• JE/REPOST: Journey into Procrastination #1

    From Jeanne Morningstar@21:1/5 to All on Fri Nov 12 18:42:04 2021
    Note: Originally published December 20th, 2011

    This was one of the handful of stories I wrote in the early 2010s which
    helped lay the groundwork for what I'm doing with in The Hermetic
    Garbage of Jenny Everywhere now. Since writing this, I actually have
    read the Three Musketeers as well as a number of other Dumas novels;
    we'll be seeing what this world looks like filtered through the actual
    style and themes of Dumas soon enough.

    I never did get around to writing the story that connects Jenny to the
    Classic LNH, or at least, haven't yet. It's kind of bittersweet looking
    back on all these unfinished or unwritten stories I teased. I have a
    tendency invest a lot of energy and hype in stories I never get around
    to actually finishing, but the ideas I have now about Jenny Everywhere
    and the LNH have evolved into much better ones than I had then, so maybe
    it's good I didn't write it then. I've changed a lot in the almost ten
    (!) years since this was posted, and I expect to evolve more as I keep
    writing this stuff. Onward and upward, then.

    ====


    Journey into Procrastination #1:
    "Preludes and Distractions"
    by [Jeanne Morningstar]
    Part of High Concept Challenge #24: Le Challenge French

    Note: This is an anthology series for short-short stories and 24-
    minute comics which I can write to get myself started again when I'm
    feeling burned out on more substantial work, and reply to High Concept Challenges when I can't manage to write a full story. Also, in the
    spirit of the now sadly deleted Guttertrash, some or all of the issues
    will be CC-licensed so people can build on them if they want to for
    whatever reason.

    ***

    Jenny tapped her pencil on the desk and stared at the half-finished
    exam. The exam, much like an abyss, stared back. It wasn't that she
    didn't enjoy this class, or that she didn't think it was important to
    her even though she was an engineer. A class on 19th-century French
    literature might not seem terribly relevant for someone who wanted to
    get into physics and help design an FTL drive. But she felt that it
    was important to have a complete education, so she could preserve the
    wonder and adventure of studying science and not lose track of its
    wider human context. It was just that, well...

    She was Jenny Everywhere. She could access all the memories and
    knowledge of all her counterparts in all parallel universes, and the
    power to travel to any of them. And every single one of them, at the
    moment, was more interesting than this one. The more she tried to
    concentrate on her exam question, the more she found herself drifting
    off and thinking about what she was doing on other worlds. In another
    life she could be fighting demons, or exploring the underwater ruins
    of Ys, or she could be exploring alien worlds right this second
    instead of working on a completely unrelated task so she could do it
    in ten years. She'd decided a long time ago against leaving this
    world. The adventures she could have in the future were well worth
    sticking around for. And if that meant suffering through a few exams,
    well... The next universe over she'd just solved the Riddle of the Omega-Sphinx. Dealing with a simple exam couldn't be too hard... could
    it?

    Why was she even doing this? Surely somewhere in the multiverse some
    other version of her was working on an exam question about _The Three Musketeers_. Couldn't she just pull the answer out of her head and
    call it a day? No. It was important that she learn how to work through
    these kinds of problems. Besides, in the other world the book might be
    a little bit--or a lot--different.

    She caught herself chewing the eraser and put down the pencil. She had
    to concentrate. Think. Think about Athos, Porthos, Aramis,
    D'Artagnan...

    The three of them walked into the flickering shadows of the cathedral.
    A cathedral with a conspicuous lack of crosses. They all drew their
    swords at once. "Come out!" shouted Jenny. "Don't tell me you're
    scared!"

    Walking into this strange, dark building made her aware of how far
    from home she was. The ship she was traveling in was taken from China
    to this land called France by a tornado, and she was the only
    survivor. So she disguised herself as a man and joined the Musketeers.
    Together with her three comrades in arms Athos, Porthos and Aramis,
    she had fought and won many difficult battles. Now they were going
    forth to face the enemy who had harried them constantly and had worked
    behind the scenes against them for what she hoped would be the last
    time.

    "You have corrupted church and state!" shouted Athos. "You have
    feasted upon the blood of innocents! But no longer! Your day of
    reckoning is at hand, Cardinal Dracula!"

    The mist that seeped through the Cathedral drew together before the
    altar. It took the shape of a tall, pale man in a cardinal's robes.
    "Bah! Greater men than you have tried and failed. But enough talk!
    Have at thee!" Cardinal Dracula drew his two black swords and struck
    at them with the fury of the whirling storm that had brought Jenny
    here. They battled him with all their might but, except for Jenny,
    they could not hope to keep up with the speed of his strokes. Before
    long they fell to the ground, exhausted. Cardinal Dracula fixed Jenny
    with his terrible gaze. She felt the room start to spin around her.

    "Do not fear, my child," whispered Cardinal Dracula. His voice was
    dark, thrilling, and strangely soothing. "Soon, you shall become my
    bride. Yes, I know your secret. And together we shall rule the world
    entire!" She knew could break free if she tried hard enough, but his
    teeth were already at her throat...

    "No!" said Aramis weakly, struggling to stand up. "You shall not harm
    my strangely attractive comrade in arms!" He hurled his sword at
    Cardinal Dracula, who did not even flinch. "Fool! Your swords cannot
    harm the Lord of the Undead!"

    With Dracula's gaze turned away from her, Jenny was free. She drew the
    other sword she had brought with her, a sharpened wooden bokken she'd
    been given by her merchant father. It was the only thing of her old
    life she had left. "I wooden stake my life on it!" she shouted,
    plunging the blade into Cardinal Dracula's heart. Then she realized
    that pun didn't work at all in French. One of her English-speaking
    counterparts must be tapping into her mind. Oh well.

