#twin effect
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It’s really scaring me, the way that people out here, in much much higher numbers AND amounts in one person, seem to have not just like. Literacy issues, but even BASIC COMPREHENSION issues when speaking and listening (barely) to you.
At work I ask a simple either/or question all day every day. Would you like to (x) or (y). I get told “No” almost every time. Because all that they listened to were the first few words, IF that.
One coworker of mine among a sea of WASPs is a black fella and he asked how I was today. I started out by mentioning having trouble adjusting since moving— then I told him straight up and mentioned my family and cultural differences being an issue since moving out here. And was like “Idk how you do it out here man.” He just said (paraphrasing but barely) that his daughter is real crazy and different like that and he could understand… …… ……………. ………………………. I didn’t say *I* was different, my personality (though it is). I was talking about much bigger factors here
I get that people avoid direct conversation but it legit felt like every other convo I have out here. With anyone of any background
Like listening is NOT happening and people lack even a basic vocabulary to boot…? Like I truly don’t know how I can speak (or write) so plainly and simply and still run into this again and again and again and again. This has never happened anywhere else I have lived.
I am not remotely using my full vocabulary or anything. And this still happens. It’s like they just give up. Seconds in. Or… Before even starting.
Every single time
I am only like half an hour outside of the city, living here. A pretty similar/nearly the same amount with other places, before, too, though…so….
What the fuck gives
Like new levels of denseness and even like. Uncuriosity. Lack of desire to even HAVE the conversation that we are having.
Not to even get into the people I live with….
I’m losing it man. WTF.
#personal#social#education#no it’s so much more than that#upbringing#conformism#attention span#is definitely worsening considering all ages are becoming tiktokheads now#other factors#idk what#????#it feels mildly like the universe is against me rn but i know that’s just from losing her to go home and share a mindset with#twin effect#etc#hellworld#i’m losing it man holy fuck#like the majority of ppl i meet seem. hate to say it but less bright? currently. and that wasnt true just months ago#just wtf#culture shock#?
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"I see. Seems this worked just that works. Thanks for this Ender. With the food we should be good." Hanoka smiled happy while looking at him seeing him return.
Twin Effect (@the-silver-peahen-residence)
Ender grunts a bit as he slowly wakes up, struggling to sit up from the gurney he found himself in. He grasps his forehead and tries to move his other hand, only for him to find it restrained a bit. He grunts a bit and loosens the binds with his free hand before rubbing his eyes. Noticing his completely stark naked form, he blushes a bit and looks around. The room was eerily quiet as he slowly stands up, nesrly stumbling as he makes his way over to the door. He opens it and peers outside. It was deathly silent, no air or anything being heard in this seemingly abandoned, metallic, cold place. “Hello?” he called out a bit. Nothing. “Hello?” he asked louder before stepping out into the hallway.
@the-silver-peahen-residence
#IC#rp reply#silver roses#twin effect#hidden labs au#forgotten lands au#ender#space explorer/within the stars#the-archetype-of-civilization
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Deus ex Chara
FIRST - PREVIOUS - NEXT
MASTERPOST (for the full series / FAQ / reference sheets)
#deltarune#undertale#crossover#utdr#crossover comic#undertale fanart#deltarune fanart#twin runes#twin runes comic#my art#kris dreemurr#frisk#chara#susie deltarune#ralsei#now aren't you glad this wasn't flowey?#still it scarred everyone for life in the process#Chara used sneak attack!#it was super effective#they get a +5 for back attacks
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they're like if cain killed abel with a squishmallow
#unrelated but if i read ford and stan the story of cain and abel i think it would have profound effects#“am i my brother's keeper” the way that would resonate do i even need to explain#mabel pines#dipper pines#mystery twins#pines twins#pines family#gravity falls fanart#gravity falls#digital art#rebisrot
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Chapter 91 of Bill Cipher, still in drag as a Normal Human, getting an unusual amount of unsupervised time outside of the Mystery Shack: Agent Powers very seriously pursues the truth behind what happened last summer.
Meanwhile, the other agents very goofily pursue the truth behind what happened last summer.
Lookit'em go.
Meanwhile meanwhile, Bill faces down the metaphorical specter of his own dying legacy.
####
Ford paced across the ritual chamber, reading and re-reading the script Bill had handed him, stroking his chin in concentration.
Bill watched him from the Blind Eye's favorite brainwashing chair, one ankle hooked over the other knee in a figure 4, hands laced behind his head. "I know the script's a little hammy, but you saw those recordings! This is genuinely how these guys talk, I promise!"
"No no," Ford said. "The script's fine. It's just—I've never played a villain before. I need to get in character."
"Oh, you nerd!" Bill rolled his eyes at the ceiling. "This is a big DD & More D session to you, isn't it!"
"Of course not. DD & More D's RPG system is far better suited to swords & sorcery than cloak & dagger."
"You know what I mean."
Ford was fighting to prevent a giddy smile from breaking out across his face. "I assure you, I'm taking this completely seriously."
"Ha! Sure. You're lucky you're behind the camera, that face would ruin the performance," Bill said. "At least it's an improvement over that scowl you always give me." Slightly deflated, he said, "Yeah, that scowl."
"We shouldn't waste time. Should we...?" Ford gestured to the wrist straps on the chair.
"Ha! I don't trust you that much." Bill held his hands behind his back, wrists crossed. "Just pretend I'm tied up, it's fine."
"Are you sure that's a good idea?"
"What's that supposed to mean."
"I'm not an actor. You're a liar but you're not an actor either. We're missing the chanting chorus the cult leader usually has when he does this. We need every tool we can get to make this look convincing."
"Pfff!" Bill waved off Ford's worries. "Re-lax, he won't suspect a thing. Guarantee it."
