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TEST DRIVE MEME #2

1. this hotel room got a lot of stuff
[you wake up.
it doesn't matter where you were before. going to bed? dying? opening the door to face a great evil? same result. you wake up in a soft bed with starched sheets in a cool, darkened room, sunlight peeking out from behind thick curtains. maybe you're alone; maybe you aren't. maybe you immediately notice the folded paper on the bedside table near your head. if you don't, you better fix that real quick: you won't be able to even open the door before you read it.
the note itself is written in a neat hand on white card stock; there is a stylized logo of a ship with the words SERENA ETERNA printed underneath. the note reads as follows:
Dear Passenger(s),
As your cruise director, it is my great honor to welcome you aboard the Serena Eterna, your destination for fun and adventure! We know you could have chosen any cruise line for your vacation, and we're very grateful you chose ours! On behalf of the Captain, I would like to assure each and every passenger that will we do whatever it takes to fulfill all your needs and desires during your journey with us.
At your earliest possible convenience, please attend the mandatory lifeboat drill by the end of the day. I'm sure everyone is very eager to get started on all the fun and sun, but safety always comes first! You can find your life jacket in your cabin's closet; carry it to your assigned muster station on deck one, where I will take you through the drill. If you can't find me in the crowd, just look for the gal with the winning smile!
See You Real Soon!
Sincerely,
Gal Friday
you walk to deck one. you have no other choice: every time you try to step in a direction some unseen being considers "not towards deck one," you find your legs no longer move, staying stock still, frozen. whether compelled quickly by curiosity, or delayed by pure stubbornness, the result is the same, and you are left milling around with other similarly curious or stubborn people.
you see someone in uniform near the front of the crowd. she seems to be a gal, but is missing the winning smile, along with most of her other features. she seems to see you, though, rushing to your side and placing a lei around your neck with great formality. a voice, cheery but artificial, sees to come from nowhere and everywhere.]
Welcome aboard! We're so glad to have you!
[you touch the lei. rooster feathers, lotus seeds, and a carved circle of something white and hard, linked onto a silk string.
after the drill is completed, you are seemingly free to go. or, well, your legs work, now. and maybe that's as good as it's gonna get.]
2. and a touch-tone phone
[chatterbox isn't exactly the most popular venue onboard. it probably has something to do with the distinct lack of open liquor bottles. so, nothing personal. except it seems that it's decided to take it that way, suddenly.
anyone enjoying the other amenities of deck five will feel the distinct sensation of being watched while they do so. the kind of feeling a prey animal gets while being stalked on the grasslands. something may slither by their foot, or past their elbow while they rest it on the bar, but nothing appears to be there when they look.
until there is.
a black electrical cord originating from somewhere will, first, wrap around their ankle, tugging in a very clear "follow" instruction. should this instruction be ignored, a second cord will wrap around their other ankle, and, once again, tug. should this clear final warning be ignored... well, now they're being dragged down the promenade, and that's really their own fault, isn't it. don't struggle. struggling means more cords show up. and none of them seem terribly aware that most species need to expand their lungs to live.
their final destination, no matter the journey, is chatterbox's main stage, where the karaoke machine awaits. the cords place a microphone in their hand; the mic's cords bind it tightly to their hand.
they don't have to pick a song. there isn't an actual gun to their head, in any literal sense. it's just, those cords really don't seem that interested in letting go until they do.
and if you were heading to chatterbox anyway? welcome to the weirdest goddamn karaoke night you've ever seen.]
3. and a bucket of ice (cw: cannibalism mention)
[no longer will scoops be bound by the shackles of only having 31 flavors. for this month, and this month only, a sign that very much looks like Friday hand-wrote it announces, they will have 32!
what is that mysterious 32nd flavor? it depends, really: the letters on the display case seem to shift and change with each new pair of eyes that fall upon them, with the contents changing along with it. someone from the capital wasteland might find some Nuka-Cola ™ branded ice cream. twilight town residents will be thrilled to find sea salt on the menu. and a frankly concerning amount of people bring out a flavor that only describes itself as "long pig." it's a weird off-white color. don't think about it too hard.]
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Did he grab a handle of vodka and a huge bottle of off brand Midori? Yes. Does he twist off the cap on said melon liquer, take a swig, sputter, and then decide to just finish it or pass out trying? Also yes.
His next drink is a bit deeper than he ought to take in front of a teenager...or a bartender, for that matter, but once he's a good few chugs in he feels like he can face this absolute bat shit shift in reality.
"Okay--" said hoarsely, he gestures very vaguely with big motions with his free, non Midori holding hand. "Yes that's his face, it just gets...extra mooney around Blackbeard."
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"Alright, anything else I should know about him? I haven't been on the crew for long, and he's kind of hard to read."
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"Repeat that for me, please. You're on the crew?" It's not said with any sort of derision. She's certainly not the youngest person he's ever seen press-ganged but, this, Stede Bonnet is, oh dear.
Nope, he still needs another swig and he sighs as he takes one.
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"Yeah, there was a sign up and everything. I'm in it for the sword fighting, mostly."
