lamentus: (Default)
theorem mods ([personal profile] lamentus) wrote in [community profile] theorememes2025-11-03 08:07 am
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TDM #1, arc 1.0: we drift like worried fire










BUFF



Bonded of The Sorrowweld will find that the NPCs are especially friendly to them this month. Seriously, they just keep trying to give you things. It might get annoying.







DEBUFF



For those who are bonded to Tarnished Az-Mehet, you keep seeing shadows out of the corner of your eye on every screen in the ship, even your datapad. Something is lurking.








At first, you feel a pull. In which direction, you do not know. When a portal of shimmering black and glittering stars appears in front of you, it only seems natural to step into it. On the journey, it is as if you see everything: ancient galaxies wheeling through space, cultures born and growing and leaving their planets, lights creeping over landmasses and them winking out all at once. You see the hungry arm of a black hole, an enigmatic smile under a mirrored mask, a fist clenched tight around an endless sword. Fangs shining in starlight, bandaged feet that have traveled so many miles and still remain sturdy, and code shattering under titanium will.

And then your feet touch solid ground again, and what you have seen is suddenly hard to recall, the merest of glimpses springing to mind when you try to think back.

All you know is that you witnessed something enormous, something you probably shouldn't have seen.

As you struggle to refocus your gaze, all you see for a long moment is white. White walls, white floor. Narrow white cots lined up against a wall, screens blinking above them in tones of soothing aqua and mint. You are in a medbay — a highly advanced one, given the lack of bulky machinery — but perhaps the most eye-catching thing about the room is a long window showing endless black and twinkling stars outside.

Before you can give voice to any thoughts, a small robot flutters toward you, and perches on the back of a chair. "Hello, Wayfarer!" the birdform chirps cheerfully. "I imagine you must have many questions; allow me to enlighten you! You have fallen victim to a quantum accident and have been pulled to another universe, but the Ascendants, in their generosity, intercepted your signal and brought you here so that you did not wind up in empty space. You are aboard the Theorem of the Astral Rose; our mission is to explore uncharted space and search for the Song!"

They pause, thinking, their little blue eye aglow, and then brighten.

"Oh! Introductions are in order! I am Starling's Lament in Flight, but you may call me Starling's Lament. I am one of the Hosts of this exploration vessel; we will do everything we can to ensure a safe voyage for you. Unfortunately, at this moment, we cannot send you home. The Ascendants have indicated that their search for the Song may play some key role in doing so." They whistle a merry tune. "Please enjoy your stay!"

REFLECT


When you manage to get your wits about you -- it's a bumpy ride between universes! -- you start to leave the medbay. Starling's Lament has indicated that you are free to explore the ship, and nowhere is off limits to you. As you leave the cool white tones of the medbay behind, a hallway stretches out in front of you. Both sides are transparent, offering a view into the long dark of space beyond. However, unlike deep space, there is currently quite a lot to see.



On the left lays the broad curve of a planet, lush green landmass and white clouds skidding across its surface. Its star is just sinking behind it, lighting up the very edge of its atmosphere in tones of engine-burn orange and ozone blue, as long shadows cast by enormous space elevators creep across the landmasses. Its most eye-catching feature, however, are the hexagonal structures webbed across its surface, connected by fine corridors with all the geometric precision of woven spider's silk. You can just barely see the tiny dots of spaceships flowing around them, docking, embarking, shuttling between them.

"That is the Redline Trading Post." You hear a tiny whisper, and look up to see another robot — a beetleform, this time, with a shiny dotted shell — watching you curiously from its place on the ceiling. In fact, there are a number of other Hosts doing the exact same thing; a snakeform coiled around a barrier rail, a catform with bright yellow eyes peeking around the corner, a chirping droneform hovering some distance down the hallway. They're all fascinated by you. "But we will be departing soon. You will not get to taste the Galactic Snowball Nova-Cream, the shining culinary jewel of Redline. Sorry. I hear it is very tasty."

You look to your right, away from the planet and the Redline post, to gaze out into the depths of space. In the distance, there is a nebula, its gasses lit up in shades of coral pink and deep purple. It is pockmarked with stars both young and old, newborn stellar entities cradled in the depths of its life-making dust. Set against the dark of space, it is a flower in bloom.



It's beautiful, except—

The longer you look at it, the more something nags at the corner of your mind. A memory glances across your thoughts, unbidden. Something you hoped for, maybe; or something you fear. Whatever the memory, as you gaze at the nebula, a small piece of it curls, shaping in response to your memory. It is your face, reflected perfectly. Smiling, or howling in anger, or weeping.

Eventually, the nebula will go back to normal. But for now, it reflects the fears and triumphs of the new Wayfarers, a mirror held up in the darkness of space.

