There is a young girl skipping through Grant Park. She has a wireless PS3 controller in one hand. The other hand, she holds up close to her face, the distorted doll heads on her fingers letting off some pretty serious psychic disturbance. To some, it might seem like indistinct chattering. Others might hear distinct words, but the language is likely
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So she's frolicking about in a sweatshirt, grinning at the sky, when it...spasms. She frowns at it. That felt wrong, not like a Rift at all. Looked wrong.
There's also a bit of weird happening over across the way, there, though she doesn't connect the two until she gets closer -- the weird she was initially picking up on was 040, and it's we she appears beside, though she's staring at Mati. Or, more accurately, at the heads on the girl's fingers.
"Not her real head," she murmurs. "Not her real game." She just can't quite put her finger on what is.
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We turns, studying Babel. Mati's games hurt our head, but more is one the fritz right here.
Pieces are falling apart. Networks are getting disrupted. Some things will have to be smashed.
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She looks back to Mati when the girl's shoes bump hers. The invasion of her personal space doesn't bother her. The defiance doesn't either. It's the way reality flickers around Mati that reminds her...reminds her of...
The air thickening--flash of light or white or nothing or void--paralysis--pain--
There's a sick feeling rising in her throat.
"Nobody can get out," she deadpans, staring right back down into Mati's eyes, ignoring the question completely. She can feel it, poking and prodding at her walls, wanting them down, wanting to speak. She won't let it.
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Words. There are words in response; the puny things that can only exist within other things that exist. Need for air and eardrums and lips and tongues. Alima dharbek.
She gives the elt partiality a stare that makes it clear enough: this is not something We Should Access. It is a dogged little thing anyway. A good pet. A good Pillar.
It has to crack, Mati points out, meeting Babel's stare. Then it will be free. Whether or not we all crack with it. It. Will.
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The shake turns into just a shake of the head. "Always cracks," she mutters, looking exasperated. "Cracks in good time, without you. Every little bird sings to be free."
It has to crack. But that's not right, not wrong but not right -- the universe will crack in time, they always do, but she has the distinct feeling that now is not the time.
Or maybe she can't tell anymore. That's almost as frightening as the sudden possibility of the End rushing right up on them. This isn't the right universe for her, or for this tiny thing that looks like a girl and most emphatically isn't. She doesn't know what she is, except the beat is familiar. But she would have remembered a beat like this, if she'd felt it before ( ... )
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She drops her hand from her face and glares at Babel. The strings are like twigs and branches. She feels broken and scratched as she breaks through them, but the pain is welcome compared to the static and her inability to breathe. She can't properly exist here. She can't properly exist within any universe, but this one is one of the most farkelt she has ever been within.
So she takes away a dimension, strips time, and adds in a healthy sense of nothing. Sure, there will be repercussions. Sure, it hurts as the universe snaps back at her. But it's fine. She needs this now.
You don't wait for the animal to die to eat it, she hisses, the voice losing it's childlike manner, the song tones dropping entirely. You slaughter it in its ( ... )
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--this is not what should be. This is not the end, this is something outside. This is something she hasn't felt before, but seems eminently familiar, and that scares her beyond the searing pain in her body, beyond the vibrations.
And then she realizes she cannot feel her own beat under everything. No--it's there, but something's missing. Something steady, something always there, something--there's no movement.
Babel twists her hands into her hair, doubling over, and screams. She can't do anything else for the time -- or no time -- it takes Mati to break reality. She's silent, after, but doesn't move, her face obviously pained.
"Slaughter takes nothing away, wait for it, wait for it--it's not," she mutters. "Tear apart, broken--breaking--break this. This is the worst--" She breaks off, shutting her eyes tight against she doesn't even ( ... )
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This town isn't stable at all. It's a little bundle of sticks, waiting for someone to light a fire under it. Of course, who's to say what a farkelt verse is like before it's opened? If order and reality can come from chaos, who's to say that chaos can't come from order and reality?
The worst?
Mati begs to differ. This is her arena. This is where there is a sense of accomplishment. Of power. Of Existing. There's no room here. Not in the least.
Doesn't matter, though. No one can stop me.
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except---
Except.
She remembers the clouds, but not enough of them.
So for the moment, she's going to be unresponsive in Grant Park. Sorry, Mati; you didn't break this toy completely, but for now, it's broken.
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