Ororo Munroe (
agoddessonce) wrote in
etrayalogs2024-06-01 11:45 am
[OPEN] X-Mansion clean-up
WHO: Storm and you!
WHEN: Late May-Early June
WHERE: Xavier Institute for Mutant Education and Outreach
WHAT: Come bother a lonely goddess in a blast from the past mansion!
NOTES\WARNINGS: N/A for now, but this is the X-Men - discussion of death, bigotry, and discrimination likely.
A new building has popped up in Etraya - easily visible from the Hospital and Apartment Complex on the main island. Ororo spends a few days flying back and forth from the main island and to the Institute, investigating its exterior and interior, before finally just taking one of the bedrooms in the main mansion.

⏵ i. indoors;
⏵ ii. pool;
⏵ iii. rooftop;
⏵ iv. wildcard;
WHEN: Late May-Early June
WHERE: Xavier Institute for Mutant Education and Outreach
WHAT: Come bother a lonely goddess in a blast from the past mansion!
NOTES\WARNINGS: N/A for now, but this is the X-Men - discussion of death, bigotry, and discrimination likely.
A new building has popped up in Etraya - easily visible from the Hospital and Apartment Complex on the main island. Ororo spends a few days flying back and forth from the main island and to the Institute, investigating its exterior and interior, before finally just taking one of the bedrooms in the main mansion.

⏵ i. indoors;
The gate and the doors are, actually, left unlocked for now. Ororo is alone, and isn't too worried about security just yet - it was just her in this large, lonely mansion and she could take on anyone who might feel like trespassing -- not that there was anyone like that here, she'd found. She can imagine people like Scott or Logan or even Hank berating her for being careless anyway, but... she isn't worried. She's more concerned about how much of the institute is even real - and thus, how safe everything actually is.
So, she goes through the entire building one room at a time - testing light switches, checking stoves or microwaves, looking through the computers in the old staff offices (they switch on, but there's nothing saved in them), turning beds so she can offer them to people who might be sick of the apartments... It's a large place, so this takes her a couple of days. It won't be hard to run into her walking through the halls with a little clipboard and a pen -- she'd had a brief moment of missing the modern conveniences of Henry and Forge's tablets -- and a smile for anyone who'd wandered in after her.
"Hello. Come to help me investigate?"
However, if she sees anyone approaching the main elevator, she calls out instead in a sharp warning -- "The sub-levels are restricted. If you'd like to go there, you'll need me to key in some biometrics to access them."
⏵ ii. pool;
The Olympic-size pool is easily seen from surrounding islands. It's dry and empty when Ororo first discovers the Institute, and not yet very clean. She considers putting up a message on the network to ask for help, but... perhaps that'd be better suited for when the pool is actually usable, instead?
So when she's done poking through the inside of the mansion, she figures it's time for a more mundane use of her powers. She blasts the tiles with wind and water to wash away any grime or dirt left between the crevices. Filling it up with clean water later was no trouble at all either, with a convenient cloud of fresh rain.
Maybe she should work on clearing out spaces for some tables and chairs next? But that'll involve more hands than she has, so it'll have to be a project for another day, maybe.
⏵ iii. rooftop;
Between self-imposed chores to make the mansion feel a little less shadowed and a little more lived-in, Ororo takes her breaks on the east wing's roof. She's taken a pool lounger and set it up here, and lies under the sun or the moon or in the shade of one of those odd, chrome structures in nothing but her underwear and a pair of sunglasses, sipping from an insulated tumbler she'd picked up at Kwiktrip and a paperback she'd taken from Corrine's (she'll return it! eventually!)
It's the last place she expects anyone to find her, really, but... people could always surprise her.
⏵ iv. wildcard;
Feel free to mix-and-match or tag in with something else completely, or use the X-Mansion as set dressing for other threads! ♥ If we have previous CR, you can also assume Ororo has messaged your character in some way to help her check the place out. Message me onalmondlychee if you want something more specific.

