Mod M (
tenforward_m) wrote in
ten_fwd_ooc2014-06-22 06:24 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:
TEST DRIVE #3 - Alien Bazaar/Ten Forward
#1 
Option 001. Alien planet, marketplace: So you're new to this whole space travel thing. The ship is cool and all, but there are hundreds of alien worlds out there. You want to explore. To see what the universe REALLY looks like.
Well, here's your chance! Your first stop is this lovely indoor marketplace, which looks kind of like a mall. There are stalls one after the other as far as the eye can see, and they sell all kinds of things: food, clothes, trinkets, animals, fabrics, jewelry, perfumes, books, etc etc. Some things look human, easy to recognize; other things look very alien. There are two levels, and constant chatter as people hawk their wares and discuss prices.
Do you want to explore? Poke at the weird shops? Buy a gift for a new friend? Flirt with someone at the food court? Maybe you see a pickpocket, and must run to the aid of the victim. Maybe there's some other villainy afoot. After all, a crowded marketplace is a good place for villains to lurk, causing trouble. Whether you're a hero or just an unassuming traveler, there proves to be some adventure for you on this planet.
2
Option 002. Aboard the Enterprise, Ten Forward: You have no idea what just happened. One minute you were home, and now you're on a spaceship, in the middle of a crowded room. It looks like a bar. There are people eating and drinking, some in uniform, others not. Some are clearly aliens.
You've managed to land in Ten Forward a long bar with barstools and a bartender, tables sprinkled throughout, and the far wall is nothing but windows out to space. It looks like a nice lounge, low conversation making the room hum.
Better ask some questions and find out where you are, or just tap the closest person on the shoulder and try to make friends. The bar is open.

Option 001. Alien planet, marketplace: So you're new to this whole space travel thing. The ship is cool and all, but there are hundreds of alien worlds out there. You want to explore. To see what the universe REALLY looks like.
Well, here's your chance! Your first stop is this lovely indoor marketplace, which looks kind of like a mall. There are stalls one after the other as far as the eye can see, and they sell all kinds of things: food, clothes, trinkets, animals, fabrics, jewelry, perfumes, books, etc etc. Some things look human, easy to recognize; other things look very alien. There are two levels, and constant chatter as people hawk their wares and discuss prices.
Do you want to explore? Poke at the weird shops? Buy a gift for a new friend? Flirt with someone at the food court? Maybe you see a pickpocket, and must run to the aid of the victim. Maybe there's some other villainy afoot. After all, a crowded marketplace is a good place for villains to lurk, causing trouble. Whether you're a hero or just an unassuming traveler, there proves to be some adventure for you on this planet.
2

Option 002. Aboard the Enterprise, Ten Forward: You have no idea what just happened. One minute you were home, and now you're on a spaceship, in the middle of a crowded room. It looks like a bar. There are people eating and drinking, some in uniform, others not. Some are clearly aliens.
You've managed to land in Ten Forward a long bar with barstools and a bartender, tables sprinkled throughout, and the far wall is nothing but windows out to space. It looks like a nice lounge, low conversation making the room hum.
Better ask some questions and find out where you are, or just tap the closest person on the shoulder and try to make friends. The bar is open.
Re: Garyn Balvadares, the Nerevarine | The Elder Scrolls: Morrowind
"Well, whatever it is, I suspect it will take its time letting us know why we're here," he says. "The ada enjoy their secrets as much as they do their games."
Nerevar says this with the conviction of experience. It doesn't take many encounters with the divine to become an old hand at it.
"Were you taken from your ship, as I was?"
Re: Garyn Balvadares, the Nerevarine | The Elder Scrolls: Morrowind
He'd have been made a meal of in the world of the Long Night if he let himself accept things that easily. Not that he knows what ada means, but he understands the sentiment well enough, anyway.
"I was. One moment, I was on my way to the bridge. The next, here."
Re: Garyn Balvadares, the Nerevarine | The Elder Scrolls: Morrowind
Until then, he prays that Azura will guide him.
"Bal Isra has just been attacked by assassins," he says. "They came for me without a writ. I had thought my being here was in some way connected."
Re: Garyn Balvadares, the Nerevarine | The Elder Scrolls: Morrowind
"I don't think there's any link between what was happening before we showed up here and us being here. I just spent the day fighting zombies off my ship."
He can see no link between being here and the Bokor. But if it had been the day of the cut and paste ship, he'd have thought exactly the same thing.
"But that probably explains the warmth of your greeting."
Re: Garyn Balvadares, the Nerevarine | The Elder Scrolls: Morrowind
Because it clearly must have been the Camonna Tong who sent these assassins. He can think of no other explanation.
"Teleportation is not beyond their capabilities. But star-ships are."
Re: Garyn Balvadares, the Nerevarine | The Elder Scrolls: Morrowind
It's one of the reasons he has issues with many of the Nietzschean prides and why working with them does not often sit well with him. But it's also why, any opportunity he gets, he tries to remind the leaders of those prides that humans are worth their respect. Humans are worth freedom.
It's why he managed to free two worlds from the Sabras and Jaguars.
