#the i love you in doomsday is meant to ironically break that wall
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me fighting the urge to tell people the doctor and rose were absolutely not fucking in s2 when they talk about it in tags of my gifsets
#it's literally been confirmed they were not#but ppl think sex = relationship and that they couldn't have been together without it#when if they had been it would've made things FAR too complicated and hurt rose so much bc#he could not commit to her until he was human#and it leads to a misunderstanding of their arc#bc they are always skimming that line between platonic and romantic#the i love you in doomsday is meant to ironically break that wall#and he was ONLY gonna say it bc he thought he would never see her again#it's not even that she is human and will die it's that HE needs to be human in order to open himself to her#to the degree she needed in the end#anyway#rambles
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Doomsday Dinner Party: Chapter 2
Me? Updating a story from 2018? Itâs more likely than you think. Iâve been wanting to write a continuation to this one for a long time.
Day 3: AU Day @taiqrowweek
Rating: T
Words: 9,000
Summary: The world might be over as they know it, but that didnât mean their still wasnât time for a road trip.
Ao3 Link: Doomsday Dinner Party (This link leaks to chapter 1, since reading it is kind of required and itâs been a long time)
~
June in the south was miserable and Qrow had not missed it one bit. Especially when that meant waking up with his clothes sticking to him like an uncomfortable, sweat-soaked blanket. It didnât help that Tai was practically a furnace, and such an extreme cuddler it was as if he was trying to make it into the next Olympic sport.
He carefully wiggled his way out of the otherâs grip, his efforts proving successful when he stirred but didnât wake. As he sat up, he bit back the groan as his entire body ached in protest, every muscle sore from last nightâs desperate escape. His shoulders were particularly knotted up, but he didnât dare try to rub at them. Not with his fingertips still scraped raw from the failed attempts to grab the edge of the concrete wall heâd tried to vault himself over.
Qrow glanced over at Tai, still slumbering away.
He remembered that split second of dread that had shot through him, when he called for Taiâs help and the man, already safely straddled on the fence, looked the other way. He had thought, this was it. Tai was going to jump to the other side and leave him to die. He couldnât describe the feeling that overwhelmed him when Tai only chucked their bags over before joining him back on the ground to help him over, putting himself in danger to save him.
After every other loss Qrowâd endured â friends, coworkers, his father, civilization itself â he was certain that nothing else could faze him. Oh, how the universe loved to prove him wrong. For the dread he felt when he was in trouble was nothing compared to the all-encompassing terror that engulfed him when it was Taiâs life on the line instead.
Heâd almost lost him last night and the thought alone still shook his very soul.
It wasnât even supposed to be like this. His plan had been simple: Team up with the trained soldier and travel from Montana to Texas. Try to locate his sister in Wichita Falls. Then, get a free pass into the military safe haven in Archer City. He was just supposed to use Taiâs connections to save his own skin, not fall for the guy.
And yet, here he was, a foolish man gently stroking his knuckles across Taiâs face, heart jumping at the little smile that elicited.
Damn it.
Qrow pulled away, before getting to his feet and picking up his scythe as he headed for the door. He opened it only a crack at first, listening carefully for any out of place noises â shambling feet, hissing breath. Anything that might indicate a Stalker nearby. When nothing caught his ear, he widened it, took a quick visual sweep of the area, before determining it was safe and walking outside.
Though he had no skill in reading it, the sun wasnât too high yet, so he guessed it was only a bit past eight. Despite the early hour though, the summer heat was already settling in thick. He turned on his heels, getting another gander of the area. Even in the light, there wasnât much to the facility. The wall surrounded the perimeter, only broken by an iron wrought gate that was probably only ever opened for vehicular traffic. He spotted nothing beyond the metal bars, so the horde that had chased them had thankfully continued on, rather than lingering in wait for them. Within the walls, there was only the small office building theyâd holed up into and the white tanks that potentially held some water.
Possibly a back-up supply in case of a tornado emergency? He wasnât sure, but it would be worth investigating after Tai got up.
For now, he had a different task in mind as he settled on the ground in the shade of one of the tanks and rested his weapon in his lap. Having been so exhausted, he hadnât cleaned the blade last night like he should have. It was going to be a chore to do so this morning, now that the blood had had time to dry and crust over. It would have to be done before they moved out though, so he set himself to work on the arduous task.
It wasnât until he was nearly done that Tai finally emerged, lumbering his way over to sit down beside him.
âBreakfast?â He greeted, shaking a bag of almonds at him.
âSure.â Qrow accepted a handful, throwing them all into his mouth before picking back up his grit stone and moved it along the sharp end of the scythe. With the sound too grating to talk over, they shared the meager meal in silence. Not that there was much left to sharpen. Only a few more strokes and the task was done.
It was worrisome that the bag was empty in just as little time.
To avoid thinking about it, he rapped his knuckles on the tank behind them. âWas thinking there might be some water in here.â
âDoubt it.â Tai said, appraising the unit with a skeptical eye.
âOh yeah?â He challenged. âWhat makes you so sure?â
Without breaking eye contact, Tai pointed to something above Qrowâs head. âWell that, for starters.â
He looked up at what he was indicating, spotting the bright yellow sticker with big, bold letters that said: Caution â Fire Hazard.
Not missing a beat, he said, âCould still be water. Itâs a hazard to fire.â
Tai chuckled. âOh, I see. Itâs one of those badly translated stickers from Peru then.â
âPeru? Why not China?â
âBecause my people have standards.â
âYour people?â Qrow arched a brow. âTai, youâre like the whitest Chinese person to ever exist.â
He gave him a once over. âKettle, black. Or in this case, white.â
âHah. Clever.â He mocked. âLeast I got the Asian eyes.â
âAnd theyâre very pretty.â Tai reached out, roughing up his hair until most of the shaggy locks were covering his vision. He laughed Qrow off when he tried to swipe at him in retribution, scuttling back and getting to his feet. âCome on, we should get moving before the sun gets too high.â
âYeah, yeah.â He stood as well, pushing his hair back into place, grimacing at the grime and grease that kept it into place like a self-made hair gel.
God, what he wouldnât do for a shower.
As they headed back to the little metal building, he said, âSo my thought is we head back to the car. Salvage it if we can. Ransack it if we canât.â Theyâd left a lot behind in yesterdayâs escape, including a canister of gas and some spare water.
Tai nodded stepping inside just long enough to grab their packs. âShouldnât be a problem. The freeway should be mostly clear now, so we can probably hotwire something new if need be.â He headed towards the gate, handing Qrowâs bag over as he passed. âWe can probably go scavenging in a few of the small towns on the way, but if all goes well, we can definitely make it to Wichita before nightfall.â
Qrow froze.
It took the other man almost a dozen steps before he noticed. He paused, glancing back, âQrow?â
He shifted his weight uncertainly, dropping his gaze. âYeah, âbout that. I was thinking maybe we should just⌠skip Wichita and head straight for Archer City?â
The silence that followed allowed Qrow to feel lower than the dirt he was staring at. And though Tai wasnât a violent man by nature, at least where the living folks were concerned, he still flinched all the same when the man approached him.
But the most Tai did was lay a hand on his shoulder, voicing softly, âAre you sure?â
âLast night was the first time weâve encountered a crowd of that size. We barely made it.â He replied. âIf we couldnât handle that, how are we going to handle Wichita being like that from end to end?â
âYou donât know that.â
He finally rose his gaze. âNo, but I do know better than to gamble on a losing hand.â
âBut,â It was hard to catalogue the pinched expression that formed on Taiâs face. âBut sheâs your sister.â
He swallowed down the sudden grief that was trying to crawl its way out of his throat. âYeah. Truth is though, I know sheâs not there. She either got out, or she didnât. I only wanted to go for me. To find peace with it, I guess.â He laid his hand over Taiâs, feeling the scars on the knuckles and the warmth of his skin. Alive. Here. âBut I donât want to lose you by chasing ghosts.â
Those soulful, blue eyes searched his face carefully. Then, for no reason at all, Tai pulled him into a hug, whispering into his hair. âOkay.â
It was almost like he was trying to comfort him. He didnât know why though. He was fine.
Qrow buried his head into Taiâs shoulder.
âŚHe was fine.
~
Qrow was nothing if not masterful at ignoring his own emotions.
âWhat do you think?â Qrow asked as he splayed himself over the hood of a Ferrari. âPerfect for the next calendar?â
âQrow no.â The smile gave his partner away.
âOh youâre right, the ladies like the open shirt look.â He teased, reaching up to undo a few of the top buttons.
Tai shoved a hand in his face, pushing him. âCut it out porn star. We gotta actually work.â
He gave a mournful sigh. âMy career, ended before it could take off.â
Qrow hopped down from the car, trailing after the other man. As theyâd feared, their little hit and run last night really did a number on the Camry. The back wheels were now pitched up on a hill of squirming, hissing Stalkers. There was really no hope of getting it loose without a tow and even if they could, the potential damage the vehicle sustained probably negated the effort.
So they made their way to the freeway as planned, now eerily empty except for the few dead still stuck in their seatbelts. They made sure to avoid those ones.
âOh, what about this one?â Tai pointed out a Jeep Wrangler, eyes practically sparkling. âBe good for some off roading, yeah?â
âYeah, âcept that gas guzzler ainât going to get us very far.â He nudged him onwards, peering into the windows of the cars they were walking by, trying to see if there were any abandoned snacks or water bottles to snag. Unfortunately, the best he could seem to find was a pack of Winterfresh gum, the sticks so old they crumbled.
They ate them anyways.
After about an hour of scouring their options and many failed attempts to get something working that hadnât had something wear out from disuse and time under the hot sun, they finally managed to get a little Hyundai purring to life. Qrow eased it down the grassy slope, the whole frame shaking roughly as they made their way to the side road theyâd been traveling on. Once they hit it, it was smooth sailing from there, Qrow pulling down the window to stick his hand out while Tai hummed showtunes beside him and mapped out the safest route to their final destination.
They reached Sterling within the first ten minutes. The small town, boasting only an original population of 800, was like a ghost town to drive through. A shambling straggler could be seen here or there, but mostly they went through uninterrupted â stopping only to check an already well-ransacked Dollar General. Temple, the next village down the 65, was not much more impressive and with tiny stores just as empty. They pulled over halfway down on the 70 to wash up in the Red River (not quite the shower heâd been hoping for, but it would do). They collected some spare water to boil later, before moving on.
Soon enough, they were turning onto the 79 and crossing the state border, driving through Byers, a town so miniscule, it wasnât worth touring.
âMaybe we should just keep going.â Qrow said as they entered Petrolia, finding the show to be the same as the rest: lifeless streets decorated with only the occasional Stalker and nothing else. âWe really arenât getting anywhere with all these stops.â
Tai ran a hand through his hair, already dry as the early afternoon sun bore down from above like a heat lamp. âSuppose so. Weâre only an hour or so away. Turn right here.â
He did as told, eyeing the signs as he did so.
Tried to ignore the heaviness in his heart as he realized they were turning away from Wichita Falls.
He focused twice as hard on the asphalt stretching for miles before them, avoiding the occasional abandoned car or, in one case, tractor. There wasnât much to see on the countryside of Texas, even less so now. It was nothing but wide, open fields, overgrown with weeds that had gone untilled, interspaced by the occasional barn or house. Any livestock there had been seemed to have escaped from their pens or frozen during the winter season.
They both looked away from the dead horse still tied to its post in the corral.
It took only twenty minutes to hit the next city. Despite it being three times larger than the other towns, they made it through Henrietta without incident.
They were just going under the overpass of the freeway when Tai suddenly exclaimed, âWait! Turn around!â
âWhat? What is it?â Qrow asked, U-turning in the middle of the road.
