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Doors Verse ([info]doorsverse) wrote in [info]doorslogs,
@ 2013-10-18 21:51:00

Previous Entry  Add to memories!  Tell a Friend!  Next Entry
Entry tags:plot: halloween

Who: Everyone!
What: The Halloween plot
Where: Passages → The RMS Mauretania
Notes: This is a group log, so anything goes as far as adult content. Please provide locations and warnings, whenever appropriate, in subject lines. Characters may only be in one place at a time, not in multiple threads simultaneously, and you must post using the “doorsween” anon account. This post is anonymous; no names, accents, or defining fonts, please. Lastly, comment with "dibs" on threads you intend to hit, and feel free to exit your characters from threads at any time.



The Mauritania is a ghost ship.

Launched in 1938, it's been decades since she sailed the oceans, and yet the doors of Passages open onto the night-darkened deck of a ship that is barely afloat. She tilts, she lurches, and she is cobweb-lined from her deserted bridge to her silent deck. There is no land to be sighted from any railing, and no light save that from the stars overhead. The promenade winds around the upper level in ominous silence, and haunting music can be heard beyond the doors that lead into the ship's interior.

Promenade; Elevator: It's a curious thing, this ghost ship's elevator. Opulent and splendid, it takes up the entire center of the grand entrance, and it is meant to carry passengers down into the belly of the ship. But it doesn't work just right. Sometimes, the elevator drops impossible lengths. Sometimes, the elevator stops altogether for hours at a time. Yet somehow it's always empty and awaiting new passengers.

First Class; Baths: The upper-level, with its height and distance from the ocean, feels safe and bright. Classical music can be heard in these halls, though there is no orchestra and the ballroom is ominously dark. Laughter leads passengers to the one mostly-lit area in first class, where a swimming bath leads to smaller, more private Turkish bath. The lights here are quiet, flickering and barely there, and shadows dance elusively in the depths of the pool, while ghostly laughter can be heard in the private bath stalls.

Second Class; Theater: Down a level, the second-class floor is louder than the elite first-class floor. Here the air is thick with cigar smoke, and glasses can be heard clinking from the open doors to the smoking room. But it's the theater that draws passengers on this floor. It is cramped and entirely dark, save for the monochrome film on the screen, hauntingly devoid of sound, where a collection of terrifying collages and darkly sexual imagery fill the screen.

Third Class; Dining: Claustrophobic stairs lead down to the narrow passages of the cramped third-class rooms, where the air is heavy and thick, and where the lights flicker and cast the hall into windowless darkness. Here, the ghostly gears of the engine room can be heard sputtering dangerously, and the sensation of the ship's tilting is most pronounced. At the end of the hall, the dining area gives the illusion of windows where none exist. Chairs are pushed aside to allow for dancing to soulful and intimate music, while ocean water teases shoes and heels.



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Re: First Class: The Turkish Baths
[info]doorsween
2013-10-19 11:19 pm UTC (link)
If the princess was alarmed at being joined by a stranger in bare feet and leaves, she didn't show it. Instead, it was taken with an easy acceptance, the warmth of the water soothing over her bare legs. Reaching down, she began to wash her feet, fingers scrubbing at the dirt that had caked itself to her soles, glancing up with a soft smile. "Hello to you as well," she said softly, her voice a soft thing, lower than might have been expected. "And I do not know. But does it matter? Why question what we have been given. Embrace it, yes?" The soft smile grew with warmth and the princess leaned down to take one of the elf's feet in her own hands, fingers rubbing, soothing. "You don't mind, do you?"

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Re: First Class: The Turkish Baths
[info]doorsween
2013-10-19 11:37 pm UTC (link)
Usually she was too shy to be familiar with a stranger, in either facade, but instead she smiled back. The princess was soothing, she was soft, she was nothing as unnerving as the rest of this place with the sounds and shifting sanity. "I think it should matter," she said hesitantly. "But perhaps not. In here is better than out in the wind." She took in the human's face and appearance, and relaxed into the touch. She took one of the leaves tied into her hair and put it into the princess' own, since she was being kind. The laughter started again and her head lifted in that direction once more. "I wonder why they are merry."

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Re: First Class: The Turkish Baths
[info]doorsween
2013-10-19 11:49 pm UTC (link)
She ducked her head as the leaf was pressed into her hair, a nod of thanks as she sluiced the water from the elf's skin, ensuring that she was clean, before beginning on the other foot. There was something soothing in the act of washing another, and while it was nothing she would have done normally, in here, the norm didn't seem to matter. The chains of the world were gone, allowing her to be as she wished, and there was something good in that.

"What's in the wind?" she asked, looking up from the task at hand, her brows lifted in curiosity. "As for why they are merry..." She glanced back over her shoulder in the direction of the laughter that spilled out into their world, head canted to the side. "Why question why they are happy. They have their reasons, and their laughter is enjoyable."

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Re: First Class: The Turkish Baths
[info]doorsween
2013-10-20 12:06 am UTC (link)
The elf never let another person wash her before, yet it felt expected. Allowable. In fact it pleased her, enough that she would certainly offer to do the same for the princess afterward. It was only right. Her fears were leaving her, and she was glad for it, since water was an element unfamiliar to her. Perhaps she was a sister; a sister of the heart, not of the blood, and they all found connection in that way.

"Trouble. Danger. Sometimes when the wind shifts, the fates can go anywhere." She often felt like she could go any which way, and that was not specific to the elf only. Another part of her felt too, the shyness and the strangeness, alien and uncertain. The elf raised her eyebrows, the tattoos appearing to make a new shape with that simple expression shift, and then she laughed too. "Why question it indeed. If they are happy, why should we not be? You are very wise. Are you not afraid, being here, or are you a part of this place?"

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Re: First Class: The Turkish Baths
[info]doorsween
2013-10-20 04:02 pm UTC (link)
The princess gave a hum at the explanation that was offered, glancing up in time to see the shift of the tattoos, the way they made an expression just as easily as her face might. "I don't feel that there is anything here to be afraid of. If there are monsters in the shadows, let them come out. I have fallen far enough as it is, and monsters hold no fear for me." The real monsters, she knew, were the ones inside yourself, the darkness in the soul that ate away and destroyed the world around you.

Her expression darkened, brows knitting together, and then the princess was stepping up and out of the bath, offering a nearby soft towel for the elf to dry herself. "I hate to leave you so suddenly," she started, "But there's something that I must attend to. It slipped my mind, so I hope you'll accept my apologies." She gave a bow, not a curtsy, before scurrying away on bare feet.

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