mashiara: (mmmkay | would you walk in)
Nynaeve al'Meara ([personal profile] mashiara) wrote in [community profile] eastbound2023-04-15 11:49 pm

audio | un: wisdom | wedding day three

Right, so this happened. Again. In case the lot of you who get the whole feast for a third time also see the bride go missing, a heads up:

The conductor can track any ticket or numbered staff member on board. Any. The man needs help beyond anything I have the time or ability to give, but he's far from the worst when it comes to devotions to the train. The staff serves it tea every morning. Before any of you are up. We don't all sleep, do you know? I haven't slept since I got on board.

Either way, see about asking him where she's going if she disappears again tonight.

And if any of the staff tell you about being kind to the train, praying to the train, polishing the train for the train, don't laugh where they can hear you. The chamber maids cry about it later. How misunderstood, they say, the train is. How unenlightened the ticket bearers, to not understand the train's benevolence. If I have to hear that one more time I'll scream.
stephanivien: (Default)

[personal profile] stephanivien 2023-04-17 12:09 am (UTC)(link)
I'd be willing to swap my ticket for your pass, if you think it would make a difference, in that case. Perhaps worth the experiment if nothing else.

[ Hey, a sentient train is better than a possessed, doomed phantom train. Count your victories. ]

I confess, from an engineering standpoint, I am quite curious as to how one mught go about constructing a sentient automata intentionally. I confess myself less curious into the rituals of serving said locomotive tea and crumpets.

[ On that thought... ] Would a train even like tea? I feel it would only be detrimental to it's inner cogs and components.