âWe need to go there!â
He followed the direction he was pointing, eyebrows going up to his hairline. âPecan Shed? The fuck you want to go there for?â
âItâs a gift shop.â
He waited a beat. âAnd?â
âIt has things⌠and stuff?â
Qrow rolled his eyes. âWhat a concept. Next youâll be telling me hardware stores have nails.â He turned onto the side street all the same, pulling into the parking lot within seconds. He gave the building a once over as they got out of the car.
It was a fairly large. Two stories tall and long as a barn, with a fancy awning in front that mimicked a shed roof and a patio with seating that stretched all across the front and down both sides of the property. The name of the place was in big red letters at the top story, something that would be easily visible from the freeway when passing by. The front doors were made of glass, surprisingly still intact and, more importantly, unlocked.
They stepped inside with caution at first, but a quick sweep of the open floor and a few calls to garner attention with no response told them they werenât in any immediate danger.
Which meantâŚ
They shared a glance, before immediately tackling the still semi-stocked junk food station in the middle of the room. He ripped open a package of Ruffles, stuffing half the bag in his mouth at once. It tasted like heaven. Stale, over-salted heaven.
Beside him, Tai was inspecting a bag of what appeared to be shelled peanuts while tipping back a bag of Fritos.
He swallowed down another handful, saying, âSave those.â They would keep better longer and they were good fillers when they had nothing else.
âYeâIâno.â Tai garbled out, his normal southern politeness completely abolished in the sightline of food.
Qrow, who had no politeness at all, just tossed the empty bag over his shoulder and reached for the Funyuns next.
By the time they had their fill, there was a small collection of litter at their feet. He sighed, plopping down onto the nearby checkout counter, smoothing a hand over his belly. Theyâd had to ration for so long, he couldnât even remember the last time he felt safe to overindulge. Too worried about what heâd need tomorrow to worry about the ache in his stomach today.
âSir, how much will this cost?â
Qrow looked up, smirking as Tai stood before him with two hand baskets full of goods. âFor what? The food or my sexy ass?â
He winked. âThe food. Your ass is priceless.â
âLeast you know quality when you see it.â He hopped down, taking one of the baskets and following the other out to the car.
They fell into an easy rhythm, scouring the shop top to bottom for anything worth nabbing. Drinks, trail mixes, jerky, matches, candles, blankets, batteries, knives. Even things like books and magazines were useful for campfire tinder â and maybe a bit of reading for those really boring nights.
Then again, Qrow thought as he placed a few shirt-wrapped bottles of wine in the back, there were always other methods of entertainment.
He slammed the trunk closed, before heading back in for one last sweep through of the back aisles. He zigzagged around the store, triple-checking the sections theyâd already emptied. A selection of colorful novelty mugs caught his attention and he chortled over the one with the cartoon Corgi surrounded by a heart and flowing text framing it that said, âThis is the Corgkey to my heartâ.
Tai had always said he wanted a dog, hadnât he?
He plucked it off the shelf and made his way towards where he could spot the familiar head of blond hair peeking above the displays. He wheeled the corner, about to call out â only for it to choke in his throat when he realized what the other man was doing.
Tai stood in front of a rack of wooden baskets, each one filled to the brim with stuffed animals. He seemed to be in a silent debate over whether to take the fuzzy teddy bear or the brightly colored unicorn, as if it were the most important decision of his life.
He looked so⌠lost.
Qrow inched forward hesitantly, moving loud enough that he knew he was there, but quiet enough to not disturb him.
It seemed Tai wasnât completely stuck in his own head though, for when he finally stood at his side, he spoke, âI used to bring Yang here a lot.â
He tilted his head, surprised. âYour daughter?â Tai hadnât talked about his girls much; whether it be out of a simple habit of privacy or a necessity to keep himself focused on survival instead of agonizing over his childrenâs fate was unknown to Qrow, but either way heâd never pried.
âYeah. When Iâd take her to go visit her mom, if the trip didnât go well â and it rarely did â Iâd bring her here. She loved the dinosaur exhibit thatâs in front of the truck stop. Iâd let her play there as long as she wanted and then weâd eat at the Steak Nâ Shake.â He waved a hand at the store around them. âThen weâd come here, get some of the specialty fudge to bring home and Yang would pick out a stuffed animal for Ruby. Somehow, she always knew which one sheâd love the most.â Â He laughed. It was a strained, wounded sound. âIâm afraid I donât have her intuition though. I canât even remember if Ruby was still in her unicorn phase before I left.â
Qrow swallowed down that same, awful grief from before that was trying to escape. Instead, he forced some cheer into his tone as he said, âWell you know what I do when I canât make a decision?â He turned to the baskets in front of them and pulled one right off the rack, dropping it down between them, âI get them all.â
Tai blinked down at it, before a genuine smile broke free. It was like watching the sun come out after a rainstorm. âQrow, we canât bring them all.â
âWatch me.â He pulled another one free and balanced it against his hip as he hefted it towards the car.
Ten minutes later, they were peeling out of the parking lot, about a hundred pairs of eyes watching the road go by from the backseat.
And Tai didnât stop smiling.
~
A semi-truck was parked sideways along the two-laned road that cut across the lake on the 172, itâs front fender partially submerged in the murky water, effectively blocking the way. Qrow didnât think much of it as he turned them around to take another route.
He grew more suspicious when they encountered multiple semis parked in a line across the 174.
Tai lent forward, eyeing the trucks with narrowed eyes. âThese are barricades.â
âAnd people donât set up barricades if they arenât trying to protect something.â Qrow determined, switching into low gear. âCome on, we can drive around it.â
âWait!â He grabbed his wrist, keeping it from touching the wheel. âIf the military set these up, then the fields are probably mined.â
He considered that for a moment, before shifting into reverse. âAlright then weâll try up the highway.â
Around they went, the detour taking them nearly a half hour â and sure enough, right at the juncture that converged the highway with the freeway, another blockade halted their forward motion. But this time, there was a message left for them in bright red paint along the bodies of every truck:
TURN AROUND OR DIE
âThe fuck,â He breathed, a shiver running down his spine. He looked to the man beside him, whose face had gone white. âTai?â
Tai set his jaw, before pulling out the map. âCome on, letâs get closer than weâre walking it.â
âAnd what are we doing about that?â Qrow snapped, pretending his voice didnât hit the octave of a screeching bat.
âYou donât have to come with me.â
The words were like a blow to the face. âWhat?â
He pointed out the frontage entrance a few miles south. âIâll go, and then Iâll come back and get you if itâs safe.â
His heart slowed down from its 100-mile a minute pulse line to only about 80. He pulled the car around, grumbling all the while, âLike hell you will.â
Despite his words though, as they neared the off ramp, the desire to just hit the gas and keep going overcame him so strongly, it was like his foot was fighting against a two-ton weight. He looked again to the man beside him, tried to draw strength from his unwavering nerve. Tai had the look of a man who was about to go to war with the whole world if it dared stand in his way of him and his kids â and if Qrow just became another obstacle, he had no doubt on where heâd end up on that side of the battle.
He wished heâd had even an ounce of that same backbone for his sister.
He beat down his shame and jerked the wheel to the right, heading down the ramp and following the way back up to where the street met another. He turned onto it. The road was immediately rough, more dirt than asphalt, rattling the frame of the car harshly as they slowly trudged between the empty farming fields.
Halfway down the road, they came to a pair of dead ash trees, one on either side. Hanging from their blackened and brittle branches were about half a dozen empty nooses. But one was not.
Instead, in its snare, was the body of a decaying crow.
A promise and an omen.
An eerie silence fell between them as they passed underneath it, the air stifling, suffocating.
Qrow coughed and said, âI think that was my cousin.â
Tai snorted, smacking his arm. âShut up.â
His own snickers were practically hysteric. The buzzing that had started in his nerves from the first warning sign had turned into a crawling feeling, like a line of ants were marching along his skin. To combat it, his grip on the wheel tightened.
This was insane. People had done all this. Blocked the roads, painted the warnings, hung the signs. All in an effort to keep other survivors from coming close. Was it all just the militaryâs doing? Scare tactics because they were overcrowded? Or was it something worse?
Just what were they walking into?
âHey.â
Qrow sucked in a sharp breath, looking down at the hand now covering his own.
Tai ran a thumb over his knuckles, the movement as gentle as his voice, âItâs okay if you want to stay back, really.â
âFuck that.â He snapped. âYou would of come with me to Wichita, no matter what, right?â
âYeah, absolutely.â Was the immediate assurance, followed shortly by, âBut that doesnât mean you owe me your life.â
He thought, again, of last night. Their shared panic as they ran across the fields. The wall that loomed ahead, cutting off their escape. Taiâs frantic orders as he helped him over.
Had he been alone, that would have been it.
He couldnât stomach the thought of Tai being in a similar situation â needing him to look out for him. And him just not being there.
âNo.â He avowed, meeting his eye. âWeâre in this together. So unless youâre gonna throw me out of this damn car, you can cut it out with the martyr shit. Okay?â
The hand over his pulled his off the wheel, Tai clutching onto it almost fiercely. âOkay.â
Qrow let him keep it, slipping his fingers between Taiâs own as he turned back to the road.
As they neared its end, he noticed an assortment of industrial standard wind turbines. Perhaps once in use to provide power to the few speckled barns and homes on the horizon. He turned north, driving between them, peering up at them. The blades were whirling lazily in the breeze as the metallic forest caught the bright, summer sun, gleaming harshly bright.
He had to wonder if the buildings out here still had power. Or, if not, if a bit of tweaking to the structures might be able to bring them back to life. He was long removed from his university days when he would dabble about in engineering, and heâd never actually studied the ins and outs of wind energy converters, but the temptation to try was irresistible. To be able to cook their meals on a stove again or, god, have a hot shower. He had to bet there were some independent water wells out here and the land was still prime for growing too; it wouldnât be hard to get their own crops growing. With time, they might even be able to find some livestock again. And a dog, too.
Qrow got lost in the fantasy of it.
So much so, Tai almost made him jump when he suddenly spoke up, âHere too?â
He blinked away the afterimages of him and Tai playing house during the apocalypse, focusing on the reality before him.
Scoffed at the sight of the pickup truck parked sideways across the road. He rolled to a stop, eyeing a side street in the rearview mirror a short-ways back. It was even less maintained than the ones theyâd been traveling down so far, promising a ride that would rival a go around on some bumper cars.
âWhat do you wanna do? Walk it or keep going?â He asked gruffly.
Tai hummed thoughtfully, eyeing the map once more. âWeâre not too far off at this point. Ten miles at most.â
âNot far off, he says.â Qrow mocked under his breath, even as he parked the car.
His partner laughed, undoing his seatbelt. âItâll be good for you. Your scrawny legs could use some definition.â
He opened his mouth to retort, reaching for the keys to turn off the car â
When the one in front of them roared to life.
They froze, staring at the truck.
âWhat?â Tai whispered.
To assure they hadnât misheard, the engine revved loudly.
Then, the wheels rotated towards them, the axles squealing as the truck came barreling towards them.
âOh shit.â Qrow barked, throwing them into reverse and slamming down on the gas pedal.
Tai yelped as he was thrown into the dash as they rocketed backwards several meters. Another quick gear shift, and Qrow twisted the wheel around, flying down the road heâd spotted before. They hit a pot hole hard enough to throw them up from their seats, but he didnât dare slow down.
His arms trembled and sweat started to bead from his brow. âWhat the fuck.â
He looked at the rearview, seeing the truck taking the same corner, gunning after them.
âWhat the fuck!â He shouted again.
âI donât know!â Tai shouted back, scrambling to get his seatbelt back on.
