Void Missions (
voidmissions) wrote2021-09-30 06:48 pm
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[M15] ENEMY: UNKNOWN - THE INTERVIEW
On opening their eyes, Voidtreckers will feel a sense of disorientation, a dizziness to their vision and inside their head. Both clear quickly, letting them remember where they came from: in the midst of a mission, some unknown entity jumping them, and then —
They stand in an empty room. The lighting of the room stings their eyes after how dark the rest of the station has been. The walls, ceiling and floor are all bright white, tiles. There is no visible door, no windows.
After the disorientation comes fear. The hairs on the back of their neck stand up. For those with danger sense, these senses are going haywire, even though any other abilities are still not working. The feeling can be pushed down, it is similar to the air of expectation at the start of a horror film, the anticipation of fear rather than being in a truly dangerous situation. It might be that they have been on the train long enough to have felt it before.
Heavy footsteps sound, it is almost impossible to tell where they are coming from as the echo through the empty space. The feeling of dread grows until part of the far wall slides open with a mechanical hiss.
Filling the doorway are two huge figures, around seven foot tall and bulky. They are in large metal suits, almost like power armour, black with highlights of gold. They wear a mask that covers their whole face. It is impossible to see the figure inside at all. Their breathing comes through heavy and raspy and when they walk their footsteps are heavy. The door closes behind them and their presence makes the room feel smaller. One of them scans a green light over the voidtrecker.
"Do not be alarmed. Under sections ninety six of Inter-dimensional law and on behalf of the Void Ministry we have intercepted Voidcraft designation Voidtrecker Express as part of ongoing investigations. You have been taking part in a simulated excercise to gauge your skill and strength. No harm shall come to you or your crew, you are protected by inter dimensional law. You have been chosen for questioning and we ask that you comply. You have the right to refuse our interview but we have the right to hold you until our investigation is complete or one week in standard void time has passed, whichever is longest. Complying with us will ensure our investigation is more efficient."
The inspector talking pauses here, as if giving the voidtrecker time to take in that information.
ENEMY: UNKNOWN
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He hadn't registered the screens yet, but with Tidus now pointing them out, he couldn't say he was impressed.
"So they abduct us out of their staged test to shove is into friendly interviews which, is that a word for questioning? Then afterwards, they stick us in a box where we can stare at everyone still forced to do the testing. Have I got that right?"
They're being turned into complicit voyeurs. Thanks, Yi and Er! Truly, this is gratitude! Being shoved into an even smaller box...
Don't mind the irritated flicks of his tail, he's just. Annoyed again.
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More baffled, and curious; about where it'll lead, what good - or bad - will come from it.
"Shoved from one box with a bunch more boxes - sounds like life in the Void, don't you think?"
He means it as a joke to lighten Jingyi's mood, but then adds, in case it doesn't work on its own. "You got anything to drink? Eat? I've got some snacks."
Here, let's think about chilling some, Jingyi pal.
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"Water would be nice." The current room doesn't look like it's equipped to provide more itself, so asking for tea, or a momentary wish for alcohol, doesn't make it past initial thoughts.
"I'm really tired of being abducted as a pawn in someone else's chess game. Can't tell if it's better or worse that both the train and these guys are the least deadly version I've dealt with."
So far. Maybe that would change! He sure hopes not, not when they're bound to the train. He's just not going to say that when it's something Tidus knows better than he does.
"Is there anything else to do? Obviously, the waiting, which they basically said wild take as long as they want it too, but... has there been more of us today? How many new interviews?"
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"Best you're going to get," he says as he offers the drink, but an open ear to Jingyi's already voiced complaints.
"About..." Uh. Tidus's brow scrunches close as he thinks. "A couple? There were ten people I showed up. Now there's..."
He waves a hand. "Well, I'm not really counting, but you'd think there'd be more people getting brought over if this is being treated a big deal, right? The room's too small for it, but wouldn't you want, say... half of us?"
At least?
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"I'd want more if I was trying to gather information on an incident. Even on Night Hunts we talk to more than a handful and a half of people."
