Project W Subject 013 ("Albert Wesker") (
subject_013) wrote2020-09-10 09:59 am
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Entry tags:
deerington/
deercountry Inbox - UN:A_Wesker013

”Greetings. You’ve reached the voice mail of Albert Wesker. I can’t come to the phone right now, as I’m either at work in the laboratory or chasing some Beast off my roof. At the sound of the tone, please leave your name and number and a suitably short message and I’ll return your call as soon as possible.
“However, if you’re Chris Redfield, stay on the line….”
Re: @deercountry August TDM - With Luz Noceda [CW: Fictional virus mentioned]
Luz had given it SOME thought, but was somewhat concentrated on what she would have to do once she got her body again, but did wonder how it related to their Moon goddess.
"Oh, well, I was just thrust into a den of crabs, so I guess I was just scrambling to not die? I guess that instinct sort of won out, and once I got away from them, that whole thing made me remember what I was doing before I got here?"
Luz hesitated. "Well. Other people's blood can do strange stuff. Mind just sort of glows in the moonlight and smells like milk? Otherwise I think people with blood like mine have kind of more mental magic manifest."
Re: @deercountry August TDM - With Luz Noceda
"A den of crabs? Why am I envisioning you stunning them with rocks and scrambling away?" he notes, almost mischievously. "I have a feeling it was just as well that I missed out on that particular local fauna.
"Paleblood, I think the call that kind. It sounds like a beautiful blood type," he says, with a hint of awe and admiration. "And it fits your magic and your personality." Perhaps it's a trick of the light from the string lights and a mist coming in from the sea, but a whitish vapor might start to rise from the back of his neck.
Re: @deercountry August TDM - With Luz Noceda
Clearly, Luz was more forgiving about parables, particularly when they related to her.
"'Stunning them; is a nice way of saying I started to throw them at the crabs and then took on some ones with the rock intending to break them if they got near me. Believe me, I was not playing around with those things. Their sting was weird."
Someone still hadn't figured out that her blood was susceptible to it.
"Beautiful? I guess. Pale things tend to usually be the description of frail things, like if someone's sick. Thanks for that, but I'm still trying to figure out if I have a blessing or a curse. I'm used to glyphs and magic that I can attempt to shape. I've never had to live with magic inside of me. That changes things in ways I have to figure out now. What if I accidentally activate it by mistake?"
((This delay was on me: I thought I had replied but hadn't >.<))
"If it's any consolation, I've run across myths and legends of wondrous pale things: the Wampanoag of the North East believed that deer with white fur were the messengers of the Great Spirit. And the Lakota of the Plains believed that long ago, their tribe were saved by the wisdom of a white buffalo which transformed into a woman," he says, glancing up to the moon. "To this day, they consider the sight of a white buffalo to be a blessing and a warning, and the birth of a white buffalo is considered a sign of changes to come.
The vapor starts to coalesce into an animal shape perched on his shoulder, something fairly small but long and slender with short legs. The vapor solidifies and darkens into a small brown weasel.
"Oi, 'as anyone told you your 'ead is a dark an' wee-yud place, boss?", the critter asks, leaning over to look into Wesker's face. The critter then turns around toward Luz. "Oh, 'allo. Found your way t' this world, too? Welcome t' Trench. ..Luz, is it?"
((no sweat, real life happens!))
If that was any kind of easing of mind, only Luz Noceda could find it!
"That does put me a little at ease. I'm not sure exactly what will be the drawbacks or the assets of being a Paleblood, but maybe it'll be better not to jump to conclusions yet. Hey, what's that?"
Oh, it was a weasel! And it talked with a Cockney accent, that was so cute!
"I have, weasel friend, thanks for noticing! Yup, I'm Luz! What's your name?"
Re: ((no sweat, real life happens!))
"Give it time, you'll discover it's strengths and how to balance any frailties - Here, what's this?" The release of his Omen doesn't hurt in the least, but having a literal brain weasel emerge from one's head would put anyone, even the most implacable man, out of sorts the first time it happens.
