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The Crossing Mods ([personal profile] thecrossingmods) wrote in [community profile] thecrossinglogs2025-01-18 12:15 pm

THE CROSSING #1

THE CROSSING #1
It's time.

For more detail on the particulars of the event, be sure to refer to our info and planning post!
time to choose
— CALM BEFORE THE STORM

It likely isn’t a surprise, when The Ferryman speaks into your mind again. You’ve known The Crossing was coming, and for the past hours, days, or weeks (however you prefer to section your time in this place), you’ve been feeling it drawing closer.

You’ve felt the pull on your soul, guiding you to follow The River; you’ve felt the changes in the Cavern, and in yourself, a shift in atmosphere that seems to start in the humidity of the air and sinks deep down into your bones. You feel solid. More importantly, you feel vulnerable.

Those who want to pay the toll are invited to gather at The Ferryman’s point of vigil; those who don’t will at least have the draw of The Crossing to guide them.

If you have anything to say before the split, now is the time to do it.

— LIGHTS OUT

Because when the moment comes, it waits for no one.

The Lantern doesn't extinguish immediately. Those gathered with The Ferryman (and, perhaps, those gathered near The Ferryman) will see it: a precarious flickering of flame behind glass. The light shrinks, and with it comes a feeling of something else retreating, too — something that you may have understood was there without realizing it, or that you may have assumed was simply another aspect of the light itself.

The bubble of safety, you realize, is receding. And when The Lantern's Light finally goes out, so too does the shield keeping you separated from the wraiths prowling the tunnels.

The darkness closes in. The Cavern's glowing plants are now the only steady source of light in the entire chamber, which allows your eyes to adjust, but only so much; it becomes difficult to make out the faces of even those standing right beside you.

It's time, so says The Ferryman. Make your decision.

follow the leader
— PAYMENT COMES DUE

There is no pomp or ceremony associated with The Ferryman's toll collection. You need only to be willing, and ready.

The darkness seems to shroud The Ferryman more than it does the rest of you, somehow. You can't make out the features of their face, only hear their voice bidding you to step forward when you're ready. For any of you who might need a moment, The Ferryman will wait.

A mote of light appears in The Ferryman's palms as the toll is paid, growing in proportion to the number of memories it receives. It's small, but you can feel the influence of it: that protective bubble you felt recede when The Lantern extinguished grows again around the light, just enough to envelop the group gathered here.

Time to go, says The Ferryman. And even though you can't track their movements in the darkness, the light tracks it for you: over the lip of the land bridge, and down to the black River below.

Nowhere to go but forward. When you step off yourself (even if it takes a bit of psyching up to get there), you'll find that the drop is gentle, and that your steps suspend safely over the water.

Just don't get left behind.

— HEAR A VOICE THAT CAUSES YOU PAIN

And so, you journey.

You walk on the surface of The River as if it were a wide, black road. Ahead of you, that same mote of light follows in the steps of The Ferryman, illuminating the ripples they leave in the water as breadcrumbs for you to follow. The air above The River is cold, certainly, and sometimes the icy water might splash up onto your shoes or ankles — but The River is wide, and there's room enough to walk together, even if you can't see each other well. It's as comfortable as a journey like this might ever be.

But The Crossing is a trial. You didn't forget, did you?

It starts slow: sounds from the darkness that could be voices, unless it's been dark for so long that your ears are playing tricks on you? Shouts of anger, high-pitched laughter, cries of fury and despair.

Then there are words. They beckon to you from the darkness: some plaintive, some punitive. They want you to stop. They want you to stay. They want you gone. Most of the voices are unfamiliar to you, but at least one, you know very well.

You need to keep moving. If you lose sight of The Ferryman's steps, you run the risk of being lost in the Cavern forever. Or perhaps it's someone beside you who's on the edge of losing their focus, someone who needs you to help keep them on the path?

trust your gut
— FIGHT FOR YOUR LIFE

The rest of you, left behind on the banks of The River, have only your wits, the contents of your pockets, and the pull of something beyond the darkness to help you on the journey. The darkness is smothering, but not completely impenetrable: you have the glow of the Cavern plants, the faint gleam of the toll group’s steps on the surface of The River, and anything you may have picked up before you got here.

You can travel together or alone, but you must move. The metaphysical pull on you is growing stronger and more insistent the longer you stay in one place, and the Cavern, before preternaturally silent and still, is beginning to stir.

The wraiths, once silent, shapeless, harmless shadows following you about the Cavern, have changed. Where before they were merely unsettling to look at, now they have become larger and more monstrous: sharp eyes and claws, wide eyes and mouths. Where before they were silent, seemingly both unable and unwilling to make any sound, now they wail: wordless cries of pain and anger giving away their positions in the darkness.