IMBIBE

Once you make it into the bulk of the ship, the Hosts inform you that as they have just restocked all essential supplies, they will be throwing a party in your honor, and they hope you will sample the food.

Maybe you're incredibly dubious about this. Maybe you're starving after your long journey. Either way, you find yourself in the mess hall. It's less like a traditional mess hall and more like a park full of food trucks with seating in the middle. The food trucks are bright and eye-catching, Hosts serving huge heaps of food from their interiors, as their signs advertise everything from Earthen Ancient Egyptian food (As Close As We Can Reconstruct It!) to Raxalar Black Stew (New and Improved: Now Free Of Grit!).

Real grass is underfoot, and the picnic-style seating in the middle appears to be real wood. The lighting is a myriad; whimsical string lights strung between the trucks, floating globe lights playfully dancing like fireflies, and the luminescence of a dogform's patterns and a droneform's enormous eyes and a flyform's glittering trail. The Hosts are clearly excited.

And if the food happens to have... some kind of effect?

Well, the Hosts say, that's only to be expected! The attention of an Edict may, for a nano-second, turn toward the start of this voyage, and that's bound to make anything go a little wonky. Also, they've used some ingredients from the local system, and it's only customary there to share some thoughts and ideas and memories when you eat together. How else can you properly get to know each other?

RED BUFFALO SHANK WITH SPIKED LOTUS

This may or may not look appealing to you depending on your sensibilities, but it does smell incredible. Soft, savory red meat paired with the fragrant, earthy scent of the vegetable. The Red Buffalo is perfectly seared, and if you poke them cautiously, you'll find the spikes are entirely edible, as long as you chew well enough. If Wayfarers eat this, they will find themselves sharing a memory with the nearest person, a vision of the last time they were truly happy.

UPSIDE-DOWN PLUM SPARK-WINE

It seems the Hosts aren't quite sure of the appropriate alcohol content of substances, as this will burn all the way down, chased by a cool, sparkly feeling all the way down one's esophagus. It tastes of sweetly sour plums, and a potential hangover tomorrow morning. Wayfarers that imbibe this alcohol beverage will start overhearing the thoughts of those around them, as if they are perfectly in tune with everyone.

GOLDEN BUNS WITH SPICED HONEY DRIZZLE

Ah, a perfectly homey looking meal, sweet and savory, gently steaming. These are a must-try for any Wayfarer with a sweet tooth, proudly boasting of the agricultural and apiary skill of a nearby alien culture. The buns are perfectly fluffy, the spiced honey is warming. What's not to love? After eating this, Wayfarers will find themselves and the nearest person sharing a vision of themselves as they might have been had they gone down the worst possible path in their life.

CHERRY COLA!™

This isn't the Cherry Cola! you may or may not be familiar with, but it's interesting that whatever alien came up with this came up with the same Earth word. Or maybe the Hosts got it from Earth? Either way, it's fizzy, it's sparkly, it makes you feel like you're floating on rainbow bubbles. Upon drinking this, imbibers will telepathically project outward a vision of the most beautiful thing they've ever seen.

A CAKE. MAYBE.

Dear god. What is it? Who came up with this? Who is even brave enough to try this? It certainly… has a taste. It… has an appearance. Whether either of these things are good is in the eye of the beholder. Wayfarers adventurous enough to put this in their mouths (or other eating appendages) will find themselves uncontrollably speaking aloud of the thing they long for the most.

INITIATE


Eventually, it comes time to launch.

The Hosts are a blur of activity, some of them packing up more delicate equipment in case of errant gravity waves during initial propulsion, some of them herding the Wayfarers into a seating area reserved specifically for the safety of its occupants during launch, deceleration, and rare turbulence. You are informed that engine flare will be so bright it will rival a star for the next twenty-five hours of engine start-up burn, but you will only need to stay strapped in for half an hour or so.

As the Theorem's enormous engines start cycling, the entire ship seems to hum in melodic song. And after everybody is strapped in, that's when the intensity starts. Gravity seems to want to push everything toward the stern, and Wayfarers are pressed hard against their seats with the inertia. After half an hour, the Hosts cheerily announce that everybody is free to get up and move around — but you might want to stay near a window, as they will be doing a low dive through the nearby planet's second moon's atmosphere, and it will be quite the sight.

Soon enough, the moon becomes visible. It is of unbroken crimson red, though subtle shifting in its surface lets you guess that it's water rather than earth. And then, as the Theorem rolls gently to the side, the view in the windows nearly perfectly split between moon and space, that's when you see them, swimming through the atmosphere.



