After the Fall of Efrain
With the Prince of Sorrow's Song dead and gone, the opera dissipates, spitting its victims out on the summit of Crane's Ridge where the Dance of Celestine was held some months before. It's getting late, and there is no one yet in town to run the train. Some will brave the trip home simply for the sake of collapsing into their own beds and achieving some sense of normalcy. Others will do so with the hope of returning with help. But many others will simply say "fuck it" and camp out on the mountain, still fitted with extra firewood from the festival and the means to build temporary structures in nearby storage sheds. The journey down will be safer in the morning, and there's solidarity to be had in a cool spring night spent under the stars.
Oh, look, there's even some non-perishable food and wine from the Dance. Combined with what can be hunted or foraged, as well as snacks and drinks stolen from the concession stand, there's plenty to go around. This might even be a little bit fun! Anyone up for another game of Never Have I Ever? Maybe a little Truth or Dare? Or perhaps you just want to chat and unwind with your friends. Whatever the case may be, have fun. This is your time. After darkness, there is a dawn. At the death of Sorrow, there is joy.
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"Yeah, hypotheticals are always kinda weird. Especially after you've had the whole 'there's other universes out there' lesson, I think. I'd probably have a different answer if I'd just been, like, the normal kind of teenage runaway."
Rather than an interdimensional teenage runaway.
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"Din't know there was a normal for that," he offers instead, which means she can talk more about it if she feels like it.
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"I mean, most runaways don't run away to a whole other universe. They usually just hop on a Greyhound and go to the next state over or something."
She's not particularly guarded about that part, at least. Spending so long hopping between alternate dimensions comes up a lot when you're stuck in one.
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"Oh, right—they're a bus company," she clarifies. "The kind of bus company you can afford an interstate trip on with a few months' allowance, depending on how far you wanna go."
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"Whole other universe is a lot farther than that. Guess it's different if you can do it on purpose though."
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"Yeah, I got lucky like that. Makes being stuck in one universe kinda weird. My travel watch died when I turned up on the ship and never started working again."
And so, stuck twice over.
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"With the help of geniuses who know stuff about quantum physics. I couldn't build the watch on my own if I tried." She shrugs. "Even then you could only go places they'd figured out the universe code of."