𝘱𝘦𝘵𝘦𝘺, 𝙨𝙥𝙞𝙙𝙚𝙧-𝙢𝙖𝙣 (
webshoots) wrote in
networkinthenight2019-09-10 10:18 am
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Entry tags:
@parker — text.
I haven't met everyone, so for those of you I haven't met: hey, my name's Peter, wish circumstances were better etc, and I'm going to admit I don't really do this a lot, so you'll have to bear with me.
I know we've just had a meeting to discuss how we can be more prepared in the future and how we can try and limit repeats of the Lighthouse expedition and the party, but that was before Robin and the Doc shared with the class what they know about the World Eaters. New and old, we're all roughly on the same page as far as that's concerned.
Saying it'll be worth putting our heads together at some point to work out how we're going to deal with that threat is an understatement, but... It'll be worth it. Apparently the quickest way to send us all on a one-way trip to definitively not existing is by not working together, and I'll be honest and admit I'm pretty keen on avoiding that.
(That doesn't mean now, for the record, but we've got a time limit and this doesn't look like it's one of those situations where you can cram all night with a jugful of coffee and hope for the best at 8am, day off.)
(And while we're here, can we all agree that murder is bad? Yes? Great.)
I haven't had the (questionable) luck of coming across anyone from my version of Earth here, but we can basically sum it up with: stuff happens. Invading aliens, not-so-invading aliens, pod people, body snatchers, you name it, it's probably happened. I don't want to assume that's the case for everyone here, but I've spoken to enough of you that I feel pretty comfortable going out on a limb and saying that most of us have had experiences that kind of stretch the definition of 'normal'.
Which also means we've got enough experience between us all to make some kind of headway.
(That's the long way of saying "okay, so", by the way.)
There's been a lot of encouragement about exploring Beacon and pulling together whatever we find into something cohesive to be able to figure out a survival plan, and that's great but it's not without its risks.
In life, I had a tech company. At the moment, I've just got it on my tablet, but I've been messing around with something I came up with back home. Think of it like GPS, but with fewer (read: no) satellites.
Radius isn't unlimited and it's not totally foolproof, but if anyone's heading out into the forest and they've got any concerns or reservations about ending up separated from whoever they're with, or unable to find their way back to town, let me know.
I know we've just had a meeting to discuss how we can be more prepared in the future and how we can try and limit repeats of the Lighthouse expedition and the party, but that was before Robin and the Doc shared with the class what they know about the World Eaters. New and old, we're all roughly on the same page as far as that's concerned.
Saying it'll be worth putting our heads together at some point to work out how we're going to deal with that threat is an understatement, but... It'll be worth it. Apparently the quickest way to send us all on a one-way trip to definitively not existing is by not working together, and I'll be honest and admit I'm pretty keen on avoiding that.
(That doesn't mean now, for the record, but we've got a time limit and this doesn't look like it's one of those situations where you can cram all night with a jugful of coffee and hope for the best at 8am, day off.)
(And while we're here, can we all agree that murder is bad? Yes? Great.)
I haven't had the (questionable) luck of coming across anyone from my version of Earth here, but we can basically sum it up with: stuff happens. Invading aliens, not-so-invading aliens, pod people, body snatchers, you name it, it's probably happened. I don't want to assume that's the case for everyone here, but I've spoken to enough of you that I feel pretty comfortable going out on a limb and saying that most of us have had experiences that kind of stretch the definition of 'normal'.
Which also means we've got enough experience between us all to make some kind of headway.
(That's the long way of saying "okay, so", by the way.)
There's been a lot of encouragement about exploring Beacon and pulling together whatever we find into something cohesive to be able to figure out a survival plan, and that's great but it's not without its risks.
In life, I had a tech company. At the moment, I've just got it on my tablet, but I've been messing around with something I came up with back home. Think of it like GPS, but with fewer (read: no) satellites.
Radius isn't unlimited and it's not totally foolproof, but if anyone's heading out into the forest and they've got any concerns or reservations about ending up separated from whoever they're with, or unable to find their way back to town, let me know.
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I meant, one of the ones in the trees? I see them sometimes, when I get back to the cabin or when I'm headed somewhere?
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Oh, those ones. Sure, that's an idea.
Hey, unrelated q. but: how are YOU with tech?
[ it's related. ]
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I.
Can use an iPhone? And, I mean, I can fix pretty much anything, if that's what you're asking. But I'm not like good at tech in general? I'm more of an app user, because that's easier.
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And okay, right. So that filter you've put into place, on a scale of 1-10, how confident would you say you are in it?
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1/2
2/3 actually, soz
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But the other thing to note about the spirits: they're pretty protective of the lighthouse and by extension, the lighthouse keeper.
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Is it good ice cream? I haven't had any in. So long. I didn't really have time. Before I got here and the last one I did have was [served with the dying blood of an innocent and it was only a lick. Which was bad enough, thank you] not good.
Okay, so they're mostly out there maybe?
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The flavors can be a bit wild, but at the same time, if you've been to Williamsburg at all in the last 10 years... not so wild.
No, they're definitely everywhere, but that wasn't really what I was getting at. All I'm trying to say is: be careful. There's still a lot of unanswered questions about Beacon, about why we're here, how we're here. Even these tablets, all we really know about how they work is 'something something magic'. (I hate that, by the way).
