Duplicity Game Mods (
duplicitymods) wrote in
duplicitymemes2019-01-11 06:40 pm
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
![[community profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/community.png)
Entry tags:
TDM #4 ( revised )
« « « TEST DRIVE MEME » » »
It's discouraging to think how many people are shocked by honesty and how few by deceit. Yet, solace is found in the lies we tell each other, comforted by the peace of knowing that we're not alone in our depravity, and once on this path, sin itself becomes the lesser of two evils masked in a cloud of normalcy. This is how Duplicity has functioned since the beginning. The divide of power and social standing is overt in that Dominants influence the decisions made both publicly and privately while Submissives cater to the rules presented to them. It is the way of Duplicity to assign random designations at birth with no leeway in altering what has been given. Climate in the Up is far stricter than that of the Down; violating outlined personas for a Dominant or Submissive while in full view of others is punished by degree of infraction. In the Down, many tend to turn a blind eye to these sorts of offenses. To counteract the discovery of the Deceit Gene – a natural "negative" response to all stimuli – the L.I.E.S. program was founded. The program had been designed to introduce new subjects to the current environment and test for the Deceit Gene through immersion in Duplicity's standing society. Sexual impulses and encounters increase the chances of detecting the gene within these individuals. Participants are typically released from L.I.E.S. after a year; however, results have remained unsatisfactory and testing still continues. You’re here! Finally! Welcome to Duplicity. After choosing a door and stepping through to the other side, the first thing that greets you are the enthusiastic faces of people in medical scrubs and pristine lab coats. Their enthusiasm translates to eagerness as they strip you of your clothes to perform a thorough examination—you will be healed, bathed, and given a paper gown to wear until your items can be processed and delivered to your residence later in the evening. You are also given a device that accesses the network as well as the time and location of orientation. If you enter Duplicity into the Up, congratulations! You’re a Dominant, which means you are immediately picked up by a limo after processing and taken to your highrise. Here, it is two Dominants per floor with separate apartments. If you enter Duplicity into the Down, congratulations! You’re a Submissive, which means you are directed towards public transportation with the address of the motel you’ll be living in. Here, it is two Submissives per room with a shared common space for all rooms. Enjoy your free time until orientation! Participation is mandatory by all new and old arrivals. Oh, and one more thing. It's fucking cold. Better bundle up. |
![]() After stepping through the door and participating in orientation, LIERS are assembled together in the Up for a tour of Duplicity in its entirety. Seats are in pairs and randomly assigned to Dominants and Submissives alike. Traveling from Fiddler's Square, the train journeys through various parts of the Up, showcasing society and examples of lifestyle. Along the way, frequent stops are made; a variety of passengers can be seen exiting and entering the doors. A Dominant with a kneeling Submissive takes a seat near the front of the train at one stop. A small group of Submissives board and sit closer to the LIERS at another, all seemingly content in their roles. As the tour continues through the Up, the train passes close to the Market and White Wall Bridge and zips by North Park before heading into the Down and bypassing Red Wall Bridge and South Park. The train makes a "final" stop at Riddler's Square, where inhabitants of the Down are instructed to return to their temporary housing. Those who live in the Up are permitted to stay on the train and revisit the same locations while returning. |
![]() While the societal climate between Dominants and Submissives remains somewhat neutral throughout Duplicity, there has been the occasional whisper of defiance and call for equality. Yet, demonstrations and visible proof of this unhappiness spreads faster by word of mouth on a day exactly when you need it most. Welcome to Autonomy, a "traveling" nightclub that is never in the same place twice. People wanting to attend only learn of its lucrative location and password hours before it opens for business. Tonight, I choose the third door will get you inside and into the temporary freedom club Autonomy has to offer. In this circle, there are no assigned designations and no consequences for taking a role that isn't the one given by society. So, a Dominant may become the Submissive they've always wanted to be—or vice versa. Dominants and Submissives alike are able to mingle without repercussion and be themselves. Food, drinks, and private areas for more intimate – or if your preference is sexual – encounters are provided. Donations are accepted at any point during the night to further Autonomy's attempts of spreading the fulfillment that comes from being untitled. On the night you choose to visit, Autonomy is holding a random lottery for temporary connections. When entering, you have the choice of submitting your name into this drawing to be paired with someone else in the club regardless of designation. A short while later, a message will pop up on your device with the name and information of your partner, and whether or not you choose to meet them is purely at your discretion. Having more than one connection isn't completely unusual either. |
