pumpkinhollow (
pumpkinhollow) wrote in
ph_logs2025-03-29 08:17 pm
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MARCH SADNESS - A Symphony of Sorrow
SYMPHONY OF SORROW
If the Audience Would Please Take Their Seats
You find yourself at the theatre.
You may be asking how you got here, why you are here, when did you arrive. But none of that matters, does it? Nothing matters. Whether you are shocked at yourself for thinking so or whether you have known that nothing matters for years on end does not matter either. Whatever meaning there was to be had in any of this escapes you now. Who you were and what you wanted, what you valued and stood for, it all seems now like such a hazy dream. Out of reach.
There is a ticket in your hand. It tells you where to go. You follow it dutifully. Ticket stubs are exchanged for playbills. A schedule of performances. Whatever. You numbly proceed to where you belong. Performers and stage crew to their places, orchestra to the pit, workers to their positions. All with the knowledge that there can be only pain.
A four-armed conductor in moth-eaten robes raises his baton, and there is music.
You deserve this.
You deserve this.
You deserve this.
You may be asking how you got here, why you are here, when did you arrive. But none of that matters, does it? Nothing matters. Whether you are shocked at yourself for thinking so or whether you have known that nothing matters for years on end does not matter either. Whatever meaning there was to be had in any of this escapes you now. Who you were and what you wanted, what you valued and stood for, it all seems now like such a hazy dream. Out of reach.
There is a ticket in your hand. It tells you where to go. You follow it dutifully. Ticket stubs are exchanged for playbills. A schedule of performances. Whatever. You numbly proceed to where you belong. Performers and stage crew to their places, orchestra to the pit, workers to their positions. All with the knowledge that there can be only pain.
A four-armed conductor in moth-eaten robes raises his baton, and there is music.
You deserve this.
You deserve this.
You deserve this.
Observer’s Overture
First Movement in E Minor
adagio, con dolorePP
Lights down on the chorus, who sits in the stands. They are playing the role of the audience. Ad lib spoken word between chorus members seated near one another. Soft music begins to swell eerily.
Lights up on the stage. A performance begins, apparently in media res, where the chorus is meant to observe.
vacillante, improvvisato
cresc. P
The performers on stage play out their acts, appearing fearful. The chorus ad libs quiet uncertainty from the stands. Some of them will look down at their playbill and find their own name on the schedule of acts to come. There is a brief description on the page of the act that is scheduled for them. It is clear by the state of the ones already on stage that this isn’t something they have a choice in.
Chorus members attempt to rise from their seats, but cannot. Not yet. Foreshadowing to a later movement. For now, they must endure the overture.
Opera Infernale
Second Movement in Various Keys
( A medley of vignettes, performed in various styles)
chorale concerto a tutti, con affettoF
Various chorus members rise between songs and make their way to the green room, where they are costumed. They have some time to talk with other incoming acts. They will find themselves and their loved ones being prepared for their acts.
segue
Those who performed before stop in the green room again. They look drained. A fate which awaits the incoming acts.
segue
On the stage, each act is a musical recreation of trauma. A worst fear, a most painful moment, an act of cruelty, a time of hardship. The styles will vary accordingly. If the other players in a given tale are present, they will receive their role without question. If a cast member has no fellow performers from their own world present, an understudy will be chosen to play any other roles from those that they are close to. Everyone is off book. Vocal quality is adjusted to match the conductor’s standards. Staff ensures there are no interruptions. The show must go on.
CODA: Für Nimona
A Coda in A Minor
There is a stranger in the green room, unmoving. Pale glowing eyes peer out from an ungulate-shaped void perched atop a high end suit. Antlers leer overhead. He is waiting for someone. Staff take no notice of him. Ensemble's Lament
Third Movement in G Minor
bocca chiusaPPP
There are other places to be besides the stage. Other roles to play.
pesante
Behind the stage, the stage crew toil under Baritone, the stage manager and the Viscount of Suffering. There is a pipe organ built into the man’s chest, and the bell of a horn where his heart ought to be. It shows. He is as cruel as he is miserable. He runs a tight ship.
declamando, letando
There are others in the pit, if they have the musical skill for it. And while this part of the performance is managed by a kinder sort, the Contessa of False Comforts is not so named for no reason.