"Are you sure he's dumb enough to buy this?"
####
Powers sat on the floor, staring into space, as he reevaluated everything he knew about this town.
####
"It's like that goat can teleport," Trigger grunted, trying to get between a couple of trees. "How did it get all the way—?" He tripped over a fallen tree hidden beneath a blanket of ferns and crashed to the ground with a yelp.
Dale leaped over the log, offered Trigger a hand, and said, "Maybe the trees are messing with the radar?"
Trigger brushed some leaves out of his hair. "Where's it say it is now?"
"About twenty feet..." Dale pointed. "That way."
They looked.
Gompers was stood staring over a thick bush at them. Tauntingly.
"Ah-ha!" Trigger ran for him; Dale followed close behind, looking at his tablet. "Now we've got you!" Trigger fought through the bush forming a barrier between him and the goat. "Stay right there, you—"
He yelped as he stepped on air and lost his balance. Dale managed to stop just in time, the tips of his shoes over the edge, only for Trigger to grab his wrist and drag him down—straight into a ten foot deep crevasse that the bush had been hiding.
Gompers stood on the other side of the crevasse, looking down at them curiously.
Dale and Trigger were tangled at the bottom, stuck in a mud puddle that had been left over from the past weekend's rains. Dale groaned at the goat, "How'd you get over there?"
Trigger attempted to climb up the steep side, dislodged a sheet of dirt, and slid back down on top of Dale. "How do we get over there?"
Gompers bleated at them and took off deeper into the woods again.
####
While the agent was busy having what was no doubt a very exciting look into Gravity Falls' secret unauthorized mental health charity service, Bill decided to make a visit to that curtained-off wing of the museum he'd seen last night—the one with all the warnings against bringing a camera into the area.
It was a lot less exciting than Bill had expected. Just a display of a bunch of local Native art—hide clothes with elaborate quillwork and beadwork, jewelry made of shells and claws, stone carvings, baskets... Most of it was the kind of stuff that had been made in this area only long after the locals he'd befriended had so callously betrayed and banished him several thousand years back; only a couple of objects looked like things the people he'd known might have made, primarily the stone things. But even though most of the stuff in the room was "modern," he thought it looked too modern, not like the centuries-old works he'd expected.
The room was familiar—distantly, fuzzily familiar. As though he'd seen it in a dream.
A glance at a plaque on the wall explained why everything looked so new: most of the displayed items were replicas. This was a collection of objects that the Northwest family had stolen from tribes in the area over a hundred years ago. When the Northwest Manor had been sold to one Fiddleford H. McGucket, all objects left behind in it had conveyed, stolen artwork and crafts included—and an oil painting of the sleazy-looking Northwest who'd done a majority of the stealing, which was now hanging in the museum with a list of his known and suspected crimes and injustices displayed next to the painting. It was, Bill had to grudgingly admit, pretty funny. Kudos to whichever museum employee had thought that up.
According to the plaque, Fiddleford had contacted the nearest tribes to ask them whether they recognized anything in the Northwests' collection and to offer to return the pieces—which surprised Bill. He'd never seen Specs as the kind of guy to be particularly interested in repatriation. Most of the ill-gotten art had been gladly taken; anything that nobody had wanted, Fiddleford put in the museum; and a few artisans had even offered modern replicas of some of the items Fiddleford had returned, for public display with the artists credited.
He didn't see why this room was behind heavy curtains with half a dozen "no photography" warnings. It wasn't like these were priceless antiques at risk of degrading under flash photography; aside from the oil painting—which he doubted anyone was too precious about—everything in this room was under a decade old. So why...?
He had seen this little exhibit in a dream, he was sure of it. He tried to find the point of view he'd seen the room from. The room wasn't a perfect rectangle. It turned, L-shaped, into a little alcove. Bill wandered into the alcove—and froze when he saw his own face.
He was eyes-to-eye with the apocalyptic tapestry through which he'd watched the Northwest Manor's great hall for decades: black sky, red inferno, dead trees, dead humans, dying survivors, and above it all Bill's eye shining blood red like the sun hidden behind wildfire smoke. Another: the odd spaceship-shaped gap in the mountains around the town, and Bill—bright yellow against a deep red sky—framed by the gap as though his eye were the setting sun. And another—a pattern consisting of nothing but triangles with eyes, the geometry unusual for art in this region—and another—Bill surrounded by blue lightning, probably a distorted remembering of the unsuccessful redwood portal—and another, another...
Six tapestries in all, of varying sizes. These weren't replicas. Each showed varying degrees of age—broken quills, frayed edges, fading dye, the grime of an article centuries old that had been poorly cared for—but they were all centuries old. The tributes to him made during his long absence: the echoes of a millennia-old generational trauma memory.
The tapestries weren't all that was contained in this little alcove. He forced himself to break eye contact with himself to look at the other items on display. Photographs of several cave paintings—the zodiac, the ritual to summon Bill, the prophecy of his defeat. A few small carvings of his face in stone and wood. Spear tips with his face carved in them, broken due to the way a hollowed-out eye compromised the structural integrity of the stone. And—one of Mabel's blankets, sitting innocently behind a glass case. He stared at it in amazement. Who would have imagined that he'd find a little shrine to himself, right in the middle of the Gravity Falls Museum nearly a year after his death?
On the blanket, his eye had been crossed out with an X of black electrical tape. Bill's blood ran cold.
He forced himself to look at the tapestries again. Some of the quills were broken with age, yes; but someone had also taken a sharp knife and sliced two neat, clean lines across his eye in each of the tapestries, almost invisible except for a few of the broken quills that now bent out of place. The geometric pattern of triangles had been so criss-crossed with slashes that it was amazing it hadn't disintegrated.
