look: made for me, please don't take. (pic#)
disney princess will graham ([personal profile] look) wrote in [community profile] ataraxion2013-10-28 07:25 am

[ VIDEO ]

Contact.

[ will sounds like he's giving a lecture when he comes on the screen. he's looking directly into the camera — it's easier to make eye contact with a device. ]

That's the key to all this. If you're receiving foreign sensation, you need to track down the person it originated with and make skin-to-skin contact. It'll stop the side-effects, and eventually — hopefully — break the connection. Doesn't have to be more personal than a handshake.

[ a pause, and he glances down, off-camera, visibly discomfited by the fact that the hand not holding his device is in the grip of another. ]

An... extended handshake. Whatever timer this thing is working on, we think letting go resets it.

[ the screen’s upended as sherlock hijacks the device, settling on his face (at an admittedly slightly awkward angle) a moment later. ]

But in the meantime— I’m sure you’ve all noticed that the physical links are current, unlike the memories, and arguably offer us a great deal more control. Passive sensations are the exception, but if I were to hypothetically hit my hand — as our resident neurologist has demonstrated — then Mr. Graham would feel it. [ and by hypothetically he means he's tested it, several times. ]

In the case of mutual sensations, like, say, holding one’s hand, this creates a unique feedback loop; the sensation of their hand in yours, and yours in theirs, et cetera. [ speaking of hand-holding, holding will’s hand is getting in the way of his usual gesturing; the screen's unsteady as a result. ] While I'm reluctant to test the theory with present company — no offense — I imagine this could apply to other neutral or positive sensations. If one were to engage in sexual intimacy with their link partner, for instance, then the moment of—

[ in another blur of abrupt motion, will takes his device back — and also his hand. no offense. ]

Better reset the clock to zero, Mr. Holmes.
mansuetus: (☩ 06.)

video »

[personal profile] mansuetus 2013-10-28 01:49 pm (UTC)(link)
I spent all my life in Rome, signore. I speak Italian as well as Latin and Greek. You know it to be Italian -- do you speak it as well?
mansuetus: (☩ 49.)

[personal profile] mansuetus 2013-10-28 01:56 pm (UTC)(link)
If you shall show it to me, I can easily teach you. I have Dante here too; as well as Petrarca. Is it La Comedia?
mansuetus: (☩ 60.)

[personal profile] mansuetus 2013-10-28 02:11 pm (UTC)(link)
A text of beauty! and much sweeter than La Comedia

[ she gives him a small curtsy ]

I am honored, signore, to introduce myself to you. Lucrezia Borgia.