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"Of course you are," he agrees and clucks his tongue. He's being careful, conversational even. This is possibly the least judgmental and bitchy he's been so far. "And you've met many pirates before joining the crew?"
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Which would make his involvement with Blackbeard weird; Blackbeard was amazing enough that he persisted through history, whereas she'd never heard of Stede back home.
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"Now...don't get me wrong. I'm loyal to the Captain," he says and makes a sort of wishy-washy gesture with his free hand. The other hand is occupied with fingering the neck of the Midori bottle anxiously. "It's just...Piracy is really a career path for the desperate and the insane. Captain Bonnet is...an anomaly."
He can feel the alcohol kicking in the longer he stares at her. Since his capacity for delicacy is about to go out the window anyway he decides to help it along.
"He's fucking weird," Lucius just comes out with it.
"You saved me from the wires so, it's only fair to warn you. He's a terrible pirate, just godawful. He's a perfectly fine fellow, very nice in a silly...bumbling uncle kind of way. He's trustworthy, loyal, very friendly, and kind. He does his best to please everyone and is extremely understanding. None of these things are qualities you want in a pirate, especially in a pirate Captain."
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"Yeah," she says, notably more muted and dour than she had been, "I thought he was kind of a marshmallow when I saw him. I figured it was weird too."
As if she'd ever admit she was childish enough to go along with it. She was a dead girl on a ship full of people waiting around to die, in various states of denial about it. It wouldn't matter if Stede had been the best pirate captain in the world. There could be no freedom here. Only the responsibility she had to them all to work this out and fix things. It was a silly digression to begin with.
"I'm going to get myself a juice," she said, standing up from the table, wishing that it didn't sound as childish as it did, and she wasn't so young as she was.
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"Listen, I'm sorry," he starts and it is sincere even if he doesn't sound entirely...unsarcastic. "I didn't mean to ruin the...mystique...but Captain Bonnet is not a normal situation. It's worth it to...know what you're getting in to when you join a really bizarre crew.
"If you are in it for the swordplay, God knows we could use you," he adds and leans on the bar, propping his chin on his fist and his elbow on a tap. "But it's...riskier than just being a normal pirate--fuck am I saying? Wait no, that's accurate.
"In two months he's been run through by two separate blokes and boarded by two different navies. He burned a French aristocrat's barge down after inciting a riot, played at being a ghost ship to mess with Swedish merchants, and pretended to be a lighthouse to escape the Spanish and that somehow worked??? He also ran us aground, lost two hostages, was captured by islanders, and killed an English naval officer in like...the span of a day."
Is he still talking or just thinking?
"What I'm saying is: it is a lot. Even for me. I was a pirate before I met him, yeah? And then there's the whole Blackbeard thing--and now we're in...not Hell--it's so much."
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Lucius doesn't have the storytelling ability of Stede. And the proximity to him telling her that Stede was the pirate equivalent of a golden retriever who couldn't pirate a movie makes the references to stories she's never heard fall even flatter. Whether it's lying to save her feelings or the truth delivered in an unconvincing way, it matters little. Darcy has entered the pit, and she doesn't intend on getting out of it soon.
"You don't need to make me feel better. You said he was a shit captain. So either you're lying now, or you were lying then."
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He pushes himself back upright and sloshes his bottle idly as he gestures back at the table. Neither of them are sitting there but that's not the point. This is...not an ideal time to disagree with her, given the absolute boatload of liquor trickling into his veins, but he already did his good deed, thank you very much.
Warning teenagers away from lives of piracy puts him firmly in the 'good guy' position, regardless of how meanly said teenager deals with it.
"The lack of nuance inherent in criminal enterprise which limits what traits are viable for survival? Or just me for pointing them out?" Lucius asks.
"OoooOoooor," he singsongs, holding that syllable long enough to sit fully upright. "Is it the fact that you wanted to be an actual real life pirate and do swordy murdering when you're not bold enough to drink trash liquor when nobody's looking? Is that the one thats got you all mopey?"
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"ThE lAcK oF nUaNcE-" she repeats in a mocking tone, "fuck you. Don't talk down to me, I knew he wasn't going to be a very good captain, I'm mad at you because you tried to walk it back and tell me 'ohhh he's actually cool, he's been stabbed, he pretended to be a lighthouse, ohh I actually said he was the worst pirate ever just because he's so weird and it's so dangerous'."
She leans over the bar, her dark eyes glassy as a shark.
"If I touch that bottle, that faceless bitch is going to appear over my fucking shoulder to tell me off. I can drink back home. I just don't. You don't know anything about me. And it's bold fucking words coming from a man who was scared of a karaoke machine."
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Going from not drunk enough to talk about this to far too drunk to talk about this is just unlucky.
"I'm sorry, which...part of 'the Captain is going to get us all murdered by assorted navies and summarily hung' sounded like an endorsement?"
He blinks and takes a deep breath through his nose.
"Was it the descriptions of him being a lunatic? Is that the...cool and appealing part?" He gestures with his free hand, honestly baffled. The waspish argument has been entirely forgotten in the wake of this realization.