His eyes darted over the rest of the objects, studying them more closely. The stone and wood depictions of his face—all freshly re-carved into, X'es covering the eyes. Where he'd first assumed the spear tips had broken with age, he could now see how they'd all been snapped neatly, precisely in half. In the photographs from the cave, he could see his eyes had each been covered by a red spray-painted X. The summoning ritual had also been defaced: apparently not content with painting over it, someone had fully scraped the ritual off of the cave wall, leaving behind only a few missed marks.
None of these items had been defaced before. Bill had made sure that the people in the area passed on a "superstition" against damaging any images of the One-Eyed Beast. (Translation: after they'd figured out that Bill was bad news and decided to cut ties to him, he'd contacted them in their dreams—"If any of you humans even try to take out my eyes, I'll haunt you all so hard. I'll be in your nightmares, I'll be in your kids' nightmares, I'll be in your grandkids' grandkids' nightmares, do not test me!" That had been about the time the shaman locked Bill out of the valley and ensured he couldn't make good on his threat—but the superstition lingered.) He knew for a fact that some of these eyes had even been working as recently as last summer: he'd watched the Northwests' every move through those tapestries. All this damage had been done after his death.
The only item that hadn't been defaced was the blanket. The plaque: "Artist: Mabel Pines, great-niece of town heroes Stanley and Stanford Pines, age 13. Acrylic yarn, 2012. Recreation of a ritual symbol designed to defeat the Beast with One Eye. Donated by Fiddleford McGucket." He suspected this blanket got electrical tape instead of a brutal slashing as a courtesy not to the artwork's subject, but to its artist.
He read the informational plaque accompanying this anti-shrine.
These were the only items in this wing that weren't replicas—because no tribe with ancestry around Gravity Falls Valley wanted them back. (So Fiddleford had offered to return art in Northwest Manor, had he? Begged was more likely.) The plaque explained that neighboring tribes considered depictions of "the Beast with One Eye" to be cursed. "Cursed" wasn't quite the correct term, Bill knew well; but the plaque didn't leave room to expand. It kept its description as terse as possible. (After all, anybody in Gravity Falls already knew exactly why these particular items were cursed; and tourists didn't need to know.) The plaque ended, firmly, "They say they would rather forget about the Beast with One Eye."
Somebody else had scrawled underneath in red marker, "AND SO WOULD WE!"
Underneath the marker scrawl , someone had written in smaller, neat, black pen, "יִמַּח שְׁמוֹ". Yimakh shemo. May his name be erased. A death threat would have hurt less.
There were under ten humans in Gravity Falls that Bill knew had studied Hebrew. He forced himself to wrench his eyes away before he could be sure he recognized the cursive handwriting.
Behold: the legacy of the great, the godly, the All-Knowing and All-Seeing Bill Cipher. Relegated to old history, shoved disdainfully in the corner of a stupid hick town's stupid local museum, with people fighting over who has to put up with the last remnants of him. For thousands of years, the locals had been driven to preserve his memory, but it hadn't been preserved out of reverence; and from now on, it wouldn't even be preserved out of fear.
Without Bill around to pull the strings, the superstitions would fade, the myths would be forgotten, and humans would get bored with the All-Seeing Eye symbol and stop using it. Eventually, humanity's influence would wane, and another species whose culture he'd never influenced would take over; and within a few short millennia, his face would be forgotten on Earth. His face would be forgotten everywhere.
How could this have happened to him?
He glowered at the array of blind eyes staring at him from the walls.
Bill's pocket vibrated. He pulled out his phone. Ah, right, Powers. He'd almost forgotten about him completely. Ha.
Powers had texted to ask him to come downstairs. He said there was something Bill needed to see. Yeah, he bet there was.
It was certainly better than this.
####
"Hey there," Dale said, crouched on the sidewalk, voice high and soothing, "come on, this way."
Gompers stared at him distrustfully from just within the protective boundary of the forest's treeline.
Dale was holding out a slice of Greasy's cherry pie on a paper plate. "I'm not going to hurt you," he said. "We want to help you. You've got a little piece of plastic inside you that we need to get out... it'll probably be good for your health..."
Slowly, Gompers crept out of the forest, watching the agents warily as he approached the plate of pie.
Standing a safe distance behind Dale with his arms crossed, supervising, Trigger said, "You have quite a way with animals."
"I've always found that animals have a calming effect on me, so I've tried to cultivate a calming air in return." He looked up at Trigger. "You see, the key is respect. Mutual respect. From man to animal and from animal to man. One time I was meditating with this Tibetan monk in a dream, and—"
He turned back toward the goat. The pie was gone. Along with half the paper plate, and a chunk of his suit's sleeve.
Gompers was hightailing it down the street.
"Oh."
Trigger said, "I don't think he reciprocates your respect."
####
One of the files Powers had found was in code—he'd have to ask Goldie to take a look at it—but the other file, the one on the Memory Gun, was all in plain English; and for the past few minutes, he'd been reading through a list of adverse side-effects the Blind Eye had discovered from using the gun. Victims who had forgotten how to drive, forgotten their children, forgotten their own names... The aim of the document seemed to be to determine how to refine their wording when they programmed the gun in order to more accurately select their desired memories.
But whoever had written it seemed more concerned with the victims who remembered more than they should have.
Powers was startled by a knock on the door. He slapped the file shut. "Hello?"
"It's me." That was Goldie's voice.
He heaved a sigh of relief. "Come in, it's safe."
There was a moment of silence. "It's stuck."
"What?"
"The door. It, ah—must be... heavy?"
Huh. He crossed the room to help open it. It was a pretty heavy door, but it didn't seem stuck to him; but Goldie just swept past him with a muttered thanks. "What's this room?"