The opera is long. There are no intermissions. The orchestra plays until their lungs ache and their fingers bleed, while Sonata assures them that it will all be over soon. Surely she cannot be lying. Surely there must be an end…
freddo, pietoso
Just outside the auditorium, there is work for the chorus serving food and drinks, taking ticket stubs for the endless stream of audience members, cleaning messes, or all other manner of soulless work. Perhaps these ensemble members simply did not interest the Conductor. Or it could be that they were made more miserable elsewhere.
Reprise - Observer’s Overture
Fourth Movement in E Major
impetuosoFF It would seem that once a chorus member’s concerto is complete, they are free to move about the premises. At least until they are scheduled in a supporting role for another soloist. This means a chance to explore--- or escape.
presto repente, bellicoso
cresc.
Those attempting to escape will be met with resistance, however. Guarding the doors are shades, creations of the Conductor who can wear the faces of those held dear by those that look upon them. Escape, more likely, will come from within.
Members of the chorus who attempt to do battle with the Conductor, however, will find themselves up against something far more dangerous. Figures of glass, in all different shapes. Some abstract and solid, some hollow and human-like, and everywhere in between. Perhaps some chorus members will find one to be familiar.
The Hero will need an ensemble of her own to make it through and strike at the Conductor. Perhaps a resistance can be formed in a hidden location near the green room.
Homeward Aria
Fifth and Final Movement in C Major
tiempo di fanfara, vittoriosoF
When a dagger of Aster is driven into the heart of Prince Efrain of Sorrow’s Song, at last, the illusion fades. The members of the chorus relinquish their roles and find themselves on the summit of Crane’s Ridge.
It will be an arduous journey home, but it can be done with the solace that there is one less Demon Prince to trouble Pumpkin Hollow. Music in a joyful major key swells, then decrescendos.
enfatico, mancando poco a poco
| CONTENT WARNINGS: altered states of consciousness, entrapment, grief, depression, mood control, loss of bodily autonomy |

no subject
The lights drop all at once, darkness falling on the punchline of this whole horrid affair. Melanie feels it only in the lack of faint heat from the lamps, leaving her all of a sudden very, very cold.
It's over. There's a moment where it feels as if she's about to collapse, like the weight of the darkness at the end of all things is pressing her down in to the solid stage floor—until, instead, she storms off in what she hopes is the direction of the exit at stage left, shouldering past Jon and banging her hip sharply on the desk on her way.
Neither collision stops her.
no subject
Collision. He stumbles a bit, before panic starts to well. Against all better judgement, he follows.
"Melanie--- Melanie, I--- wait, I'm sorry---" He flounders his apologies, teetering on panic. "I didn't know--- I didn't want to do this, I---"
no subject
She's half a mind to throw something at him. Might even do it, if the idea of fumbling around to find something to throw at him wasn't humiliating in itself. Even then she stops to yank one of her ill-suited heels off her feet so she doesn't twist her ankle (always has been a trainers or boots kinda girl) and holds it up, as if she's going to—only to throw it at the floor and kick the other off somewhere. Who knows where. She doesn't care.
"O-Oh shut up! You think I don't know that?!" Actually, maybe she didn't. Maybe a part of her can never truly be sure, with Jonathan Sims, which things he wants to do and which things he's pushed into. Even here, where she can feel the strings pulling at her own limbs. "I don't need more of your— relentless fucking apologies, Jon, I—"
Or does she? Or— ugh, fuck, she doesn't fucking know. It's not the same as that first talk after the bullet but something about hearing him say I'm sorry even when it makes perfect sense for him to do so feels like nails on a chalkboard.
no subject
Instead, he swallows whatever words collide in his throat, doing what he can to manage the burning shame of being puppeted along for that. He's at least got to try to make right where he can, and if he can't, maybe it'd be best to leave her be.
