Entry tags:
event } that was easy
WHO: All y’all who feel like playin’.
WHAT: MARKER TAG
WHERE: On Navi.
WHEN: Jan. 17-31
WARNINGS: Use ‘em in your threads if needed! And if you end up getting a marker punched through your skull, please report it on the death page.
Something weird is afoot.
Everywhere you look, you’ll find piles of markers, all shapes and sizes and colors. And without explanation, you may find yourself overcome with a deeply competitive impulse to win. Win what? Why, a classic game of marker tag, of course. Why is this happening? Who cares! If affected, the only thing you’ll care about is marking your target.
This "game" will be played out in one-hour increments. For that hour, one person will be the target, and the rest of the ship's affected passengers will have an innate sense of who their target is. Anyone not "it" will chase the target character with the aim of placing a mark on them. Once a target has been marked by another character, the impulse to chase will fade, until the next target is selected at the start of the next hour. Target characters will remain targets until the end of their hour or until they have been marked by all participating characters. After that hour, the game starts all over again with a new target.
Sure hope those marks wash off in the shower!
WHAT: MARKER TAG
WHERE: On Navi.
WHEN: Jan. 17-31
WARNINGS: Use ‘em in your threads if needed! And if you end up getting a marker punched through your skull, please report it on the death page.
Something weird is afoot.
Everywhere you look, you’ll find piles of markers, all shapes and sizes and colors. And without explanation, you may find yourself overcome with a deeply competitive impulse to win. Win what? Why, a classic game of marker tag, of course. Why is this happening? Who cares! If affected, the only thing you’ll care about is marking your target.
This "game" will be played out in one-hour increments. For that hour, one person will be the target, and the rest of the ship's affected passengers will have an innate sense of who their target is. Anyone not "it" will chase the target character with the aim of placing a mark on them. Once a target has been marked by another character, the impulse to chase will fade, until the next target is selected at the start of the next hour. Target characters will remain targets until the end of their hour or until they have been marked by all participating characters. After that hour, the game starts all over again with a new target.
Sure hope those marks wash off in the shower!

prose partyyy
"My apologies. I hadn't intended to startle you." Truth be told he hadn't been expecting to run into anyone so soon, either, with as quiet as it is in the cabin area. It's hard to see from a distance what it was the young woman had been writing on the door, but he pays that little enough mind as he approaches, stiffly kneeling down to collect the dropped marker and return it to her-
Only to pause, as he stands again, pale eyes studying the odd little mask she wears, and for a long, uncomfortable moment, it seems almost too akin to those hanging from his belt for comfort. But the too bright eyes behind the mask are kinder than any Ascian's, and her outfit so unlike their own; it takes a moment to collect himself again with that realization in mind, and his voice perhaps a bit warmer for it.
"I'm going to assume that you're a passenger rather than crew."
no subject
Something about this meeting leaves her slightly off kilter; uncertain. There is a sense of familiarity so heavy that it is near suffocating.
"I— Are you injured?" Azem pauses briefly, taking a breath and quickly continuing: "Nevermind. That was— Even the blind could see you are... The better question is: would you permit me to heal the worst of your wounds?"
no subject
"They've been tended to." Sort of, at least. Severa had certainly done her best in tending to them, though she was no trained chirurgeon. And perhaps he should have had the Alliance's people look them over after, but he'd be hard-pressed to say that he's willing to trust them with his own well being, even now.
But the young woman's concern is palpable. And that sliver of guilt tugs again, more insistent, when he realizes how curt the words sounded.
His expression softens, and with a soft sigh he shakes his head, reaching out to gently take one of her hands, so he may press her marker carefully back in it.
"I do appreciate the offer, of course, but you needn't waste any resources on me. They'll heal, with a little time and rest, miss...?"
no subject
Touch is still something she is acclimating to (prior to her awakening it had been years since she last experienced it so casually—mere weeks cannot make up for that), and so his taking of her hand causes her to tense. A fraction of a momen later has Azem let out a small breath and relax, accepting the marker with a quiet murmur of thanks.
The boy-man speaks again and his words earn himself a scoff.
"'Waste any resources'," she echoes, almost in disbelief at how ridiculous a statement she just heard. "What resources? Because I assure you I have more than enough aether, and would hardly consider you a waste of it."
no subject
Oh, he's very aware she's only humoring him. Has the self-awareness to know that were he to come across someone in a similar state to himself, even, he would likely feel the same as the young woman.