"It's—memories, I think," Powers said. "As outrageous as it sounds, it appears that a secret society stores stolen memories in this room. I've only watched a few, so far I can't figure out the pattern to who's being targeted or why, but..."
He trailed off. Goldie had drifted past the piles of memory canisters with only quick glances, drawn to the odd-looking TV-like screen at the back of the room, as if mesmerized by its glow all the way from the door. He sighed quietly. "There's... something I think you should see."
He couldn't look at Goldie while the recording played. Instead, he watched it again, staring at the past Goldie's terror and rage.
When it was over, all she said was, "Wow." Her voice was strangely flat. It was another couple of seconds before she added, "That's—pretty bad, huh."
Her reaction was underwhelming. Powers turned to look at her, puzzled.
Her expression was terrifyingly blank. There was something hard and heavy and distant in her eyes. Exhausted. Like she was just holding it together under some sort of heartbreak. She was always so animated; the change was almost scary.
He said, "I'm sorry, I should have warned you. It must be a terrible shock." He'd been too shocked to think of warning her.
The comment seemed to shake her out of some sort of trance. "It's—fine. Just gimme a sec, I..." She rubbed her eyelids with one hand. "Wow! Okay. I can handle this. It's just..." She gestured vaguely at the screen. "It's a lot to process."
He could only imagine. "Do you remember this happening at all?"
She took a long moment to answer, fingers still pressing her eyes shut. "No," she finally said. "I think I remember being here before. The room looks familiar." That explained how she'd navigated it so confidently. "But—not that. I don't know when that happened. When did that happen?"
"I think it must have been last summer."
Powers explained everything he'd found so far—the contents of the other canisters, the blueprints for the Memory Gun. Goldie had to sit on a nearby table as she processed this—elbows on her knees, knuckles pressed against each other, index fingers tapping together as she listened.
"It looks as though this 'Society of the Blind Eye' has been erasing the memories of people in town—and people who know too much about them. But I don't know why they're here or why they're doing this," Powers said. "In one of the memories, Preston Northwest mentioned a secret town founder. It might be irrelevant to whatever's happening here, but it does sound like the most important thing on any of the recordings I watched. Aside from—yours."
He sat beside Goldie. "I suspect you were a part of the bureau." It was horrifying to think—that they might have worked together and both forgotten—but...
"Yeah. It's possible," Goldie said.
"Do you remember anything that might have suggested you were part of the bureau? Something we could look up and verify?" Powers asked. "Somewhere you lived in Washington, or maybe part of your training...?"
She winced and broke eye contact with him. "Uh... no. I—I don't."
How much had she lost? Far more than just the details of the investigation she'd come to town for. He wrapped an arm around her shoulders reassuringly. She tensed, then relaxed, then leaned against him—but hardly seemed to notice he was there.
"I think something's coming back," she said, gaze faraway. "Now that I'm here... I remember being in the museum. I think I was caught by somebody wearing a hooded robe."
(Powers glanced at the carving of a robed man in front of the altar.)
"They were angry that I'd taken... some kind of map? It was square, looked really old..."
"A map!" Powers jumped up to grab the file on the Memory Gun and pulled out an odd paper he'd found sticking out of it. "Is this it?"
"That's it!" Goldie favored him with a smile, her first since he'd shown her that memory.
"It looks like gibberish, though," Powers said. "There's several partial images, but nothing clear. I don't know what to make of it."
Goldie glanced over it. "Have you tried folding it?"
He gave her a quizzical look. "Folding it how?"
She raised her hands in a shrug. "It's got creases on it. Looks like somebody's folded it before."
He'd assumed that someone had just folded it to stuff in their pocket at some point—but the creases formed an odd, precise geometric pattern of triangles and diagonal squares. Now that she mentioned it, it didn't look the way anyone would normally fold a paper. He studied the directions of the creases, folded the four corners in to meet in the middle—and a drawing of a pointing hand emerged from what had once been unintelligible lines and curves on the corners of the page. Look at that.
But now the four new corners of the image were covered in inscrutable lines of their own; maybe...? He turned the map over and repeated the process, folding the four corners into the center; and there was a new image, but it looked like a couple of different images jumbled together. "Hmm..." He stroked his chin, staring perplexed at the image.
(Next to him, Bill pressed his lips flat together to keep himself from telling Powers to unfold two opposite flaps and see what happened, come on, do a little experimenting, man. Schoolchildren made these things when they were bored in class and pretended to tell each other's fortune with them, this wasn't that complicated. But no, be patient, it was fine, it was fine, Bill had shown more tolerance for denser humans solving simpler problems than this. What kind of a muse and mentor would he be if he couldn't show a little patience with ignorant mortals? Heck, it was a tribute to Bill's personal patience and strength of character that he hadn't spontaneously combusted the entire Nightmare Realm in the process of trying to get a portal built.)
Eventually, Powers figured it out himself, unfolding the top and bottom flaps to reveal a hidden diagram: a crude graveyard with a tunnel weaving underneath, the tunnel marked with arrows pointing at it. Closing the top and bottom flaps and unfolding the left and right flaps revealed another diagram: it looked like a building floor plan, with a dotted line that led to an equilateral triangle pointed downward. He recognized the floor plan. Aside from the triangle, he'd seen the same map upstairs less than an hour ago. "This is the museum."
"Looks like it. Think it's something important?" Goldie smiled wanly. "You don't typically think of important things being left to rot in some dusty corner of a small-town museum."
"Don't you? If a small town has a museum, I'd think that's where they'd preserve the most important objects they have."
Goldie processed that silently. "Yeah," she said, voice hollow. "Maybe."
"At any rate, it was important enough to erase your mind over. Let's go."