![]() Gratification of being a successful Dominant or Submissive isn't necessarily simple. Learning curves are to be made, and mistakes will happen. Led by a Dominant and Submissive couple – Miriam and Victoria, who have been paired for twenty-two years – a monthly meeting for unattached Dominants and Submissives is held in the conference room of Morning Wood motel in the Down. The meeting starts a few minutes after nine and has no designated end time. The couple introduce themselves and explain the purpose of the meeting: learn the proper method for a new kink and possibly find your perfect partner. The space is intimate and well-stocked with refreshments. To begin, Victoria, while blindfolded, balances on her hands and knees with her back perfectly level. Her partner, when ready, places various items on the level surface–a full cup, a plate. The Submissive is meant to hold the items until the Dominant believes she's reached her limit. The exercise is one of trust and understanding. The demonstration is a short one, followed by Miriam removing the blindfold and soothing her Submissive. The words are whispered low and with care, clearly a method that is specific to this couple. The process is concluded with the pair handing out workups, videos, and answering questions. Anyone wishing to practice Purposeful Submission can do so in the open room with a random volunteer, aided by the couple, or can find someone to take to one of the rented rooms. Sex may follow any scene but is not necessarily included. Experimenting with unattached Dominants and Submissives allows for new relationships to form. |
Please read carefully. On each Test Drive Meme, there will be a section noting character roles based on birthdays; these will vary each TDM. On an IC level, character will still have gone through the doors but assignments OOCly are still randomized. When applying, there is a section of the application that denotes whether the character chose "left" or "right". When participating on the TDM, there will be a third option. Players may link either a top level or a thread (five or more comments from their character) from the TDM and title the link as "Door Pass". This means that the player is choosing to take the designation that they were randomly assigned on the TDM, rather than taking the designation of a door. If the player decides to select a door rather than use the pass, then they are trying their luck; they may get the same designation they had on the TDM or the opposite. Once the application is submitted, players can't change their choice. To assign roles to characters for this TDM, use the following guide. All characters who have blue eyes or one blue eye and another color are Submissives. All characters who have brown eyes or one brown eye and another color are Dominants. Characters with any other color eyes are Dominants. To use this TDM as a door pass please link this on your app and place whether it is Dominant or Submissive. Please remember to mark any necessary content, and have fun!! |
no subject
It sounds like you won't be lacking stories to tell later. And undoubtedly of the interesting variety, considering your other life stories involved pirates, the plague, and the spontaneous acquisition of a healing ability.
[Assuming he stays conscious long enough to divulge a few.]
I doubt mine would be nearly as enthralling, unless I have the good luck of being in the company of someone who won't tire too quickly of stories of slaying monsters.
[He has other kinds of stories, of course; stories about destiny, one special little girl, and the forces of Chaos, but he doesn't want to think about them in a place where he has no means of reaching the main feature of those stories.]
no subject
[Or until he passes out, at any rate. He says it brightly, tone chipper as he continues to walk unsteadily through the city streets. Geralt has him on one of his favourite topics, the stories of his multiplicity of adventurous escapades, and to look at him, or hear him speak, one wouldn't be able to guess he'd been kidnapped and dragged through mysterious means to an unknown city only to be made some kind of slave-status citizen.
He's taking it all rather well. Though the consumption of a large amount of gin has doubtlessly helped.]
And come on now, don't sell yourself short.
[He says as he moves to slap Geralt on the back in a gesture of camaraderie, almost misses, stumbles just a bit.]
I'm sure you have some good ones. I've never slain any monsters myself so that's ah, that's already a point of intrigue.
no subject
Careful. We wouldn’t want you to find out first-hand how filthy these gutters are.
[By the sound of his voice, he might find the prospect a little amusing. And, also by the sound of his voice, the alcohol is finally having an effect on him.
He clears his throat before speaking again.]
Well then, I’m in luck. There’s only so many ways I can describe the killing of the beasts, but I may be able to hook you on a story or three on the basis of ignorance.
[They’re not far off the train station now, and Geralt is pleased to see a train pulling in for its next pickup. They won’t be made to wait in the cold.]
It’ll be a story for a story. Why don’t you start us off.
no subject
They keep walking, and he picks up his pace a bit as he sees the train begin to pull in.]
Let me see, how about my grand escape from Vesuvia? That time I mentioned, when I had to leave, it was because I'd been condemned to death for the murder of the Count, you know, that utterly deplorable fellow I told you about before. Well, on the night of the grand masquerade, he was burned to death in his bed chambers, and the person they caught at the scene? Well, that was yours truly, and the assumption was, alas, that I was to blame. So I was promptly arrested and taken off to the dungeons to await my fate. The best part, to be honest, were the rumours. My favourite that I've heard is that the dastardly Doctor Devorak escaped the cells in the dead of night by turning into a swarm of bats and flying away.