To call them fish would be inaccurate — they are not in an ocean, or any body of water — and yet, that will be the word that springs to mind for most Wayfarers. Some of them are sleek and small, schooling in packs of shimmering white and ochre. Others are long and pointed, appendages pointed backward to exude a bright pink gas that propels them forward and which trails after them like oil slicks in the air. The locals call them x'enuda, the Hosts tell you, a combination of words that mean to fly and cunning prey.

They swim closer, swarming outside of the window. Some of them swim through, phasing through the shielding and windows alike, to dance gently in the interior of the Theorem, darting to and fro. If any Wayfarers find themselves curious enough to reach out and touch these creatures, they will find themselves similarly phased, capable of passing through matter for the next few minutes before the shared electrical field wears off and returns them to normal corporality. The external shield will catch you if you phase right through the ship's floor, but you may need to swim back up. Others may find themselves suddenly craving company, as if the x'enuda's instinct to remain safe in a school is catching.

FOREWORD


"All Wayfarers, please report to the docking bay!"

As you filter into the enormous cavern that makes up the docking bay of the Theorem, you see rows of smaller spacecraft. Some of them are sleek and light, like they'd be as free as a feather during aerial combat, while others are bulky and spacious. Many of them have designs in alien languages on them, or bizarre looking mascots, seemingly for good luck. As the occasional screen informs you, you are free to claim any one of the ships as your own, but first, Starling's Lament would very much like to give a presentation.

Past the rows of ships lays an expansive opening in the side of the Theorem, many stories high and wide, a shimmering forcefield the only thing between you and space. Beyond it, you can see the quickly fading shape of the planet and moons you left behind as the Theorem continues acceleration. It is in front of this that Starling's Lament has set up a large hologram of a star map.

As they start to explain once everyone is gathered, the map currently shows the region of space you are in. It is an enormous quadrant of multiple galaxies, some pinwheeled in shape, some circuler or tube-like. A line arcs across it, heading into what is clearly less-explored space, beyond the area colorfully marked as Alliance territory. Eventually, that line stops at a star, which then magnifies to reveal a six planet system, the second planet from the star circled.

This is your first objective: designation Epsilon-355.

There are many stories of which planets the Last Pilgrim has set foot upon, and yet, nobody has ever verified any of them. This, the Ascendants claim, is the closest match they have found for one of those planets in a scrap of story: a land of golden sand and shimmering glass, where pilgrimages track their way across the Golden Barrens desert. The planet is small and unassuming in the hologram, and the details next to it are scarce: relatively normal gravity, breathable atmosphere. More details will become available as the Theorem gets close enough for in-depth scans.

If there any notes of the Song to be found, they may yet be found in the Last Pilgrim's footprints.

Presentation nearly over, Starling's Lament directs you a series of tables that have neatly assembled packages of gear. Once you have picked your Division, you are welcome to claim the technological tools of its trade. You can also look at the spaceships available to claim, or even just watch out the docking bay door as you leave the planet behind and head deeper into space.

Welcome to the mission, Wayfarer.


flavourtown: (015)

[personal profile] flavourtown 2025-11-04 03:34 am (UTC)(link)
Could they not be perfectly united? Hiveminds are a perfectly common thing. For all we know, they do not have their own personalities, but are mere branches of one greater entity.

[ He flicks one ear backward, and his earpiece dutifuly reports: butterflyform Host perched on the wall, droneform Host floating by and exiting the hallway. They are everywhere, cheerful and helpful, but Jiaoqiu is going to maintain his reservations.

Whatever the answer, the other man is correct. The true answer likely does lay somewhere inbetween: neither good, nor evil. Something more complicated, as all sentient beings inevitably are.
]

We shall have to hope our noses are keen enough to sniff that truth out, then.

[ Jiaoqiu's lips curl in a smile. He sticks his hand out to offer a handshake. ]

I'm Jiaoqiu, from the Xianzhou Yaoqing, if that means anything to you. Can I assume that you are a scholar of some type? You have the bearing of one.
victus: (pic#18140726)

[personal profile] victus 2025-11-06 01:43 am (UTC)(link)
[ A hivemind. Briefly, Viktor's gaze unfocuses, and he hums, a low sound in his throat, always so noisy when he's working through a problem. ] It would explain a great deal, [ he murmurs, distracted. ] A pity if true, though to control such a vast network of automatons would ... Ah. [ He chuckles at himself, returning to this moment and not the frankly endless pathways his mind sometimes takes. ] As you see, I am often getting ahead of myself.

