you'll find the ways to keep it like that.
Useless. Every night she rises like smoke from her glassy pond in your mind, and somehow - although you choose not to believe yourself - you know that it won't be long till she rises out of your dreams, and into everyone's nightmares...
Bartleby Johansen
There is nothing special about you. Okay, so you're a unique individual with your own quirks and specialties, but so are everybody else. There is no reason why you should be having these dreams. They've become an obsession, and probably not a particularly good one. If you had any relationships they would've been long gone, as all you can think about is HER. That wonderful creature of light and shadow, regal atop of her larger-than-life lynx. You don't even know her face. Maybe she's veiled, maybe you just forget it upon waking, but you have no idea what she looks like. And all the same she keeps following you around, as it were; even into the waking world. It was quite the shock when, in the middle of an elaborate tale, you found yourself describing everything you could remember about her to a total stranger, whom instead of gifting you with money gave you a look as if you were mad and hurried along. Are you going mad? It's difficult to say, but you certainly have been plagued by various symptoms. And by cats. Where have all those darn cats come from, anyway? Sometimes, it's almost like they're following you. Watching you. Some of them aren't exactly cats, either. But what can you do? Telling animal control that you're being stalked by a lynx isn't very likely to have a positive outcome, now, is it.
It wouldn't be so bad if only you knew what she looked like, though. And if your potential madness is going to chase away most customers anyway, you might as well just stick to chasing her through your dreams...
Finn Kovlovsky
There is nothing special about you. Okay, so you're a unique individual with your own quirks and specialties, but so are everybody else. There is no reason why you should be having these dreams. And to be honest, they're starting to scare you. That they've turned you into an insomniac, unable to sleep for more than a couple of hours each night, is one thing - but they've started seeping into your reality as well. Only three days ago you could swear that you were not alone when you looked into the mirror: Right behind your left shoulder, smiling teasingly, you could clearly see HER, the dreadful woman who stalks your every sleeping moment. When you turned to look she was gone, of course, but you know what you saw. After all, that gnarled face of thorns and bloodied roses is the only thing you've been painting for weeks, now. It's endlessly frustrating. No matter the motive, no matter the idea, no matter the careful intent – there she is. To begin with, you didn't even notice that subtle change in the face of the ever-present woman. But for each painting she's come closer. Grander. When she ate the boy was when you discovered that you couldn't stop painting, either; rather you've felt compelled to spend more and more time with the aquarelles. And now she's the only object left on the canvas. She's close; so very close.
But meanwhile, in your dreams, she's running away from you, her laughter teasing, and as fast as you run, you cannot catch her...
(wits+athletics=6 dice yield 0 successes)
The window, however, is just slightly too high up, small and foggy, and he doesn't manage to get anything worthwhile through it.Convergence
Part 2
(resolve+composure-2 circumstances=1 success)
Once he’s wrestled control of his own mind, he walks over to the woman that seems to have fallen over.
Cynthia is having a feeling, without quite knowing why, of having been there before. Or, while maybe not quite that, she feels a… familiarity to the place.
But the reflection she sees is the same as from her dream. The stick-person. With the eyes of broken green glass.