tongueamok: (➣ knitted like fine lace)
Carlisle Longinmouth ([personal profile] tongueamok) wrote in [community profile] hadriel_logs2018-11-25 01:08 pm

Dome Sweet Dome

Who: Carlisle Longinmouth ([personal profile] tongueamok), OPEN
What: It's a log for the folks who expressed interest in Carlisle's latest gardening project! In short, he made a stupid dome of magic to protect the only two gardens he cares about, and is feeling very good about himself. Make him regret his hubris.
Where: Park
When: November 21st - early December
Warnings: Nothing yet! Heads up for anyone who has met him, but hasn't seen him in the past month: he's a lot more colorful now.


As the days without the gods add up and the city grows colder without power, there may be less and less people braving the outdoors. However, any of those who happen to wander in the vicinity of the park -- or what remains of it, as most of the trees have been removed -- might notice something odd: there are two, translucent domes covering a portion of it, their walls illuminated with a magical energy. Upon closer inspection, one can see the vague shapes of archways and leaves behind these glowing, blue barriers; they're connected to the ground via a stone curb, so any visitors might want to watch their step.

But should someone trip and fall into either dome, they'll find the walls won't keep them out -- they'll slip right through with only a tingling sensation, much like the shock of static, to accompany their passage, the magic wall remaining whole behind them. Within one dome is the memorial park, its various markers and tributes to those who have disappeared from Hadriel protected from the elements beyond the barrier; within the other is a garden, its rows of shrubs, vines, and greenery kept at a comfortable temperature within the magical ward.

And on most days, near the cottage at the center of said garden, one may find the man who conjured these domes, Carlisle Longinmouth. Sometimes, he's pruning away at the twitching, ivy-like vines of his coilers, tossing the trimmings to his pet, Rabbit. At other times, he's knelt near the barrier himself, inspecting the integrity of his magical walls. On more than one occasion, he may be over near a patch of dirt walled off with stones, within it the stalks of still-growing barley. Wherever he may be, there is one constant: he's generally not thrilled to find he has company.
whip_poor_will: (the humbling river)

[personal profile] whip_poor_will 2018-11-26 08:30 am (UTC)(link)
Given the superfluity of deities that Ravine knows of that has plagued history, it is not as silly as Carlisle would think. She gives him a warm smile.

"The name. The festival itself celebrated Marduk, the patron god of Babylon."

A particular favorite of the Nebuchadnezzar she knew as the human diviner, Yehudit.
whip_poor_will: Why don't you go and get on the school PA and tell everyone my dad is Valmart and I'm half Dracula! (smells like a steam boat captain.)

[personal profile] whip_poor_will 2018-11-26 09:18 am (UTC)(link)
Time is only a blink to Ravine, as Carlisle returns as quickly as he had left. Her smile widens as he speaks the words in his own foreign inflection and expresses curiosity in the religion of the people who had raised her. While raised in the Kingdom of Judah, Yehudit had spent more years in the service of Nebuchadnezzar, serving a purpose she would not have found on the city streets.

She could easily shatter the illusion Carlisle holds of those people's cult beliefs and explain how there was no Marduk. At least, not in the way that scripture carried on. It's important to the priest, though. And for a moment, she is inclined to humor him. If not for a little while.

"He governed the forces of harvest, water, judgment, and sorcery. To the people of those lands, the gods were only as powerful as the cities in which they are worshipped -- so when Babylon grew from the small state to a thriving and powerful city, Marduk was hailed as a supreme god of the southern state."

It doesn't entirely answer Carlisle's query, but it answers enough.
whip_poor_will: (wait until biggus dickus hears of this)

[personal profile] whip_poor_will 2018-11-27 11:08 am (UTC)(link)
"Yes, I suppose it is..."

Although Ravine never did held the same abhorrence towards the gods of this place, she is remiss to truly acknowledge their godhood status. It is merely simpler to identify with a name in mind than to label them as the 'Other', accurate that it may be.

She cants her head at Carlisle's musing. "There are plenty of godless worlds out there, or places in which their deities do not play a direct role in the lives of their followers."

The 'gods' of her world may as well be the Emanations, but Ravine is even more loathe to see them as such.
whip_poor_will: (Default)

[personal profile] whip_poor_will 2018-12-15 07:32 am (UTC)(link)
Her lips pull into a grave simper. Indeed, she does know, but that does not take away from her desire to learn things from others the natural way.

"It is a gift not many are blessed with, to know with certainty where their life's work lies. Mine only came to me after I died."

Losing her head, to be exact, but now doesn't seem like an appropriate time for decapitation jokes.
whip_poor_will: (Default)

[personal profile] whip_poor_will 2018-12-15 08:14 am (UTC)(link)
A strange, weary laugh escapes her. "Failure is a fact of life, Carlisle. Some make more mistakes than others, but we are all prey to our own faults. Myself included."

Ravine has failed others on more than one occasion. Even in life, as a diviner, she was not the best towards the end, when madness overtook her. When the threads of reality became impossible to discern from one another. From where she's standing, Carlisle has managed to accomplish much more in his short life than she ever had as Yehudit...

"As you can imagine, it differs from the individual. Some die more traumatic deaths than others, and require more time and care to contend with. I believe this is why the delivering of souls has been tasked to those of us who have died as well -- we are more capable of understanding the dead, having died ourselves, and oftentimes not in pleasant ways."