Rizzy (
varymydays) wrote in
voyagers2014-02-01 04:28 pm
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Entry tags:
- aleksandar hale,
- audrey parker,
- bonnie bennett,
- carol lockwood,
- caroline forbes,
- cassie riddle,
- castiel,
- charlie wellman,
- christine chapel,
- clementine,
- damon salvatore,
- danny wilder,
- don flack jr.,
- elena gilbert,
- ethan hale,
- helen williams,
- jason dilaurentis,
- jenny mills,
- john constantine,
- kathryn janeway,
- liz parker,
- lois lane,
- mark barnes,
- martha m. masters,
- mary jane watson,
- natalia guevara,
- nikola tesla,
- party post,
- peter parker,
- rachel conway,
- rafe guevara,
- rebekah mikaelson,
- sarah monroe,
- tyler lockwood,
- wolverine,
- zoe dabrowski
[party post] come sail away with me

You've come through a door, and you are on a boat. Specifically, you're on a cruise ship in the middle of some giant body of water. You've come through the door behind you which is attached to nothing and may now be locked. It's relatively empty as giant as it appears to be. The only other passengers that are here appear to also have come through the door for the most part and it is not nearly enough to fill up this entire cruise ship.
Also, who knows who the hell is driving this thing since all of the employees appear to be either ghosts or holograms...
Is this your first time here or your hundredth time here? Do you want a drink or a dip in the pool? Is it day or night? Do you stumble on your room or some other situation either fun or painful within its many rooms, shops, and facilities? Do you run into someone you know or a complete stranger?
The possibilities are unlimited!
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When something isn't worth publishing, you get really good at lying about the words that could be printed but can't. Won't. You get so good at it that even you start to believe your own deceptions and the things your head tells your heart, even though your heart knows they aren't true. Funny thing about the heart, is that it doesn't always get what it wants. Very rarely in fact. It's easier to listen to the lies and guard your heart than it is to embrace the truth and watch your heart get hurt in the process.
"You're the second person to use the word usually." Liz gets up, rising to her feet. "Though the first to insist that the ship is sentient. I'd call that crazy and impossible, but so is being picked up from a desert town in the middle of New Mexico and dropped off on some ship in the middle of nowhere."
Which, she realizes in sudden, panicked hindsight, sounds more alien than it ought to be. People make alien jokes and cracks about her hometown all the time. It shouldn't be this alarming, but when you make FBI watch lists, it's not so funny anymore.
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Peter leans back as she gets to her feet, and there are still tools scattered out all around him. He found this stuff in one of the other endless rooms that appear on this ship. There are 'stores' that never require any money. There are restaurants and clubs and rooms that just happen to have whatever someone is looking for at the time. It all goes into the mystery that is this place, and he's yet to solve it though he is planning on trying. Any place that grabs people against their will can't be good.
"Well, I've never heard of anyone who couldn't go back, but I don't want to say always in case one time I'm wrong and then it's like... I gave someone false hope," Peter says, and then he shrugs a tiny bit, biting at the end of the tool that he has in his mouth without... thinking. He makes a face at it when he realizes what he's doing, lifting up a hand to push his glasses up the bridge of his nose. "I haven't found a scientific explanation for any of it yet or I'd be explaining... under those terms. I really wish I knew... why this happened or how to get back when you needed to, or why this happens--"
Any of the above? It'd be really, really good to know, but answers aren't really easy to find.
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It would never be truly safe for them. Safe was relative to have careful you were, how much distance you put between those secrets and yourself.
The middle of the ocean was a good distance from Roswell, at the very least. Upside? Not really. Not by a long shot.
"No scientific explanation for it means there's no pattern to follow. The appearances are random, no telltale warning sings that someone's about to pop up?"
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It's not even his own safety that he is concerned about. It's the people around him. They're the ones that get hurt, that get killed.
Peter always survives somehow, always comes crawling out of the wreckage.
He smiles softly at the science talk, setting the tool to the side as he nods. "No sign at all that I have seen, and I started to pay close attention to it. They just appear, wondering how they got here and why and where here is. Unless they've been here before like I have then they wonder how long it'll be until the door unlocks again." Until they can go home.
