aunamee ❱❱ anomie (
marcato) wrote in
diademlogs2026-02-04 04:15 pm
february catchall | open
Who: Aunamee and you
Where: Panorama and the fringes
When: Throughout the month!
What: Aunamee is coping with his recent death by watching terrible ghost weddings, crashing his car, and pretending his god still loves him.
Warnings: Sadism, talk of death, more to come (probably)
[He's been here for eight hours.
No. He's been here for eight hours today. The cumulative hours are far greater -- perhaps closer to thirty at this point, not including the six hour drive in each direction. As tempted as he's been to sleep in his car and spare himself the commute, there are certain lines he won't cross, lines that make him look too --
(desperate)
-- imprecise, and so he forces himself to go home now and again. To shower. To sleep in a place with clean sheets.
Otherwise, he watches. Again. And again.
And again.
a. Sometimes, Aunamee observes from the third row with perfect posture, periodically glancing down at the notebook in his lap. He's counting down to something, his white-gloved fingers twitching in a regular rhythm. When the bride throws her champagne glass at 4:32 PM, he doesn’t flinch. Instead, he writes down the time.
b. Other times, you can find him weaving around the specters, sometimes silent, sometimes speaking aloud, predicting calamities with the calm voice of a priest. "You will remove the knife from your bouquet after he calls you a whore," he tells the maid of honor. "You will stop breathing ten minutes from now," he tells the groom. They don't hear him. He doesn't need them to.
c. Sometimes, late in the day, he takes a slice of wedding cake and eats it with a fork while the groom bleeds out six feet away.
d. One day, on the way back to his motel, he falls asleep at the wheel, just enough for the car to drift across the center line, tires catching gravel before he jerks awake with a sharp inhale and overcorrects. Does he hit your car? Do you swerve out of the way? Or do you watch his car go still after it collides with a telephone pole?]
[You see him in a bar, nursing a clear liquid that might be gin or might be water. You see him near the temp worker pickup spots in the Pavilion, where people gather at dawn hoping for day labor. You see him bruised outside of a gambling den after winning one too many poker games, gingerly smoking a cigarette.
He's always wearing white, and he always looks -- not calm, exactly, but emptied out, a husk of a man whose serenity is contingent on maintaining what little control he has.
And right now, he's in control.]
Hello.
[He turns on a smile. It's practiced, this smile, but all the practice in the world can't make his eyes look alive.
He leans forward, conversational. Conspiratorial. Up close, his eyes look as tired as they are empty, his sleeplessness concealed with foundation that doesn't quite match his skin.]
Tell me something true.
[ooc: Aunamee has an enchanted glove that can detect lies, and he'll be using it in this thread! It will only detect intentional lies, however, so if your character thinks something is true, it won't catch it.]
[Got something else in mind? Give me a ping at
dendrite or send a PM and we'll work something out! ]
Where: Panorama and the fringes
When: Throughout the month!
What: Aunamee is coping with his recent death by watching terrible ghost weddings, crashing his car, and pretending his god still loves him.
Warnings: Sadism, talk of death, more to come (probably)
the wedding
[He's been here for eight hours.
No. He's been here for eight hours today. The cumulative hours are far greater -- perhaps closer to thirty at this point, not including the six hour drive in each direction. As tempted as he's been to sleep in his car and spare himself the commute, there are certain lines he won't cross, lines that make him look too --
(desperate)
-- imprecise, and so he forces himself to go home now and again. To shower. To sleep in a place with clean sheets.
Otherwise, he watches. Again. And again.
And again.
a. Sometimes, Aunamee observes from the third row with perfect posture, periodically glancing down at the notebook in his lap. He's counting down to something, his white-gloved fingers twitching in a regular rhythm. When the bride throws her champagne glass at 4:32 PM, he doesn’t flinch. Instead, he writes down the time.
b. Other times, you can find him weaving around the specters, sometimes silent, sometimes speaking aloud, predicting calamities with the calm voice of a priest. "You will remove the knife from your bouquet after he calls you a whore," he tells the maid of honor. "You will stop breathing ten minutes from now," he tells the groom. They don't hear him. He doesn't need them to.
c. Sometimes, late in the day, he takes a slice of wedding cake and eats it with a fork while the groom bleeds out six feet away.
d. One day, on the way back to his motel, he falls asleep at the wheel, just enough for the car to drift across the center line, tires catching gravel before he jerks awake with a sharp inhale and overcorrects. Does he hit your car? Do you swerve out of the way? Or do you watch his car go still after it collides with a telephone pole?]
the truth
[You see him in a bar, nursing a clear liquid that might be gin or might be water. You see him near the temp worker pickup spots in the Pavilion, where people gather at dawn hoping for day labor. You see him bruised outside of a gambling den after winning one too many poker games, gingerly smoking a cigarette.
He's always wearing white, and he always looks -- not calm, exactly, but emptied out, a husk of a man whose serenity is contingent on maintaining what little control he has.
And right now, he's in control.]
Hello.
[He turns on a smile. It's practiced, this smile, but all the practice in the world can't make his eyes look alive.
He leans forward, conversational. Conspiratorial. Up close, his eyes look as tired as they are empty, his sleeplessness concealed with foundation that doesn't quite match his skin.]
Tell me something true.
[ooc: Aunamee has an enchanted glove that can detect lies, and he'll be using it in this thread! It will only detect intentional lies, however, so if your character thinks something is true, it won't catch it.]
wildcard
[Got something else in mind? Give me a ping at

Wedding A.
He's been out of sight for a bit, so he's surprised to see someone else there who isn't a ghost. To find out it's someone he recognizes is interesting, and he feels comfortable going to Aunamee and sitting down next to him in the third row. He has an enormous plate of food. Jack doesn't need to eat, but he likes to.]
I tried to free them, but it doesn't work.
no subject
I know.
[And he does know. In the beginning, he also tried to free them -- not out of kindness or mercy, but because he wanted to force the world to acknowledge his existence. It didn't.
The bride is screaming now. The maid of honor holds her back while the other guests stand up from their seats, stunned.]
There are slight variations sometimes. [He murmurs the words, his back straight, his pen poised. This cycle has been consistent so far, with the champagne glass crashing to the ground exactly on schedule. When the maid of honor grabs the bride, she uses her left hand -- as expected.] Like the universe is testing which version of this calamity it would like to keep.
no subject
[ Jack has never been to Hell, but he knows that torture can come in all kinds of forms. Making someone relive their worst moments constantly could be a good metaphorical knife in the wound over and over. He doesn't think these people deserve Hell, but he could be wrong. They mostly only seem bad because they're fighting at a wedding. Maybe they're all secretly serial killers. Or maybe justice just isn't an option for most people. He'll never know.]
What are you hoping to learn by watching them?
[ He knows Aunamee well enough to have observed that he likes to watch things and learn about them. He likes to do that with people too, asking them questions and absorbing their answers. Jack has a similar nature in that way. He likes watching others and getting to know them, whether they tell him or he's observing and making his own guesses.
He's glad to see that Aunamee looks much better now though. Centered. He knows his new friend has struggled with adjusting to this place. Studying ghosts is a much better use of his time than feeling bad about things.]