[He laughs as they reach the train, disentangles himself from his companion long enough to drop down bonelessly into one of the seats, long legs spread out before him. He does recall seeing other submissives taking the train during their tour, how most of them had been kneeling, not using the seats at all, and whilst he's far from opposed to doing such a thing...it doesn't suit present company, and if none of the train,s occupants are going to make any complaints, he'll stay right where he is.
Turning to Geralt, he continues.]
The truth is a touch less dramatic, I'm afraid. A very good friend of mine, Mazelinka, who helped raise my sister and I when we were orphaned - although that's another tale - crept into the dungeons in the dead of night disguised as cleaning staff, picked the locks of my cell, and whisked me away. It was a mad dash through the night-time city streets and down to the docks, onto her awaiting ship...where she hid me in a case of rum until we were out at sea.
[And again, there's the deep soft sound of his laughter.]
By the time she unpacked me, I'm afraid there was rather less rum than there had been to begin with.
no subject
To the suggestion that Julian escaped prison in the form of a swarm of bats, Geralt shakes his head.]
Preposterous, as rumours go. You were clearly a single, large bat.
[Once in the train, Geralt sits himself down beside Julian in a much less exuberant fashion. He has a neat way of sitting, like a man sitting before the desk of a superior. This is courtesy of an on-and-off lover who managed to impress some manners on him despite Geralt being raised among and almost exclusively by men.
He nods along as Julian continues his story, periodically arching his eyebrows in amusement. Julian's quite the talented storyteller, so much so that he manages to draw forth a laugh from Geralt with the mention of the rum. It’s short and soft, and clearly not a sound Geralt makes often.]
A man cannot reasonably be expected to demonstrate restraint when put in a case of rum. I likely would have done the same, and with my constitution, I’m not certain any of it would have survived the journey.
no subject
Hah! It would have been more believable, one large bat. I suppose it's the way I dress that does it. Perhaps they mistook me for a vampire.
[His grin is as loose and sprawling as the rest of him, and the other man's soft huff of laughter doesn't escape his attention, only makes him beam all the brighter.]
It wasn't the most sensible place to hide me, was it? I suppose, amidst all the panic, dear Mazelinka didn't quite think that part through. It was after she released me from my boozy prison that I got the eye patch, actually. She gave it to me to cover my eye, make sure I didn't spread panic in any port we happened to pass through.
[The part of the story he leaves out is his own fast ascending fear in the wake of finding himself in the Count's room, unable to remember what had happened, being swiftly whisked into the cells and marked with the murderer's brand. The guilt and terror and sick self-hatred that plagued him for the last three years as he tried to recall whether he'd done the dead or not. But those things aren't much fun to talk about, and don't fit the image of the debonair anti-hero he's trying to conjure up.
So he says nothing of that, instead leans over in his seat until he's conspirational-close to his new drinking companion.]
I like that you didn't ask whether or not I did it.
no subject
He regards Julian curiously when he leans in, an eyebrow arched.]
It wouldn’t bother me if you had. I've seen better men experience worse deaths for less than the deeds of this Count of yours. But you made your innocence of the crime quite clear, and it would be amiss of a hired killer to throw doubts and accusations upon you.
[He’s killed people himself for less. Monsters come in all shapes and sizes.]
And - [He leans just a touch closer.] It would be bloody impolite.
no subject
The thoughtfulness breaks around another of his smiles when Geralt makes his closing statement, though, his brief moment of solemn musing lifting.]
Quite.
[He goes to place one elbow on the hand-rest that separates them, almost misses, then drops his chin into his open palm.]
But now, I believe, it's your turn. I like hearing a good story almost as much as I enjoy telling one.
no subject
[He has fought so many monsters over the years that there are hundreds of tales he could tell. To select one worthy of being told is a difficult process; after a while, they all kind of just melded together for Geralt, but he eventually decides upon the Striga of Wyzim.]
One of my best known tales is that of the Striga of Wyzim – not through choice, mind you; a bard companion of mine included it in his works without my knowing and has been continuing with this tradition since discovering I’ll only threaten to smack him around the ear for it. But I digress. The story.
