All Inclusive Mods (
concierge) wrote in
all_inclusive2014-10-18 03:40 pm
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All Hallows Haunt and All Must Have Fun
The fog had begun near the dusk hours, coating all the plants and flowers in the garden. It settled, heavy, and blanketed everything with a new cover that was only matched in mood by the graveyard that had unearthed itself from the grass and the moss. Names were etched on each gravestone, but the most unnerving part was that every few steps, if you stopped and listened very, very carefully, you might hear a knock of a human hand against hard wood. It was almost as if the dead were being called upwards.
The maze stood normal, but inside around the corners, there were things lurking and waiting.
Outside might have become frightening and gloomy, but the contrast to indoors was stark. Inside, carved pumpkins lit with candles turned the ballroom and restaurants into amber-lit abodes, costumed partygoers twirled to the music played by the band in the lobby (while the DJ had set up in the conservatory). Candy and small hors d'oeuvres circulated on the trays of immaculately clad waiters and though outside it was stormy, foggy, and spooky, inside was a delight of themed drinks, delicious food, and the manic and half-crazed mood of people in the midst of their fun.
The party for Halloween had begun.
And there was no telling when it might ever end.
The maze stood normal, but inside around the corners, there were things lurking and waiting.
Outside might have become frightening and gloomy, but the contrast to indoors was stark. Inside, carved pumpkins lit with candles turned the ballroom and restaurants into amber-lit abodes, costumed partygoers twirled to the music played by the band in the lobby (while the DJ had set up in the conservatory). Candy and small hors d'oeuvres circulated on the trays of immaculately clad waiters and though outside it was stormy, foggy, and spooky, inside was a delight of themed drinks, delicious food, and the manic and half-crazed mood of people in the midst of their fun.
The party for Halloween had begun.
And there was no telling when it might ever end.
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"I'm dressed as Alice Liddel of Alice's Adventures in Wonderland fame." With her short poofy blue skirt, covered in fake blood, she does a curtsy (sort of) before continuing. "Only this is from one of my favorite video games by a company called American McGee. It's super dark and creepy and Alice is a bad ass who has to save Wonderland. See, when she got home after her first trip to Wonderland her family had to commit her to an asylum cause they thought she was crazy talking about this Wonderland place. But it was all real. Wonderland has gone dark and scary and they want her to come in and save it. So see?"
Her smile is too bright to go with the bloody dress and knife and what she says next. "I'm a bad ass."
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He nods at her explanation. "I can see that." A pause. "That you're Alice. I'm less sure on the 'bad ass' part. The big cheery smile sort of contradicts the 'bad ass'."
"Now, pleasantries out of the way, what exactly were you doing? When I walked up and scared you."
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"Also, apparently you've never met actual bad asses. Some of them have the best smiles." All the bad asses she knew smiled anyway. Even some of the evil ones. But as far as the character of this version of Alice Liddel, she probably shouldn't be smiling like she was. Ah well, she never said she was an actress. Although there was that one time when everyone turned into their costumes.
She pops another chocolate into her mouth and gestures to the double doors leading outside. "I heard there was creepiness happening outside. I was thinking about doing some scooby work and investigating."
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A slow-ish blink. He waves a hand back and forth, indicating himself. "I am a badass." In case she couldn't tell. And he's not meaning the baseball uniform.
"Well, I would offer to go with you, but since you don't think I'm bad... wait - 'scooby'?" At some point his brain will catch up with the things she says before several weird seconds pass. Either that, or she'll start to speak English and he won't have to attempt the world's strangest simultaneous translation before responding to things she says.
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English is for normal people. Dawn and Buffy and their little group had always had their own vocabulary. Honestly, Dawn is impressed that Harvey keeps up as much as he does. "Yeah, that's what we used to call the people who helped by sister with her whole one girl in all the world gig. As a joke. Scoobies. You know, like scooby doo. Solving mysteries and fighting crime? Minus the supernatural part that we have to deal with."
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"Wasn't there a supernatural part to Scooby Doo mysteries? At least, enough that they used 'ghost' as an explanation fairly often before they solved the real mystery?" What? He watches TV. And watched plenty of it as a kid. He wasn't always a rich, smarmy badass.
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She's just gonna look at him, highly amused that he ever watched Scooby Doo. "Let me guess, you watched Transformers too. Oh! And that X-Men cartoon."
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He arches an eyebrow at 'scrappy'. "So you're the annoying sidekick that's really too young to play with the big kids?" Teasing, who Harvey? No way.
As for her queries about the television he watched as a child, he doesn't dignify that with a response. Surely she's figured out by now that he's well-versed in popular culture.
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"But when I wanna be, I am so one of the big kids. Sometimes I even drive the getaway car." She adds with a hint of amusement. Because while it's true, and while driving the getaway car isn't usually a part of what the big kids do, Dawn does it and also gets in the middle of the fray.
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"When did you become a superhero?" he asks. He doesn't remember that coming up in conversation. She'd mention that her sister saves the world, but not that any of them were actually 'superheroes'.
He gives her an almost amused look. "You drive the car? What about your sister? Or her friends?"
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"I'm a way better driver than Buffy. But we have this van so we can all get to a scene together and with weapons. I drive it. And I use the crossbow to help get people to safety. You know, by keeping it aimed at the zompires and various other oogly booglies." She explains. "Plus if someone is super injured we can put them in the van and take them to the hospital."
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If he grins at her, can you blame him? Here is this teenager - she's like, what, nineteen? it still counts - telling him that she saves the world with her sister. Her sister who is supposedly some mystical important something or other. (To be honest, he either wasn't paying attention or it's too bizarre for him to believe.)
Now he really is fighting a blistering smile. "You call yourselves 'Scoobies' and ride around in a van?" he asks incredulously. "Is it blue and green?" He is trying really really hard not to laugh right now.
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"Weren't you going to go outside?" he asks.
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"You're going out there all alone? Isn't that dangerous?"
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She looks back at him, wide-eyed with one brow arched high. "Maybe. I'm assuming my sister is out there though. If there's danger she's usually in the middle of it kicking it in the behind. You know, hero stuff."
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He ponders this all for a moment, peering at her. "So, what you're saying is, you're going to go outside - alone, potentially risking your life on the assumption that your ass-kicking sister is out there to save you if something tries to eat you?"
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But now that Harvey had spelled it out like that, she actually reconsidered going outside. "Well, I mean she could be out there by herself. She might need backup."
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For the moment, he gives her a look and lets her try to work that out on her own. "That's not what I was saying," he prompts and taps the bat against the floor.
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"Yeah, candy. You know what I want? Pop Rocks." And she's going to go in search of some, turning on her heel to look through all the baskets of candy scattered about. She doesn't even know if they have Pop Rocks. But she wants some. And it's a nice diversion from embarrassing herself in front of Harvey.
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