Mask or Menace | MODERATORS (
maskormods) wrote in
etcelsior2015-08-22 08:10 pm
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
![[community profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/community.png)
Entry tags:
The power is in your hands

TEST DRIVE MEME
Considering apping into MASK OR MENACE? Want to dip your toes into the setting and get a feel of whether your character will fit into it? Or maybe you're just cruising and want to play around? Then you've come to the right place!
Pick any of the following scenarios below or feel free to make up your own, but don't be afraid to throw yourself at someone else's thread, either!
And remember to have fun!01. Your memory might be a haze still and you might even feel frustrated or anxious by the sudden news that you are no longer in your own world and that the Porter scientists and military cannot send you back. You don't get a chance to linger long in the underground Porter lab, but something is clearly amiss; light patches on the floor indicate something else used to sit in that spot in the room. Parts of the wall, floor and the tables look as if they have been refurbished in the past few months -- something happened in here some time ago. Something big.
You're ushered out quickly and then suddenly, you're enveloped in a faint blue blue light before you find yourself under the bright Floridian sun. Another soldier steps toward you with a smile, directing your attention to a car near a large gate. She mentions she'll be debriefing you soon, handing out a brown folder and a pamphlet. You don't see the digital tattoo on your wrist, but it's quickly explained on your way over to the car as you realize there are other confused faces nearby, all holding files of their own.
02. The city of Heropa is what one might expect from a small, bright and cheery place. The locals are friendly enough and local shop owners might offer a free drink to help cool you down in this awfully nauseating heat. Some of the locals might thank you for always lending your service to the nation and others might not say anything. In fact, some people might back away from any imPort who quite obviously looks like they aren't from around the neighborhood. Once in a while there's a look of disdain on someone's face and hushed voices. Something about "the outbreak" and "the government's gotta crack down on their medical files". "Some of them can't be right in the head" says another.
03. De Chima, Virginia, is a large city with a healthy economy, and though it's quieter, there are just as many citizens awed at your presence. Heavy winds have people grasping at their newspapers and constantly brushing hair out of their faces, but that doesn't distract them from crowding you in excitement if you're obviously from a different time or world, or just let it slip that you're a newcomer. Children and young teenagers are especially likely to ask for an autograph and a photo.
Some locals seem less enthused to see you. They never make an approach, but they can be overheard scoffing and muttering something about cameras. "Who do they think they are?" or "I don't like it... it reminds me of the government corruption back in the eighties." What could they be talking about?
04. Maurtia Falls, Pennsylvania, is normally known for being a little more on the apathetic side, but there's been tension in the atmosphere lately. Nobody will outright state what it is that's rustled their jimmies, though you might find a newsstand with articles on recent and aggressive vigilante behavior within the city. "ImPorts: loyal to the cause of their own?" reads one newspaper article.
People are not as friendly in this city and go out of their way to avoid walking down the same sidewalk as the more obvious looking imPorts pass through. Local cops say nothing, but they scowl at those imPorts and utter something about "no badges" and "acting like authority figures".
05. Nonah, North Carolina, is the liveliest of all cities. It's loud, busy and there's some kind of energy in the air that gets everyone buzzing with excitement. Anyone who they come to determine an imPort is bombarded with all sorts of offers; job offers, advertising gigs, spokesperson for advocating children stay in school, etc. Anything and everything! You name it. Shops offer discounts for food and clothing, whatever they need. People flock in droves with questions, but they all say the same thing. Thank you for your service to this country, Hero. You saved a lot of lives. Wow, feels great to be a hero, doesn't it?
no subject
Her next offer is easier. Her next offer promises Adam paying her back and cleansing his soul from the debt. ] Yeah, that sounds good. I could do with some coffee.
no subject
Gee, Kitty, why do people think you're overbearing? ]
I thought as much. I could do with some myself, actually. There's a place not so far from here - it's a chain, actually, of coffee places, and their lattes are ridiculously overpriced but their regular coffee is very good and very cheap. And it's just...coffee, too. They're not doing that irritating pour-over thing - have they started doing that in your world? The pour-overs?