I should first explain what a striga is: it is, simply put, the result of a powerful curse being put on a woman. It turns them into a beast that relishes all the things one can expect from beasts: killing, feasting, and the dark. The appearance of one is not unlike a bear, though considerably more hideous, and with considerably longer teeth and claws. The striga in this instance was the daughter of a king, who conceived her through an immoral union.
[He decides to spare Julian the exact details of how the daughter came to be.]
I was tasked with breaking the curse by spending the night with the striga. Or rather, I was given the job after years of death and people turning tail at the sight of the thing. I would also be permitted to kill the girl, should I find myself unable to break the curse, with the stipulation that I was to let myself be considered a failure and banished from the city for this.
I set out with the intention of turning that hideous creature into a young girl, who would have been fourteen at the time, for that is how long she resisted all attempts to free her of either her life or the curse. I made my preparations. As these things go, a man - most likely the man responsible for the curse - stepped out of the dark while I was readying and tried to stop me. First with coin, and then with an attempt against my life, so I kept him in close quarters through use of rope until the striga appeared and had him make a distraction of himself.
[He pauses briefly, considering how to go about describing the fight.]
The beast put up a good fight. I put up a better one, in no little part due to my still having the ability of higher thought. Ultimately, I compelled it into retreating with a roar. Not quite as simple as a roar, I’ll admit, but to any spectator, that is all it would have been. The beast ran and I descended into the crypt to wait out the rest of the night inside the sarcophagus in which the child had spent her days.
Morning arrived, and there was the young girl, unconscious upon the floor of the crypt. A little dirty and slim, but otherwise like any other fourteen year old girl. I checked her for remnants of the curse, and I discovered one when she lashed me in the neck with her talons.
[He gestures to the long, jagged lines on the side of his neck. One is given the impression of very deep wounds.]
My method of ceasing further attacks on my person was to bite her on the neck, which seemed only fair after she had torn into mine. Her growls subsided into whimpers, and then, silence. I fell silent shortly after and woke up some time later with a very sore neck.
no subject
Which makes it all the more interesting to him, if he's honest. Geralt even has battle scars to prove the tale, which gives the whole thing an extra layer of authenticity, of interest.]
Well, that all sounds quite frightful. I don't think I'd want to run into one of those striga things...lucky such a beast doesn't exist where I hail from...at least, I don't think it does. I've never seen one.
[He sits just a little straighter in his seat as the train rattles past one stop and onto the next.]
So what happened? Did she survive in the end, after the bite? Did she uh, did she get to live a normal life?
no subject
[At most he would have left her with some scarring. More mental than physical, if he was to guess.]
Despite achieving the ideal outcome, I’m afraid being stuck in the mind of a beast for so long left her mentally impaired. She wasn’t fit to be a king’s daughter when she emerged from that crypt, and if the absence of her in the public eye since then is any indication, she never reached a stage in her recovery where she could be a viable continuation of the royal line. But she is the king’s daughter all the same, and there’s no reason to believe he doesn’t treat her as such.
[It’s as close to a happy ending as he can give Julian. It’s hopeful, if nothing else.]
no subject
Hmmm, probably for the best. It sounds like she had enough excitement for one lifetime, could probably do without all that court intrigue and political maneuvering.
[No sooner has he said it then there's the flash of his smile, one brow arching high.]
And you had a bard sing about you! What a feat...I've never heard any sing about me.
[he sounds just a touch wistful.]
Although I did once accidentally walk onto the stage of a community theatre, mid-production. It was a play about the night of the masquerade, where of course the villainous Doctor Devorak was the anti-hero of the hour. He wasn't ah, well as you can probably imagine, he wasn't very well liked amongst his people.
no subject
My sympathies. [Julian doesn’t sound entirely (at all) displeased with the prospect of being the subject of a bard, though, so he adds:] Should that bard of mine ever make an appearance here, I’ll be sure to direct him to you for inspiration. You’d be able to… enjoy a better depiction of yourself, if slightly exaggerated. With any luck, he’d lose interest in singing about my deeds and romantic conquests upon discovering an exciting new subject.
[Just thinking about Dandelion waxing poetic about his activities in this place is enough to fill him with a dreadful embarrassment. It would be much harder to escape recognition in a place as concentrated as this.]
no subject
The train rattles on into the night, and Julian seems to brighten at the mention of the bard.]
Oh, do you think he would? I've always hoped there would be at least one song about me, someday, you know, even if it's one about the cloud of bats. Although I suppose I shouldn't go wishing your friend into a situation he may not like.
[He's aware that his own proclivities put him in the likely rare position of not being overly concerned with the whole situation here.]
no subject
[Geralt loves him, really.]
