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TRANQUILIZERS ([personal profile] robbies) wrote in [community profile] memesville2020-10-25 11:03 pm
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TDM - OCTOBER 2020


TEST DRIVE MEME - OCTOBER 2020

Everyone's entitled to one good scare.
CW: Violence, death, mouth trauma, vomiting, needles, razors


“Help me. Please, help me…”

A child’s voice, calling out for aid. There’s no rhyme or reason for when it comes to you. It’s so quiet, a whisper in the deepest, darkest corners of your mind. Were it not for the sharp, stabbing pain it pulls out of you, you could ignore it. You could even pretend it’s just your imagination.

It all happens so quickly and powerfully. Left in the dust, your brain struggles to process it all. Blacking out is the least it can do, but it’s also all it can do, and it does so before you even have a chance to fully register just how young the voice is, and how deeply, heartbreakingly lost it sounds.

When you finally awaken with your bare feet tangled in soft sheets, a layer of fuzzy fleece or slinky silk clinging to your body like another layer of skin, the sunlight pouring in from the window next to your bed momentarily blinding you, and the cries of happy children playing baseball outside of it carrying faintly, it all becomes very clear—

Something is horribly wrong.

OCTOBER 1st.

It becomes very clear very quickly that this isn’t a simple kidnapping.

  • If you’re twenty years old or older, the bedroom you wake up in is very clearly a couple’s bedroom — with separate beds like a modest, modern couple of course! A similarly lost and confused stranger is in the other. They are your counterpart, for everything in this room has a matching counterpart — the nightstand and lamp each of you have beside your beds, the framed pictures on the wall, even your pajamas.
  • If you’re under twenty years old, your room is smaller but more personalized, filled with comic books, model kits, stray baseball cards littered around the floor. Dolls, fashion magazines of people dressed from a bygone era, stacks of vinyl records neatly arranged next to a record player.
And then there are the pictures. They’re everywhere in the house — in a frame on your nightstand, hung on the walls, stuck in the photo albums and scrapbooks lying on your desk or tucked away in drawers. Here you are on your wedding day, exchanging vows with your partner. Here’s you sitting in a fishing boat with one of the younger members of your house. Here’s a picture of you at ten years old getting ready for the first day of school. All of the photographs are aged, sepia, even yellowed and dusty in frames hung for a long, long time.

By the time you make it down to the living room, you’ll notice that the television is on; someone must have forgotten to turn it off before they went to bed. On it, a cartoon pack of cigarettes and accompanying cigarette dancers prance around a black and white pumpkin patch, joined by dancing skeletons, ghosts and witches as a cheerful little earworm blares:

”Thirty days til Halloween, Halloween, Halloween, thirty days til Halloween—“


GETTING TO KNOW THE NEIGHBORS.

As you get acclimated, you gradually begin to learn more about this strange new world you’ve found yourself in. You’re in a neighborhood on the east side of a town called Santa Rosita located… somewhere in California (wherever or whatever that might be). The year is 1961.

If it wasn’t clear enough, your neighbors are more than willing to humor you if you ask. Even if you accost them with questions and demands. Sure, you and your family are a little kooky, and you have a very overactive imagination, but the key to any good joke is playing along! And how could something like “I’m from the future, from another world” be anything but a joke?

A. AUNT MYRNA'S PARTY CHEESE SALAD.

Over the course of the week, your neighbors will come by unannounced, each with a new homecooked meal to welcome you to their cozy little side of town. Meatloaf, potato salad, lamb chops. Gelatin molds — lots of gelatin molds.

Someone even comes by to drop off a gelatinous yellow lump of pineapple, green peppers, celery and yellow cheese swimming in a soupy mixture of sour and whipped cream. “It’s my aunt Myrna’s recipe!” they gush once they drop the casserole tin into your hands, proceeding to rattle off every ingredient.

Well, at least you won’t be starving anytime soon.

When you bring it back in to your kitchen - and its cheery wallpaper and its floral patterned Pyrex dishware, you and your new...family(?) all stare at the cheese salad, the gelatin, the curiously frosted meatloaf spread. A smorgasbord courtesy of the insistent generosity!

Who will take the first bite?

B. DON'T BE A SQUARE!

You can only avoid the cheer and the neighbors for so long, even as you sit inside enjoying all the amenities of your new home. The television can only turn its volume up to five, after all! One bright and sunny Saturday, the weather crisp and clear, news broadcasts and reruns of The Ed Sullivan Show are drowned out by the music in the neighborhood. Eventually it’s too much to bear — you simply must put on your shoes and go discover the source of that infernal racket.

