paramnesiarules (
paramnesiarules) wrote in
ph_logs2024-09-03 04:14 pm
August/September top-level
Who: Helen Richardson (
paramnesiarules) & anyone else who wants to meet the new Spiral-touched weirdo~
What: First meetings galore!
When: Last week of August and first week of September, before Dahlia's big birthday bash
Where: Anywhere there are people!
Warning(s): Discussion of madness, trauma, and depersonalization.
The Oak & Iron
On her first morning in this strange new world, Helen embarrassed herself terribly.
She'd been quite pleased with how she was holding it together -- sure, her memories of speaking with Mayor Poe were a bit fuzzy, and it took her a few minutes to remember where she was when she woke up in her room in the inn...but she'd stayed calm. Cool. Professional. She's gotten out of bed, washed her face, combed out her hair -- even taken a moment to admire the old timey charm of the secondhand clothes she'd been given, like something out of a period drama. She'd gone downstairs. She'd ordered breakfast -- just something simple, bacon and eggs and a slice of toast. She'd sat down and waited for it to come to her -- and that was when everything fell apart.
It was the smells that did her in. And the sounds. And the...colors. Her egg, when her plate was set down in front of her, was a rich inviting yellow, nearly orange. The bacon was red-brown with white streaks of fat, and smelled warmly of cooked pork and grease. At the table behind her, two people were talking quietly about a party that was supposed to happen in a few weeks. The wood grain of her own table was smooth and warm under her hands. Everything was soft and...somehow gentle. There were no hard corners or harsh smells, no eye-searing artificial colors. Everything was natural and gentle, homey even though it was just an inn. Like it had been designed to make people relax and feel safe -- and it probably had been.
It was too much. Helen tried to hold it back, tried to stop it -- but she failed. With no other recourse she covered her face with her hands as, as quietly as she could, she began to cry.
Greymare Library
The scratching of her pencil is awkwardly loud in the quiet room. Helen cringes and tries to draw more quietly, but she doesn't stop. She's almost done, and once her map of the island is finished -- maybe she'll feel better? Maybe she'll feel <i>safer</i>, once she knows where everything is and where it's supposed to be. Once she can be sure that she'll <i>notice</i>, if anything changes...
She draws a final line and puts her pencil down with a sigh. One last thing, and then her little project should be complete. She's not sure which of the people wandering the stacks are patrons and which are employees are the library, so she simply corners the first person she sees and asks them plainly, "Excuse me. Do you work here?"
Temple of Seasons
The local church is small and quaint, and seems to exert a pull on Helen that fills her with a quiet, trembling fear. The doors are thick and heavy, and seem to almost whisper to her, promising safety and tranquility, but -- she can't bring herself to touch the handle. She sits on the front steps instead, arms wrapped tightly around herself, and tries to pretend that she's just taking a break. Just a little rest, that's all. Nothing out of the ordinary.
Tawny Beach
The beach is crowded, but it bothers her less when she can look out on the open ocean. It stretches out to the horizon, a flat, blue plain broken with the white caps of cresting waves. Like a badly-installed carpet beginning to bunch and pull up from the floor, she thinks, and the thought is amusing rather than nauseating. In all other respects it is completely unlike an interior hallway -- and if her eyes should start to leak again, it's easily blamed on the salt air. Now if only she could shake this ridiculous and cliche conviction that people are staring at her, everything would be...just. Perfect.
What: First meetings galore!
When: Last week of August and first week of September, before Dahlia's big birthday bash
Where: Anywhere there are people!
Warning(s): Discussion of madness, trauma, and depersonalization.
The Oak & Iron
On her first morning in this strange new world, Helen embarrassed herself terribly.
She'd been quite pleased with how she was holding it together -- sure, her memories of speaking with Mayor Poe were a bit fuzzy, and it took her a few minutes to remember where she was when she woke up in her room in the inn...but she'd stayed calm. Cool. Professional. She's gotten out of bed, washed her face, combed out her hair -- even taken a moment to admire the old timey charm of the secondhand clothes she'd been given, like something out of a period drama. She'd gone downstairs. She'd ordered breakfast -- just something simple, bacon and eggs and a slice of toast. She'd sat down and waited for it to come to her -- and that was when everything fell apart.
It was the smells that did her in. And the sounds. And the...colors. Her egg, when her plate was set down in front of her, was a rich inviting yellow, nearly orange. The bacon was red-brown with white streaks of fat, and smelled warmly of cooked pork and grease. At the table behind her, two people were talking quietly about a party that was supposed to happen in a few weeks. The wood grain of her own table was smooth and warm under her hands. Everything was soft and...somehow gentle. There were no hard corners or harsh smells, no eye-searing artificial colors. Everything was natural and gentle, homey even though it was just an inn. Like it had been designed to make people relax and feel safe -- and it probably had been.
It was too much. Helen tried to hold it back, tried to stop it -- but she failed. With no other recourse she covered her face with her hands as, as quietly as she could, she began to cry.
