Illarion Albireo (
unsheathedfromreality) wrote in
deercountry2022-04-13 09:49 pm
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Real & Half-Real: Chapter 1 - The Portal and the Plan
Who: The Committee to Rescue Illarion from His Very Stupid Mistake
What: Building a portal to bust into a pocket dimension and strategizing what to do once they get there. All extremely advisable science.
When: Early-mid April
Where: Throughout Trench, and in parts beyond it
It's been weeks since Illarion's disappearance in the fight against Leviathan, and scarcely fewer weeks since his Omen Iskierka began papering Trench with notes on his whereabouts. The shrike's friends and loved ones have not been idle during that time, and now their plans begin coming to fruition.
It's time to get him out of the nightmare he's trapped in--but first, they've got to break their way in, and they've got to have a plan.
[[ Part of the Real & Half-Real player plot! Navigate to other plot posts: [OOC] Interest Check | [IC] Prologue | [IC] Iskierka's Notes ]]
What: Building a portal to bust into a pocket dimension and strategizing what to do once they get there. All extremely advisable science.
When: Early-mid April
Where: Throughout Trench, and in parts beyond it
It's been weeks since Illarion's disappearance in the fight against Leviathan, and scarcely fewer weeks since his Omen Iskierka began papering Trench with notes on his whereabouts. The shrike's friends and loved ones have not been idle during that time, and now their plans begin coming to fruition.
It's time to get him out of the nightmare he's trapped in--but first, they've got to break their way in, and they've got to have a plan.
[[ Part of the Real & Half-Real player plot! Navigate to other plot posts: [OOC] Interest Check | [IC] Prologue | [IC] Iskierka's Notes ]]
no subject
"My concern is not so much for the conditions on our side of the portal, but for those who have journeyed through it," he says, after a pause that he has allowed to stretch overlong. Or perhaps he has not allowed long enough, and he is serving as a distraction to the man's work, which will cause him to make an error that will in turn doom the entire expedition.
Or something of that nature.
"If the worst should come to pass, and they are not able to return before the collapse..." He would clear his throat, if not for the necessity of holding still. "Would they be harmed, or merely stranded?"
no subject
"The collapse of the portal itself shouldn't cause any additional harm. Like I said, it's more of a brace than anything else."
He taps the extinguished torch against his palm, gaze gone distant with thought.
"My concern is that a premature collapse is likely to be a symptom of a greater problem - like instability within the dimension itself. If it collapses it's difficult to predict what might happen to those within it."
no subject
"Little good," he says, soft and dark as loam, "If it is at all like my experience of such a thing. Perhaps it will not be. The circumstances are not wholly alike, and I am no magician, nor a theorist of the art. I also allow for the possibility I worry overmuch. I am prone to the melancholic."
He glances away, towards the rest of the project and those working on it.
"All of this for the sake of one lost soul." Ortus muses. "It is a curious trait of humankind, our willingness to risk so much for the sake of a single person, one a stranger to most of us. Is it noble, or foolhardy? Do we answer such a question by the intent of the action, or by its outcome?"
no subject
But Ortus's musing hits closer to home than Ford is expecting. He's familiar with the concept of sacrificing a great deal of time, effort, and energy to rescue someone trapped on the other side of the portal, and well aware of the high cost such a mission can extract. Even knowing that the cost this time won't be nearly so high it's sobering to think about.
"I doubt you can call it one or the other when something like this is usually both."
Noble to make the sacrifice, and foolish to do so.
"The outcome that matters to those making the effort is whether or not he appreciates it."
no subject
But people here have often been surprising to him, to the extent that he finds himself increasingly less surprised. There is a level of tolerance extended to others that he supposes is a sensible local custom, considering.
"One would hope he does," Ortus agrees, mildly, "Though perhaps I show myself a hypocrite in thinking so. I was a laggard in my gratitude to those who sought to come to my aid when I was in peril."