âThereâs someone in there.â
âYou think?!â
He smacked the wheel. âWell what the fuck do we do!?â
âCalm down.â Was the sharp reply, Tai twisting around in his seat to keep an eye on their pursuer. âWe just need to lose him.â
âOh, thatâs all? Brilliant!â
âQrow.â The commanding tone shut him down immediately, his partner leveling him with a look. âListen to me. Weâre going to be fine. Just focus on driving. Weâll find a place around here, a home, a barn whatever. Just something with some cover.â
He took a few deep breathes, trying to steel his nerves. âAlright, alright.â
Except, it became abundantly clear that plan was sunk, as they sped past the first side street, completely blocked off by rubbish and vehicles. It was the same story with the next one.
Tai cursed under his breath. âHeâs corralling us.â
âMaybe we should ditch the car? Head out into the field and make a run for it?â Qrow suggested.
He shook his head. âWeâll be too exposed. I think our better bet is to figure out where heâs leading us.â
âAnd then?â
âThen weâll talk this out with whoever this guy is.â
âAnd if he doesnât want to talk?â
Taiâs expression smoothed out into something cold. âThen youâre lucky Iâm a good shot.â
Qrow swallowed, not arguing further.
He knew Tai could do it, if he had to. Thatâs how the military had trained him. But he hadnât had to go through any of those tough regimens like his partner. Hell, up until eight months ago, heâd been living a rather lavish, uncomplicated life helping his old man upkeep the business fixing transmissions and rotating tires.
He was a mechanic! How the hell did he end up in a high-speed chase in the middle of fucking nowhere?
A blare of the truckâs horn made his heart jump into his throat. What was this guy gonna do, once he got them where he wanted them? Would he really start shooting?
God, he didnât want to kill anyone. Not someone alive at least.
Another rough bump shook the thought down, so he tried to focus on keeping them steady instead. Another mile on, and the road ahead became blocked by another pickup truck, forcing them to take a hard right.
As he turned, he spotted movement in the front seat of the car.
A sense of foreboding swept through him and once they got far enough down the road, he braved a glance. Sure enough, the rearview told him they were now being pursued by two cars.
âTai.â Qrow hissed in warning.
But Tai wasnât looking at the situation behind them, instead pointing forward. âLook.â
He did, squinting a bit. Though still a good few miles off, he could just barely make out the shape of a large building of some sort â taller than any of the other buildings around these parts. Unnatural and out of place.
âWhat is that?â He asked.
âDunno. But I have a feeling weâre about to find out.â
The suspicion turned to truth as they continued down the road, the structure looming ever closer. Until he could make out it wasnât a building at all, but rather a massive fence, at least two stories tall. It was made of a mismatch of materials, including timber beams, chain link mesh, and aluminum sheet metal.
It had to be sturdy though, because as they rolled up to the front gate, he could spot half a dozen people standing on platforms attached to it, three on either side of the gate.
Every single one of them held a rifle.
âWhat now?â Qrow barely got out around the knot in his throat.
âIâŚâ Tai looked frantically from side to side, as if an escape route would just materialize from thin air. When nothing did, he looked to him, and for the first time since this all started, Qrow could see the fear in his eyes. âI donât know.â
They both looked back as they heard the sound of car doors closing, the drivers of either car stepping out and heading towards them. One was a man with short brown hair, the front of it pulled up like a plumage of feathers. His shirt was sleeveless, boasting well-toned arms that promised an ill-fate for his opponents. Yet, even he seemed slightly dwarfed by his companion â a tree of a woman, solidly built, and tall. She was swinging around a giant mallet like it weighed nothing.
The two of them split, flanking their car from either side.
The man knocked on Qrowâs window, pointing down.
Getting the hint, he rolled it down.
The man rested a hand along the top of the door, leaning in. âWhere yâall heading? The zoo?â
He blinked, confused â and then he remembered the army of stuffed animals in the back seat, and scowled. âClever, asshole.â
That only seemed to amuse the other, as he chuckled. His voice was smooth and calm. He knew who was in charge here. âThis oneâs got some bite, donât he Elm?â
âSure does.â Elm replied. âAnd look, theyâre just your type. A couple of pretty boys.â
The hair on the back of his neck stood up uncomfortably. The fuck did that mean?
Beside him, Tai took a deep breath, saying slowly. âLook, weâre not trying to start any trouble. We were just passing on through.â
âWere you now?â The man drummed his fingers on the roof above him, the noise unusually grating with Qrowâs nerves so shot. âAnd you just happened to come this way? Didnât happen to see any of our warnings or blocked roads?â
âYou guys did all that?â Qrow realized too late the question only made him sound falsely innocent.
âCute. Real cute.â The easygoing smile disappeared, replaced with something rigid and dangerous. âAlright thatâs enough small talk. So, let me explain how this is going to work. The two of you are going to get out of the car. Youâre not going to struggle or try anything stupid, âcause if you doâŚâ He lent in even further, as if he were trying to share a secret with them. âYou see those people up there? They donât have the best of aim, but they sure do got a lot of bullets. Quantity over quality and all that.â
Qrowâs hands tightened over the wheel he still hadnât let go of. Taiâs breath hitched.
Neither of them moved.
The man gave a longsuffering sigh. âCome on now. Donât make us drag you out.â
Another beat passed.
Then, with a reluctant click, Tai undid his seatbelt. Opened the door slowly.
âAttaboy.â The man praised, before turning his gaze to him. âNow you.â
Qrow shut his eyes, counted down from five, and finally managed to pry one hand loose. Shakily, he pulled the car into park, before doing the same as his partner and stepping out of the car.
âThatâs it, nice and easy.â The other coached. âNow, arms out.â
Once, when he was young and stupid, he got pulled over for drunk driving. So, he wasnât unfamiliar with a pat down. This was a lot more⌠thorough. The asshole even managed to find the swiss army knife in his back pocket.
From where he was being given much the same treatment by Elm, he heard Tai ask, âCanât we talk about this?â
âYou can sing like a bird, but it wonât do you any good until the chief gets here.â She replied.
The chief? What kind of society were they running? A tribe?
âAlright, this way.â The man tossed all his weapons onto the seat of the car, before clapping a hand down on his shoulder, pulling him forward. âGonna need you front and center.â
Qrow reluctantly followed, fighting the urge to curl away from his touch. He grunted a bit when the other forced him down, his knees cracking painfully on the ground. Tai was manhandled into the same position beside him, grunting a bit as Elm forced him down even more roughly.
The man called over them both, âWhereâs the chief?â
The tiniest of the firing squad, a dark-skinned woman with boyishly short hair, called back, âAlmost here!â
âClover.â Elm said urgently from behind them. There was a light jingling noise that Qrow couldnât place but recognized as something passed between them.
There was a few short seconds of nothing, and then suddenly Clover was marching around them, kneeling down in front of his partner. In his hand were Taiâs dog tags. âWhere did you get this?â He asked darkly.
Tai looked between them and Clover, murmuring, âTheyâre mine.â
âReally?â He flipped the face of it around, reading it aloud. âSo, your telling me your name is Taiyang Xiao Long?â
His lips pressed into a firm, defiant frown. âYes.â
âBullshit.â Clover spit in his face. âWhoâd you take this from?â
âI didnât steal it from anyone.â
âFuck off with that you-â
Qrowâs fingers clenched into fists, his own temper flaring. âHey! Why donât you fuck off! Itâs called remarriage jackass â or is that too hard a concept for you?â
It probably wasnât the best thing to do, if the flash of panic that passed over Taiâs face was any indication. But Clover just leveled him with a glare before getting back to his feet, letting the chain dangle from his fingers. âYou know, I heard her people liked to take souvenirs from the dead. But a soldierâs tags? Thatâs just vile. How many of my friendsâ bodies did you desecrate back at the base?â
âHer peopleâ? âBodiesâ? What was this guy prattling on about?
âWait. Just wait a second. The base?â Tai took a shaky breath. âArcher City base? Youâre from there?â
Elm smacked the heel of her hammer into the ground right behind him. âWe both were. It was all real nice, until your little buddies came by and slaughtered the lot of us.â
Qrow felt his stomach plummet at those words.
Tai had gone pale, his composure barely hanging on. Desperately, he croaked out, âHow many survived?â
Whatever he thought of his reaction did nothing to temper the acidic hatred Clover stared down at him with. âYouâre looking at âem.â
Had Tai been one of his actual enemies, Clover may have been proud to know how devastating a blow heâd just delivered. Regardless of it all, the damage was done. And Tai?
Tai broke. It wasnât loud, like the way glass shatters. Rather it was subtle and unfixable, like the snapping of a flower stem.
Qrowâs own heart fractured at the way he whimpered, curling in on himself. The fleeting sunflower, already beginning to wilt and die, now that his roots were gone.
He reached out for him, hand coming to rest on his back, not caring if the lumberjack of a woman behind him smashed his entire arm flat for it.
âSheâs here!â One of the squad from above called. The chain link rattled as someone ascended the platform from the other side.
Qrow paid it all only half an ear and eye, more concerned with the defeated man before him then anything this chief was going to do with them. Though, when he heard the telltale stomp of boots from above, he offered a cursory glance skyward.
She was a tall woman, with wild black hair and a curvy, powerful figure. A bandanna covered the lower half of her face, and she seemed equally disinterested in them, instead speaking with the petite woman whoâd spoken before.
âNot much to say about them boss.â Clover reported. âOne of themâs got some stolen tags from a Taiyang though.â
That grabbed her attention immediately, her body jerking around as she looked down at them with intense interest.
Even from here, Qrow could tell her eyes were blood red.
And then he couldnât see them at all as, without warning, she practically raced back to the ladder as she shrilled orders at her people, âLOWER YOUR WEAPONS AND LET THEM UP! OPEN THE GATES, NOW!â
There was a sudden, confused cacophony of voices. Another sharp command and then, an equally snappish retort that bellowed above them all, âYou heard her, open it!!â
Qrow caught Clover and Elm sharing a worried look between them. He felt his guard rise higher, confusion and fear melding into one. What was going on? Was she coming down there to kill Tai herself? He shifted over, trying to block Taiâs body with his own as he heard the latch of the gate come undone, slowly starting to roll open.
The chief could hardly wait for it, practically squeezing her way through.
Except at some point on the way down, sheâd ripped away the mask. This close, there was no mistaking her.
âOh my god.â Qrow whispered. âOh my god.â
Then he was on his feet, shoes scrambling for purchase and hands clambering over the dirt to get himself up as fast as possible, taking off at a run. The rest of the world fell away, the only thing left the woman running just as fast for him â and despite it being mere seconds, it was entirely too long when they finally collided.
Her name burst from his lips like a prayer he never thought would be answered. âRaven! Oh god, Raven.â
It was impossible. She was here. She was here!
His heart beat as wild as his sisterâs hair, the mane of it seeming the surround him as she buried her face into his neck and sobbed. âQrow. Youâre alive. I never thought â Howâd you even get here?â
His response came out in a stammer. âMe? B-But you-! And I, I,â Oh, he was crying too.
So he stopped trying, just held on tight and let the tidal wave of emotion hit him. The grief heâd been ignoring. The guilt of having given up. The hope he never let live. The relief of her being safe. The unbelievable happiness knowing she was actually and truly alive.
âI love you.â The words burst out of him, sudden and uncontainable. As if he needed to make up for lost time. All the years he should have said it more, after the divorce had split them across the country and the forced separation left them bitter even with each other. Until the phone calls went from every day to almost never. Until they only caught up on the occasional holiday. Until he thought there was nothing worse than becoming invested into something he was destined just to lose.
But heâd been wrong. Feeling like he was completely alone was much, much worse.
âThat wasnât an answer.â She spoke around tears. âBut I love you too, you stupid idiot.â
ââStupid idiotâ? Really bringing out the big guns with that one arenât ya?â He laughed and she shoved him a bit. It was just like the old days.
âItâs just such a strong character trait, it has to be said twice.â Raven assured, wiping her face.
