LG110, Night 1-A: A Terrible Fate, Indeed...
Night 1-A will end on Saturday, February 21st @ 10:00 PM EST.
The last customer of the evening was a Goron who had wandered in from the North Gate smelling of snowmelt and celebration, turning every mask over in his great stone hands with the careful reverence of someone who had never held anything so small and fragile in his life. He bought a painted bear with a gap-toothed grin, tucked it under one arm like a clutch purse, and ambled out into the early evening with a rolling contentment that made the bell above the door laugh twice.
The Apprentice watched him go and then turned to find her grandfather already watching her.
"Go," he said.
"I haven't finished the inventory—"
"It will be here in the morning." He settled into his chair behind the counter, the one with the cushion she'd stitched for him two birthdays ago, now flattened to a disc of good intentions. "The inventory is not going anywhere. The show, however—" He tilted his head toward the window, where the orange light of a setting sun was beginning to gild the edges of the Clock Tower's face. Somewhere beyond the glass, a drum struck up, and then another, and then a brass section that had clearly been practicing all afternoon and was now absolutely certain it was ready. "—is going somewhere quite specific at quite a specific time."
She had her green cap on before he finished the sentence.
"Eat something from the vendors," he called after her. "Not the spiced nuts. They'll give you dreams."
"What kind of dreams?" she called back.
"The kind that make you wake up uncertain which one was real." He opened his ledger. "Go. Shoo."
She was almost to the door when she stopped and looked back at him — the white hair, the slow smile, the way he held a pen like he was composing rather than accounting — and felt a small, sudden pang she couldn't quite name. It passed. She chalked it up to the spiced nut warning and pushed out into the evening.
Behind her, the bell laughed. The Happy Mask Salesman listened to it until it stopped, then glanced at the wall where a single hook hung bare above its small handwritten placard. His pen paused over the ledger.
He looked away.
Then, from the direction of the South Gate, came a sharp knock — not at the door but against the frame, the particular rhythm of someone who had been celebrating since noon and was now fairly certain this was the pottery shop. The Salesman sighed, set down his pen, and went to let them in. A man in a paper crown fell through the doorway and looked at the walls with an expression of pure, undiscriminating joy.
"I'll take that one," the man said, pointing vaguely at everything.
"Of course you will," said the Salesman, and helped the drunkard to a chair. "Let's start smaller."
The plaza was a living thing.
It breathed in the smells of roasted corn and candied apples and the particular honest sweat of a crowd having a genuinely good time. It exhaled music and laughter and the occasional whoop from someone who had just won something at Honey & Darling's. Banners caught the last of the daylight along East Street and turned it into something ceremonial. The Clock Tower rose above it all with its patient stone face, and beneath it — so small and bright and fizzing with energy that she could have been a firefly that had learned to walk — the Apprentice stepped into the plaza and immediately stopped to breathe it all in.
The Carnival Stage had been erected opposite the Tower, a broad wooden platform draped in moon-silver cloth and lit from below by lanterns in blue and gold. It was already packed five deep on all sides. She wriggled through with the practiced efficiency of someone accustomed to small spaces and stock shelves and came out near the front just as the drum roll settled into something stately and the first actor strode onto the stage.
He was young, playing older — or perhaps he was old playing young; it was hard to tell under the makeup. He wore a green tunic that had seen careful work, a pointed cap, and a little wooden shield painted gold that caught the lanternlight when he turned. The crowd applauded like they were greeting a returning friend.
The Moon was out.
She noticed it the way you notice something that has always been there but suddenly chooses to be noticed: a pale and enormous face gazing down from the darkening sky with an expression of absolute serenity, eyes half-lidded, neither kind nor cruel but simply watching, the way the very old watch the very young at play. The stars were already visible around it, smaller and uncertain. The Moon needed no introduction.
♩ There was a world like any other
With fields and stones and bread
And underneath a rolling sky
A boy who wouldn't stay dead ♩
The lyrics floated out over the crowd on the voice of a woman somewhere stage left, full and clear and pitched to carry. The Apprentice felt them land in her chest like chimes. Around her, people who had heard this song every year for as long as they could remember mouthed the words without thinking.
She was watching the actor-hero chase another actor across the stage — this one in a jester's costume, wild-eyed, wearing an elaborate replica of a terrible mask, all swirling purple and gold — when she noticed the Clock Ward.
He was standing at the edge of the crowd, helm on despite the summer heat, watching the audience rather than the stage. Not far from him, another. And another. They were spaced around the plaza like fence posts, present and immovable and scanning. She counted seven from where she stood. She'd seen two more near the South Gate on her way in, stopping a thin man in a traveling cloak to ask for his papers.
She'd heard her grandfather mention Mayor Bremor once in the same breath as the word thorough, in the same tone he used for words like loud and sharp.
♩ He played the song the world forgot
He played it past the dark
He wound the hours like a clock
And kindled morning's spark ♩
The woman's voice reached the chorus and the crowd surged forward half a step. On stage, a man in silver Zora scales dove dramatically through a ring meant to suggest the ocean and came up with a bundle of glowing prop-eggs to thunderous approval. The Apprentice forgot about the Clock Wards entirely.
Each vignette unfolded with the breathless logic of a dream: the Deku King sat upon a ridiculous throne that wobbled every time the actor playing him gesticulated, which was often; the ghost of a Goron hero materialized from a trapdoor in a gust of theatrical smoke and the crowd went very quiet for a moment, the way crowds do when something catches them somewhere unexpected. A man in a great shaggy goat costume ran in circles until he tripped over his own hooves and went down to the kind of laughter that could only mean yes, exactly, that is precisely what that felt like.