"Oh god, your from the weird, flashy light future right? Is Stede Bonnet's madness cool? That can't--please tell me that mad people aren't a selling point here? God--lie to me, please, if that's the case. I can't process being in Hell with my boss and also having him be cool now."
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"Of course not," the death of her meagre social life back home after her involuntary internment was evidence enough of that.
"Just- fuck you, okay? Fuck you, fuck Stede, fuck all of this pirate bullshit. What kind of idiot stays with a Captain if he thinks he's going to get killed for dumb reasons? It's all dumb. I dont even like pirates."
Yeah, take THAT Lucius, pirates are uncool now.
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"Good--that's the spirit," he lifts the bottle in salute and sways back on the stool. "What were we--oh yes, Pirates are idiots and don't take shit from anybody. Good talk."
Nevermind that the person she's currently taking shit from his him. It's possible he'd understand her utterly different material conditions if he were both sober, and realized she's contemporary with the technology here. It's unlikely, of course, but possible. As is, he feels both like he's done a good turn for an ailing vagrant and like he's had a pissy spat with a friend.
Both are true, somewhat.
"This green stuff is--" Lucius points at the bottle blearily. "--much stronger than I expected."
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She uses one of her orange juice bottles as a buffer to nudge the midori away from him, and gets him a glass of water that she dunks in front of him, trying to muster any sort of authority.
"Because it's meant to be mixed. Drink this before your fucking liver fails and I need to drag your sorry ass to the morgue."
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Gone forever, then.
He suffers the water but goes in on it a bit harder than he should and sways as he does it. He dumps it on himself and scowls but, really, it's just as well. He smelled awful.
"Okay, maybe another? That was practice."
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"Stede might be a shit pirate but at least he has manners," she gives him a scowl as she proceeds to get him another glass of water anyway. Next time she's getting him a sippy cup from the kid's zone.
"Do you have a cabin key yet? You should probably lie down."
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He ponders a bit and then seems to remember something. When he fishes into his pocket he pulls out both the smart phone they've been given and a key on a numbered keychain. Apparently he lives at 117, wherever that is. He promptly drops both on the counter in front of her, heedless of the fact that one is a delicate piece of technology.
"Got these?"
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"Alright, c'mon," she hops over the bar in a flagrant attempt to show off, again, offering her shoulder for him to hold onto.
"Your legs still work?"
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Lucius stares at her and, if he did not have both his hands back on that glass of water, he would have reached for the Midori again. After a pause he frowns.
"I'm not up and walking to the door am I?"
He huffs and then, with a groan, pushes himself off that stool and up to standing. Now that he's up, he's rather exceptional at keeping his balance. This ship rocks far less than most of the ones he's used to being on. He doesn't really need her shoulder, but he does sort of drape himself against her because he is a drunk. And, despite her telling him to go fuck himself repeatedly, he's grown fond.
"Lead the way!"
He's taking this glass.
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Thankfully he was mostly carrying his own weight. She knew she could carry a person, jogging around the room with one of her teammates on her back was one of the warmups her coaches made her do, but it was a lot further to that part of the ship than it was once around the room, and he seemed heavier than a teenage girl.
She's also not bothering to take the glass off him.
Darcy handles the modern aspects for him on the way, managing the elevator and letting him know that he's not going to die in it. They arrive at his cabin not too long after, and she opens the door for him.
"C'mon, in you go-"
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That is, unless, you spot the five-foot-something skeleton dressed in a suit, looking around like he's trying to figure out if he's been mugged. Well, maybe you can't tell, since he is literally a skeleton and thereby has no face to emote with.
Up until now, he's only had to contend with a mysterious, never-seen cabinmate. When the door opens, Skulduggery turns, fully expecting to have to do the whole "please don't scream, I'm a friendly skeleton" shtick...
But then he sees Darcy and forgets he's supposed to be a calm, peaceful ambassador for the walking dead. He throws out his hands and, with all the energy of a dad seeing his kid on a long weekend, exclaims, "Darcy! Who's your friend?"
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Which is ideal because normally his reaction would be to faint dead away and somehow, this is actually less inconvenient than that.
He hasn't actually walked in the room yet, which is lucky and just means the hallway will have to be tidied, but he does spill his water. Again. And that is truly disheartening. Once he's thrown up a really impressive amount of lime green liquid, he rights himself, woozily, and turns to face the Skeleton.
Yeah.
This might as well happen.
"Sorry--it's been a long--however long it has been since I got here," he says as he stumbles in and into the bathroom briefly. "Lucius Spriggs, pleased to meet you--" he calls from inside as he uses the tap to refill the glass in his hands.
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She can't even really be happy to see Skulduggery in this state, and some part of her is worried he'll see something is wrong and ask her about it. So she dusts off the shoulder she helped him here on, and says- "I should go, I only brought him back here so he didn't pass out in the club."
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Their magical ability is to survive indefinitely in rowboats on the open ocean. V Specific.
not to mention fantastic comedic timing
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Drunken encouragement feat. Lucius Spriggs
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