He was about to retort when Clover cut in between them. âHey uh, I donât mean to interrupt your reunion, but I think thereâs something wrong with your friend.â
Qrowâs head snapped around. Like that moment in the gift shop, Tai seemed to be lost in his own head â but even further this time. He didnât even respond to the way Elm shook him or tried to encourage him to his feet.
âShit.â He breathed, before racing back to his side. He waved the other woman aside, kneeling down next to him. âTai, babe? You in there?â
Nothing.
âCome on, donât do this to me.â He murmured frantically, reaching out to hold his hand.
His sister approached, and though she appeared to be oddly taken aback, her voice was sharp and commanding, âWhat happened?â
Qrow waved vaguely to his left. âYour little boy scout there is what. Told him his family died.â
âWhat?!â The soldier barked, holding up his hands, âI did no such thing.â
He leveled him with his best glare. ââYouâre looking at âemâ? Thatâs what you said about the survivors. His daughters were there, asshole.â
At least, that was what Taiyang was hoping. He had banked everything he had that his little girls had made it to the safe zone and were just waiting for him to return. The unshakable belief had been the only thing keeping him sane.
Now that it was gone, he had nothing left to hold onto. Qrow didnât know what to do, or even had the faintest clue how to pull the other back from the sea of despair he was drowning in.
Clover looked horrified. âI, but I-I didnât-!â
âItâs fine.â Raven asserted.
âWhat?!â Qrow shouted. âHow can you just fucking say that?!â
She leveled him with look he couldnât even begin to decipher. âJust. Let me.â
Without any further context then that, she settled on the dirt next to them. She reached out, gripping Taiâs jaw and turning his head to face her and in a gentle octave Qrowâd never heard her use, said, âTai, can you hear me? I need you to come back. Yang and Ruby are here.â
At the sound of his daughtersâ names, Tai finally blinked, some light returning to his gaze. Encouraged, Raven lent in closer.
âTheyâre alive. Theyâre safe. But you need to wake back up if you want to see them. Can you do that for us?â
He felt the hand in his slowly starting to grip back. Whatever his sister was doing was working â and while Taiâs brain was starting back up, Qrow felt like his was doing all sorts of mental gymnastics just to catch up. How did she know Taiâs kids? Were they really beyond those gates? Did they talk about their dad enough that she just knew who he had to be?
The real answer turned out to be exceedingly more simple and absolutely mind-bending, because Tai finally croaked out, âRae?â
His sister smiled and responded as if it were the most natural thing on earth, âYeah, itâs me.â
The words echoed on repeat in his ears. Rae. As in, Taiâs first girlfriend Rae. Yangâs mother? Was also Raven, his sister?!
Qrow felt like he was going to need one of these quiet-talk therapy sessions because now he wasnât sure he was entirely all here anymore.
The world was still intent on moving on whether he was there or not though. Tai inhaled shakily, practically pleading, âAnd, the girls? Theyâre really-?â
âCome see for yourself.â Raven stood.
Taking a moment to gather himself, Qrow followed suit, pulling Tai up with him. He led him towards the entrance, shooting a look at his sister that promised they were going to talk about this. Â
She avoided his eye and fell in step with them, calling first to the firing squad still above them, âHey, showâs over! Back to your jobs!â Then to the soldiers, âClover, Elm. Bring in that car and then get back to your posts.â
âYes maâam.â Clover saluted. âAnd uh, Qrow, Tai?â Only Qrow looked back â holding up his hand to catch Taiâs tags when he tossed them his way. âSorry.â
He nodded, pocketing them. He made a mental note to make sure the other man gave twice as good an apology to Tai when his lover was more present.
They stepped through the gate and it was like entering a long-forgotten world. The road continued on straight â but the acres of fields on either side were busy with tents, motor homes, and even a few trailers, everyone making do with whatever shelter they could find. People were milling about, doing all sorts of things. He could see some older men in lawn chairs, enraptured by a game of Chinese Checkers. A team was working with various gardening tools to clear up some free land. Another team was working on the skeleton of a structure against one of the walls that was looking like the beginning of a home. Pens were built towards the back, a few cows and a chicken coop in view and there were a few fire pits speckled around the facility, once in use as several people boiled and stored water.
A sense of surrealism enveloped him. Theyâd been on their own so long, he almost forgot what normal life could look like.
âThis almost doesnât feel real.â Qrow admitted, eyeing a young pair sparring in the shade of the wall.
âYou get used to it.â Raven replied, leading them towards the west side of the colony. âWe all keep pretty busy. Everyoneâs got a job here; a way to contribute. We take care of each other, keep each other safe.â
He scoffed. âThat why we got chased halfway to hell getting here?â
âItâs⌠preventative.â She explained. âWe just want to make sure everyone comes to the front door.â
âSo you can shoot them.â
âIf they give us reason to.â
He gaped at her, aghast.
Raven sighed, walking in-between the space of two parked RVs. âThis world doesnât have rules anymore and there are a lot of bad people willing to take advantage of that.â
âLike at the base.â It was a surprise to both of them to hear Tai speak. âWhat happened there?â
Something dark flittered along his sisterâs face, before she looked away. âAnother group wanted what we had. So, one night, they rammed down the gates with a few semitrucks filled to the brim with biters to get it. There was over a thousand of us there. Now thereâs only a little over a hundred of us.â
âChrist.â Qrow cursed. He couldnât even fathom it. What kind of mindset did someone have to have to do something so willingly vicious?
âThese people already lost everything twice over now. Theyâre looking to me to make sure they donât lose more.â She stood a little taller, her voice strong and confidant. A voice people would find faith in following. âSo yeah, Iâll scare even God himself away from our gates if thatâs what it takes.â
If there was a concern to take away from all that, the day had been much too harrowing and long to put any honest consideration to it. So, he just let it lie, a gnat in the back of his thoughts for now.
He figured any other conversation was probably moot anyways, as when they rounded another trailer home the field opened up to what appeared to be a small picnic and playground area. In the center between the various tables and play equipment was a canopy tent, providing shade to the small gathering of children underneath it. They were all sitting in the grass, listening to the woman before them as she read aloud.
Taiâs grip had become iron tight, breath shallowing out.
As they drew near, Raven spoke up, âSummer, mind if we interrupt?â
The disruption drew everyoneâs gaze on them, eyes wide and curious at the strange newcomers in their midst. Their teacher, Summer, seemed as equally spellbound, the book sheâd been reading falling right out of her hands.
From the front, Qrow caught movement as one of the students stood, and he saw his niece for the first time. For even if the color was Taiâs, there was really no mistaking that wild mane for anyone other than a carbon copy of Ravenâs â no matter how much those flimsy pigtails tried to tame it. She had to of been around eight or nine and she had a gangly appearance about her, the same way he had been during most of his childhood while he was still growing. He hoped she wouldnât get his outrageously long legs.
Beside her, another girl stood. Had he not already known she was only two years apart from Yang, he would have mistaken little Ruby for being even younger. She was tiny, something that would probably follow her all the way through to adulthood. Unlike her sister, who seemed to be a mismatch of both her parents, she was practically a miniature version of the woman just behind her, right down to the silver eyes.
âDad!â Yang shouted, shoving her way through the crowd recklessly. With her clearing the path, Ruby had no trouble following, letting loose a shrill cry of her own.
Whatever trance Tai had been transfixed in broke immediately, and he tore away to clear the distance between him and them, falling to his knees as they reached each other. Finally, finally after what had probably felt like an eternity to the father, he was able to scoop both of them up into his arms and hold them close, sobbing with unashamed abandon as he bestowed them with kisses and I love youâs.
Qrow heart melted at the sight, blinking away tears of his own as a delirium of happiness overtook him.
Raven wound an arm over his shoulders, pulling him against her once more. It grounded him, reminding him this was all actually happening. The little farm home heâd envisioned earlier crumbled away. In its place something new and bigger formed. His sister, Taiâs girls, and this little piece of land and community â their Beacon of hope in the middle of nowhere â was all part of his reality. Their reality.
They were home.
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HOMESPORK ACT 5 ACT 1: Mobius Double Plusungood, Part 2
BRIGHT: Nepeta wants to know whatâs going on. Aradia finally stops dodging the question and tells Nepeta sheâs dead, but doesnât elaborate on how it happened. She asks Nepeta to keep it a secret, which Nepeta agrees to. Aradiaâs also picked up some froglike traits from being merged with the sprite -- namely a tendency to ribbit.
In retrospect, itâs kind of funny that an active player can merge with a sprite. The role of a sprite seems to involve having detailed knowledge of how the Game works and what the player should do next, but only dispensing vague advice to the player. Prototyping a player would give them full access to that knowledge with no sprite vagueness to get in the way. The Game doesnât seem too concerned about that, though.
CHEL: Now itâs time to get to know AG better. A doodle of her declaring her to be a HUGE BITCH fades into her standing in her room. Rather gothic, and also filthy-looking; itâs dark, with a red sky outside, and cobwebs and broken Magic 8 Balls lie around everywhere. Thereâs a FLARP poster and numerous pages of notes on the wall.
Your name is VRISKA SERKET.
You are a master of EXTREME ROLE PLAYING. You can't get enough of it, or really any game of high stakes and chance. You have persisted with the habit even in spite of your ACCIDENT. But then again, you don't have much choice.
Your lusus is VERY HUNGRY, ALL THE TIME. She can only be appeased by the FLESH OF YOUNG TROLLS. You cloud campaigns for teams of Flarpers, utilizing your abilities for ORCHESTRATING THE DEMISE OF THE IMPRESSSSSSSSIONA8LE. Your victories supply you with treasure, experience points, and SPIDER FOOD.
You are something of an APOCALYPSE BUFF, which is something you can be on Alternia. You are fascinated by end of the world scenarios, and enjoy constructing DOOMSDAY DEVICES for the hell of it. You are drawn to means of DARK PROGNOSTICATION and the advantages they offer, particularly in gaming scenarios. Your abilities in this department were hobbled with the loss of your VISION EIGHTFOLD, and you have since sought alternatives through various BLACK ORACLES. You consult with these ominous globes, but routinely destroy them in frustration over the PUZZLING GUARANTEED INACCURACY of their predictions. Breaking them has developed into a habit BORDERING ON FETISHISTIC, and with each you destroy, you add to an insurmountable stockpile of TERRIBLE LUCK. You have to stop. But addiction is a powerful thing.
FAILURE ARTIST: FINALLY we get a name for her and we donât have to keep saying AG. I imagine the non-Homestucks are feeling like I did when I played Danganronpa 2 finally and saw the âfingers-in-his-assâ guy.
CHEL: She examines a drawing on the wall, of her FLARP character MARQUISE SPINNERET MINDFANG, who is just Vriska in a different coat and seaboots, with a hook instead of her robot hand. She is the scourge of land dwellers and sea dwellers alike, and worst nightmare to silly BOY-SKYLARKS everywhere. She has accumulated more treasure and gained more levels than any member of the PETTICOAT SEAGRIFT class ever. She gained all the levels. All of them.
En route to her computer, Vriska steps on a D4, and complains about how sheâs had terrible luck since her mysterious accident. Iâd just like it noted that this is a small but noticeable occurrence of Vriskaâs tendency to blame others for her problems; if she cleaned her room some time, that wouldnât happen. Still, she doesnât worry about it too long, as sheâs busy.
So many irons in the fire. Such a tangled web. It is a web full of flaming irons and mixed metaphors.
BRIGHT: Vriska equips her weapon of choice, a set of enchanted D8 dice called the FLUORITE OCTET.