But, as he's unlikely to appear, might I satisfy you with a limerick?
[They have a few more minutes before the train reaches their stop. Enough time for Geralt to compose something that would make Dandelion ashamed of him.]
no subject
[He says it, but then he's sitting up straighter in his seat a moment later, claps his hands together once, loudly, exuberant. Enough to draw a few looks from the scant other passengers on the train, but they soon look away again, returning to their own business or conversations.]
A limerick! Oh, I'm game, yes. I'd love to hear one.
no subject
There once was a doctor who felt flat,
For his towns people thought him a rat.
And then came the day,
That he said 'hooray',
For they now thought him a swarm of bats.
[As far as limericks go, it's... not great, but it's about the standard one can expect from a man as lacking in musical talent as Geralt. Particularly after he's downed five glasses of gin.]
no subject
Hah! Bravo, bravo, perhaps your friend should be in fear for his title, if he ever does put in an appearance here. The swarm of bats...it gets me every time.
no subject
I thank you, and I’m pleased you enjoyed it. In the unlikely event I think up further limericks, I’ll keep in mind to share them with you.
[Very, very unlikely, but at least Julian will have the one attempt to keep for the rest of his days.
And with that attempt done, they’ve reached their destination. The squeal of the breaks is an unpleasant sound for someone of Geralt’s sensitive hearing to be subjected to, but it never takes long for it to be swallowed up by the hubbub of people standing out of their seats, retrieving their luggage, hushing their children and murmuring amongst themselves. When the commotion starts (and Geralt has noticed it always starts long before they've come to a complete halt), he's quick to join in, rising from his chair and steadying himself with a pole grip. He keeps his other hand free to be used as support should Julian find himself stumbling again.]
no subject
Is your accommodation from here? I'm beginning to fear that if I don't indulge again soon, I'll begin to sober up. And we don't want that, now, do we.
[Though despite the jovial words, he doesn't look to be in danger of sobering up any time soon.]
no subject
If it’s all the same to you, I’d prefer not to have to clean vomit off my floors. I just received them.
[He directs Julian toward an alleyway far out of the way of any streetlamps, so dark that one is prevented from seeing what sits beyond it. The Up is safe enough that Geralt doesn’t have to have any reservations about entering such a place without a weapon.]
no subject
Are you casting aspersions on my ability to hold my liquor? You wound me.
[He says, though it's clearly a matter of theatrics, that beneath all of that he doesn't appear to be wounded at all. He allows himself to be led into the increased darkness of the alley, his voice dipping low now as he moves from a pretense at hurt to one of concern.]
And what's this now, leading me into dark alleys in the dead of night. Should I be afeard for my safety?
[But the crook of one thick eyebrow, the angle of his oncoming smile, all clearly indicate that he's teasing, that the gin in his system has obviously left him silly and playful.]
no subject
[There’s nothing to fear in the alleyway except perhaps the potential to walk through garbage. Geralt nonetheless manoeuvres himself so he’s walking in front. Partly out of habit, and partly because he doesn’t want Julian to kick or trip on something.]
I’ll strive to keep you intact through to the end. Your toes, in particular, as you’re liable to kick something in this dark.
[He glances at Julian just in time for Julian to see his pupils dialating like those of a cats. He can see just as well as one, too, as they head deeper into the dark of the alleyway.]
no subject
Lucky I ran into you then, isn't it? Who knows where I'd have ended up otherwise.
[Asleep in a gutter in the Down probably, or under a table in the bar they were frequenting. Or some situation entirely worse than that. And he does catch the quick dilation of the other man's eyes as he turns to look at him, knows what it's likely to mean. Allows himself to be led along with some certainty, safe in the assumed knowledge that Geralt will be much better at maneuvering his way around than Julian himself currently is.]
no subject
[The walk through is uneventful, punctuated once or twice with Geralt pulling Julian out of the way of an obstacle and little more. Well, that’s not entirely true; there was a cat, but Geralt made a face at it and it promptly fled. A face Julian wouldn’t have been privy to, and he’s grateful for that, for baring one’s teeth at cats looks quite silly.
The alleyway opens out into a street that is occupied almost entirely by apartment complexes. Some are clearly more upper-class than others, and Geralt heads for one that looks reasonably modest.]
Before we enter, I should warn you that the security here likes to questions those entering with submissives with which they have no contract. And there's no back entrance.
[He's seen it happen a few times, but perhaps if they're fast and quiet they'll be able to avoid prying eyes.]
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
I'm sorry this happened haha
I'M NOT LMAO
LMAO good
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)