A firework cracked overhead, green and gold, trailing sparks like scattered rupees. Another followed it, blue this time, blooming into the shape of the Zora's emblem before it faded. She tipped her head back and watched them burn themselves out against the Moon's pale face and felt, very specifically, that she was standing in the center of something she would want to remember.
♩ Oh, the giants heard him call
They heard him from their sleep
They cupped the Moon between their hands
And held while people weeped ♩
A third firework, and a fourth, cascading now, each one higher than the last. The crowd cheered at each one. The actor-hero raised his ocarina. The actress-Moon on stage — a round-faced woman in silver paint who had been moving through the background of every scene with a slow and cosmic patience — turned to face the audience directly for the first time, and the crowd fell hush.
The Apprentice's hand found the tin ocarina in her pocket, and she held it there without taking it out, her thumb running over the holes.
♩ They held it like a child awake from nightmares
While a boy named Link climbed for the Moon
Where children played beneath a peaceful sky
And there, at last, the darkness met its doom ♩
He did not know how long he had been on the floor.
The lantern was still burning. That meant something — not too long, then. The ledger had fallen with him and lay open on the wrong page, the pen still capped, which meant he'd put it down himself before they came through the back. He tried to be grateful for small mercies and found he was too old for it at the moment.
He pulled himself up by the counter's edge, counted his teeth with his tongue out of professional habit, and stood very still until the room agreed to stop moving.
The drawer.
He had not opened it since the morning. He had not needed to. But he crossed the shop in three long strides — longer than he'd moved in years, which told him something about the quality of his fear — and dropped to his knees and opened it.
The faded blue cloth was there.
It lay flat.
He pressed his hand against it and felt only the shape of the floor.
He sat back on his heels. Somewhere outside, a firework went off, muffled through the walls, and the crowd cheered. The bell above the front door rang with the vibration of it. Rather than a laugh, it sounded like a whimper.
Then the Happy Mask Salesman covered his face with both hands. "A terrible fate, indeed..."
The finale was building.
The actor-hero and the jester-Skull Kid stood at opposite ends of the stage, and between them the actress-Moon waited with her silver hands folded, and the crowd was so quiet that the Apprentice could hear the wood of the stage settling. Even the Clock Wards had turned to watch.
Then the jester-Skull Kid stepped forward and held out his hand.
And then a second Skull Kid dropped from the sky.
There was a moment — half a breath, maybe — where the Apprentice thought it was planned. The costume was too good for it not to be: the same knobbly silhouette, the same splayed posture, but the mask was wrong. It was always wrong, the prop they used, good craftsmanship but obvious, the purple just a shade too even, the eyes a shade too dim. This one caught the lanternlight and gave it back changed — older, heavier, the color of a bruise at its worst — and the eyes were not dim at all.
The jester-Skull Kid took one step backward and then sat down on the stage very suddenly, as though his legs had decided the matter without consulting him.
The second one landed without a sound.
The crowd murmured. Somewhere to her left, a man laughed and said something about the budget this year. Someone shushed him. The actress-Moon had stopped moving.
The figure in the real mask turned to face the audience, and the Apprentice felt the tin ocarina go cold in her pocket.
"Thirty-three years," it said, and the voice carried without effort, the way thunder carries — not loud exactly, but occupying all available space. "Thirty-three years you have been celebrating a story. Eating his food. Singing his songs. Teaching your children his name."
It tilted its head. The mask's eyes caught no light now, or caught all of it, or both — she couldn't tell.
"He is not coming back."
The crowd was very still. On stage, no one moved. The actor-hero still had his prop-ocarina raised, and his arm was beginning to shake with the effort of holding it.
The figure spread its arms wide, the way an actor takes a bow, and lifted slowly from the stage — not jumping, not pulled by a wire she could see, but rising — until it hung between the lanterns and the Moon's enormous face, and the Moon above seemed to lean forward, almost curious, almost eager, and the stars around it seemed to hold their light.
"Let him rest. You will join him soon enough."
The first explosion was not a firework.
It came from the direction of the North Ward and it shook the ground through the Apprentice's feet and up through her knees and into her chest, and for one long moment the crowd simply did not understand what had happened. Then the second one came, closer, and the understanding arrived all at once and became a scream that belonged to no one person and everyone at once.
The Apprentice looked up.
The Moon's face, serene all evening, was beginning to change its expression. Slowly. The way a sleeper's face changes when the dream turns.
Above the Clock Tower, the Skull Kid — the real one, the wrong one — spread its arms wider still, and laughed, and the sound of it went up and up until it was indistinguishable from the next explosion, and the next, and the screaming of the crowd that had, three minutes ago, been singing along.
In her pocket, the tin ocarina offered no comfort.
Alas, it was only tin.
RP Quest: Become the heroes Termina needs! Save as many people as you can!
The Happy Mask Salesman
Player List
0
Amanuensis
Happy Mask Apprentice, AKA 'Ap'
1
@The Unknown Order
Heroshi
2
@Araris Valerian
"Grouchy old guy (or gal)"
3
@Wahrheitswächter
Wahi
4
@Ashbringer
Coliver
5
@coco.pudding
Amora
6
@|TJ|
Cosmetica
7
@Honors Ghost
meeee
8
@Haelbarde
Link the Goron
9
@Wonko the Sane
Zymni
10
@Doc12
Thistle
11
@Burnt Spaghetti
Cindra
12
@CoderDrag0n8
Squircle
13
@Mistfallen Soldier
Kieran
14
@Divergent
Gor Elam the Goron
15
@Archer
Ouae the Zora
16
@Hoid Slayer
Avery (Foreign Cousin of Heroshi)