"Call me Cypher. Nice t' finally meet yah, Luz!" the critter says, cheerily.
"You took the name of the sly fellow in the first Matrix movie?" Wesker asks, dryly bemused.
"Why not? Y' always found that bloke funny."
Wesker raises both pale eyebrows and looks to Luz, still bemused by this. "I pray your Omen is less of a joker, but that may be cursing it into existence."
Re: ((no sweat, real life happens!))
The blood magic was certainly an adjustment.
"I'm sure you're right, I'm just getting the hang of some things. They're definitely taking some time to use right."
Luz raised an eyebrow. "Cypher? The jerk that sells them out and kills off Apoc, Mouse and that underappreciated character Switch? Don't know how much of a 'sly' character he is."
Someone had apparently had certain feelings about that movie.
"Oh, Tempest doesn't talk, but she really doesn't have to. I can hear what she's saying loud and clear!"
Re: ((no sweat, real life happens!))
"I'll let you in on something I haven't shared with many people: I lost my family at a young age. I was taken in by a wealthy scientist, but while he provided well for my physical and intellectual needs and while he had adopted twelve other children like me, it wasn't a warm and wondrous upbringing. Family is... a foreign notion to me, at best." And this is as much as he's willing to reveal on the subject. Certainly not the megalomaniacal plans he and his siblings were meant to be part of, much less how it ended.
"Every story needs a good antagonist. He had some of the funniest lines in the movie, for one thing. For another... I suspect he was a true believer who grew disillusioned and when that happened, as all too often happens, he turned hard in the opposite direction," he muses.
He glances to his own Omen. "Perhaps you could take a page from Tempest's book."
"Where would be the fun in that?" Cypher retorts, paws on hips.
Re: ((no sweat, real life happens!))
"I'm sorry to hear that. I was born as the only child, and even then my dad wasn't around for very long. I've been raised by only my mom as long as I can remember. After that, if I've been with other people, we all tend to look out for each other, whether it was on the Isles or here. I couldn't imagine someone adopting me only to act like I was just one of many."
Luz frowned. "But he wasn't that antagonist, the Matrix was. He knew the truth, and chose comfort over fighting to live. Artificial reality was more important than those who cared for each other and struggled together. That doesn't sound like a way I'd ever want to live."
Luz was all about living her truth, no matter how hard it was. She chuckled at Cypher's retort though.
"All of our Omens are just a little different from us. I think I like that about them, honestly. I think I agree with Cypher there."
Re: ((no sweat, real life happens!))
"Better not to imagine it, then. Perhaps there's hope that anyone may find their own found family." With the unspoken implication that it may apply to him. Something like longing, wanting this may flicker in his strange eyes and then fades back into his usual quiet anger.
"True, though as horribly as the Machines treated the humans, they were harmed first, and sadly, they may have learned to oppress them from the way humanity treated them in the first place. Considering how humanity scorched the sky and ruined their own planet, it may have been a mercy to live in a simulation, though... it wasn't implemented in the most humane fashion." We admit, someone may have some insights into the rationale of the Machines, given his training - read, the awful rewiring of his mind.
Cypher points to her with one paw. "I like this girl! she gets it!"
"I like her as well," Wesker admits out loud, and for once, he's completely truthful, no shades of a secondary meaning.
Re: ((no sweat, real life happens!))
Luz squinted her eyes. She was very anti-Cypher, and just as anti-simulation.
"I did see the Animatrix! Luckily mom wasn't with me to see that or I never would have. You were definitely right about what humans did with the machines and how they treated them. I'd love to say that humanity isn't that cruel, but that's not true. The easier machines make things for human beings, the more they expect technology to make their lives easier. I'd hate the idea of living in a simulation, but right now, that reality tends to make sense for the way people are than I'd like it to be."
Luz wanted to be an idealist, but she was also dabbling in being realistic. Thanks, Deerington. Also, the first section of Animatriz? Waaay too sexual.
She grinned at good Cypher. "I'm on Neo's side! Fight back against the simulation!"
