letsgolegion: (Default)
The Legion [Mods] ([personal profile] letsgolegion) wrote in [community profile] legionmissions2017-01-03 12:57 am

SILENT HORIZON - [Part 1: The In-Between] [modplot]

Who| Everyone who signed up
What| 2 spoopy
Where| In The In-Between, the pocket dimension inside the Silent Horizon
When| After Valor's Day. Mission starts shortly before "No Sanity Clause" and runs simultaneously in game time
Warnings/Notes| Potential warnings for EVERYTHING. This is a horror plot that may tread a lot of ground. Please keep in mind that you can stumble on disturbing stuff in almost any thread. We advise all players to put warnings in the subjects of threads when they lean towards cut-worthy stuff.


The mission was simple. The team had to board the derelict Silent Horizon, a ship with an experimental stardrive, after it finally reappeared in UP space, many hours after it was supposed to reappear, during its first field test. No life signs were aboard, but the presence of several Roboticans on the crew -- who were undetectable by bioscan -- meant that the ship had to be boarded to make sure the Robotican crewmen were gone, too.

The United Planets government, concerned about the loss of the crew members, asked the Legion to step in, in case the threat on board was of a metapowered nature. Due to the massive danger implied by an entire starship crew going missing, the response team sent on the mission was relatively large, more than enough to handle any hostiles. None of this "we'll just send one tiny team to go alone into a giant starship against an unknown threat" business. No, if there was a hostile force on the ship, the plan was "let's drop 25+ Legionnaires on its head." Safety in numbers.

It was a good idea. In theory. In most cases, it would've given them the edge that would've let them face something very nasty without succumbing to it themselves. But in practice, it just meant that it was a much larger team that suddenly went missing after watching the last video log of the previous crew on the command deck.

Screams poured out of the screen the moment it started to play -- automatically -- when they entered the command deck. Onscreen, they saw the original crew murdering each other, tearing each other apart in a blood-soaked rampage.

"Wait, stop! What's wrong with everyone? Why are you --?" cried out one of the Robotican crew members, clearly immune from whatever was causing the madness, but his cries went unheeded as one of his Coluan crew-mates bashed his head clean off with a chair.

After the video played, the darkness swept in, wrapping around the whole team of Legionnaires, making them feel frozen all the way down to their bones and stealing consciousness away from them. When they woke again, they all found themselves separated, waking up in a realm of nightmares.

The halls breathe here -- at least in the places that have walls. They flex in and out, like the passageways inside the lungs. Sometimes the walls give way to open nightmare-scapes, remote and foggy, or bright and alien and exposed. The landscape bends and shifts around them, reacting to their thoughts and fears. And every so often, far off, there is the pitter-pat of something strange moving through this place. Like the sound of many feet -- or hands -- slapping against the ground or flesh-walls.

At some point, there is always a voice that each of them hears, tinny and robotic and distant, warning them of a being called the Faceless, that rules this realm. They're told not to feed from his blood, that if they do they'll be made a part of this place. If they accept his offer, and change forms, they'll eventually bleed to death, and if the Faceless isn't stopped before they die, those that die in their mutated forms will belong to him forever.

It's not the only voice they'll hear, though. This is a land filled with whispers. And screams. And the sounds of begging sometimes, too.

And for some of the Legionnaires, the In-Between speaks to them, touches something deep and dark inside them -- and it's calling them home.
vata: (waiting on a wire)

[personal profile] vata 2017-01-20 09:05 pm (UTC)(link)
Sombra comes to a hard stop, heels dug into the earth (and it feels wrong, all of it), eyeline stuttering as her attention shifts—

"Cortana..."

Unlike Sombra's usual tone, something casual and withdrawn, this is more direct. Steady. Demanding. Not just because whatever's doing this seems to be feeding on her memories, but because she seems all too prone to bleeding them at the moment. Which means Sombra has to ask:

"Are you gonna be okay, manita."

steelandtemper: (33)

[personal profile] steelandtemper 2017-01-21 12:07 am (UTC)(link)
"Yeah, I'll keep it together," Cortana says with a sigh. At least she sounds more tired than uncertain. The past never does stay dead.

"You've got the right to know what's going on, anyway." As unpleasant as the retelling is for Cortana personally, if she can't keep the memories inside her own mind--and doesn't that loss of control annoy her--Sombra should at minimum have enough information to understand what she's experiencing by proxy.

"During the final battle of the war, the Chief and I had to split up." Cortana doesn't elaborate on why. It's complicated and the fact that it happened suffices for her clipped retelling of events. "I stayed behind enemy lines while he went back to Earth. The Gravemind captured me soon after that. It wanted everything I had on Earth's defenses, but the damned thing was just rotting meat and a grudge, so it couldn't break my security. It had to break me instead."

That perfect AI memory turns into a curse sometimes, processes cropping up as quickly as she can kill them. Cortana can almost feel the pressure again, like a drowning victim struggling to hold their breath because they know it will be their last.

You said you would answer my questions...you should never make a promise you cannot keep.

"...It didn't." And that's that, except for the part where it's so clearly not.

"The Chief came for me, we killed it, and we got on the last shuttle out."
Edited (ARGH) 2017-01-21 00:08 (UTC)
vata: (I've got a ton)

[personal profile] vata 2017-01-22 01:16 am (UTC)(link)
Usually living by proxy is a luxury, makes her feel invincible. There's a rush in mapping the danger someone else has survived from behind a screen, but this? This is different. Even Overwatch's darker secrets don't stack up, and she can't help the shiver that threatens to creep up her spine at the sound of that voice.

"So if it's dead, and it failed, why's it here?"

There's a pointedness to the question, most of it revolving around Cortana herself rather than the nightmare: are you really over it?

steelandtemper: (14)

[personal profile] steelandtemper 2017-01-24 02:24 am (UTC)(link)
"The Faceless is testing for weak points." Cortana hesitates, but what comes next isn't anything Sombra couldn't figure out on her own. Spend enough time sorting through data and you learn that what isn't said can be just as important.

Yet still, she hesitates, and the Faceless doesn't.

Live forever. Live in me, Cortana. And if John comes, John need never face death again, either...

Quieter now, the pressure relieved this time not by submitting, but by trusting, and that, rather than any tactical analysis, breaks through her reticence.

"I was never weaker than that."
vata: (right back)

[personal profile] vata 2017-01-28 12:03 pm (UTC)(link)
"Good thing none of this means anything to me." It's forced, like pressing through the pressure of a rushing current; Sombra's certain that if any of this was part of her reality, her memories, it might tip Cortana (or Cortana might tip her—) over the edge of their collective sanity. Like this, at least, they can brace each other.

But she still hates the sound of that thing's voice.

"You want me to put on some music instead? I mean— if this is just an illusion, there's no reason we have to actually listen to it."