Any other time, he might even continue to stubbornly press on with his refusal. But Gaius aches, in more ways than one, and carrying his daughter's limp form from the castrum only aggravated injuries both old and new. It's the only reason that he's willing to relent so easily; hard to be of much use around a ship when even walking down a hallway near exhausts him.
It's nothing at all to do with the way that the woman's unimpressed look leaves him feeling oddly chastised, even with half of her face hidden behind her mask.
"But if you so insist, I suppose it could do no harm to have them looked at again. It's only the leg that gives me issue, however."
no subject
Upon learning that it his leg that bothers him, she promptly sets about conjuring up a seat for him. Before she can finish the first flourish of her hand, however, she thinks better of it. Moving away from Hades' door, Azem gestures for her unexpected charge to follow her to her own quarters instead.
"Has your leg suffered an impact, a puncture, or a slicing wound?" She asks, absentmindedly waving him toward the plush armchair in the far corner of her room. There is another matching chair across from it, and a coffee table between them with intricate, geometric golden patterns inlayed upon the glossy surface.
The room is cozy, warm, and welcoming. A large direwolf pelt cloak is draped across the bed. A tall, wide set of shelves takes up half of one wall, neatly organized with potted herbs, colourful bits of sea glass, shells, and amorphous clay figures. The other half is brightened by numerous drawings, clearly done by the clumsy, eager hands (or fins, or tentacles) of children.
There is an illusion cast over her window, showing a view of her home from better days instead of the inky black void of space. Azem is careful to ignore it as she takes her own seat.
"I may not have studied medicine at Anyder, but that does not mean I lack in ability... Provided you aren't about to expire my healing should be ample enough to set you to rights." A quick glow of magic has the coffee table altered to better suit propping a leg up comfortably. "I would have been a very poor Traveler had I been incapable of tending to wounds."
no subject
But follow he does. She hasn't yet given any reason to not trust her, after all, and if she can truly help him to get the pain and the limp back under control...
It is, when he enters, far more cozy than his own cabin. Warm and lived in, it's almost enough to put him at ease the second he crosses the threshold, and he's careful to avoid touching or bumping anything as he follows after the young woman, pale eyes looking over the room. And he'd be quicker to take a seat in the comfortable looking chair that she motions to, if not for what catches his attention out of the corner of his eye, then.
Because he remembers looking out the window of his own cabin, shortly after he woke up. He remembers too well right now the inky black void beyond the glass, cold and empty save for the scattered points of distant stars, and the weight that had settled in his gut at the sight of it. The view out the woman's window is nothing like that, though the land below is an unfamiliar one, and Gaius pauses, brow furrowing lightly as he stares out at the shining city.
He's so distracted, in fact, that he doesn't even hear her when she continues speaking, let alone notices the changes made to her table. And it's another long moment before her words seem to catch up to him, though he's unable to tear his gaze away as he answers.
"Impact, mostly. There is a gash, but it's not what hinders me right now and should heal well enough on its own." Should. Hopefully would, though Severa had assured him so, as long as he didn't further aggravate the wound.
Easier said than done, as it turns out. When Gaius is finally able to turn his attention back to the strange young woman helping him, he studies her for some seconds before he gingerly moves over to the offered seat, sitting slowly as he hums, thoughtful.
"I'm...unfamiliar with this Anyder, however. Where are you from?"
Because it certainly isn't from anywhere in Garlemald or Eorzea, at least as far as he's aware.
no subject
"Akadaemia Anyder. The foremost university of my people, located in the heart of the capitol," she explains, doing her utmost to keep her voice free from the weight of her mourning. "My home was Amaurot."
Azem doesn't dare attempt any healing magicks while her emotions are so tumultuous. Allowing her guest time to feel comfortable before proceeding seems like it may be of benefit to the both of them.
no subject
Nothing more dramatic than simply turning fully to her, his gaze questioning as he studies those eerily bright eyes peering out from beneath the woman's mask. She doesn't look out of sorts, though. Not at all, her demeanor still pleasant and welcoming as it was when she first ushered him inside. Perhaps from anyone else, the phrasing would have been worth nothing of note. But there's a weight to that was, however slight, that doesn't escape Gaius' notice.
A familiar weight, that he feels all too keenly himself these past days, seeming heavier with each passing day.