no subject
And also she says the magic word - cheap. ] Mostly I just drink coffee from a vending machine at school. [ And instant when he's at home. ] What's a pour over?
no subject
[ She takes to this topic with ferocious cheer. She's not just trying to be sociable - she has opinions about this particular sort of coffee. ]
It's coffee brewed by the individual cup, by hand. So the barista, or waitress at the perfectly decent cafe that has regular coffee that's really quite good and can be poured out very quickly - [ A quick thump to her chest, as though it was remotely ambiguous who she was talking about - ] Has to stand over the grounds, fussily pouring more and more water over the grounds until finally it all drains into the cup, and a process that used to consume no time suddenly starts consuming five minutes per customer. It's maddening. And the coffee's not even that much better!
no subject
[ Rushing from school to work to Cabeswater to sleep and back around again doesn't leave time for luxury coffee. ] As long as it has caffeine in it and it's wet that's all I really need.
no subject
[ An irritated, huffy sigh. Anyway... ]
My name's Kitty, by the way.
no subject
Oh, Adam. Adam Parrish. [ He gives her a little smile because it's not like offering his hand to shake is normal. ]
no subject
[ She flashes him a broad grin. ]
Anyway. This place just does coffee coffee. It's good.
So - what's your world like?
no subject
Kind of ... normal? [ Except for Welsh Kings and ley lines and magical forests. But Adam is not Gansey and so he hoards the reality of his world until he knows he can trust her. ]
I'm from Virginia. That's why I came here. I thought I could get home that way.
no subject
[ She says that cheerfully enough. Though: ]
That must be a bit hard, though. Coming here and seeing all this.
no subject
[ Which resulted in the almost nervous breakdown on the park bench. ]
no subject
Yeah. Are you going to stay here, do you think?
no subject
[ They've taken him from his home. He can't get back. The tiny little apartment above St. Agnes doesn't exist here. ]
Do you know if there's like a hostel or something? [ Maybe she'll think he's a backpacking hipster instead of broke. ]
no subject
You're...not going to live in the imPort housing?
no subject
[ It's okay, Kitty. He just didn't know. ]
Oh. That's a thing?
no subject
[ She relaxes just a little bit. Okay, so then maybe he won't die starving and frozen on the street. ]
Yeah. You get free housing from the government. A job, too, and a stipend. If you register. Which basically just involves saying that you'll cooperate with them even though you don't really have to.
no subject
Are you sure we're still in the US? [ He gives her a small smile to convey that he's joking. Still, it's almost valid. the government aren't all that helpful to people like him. ] I'm not really the hero type though. [ He doesn't think he can do it. He can barely save himself, let alone anyone else. ]
no subject
Oh, I'm not, either. But if they're idiots enough to give me money because they're deluded about me, I'm hardly about to correct their mistake. Especially since I make sure that money goes to the people it ought to go to.
no subject
[ Is she giving her money to the poor?
Is that why she wants to buy him coffee.] Don't they make sure you're doing something heroic every so often? Like why give us money if we're not doing it. It's a job.no subject
Robin Hood?
[ Anyway - ]
And no, they don't. Honestly, I'm fairly certain they keep giving money even to the worst ones. Which is ridiculous.
no subject
They must have a lot of resources.
[ What would that be like? To be given money just because? To not have to worry about paying rent and student fees and three jobs and studying. Maybe he could take a nap before midnight. ]
no subject
Well, the entire government, I should say they do. Unfortunately, they just use those resources badly. Like just about every government, of course.
no subject
[ He's best friends with the biggest WASP to ever WASP. ]
So why do they bring us here instead of getting the natives to do the work?
no subject
[ She pushes her hands through her hair, clearly annoyed - though not, of course, at him. ]
It's a machine that brings us here. Working at random. The government just decided to use us as a resource now that we are here. By kissing our arses. Throwing nice things at us so we'll feel positive towards them.
no subject
[ Well, there goes his plan of convincing someone to send him back. ] A machine though? That's like the beginning of every sinister robot movie I've seen.
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)