Well now Luz was blushing. "Aw shucks. Thanks Wesker!"
Re: ((no sweat, real life happens!))
He bows his head to her, tipping his hand. "My pleasure, my dear."
The fish folk band converse among themselves, clearly settling on what piece to play. Someone murmurs a suggestion, and the others make agreeable noises. They strike up a jaunty, dancelike melody, starting first on guitar and mandolin, the drummer and the accordion player gradually joining in.
Wesker tilts his head, listening. "....Parson's Farewell. That's a very old piece in my world of origin." He turns to her. "Shall we bid farewell to the shore and move inland?
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Look, she understood what she was and was not supposed to see, and a person like that? That was clearly someone Luz knew she wanted to stay away from. It was like a grosser version of Warden Wrath and his obsession with Eda.
Luz listened with vested interest, then turned to Wesker and gave him a nod.
"Sure! I think my legs have been feeling pretty wobbly anyway. I could use a more stable ground."
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"If you don't mind the weight," Luz said modestly, which was ridiculous. Luz was the weight of a sponge.
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She could literally turn into one anyway, but she leapt onto his shoulders nonetheless.
"I'm doing this. Begrudgedly."
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Wesker strides off, bearing Luz as he heads up the Boardwalk, heading toward the Lamp. "The first day of the rest of our lives..." he muses, almost thinking out loud.
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"I DO prefer crow. A group of them is called a murder, you don't get more hardcore than that."
The most mature and obvious reason, of course.
"If its a day like this, I'll take it," Luz piped up. "There are worse days than this one coming up, I bet."
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He chuckles, pleased. "Corvids are generally hardcore, but crows and ravens are their royalty," he muses.
He may grow quiet, edging onto the cold brooding he falls into that chills to the point of burning. However, he has a package of pleasant on his shoulders and he pulls himself back. "If this world is anything like its predecessor, no doubt, we shall have more experiences to add to our stock of dark stories.."
The glow of the Lamp appears out of the mist up ahead. He strides up to it, pausing before it. "Shall we pass through?"
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It must have been some weird luck she was born in some world where nothing as interesting happened until she actually left it. To think though, that some worlds were on par with this one on how bad things could get.
Luz nodded. "Darn right! And I've been pretty into birds, or was anyway."
Wolves had recently come into her life, and they were kind of their own thing.
"I think you're right about that. But at the very least, there's no Julia or Mother Superior. At least we don't have to feel like there's a target painted on our backs. we can at least have moments to breathe easy!"
Whenever they came and they had the foresight to see them.
Luz looked at the lamp and nodded. "Let's go!"
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"We'll see what manner of treatment our new hosts give to us. At least whomever they are, they allow for warm welcomes," he notes. He's accepted this world as his life, but dwelling in the predecessor to this world, to say nothing of the preparedness his world of origin gave him.
"Further up and further in," he murmurs and steps into the glow of the Lamp...
...The pull of the lamp draws them through into the warm lights of the windows in what looks like a fantasy inn. "Well. Dare we expect a warm fireside with travelers meeting for the first time, a darkling stranger watching from the corner?" he muses.
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Luz nodded. She could definitely agree with that. They still had to be wary about a lot of things.
And now they were pulled into some kind of inn, where it looked like it could be something right out of a horror story.
"Only if they sing a rousing ale song and can carry a tune," Luz replied, giving him a totally-approving-of-this-place look.
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"Like something straight from Lord of the Rings," he muses, leading the way, his hand straying close to the dagger at his belt. "Though if there's any ale involved, I'm the one drinking it," he adds, with a mischievously paternal lilt.
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"Ugh, gladly. I do not get why any kid wants to drink something that's so bitter. I'll stick with Boba tea and soda, thanks. The only thing I'd envy those dwarves for are the songs: they have GREAT songs."
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[CW: Fictional pathogens mentioned]
Re: [CW: Fictional pathogens mentioned]
Re: [CW: Fictional pathogens mentioned]
Re: [CW: Fictional pathogens mentioned]