...okay, Iâm getting used to characters having semi-absurd weapons, but seriously, what? Letâs review everyone elseâs chosen weapons: Hammer, knitting needles, sword, gun, sickles, lance, clawed gloves, walking cane. Sollux had some throwing stars but didnât assign them to his specibus owing to his telekinesis being enough; we havenât seen Aradiaâs strifekind yet, but she also has telekinetic abilities, and hers are apparently enhanced by her being dead. So thatâs a lot of genuine weapons, and some things which arenât weapons but can readily be used that way in a pinch...and then Vriska has a set of enchanted dice.
Itâs a good fit both for Homestuckâs absurdity and for Vriskaâs obsession with luck. But it does stand out rather.
Anyway, rolling the dice will execute a wide range of highly unpredictable attacks. Very high rolls can be devastating to even the most powerful opponents. Apparently these work everywhere, not just in FLARP games. Also, while we see ghosts, psychic powers, and superpowered coding, I think this is the only reference to plain magic we have on Alternia.
Vriska steps away from the computer to avoid talking to GA, who she refers to as an unwelcome solicitor, but returns to it when someone else starts messaging her. Vriska calls him this guy; he has no icon -- and, oddly, no username -- and types in white, which means the reader (and Vriska) ends up highlighting the conversation a lot.Â
Hello.
AG: Oh my god, why are you talking to me????????
This is the last time we'll ever talk.
AG: Still sticking with the white text I see. So smooth and stylish!
AG: I forgot how much I loved highlighting it to read all the 8oring things you have to say.
AG: It's like a fun game for super extra handicapped retarded people. Like opening a present! Find out what o8noxious thing the mystery tool typed.
AG: What is it!
A parting courtesy, I suppose.
All the ways I've exploited you were meant to bring about the events that will take place this evening.
Knowing this will provide context for the events in your near future, and will affect how you behave in response.
These events will be just as important as those preceding it.
I've gone to great lengths, you see.Â
Well, this guy sounds ominous.
Also, using âhandicappedâ and âretardedâ as insults is entirely in character for Vriska, who has no time for people who canât operate on her level. Currently Vriskaâs also being shown as an unlikeable character. Weâll see how that develops.
CHEL: Still, a lot of people really donât like those words being used casually, and the fact that we need to show you how things develop should imply that they wonât develop in a way youâll like. SoâŚ
CLOCKWORK PROBLEMATYKKS: 39
White Text Guy, as the characters refer to him for a while to come yet, continues gloating about how successfully heâs exploited Vriska, who tells him sheâll log off and orders him not to use that nasty trick where you log me 8ack on out of petty douchey spite! WTG says heâll be brief, though heâs not particularly brief in fact, tells her he no longer hold[s] her accountable for any wrongdoing, and says that if she accepts this, she may get her luck back. Vriska doesnât believe him and continues to rant, and he points out that her unpleasant, simplistic temperament is what made her so easy to mess with.
If you turn a swarm of wasps on a crowd, the outcome is certain.
He leaves with these even more ominous words:
Though the magnitude of the ensuing destruction resulting directly from your actions will be neither possible or necessary for you to fathom, there nevertheless ought to be a silver lining.
The only question is whether you will live long enough to see it.
Vriska, enraged, lifts a Magic 8 Ball with the intention to smash it, but decides she canât be bothered, and answers GA, hoping some camaraderie will cheer her up, even if itâs from a meddler. However, GAâs first question is âIs Your Lusus Dead Yetâ. Not particularly cheering, is it?
Vriska, for the first time, expresses concern and sympathy for another person when GA says her own lusus is dead, though it may be undermined slightly by her own personal disappointment in never having got to meet said lusus. GA doesnât seem very concerned, and says âMaybe You Still Canâ. According to her, though, all their lusii are dying, as a âPreemptive Consequenceâ (if thatâs a meaningful concept) of the upcoming Game. Karkat blames himself for activating the cursed code, but GA thinks it was inevitable. However, Karkatâs idea of a curse Is Inseparable From His Perception Of Events As Intrinsically Negative And As Tailored To His Personal Dissatisfaction, and so is Vriskaâs poor luck. GA points out that if Vriska cleaned her floor she wouldnât step on so many things. THANK YOU, GA, you made my point for me! Vriska is angry at GA âmeddlingâ so, and demands to know why she does.
GA: Because Youre Dangerous
[...]
GA: Its Ok To Be Dangerous
GA: Lots Of People Are
GA: And Dangerous People Can Be Really Important
GA: Maybe Even The Most Important Sometimes
GA: But It Just Means Theres Got To Be Someone Around To Keep An Eye On Them
As Vriska gets angrier, itâs noted that she puts 8s in her typing in places where they donât work as Bs or as âeightâ sounds, and they become more numerous.
AG: Or you know, if you're so h8gh 8nd might8 an8 th8nk you're so gr8at, m8y88 you c8uld oh I d8n't kn8w........
AG: TRY AND ST8P ME FROM DO8NG B8D THINGS????????
GA: That Wouldnt Work
GA: If I Tried To Stop You You Would Regard Me As An Enemy
GA: Instead Of Merely As A Nuisance
BRIGHT: GAâs strategy appears to be trying to talk Vriska into being a better person, either by persuading her that itâs the right thing to do or by being so annoying that Vriska does the right thing to avoid being meddled with. Sheâs making an effort, Iâll give her that. And given that she doesnât live anywhere near Vriska, there isnât all that much she can do to rein her in.
CHEL: Vriska signs off, ranting about her âLousy st8pid godd8mn supportive friend!â and heads down the enormous staircase to check on her lusus.
You wonder if any other kid on the planet has such a high maintenance lusus? You DOUBT it.
As a matter of fact, one does and Vriska knows that, but weâll see them later. Not a continuity error, itâs just Vriska self-pitying.
From a window, we see a doomsday device hanging over a chasm by chains attached to the surrounding cliffs. Vriska built it for an especially powerful and influential member of the nautical aristocracy, with help from an as-yet-unnamed nearby friend. Vriska reaches the bottom of the stairwell, and we meet her lusus, which isâŚ
⌠a spider about the size of a cathedral. For the sake of our arachnophobic readers, weâll refrain from posting a picture. Suffice it to say sheâs as terrifying as she sounds. Pan out to show the entire valley is filled with cobwebs, and Vriskaâs hive is matched by a similar one on the other side of the valley.
Before we move on, Iâd just like to chat a little about the astrological symbolisms used here. Vriskaâs the Scorpio troll, and it puzzles a lot of people that sheâs spider-themed instead of scorpion-themed. Both arachnids, but not the same thing. However, Scorpio does have multiple symbols, depending on the source of the interpretation of the constellation, including the spider and the phoenix. Observe! (I enjoy astrology. Sue me.) Also, a scorpion would be a lot harder to get the story symbolism out of; Vriska is at least attempting to be a master manipulator pulling on strings, i.e. webs. The astrological symbolism and alleged personality traits arenât used for all of the trolls in general, either. The troll with the sign of Aquarius the Water-Bearer is seadwelling nobility and probably wouldnât be happy to be represented astrologically by a servant, and Gamzee is basically the opposite of the ambitious and hardworking traits of the allegedly typical Capricorn. Basically the signs are mostly aesthetic and if Huss can work in some connected symbolism thatâs a bonus. I donât consider this a negative thing in particular, though it might annoy some astrology buffs.
Actually, I donât know how intentional this was, but one fan actually analysed how the social expectations on Alternia are in fact the exact opposite of what would actually suit their astrological sign. It didnât get finished but thereâs some interesting information - read the posts in question here, beware spoilers!
BRIGHT: One amusing consequence of this can be turned into a game: Go to Tumblr, find an astrology post, and see how long it takes to figure out if itâs a Homestuck riff. Some of them even just say âVriskaâ for Scorpio.
Itâs probably just because I mostly follow fandom-related blogs, but Iâve yet to see a Tumblr astrology post that wasnât a more-or-less-subtle Homestuck joke.
CHEL: And the ones which arenât make for great fanfic prompts!
BRIGHT: Vriskaâs lusus is fine, as it happens. Vriska pretends to be happy about this, but sheâs rather less convincing than Dave is about his own guardianship issues.Â
FAILURE ARTIST: And we turn from Vriska to look in her neighbor and itâsâŚ.that creepy guy! Hurray!
Your name is EQUIUS ZAHHAK.
You love being STRONG.
You are so strong, you would surely be the class of the elite legion of RUFFIANNIHILATORS. And while such a calling would be quite honorable, you would prefer to join the ranks of the ARCHERADICATORS, perhaps the most noble echelon the imperial forces have to offer. Unfortunately, you SUCK AT ARCHERY. You have not successfully fired a SINGLE ARROW. Every time you try, you BREAK THE BOW. You are simply too strong. You have broken so many bows, it has developed into a habit BORDERING ON FETISHISTIC. You have to stop. But addiction is a powerful thing.
You have a great appreciation for THE FINE ARTS. You use your aristocratic connections to acquire PRICELESS MASTERPIECES, painted in the oldest and most respected Alternian tradition of NUDE MUSCLEBEAST PORTRAITS. These striking depictions of the EXQUISITE FAUNA native to Alternia remind you of the PUREST PHYSICAL IDEAL that must be sought by anyone who professes a LOVE OF STRENGTH. When those of lesser bloodlines turn up their uncultured noses at such stunning material, it MAKES YOU FURIOUS.
Practically everything MAKES YOU FURIOUS. You have so much rage, it can only be expressed through STAGGERING QUANTITIES OF PHYSICAL VIOLENCE. You build strong and sturdy robots, set them to kill mode, and BEAT THE SHIT OUT OF THEM in caged brawls. Sometimes you LOSE TEETH. But they usually grow back.
FAILURE ARTIST: Equius Zahhakâs first name is obviously a take on the Latin word for horses, but his last name is from a Persian demon who is also known as âhe who has 10,000 horsesâ.Â
So yes, that furry porn on his walls is high art to trolls. Though the prequel Hiveswap Friendsim, which has artist characters, doesnât have MUSCLEBEAST PORTRAITS. Maybe Equius is actually weird.
CHEL: Actually, the Friendsim does have musclebeast art; if you squint at the beginning of Nikheeâs route, you can see depictions of white muscular chests flanking the arena, which donât look like troll chests. Hiveswap proper is rated PG, so weâll be spared it there, too.
FAILURE ARTIST: Equius is more even-tempered than his introduction suggests. Heâs not completely violence-free (as we will see)Â but heâs not in a constant âroid-rage. Heck, from what weâve seen before of him he just gets peeved and snotty.Â
Equius calls for his lusus Aurthour, who I guess could be called another self-insert. Aurthour is a centaur-type creature with cow udders and a mustache and looks like something out of Hussieâs early comics. Aurthour carries a glass of lusus milk on a platter, presumably from its own udders. Ummm.Â
You cannot hope to beat Aurthour in a butler-off. He is simply the best there is.
Sweet, I guess.
CHEL: I wonder how Aurthour contorts around to reach his udder. Centaurs arenât really known for flexibility.
FAILURE ARTIST: We find out why Aurthour has a shiner. Itâs not because of domestic abuse but because when Equius âgentlyâ pats Aurthour, Aurthour bruises. Yet this creature is the only lusus STRONG enough to raise Equius.Â
Equius tries to drink the glass, but it shatters in his hand. Which begs the question of why Aurthour doesnât use an alternative to glass. Well, I guess Equius going straight to the source would be too disturbing even for Hussie. A bigger problem is how Equius can do the fine detail work of building robots when he canât hold a glass.Â
Equius goes into a rage, which just means he stands around in Hero Mode while the lusus milk quickly evaporates. Wait, quickly evaporates? What is it made of?
CHEL: I assumed the heat of his rage boiled it.