At the door to the pneumatic tube room, Powers said, "I'll follow this map; you watch the exits and alert me if anyone's coming. We don't know who at the museum might be working for..." He turned to look at Goldie, and found she was no longer at his side. "Goldie?" He turned around.
She was storming back across the room, finger pointed like the tip of a saber at the wooden cultist sculpture. "You think you can erase me?! You think you can make the whole world forget I ever existed?!" She clawed at the wooden hood like she was trying to get her fingers into the fabric and strangle the placid-looking figure. "I bet you think you're such a hero! Defending your precious little town from the big scary monster who came here to help you! But you'll never destroy me! I'll make your skin into shower curtains! I'll—let go of me—I'll flip your electrons into positrons, I'll—"
Powers managed to get an arm around Goldie's shoulder and lead her back to the door. She spat in its blinded eye as she left.
####
While Goldie stared at a display on the town's lumber industry (Powers suspected she wasn't actually reading it), he followed the map to find a painting—an odd inclusion in a history museum. It took him a few minutes to realize it should be turned upside-down to match the shape in the map, snapped a picture, and turned his phone over to find an image of an angel.
He didn't know what to make of that; and when he asked Goldie if she could see any sort of codes or disguised messages in it, she said she couldn't. The angel appeared to be a dead end; their only other lead was the town graveyard drawn on the map.
Goldie was uncharacteristically forlorn as they returned to Powers's car and he opened the passenger door for her. As they got on the road, Powers asked, "Are... you alright?" Stupid question. "If there's anything you need..."
"Promise you'll never forget me." He could feel her eyes blazing against the side of his face, staring at him, commandingly.
He nodded. "I promise." Traffic was light; he took one hand off the steering wheel to offer to her.
She seized it firmly, like they were sealing a pact.
####
Gompers ran across the roofs of the businesses lining Main Street, jumping from rooftop to rooftop and bleating in fear as he was chased. And Trigger chased after him, just a building behind Gompers.
But Main Street wasn't very long. Gompers scrabbled over the sloped shingles of a small salon, jumped down to the flat roof of the rival barber shop next door, and found himself out of buildings. He turned around to nervously watch his pursuer.
"I've got you cornered now," Trigger said. "Don't make this any more difficult than it has to be. Just come along quietly, and..." The roof creaked under him. "Uh oh." It collapsed under him.
He landed flat on his back in the middle of a salon. A couple of hairdressers and their customers stared at him. He sat up, looked around at them sheepishly, and said, "Afternoon, ladies."
####
The angel statue was visible through the trees even before the rest of Gravity Falls Cemetery. When they were close enough to inspect it, it was clear the angel's left hand matched the hand drawn on the map; as Powers was inspecting the hand, he accidentally bent its index finger, and the ground opened up.
Goldie elected to stand guard near the entrance, sitting on the steps, as Powers explored deeper; which was just as well, because the tunnel was apparently boobytrapped. (What in the world was the Blind Eye's budget? Hidden subterranean chambers in the museum, hidden underground tunnel in the cemetery, a memory-erasing ray gun, a poison dart trap...)
At the bottom of a steep incline, the tunnel opened up into a chamber. He expected maybe money, or stolen and forged property deeds, or even bootleg maple syrup... you never knew in this town. He didn't expect piles upon piles of crates and files with the Official United States Government Cover-Up Seal—the seal of the Bureau of Covert Investigations' parent department.
He didn't like this.
He steeled himself and began exploring the room.
####
Goldie lifted her head as she saw Powers coming up the tunnel. "Hey!" She held up one of the files they'd taken from the Blind Eye's filing cabinet. "I decoded that ciphered document you found. It wasn't even a good cipher. I think we've got the Blind Eye's address book! Names, addresses, officer titles—say, what do you think a 'secretary' does in a society that tries to erase memories? He's probably not recording meeting notes..."
She fell silent as Powers flung down a file on the step beside her. "What's that?" She picked it up. The file was titled "THE NORTHWEST COVER-UP" and stamped TOP SECRET. The cover-up seal took up most of the cover; beneath it was an X'ed out eye and the typewritten letters, "in collaboration with the Society of the Blind Eye".
"Everything about this town is a lie," Powers said.
"Everything? What do you mean?" Goldie flipped open the file, skimmed it, and frowned. "Who founded the town?"
"President. Sir. Quentin Trembley. The third. Esquire." Powers pronounced each title separately. He sat down next to Goldie; his hands were trembling. "He was a secret United States president. When he was evicted from office—he wasn't even impeached, they just kicked him out!—he fled across the country and founded This. Town." He shook his head in disbelief. If he hadn't read it himself... "This—this Trembley was an utter madman. He declared war against pancakes, appointed infants to the Supreme Court, banned pants, raved publicly about giant spiders... I'm not surprised he was ousted, he sounds like a complete lunatic."
As he spoke, Goldie's expression darkened. "Huh." But she didn't say anything else. She just stared at the cover-up file.
"Somebody decided to erase his entire existence from history. Nathaniel Northwest was named the founder of Gravity Falls in his place. He sounds like he was just as mad as Trembley was, but—he was just the village idiot, I suppose he must have been easier to control than this Trembley." Powers shook his head.
"So... what does all this have to do with the Blind Eye?" Goldie asked.
"In one of the memory canisters, I saw them discussing this cover-up with Preston Northwest—Nathaniel's descendant. He knew about the cover-up—of course he would, his family's fortune rests upon it!—but... they erased Preston's knowledge of it, too. Not only is this town the center of a cover-up to hide the fact that we once had a lunatic for a president, but also the government set up an entire secret cult to erase the memories of anyone who finds out about it... or, by the looks of things, about anything else happening in Gravity Falls that the government doesn't want civilians looking at too closely."