Maybe that's why it seems to stick out, when she speaks. Maybe he's simply reading too much into it, a tired old man finding sorrow in everything he sees and hears. But his expression softens, the frown fading from his features as he listens.
"Amaurot." He turns the name over in his head, but... No. It's not a place he's familiar with, on any of the three continents he's traveled nor on those he's only studied. And again, he turns his attention to the young woman's window, where the bright light of that gleaming city still filters into the room in place of the empty dark of the void.
"And I don't suppose that it looks anything like the impressive view below, does it?"
no subject
"No," she manages, eyes downcast and focused on her fidgeting fingers. "But it had looked like that not so long ago..."
A snap of her fingers and the scene changes; sky going dark and grey, shrouding the sunlight like a mourning veil. The city is no longer bright and filled with life—the once beautiful architecture is gutted, with large pieces missing from the outer walls, the metal skeletons of what were once homes and offices are agonizingly twisted and exposed to open air.
There is no more greenery or any other manner of foliage. The corpses of malformed creatures litter the streets, though the bodies of what are undeniably robed people outnumber them by far—many of them so small that they could only be children, huddled together in fear during their final moments.
All is eerily calm and still in the aftermath of Amaurot's final days.
"I prefer remembering it as a home, not a mass grave."
Another snap shifts the illusion to overlook a crisp, clear ocean from a lush, volcanic shoreline. Perfectly unremarkable, and infinitely preferable to the void.
"...If you rest your leg on the table I can give a cursory examination, then create a suitable treatment."
no subject
And the sight that greets him now...
Whatever it was that had overtaken the once bright city in nothing short of horrific, and Gaius feels his breath catch in his throat to see the broken shells of what were once proud spires and buildings. To see the smokey haze that covered the ruined streets, darkening the sky above, and the bodies...
Something twists in his chest, so horribly tight, at the small forms found among the bodies of man and monster alike, and his grip tightens on the armrests of his seat as if he makes to stand again. The image is gone again all too soon after, however, all of the horror and death and destruction replaced by a foreign coastline, serene and picturesque...but he knows the sight of the broken, twisted ruins will remain burned into his mind. As will the profound sadness that follows, a strange sense of longing for something lost.
For his own home, perhaps. For his family, that he'll never get to see again.
It's some moments before he realizes that the young woman is still speaking. Speaking to him, specifically, again gently reminding him of why he's there in her cabin in the first place, and Gaius has to blink away the heat gathering at the corners of his eyes before he can turn his gaze back to her, letting out a slow breath before he very slowly, very carefully, reaches down to pull his leg up on the table between them.
"I'm sorry." And though his voice is low, he means it. Genuinely so. He's seen too much needless destruction himself to not understand the grief the woman must be going through, and he has to take another breath. "To lose your home..."
He can't even begin to imagine how that must feel.
"It looked a beautiful city."
no subject
"A city can be rebuilt," she explains. "My home was with what was left of my people."
The quarter of them that were left after Zodiark's last meal, and lesser still after Hydaelyn's summoning.
Azem shakes her head again, though this time it is to shake errant thoughts loose from her mind, allowing her to focus instead on the injured leg before her. When she reaches out her hand it is with a delicate, fleeting touch that radiates golden warmth as it analyzes his leg, informing her of the extent of its damage. Her lips thin, eyes narrowing behind her mask.
"This is no minor wound." Her tone is a blend of accusation, sadness, and disappointment. "What makes you believe you deserve this pain?"
no subject
Not that he's given much chance to dwell on the fact. Though the grief is evident, both in the woman's voice and her smile, she wastes no time in examining him once his leg is propped upon the table. The painful stretch of the torn muscle beneath his wound causes him to grit his teeth, though he makes no other noise or indication of his discomfort as she reaches for him. After all, it's far from the worst injury he's ever had, now. Not the worst pain he's felt, not by far.
And the warmth that follows comes as little surprise. She did say she was a healer, and he's no stranger to such magic. The warmth brings with it some relief, however fleeting the feeling is, and he lets out a soft sigh when she pulls away, only to raise a brow at the chastisement.
"For the things I've allowed to happen, I dare say I deserve more than just this," he murmurs, the bitter words less to the young woman than himself. But he shakes his head, raises a bandaged hand in an attempt to placate her before he continues. "It would have been my companion if I hadn't stepped in to save her, and it is a small price to pay to keep another young life from being cut too short."
no subject
Healing may not be her specialty, but she has a keen grasp of anatomy and was unrivaled in her ability to shapechange—all of which serves to give her an unorthodox efficacy to her curative arts.