[ like DO YOU WANT to say on the network on an encryption that you don't trust that you want to tag a (potentially violent) spirit with a tracker?? ]
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You hate magic? You're not like some sort of witch hunter, are you?
[No, he does not! And is very badly trying to invite Peter to the ice cream stand in town so they can talk in person! Quentin needs emojis.]
1/2 again I AM SORRY
You might have been...? Trust me, you'd know. There's this very specific ratio of edginess : overpriced coffee shops that like separates Williamsburg from the rest of Brooklyn.
It's in the village, by the way. The ice cream stand.
But ... witch hunter?
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I'm a scientist (or I was.) I just hate magic on principal.
(I mean... hate's a strong word. I don't like it.)
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In the village? Where, because right now I'm somewhere close to the disgusting pool that's close to the cabins.
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[ because haha if magic is involved he just goes knocking on doc strange's door. ]
It's by the entrance to the park. As soon as you see the glove balloons, you're there.
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[Since Peter does not seem to pick up on the hint to come! Quentin is just going to go and try to talk to the crab with the ice cream.]
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I don't know, he's doing his best with what he's got. The spirit of entrepreneurship has to be commended if nothing else.
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Maybe.
Also. Come have ice cream with me, Parker.
[This is his I-can't-even face. And it's just for you, Peter! God, asking for a date is easier than this.]
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("oh, right.") ]
Peter.
Parker's what my former boss calls me and trust me, you don't want that association. -- Not unless you too have a questionable moustache and a hatred of a fair wage.
Ten minutes?
[ fifteen. good timekeeping is also not in his wheelhouse. ]
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[The stand looks deserted in the faint light from his lantern and Quentin is about to just go stand somewhere else to wait for this Peter-not-Parker, when the tiny hatch opens and a crab pokes its head out. The surgical glove hat all perky on its little head and it waves a pincer at him and probably at the sign with flavors on it.
Putting his light all the way up to see, he picks the Coffee flavored one and waits while the crab goes about making him one in a slightly tilting cone.]
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logically, he knows he should conserve webfluid given they don't know when something like last month could happen again, but swinging to the village manages to be both faster and more relaxing than walking would be; and rastus (or robin — peter's not entirely sure on the details after her network post), apparently, is more than capable of getting his (or her) hands on the relevant ingredients.
a little past the river separating the square from the village, peter does opt to walk, breaking out into a slight jog once he sees the familiar boundary of the park and ice cream stand. there's only one other person there — 'suprnerd', peter assumes — and he's struck almost immediately by the thought that he didn't get his name.
(smooth.)
there's a momentary silence then, as peter holds his lantern up and the corners of his lips quirk upwards into a quick, almost apologetic smile. ] —I'm going to assume 'Super Nerd' isn't actually your name?
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The ice cream is all done away with by the time someone comes along. Peter looks-- older than he would have expected, but maybe that's just what New York does to you. Quentin tucks his hands in to his pockets and rolls his eyes.]
It's Quentin. Super nerd is-- [he shrugs] a thing? Hello.
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today, he opts for prickly pear, and his attention shifts back away from the ice cream and back to quentin when he answers — "super nerd is a thing" earns a short laugh, and he hums a noise of vague acknowledgement in between bites of ice cream before adding: ]
Please, when I taught high school, even my students called me a nerd. [ which, actually? was fine, it was just being called old that he took exception to. ] So if anything, you've got competition for the title. [ the reply's punctuated by a short pause, then— ] Look, I don't want to sound rude, but did you just want ice cream, or was this a— [ vague handwave. ] 'let's continue offline' kinda thing?
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Flushing just a little, he bristles and squares his shoulders before snapping back:]
You said the network wasn't safe. This isn't just-- I didn't ask you on a date or anything. It's, uhm, not? But I wanted to talk about the trackers you offered and, yes, that. Because this might be safer?
[Or at least they might be able to see anyone close enough to overhear them, when they're out here. It's not like this place is overrun with visitors and it's really just the two of them and the bobbing balloons on the ice cream stand. And whichever spirits might be lurking behind the treeline.]
No one knows where they go. Or why. Your tracker might help with some of those questions.
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he huffs a breath that's not quite a sigh, one shoulder lifting in a light shrug. ]
I don't know that it's not safe, but— [ peter drops his rucksack to the ground, squatting briefly to reach in and pull out his tablet. the edges are a little scuffed and dented, as if it's been jostled around (and quite possibly dropped) a few times over the last couple of months, but it works and as far as peter's concerned, that's the important thing.
he stands back up, holding the tablet out in front of himself. ] These shouldn't even work. [ punctuated by a breath of a pause (give him a moment, he's just going to have another bite of ice cream) and then he waves the hand with the tablet loosely. ] This world doesn't have satellites, there's nothing that resembles the internet, and they don't even need charging. That doesn't strike you as weird? [ beat. ] You mentioned magic, there's a— [ loose handwave ], kid by the name of Elden. He's a — healer, but he can also detect magic, I don't really get how that works, but I'm running with it, and apparently each and every one of these gives off a magical aura. I don't know what that means, but I do know I'm not about to run the risk of someone taking a comment of tracking the spirits the wrong way. When the spirits attacked last month, there was a sound — a foghorn — just before. Robin says she meant to stop the spirits, but all we've got is her word on that.
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5 years later i'm soooorry
NO worries!
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