Powers took a shaky breath. "And that's not the worst of it."
"Oh-oh." Goldie closed the cover-up file and looked at him warily. "What's the worst?"
Powers held out a business card—bent, dusty, worn around the edges from age—that he'd found sitting next to the projector. It was his own business card. "The worst part is, I already knew about it."
####
Dale waited outside the salon, hands in his pockets. He checked his watch, then rocked back on his heels.
Trigger stepped out of the salon with frosted tips. Dale stared at him. Awkwardly, Trigger said, "Well?"
Dale nodded. "Yeah, you look nice, it's nice."
"Thanks. I've always wanted to try the look but never had an excuse," Trigger said. "Anyway—what do we do about the goat."
They started walking back to where they'd parked their car. Dale said, "In my opinion, it's time we call in the big guns."
"You mean...?"
"That's right. Animal control," Dale said. "We can set up a perimeter around town, then slowly close in. We'll tighten the net around it, and—"
Trigger clapped a hand on Dale's shoulder. He pointed down the alley they were passing.
Gompers was eating out of a spilled trash can. He looked up like a kid who'd just been caught shoplifting by two cops.
The agents exchanged a look, then lunged at Gompers.
####
When Bill got back to the shack, he owed the Pines a round of congratulations. Stan for stealing back the file on the Northwest cover-up from the police department, and for planting the papers from the case file and the threatening letter in Powers's motel room without getting caught; Mabel for the terrific forgery work on the fake map, the modifications to the cover-up file's cover, and the threatening letter itself; Ford for—well, he hadn't done a lot, but he'd been a decent actor—but on the other hand that yimakh shemo had burned up nearly all the goodwill Ford had earned last night, maybe Bill would skip thanking him; and Dipper had barely done anything, he'd just helped plant the file and the old business card in the chamber beneath the graveyard, Bill could skip thanking him too. Maybe he'd make a point of praising Soos for his chauffeuring just to rub in the fact that he was leaving Ford and Dipper out in the cold.
Thinking over his plans gave Bill something to entertain himself with while Powers clung to Bill's hand and reevaluated his entire life and career.
"I just don't... What else did I forget?" Powers asked. "I apparently forgot about the first time I learned all this... I must have forgotten you..."
"Hold on. Did we know each other before?" asked Bill, as if he hadn't planted all the clues to ensure Powers would come to that exact conclusion.
"We must have," Powers said. "You were investigating in this town, and yet I don't know you; the letter I received threatened that I might lose 'another' team member; and in your stolen memory, the Blind Eye told you that your team wouldn't remember you. I don't have a cryptologist on my team, and you're a cryptology expert. It all fits together."
Bill nodded encouragingly—yes, that was exactly what he'd wanted him to conclude.
"And there's all the other little clues that fit into place. The way you were so interested in this investigation, right from the outset. It makes sense if it was subconsciously familiar. And you think you're a visitor to town but the people here talk about you like you're a resident. They even seem to know you by two different genders... and when you told me to buy a car, you said to say that a 'Mr. Locke' sent me. You must have been communicating with people in town under two identities."
Hold on. That was dangerously close to information Powers shouldn't have. How had he found that out?
"And you know my first name," Powers went on. "Most of the BCI's field agents use code names even in the office. I've been working with Trigger since he joined, and he still doesn't know my first name. If you do..."
Bill was relieved they were back on track. He'd planted that clue on purpose. "Then we must have been close. No wonder I can't keep away from you."
Powers glanced away bashfully. (Ha! Too easy.) "And yet... I don't even know your name."
Alarm shot up Bill's spine. "What?"
"I thought 'Goldie Locke was an improbable name the first time I heard it. But, it's the exact kind of name the bureau would give a field agent. It has to be a code name."
Bill mentally kicked himself for the hundredth time for not choosing a subtler fake name. At least Powers had drawn the wrong conclusion. "Oh. Well. When you put it that way."
"Do you remember your real name?"
He hadn't prepared a backup fake name. He scrambled for another name that wasn't too masculine, too exotic, or even more fake sounding, and came up blank. "Uhhh, yyy—no."
"I wish I could help you remember it," Powers grumbled. "How much do you remember about your life?"
Bill had been deciding that since Powers asked at the museum if he remembered any verifiable biographical details (a question he should have anticipated sooner). He didn't want to say nothing, that might look too suspicious; but he didn't want to give any leads Powers could follow up on. "Not much. Faces without names, flashes of different cities I must've visited... I thought I just... had some kind of amnesia. The people in town have been nice enough to let me bum around here while I figure things out."
"At the Mystery Shack?" Powers asked. "You've been working with Stanford Pines."
Bill flinched. "I—yeah. I have." Sheesh, how did he know that?
"You didn't mention you were staying there," Powers said wryly.
Bill laughed. It came out more nervous than he'd have liked. "Yeah, well. I'm gonna come clean with you: I didn't want you to find out when I was trying to charm you into charming me out of my dress." (He was gratified to see Powers flush pink and turn away to loudly clear his throat. Bill had lost control of this conversation so fast, it was nice to know humans were still predictable in some ways.) "I mean, who wants to tell the handsome federal agent in the nice suit that you're a brain damaged bum couch-surfing in Oregon's most rickety tourist trap?"
"With all due respect, the brain damage wasn't as well-hidden as you think."
"Wh—hey! What's that supposed to mean?!"
"Your trouble with your eyes. Issues with binocular vision are a common consequence of brain damage." (For the first time that day, Bill was suddenly hyperconscious of the way one of his overtaxed eyes was twitching as he struggled not to let it squint shut.) "And I skimmed the file on the Memory Gun. It mentioned cases of victims forgetting how to safely cross a street, how to ride a bike, how to throw a ball... I figure forgetting how to open doors falls under the same umbrella."