"A noble act," she can admit that much. "But what of your life?"
no subject
Bitter, broken, and a hollow shell of the man he once was, but he's here and alive, despite everything. And surely that counts for something.
Gaius keeps as still as he's able when the young woman finally begins to work, that same warmth rolling through him once again, though it's...different, he thinks, than the magic used by conjurers. Rather than simply soothing over the pain of the injury, he can feel flesh and bone knitting back together, and while the sensation is faintly nauseating, it's also entirely painless. And again, his pale eyes flick up to study her, turning these abilities over in his mind.
"I'm not attempting to needlessly throw my life away, if that's what you're implying." Though the tone of that statement says he's well aware that there's no if. It may have been true once, perhaps; the bloody trail of vengeance he tore across Eorzea and Othard both seem a lifetime ago now, before he was pulled violently back to his senses by the family he nearly left behind.
The family that he left. That he still failed. His chest tightens again, with a different pain, and it takes a shuddered breath to keep his voice even as he continues.
"And while I won't apologize for taking the risk that I did, I am...not ungrateful, for the aid. If there's a way to repay you, I would like to."
no subject
In those final months of Hydaelyn and Zodiark's battle she had watched far too many of her people choose to stop fighting to survive. Some out of tiredness, some out of hopelessness, and others out of guilt. It hurt her like nothing else, until that day—
Azem shakes her head, then rises from her seat to gather some things from her shelf to make him an ointment. Small bits of various herbs and a pinch of gold dust, all placed into a small glass jar that barely fits in the palm of her smaller form.
In theory she could simply create it with aether alone, but medicines are more effective when the key ingredients are grown. Herbs for medicinal effect, gold for aetherial conductivity...
"You allowed me to aid you. That is repayment enough," she answers. "I'm making a salve that will help with whatever else ails your flesh. Consider it a 'thank you' for making me feel useful."
She weaves together the rest of the ointment using aether of radiant gold, blending the raw ingredients with magic and creation, infusing it with restorative properties. She finishes it off with one final flourish of her wrist and ignores the way her strained soul begins to writhe in pain.
It takes her two steps until the table is within reach. Azem is quick to kneel down and place the ointment carefully upon it, but unfortunately finds herself unable to rise to her feet again. Unwilling to cause the man any undue concern, she simply acts as though this was her intended course of action; keeps her fingers clenched firmly against the leg of the table, obscuring the way they shake. Her mask is a blessing for how it hides the way cold sweat begins beading upon her brow.
"It's— It should relieve aches and pains, and stimulate natural recovery."
no subject
"I may yet have more reason to make you feel useful in the future, then, if we're to be trapped here for long," he says, with a soft hum of approval. After all, it can't hurt to be friendly with an accomplished healer. Especially for one who can't manipulate his own aether.
And while he doubts all of the damage can be so simply soothed away, the aid will at least give him the chance to be useful himself, and not the burden he has been so often as of late.
His attention is pulled back to the present when he hears the soft click of the jar being placed on the table, and the woman... She doesn't collapse, no. It's not a messy fall, but she kneels far too quickly for comfort, and her white-knuckled grip on the table is a difficult thing to miss. More difficult to ignore in its familiarity, and with a frown, Gaius moves the jar of ointment to the side as he leaves his seat to carefully kneel down beside her, taking her free hand in his own as if to help her up.
That he can feel the clammy chill of her skin, even through the bandages, appears to make his decision for him, then. And he sighs, pale eyes looking down at her apologetically.
"Forgive me for this, but-"
There's not much more warning than that. Though his movements are still somewhat stiff, he gathers the young woman into his arms with a surprising gentleness, carefully picking her up off the floor and standing again with a softly murmured "up you come, little one." She's not much larger than Allie. And without the table to obscure it, he can see the faint way her hand shakes as he holds her, and wonders for a moment if her skin is supposed to be as pale as it is now, or if her mask has simply been hiding it this entire time.
But he says nothing of it as he looks around, and crosses the room to the bed, laying her carefully on the direwolf pelt spread across it.
no subject
Azem has an inkling of what he's planning, but even if she had realized it sooner there was nothing she could do to prevent it, regardless.