FAILURE ARTIST: Equius tries to equiup equip a bow but fails due to his strength. Like the glass smashing, this is a normal occurrence. Youâd think heâd give up but apparently breaking bows is like popping bubble wrap to him. Expensive bubble wrap. So he has the useless 1/2bowkind, a bowkind for when heâs ever that lucky, and the fistkind which he actually utilizes. Yes, in Homestuck, you can register your fists as lethal weapons.Â
Equius talks with Nepeta and the narration summarizes like thus:
CT: D --> Yes AC: :33 < no CT: D --> Yes AC: :33 < no CT: D --> Yes AC: :33 < no CT: D --> Yes AC: :33 < no CT: D --> Yes AC: :33 < no CT: D --> Yes AC: :33 < no CT: D --> Yes AC: :33 < no
Equius is still worried about his good friend Nepeta, so he decides to relieve his stress by talking with another friend. And here comes a line fans take as meaning trolls donât have friendship.Â
It should be noted that in troll language, the word for friend is exactly the same as the word for enemy.
Though that line contradicts Equius considering Nepeta his friend only a few lines back. This worldbuilding sucks.Â
CHEL: Well, he doesnât treat her the way a human should treat a friend at this point.
FAILURE ARTIST: So Equius trolls this frienemy who turns out to be Gamzee.
centaursTesticle [CT] began trolling terminallyCapricious [TC]
CT: D --> Have I ever told you what a reprehensible disgrace you are
TC: hAhA, fUcK yEaH, oNlY eVeRy MoThErFuCkIn DaY bRo! Â
Yeah, Equius, pretty much everyone tells Gamzee that every day.Â
Equius says he wants get some things off his chest, which giving what we later learn about troll relationships might be adulterous. Gamzee tells him not to let his feelings be bottled up lIkE a FuCkIn AlL sHaKeD uP bOtTlE oF fAyGo and this metaphor makes Gamzee thristy. Equius berates Gamzee for drinking soda, which seems harsh but we later find out soda is booze for trolls. Heâs also angry at Gamzee for doing sopor slime. Now, fans think Karkat didnât like Gamzee doing sopor slime but we never actually see it. Itâs just Equius who cares. This leads to an exchange I find interesting.
CT: D --> You will stop
TC: WhOaAaA, i WiLl?
TC: hOw Do YoU kNoW tHaT?
CT: D --> No, you don't understand
CT: D --> It's not a predi%ion, it's an order
CT: D --> I command you to stop
Gamzee is so passive he finds it hard to imagine making decisions that will change his future. Sad. And when Gamzee does get what Equius means:
TC: Oh, AlRiGhT bRoThEr.
TC: yOu MoThErFuCkIn GoT iT.
CT: D --> What
CT: D --> Are you serious
TC: yEaH.
TC: I mEaN, yOu GoT tO sHoW sOmE fAiTh In YoUr FrIeNdS, cAuSe ThEy'Re AlL tHe OnEs WhO'rE bEiNg To LoOk OuT fOr YoU.
TC: sO fUcK iF yOu SaY i'M nOt DoInG tHe ShIt RiGhT, tHeN wHaT tHe MoThErFuCk Do I kNoW!
CT: D --> No
CT: D --> This is una%eptable
CT: D --> Ok, let's start over
CT: D --> I apologize
CT: D --> I was completely out of of line, and I'm sorry
CT: D --> I have no right to talk to you like that, or tell you what you can't do
TC: aWw, No WoRrIeS!
Gamzee was ready to kick sopor slime except Equius backed down. Wondering about the timeline where Equius didnât back down.Â
Still, Equius begs Gamzee to behave like a superior. Gamzee asks what that means and Equius gives a very creepy answer.
CT: D --> 100k, it isn't that difficult
CT: D --> Try to be cognizant of your desires and needs
CT: D --> And attempt to regard those around you as simple vehicles meant to bring about your gratification
At least Equius is a hypocrite...most of the time.
Equius asks what Gamzee is doing and Gamzee relates his adventures in Sgrub. He bonked an imp on the head and scared another with a horn and eventually ended up sharing pie with them. Equius likes the tales of valor but is disappointed with the peaceful end.Â
Equius asks Gamzee to roleplay and Gamzee says yes; thereâs an uncomfortable sequence where Equius tries to get Gamzee to virtually dom him. Gamzee is terrible at being assertive, but Equius is still whipped into a state of contrition. Basically, Equius is getting off on this.Â
CHEL: It should be noted that tricking a child into sexual behaviour is a form of abuse even when itâs done by a child of the same age. Not cool, Eq, and not funny, Hussie.
CALL CPA PLEASE: 11
CLOCKWORK PROBLEMATYKKS: 40
SEND THEM TO THE SLAMMER: 4
Though, while that is clearly the reading weâre meant to get from that, I have to say Equius never reads to me like heâs actually enjoying being ordered around. With Gamzee heâs just frustrated that heâs not behaving in a correct manner, and in later exchanges he seems knocked off-balance by the normal social order being upended. I know Iâm just projecting, but it reads more like he has some issues with anxiety or OCD and is desperate for someone else to take control and tell him what they want him to do so he doesnât have to worry. He sweats constantly during these exchanges, which is supposed to imply heâs aroused, but people sweat when theyâre worried or afraid too.
FAILURE ARTIST: On a lighter front, Equius says he doesnât live near the ocean, which considering his neighbor regularly goes on a pirate ship is an odd thing to say.
CHEL: How near is ânearâ? He might just mean not within walking distance so he canât casually wander out to the sea like Gamzee does.
FAILURE ARTIST: Equius ends by wondering about the social order that puts someone like Gamzee above him but someone as graceful and poised as a certain mysterious she is of the lowest caste. Gamzee (and the readers) ask who she is and Equius brusquely says D -->I shouldnât be talking about this D â Youâre the enemy before signing off.Â
CHEL: If oneâs been paying attention, one can guess.
Next, Equius and Vriska are in cahoots. Cahoooooooots. Vriska declares her intention to meddle, and they have a brief exchange about sarcasm. Itâs horribly inconsistent whether trolls have sarcasm or not, as Iâve pointed out before. Already gave a point for it, though.
Anyway, Vriska asks if Aradiaâs present is finished. It is.
CT: D --> But I don't understand why you're intent on gratifying that worthless peasant
AG: 8ecause I promised I would and it's none of your damn 8usiness! Man.
Their plan is to let Aradia usurp Sollux as leader with her cute little ploy (recall her sending him to sleep and letting him swallow mind honey earlier), then both snatch power from her and become joint leaders. Each asks the other if theyâre planning something sneaky and each insists theyâre not. Equius can sense that Vriska is trying to read his mind, and when she wonât stop, he takes control of her cybernetic arm, which he built, and makes her slap herself in the face.
FAILURE ARTIST: So given that Vriska tried to read Equiusâ mind, despite the dangers (both physically and mentally), it is unbelievable she refrained from reading Karkatâs due to delicacy.Â
I think Hussie has said in his commentary that Vriska had a crush on Equius. The fandom prefers lesbian Vriska at this point and so has ignored that. YMMV on if there is evidence of a crush in the text but I find the idea amusing.Â
CHEL: Equius goes to fetch the present for Aradia which he was supposed to give to Vriska.
You naturally will doublecross your accomplice, just as you assume she has plans to doublecross you. You assume she is assuming the same of you. Business as usual for blue bloods.
How the hell does this society get anything done?
You will deliver it to Aradia yourself to gain her favor, and then doublecross her and take your rightful position as team leader. How ironic that someone of your blood purity must work to win the favor of the lowest sort of peasant. Humiliating. Strangely titillating, even. But in the end, class order will be restored.
He takes the tarp off the present, and it isâŚ
Why, Aradia. It appears the red glass of your eye has caught the pink and green glint of the moons in their perigees. The sweet poetry almost makes a man forget how the grime that once filled your veins made his stomach turn. It is a good omen for illicit lovers. Could you imagine the scandal if anyone found out?? No one must ever know.
But worry not. Your heart will pump no more of that despicable red sludge. You have been given a new heart. You can be taught the ways of the class you were always meant for. No one is beyond redemption.
Be grateful, dear Aradia. For the first time in your meaningless life you have met a man with true compassion.
Jesus fucking Christ. See what I meant when I said his interactions with girls were worse than his posters? No points because itâs supposed to be creepy, and with the teachings of his society itâs not entirely his fault, but wow.
FAILURE ARTIST: Well, his interaction with a girl is creepy. His relationship with Nepeta is more problematic than fans remember but thatâs two-sided and not infatuation. As for Vriska, heâs cold and business-like with her. He collaborates with GA but thatâs off-screen and was probably also business-like. Meanwhile, he has lustful interactions with most every male character. Weâve seen how he acts with Gamzee and weâll see more later. Equiusâ interactions with guys are another example of Hussie using male attraction to other males as a punchline.
CHEL: But yes, heâs built her a robot body. Unfortunately for everyone involved, while making out with it, he feels judged by one of his battlebots, gets angry, and punches it. It goes flying out the window and robosplodes above the valley, and its remains hit Vriskaâs doomsday device, setting it off. It breaks before it can actually destroy the planet, but the chains holding it up snap, sending it swinging into the cliffside, causing another explosion. The cliff collapses, taking part of Equiusâ hive with it, sending Aurthour plummeting into the chasm and crushing Vriskaâs spider lusus under tons of rubble.
Cutting back to before that, we see Terezi battling imps on her treehouseâs rooftop, when Vriska messages her, declaring that playing the game together means breaking their truce. Terezi says thatâs not what the truce was about; it was about STOPP1NG TH3 3NDL3SS CYCL3 OF R3V3NG3 and Vriska not using her powers maliciously anymore. Tereziâs next couple of comments are just calling Vriska a liar so Iâll just take Vriskaâs, to further illustrate her behaviour.
AG: Man, you like to give me such a hard time a8out all that. I can't catch a 8reak! AG: Can't you see I'm trying to put all that 8ehind me and make amends with every8ody? AG: No, of course you can't see that. What am I saying! [...] AG: I'll prove it to you. I'm giving Aradia a present that will make her feel all 8etter finally. AG: Then I'll 8e in the clear. Phew! Totally redeemed. You'll see. I mean smell.
Vriska appears under the impression that large flashy gestures are the important part of an apology, not actual sincerity. Terezi points out Aradia doesnât care about anything anymore and probably wonât care about this.
AG: Man, why can't you cut me some slack for once???????? AG: It's not like I even did anything that 8ad to you. AG: I lost seven eyes 8ut you only lost two! I would say you came out ahead in the 8argain. GC: 1 KNOW GC: 4ND 4CTU4LLY GC: 1 N3V3R R34LLY GOT TH3 CH4NC3 TO TH4NK YOU >:D
Vriskaâs disbelief aside, Terezi really is serious here. Not surprising to the reader, her blindness is basically a superpower.
AG: Remem8er Team Scourge? How convenient all that must 8e to have forgotten! You were so nasty. AG: Oh man, if you crossed Terezi Pyrope you were fucked!!!!!!!! GC: Y34H 1F YOU W3R3 4 B4D GUY GC: W3 W3R3 SUPPOS3D TO B3 L1K3 4 V1G1L4NT3 DUO D1SP3NS1NG JUST1C3 GC: 4ND YOU COULD T4K3 TH3 B4D GUYS HOM3 4ND F33D TH3M TO YOUR STUP1D SP1D3R GC: BUT 1NST34D YOU JUST F3D H3R 3V3RYBODY! GC: 4ND L13D 4ND L13D 4ND L13D
Okay, this little exchange needs some more dissection. Terezi is supposed to be the âgood copâ of Team Scourge, the by-the-book one on the side of the law. But we saw what Alternian law is like, and later on weâll see demonstrations that things such as having a birth defect or, according to Hiveswap, owning fiction which so much as mentions the possibility of rebellion, are punishable by death. Not only is this not making Terezi look any better, if sheâs as obsessed with the law as we saw, who would she deem not a âbad guyâ, and why would Vriska have such a shortage of âbad guysâ that sheâd need to take anyone else? Hussie appears to have forgotten that the Alternian concept of justice is different from the Earth one.