"I'll--- try to find your cane. I doubt the demons would see fit to put it anywhere easy for you to find."
no subject
An empty, wet snort. "Yeah. W-Wouldn't put money on it."
She could tell him where to shove it. The raw and angry part of her—the part of her that still feels a phantom throbbing where the bullet used to be so stark that she can almost feel out the shape of the place it once sat beneath her skin—really wants to, wants to snap at him and rebuff even this reasonable offer of assistance. Throw it in his face. Grind him to dust under her feet until he doesn't dare speak to her at all.
But even now (maybe especially now) she knows that's not going to fix anything. It's not actually going to make her feel better. It was always just a plaster over a gaping wound.
(And she can already tell she's going to bruise from hitting the damn desk.)
"...f-fine. Fine. I have— no idea where the hell anything here is."
no subject
no subject
She breathes in, shoulders rising with it and falling heavily on the exhale. Steeling herself. "I-I can manage. With the directions."
There's only so many dings her pride can take. And she can't rule out instinct kicking in if he gets too close. Be a shame to hit him after deciding better of it.
It does suck, without her cane. Having to be careful about every placement of her feet so she doesn't end up tripping over the first step down is slow and frustrating and a little bit embarrassing, but she's stubborn enough to push through.
no subject
Clear, concise, Jon carefully guides her along, down those short stairs and, thankfully, to the room just to the right of it. There's a change in the sound, when their feet stop hitting wood and hit the dingy rug in the green room, but it gives Jon a good opportunity to find the cane, which had been leaned to the side, just in sight, but out of reach from someone who couldn't see it. Bastards.
"...I'm sorry this is the first time we've--- spoken. Really spoken," he corrects himself quickly, quietly. "I know neither of us have exactly tried to draw it out, but... I should have found the time, before it came to something like this. Things that fester like this, the demons seek them out intentionally."
no subject
"Of course they do. Fucking— bastards." Like the Fears all over again, only somehow more pointed. The architects themselves close enough to reach out and touch, not just their lackeys.
Having her cane back in her hand is a tangible relief. She's not sure she realised just how much it's become a part of her sense of security until now—it's never been out of her hand without her say so, since getting to town. Months into learning to live with a disability and there's still so much she's internalising.
"...if you'd pushed it too soon I'd probably have bitten your head off," she admits, because it's true. Stupid, in hindsight. Should've ripped off the damn bandaid, got it over with, instead of awkwardly acknowledging each other only as much as necessary with her swinging by the tea shop. "Should've known it'd come to some bullshit like this."
no subject
It's not so much fatalism as it is simple fact, really. If there's something you're avoiding, in places like this, with influences like these, they'll sink their hooks into it, and throw it directly into your face. It's inescapable. You can only do with it what you can, and try to make the best of a situation no one should find themselves in.
"Not sure if it's worth trying to find a way out of here," Jon admits, letting out a soft, short sigh, the frustration of futility tangled into it, while he takes a look around the room. "These tend to end on the demon's whims. Our best bet may be to find whoever we're able to on the fringes, and try to keep them out of the line of fire until an opportunity presents itself..."
no subject
"Sounds like as good a plan as we're going to get. Which is about as far to the opposite of reassuring as possible, for the record."
She just wants this to be over. After all this time, she's so tired of still being stuck in situation after situation where she can do nothing but rage uselessly against the boundaries of a nigh impenetrable cage.
"But if we're going to find people, it better be in literally any other room than this." She doesn't want to stand here and listen to the distress of everyone coming off the stage.
(The uncharitable part of her thinks that Jon just might. Free Fear, right?)
no subject
"Maybe, if we're in luck, we'll find others who have broken away already. I suppose all we can do for now is... hope, really."
wrap!
"Right. Because hope has always gotten us so far."
But there's no other option, and so with one big breath, Melanie moves to follow the sound of his footsteps. If her cane catches the back of his ankle a couple times as she catches up, well, that's just a hazard of walking ahead of her.
This will end. All things do. But in the meantime, she will keep hating it, because that's what she does.