no subject
Her gaze shifted over Ororo's shoulder, less here and present, even as their hands stayed linked. The rest of her skipped across dozens of minds here and dozens not here. ] They're scared. Most of them. But trying to be strong, even as what they all just went through has left jagged marks on so many of them already. They don't know what this is, and they've never been through anything like this before.
no subject
But she is here - and there must be a reason. ]
We went through something difficult a few weeks ago. Not everyone survived - but those who did not, have simply... come back to us. It is unclear how. [ She smiles wryly. ] In the aftermath, everyone scattered - trying different ways to be strong. Not everyone has or had someone they could trust themselves to be vulnerable with. [ Ororo knows she hadn't had anyone like that, didn't really need anyone like that. But she had been feeling the familiar, tempting pull of solitude and had a little bit of fear for a while - what if she fell into old habits, started freezing herself off from people, just because they were strangers?
Then, one by one, people she knew and loved started appearing; it was a little too well-timed. ]
... It's not something we can solve easily. Certainly not a problem I can simply strike down with a thunderbolt. So it is unsettling, yes? Not knowing how to help yet.
no subject
Jean pressed her fingers lightly, before drawing Ororo toward the stairs.
Even for as much as she'd said swim, Jean had the urge to sit down now. ]
But we will—solve it. Like we always do.
The X-Men, and the Avengers, and whoever else here is willing.
no subject
Plenty are willing. [ Almost everyone here was willing. ] ... Truthfully? I'm most concerned about the average age of the city population. [ She glances over at Jean as they get comfortable. ]
Laura - this version of her - is one of the youngest ones here... but there are a handful of other children, too. Young teens. [ And, if you ask Ororo, they still counted as children. She's very concerned. ] Many of them are willing, too, but... [ they're so young. ]
no subject
There are quite a number of them. I saw Kate opened a place for all of them.
We could reach out and see if she needs help with anything there?
And Laura—
[ There's a momentary glance skyward.
That felt as tangled up in her and home as Scot did. ]
It's strange. Even when I was brought from the past into the future as a teen, I still only knew her as a teen back home. [ One with a small predisposition to kissing Scott and Warren. ] I never knew her this young. Only Gabby, after I came back.
[ How much they could touch with so few words.
How lost would Scott be trying to make sense of them talking? ]
It's strange to look at her and see Gabby,
but it's still very much Laura. Even from another world.
no subject
I would like to reach out to Kate Bishop about it, yes. It is just - I think I'm a little too intimidating. You might be better at this than I am - do you remember when we were talking about those children who might have been mutants? We were playing billiards at your home on the moon... [ Ororo smiles ruefully, looking up at the sky, as if the moon they know were up there. She lingers on the memory for a little while - her and Jean, and Scott and Logan and Kurt. It had been a matter of short debate, but she'd gone ahead and taken charge of that issue herself. She isn't sure if she could do that here - she knows the figure she must give off to the people who didn't know her. She could never tell what was it that made her so intimidating; Jean had the benefit of looking and being sweet, even with all the power she carried within her.
And Laura... Ororo's smile gentles. ] I didn't know her this young, either. I was there when she first arrived, did you know? She was older than this, but just as stubborn and willful. Protective of her heart, and so curious. [ About everything. About others. About Logan. For a moment, Ororo thinks of the days in the old mansion, the one that had crumbled before their move to Utopia, where she'd catch Laura in the monitor room late into the night, watching over her friends and her father. ]
Perhaps it's fate that we're here for her, at her age. There are things we can do for her that she may not have gotten. All the children that are here, they might even get along. [ Be her friends, have fun. Have a little more of a childhood that she was denied. Goddess, she really hopes this Laura could have that, at least. She still could. ]
no subject
[ One of so many cherished memories from living in the Summer House. Surrounded by family and the dearest of friends. She has to wonder if it's still standing or has been reduced to warfare rubble. She had loved it. All of her family in one place. A door through which anyone could step and be there with them, or they could step and be right in the heart of Krakoa. ]
Perhaps you're right.
[ Jean nodded, leaning back against the step, and it's as much to Ororo's words as it is the spool of thoughts connected to it. There's an ease here with Ororo and with only a specific handful of others, where Jean doesn't concern herself with trying to be as careful as possible when it comes to the thoughts of others. Whether it's trying to blanket them or not paying attention—a feat that takes a good deal of effort (or simply the respect of not reacting/commenting) for someone who had so easily heard the thoughts of millions on Earth from the moon. ]
I hope that, eventually, she'll feel able to stay here for longer.
That it's safe, and she's wanted here.
[ Beat. ]
At least as much as anyone can be in these circumstances.
no subject
But she nods, skirting around those thoughts and settling on the immediate concerns before them. ]
We'll find a way to make her feel that safety, even in these circumstances.
[ She pauses here, lets the words hang between them as Ororo thinks back. ]
You mentioned... other worlds? Do you mean the ones Aurora is asking us to save through her arbritrary missions? [ This gets a frown out of her. ] The ones we must apparently choose from, when we ought to be saving them all.
no subject
The new question isn't surprising, but Jean's focus shifts slightly. Not evasive or away, but more like a hand (that wasn't a hand), reached out into a darkness (that was never dark), and never far, to brush fingertips against the expanse of the beyond swirling outside of this dome, and this planet. Fleetingly. Without purpose. Only re-acknowledgment of existence. ]
A little of both. The other cities here with us, and the worlds out there.
no subject
If Jean says there are cities beyond the border that keeps them in here, Ororo's inclined to believe her. ]
What can you sense?
no subject
There are two other domes like this on the planet. The one we can see, and one on the otherside, caught in the longer and deeper shadows of this world in its gravitational spin. The one near us is... [ She searches for a word, and it almost sighs out. ] Peaceful. Serene. They are content with their circumstances.
But the other. [ Her brow furrows. ]
They have a dictator, and she rules through cruelty.
no subject
Neither of those sound appealing at all. [ To be content with this life, or to fight so hard that whatever intelligence was in power - Aurora, Echo, whatever name they wanted to use - would evolve to put them under their heel... ]
I presume those cities are... older, by some measure?
no subject
It draws into question Aurora's premise here.
Where are those worlds, then? Did they complete their tasks?
Or were all their tasks different for their bubbles?
Are these worlds actually at risk?
Why didn't they go home?
no subject
Ororo trails around a finger over the water, watching the ripples that nudge out and crash into other ripples. Some continue on into the rest of the pool, some simply fade away. She didn't want anyone, or anyone's efforts, to fade away. ]
I have never bought into the reasoning into the missions. But the reality is, we are... compelled into them, somehow, for as long as we are here. [ That's the real and present threat - that whatever the reason behind it all was, they still had to take part in all these anyway. To whatever consequence. ]
If we find the real purpose behind the cities and these missions, I think we will find ways to get everyone to their true homes.
no subject
I was thinking about what you said about the labyrinth—how everyone was made to go there because they wouldn't be able to breathe if they stayed. What actually happened here, then? If I'd been here, would I have been able to choose to stay behind?
If there are ways to get around the missions. Circumnavigate them.
What happens to people who do, or try to.
no subject
What I'd also like to know for the missions that come is if results are truly binary - are the only possible results to pass, and to fail? [ Ororo didn't like that. It's only the beginning of her own idea, her own desires, but... did they have to do everything within the terms given to them?
Could they not simply create a third option? ]
However... if we poke too closely, Jean, it's possible that we put the Etraya's residents at risk of becoming like the city ruled under a cruel dictator. We must be cautious.