by Narrator » Sat Feb 01, 2025 7:15 am
The street that Sam and Miriam found themselves on was almost a contradiction in terms -- a quaint urban street? A quiet, quaint town wouldn't have nearly as many buildings as this, and a city would have at least some sort of rhyme and reason to how the buildings were built -- they'd be made out of the same basic materials, at least.
Instead, this...we'll call it an urban village, for the sake of defining things -- had quaint little shops and sidewalk cafes (much like Kneadful Creations) butted up against ancient stone structures connected to gleaming glass facades that looked more futuristic than anything London had to offer, next to a house made of gingerbread, and on and on we went. It all sort of flowed together -- it wasn't like these were out of place or selected randomly, as everything sort of connected and locked together, but no designer would put these things together in, like, a plan. The streets were lined with greenery -- both fairly standard trees and flowers, and some more bizarre things; stalks of flowers with large bulbs in a variety of unnatural colors. The city stretched out, with a larger, more official looking downtown area down one end, though it was hard to get the scale of the place here. Both from being on ground level and, well, the sort of random size and shape of the buildings making measuring difficult.
The light here came from above, which was fairly normal. But it wasn't the sun -- there was some light emanating from straight up, where they had fallen from, providing kind of a warm, pleasant glow into the city. If they stared long enough directly into the light, in the way you're very much not supposed to, they could make out what might have been the vague patterns of the ceiling of their dorm? Maybe?
Miriam was right, though -- this wasn't a mindscape. When in someone's mind, there was a floaty, almost aetherial sense; the telepathic portions of their brains interpreting thoughts and images and essences into sensory input they could comprehend and digest. This was more rooted, rock-solid. They had weight and mass. The world around them could be touched and heard and smelt. This was an actual, physical place; somewhere they actually were rather than were projecting themselves into.
Beyond that, it also just didn't fit right to be Will's mindscape. It was hard to put their finger on just what was different, looking around from where they were still picking themselves up, but a mindscape -- especially for a non-telepath -- was more of a holistic interpretation of one's psyche, filled with metaphor and symbolism. Where acting, or interacting, with the world around them would affect the person's mind and personality in some sort of fundamental way. This...this place wasn't that. One got the impression here, though, that if they went into that smoke shop, the cigars would just be cigars. That's not to say that whatever this was wasn't connected to Will -- I mean, they fell into the cauldron, didn't they? -- but this wasn't some kind of psychological soup.
Logic would dictate this is where the Wills went when they were re-absorbed into the cauldron, but Will had never described anything like this to them. His normal response, if anything, was that it was an indescribable sensation of remerging with himself; absorbing the memories and experiences of whichever aspect of himself went out into the world and integrating them into his whole self. Certainly, nothing as solid and tangible as all of this. I mean, there was a bus stop! Surely, Will would have mentioned some kind of mass transit system.
"Something's wrong" also was a fairly accurate statement. First of all, there was themselves. Both Sam and Miriam would find their telepathic senses significantly muted in here. Not entirely gone; they weren't de-powered or anything, but blunted, as if trying to listen to the radio playing three doors down through several closed doors. Sam, in particular, would also feel a little strange as she looked at her hands. As a shapeshifter, she had a more intuitive connection to her body that Miriam did, and that connection was just slightly off.
"Something's wrong". The buildings on the street were mostly empty and shut down. A number of "for sale!" and "great deal!" signs were in the windows. It wasn't abandoned -- here and there, some activity was going on. People of different shapes and sizes -- a nine-foot tall woman, clearing great strides with every step; an 18-inch tall man cleaning the windows to his shop, some sort of...faun? Satyr?... reading the paper at the bus stop-- were around, but not nearly as many as you would expect from something this size. The city was far too big for it's populace.