"What? Ah—"
Being carried like this is strange. She doesn't know what to make of it, though admittedly it is difficult to think with how her head spins and her soul rebels. She swallows down a pained sound, a small hiss of air pushing between clenched teeth making itself known instead.
Somehow, despite everything, something about this rings familiar, and it's only once she has wrapped herself in the warmth and scent of her first purchase that Hemera's mind offers a groggy explanation. She rolls over to stare up at him; freckles standing out starkly against her pale skin.
"...Your name is Gaius?"
no subject
And that should have been the end of that. He had every intention of leaving, after thanking her and bidding her to rest. The promise to return later and check in on her is there on the tip of his tongue as he turns back to her-
But that question.
That question stops him, pale eyes widening as he looks down at the young woman. And there's a long moment before he can answer, hesitating before he speaks.
"...yes. Yes, I'm Gaius Baelsar."
Where did that come from...? He's quite sure he doesn't know the woman; he would remember someone so striking, he thinks, because such a mask would stick out in any number of the places he's been to, over the years. But there's a spark of recognition in the woman's eyes, the suddenness of which brings that soft frown back to his features, and he pauses again before he continues, a wary edge to his tone.
"And I'm...sorry, but I do not believe we've met before. Have we?"
no subject
"I remember..." Eyes still closed, Hemera draws her arms to her chest, as if cradling a child. "Holding your beautiful children... They were sleeping so peacefully, but you feared letting them from your sight."
no subject
The memories come unbidden, of a time when they were all younger. Innocent, eager, still small enough to carry with ease. Of Milisandia, taking his hand and looking up at him with that bright smile of hers, slowly coming out of her shell.
He has to look away. Steps back...and sits, rather gracelessly, on the edge of the table instead, before his knees give out in a way that has nothing to do with the pain of his injuries. And it's some long, heavy moments before he can push the welling grief back long enough to form a response, his voice softer as he speaks.
"How do you know my children?"
her soul is a dumbass srry gaius
She had meant to do something, hadn't she? There was something she needed to do. Someone who needed her.
That thought is enough to force her into motion, struggling to push herself up with shaking arms.
A child of her people was in need of her.
HEM NO
It's as if his memory lost a moment, in the overwhelming surge of emotions he struggled to hold at bay. She's on the ground, wheezing as if the breath had been knocked out of her, and it takes too long for Gaius to register the sight and act, as she struggles to push herself back up. He's beside her in half a heartbeat, kneeling at her side and gently helping her to sit up, his grip on her arm and her back firm but warm as he keeps her steady, and it's a wonder he's able to keep his voice even when he speaks, slightly louder than before.
"The whole point of putting you there was so you would rest. Not strain yourself in front of your patient a second time."
The discussion isn't over. Not at all, not when there's so many questions he needs answers to. But right now, the young woman's well being is a more pressing issue. A cursory examination has him catch sight of the bright line of blood that has begun to form under her mask, tears streaking the color further down her face...
And without hesitation, he reaches up a stiff, bandaged hand, to attempt to remove the mask for a better look.
no subject
She is so distracted by the bandages of his hand and the echo of his soul that she doesn't realize what it's doing until she suddenly feels very exposed. Even still, she can hardly spare her bared face a second thought.
"I— I am fine... You are— Faint. Like the others. Like a child. But—" She stares at him with something akin to shock. "But you are a child of my people...? Your soul whispers of it... Of Amaurot."
no subject
Only to be lost when he pauses at the familiarity of the face staring up at him. A face he thinks he should know, in some distant memory, though no name comes to mind, and it's some heartbeats before he can shake himself from the feeling enough to reach up and carefully wipe the blood away from the young woman's cheek.
"I can assure you, in all my travels I've never been to your Amaurot." He would remember if he had been. He'd remember a city that shined as brilliantly as the one he'd seen out of her enchanted window, that made him so long for his own home. He should try to put her back into her bed, and do insist that she stay there, but... For now, he only sits there with her, until he sees proof that she's truly fine.
"I'm merely a child of Garlemald. Nowhere else."
no subject
The tears do not stop, though now they stem from the swell of emotions bursting within her. Disbelief. Hope. Confusion.
"I don't understand... They are all dead. Every last one, save for he and I. He had no children, and I—" She cuts herself off with a quiet breath, one hand reflexively moving to her stomach. "...He and I are all that is left. I don't understand."