FAILURE ARTIST: And what we would consider a âbad guyâ wouldnât be the same on Alternia. Thereâs tons of trolls murdering other trolls on Hiveswap Friendsim without any hint thatâs illegal. Itâs probably completely lawful for a highblood to kill a lowblood just because the lowblood annoyed them.
WHITE SBURB POSTMODERNISM: 29
BRIGHT: Maybe. Iâd say what this shows us, and is intended to show us, is that Tereziâs sense of justice isnât just based on Alternian law, but on her own moral code. The law made it perfectly acceptable for Vriska to feed lowbloods to her lusus regardless of whether theyâd done anything, but Terezi didnât think it was right, and for her that superseded the law. Sheâs the âgood copâ not because she always follows the book, but because sheâs willing to ignore it.
We also know she thought Vriska was on the same page as her. Note that Terezi makes two accusations here â the first is that Vriska killed people who donât deserve it, and the second is that Vriska lied to Terezi about doing so.
CHEL: That may be what itâs intended to show us, but what weâve already seen is that she worships the law; she draws and gleefully licks pictures of the head of the troll court, His Honorable Tyranny, and she shows no concern in her roleplay with hypothetically executing people for relatively trivial crimes. That makes this a bit⌠shaky, IMO.
BRIGHT: True. Terezi may have stopped killing since her FLARP days (or, at least, we get no indication that sheâs still doing so), but it doesnât seem to have shaken her belief in the Alternian legal system. Just her belief in Vriska, who even brings up a similar point.
AG: Well if you want to know what I think, you should start changing your tune. AG: Cause even though you got all these highfalutin morals and fancy reserv8tions, you know as well as me that a killer is a killer is a killer! AG: There 8n't no ch8nging your ways for good, and one d8y you're going to flail that silly l8ttle cane of yours and not find n8thin to 8ump into, and fall f8ce first into the shit ag8in. AG: And you're going to do something t8rri8le to some8ody and wish you could t8ke it 8ack 8ut you c8n't!!!!!!!! AG: And then you'll work hard to win 8ack their trust, and you'll try and try and tr8, and you'll see how hard it is! AG: You'll seeeeeeee!
Vriskaâs making this all about her own feelings about Terezi abandoning her, but sheâs not wrong.
Vriska hears the doomsday device exploding and the subsequent rockslide, and goes to  find out what it is. Terezi tells her not to get crushed.
The next page jumps back in time again -- this time, quite far back. Tereziâs eyes are normal, and sheâs talking to Aradia about Tavrosâs recovery. Aradia says heâs probably paralysed for life. Terezi brings up the possibility of getting him robo-prosthetics, but after the Vriska debacle Aradia is firmly against having anything to do with bluebloods.
CHEL: Terezi warns Aradia that revenge attempts will end badly and she wants to handle it. Aradia says Vriska isnât able to control her, but Terezi says Vriska will find a way to harm her anyway. They lament how they were both distracted by the same person.
AA: wh0 was he anyway GC: PR3TTY SUR3 1T WAS VR1SKAS FR13ND AA: what was he d0ing there AA: watching us GC: WHO KNOWS GC: H3S NOT R34LLY H3R FR13ND THOUGH GC: YOU SHOULD S33 HOW H3 T4LKS 4BOUT H3R B3H1ND H3R B4CK GC: SH3 H4S NO 1D34 HOW B4D H3S PL4Y1NG H3R GC: BUT TH3N 1 DONT TH1NK H3 KNOWS HOW B4D SH3S PL4Y1NG H1M 31TH3R
This sounds like they mean Equius, but weâll see. Aradia feels sheâs letting Vriska win by doing nothing, but Terezi has a plan. She confirms that her friendship with Vriska is over.
Cut to Aradiaâs house, and here I need to go into a bit more detail. This is her house:
Aradiaâs a maroonblood, the lowest of the low on the hemospectrum, peasantry and cannon fodder and supposedly extremely numerous. Yet her house looks to be about the size of the entire block of flats I live in, and she lives in it alone, with no other buildings at all in sight. In the next page, we see inside her house, which looks exactly the same as all the others; she has piles of roleplaying books and posters and a computer, and nothing looks to be in disrepair.
WHITE SBURB POSTMODERNISM: 30
BRIGHT: Her house also looks a lot like Tavrosâs, what with the windmill feature on top and the brown hangings rather than maroon, which threw me off at first.
CHEL: Weâll talk about this more later. For now, letâs stick with the most noticeable thing; Aradia is alive! Her skirt is untattered and her eyes have colour and pupils. Her lusus is alive too, napping beside her. Itâs not quite clear what it is exactly; it has a sheep-like head, but its body is long and slim with much bigger hind legs than forelegs. Could be supposed to be dragon-like? Iâve also seen it interpreted as kangaroo-like. I donât think we ever get a better view of it.
Anyway, Aradia knows Tereziâs advice is sound, but she canât bear not to do something to Make her pay. She puts her hands up to her temples, and the image fades back and forth with one of wrapped troll corpses in Spidermomâs webâŚ
It's a shame it had to come to this. You don't like summoning the spirits of the dead to settle scores.
But if she had to face her victims again, maybe she'd finally learn to feel remorse.
OOOOOOOOOO
This begs the question, how the fuck can the highbloods oppress people who not only hugely outnumber them but can shoot lasers from their eyes, control animals, and summon the dead at will? Well, thereâs actually some explanation for that. The player trolls all appear to have unusual levels of power, for whatever their given powers are; most maroonbloods canât do this. In Hiveswap a main character is a more typical maroonblood, who can just about bend spoons with his telekinesis and not much else (though we havenât seen him speak with dead yet, and itâs possible heâs better at that). Not all trolls even have their casteâs powers, as far as I can tell, as we do see a yellow in Hiveswap Friendsim whoâs not a psionic and some ceruleans who donât seem to have mind-control powers as well. Head or eye injuries, which arenât exactly rare in Alternia, can cause the loss of said powers. Also, the highest blood castes have powers of their own and other things to hold over the lowbloodsâ heads. Itâll be a while till we get to that, but Iâll say now it is convincing, we do not have an Oppressed Mages scenario.
Anyway, Aradia does her thingâŚ
As Vriska cowers on her floor, White Text Guy messages her again. Vriska replies angrily, ghosts looming over her shoulders.
Aren't you going to kill her?
AG: Who????????
Your friend.
The one who summoned the spirits.
AG: Will that make them go away?
Does it matter?
She brought them here to torment you. This obviously warrants revenge.
Vriska asks why WTG doesnât kill Aradia instead, since he helped kill Tavros; he replies âAll I did was stand somewhere for a few minutes. I just gave you an opportunity to do something you wanted to do anyway.â So, seems it wasnât Equius they meant earlier. Vriska protests she never intended to kill her gaming companions, and blames him.
Again, I didn't talk you into anything, nor am I doing so now.
You were, and are, going to do this regardless.
I only ever place myself into positions of tangential involvement with events that will bring about my employer's entry into this universe.
I oversee the events as they take place, and ever so slightly nudge them into motion when necessary.
BRIGHT: Looks like Aradia and Terezi havenât told her Tavros survived, which is eminently sensible. This conversation also highlights another Vriska trait: That sheâs a very active person, but will try to shift responsibility as soon as she doesnât like the consequences. That could be a result of her upbringing -- Vriska had to actively go and kill people for Spidermom, but she wasnât responsible for the overall situation. (Although -- how much did she do to ameliorate it? By the time SGRUB starts, Spidermomâs far too big to fit into Vriskaâs home. Vriska might have been able to get away with not feeding her at that point; thereâs not much Spidermom can do if she canât get to her.)
CHEL: The later addition to the canon, Pesterquest, claims that the lusii can psychically nag their charges and she could bother Vriska that way, but that directly contradicts Act 5, in which the trolls want to prototype their lusii so that theyâll be able to communicate properly with them for the first time, and also couldnât Vriska just move further away?
BRIGHT: Inertia is very much a thing, and people do often just settle into a rut of âthis is the way things areâ even when something could be changed, so itâs not improbable that it wouldnât occur to Vriska to move â come to that, I donât believe it occurs to anyone else either â but the fact that it doesnât occur to her does say something about her character.Â
CHEL: Also, why didnât Vriska feed the spider on animals? The possibility is never so much as considered by her or anyone else, though it seems the most obvious thing to do. Sure, the spider might be picky, but as we said, it canât leave the valley due to its size, or itâd be hunting for itself. If itâs left with the choice to eat cows or die, itâd presumably pick the former, especially since the lusii arenât supposed to be sapient and thus wouldnât have the capacity for spite. For assuming that Vriska did what she had to when such a screamingly obvious better option is never addressed, here we go with a new count, which will rise whenever Vriskaâs horrible actions are excused.
ALL THE LUCK: 1
 Back to the scene, Scratch claims omniscience, which Vriska mocks.
AG: Sure you know a lot, 8ut I know for a FACT there's stuff you don't know.
That's true.
But the gaps in my knowledge exist by design.
They are the pillars of shadow on which my comprehensive vision is built.
Necessary pockets of void meant to effectuate outcomes I've foreseen and which will require my influence.
Each dark pocket, in time, will be filled.
[...]
I don't lie.
Deception is only necessary for those like you to achieve their objectives.
I play with my cards face up.
Isn't it funny how during our various matches, I can tell you what my moves will be in advance, and still win?
Vriska, angered by this, does in fact plan to kill Aradia; Not much point in living with all these moaning spooks just to spite some guy you don't give a shit about. She canât control Aradia because Aradiaâs own powers get in the way, but there are other people she can use.
How about this guy? Unfortunately, you can only control him about half the time.
Then again, that should be all the time you need.
Cut back to Aradiaâs place, and she receives a message from Vriska, telling her her boyfriend is outside.Â
BRIGHT: Vriska also lightheartedly tells Aradia sheâs sorry, and that sheâll make it up to âhimâ someday. Presumably âheâ is meant to be Tavros, except that Vriska seemed to think Tavros was dead in literally the last conversation she had. This is probably just a slip-up on Hussieâs part, but itâs possible to read this as Vriska referring to a different âheâ entirely, considering whatâs about to happen.
CHEL: Aradia looks, and sees a figure hovering telekinetically over the fields....
Note whatâs in his hand. You do not under any circumstances eat the mind honey⌠His eyes start flashing and Aradia looks afraid, but we suddenly cut to a view of Alternia, and then to a closeup of its green moon. The prompt instructs us to Be the white text guy, and we meet him in a very familiar-looking green mansion.
You try to be the white text guy, but fail to be the white text guy. No one can be the white text guy except for the white text guy.
The white text guy is known as Doc Scratch.
He is an officer of an indestructible demon known as Lord English. His job is to pave the way for the arrival of his master, who will be summoned upon the termination of the universe. He has worked at this task for many centuries, and will continue to do so until THE GREAT UNDOING.
Scratch is Alternia's FIRST GUARDIAN. Every planet destined for intelligent life has such an entity meant to protect it, and facilitate the planet's ultimate purpose. A first guardian is typically almost as old as the planet itself, and each has a unique, circuitous origin through the knots of paradox space. They can be born into a great diversity of forms, though they all share a common, especially potent genetic sequence.Â
Remember Roseâs MEOW book, and how DD used it to create Becquerel? Yep.
The code grants them near omnipotence, and when merged with a host of great intelligence, near omniscience as well.
BRIGHT: Only near-omniscence, however. Scratch is surprised to find Terezi contacting him, but heâs able to work out that she got Sollux to help pretty fast:
Occasionally I discover there are things I have not always known.
It gives me the opportunity to make deductions, which are practically always flawless.
It's gratifying.
