peacefullywreathed: (i'll say it to be proud)
Solomon Wreath ([personal profile] peacefullywreathed) wrote in [community profile] tushanshu_logs2014-05-13 05:49 pm

i'll say it to be proud

Characters: Solomon Wreath and OPEN
Date: Anywhere between 6 May to 14 May.
Location: Various locations around the city. Specifically, places where people have died--anyone from PCs to kedan. The only place I know specifically will be the fountain where Bakura was killed, but if anyone has other specific areas in mind, you may assume Sol has been there.
Situation: Solomon needs to practice his control of his magic, since his control item was broken before he entered the game. This means using hotspots where people died to help him out. People are welcome to interrupt him at any stage of his practice, though his manifesting the echoes of people who died is only something that will happen later in the week.
Warnings/Rating: Death and after-death. Skulduggery's thread contains graphic details of a death (specifically, drowning).

After his semi-healing, Solomon's first priority had been, overwhelmingly, to regain control of his magic. His conversation with Skulduggery had left him a few steps beyond unsettled, and even now he wasn't sure what to think. Added to their differing timelines was Pleasant's uncharacteristic certainty that the armour was related to Vile, and on top of that was the fact that he knew the Temple's most closely guarded secret.

In the end Solomon had been forced to come to a simple solution: regardless of Skulduggery's current beliefs and knowledge; regardless of the current situation on the turtle; there was one thing Solomon needed, and that was use of his magic. Focussing on that, with luck, would allow his subconscious thoughts to ponder the other issues.

Necromancers didn't strictly need control items to use their magic, but it was usually how they were first introduced to it and it had been quite a while since Solomon had bothered to use magic without his. It was something like using a muscle he hadn't for longer than was wise, so to give him an edge he sought out places in the city where death had occurred, or were close by similar locations. Fountains. Street-corners. Parks. Frankly, it wasn't all that difficult.

His exercises were a simple routine. He would sit, meditate upon the deathly energy in a place, and then gather the shadows to him. They'd cluster on the walls or ground or features around him; at first two-dimensional, and then three, wrapping around his wrists and shoulders, curling around his body like a flock of affectionate birds.

Once he could hold them to him for as long as he needed without losing control, he moved on to spreading them around him as he needed and wanted, and in various shapes. If there was music nearby, he would make the shadows dance to it, filling the air with twisting shapes and cloaks, fading in and out from nothing. Once upon a time he had used to do this purely out of boredom. There was something beautiful about it. Something mesmerising. Something calming, and comforting, to watch the shadows sing and know he was the one performing, manipulating the shadows deftly like puppeteer. He hadn't done it in such a long time and it took more effort than it had with his cane, but now, it was soothing.

Eventually he was even able to summon the shadows of those who'd died where he sat. They weren't ghosts, of course; they couldn't speak or even interact. Necromancers couldn't communicate with the dead unless it involved the deceased's physical body. They were just shadows, cast black like graphic puppets, defined enough to tell details of their features. He could have traced the manner of their last moments, if he wished, but for now, he was content to assure himself he could fight without his cane if he needed.
backinakidflash: (41)

[personal profile] backinakidflash 2014-05-15 11:43 pm (UTC)(link)
When his hand broke the form apart, Bart tipped backwards in surprise, backing up like a crab before pushing up and getting to his feet. He can't stop staring at where she - it - the shade had been.

Shade. There was a man in his universe who went by that name. What did he do again? Something with shadows. Oh. Bart eyed the man warily now, not being able to recall what Shade looked like. He'd always been too busy snickering over the top hat and opera cape to notice the face. But neither of them were in a costume, so he decided to sit on the idea for the time being.

"Borrow her death? 'Borrow.' For 'research.'" The skepticism pours out of his mouth like the Niagara River over the falls. He couldn't begin to figure out why someone would want with a death. It was over. It was somebody else's business. "You don't get to use somebody's death for. Whatever you're using it for. It's not a library book. It - it's private."

He doesn't know how to better explain how prying into someone's death, when that person was alive again, was rude. Intrusive. If that was how Hayley looked when she died, well, Bart didn't want to know. There wasn't a single point in life more open and vulnerable than the one where you lost it, and she could be awful touchy.

"You don't know that." He tried to blow the question off, but his poker face wasn't good enough to hide his apprehension. He wanted to find Hayley and make sure she was OK, but how could he leave when some random guy knew that he'd died? Had he mentioned it on the consoles? Maybe. Bart has said so much on the network that it's become too much to ever remember. He told his friend Kon about it; that's right. But that was under heavy encryption. It should've been safe. Did the old locked feeds unlock when the consoles crashed? He hadn't thought to check.

Of course, it could just be that this is Shade recognizing him. That's the simplest solution. "Who are you, anyway? You're new. Or a hermit. I've seen everybody ten times this week."
backinakidflash: (3)

Ignore the mask. Comic book problems.

[personal profile] backinakidflash 2014-05-17 04:23 am (UTC)(link)
"Bart Allen." The introduction was quick and clipped, like everything else he said. He didn't offer his hand, and bowing would never occur to him. It was a rote response, a name for a name, and a rushed one at that. Being polite wasn't nearly as important as correcting how egregiously wrong Wreath was.

"Witnessing it isn't owning it," Bart spat at him. He still didn't agree that death was public. Maybe it was, if you stayed dead, but neither he or Hayley had. It reverted to private when the person was around to be hurt or offended by it. "It's not making your creepy little puppet version of my girlfriend in an alley. And come up with a better story. I'm sure you're gonna tell me how you're cleansing the 'infection.'"

To him, it was worse for her being alive again. Hayley is here in the city, and she lives in this sector, too. It could have easily been her that wandered into the ritual-in-progress. "Are the will o' the wisps your deal, or is the latest one of Dumbass' stunts? Like the goo monsters."