Some of them may even be familiar to you, once they get close enough; the wraiths that before had seemingly taken a liking to you, seeking you out and following you wherever you went, now seem dedicated to hunting you specifically.

What the wraiths want from you, it's hard to say. If they catch you, they will tear at you without strategy or direction, like a ravenous animal — or perhaps a terrified one.

Any injuries you sustain during this time, whether from the wraiths or otherwise, are just as real to you as they would have been when you were alive: you bleed, you break, and you feel every inch of the pain inflicted on you.

Nowhere to go but forward. If you follow the pull in your gut, you'll get to where you're going. One way or another.

on the other side
— A MOMENT OF RESPITE

Whichever trial you've chosen, there is, eventually, the end.

You feel it first in the atmosphere: a resettling of the off-kilterness that's been surrounding you. The air slowly becomes drier, and the darkness less punishing. The plants that line the walls of the Cavern become more and more rare, their light replaced by ambient light leaking in from somewhere above you.

For the group traveling with The Ferryman, the wide expanse of The River gradually becomes shallower and narrower, until it's hardly a trickle beneath your feet, winding through the cave system. For the group traveling on their own, there comes a point where the wraiths seem unwilling or unable to follow, their shrieks in the darkness growing further and further away.

You feel it next in yourself: a smoothing of your rough edges, aches and muscle pain and physical exhaustion melting away. For any injured on the journey, your wounds resolve themselves as if natural healing on fast-forward. Natural healing is not always the cleanest or the most comfortable, though; you might be left with scars, crooked fingers or noses, or some other lasting memory of what you risked to be here.

Lastly, once The River has narrowed enough and two groups have reunited again: The Lantern relights. The Ferryman, for all that they were nearly invisible to you in the darkness, seems just the same as they were before. You made it through, they tell you, with no small amount of warmth and pride. Let's take a load off.

You should rest. If you took anything from the Cavern to help you on your journey, you'll find that it's gone from your pockets — when did that happen? Did you set it down? It's been such a long journey, it could have been a lapse of memory.

A memory? Ah, there's something else gone too, isn't there? Willingly or otherwise. If you try to reach for it now, it's like dust in the breeze, or a dream upon waking. You know it was there once, but the harder you try to recall it back, the thinner the details get. Eventually, you might not remember even that there was something to forget.

Congratulations. The Crossing is complete.



Image credits: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 + stock imagery unless otherwise noted
solitarynote: (Fear/Worry)

I don’t have the icon for this T.T Needs to get on that

[personal profile] solitarynote 2025-01-27 03:04 am (UTC)(link)
How ironic that his sister believed it was her fault he was suffering. It couldn’t be. Sure, they had fought, but Sunny had been the one to act… the one that had led to such an unspeakable conclusion to their own colliding tantrums.

He wanted to refuse her offer but… he wouldn’t be able to walk by himself. He knew that. Not with the way his limbs were shaking. So he nodded against her shirt, climbing to piggyback against her like he had when they both were younger. His limbs hung almost loosely in contrast to where his arms gripped tight, like the energy was rapidly leaving.

He hated this. Hated that she had to take care of him, hated that he had to rely on her, when he didn’t deserve any of it.

Sunny’s thoughts truly were a whirlpool, spurred on only by their father’s harsh words and his own deceiving silence.]
perfecttune: (Hug)

CW: mention of potential drowning

[personal profile] perfecttune 2025-01-30 03:41 am (UTC)(link)
[Mary allowed Sunny to cling to her- after all, it was something familiar, comforting for not just him- but her too. She took their pace in stride, moving just fast enough to keep with the group, but not so fast that it would be uncomfortable for her brother. She tried hard not to focus on the voice and instead hoped to provide a distraction.]

Remember that time at the lake? We would all go swimming there... well... Hiro and Kel especially... [She couldn't see her brother's reactions to she took subtle body language changes as his way of communicating during her story.] You would always sit by the water and mostly read books... and the rest of us would occasionally play in the water... but that day... you had decided to come and try to play with the rest of us...

[A small smile appeared on her face and she continued forwards, every once in a while shifting Sunny so she wouldn't drop him.]

I was so proud of you... you took that step on your own... and even though things didn't go as planned... you still attempted... and that's what mattered. [She tried not to shudder at the fact that if she had been a moment later... well... she supposed they still ended up here anyways but she couldn't bear the thought of something happening to him.]
solitarynote: (Sitting Alone/Sad)

CW: arachnophobia mention

[personal profile] solitarynote 2025-01-30 03:50 am (UTC)(link)
[Sunny stiffened a bit as Mari began the familiar story. It was funny, almost - his memory would come back in fragments, books stored on the shelves of an underground, abandoned library. Yet his sister could speak and remember it so easily, so fondly.

