vagabone: (you go chamaco!)
Héctor ([personal profile] vagabone) wrote in [community profile] living_memes2019-02-16 01:09 pm

Ask Me Anything!


Ask Me Anything!

Everyone has their own story, whether they're the protagonist or some measly side character, and people want to hear yours!

Just post a description of yourself in the title and let everyone ask you questions.

solperierat: (Good times)

[personal profile] solperierat 2019-02-16 08:23 pm (UTC)(link)
Okay, weirdest magic bug you've seen.
onegreeneye: (i'm hilarious okay)

[personal profile] onegreeneye 2019-02-16 09:20 pm (UTC)(link)
That's, uh... kind of a difficult question. I suppose the Dragon Shrine mushi was pretty odd. ...Though that might just be because I hadn't heard of it before studying it.
solperierat: (Gleeful)

[personal profile] solperierat 2019-02-16 09:36 pm (UTC)(link)
Well, tell me about it and I'll rate it on a scale of 'one' to 'fuck that, actually'.
onegreeneye: (whuh)

cw for uuuh pregnancy horror kind of 8T

[personal profile] onegreeneye 2019-02-16 10:14 pm (UTC)(link)
Alright, well... it was a large mushi - or maybe a colony of smaller ones, I couldn't say for sure - that had settled into the bottom of an ocean trench. It was nocturnal, but usually stayed hidden deep in the ocean, since moonlight was enough to bother it, so it waited until cloudy nights to emerge and hunt.

On those nights, it would use its tendrils to snare passing animals and pull them into itself; from there, it would... for lack of a better way of putting it, it seemed to eat the time they had lived for. I can only speculate as to the process, but it would also seem to break the bodies of its prey down into a number of genetically identical embryos, which it would store up during the month. Each full moon, the mushi would release those embryos as waste in... let's say a few hundred globules, as an estimate, where it packaged them together.

Furthermore, those packages had another odd property: If one of those globules was consumed by a female relative of one of the embryos held within, the embryo would make its way to the uterus and - in a fraction of the animal's standard gestation period, if the human examples were anything to go by - would develop into an infant physically identical to the original who was eaten by the mushi. Though, they didn't retain any of the original's memories.
solperierat: (can u not)

[personal profile] solperierat 2019-02-17 08:13 am (UTC)(link)
...

...

...

...

...what the FUCK?
onegreeneye: (back)

[personal profile] onegreeneye 2019-02-17 08:19 am (UTC)(link)
[Listen Ed he doesn't know what you want from him here. That's how it be.

So he'll just keep talking.]


The community on the island nearby saw it as a godsend; they'd made a practice of using it to "reincarnate" those who were dying, so they could be reunited with their loved ones. The question of whether they were the same people they were before caused a few of the people there some distress, though; not all of them could bring themselves to see it that way.