He also suggests she call him âMr. Vanilla Milkshakeâ, and then hints that Aradia might not be straightforwardly dead by stating that Sollux and Terezi believe she is dead, and will soon believe she is not, both of which are true statements about their beliefs rather than reality.
Props to Hussie on this: Iâm pretty sure every Homestuck fan wants to punch Scratch in the face. Heâs just so obnoxious.Â
Terezi, however, refuses to let Scratch keep derailing her for long. She wants Scratch to get involved in their feud again, and she has a good reason for him: She knows how Vriskaâs been able to come so close to beating Scratch in their games lately. Before she can tell him, though, she needs to talk to Vriska again.
She starts by asking how Vriska feels about killing Aradia, after she promised not to. Vriska responds with dramatic insincerity about how she feels awful, and then says Terezi should be happy that Team Charge is out of the picture.Â
AG: Uuuuuuuugh, what do you want from me????????
GC: 1M NOT SUR3
GC: 1 GU3SS 1M LOOK1NG FOR SOM3 R34SON TO CH4NG3 MY M1ND
GC: 1 DONT KNOW WH4T YOU C4N S4Y TH4TLL DO 1T
GC: 1 SORT4 HOP3 TH3R3S SOM3TH1NG THOUGH
In the end, there isnât. Terezi tells Vriska sheâll be dead in a couple of minutes, and to âCONSULT W1TH YOUR L1TTL3 4DV4NT4G3â if she doesnât believe it, then leaves the conversation.
Vriskaâs little advantage turns out to be a MAGIC CUE BALL, which is similar to a magic 8 ball except that itâs predictions are specific and accurate, and it lacks a portal through which the user can read said predictions. Fortunately thatâs not an obstacle for Vriska: Her VISION EIGHTFOLD allows her to see through the opaque casing.
CHEL: Vision Eightfold is the vision from the one of Vriskaâs eyes which has seven pupils, which she covered with an eyepatch with seven rubies on it when she was FLARPing. Also remember that Jade had a Magic Cue Ball but couldnât read it? Yeah, itâs another one.
BRIGHT: One other thing: According to rumour, it used to belong to the man on the moon.
As Vriska asks the cueball whether she should be worried about Tereziâs threat (answer: YES), Terezi lets Scratch know where his missing property has gone. Vriska asks the cueball how itâs going to happenâŚ
I WILL EXPLODE IN YOUR FACE.
Boom.
This section is one of my favourite Terezi moments. It really shows off Tereziâs ability to outthink and manoeuvre people. Sheâs never spoken to Scratch before, but she still plays him against Vriska easily.
CHEL: This is why Vriska has a plain eyepatch and a robot arm in her future appearances, but sheâs otherwise fine. Bluebloods are tough, apparently.
BRIGHT: Back in the future, Spidermom has survived the rubble falling on her, but just barely. Vriska puts her out of her misery with her magic dice, which summon up a massive guillotine and decapitate the lusus, drenching Vriska in spider blood.
GORE GALORE: 11
The decapitation sets off another landslide, sending Equiusâs house straight down on Vriskaâs head, but before it can land, a portal opens underneath it and transports it into the Medium.
Vriska promptly jumps on Trollian to freak out about this, because her plan depended on her getting Aradiaâs surprise present from Equius to pass along and then Aradia and Vriska entering the Medium together, and never mind that a house was about to fall on her -- in fact, when Aradia points out that Vriska was about to die, Vriska accuses her of planning this. Aradia placidly agrees.
CHEL: This is part of my evidence for thinking Vriska might not be neurotypical. Not the priorities most people would have. Also, meanwhile, note that the lusii have the same blood colour as their charges, while the non-lusus animals Nepeta killed were black and had red blood. Iâm not sure whether thatâs a species trait, or a side effect of the weird bond between them (doesnât make a lot of biological sense, but then this is basically fantasy with a sci-fi coat of paint).
Vriska is enraged by things not going the way she planned; her grand gesture of apology, the robot body, will now be handed over by Equius and not her, ruining her chance to be friends again with Aradia. Again, she doesnât seem to understand how apologies work.
AA: were we ever really friends
AG: Yeah!!!!!!!!
AG: I don't know. I felt like we were even if you didn't think so.
AG: I guess I'm not very good at acting like a friend. Or saying stuff like, hey friend! You're my friend! It doesn't really occur to me.
For some strange reason related to her prototyping with the frog statue, Aradia types out âribbitâ into the chatbox, and informs Vriska sheâs not on the Blue team as she expected, enraging Vriska further. Vriska accuses her of taking revenge, which Aradia denies, saying Vriska was always going to be on the Red team, and that she doesnât care about her death.
AG: You're so infuri8ing! Why c8n't you just h8 me? It would 8e a lot easier th8t way.
AG: Or at least feel 8othered or annoyed or S8METHING! God!!!!!!!!
AG: May8e I sh8uld just rip my he8rt out of my chest and pound it to a 8loody pulp here on my desk with my sup8r strong ro8ot arm.
AG: Pound pound pound pound pound pound pound pound!
AG: Look at that, more nasty 8lue 8lood all over me. Why not! Might as well op8n the floodg8s and p8nt my whole hive with this oh so envia8le cerulean SWILL.
AG: 8ecause clearly it's up to me to feel em8tions for the 8oth of us, you misera8le soulless witch!
AA: 0_0
AG: I h88888888 you!
AG: H8 h8 h8 h8 h8 h8 h8 haaaaaaaate!
AG: I only regret killing you cause it m8de you so 8ORING!!!!!!!!
AA: s0rry
Aradia assures her that the teams are meaningless, but being on the Red team will put Vriska in the position they need her in. Vriskaâs confused and angry, and leaves the chat.
In Equiusâ LAND OF CAVES AND SILENCE, he trolls Aradia again, telling her he will be the sole leader, which she doesnât care about. Heâs surprised she isnât objecting, and says he needs a towel.
CT: D --> Never mind
CT: D --> I'm trying to stay professional about this
AA: ab0ut what
AA: what are y0u talking ab0ut
CT: D --> Forget it
CT: D --> It's just pleasant to consort with one of lesser breeding who clearly understands her place
Heâs been established to suffer from hyperhydrosis, but heâs clearly also supposed to be getting off on this, which, since heâs thirteen, is icky to read.
CALL CPA PLEASE: 12
It only gets worse.
CT: D --> I 100k forward to seeing how well you serve me, server player
AA: uh
AA: thats n0t quite the meaning 0f the w0rd server
CT: D --> What do you mean
AA: as y0ur server i manipulate y0ur envir0nment t0 help y0u advance
CT: D --> I don't understand
CT: D --> Are you
CT: D --> Are you saying
CT: D --> That
CT: D --> You are in a position of control over me
AA: i supp0se s0
CT: D --> Oh
AA: what
CT: D --> Oh my God
He babbles about how he needs fresh air or another towel, getting so agitated he actually drops an F-bomb, which he immediately covers up with âFiddlesticksâ. He says he wants to break something, and Aradia offers to break something for him, as sheâs developed an interest in breaking things recently. Next page, she flings an âabluti0n trapâ through his wall.Â
FAILURE ARTIST: The running gag of girls fucking up boyâs homes with bathroom appliances continues!
CHEL: Heâs very happy, except about her commoner slang.
CT: D --> In fact, this is an order from your leader
CT: D --> Call things by their proper names
AA: what
AA: y0u want me t0 call it a bath tub
AA: that s0unds ridicul0us
As FA noted, this bit of worldbuilding ends up retconned out with all trolls calling things by strange rewordings later on.
Whatever itâs called, Equius asks her to throw it through the wall again. She asks if thatâs an order, and he canât decide.
CT: D --> You could cause quite a bother for me, with the power you wield
CT: D --> I can do nothing to stop you, peasant girl
CT: D --> It's so magnificently depraved
CALL CPA PLEASE: 13
Aradia ribbits again and he takes it for roleplaying, but commands her to continue to do as she pleases. He tells her heâs bringing the robot body, and muses on whether she should actually be co-leader again; in fact, he decides, she should be the actual leader, in secret, through him. She points out thatâs what theyâre doing anyway.
CT: D --> You take to authority well for one of your b100d
AA: i d0nt have bl00d
CT: D --> Not yet
CT: D --> But soon your heart will beat anew, and through it, fresh b100d and fresh passion
AA: 0_0
CALL CPA PLEASE: 14
Equius proceeds to STRONGJUMP right up to his first Gate, punching off an ogreâs head as he goes, and to STRONGFALL out into LOQAM, where Aradia waits. Equius hands over the robot and Aradia enters it; she seems happy, but Equius cautiously asks if she feels anything else.
EQUIUS: D --> Can you detect anything within you might describe as
EQUIUS: D --> Smoldering passion
[...]
ARADIABOT: 0h g0d
ARADIABOT: 0H MY G0D WHAT DID Y0U D0!
ARADIABOT: did y0u pr0gram this r0b0t t0 have feelings f0r y0u?
ARADIABOT: R0MANTIC FEELINGS???
EQUIUS: D --> Hrrrk
ARADIABOT: ANSWER ME BLUE BL00D SCUM
EQUIUS: D --> I
EQUIUS: D --> Yes
EQUIUS: D --> Uh
EQUIUS: D --> It's a chip in your heart
EQUIUS: D --> Is that not ok
Understandably, it is emphatically not.
GORE GALORE: 12
Now, this is undeniably a really, really, really creepy thing to do. Iâm not sure how much blame can be applied to Equius here, though; heâs been raised in a society which would presumably tell him she would have to accept his advances no matter what, considering their caste difference. In a horrifying way, the chip might have been, in his mind, the nicer option. Still, as I said, creepy.
CALL CPA PLEASE: 15
BRIGHT: I think itâs telling that he asks if itâs not okay after Aradia freaks out, as though he honestly hadnât considered that Aradia might have a problem with it. Specifically, up until that point, Equius seems to be interacting with Aradia more like sheâs a prop than a person â it doesnât seem to occur to him that she might not want what he wants, unless their wants conflict in a way that he finds titillating. Then she freaks out and heâs surprised. And that in turn speaks volumes about how lowbloods are viewed by highbloods in wider society.
Contrast Vriska, who absolutely realises that people down spectrum can have their own agendas and emotional reactions; she just does her own thing anyway. Vriska is actively malicious; Equius is, at least in this case, accidentally malicious. Note that he doesnât make any effort to prevent her from removing the chip once he realises sheâs distressed. (Not that he really gets a chance.)
Equius in particular also seems to have a problem about slotting people into roles in general -- he does it with Gamzee, too, although since Gamzee is higher-blooded than him, he has to at least face the fact that Gamzee doesnât fit into his role. He comes across as very sheltered.
FAILURE ARTIST: Equius considers it such a good thing to be a highblood that he thinks heâs doing her the greatest favor by turning her into one.Â
CHEL: This also brings up the question of where he got all that blue blood. I hope itâs synthetic. If not, heâs already said he doesnât kill animals, so Iâm not sure whether itâs creepier if he killed another troll for it or if he slowly drained it off from his own.
Aradiaâs not contemplating that, too busy crushing the artificial heart and slapping the shit out of Equius for multiple pages, before, erâŚ
Yes, sheâs apparently making out with him as a reward for violating her mind, even after the chip was removed.Â
BRIGHT: The first time I read Homestuck, I thought that was meant to imply that not all of the programming was gone.
FAILURE ARTIST: Hussie did confirm the programming was gone. He compared it to a failed roofying.
CHEL: This is a bit of a shock, but it makes somewhat more sense when we see more of troll culture, not long in the future. Still, right now itâs probably upsetting for a number of readers because that part of troll culture hasnât been established, soâŚ
CALL CPA PLEASE: 16
CLOCKWORK PROBLEMATYKKS: 41
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