[ With a noise in agreement, Viktor shakes the offered hand warmly but firmly. ] Viktor of Zaun, [ is spoken with pride. ] You are well met, though I must disappoint: I am an engineer. Academia was always — eh, a bit confining. As it turns out, breaking into the dean's office for confiscated materials is frowned upon. [ A joke? In this economy?? ]

What of you? [ Viktor peers at them, endlessly curious. ] Your area of study is based in research of some kind, clearly. Or you are a very ambitious philosopher. [ More jokes. Bro ... ]
flavourtown: (002)

[personal profile] flavourtown 2025-11-06 11:53 pm (UTC)(link)
A chef, in fact.

[ It's not a lie; he truly is. But it is something of a lie of omission, neglecting to mention that his main vocation is that of healing. But ever since the attack, and his methods of ensnaring and injuring an enemy having resulted in his blindness, he cannot be a doctor again, not yet, not until he learns how to once more. It is not the first time in Jiaoqiu's life that he has left the healing vocation behind, but it is the first time he has done so unwillingly.

So, it is with a mild bitterness that he proclaims to be a chef, even as his expression and smile are smooth and polite.

He does like this Viktor already, though. Anybody willing to bend the rules a little to achieve lofty goals is admirable, as long as the rules being bent don't hurt anybody.
]

I hear this ship has quite the state-of-the-art engineering lab. Have you been to see it, yet?
victus: (pic#18140318)

[personal profile] victus 2025-11-08 02:19 am (UTC)(link)
[ Well. That came as a surprise. Viktor is unable to really hide the slanted smirk that forms — pleased to meet a kindred spirit, hopeful about what he might learn from them — and amused he was so off the mark. ] And this is why investigations were never my area, [ is spoken dryly, poking fun at himself. It reminds him of Caitlyn, which is both pleasant and painful. They will find the others. They have to. ]

Not yet. There is so much to see here — and our world is not nearly this advanced. [ His gaze strays to a wandering animal-shaped robot, and Viktor watches it, fascination and wonder on his face.

He shakes his head a little to clear it. ]
This lab. Is there a map to it?
flavourtown: (Default)

[personal profile] flavourtown 2025-11-10 01:50 am (UTC)(link)
[ Ah-- Jiaoqiu had not yet considered that others might be coming here from less advanced worlds. It makes sense, certainly. If this accident of space-time that Starling's Lament spoke of is random, then all sorts of people from all sorts of walks of life will be coming here. Might they even encounter a person for whom basic electronics are an alien device? ]

Really? [ Jiaoqiu tilts his head, curious. If Viktor is an engineer, where is his current level of knowledge? ] You will have to tell me about it, and your relative technology level compared to this ship.

[ At the question if there is a map, Jiaoqiu brings out the datapad he'd been provided, and verbally instructs it: show me a map of the ship. Thankfully, it can do voice commands as well as manual input. The map, he presumes, flashes up, and he shows the screen to Viktor. ]

You'll have to lead the way, I'm afraid. Screens are useless to me.
victus: (pic#18140344)

[personal profile] victus 2025-11-16 12:44 am (UTC)(link)
We have not achieved travel on this scale, [ Viktor answers, a note of amusement in his voice. Then, in a far more intrigued tone: ] But your world has, I presume? Travel between planets? [ It's a truly fascinating thing to imagine — that for all their advancements, there were still societies that existed far beyond their own. With any luck, they might bring some of that knowledge back home.

If there was a home left to return to. Viktor tries not to linger on the thought, far more preoccupied with what he can control, which means guiding them to the lab. He eyes the procured map with a noise in acknowledgement. ]
It isn't far. Not where I would have put it, but ... [ The endless dad humor. Someone stop him.

Shifting his weight on his crutch, Viktor begins walking. ]
Approximately 20 paces forward, then a left turn, [ he says, both for Jiaoqiu's benefit as well as his own. He's never been the best navigator. ]
flavourtown: (Default)

[personal profile] flavourtown 2025-11-19 10:20 pm (UTC)(link)
We have. I was born and raised on a ship much bigger than this, actually. One that holds a population of millions as we travel between galaxies and fight an eternal battle against a near-immortal abomination army.

[ Despite Jiaoqiu's habitual placid, polite tone, there's an obvious hint of bitter weariness at that particular explanation. As he can no longer function as a healer, he's not sure about his role in that war anymore, besides. The General still insisted on keeping him as her official healer, but...

Well. Thoughts for another day.

He allows an indulge quirk at the corner of his lips at Viktor's joke. No, he supposes a ship designed by mysterious Ascendants might have some strange map layouts. The directions, on the other hand, are very much appreciated.
]

I'll be interested to see what medical and scientific tools they're providing us with, though. It will be the key to figuring out if they're just giving us children's toys to placate and occupy us, or if they are actually onboard with real scientific advancement here.