He sips at the water, shifting to have his back to the nearest wall, looking at all of them in various stages of occupation or conversation. The energy isn't great, and not in any way more felt than usual in groups of people around each other; no one's celebrating, no one's outright depressed.
He blinks, and reaches into his robes to pull out papers. A whole stack of them that he'd shoved in after being handed them and heading for the door leading in here.
"I got forms?"
He looks down at them, then offers Tidus the chance to look at them.
"I'm fairly sure those two do not want to hear more complaints from me." Their as of yet not existing committee may change its mind once it has one.
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Tidus looks at them with a blink, blank, but he'll take them if Jingyi offers them, turning around to inspect. A place to put one's name, system designation, some other bits and bobs, and then rows of lines to put one's detailing.
"They wanted to know about the missions," Tidus remarks, as that explains anything about why Jingyi got forms than just 'didn't want to hear him go on'. "They asked me about them. Official people like that kind of stuff, right? Making paperwork about everything."
...if media left any impression on busybody businesses.
"They asked me about our situation with the train too, and they were interested about the Diagad mission." He nods as he remembers it. "Some guy grabbing people from all over the place and making a world - s'gotta be a bigger mess than the way the train does it."
Because saying it out loud sure did just make him think about the train there.
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With, by his measure, complaints, but no one seemed to particularly worry on that aspect of things.
"Mm, Diagad was part of their deal for me, too. They made it pretty clear they don't understand shit all when to comes to what the train's doing, or how, and can't promise they can do anything for any of us without time to study."
He doesn't sound particularly happy, but he sighs at the end of that take on part of his interview, reaching out his hands in case Tidus doesn't feel like being the first guy to fill out more information on the forms provided below.
"Also how I felt about the train, stuff like that. I'm fairly sure I annoyed the hell out of them."
A half quirk of his lips up at the corner, since he's not apologetic or proud about it, just somewhat factually reflecting. He'd said so much.
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"Y'sure you could tell? I couldn't tell anything." About what they were thinking, feeling. But even so, he does admit after a pause. "...But, I don't think they were bad. Making us worry about the people they're taking, putting up a scare like that?" His features grimace, to say 'Yeah, that part sucks' in place of actual words.
"But it sounded like they were listening," he goes on to actually say. "And they didn't ask anything bad, right? All things considered," and he folds his arms, "it's not my worse run-in with government types."
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"Mine either, considering other government types have tied me up without access to my powers intending for ward to fail and me and a group of others to die terribly under possessed people's hands. Is it better or worse that they weren't demons or imps, just people unlucky enough to be lost to their own bodies, and taken over by resentful energies? Sure made them powerful," he said, turning his head aside to stare down at the paperwork back in his hands.
"I don't know. I'm more worried about this committee that doesn't exist. I don't know if your government types were this way, but there's a history of the ones I know wanting to believe the easier concept is true, and not the difficult ones. They want a scapegoat. Big bulbous shapes in the sky are a hard one compared to a rogue train."
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He tried, for what it's worth, but the second part of is it better or worse? sure muddled his brain in that typical Jingyi world lore way. Luckily, it's not important right now, so he puts aside miserable stories of imps and demons.
"Sure... but wouldn't they need some proof? Wouldn't they swing the conversation into making us the bad guys?" Jingyi's scenario does hold too familiar a potential, that Tidus frown, folds his arms.
"I know it's the committee we got to hope has decent guys, but if these guys are here gathering info for them, I don't think they'd waste time asking us about how the train treats us, y'know?"
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Jingyi tucks the papers into his robes like some kind of terrible open secret, frowning himself. Not that he wasn't frowning before, he just frowned more, nose wrinkling a touch.
"When they're building a... what word do I want, a sort of... presenting of the train as being the one in the wrong, and the only thing in the wrong? Yeah, they should be asking. Yeah, they will take that as is useful to what they want to say."
His fingers twitched, and he made himself breathe in, relaxing the line of his shoulders when he breathes out.