Greymare Library
The scratching of her pencil is awkwardly loud in the quiet room. Helen cringes and tries to draw more quietly, but she doesn't stop. She's almost done, and once her map of the island is finished -- maybe she'll feel better? Maybe she'll feel <i>safer</i>, once she knows where everything is and where it's supposed to be. Once she can be sure that she'll <i>notice</i>, if anything changes...
She draws a final line and puts her pencil down with a sigh. One last thing, and then her little project should be complete. She's not sure which of the people wandering the stacks are patrons and which are employees are the library, so she simply corners the first person she sees and asks them plainly, "Excuse me. Do you work here?"
Temple of Seasons
The local church is small and quaint, and seems to exert a pull on Helen that fills her with a quiet, trembling fear. The doors are thick and heavy, and seem to almost whisper to her, promising safety and tranquility, but -- she can't bring herself to touch the handle. She sits on the front steps instead, arms wrapped tightly around herself, and tries to pretend that she's just taking a break. Just a little rest, that's all. Nothing out of the ordinary.
Tawny Beach
The beach is crowded, but it bothers her less when she can look out on the open ocean. It stretches out to the horizon, a flat, blue plain broken with the white caps of cresting waves. Like a badly-installed carpet beginning to bunch and pull up from the floor, she thinks, and the thought is amusing rather than nauseating. In all other respects it is completely unlike an interior hallway -- and if her eyes should start to leak again, it's easily blamed on the salt air. Now if only she could shake this ridiculous and cliche conviction that people are staring at her, everything would be...just. Perfect.

The Temple of Seasons
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Suddenly, there's a thud of hurried footfalls on the wooden planks.
"Why, I'd recognize those curls anywhere! Helen! Helen, my lass!" It's a dapper-looking bearded gentleman who's calling to her, somehow dressed to the nines in commoner's clothes.
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She's never seen this man before in her life, she's quite sure of that. Somehow she feels like she knows him anyway, and that. Terrifies her.
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"Hey, this is super embarrassing," There's that laugh again, brittle and fake like something out of an American film, "But I am completely blanking on your name, I'm so sorry." It's a win-win situation: if he re-introduces himself then maybe she'll be able to remember him, and if he gets offended then maybe she can get away...
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"You're not here to take me back, are you?" she asks, her hands curling into fists. She tried running once before and it worked, but not for long. Maybe it's time to give fighting a chance, if only she weren't so terrified. "Please don't. Please, I don't want to die like that." Again...
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“You… oh, I see. Or rather, I don’t. You’re new, aren’t you? Not even got your wings yet, you’ve only just sloughed off your own skin. Helen, dear… I’m not about to drag you anywhere you don’t want to go.”
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"Sorry, I'm...I'm kind of going through it, this week." Month. However long it's been. "Um. What do you mean, I've just sloughed my skin off?" She glances down at her own hand, as if there's any chance it might have detached itself while she wasn't looking. After the things she's seen and...and felt, it almost feels like a real possibility.
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His voice is so gentle now, like he's trying to explain something incredibly profound to a child. Which, in a cosmic sense, he is.
"The Helen I knew before- perhaps she from another world, or perhaps she was a dream- was already a butterfly formed. Confident, powerful, delightfully awash in the absurd and impossible. Perhaps you will become her. Perhaps you won't."
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"I've always tried to be respectable, to be grounded. Sure I liked to cut loose now and then, but who doesn't? But I always thought that if I just kept my nose to the grindstone and chatted up the right people, I'd come out on top. And it was working," she suddenly says viciously, voice sharp and pointed with bitterness. "My life wasn't perfect, but it was my life, one I'd built all on my own, and it all made sense! Everything worked the way it was supposed to, until that, that man with his corridors showed up in my life. He ruined it! He ruined everything, and he..." She grimaces, struggling with the urge to cry. "He ruined me...I'm still alive, but nothing makes sense anymore..."
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"So, uh..." Come on Helen, you're supposed to be good at idle chatter. Just think of him as a banker you're trying to make nice with so you can upsell him later. "What do you...do, Mr. Sheogorath? When you're not trapped in hellish cruise dimensions or taking strangers out for ice cream, I mean?"
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"I'm afraid I don't have an artistic or...surgical background," she says slowly, "But if you're looking to fill some sort of customer service position, I do have eight years realty experience with Wolverton Kendrick and my sales patter is pretty good, if I might say so myself." Pay no attention to the fact that she nearly had an emotional meltdown right in front of him less than ten minutes ago.
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His grin widens a little.
"That bit of the interview can easily be done over ice cream, I think!"
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"Why put in a partition?" she asks. "I can understand wanting to protect client privacy, but it just seems like you've made more work for yourself, cutting the shop in half like this."
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She waves at the walls. "Some of the stuff you've got pinned up is pretty grotesque, but in a...safe way? If that doesn't sound too insulting. I can look at it or I can look away, it won't hurt me. Some of it is even rather compelling."
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wrap?
Sure thing!