Why, it’s the block party! Haven’t you seen the invitation — with instructions — sitting in your mailbox, silly? Wear a badge so everyone on the block can know you’re new and welcome you to their extended family!

Well! Each neighbor was supposed to set up a table with snacks and drinks and entertainment on their front lawn. Carter Mayhew, one of your Robbie neighbors, has a whole ring toss obstacle course set up for boys to play with, and his wife is cheerfully and blandly instructing a group of girls on jump rope rhymes. Colorful streamers hang from every lamppost and mailbox, balloons and party favors galore. Like you, there are even a few newcomers to Santa Rosita that are caught just as unaware of this event — though others are being welcomed in by husbands and wives and children, caught in conversations about building decks and the upcoming Halloween festivities.

Before you can decide if returning home or joining the party is your choice, a plate with chips and dips and yes, more gelatin is shoved into your hands and a party hat snapped on to your head.

“The guest of honor has arrived! Come and meet your neighbors, neighbor!”


THROUGHOUT OCTOBER.

Life falls into a peaceful haze for the next several days. Dull, unassuming, tranquil. As the month drags on, the spirit of Halloween begins to manifest in Santa Rosita, from the pumpkins people start putting out on their doorsteps to the smiling faces of paper skeletons pressed against their windows.

And then, towards the end of the month, something terrible happens. You hear it first through word of mouth, rippling through Santa Rosita like a wave, dark murmurs accompanied by sad sighs and downturned eyes. Soon, you start to read about it. Grim business, they say. A tragedy. How could something like this happen.

People stop talking about it by the end of the week. Best just to forget about it.

Every day, that cigarette commercial comes on. It’s impossible to escape it. And every day, the number of days in the song changes, counting down.

”Thirteen days till Halloween—”

“Eight more days til Halloween—”

“Three more days til Halloween, Halloween, Halloween…”

HALLOWEEN.

CW: Violence, death, mouth trauma, vomiting, needles, razors

October 31st. It sneaks up on you whether you like it or not. When dawn breaks on Halloween day, things are as serene as they’ve ever been as men do yard work, raking leaves as their wives bake fresh pie and cookies in the house, the spicy scent of cinnamon, apple and pumpkin wafting through the neighborhood on chilly October wind. There’s a smile on every child’s face as they skip off the school bus in the afternoon, running into their houses to get their costumes ready. As it begins to get dark, the residents of Santa Rosita start lighting their jack-o-lanterns. One by one, little balls of light flicker to life on every porch and doorstep, jagged smiles grinning in the dark.

For the entire night, nobody blows the candle inside their pumpkins out. It’s a tradition, a very old one, and traditions are just another way of saying rules.

And Halloween in Santa Rosita, as it turns out, lives and dies by the rules.

A. ALWAYS CHECK YOUR CANDY.

Halloween isn’t just for the kids, although they certainly make up the bulk of who you’ll see out and about on the streets. Walking through Santa Rosita, your neighbors are as generous with handing out treats as they are with handing out gelatin molds and pot roasts, and they don’t discriminate. Adults are received just as warmly as children; the worst one can expect is a quirked eyebrow if they show up to a house without a costume.

Apples, packs of gum, homemade cookies. Chocolate bars, nickels, popcorn balls. Your neighbors hand out all sorts of treats, most of them homemade. The Robbies are no exception, and it’s their treats that seem a bit more high quality than most, some of the candy they hand out being obviously expensive, brand names. The good stuff. They drop each treat into your bag with those same pleasant, mild expressions and too-tight smiles you’ve grown used to in your short time here.

Eventually, as everyone winds up doing at some point in the night, you decide to start digging into your treat bag to sample some of your well-earned goods — maybe in the comfort of your home, maybe outside on the streets. And that’s when the fun begins.

Maybe you bite into metal, the razor sharp end of a blade embedded into the apple or candy bar you’ve picked out burying itself in your gums, or splitting your tongue. Maybe it’s a needle, impaling itself straight through the roof of your mouth or a cheek. Or maybe it’s nothing that obvious. Maybe the realization that something is wrong comes moments after you’ve devoured that chocolate bar or cookie, the bitter aftertaste of rat poison hitting the back of your throat along with bile and the rest of the contents of your stomach as they rise up and out of your mouth.

Or maybe you’ll bite into plain, sweet chocolate or fresh fruit. That’s also part of the surprise. You really don’t know what you’ll get until you start eating.

B. ALWAYS RESPECT THE DEAD.

At ten o’clock, all the television sets in the neighborhood turn on, blaring to life right in the middle of that omnipresent cigarette commercial. The volume begins to rise of its own accord as your television starts to pick up interference, bursts of static squealing amidst the rising, screaming chorus of ”HAPPY HAPPY HALLOWEEN, HALLOWEEN, HALLOWEEN!”