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"I don't know if having a welcome wagon upon a rival would be more comforting or not."
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...not that he completely ever slows down or takes a load off even when he's here instead. Just not wired that way. He carries his guilt and his burdens and his responsibility always.
"Guess it depends on the welcome wagon," he says with a light smirk still, ducking his head again. "But appearing on a random mysterious, nowhere boat with a bunch of people waiting for you... might up the creep factor."
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Somehow, being on the deck of an infamously haunted ship seemed preferable to being strapped to a chair with FBI agents surrounding her. She'd never been in the white room personally, but she saw flashes of it in Max's mind and it was probably the most horrific thing she'd ever seen. No movie would ever compare to the terror she felt ripping through Max while Pierce interrogated him.
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As far as he's seen anyway. He wonders if that'll... ever change or if something dangerous will happen on the ship at some point. People come and go regularly so there'd be no way of knowing when or who would be here when it happens.
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"I think I can handle a few ghosts."
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"I'm sure you can," he says, and he means that. "So I'm guessing ghosts aren't the weirdest thing you've seen before. I mean you seem pretty chill about them."
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At least ghosts were of this Earth, unlike her ex.
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"Yeah, I've heard of Roswell." And he thinks aliens are pretty cool in concept even if he hasn't seen enough compelling evidence yet to really fully believe that they're out there. Maybe he should change his stance given his life over the last few years though. Radioactive spiders. Giant lizards. "Does it get annoying? People coming through all the time, trying to turn your town into a spectacle?"
...Peter would probably get snarky at them. A bit.
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"It can, but it's good for business. My family's diner is sort of a shrine to the weird and wacky, full of alien themed orders to go. You make a killing on perpetuating the notion that aliens once landed there."
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Peter laughs a little at what she says, tilting his head to the side as he tries to think of all the potential in an alien-themed restaurant. "I can kind of picture it actually," he says, and who can blame people for making the most out of it when curious tourists would come around no matter what? "What's the diner's name? Does it go with the whole alien theme or..."
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"The Crashdown. I'm not sure where my dad got the name from, but we had this one artist who works with plastic molds create this side of a flying saucer that sticks out of the front of the building. That alone brings in the tourists. Roswell has a larger tourist population on some days than we do actual residents."
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Someone still harbors aspirations of residing in Massachusetts by way of a Harvard admittance. Liz doesn't want to spend the rest of her life on the run with aliens. She entertained that notion once, but she knows now that she isn't part of
Max'stheir future.no subject
She'll get there one day. The East Coast is a great place to go in general, but he might be biased. As much as he hates New York City sometimes, he also loves it. It's home. There's not another city like it though Chicago is becoming its own home.
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Peter clears his throat a bit, realizing after a second that he's rambling, his science ramble thing.
He's a science geek too though, and while he is more into the technological side, he helped finish that formula that... created a giant man-lizard, but still. The point is he loves science as much as he hastily said it to Gwen to explain why he'd been sneaking into Oscorp, he really, really does.
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It's human. And in this moment, Liz feels more human than she has since before she was shot.
(Maybe being on this boat isn't so bad.)
"It's amazing. And important. Incredibly important. More important than people realize. I kind of want to make them realize. You know?"
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"Yeah, making people realize how important it is is really important too, and if you're passionate about it and passionate about teaching people, educating them on it? You're half way there," he says as his smile widens. She is half way to being able to get people to realize how important and amazing it is.
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"I think you're the first person I've met — and I'm talking ever — who thinks that's as important as I do. Usually people just brush it all off as a geek fantasy."
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There is definitely a passion to science that people don't get, and he will never understand how others can't really process how important it is. This is how they make advancements, discoveries that could change the world for the better. As long as it's all done ethically, when he finished that formula, no one bothered doing safe tests on it before Dr. Connors injected it into himself. If they would, they would have known.
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As does reality, but people don't know what Liz Parker knows. And they never will.
"What kind of a scientist?"
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