Sunny wasn’t sure when that had all changed. If it was before the Incident or after.

Her praise was misplaced though. Sure, he had worked up a shred of courage and climbed the stone they had used as a diving point, but what had forced him into the water - ultimately - was a spider he had noticed on his shoulder.

The dark body, with multiple legs and eyes staring at him, too close… it still made him shudder. He craned his head to make sure it hadn’t followed him here, either.

Another flinch, as their father’s voice echoed disappointment at Mari and that same hollow anger at Sunny.]
perfecttune: (Default)

Re: CW: arachnophobia mention

[personal profile] perfecttune 2025-01-30 03:59 am (UTC)(link)
[Mari hadn't known that the reason Sunny jumped in the water was due to a spider, she had just been so relieved that he was safe- and had decided to leave his comfort zone to join them. She did however feel the shudder, try as he might to hide it, and squeezed his legs comfortingly.]

I know it still seems scary... I was scared I would lose you... but ultimately... what's important is that you took that step. Even if it was small... you still made progress... and those little steps are what makes up life. We try new things, succeed, fail, discover we had a talent for something new...
solitarynote: (Check in)

[personal profile] solitarynote 2025-01-30 04:04 am (UTC)(link)
[It had been a huge step for Sunny, especially since he didn’t normally join most of the more rambunctious activities his childhood friends partook in. Normally he was off to the side… and that was fine with him.

If only it had been a step of progress. Instead, it had turned out more a flop of failure.

He found himself nodding automatically at her words. Not that he could agree with her, deep down, but an acknowledgment that he had heard.

If that was what had made up Life, Sunny wondered what she would say made up Death…?]
perfecttune: (Default)

[personal profile] perfecttune 2025-01-30 04:39 am (UTC)(link)
[As if in answer to his silent inquiry, Mari let out a little laugh.]

It's interesting saying that though now that we're dead huh? [She didn't want to admit that she was glad she wasn't alone- she would never had wished that anyone was dead- let alone her precious brother.]

If anything... I guess... maybe we can use this time to reflect? See where we improved and what things we could have changed and use that to help us though this journey?
solitarynote: (Sitting Alone/Sad)

[personal profile] solitarynote 2025-01-30 01:28 pm (UTC)(link)
[Mari’s advice might have been true for herself - though it seemed like being better than perfect was a pretty high bar to set - but for Sunny… he hadn’t improved at all. If anything, he had gotten worse.

Sure, he had always struggled with communication (or what people expected out of communicating, he could do it just fine non-verbally), but now his vocal cords had withered from not using them. His throat hurt with the slightest provocation. Not to mention his weakened physique…

He wasn’t sure how anyone would consider him useful here. Really, Sunny was just deadweight… including to his sister. His grip wrapped a little tighter around her as he looked down into the River.]
perfecttune: (Default)

[personal profile] perfecttune 2025-01-31 01:16 am (UTC)(link)
"Regardless though... we have to continue forwards to get somewhere right? Just because we took a few steps back doesn't mean we can't find a new path?" Mari had a feeling that they were all doing that now. Sure they had passed on... but instead of wallowing in painful memories, they were choosing to move forwards.

"So... just try your best ok? We'll all be here to support whatever decision you make."
solitarynote: (Default)

[personal profile] solitarynote 2025-02-03 01:42 pm (UTC)(link)
Moving forward… the only reason Sunny was doing that now was because he had no other choice. He was pretty sure he couldn’t stay back in the city they had just come from - the Ferryman stated as much - and really… he wasn’t making progress.

Not in the way his sister was probably hoping.

But… for this moment at least… he could pretend that they were someplace else. That he hadn’t committed a terrible mistake that tore their family apart… and it was just him and his sister, Sunny being carried like he used to.

The voices were oddly quiet now. Maybe, in a way, this was his sort of understanding.
Edited 2025-02-03 13:42 (UTC)
perfecttune: (Default)

Wrapped

[personal profile] perfecttune 2025-02-07 02:33 am (UTC)(link)
The slight relax in Sunny's posture was all she needed to know that he was somewhat at peace. It didn't mean that he had come to peace with the voice of their Father- although part of her desperately hoped that the sound being gone meant that he had. But for now she was content to have him lean on her for as long as he was comfortable. This familiar silence, the stretch of warmth when they used to cuddle, brought a smile to her face as she continued forwards towards their destination.

A quiet whisper escaped her lips, whether she meant for him to hear or not. "Thanks, Sunny."