Breaking through the static, garbled and tinny, a child’s voice cries out.

“Can’t— I can’t hold them— back— Pumpkin— don’t blow the— out—”

And just as quickly as it cut in, the voice cuts back out. Commercial jingle notwithstanding, you’re alone once more. But not for long.

The doorbell rings. You can see them outside from your window: costumed children. Their masks and clothes are grimy and ragged from the muddy, slimy water they’ve been decomposing in for over a week. When they come to your door, squelching wetly as they shamble up the porch steps, they ring the bell or knock, as all polite children do. If you don’t let them in, they’ll find their own way, always by force. And once they find you, all they can gurgle in their reedy, waterlogged voices is, ”Trick or treat.”

From there, they attack.

With superhuman strength and speed, they tear and rip at anything they can get their hands on — clothing, skin, muscle, face, eyes. Being short and small, despite their strength, they're at a distinct disadvantage. They can even be thrown off, with some effort. But they don’t stay down for long, and attempting to hurt or mortally wound them only stalls them for a few moments, if that. How can you kill something that’s already dead?

Some in the neighborhood are willing to try and find out.

The only houses they seem to ignore completely are the ones with lit jack-o-lanterns still outside. They’ll loiter outside these houses, staring straight ahead at your door or window like they can see exactly where you are. But sooner or later, they’ll pass by and move onto the next house.

As long as the candles in carved pumpkins stay lit.


OOC INFO

Hello, and welcome to We're Still Here's first TDM! Here's a few things we'd like you to keep in mind:

The TDM is canon. You can treat this as the game's first real event and pick and choose what threads you would like your character to remember when they enter the game. For characters who app into the game, the events of the TDM will be treated like a dream. Upon awakening from it, characters will find that time has jumped ahead to December 1st. You may also feel free to use similar reality and/or time distortions to explain why the family members your characters have in the TDM aren't the same as the ones they may be assigned to in the game proper.

If you would like to have Halloween content in your relaxed housing prompts, please feel free! You are not beholden to follow our prompts exactly so long as the spirit is maintained.

There is no Network prompt listed, but feel free to wildcard one for your characters anyway.

Although the TDM is canon in the sense that characters are free to remember its events when they app into the game, it does not count as an official plot heavy event, meaning that characters will not receive regains from participating in it.

With regards to the dead trick-or-treaters: you may NPC them however you'd like, but keep the details we've listed in their prompt in mind. They are supernaturally fast and strong, will ignore houses as long as they have a lit pumpkin on the porch outside, and will try to enter each house the moment the candle in the pumpkin goes out. Additionally, they can't be killed, but they can be momentarily stalled by injuring them. By November 1st, 6AM, they will disappear the moment the sun comes out.


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greaser: (pic#10444403)

Dallas Winston | The Outsiders

[personal profile] greaser 2020-10-28 03:36 am (UTC)(link)
1. October 1st
cw: some mentions of suicide/suicide ideation

[ That voice, so sad and small and lost, tugs at him more than he would care to admit, and before he can even steel himself, there comes a vague and foggy thought: Johnny?. Then, no, Johnny is dead, and so are you, remember?

But he isn’t. He tries to hold onto the fantasy for a little longer, pretends he doesn’t see sunlight through his eyelids or feel the weight of the blankets on top of him, pretends he can’t feel the heavy weight of disappointment and grief in his gut as he takes in a breath of air.

He lays there for a few moments, still and silent, until he eventually has to face the facts: death didn’t take. He slams an angry fist into the mattress, pushes himself up, and looks around with a sneer of contempt. At seventeen, Dallas Winston has already been sleeping in empty lots and on his buddies’ couches for so long, he can scarcely recall having a room of his own. If he could recall it, he’s sure it never looked like this. He hasn’t seen this place in his life.

He creeps around the corner, past the yellowing photographs, not even turning his gaze toward them, and calls out to the first person he sees.
]

I don’t know who the hell you are, but why don’t you tell me what a guy’s gotta do to get a cancer stick around here?

2. Aunt Myrna

[ It’s been a steady stream of jello molds and casseroles—nothing edible, really. After sneering at the neighbor and nearly slamming the door in their face, Dallas brings Aunt Myrna’s something-or-other inside and damn near slams it onto the table. ]

People call this food? Fucking California, man…West coast folks are more out of it than I thought.

3. Respect the dead

[ Dallas is always ready for a fight, even if it is against little kids in Halloween costumes. Hey, if someone’s got it coming, they've got it coming. He feels absolutely no remorse as he flips a child in a grimy skeleton costume onto the ground, and he feels even less when he slams his fist into the masked face. ]

I can’t stand kids.