"Do you have a saying like, a person talking so well that black is white, and white is black?"
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It's not the same, but being branded as traitors sure is.
"I get you," Tidus says, his own shoulders stiff, keeping like that even in the short breath he takes. "In that case, we were always screwed."
One way or another, by that scenario. He pauses, then shakes his head; slow to speak, but something set about his tone as the gaze that had flickered away turns back to Jingyi.
"It was always a risk. But now we can find out."
Decided, or simply resigned.
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Jingyi isn't stating it as any kind of Affirmative Statement; he sighs, rolling his shoulders and then rolling up to the balls of his feet, stretching.
"The whole thing gave me new worries, but whatever, not like being stuck in a room with everyone here is going to solve any of them or offer answers, so!" He flicks his fingers, dismissing whatever those worries are.
"What were you doing to distract yourself, anyway?"
Jingyi will just down his water in the meantime. One long, long drink of water.
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"You got music on this? Tunes still work." At the very least. "I got a couple magazines if you wanna waste time that way. Keeping us entertained wasn't on the checklist."
He gestures over to some the seats as he talks, to tell Jingyi where he's going, to get him to follow if he wants to. It's better than standing around, and he remembers his own interview - how often he considered just plopping down and talking that way. Better too for bringing out one of those mentioned magazines, such as one with the title over the top Deep Divers.
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His tail sweeps to one side when he sits on the chair attached to more chairs in some kind of chair-barrier, peering over at what magazine Tidus pulls out, brow furrowing.
"Deep Divers? What's it about? ... If you say diving, I'm smacking you with my tail."
The end of it, settled across his own feet, perks up and shivers briefly, like it might have rattled if only bells were attached to it at the moment. Warning, warning, all but prehensile tail weapon still online.
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...
He leans slightly toward Jingyi as he holds out the mahazine to Jingyi, explaining:
"...diving real deep..."
(He's got his other arm ready to thwap or block off incoming tails. Some of us have gotta.)
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Meaning said tail doesn't come up to deal any thwappage.
... It aims to thwap across Tidus's shins.
"You don't say."
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He kicks out his nearest leg in response, whether it makes contact or not. Some fluster, but plenty of fight.
"You were asking for it!" Yeah, yeah!!! But it's that argumentative defence that means nothing, fluff in the face of real offence. Also, if he doesn't get to knock Jingyi's tail, he's definitely knocking his side into his. "It's about a people who swim real deep! Read it, it's interesting!" In that 'surprisingly interesting for the subject' type of tone.
"I got it as a random book off the train once. The pictures are pretty!"
A lot of pictures of people, but also of their planet and images in the depths of their ocean. Tidus is making an impatient gesture for Jingyi to start flipping it to see for himself.
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"Okay, okay, show me the pretty pictures." Like Tidus needs to flip the pages for him, which he doesn't; Jingyi lets the magazine flop open in a hold that leaves it halfway between the both of them. If it also means Jingyi will use Tidus's shoulder as a prop for his own, well, that depends on Tidus leaning away so that Jingyi can ooze that direction unhelpfully instead.
"This is all about an ocean, right? I've never swum in one of those," he says, turning pages and skimming over words when they're there, but letting himself simply look at images otherwise. "Seen them from up high, but not swum in one. Unless that monastery place counts."
He knows the geography beyond the mainland, to the extent mapped at their present, the island nations that fall down the coast like lotuses blossoming out of nutrient rich silt in a riverbed.
no subject
It's rather comfortable, to have the friendly presence of two bros.
"I don't know what you file that place under." The monastery, the last of what Jingyi brings up, that weird water-not-water island....whatever. "They're great! I tell you I lived out over one? It's not easy to see in for some, but you can get eye wear if you need it. One of the exercises some blitzers like doing is diving in and seeing how deep you can get - the water gets heavier the farther in you go. Probably not safe though, in the real world."
The one outside his Zanarkand is what he means, not really said with any particular judgment on either side beyond safety.