A chill settled over Bill. "Oh," he croaked. "Noticed that, did you. You've... been paying pretty close attention to me." Not to mention talking to someone about him.
"Of course. You're a mysterious woman. I want to learn more about you," Powers said. "We spent all day talking yesterday, and I don't think I learned anything about you except that you've been in town for a month, you have an uncanny knack for cracking ciphers, and you make very interesting culinary choices. You kept the conversation off yourself."
Bill hadn't realized he'd noticed that. Powers wasn't supposed to have noticed any of this. This was what Bill got for trying to dupe a professional investigator. Thank goodness he'd gotten him set him up on this wild goose chase before he'd really dug up too much about Bill's history. Sometimes it was easy to forget that some of this planet's idiots were smart. "Well," he said awkwardly, "now you know why. At the moment, I don't have much I can tell you about myself."
Powers gave Bill a wan, sad smile. "It'll be alright," he said, sliding a reassuring arm around Bill's shoulders, and Bill realized more of his panic must be showing on his face than he'd wanted. "We'll fill in the gaps."
That was just what he was afraid of.
For the first time, the arm around Bill's shoulder felt less like a piece of a puzzle slotted into the proper place—all according to plan—and more like the kill bar of a mousetrap that hadn't yet realized a rodent was standing on the trigger.
Powers's phone rang. He picked it up, and Bill quietly sighed in relief. "Hello?"
"Sir!" That was Dale's excited voice on the line. "We got it! We've captured, extracted, and sterilized the flash drive!"
"Didn't you say it was in a goat? How did you get it out?"
"The, uhh... old fashioned way. Apparently cherry pie didn't agree with his digestive tract."
His voice a little more distant, Trigger emphasized, "Thoroughly sterilized."
"Excellent work," Powers said. "Where are you now?"
"En route to the motel."
"Very well. We'll meet you there."
Perfect, thought Bill. The sooner he finished this, the sooner he'd never have to worry about the agents learning too much again.
####
(Post-TBOB edits! Had to change the age of the items on display in the museum, since TBOB changed Bill's interactions with the shaman from being about 1000 years ago to about 4000 years ago; and since a tapestry like we saw in the Northwest Manor is unlikely to have lasted 4000 years and is made in an art style that seems to be about 1500 years old, had to make up an excuse for it to exist; in the tapestry description, added in the tapestry in Pacifica's room mentioned on TINAWDC; and I think that's it? Just minor details.
And now y'all know why a few chapters ago I had to very clearly establish the distance between Powers's team and the guys who actually know about Trembley lol.
Anyway we are MOST OF THE WAY through the exciting action! Looking forward to hearing y'all's thoughts on this week's chapter! And I mentioned it on my blog but for those of y'all that only show up for the chapters: we're switching to every other week posts for a while because working on another flashback arc ate up more of my chapter buffer than I'd like. In between weeks with new chapters, I'll be editing and posting old chapters to AO3.)
#bill cipher#human bill cipher#agent powers#agent trigger#(also featuring: agent dale cooper from hit tv show twin peaks!! he is not—I repeat—NOT a cheap knockoff.)#(you have to read the previous tag in stan's voice to get the full effect.)#gravity falls#gravity falls fic#gravity falls fanart#fanart#my art#my writing#bill goldilocks cipher
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Alice in Wonderland | 1933
#Alice in Wonderland#Tweedledee Tweedledum#Lewis Carroll#John Tenniel#practical effects#twins#Roscoe Karns#Jack Oakie#hammersmith horror#suitmation
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Danny didn’t think about his early years prior to his adoption by the Fentons. Sure, he could still remember them, but he wanted that chapter of his life to remain firmly behind him. The part of him that had been Danyal was dead and buried.
But then his parents’ portal opened on top of him, and that history became all too important again.
His mind may have long since healed from the madness of the Pit Rage, but the taint of the Lazarus Waters from his resurrections still clung to his soul.
Guided, the addition of pure ectoplasm would have washed away those wounds. But there was no guiding intelligence behind what was happening. No grander plot. Just the energies of the portal taking whatever path was needed to complete their circuit.
And thus, as the ectoplasm rewrote Danny’s DNA into a half-ghost form, it also empowered the remnants of the Lazarus Pit’s effects.
Emotions from those whom the League had killed had long seeped their way into the ectoplasm of the Lazarus Pits, but they had been faint. Far weaker than full ghosts, barely even echoes. Enough to cause the Pit Rage, but no more.
But with the influx of pure ectoplasm, those echoes grew.
And so when Danny emerged from the portal, it was with a choir of countless angry voices screaming into his brain to avenge them, to raze the League to the ground until nothing remained.
#basically. Danny’s obsession/mental state was influenced by the ghosts of the League’s crimes which had attached to him from the Lazarus pit#i’m vaguely imagining danyal was made to be a test subject on the effects of lazarus water (for the goal of strengthening Damian/Ra’s)#but that’s not required#danyal al ghul au#dp x dc#dpxdc#dcxdp#dc x dp#danny phantom x dc#danny phantom x dc crossover#demon twins au#danny and damian are twins#or they could just be non-twin siblings#danny and damian are brothers#bruce wayne is danny’s bio father#dp x dc prompt#dpxdc prompt#dc x dp prompt#dcxdp prompt
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I know I have a larger following of Video Game Enjoyers™️ on this account than film. If you aren’t very familiarized with David Lynch’s work -- I cannot stress enough the impact he has had on your life without you knowing it. I promise you your favorite video game would not exist without him (there are certainly countless others that are not pictured here). The impact he had across all art industries is insurmountable, but the impact he had on video games specifically cannot be overstated.
He was your favorite game designer's favorite film director. And I simply guarantee you that you owe him more than you know.