[ He grits his teeth, whirling to take on another masked child who has begun to rip at his jacket. ]

Little shits.

4. Wildcard

[ Whatever's good with me. I'm easy. Surprise me or catch me on plurk at [plurk.com profile] muttonchops or DM me. ]
13thcommander: (bwuh?)

October 1st

[personal profile] 13thcommander 2020-10-28 02:07 pm (UTC)(link)
A what?

[For what it's worth, Erwin doesn't view the guy in the hallway as a kid. For him, seventeen is more than old enough to be on your own and making your own way, so while he's a little surprised at finding another man in the house, he doesn't let it throw him.]

I don't know what that is.
greaser: (pic#10444402)

[personal profile] greaser 2020-10-29 08:40 pm (UTC)(link)
[ Dallas doesn’t view himself as a kid either, and he hasn’t in quite some time. He too his first trip to the county jail at age ten. There’s not a whole lot of childhood whimsy left to drain out of you after something like that.

He rolls his eyes. Dally is an old seventeen, but it’s clear that Erwin is quite a bit older than him. He doesn’t care. His lack of regard for those in positions of authority or those older than him has always been nonexistent.
]

A smoke. A cigarette? I’m gonna need one before I even get started with you.
13thcommander: (yeah yeah tell me more)

[personal profile] 13thcommander 2020-10-29 09:52 pm (UTC)(link)
Oh, a cigarette.

[Erwin has gotten dressed with the clothing he found in the bedroom, and that just so happened to include a little gold box with cigarettes in it. A lot of cigarettes, a luxurious amount, like twenty or so, along with some fascinating matches that came in a little book. He takes both out of his pocket and offers them to Dally.]

Here, you can keep them.
preaker: 𝐁𝐄𝐑𝐊𝐒 / 𝐃𝐍𝐓 (pic#14139757)

October 1st

[personal profile] preaker 2020-10-28 06:38 pm (UTC)(link)
[ Camille's been awake long enough to have: been reeled over by the photographs she's seen, tried to wake herself up from the nightmare this has to be, failed, and begun wandering the halls in search of the nearest phone or bottle of whiskey. Whichever she comes across first. So far, it's been neither.

She's trying to keep quiet, because still sleeping in the room she just came out of is some unknown man, and she'd like to keep him sleeping as long as possible, thanks. The same man is in tons of those photos with her, as well as two kids — and as soon as the boy calls out to her from down the hall, she recognises him as one of them. She's seen photos of him as a baby, and a little boy, and none of those memories are hers.....but here he is, in the flesh.

The woman freezes, all 5'4'' of her tensing up in the godawful pink silky pyjamas she woke up in. She has no fucking idea how to handle this, but his words betray that he doesn't know who she is, either. At least they have that in common. ]


...I'd love to know the answer to that question myself. [ Camille eyes him, not drawing closer. ] You just wake up, too?
greaser: (pic#10444388)

[personal profile] greaser 2020-11-02 01:22 am (UTC)(link)
[ He didn’t intend to wake up, but he supposes things don’t always go the way you want them to. He’ll deal with it later, when he’s cleared up the matter of where he is and who he’s speaking to. Coolly, he responds: ]

Yeah, something like that.

[ He snorts, letting his gaze wander to the house, the walls, and finally resting on the photographs on the wall. He’s not sure he would have recognized himself as a child, but he recognizes himself at sixteen. He leans in close, inspecting the scene. A birthday party—laughable enough on its own, but the faces of those that surround him are strangers. This woman just so happens to be one of them. He furrows his eyebrows.

That never fucking happened.
]

Real funny. You wanna tell me what the big idea is and who you are?
preaker: 𝐁𝐄𝐑𝐊𝐒 / 𝐃𝐍𝐓 (pic#14150035)

[personal profile] preaker 2020-11-05 11:16 pm (UTC)(link)
[ She watches him warily — he may be a kid, but he's an older kid, and he's got the look of trouble all over him. Not that Camille's one to judge trouble; hell, she was plenty of trouble herself. Still is, some might say. But she doesn't want to risk setting him off somehow.

And then he's looking at the photographs, and she falls silent, tensing. She has no idea how he'll react to this, no idea.. if he knows what's going on. But sure enough, the expression on his face and the question to follow suggest not. ]


I don't know any more than you. [ The woman offers, eyes still nervous and hard, but her voice softening a little. ] Woke up, came down here. Saw the photos. It makes no goddamn sense.

[ She pauses, answering the question she actually does know how to. ] I'm Camille. What's your name?