"Watching the sun set over the ocean? The best. You ever seen it? I gotta get some pictures and show you!"
As if he can pull that out of his pocket, but he does sound earnest in the idea, invested. Sunsets and sunrises along the sea? Awesome!!
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He believes him, then, and takes what Tidus says without comment, because Tidus knows, where Jingyi does not. What he can comment on, with a softened snort, is simpler.
"The sun sets over the mountains for me. Even if I'm out on the coast, and I've never had the leisure to watch a sunset there. Sunrise would be over water. Haven't seen that either," he adds, where lakes and rivers aren't the same, and he's a mountain boy, born and raised, even when he'd lived in caves and encampments before it was safe to return to Gusu in his childhood. "But I know both over the mountains. It's beautiful, too... no one would have photographs of it. They don't exist in my world."
Not like this, the gloss page he's trailing a finger against, and it's unsettling in a way that has nothing to do with this world of oceanic diving, or Tidus's dream world or the world beyond it; it's the uncertainty that came with each asking after systems, with not knowing yet, with the we will try to get you access to knowing those numbers themselves.
He doesn't want to think on those things, far outside of his own hands.
"You can get pictures?"
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"Yeah!" Tidus's answer is easy, perky. "People take pictures of everything. You might be able to get pictures of your world too." He looks at Jingyi than at the book at that, though a gaze that drifts as he thinks about another few books. "There's these photobooks where people go around void not-active worlds? Inactive void worlds," he corrects dismissively. Whatever. Mouth garbage.
"I've got a few - even one of Spira. They might not have any where you live," he makes sure to clarify, to explain. "--But places around the world, it will. They're nice. Or you can get photobooks of other stuff."
no subject
"There are people who sneak around worlds that don't know there are countless universes out there, making pictures. They're spying on scenery."
Cataloguing, appreciating beauty, and perhaps missing everything he loves about his home and the ways it has regrown over the years, but it's funny, this thought that people could have been there, or are there now, making books to showcase how beautiful someone else's home is. Travelers, just passing through, not having to be connected to anything other than the moments of beauty they seek to illustrate for others.
"To share with a, what's the word... share with a universe, but not even the people of those worlds. It's funny, right?" Homesick making as a concept, but he's not sure if it's better or worse, seeing familiar landscapes, or ones that could almost be familiar. Not seeing the place he really wishes to see, or the faces, and the familiarity of horns and tails and people who all know how to be around each other without countless, necessary explanations.
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But then- "Funny too when they know when there's places in trouble, but you've got some worlds suffering for hundreds of years, but nothing told them to check it out?" The void is large, those travelling it are few, but who cares when Tidus wants to complain. Doing so, but willing to concede, "The book I got was before everything went to trash, but... man." Man. He eyes the book Jingyi holds, but his thoughts aren't on those images, but instead:
"How would people in your world react to a bunch of magazines with photos in them?"
There's a joking quality. What if?
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"Depends on who you showed. A miracle. A horrible enchanting curse. Something to study and try to replicate, or something to try and sell as an exotic good. That's just within the realms I know, if you cross the sea to the island chain there, they might find a way to turn magazines and photographs into assassination tools, you never know."
He taps his finger against the page he's turned to, depicting someone swimming down, the light above them fading into darker blues that don't quite get to blacks by the bottom of the frame. There's a sense of depth and drama to the shot, to the power behind the one diving down, to the loneliness and immensity of what they're doing, and a danger one doesn't need to be intimately familiar with to still understand.
"Inigo's world doesn't have a void vessel waiting to solve it's problems. You didn't have one either. So many worlds are set on destroying themselves, but the problems we get called to fix, they're still simple, aren't they? When you talk about them, or Inigo does, or any of my seniors, or Sizhui, that's how it feels. Yes, those worlds are in distress, and people will die, but people die all the time, worlds are in distress all the time. We effect any of it. How insane is that? How ridiculous?"
How egotistical, he also thinks, but he knows better than to assume he knows best. If that's a saving or damning grace of his, he hasn't quite figured out.
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