It's why he tried, for Harper, to free Earth.
Eventually, he's going to have to have that conversation with the Nietzscheans.
"I've been told the people whose ship this is have nothing to do with us being here, and so far, I'm inclined to believe it."
Unless he's given reason not to.
Re: Garyn Balvadares, the Nerevarine | The Elder Scrolls: Morrowind
More, even, than the Camonna Tong. There are still a few on his own council who still hold slaves. But he has been spending the currency his name affords him to change that fact.
"I wouldn't have expected they would. Two sets of mortals to toy with."
Re: Garyn Balvadares, the Nerevarine | The Elder Scrolls: Morrowind
His expression hardens, briefly.
He may have Nietzschean allies, it's true. But he's never made any secret of his dislike for their slavers, for their oppression of his own people. The revolution Harper and he had tried to start on Earth may have failed, but it and the rebellions it sparked have given the Drago-Kazov plenty of trouble.
And any world freed from the Nietzscheans is a victory.
And the Nietzschean enslavement of worlds is one of the things that most disgusts him about the post-Fall world.
After a moment, though, his expression softens again, and he gives an unamused half-laugh.
"Yeah. That's pretty much the impression everyone around here's got. The creature doing this is messing with us and the crew."
Re: Garyn Balvadares, the Nerevarine | The Elder Scrolls: Morrowind
"Neither have I."
This isn't quite true. He often worries for those who follow him and those who love him. But Ilmeni had been fighting the good fight years before he had ever set foot in Morrowind. She knows the risks, and bears them gladly.
He sheaths Goldbrand. There seems little point in having it out now. It would do little good against the being who has kept him prisoner.
A change comes over him - very slight, but quite noticeable. His body language is more relaxed, less rigid, though in no way is it informal or undisciplined. Just as he turned from the cornered warrior to the stiff diplomat, so has he now become one military officer exchanging pleasantries with another. Nerevar Redoran has retired for the moment. In his place is the Good Knight Serjo Balvadares. Unless you knew him quite well, you would think he was finally showing the world his true self.
The number of people who call him by his true first name can be counted on one hand.
"I don't suppose you even know who I am, do you?"
Insofar as anyone does.
Re: Garyn Balvadares, the Nerevarine | The Elder Scrolls: Morrowind
What was the comparison he drew when he signed up the Sabra-Jaguars to the charter? Yeah. Stalin and the Allies. Ancient military history. Trading off ideals for practicalities has never been something that's made him comfortable, but as a man single-handedly trying to pull together an alliance out of nothing, it's had to be done.
(Those slaves will be freed.)
"That's what I like to hear."
Conviction. One of the many things that seems to have died out since the Fall.
The guy finally sheathes the sword, and that's the cue Dylan needs to holster the force lance he's been holding loose but alert at his side. He flicks his fingers, giving it one, two expert twists before he slips it back into the holster at his thigh.
"I'm afraid not. Should I?"
Re: Garyn Balvadares, the Nerevarine | The Elder Scrolls: Morrowind
He bows slightly and gives his recitation.
"Serjo Redoran Garyn Balvadares of Bal Isra, Archmaster of House Redoran, Knight of the Imperial Dragon, Defender and Hortator of the Five Great Dunmer Houses, Proclaimed Nerevar Incarnate by the Four Ashland Tribes, Supreme Commander of all House and Imperial Forces in the Vvardenfell District, Champion of Azura, Hand of Mephala, Sword of Boethiah, and Protector of Morrowind."
Beat.
"At least I think that's all of them. Most call me Nerevar Redoran. A little more than half a year ago I walked into a god's house and killed him. If you don't remember that, you've been long away from the Mundus indeed."
Re: Garyn Balvadares, the Nerevarine | The Elder Scrolls: Morrowind
Commonwealth Captain and Commander of the Andromeda Ascendant will do just fine for Dylan.
Dylan dips his head in return for Nerevar Redoran's bow, and his smile is apologetic.
"I would definitely have remembered that. Just how does one kill a god?"
Dylan just has the Spirit of the Abyss to deal with, and that's more than enough. Not that the Abyss has a house to go to.
Re: Garyn Balvadares, the Nerevarine | The Elder Scrolls: Morrowind
"Carefully, and with a lot of help," Nerevar says. "There was much work that needed to be done to make it possible, but to shorten a long story, I tore his Heart from him."
Well, he liked to think it was his Heart. But it belonged to the world. For one was made to satisfy the other.
"The god was Dagoth Ur, if you've heard the name. The Devil Under Red Mountain."
Re: Garyn Balvadares, the Nerevarine | The Elder Scrolls: Morrowind
And facing that, Dylan and his crew. One captain, one ship, and the less than fifty worlds they've managed to pull together into an alliance.
"I don't know the name," he admits. "I ... suspect that your world and mine are rather different."
Re: Garyn Balvadares, the Nerevarine | The Elder Scrolls: Morrowind
Nerevar frowns.
"Well. It is possible that the old Imperial colony on Masser was more than a rumor. But that's not what you mean, is it?"