#david lynch#silent hill#alan wake#life is strange#stardew valley#metal gear solid#disco elysium#mass effect#twin peaks
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youtube
I miss my “twin”
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*points gun to asriel* TELL US WHO THE GUY ON THE BACKGROUND OF THE FIRST PANEL OF YOUR NEW COMIC IS OR THE BEAN DIES!!!
What person?
Furthermore, you think you could shoot either of these two? Please. I tried that already. It’s called “beta testing.”
Come on. Rookie Mistake. A classic blunder right there.
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A quiet desert husbands moment I did for my second @thecodywanzine artwork <3
#codywan#commander cody#obi wan kenobi#star wars fanart#my art#not many things more romantic than watching the twin suns rise/set cuddled up to your husband#yes this is very cropped for the express reason that i want the full thing to remain exclusive to those who have it as digital merch#i think it still has the same effect cropped or not :)
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the true mass effect experience is spending ages making a personalised character just to run into a random npc that looks almost identical to them
#this has happened to me TWICE#my shepard looked almost the exact same as TWO SEPERATE npc characters in the original trilogy#and my Ryder also looked incredibly similar to a random npc I found in the med bay#like what’s the point in spending an hour getting the details right if it looks like I have a secret twin#SO MUCH EFFORT#WASTED#mass effect#mass effect andromeda#me1#me2#me3#me4#mass effect 1#mass effect 2#mass effect 3#mass effect 4#Mass effect Ryder#commander shepard#pathfinder#bioware#ea games#mass effect games#femshep#Jane shepard#John shepard#broshep#Sara Ryder#Scott Ryder
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cozy fantasy enjoyers are really sleeping on Yonderland tbh
#yonderland#cozy fantasy#what if there was a magical land filled with practical effects peopled by henson-esque puppets and the same six actors in infinite costumes#but the chosen one tasked with saving the magical realm was a thirty-something mother of twins with zero patience for whimsy#who is very firm about only performing her chosen one duties while the kids are at school and her husband is at work#part of the problem is that it only streams intermittently on poob or whatever#but it can be found#if you quest with a pure heart
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Crosshair: *chugging milk because Wrecker dared him to*
Echo: Aren’t you lactose intolerant?
Crosshair: This isn’t lactose, it’s milk.
Tech, facepalming: You’re a fucking idiot.
#he knows that lactose is in milk he just wanted to annoy tech by saying something wrong#he would def do something insane if wrecker dared him to do it#he is no longer allowed to accept dares#tech normally doesn’t curse much but his twin’s shenanigans have that effect on him#echo is having intense flashbacks to his time in the 501st#crosshair gives me the vibes of someone who would continue to eat dairy despite being lactose intolerant out of pure spite#i said what i said#each member of the bad batch is a lil dumb in their own way and nothing will change my mind#star wars tbb#star wars the bad batch#tbb crosshair#the bad batch#incorrect bad batch quotes#arc trooper echo#tbb echo#tbb incorrect quotes#tbb tech
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Canon Irn Lore ong
#shitpost#hehehe#irn silliness ong#featuring the amica ever Webb#tf ocs#tf oc#as I work on the twins ofc#cough cough#for a certain..#peak literature anyway#greatly exaggerated for dramatic effect ong
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I keep on thinking on mystery trio aus and also how few early weirdmageddon aus there are. so imagine with me somehow Stan ends up in gravity falls during Fords paranoia era and somehow Fidds is still there and not fully cult leader crazy yet. Ford still tries to get Stan to take the journal, Stan gets branded, the works.
But when the portal gets activated Bill goes ahead and makes his way through and starts the oddpocalypse.
now, rather than it being like, three days, it’s weeks upon months on the run around town. Trying to keep Bill from capturing Ford, since he doesn’t have his destabilizer. No one is happy, Stan and Ford are constantly fighting. Fidds is loosing his mind and at the edge of his rope. They get to the unicorn glen at some point and basically break in and force them to let them stay while they figure stuff out. somehow, they manage to get unicorn hair and decide to hold up in the museum. And discover just about all of the town survivors (human and anomaly) in there. Everyone is convinced that if they sacrifice Ford they will be spared, and it takes Stan threatening physical violence and Fidds mental violence to stop that from happening.
they fortify the museum and everyone gets sleep. Que bonding and reconciliations (for the most part, Stan and Ford still have issues) and Fidds recovers enough to start building a battle bot, nothing like the Shack-a-tron, but it’ll work. They restart project mentum, most everyone gets their thoughts encrypted, Stan isn’t there, he’s out gathering supplies. Ford discovers the banishment spell. But then one day something happens.
the barrier goes down.
Ford is captured.
they go to save him.
they manage to distract Bill like in cannon.
Ford and Stan still argue.
everyone is turned into tapestrys (Except for Fidds and maybe Tate or Emma depending on how this au would go.) When Bill comes back with Ford and Stan are still caged, Stan looks weird, more disheveled hair under the beanie, but no one notices. Neither do they notice the worried look on his face. Ford Makes a deal with Bill.
While Ford lands on his knees, eyes closed. Stan removes his beanie, all of the hair falling to the floor. Hat clutched in six-fingered hand. The other pulling out the memory gun.
#gravity falls#gravity falls au#stanley pines#ford pines#stan pines#stanford pines#au#mystery trio#early weirdmageddon au#weirdmageddon#fiddleford hadron mcgucket#fiddleford mcgucket#i imagine that there would be fill ins for the banishment spell#Does Stan get his memory back like normal?#Or is he left with nothing since there is no scrap book#How does this effect the rest of the twins lives?#What about the younger twins?#So many thoughts…#Listen guys-#I need Stan to get brain blasted#It’s required
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