    Dracula screamed in pain. Then he drew a metal object from his robes.
    "Behold the Reliquary of Baphomet!" It glowed and his flesh began to
    shift and change. His bones began to crack and reshape, he started
    growing, and scales covered his skin. "Now at long last you shall see
    why I am called... THE SON OF THE DRAGON!!!"

    Wait a minute, thought Jenny, the Musketeer Jenny, to her counterpart.
    Don't you have work you need to be doing?

    Jenny snapped back to attention. The Cathedral of Cardinal Dracula was
    replaced by the dull, barren classroom. She glanced at the clock and
    saw that the time for the exam was almost over. But she was feeling
    excited and energized after living through that battle. She looked at
    the question in front of her and then somehow an answer popped into
    her head, beautifully clear and fully formed. She took up the pencil
    in her hand and started writing furiously. She put the last period on
    the last sentence just as the class came to an end.

    A few weeks later she got the exam back. She'd gotten a B. Every
    question was correct except the one about _The Three Musketeers_. The
    teacher told her that her answer was highly entertaining, but novel
    didn't have any Mind Flayers, whatever those were.

    Oh well. She shouldn't have been to surprised. She'd always liked the
    Earth-44 Alexandre Dumas better.

    ***

    Notes:

    Circumstances kept me from doing a proper 24-minute comic today like
    I'd intended, but I did try to write it in one sitting.

    Jenny Everywhere is an open-source character, who can be used in any
    story. Ever since I ran across her years ago I always thought her
    concept had an enormous amount of potential, but could never really
    think of a good story for her for a long time. Soon enough I'll be
    writing an LNH story where a version of her appears, but I wanted to
    post a shorter and simpler story that could serve as an introduction.

    I realized too late that having the story told from her POV means I
    didn't get to describe her appearance very much. This is how the Jenny Everywhere FAQ at theshifterarchive.org describes her: "She has short,
    dark hair. She usually wears aviation goggles on top of her head and a
    scarf around her neck. Otherwise, she dresses in comfortable clothes.
    She is average size and has a good body image. She has loads of
    confidence and charisma. She appears to be Asian or Native American.
    She has a ready smile."

    Mostly, I think, people tend to use Jenny Everywhere as a gimmick. She
    gets thrown a lot into webcomics as a cameo character or guest star,
    but few of them actually delve into her character very deeply. This is
    a shame because she actually has a very interesting concept and
    personality. I wanted to write a story that explored her unique way of
    seeing the world. This is a story I wrote for another site that does
    so from a different angle, which I think makes a nice complement to
    this one: http://ficly.com/stories/25444

    I do have an idea for incorporating Jenny Everywhere into Classic LNH--
    which I had meant to do in Ultimate Mercenary ages ago, before that
    series collapsed under the weight of its own metaplot--so I'm
    preemptively reserving her there. I have no idea what she would be in
    the LNH20 world, though. Maybe she could be some kind of Flash Gordon-
    esque space adventurer. Feel free to use her there--or in any other
    imprint, obviously--however you want.

    Also, I've never actually read _The Three Musketeers_. I never even
    got around to seeing the latest movie. (Which is probably for the best
    because what with Hugo--which was excellent--and the upcoming Sherlock
    Holmes sequel, I might have been in danger of steampunk fatigue.) I
    did see some of the old movies. My sister, though, loves the book
    (she's a fencer) and I wrote this with her in mind.

    ***

    The character of Jenny Everywhere is available for use by anyone, with
    only one condition. This paragraph must be included in any publication involving Jenny Everywhere, in order that others may use this property
    as they wish. All rights reversed.

    This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
    Unported License. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ or send a letter to
    Creative Commons, 444 Castro Street, Suite 900, Mountain View,
    California, 94041, USA.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Drew Nilium@21:1/5 to Jeanne Morningstar on Sun Nov 14 04:59:48 2021
    On 11/12/21 1:42 PM, Jeanne Morningstar wrote:
    Note: Originally published December 20th, 2011

    This was one of the handful of stories I wrote in the early 2010s which helped
    lay the groundwork for what I'm doing with in The Hermetic Garbage of Jenny Everywhere now. Since writing this, I actually have read the Three Musketeers as
    well as a number of other Dumas novels; we'll be seeing what this world looks like filtered through the actual style and themes of Dumas soon enough.

    God, this story feels so classic to me. X3 So foundational.

    I have a tendency invest a lot
    of energy and hype in stories I never get around to actually finishing, but the
    ideas I have now about Jenny Everywhere and the LNH have evolved into much better ones than I had then, so maybe it's good I didn't write it then.

    I feel like that about a lot of my long-delayed storylines. X3

    A class on 19th-century French
    literature might not seem terribly relevant for someone who wanted to
    get into physics and help design an FTL drive. But she felt that it
    was important to have a complete education, so she could preserve the
    wonder and adventure of studying science and not lose track of its
    wider human context.

    This is very forward-thinking pre-tech-companies-creating-the-Torment-Nexus

    She was Jenny Everywhere. She could access all the memories and
    knowledge of all her counterparts in all parallel universes, and the
    power to travel to any of them. And every single one of them, at the
    moment, was more interesting than this one.

    Oh, that's ADHD

    Why was she even doing this? Surely somewhere in the multiverse some
    other version of her was working on an exam question about _The Three Musketeers_. Couldn't she just pull the answer out of her head and
    call it a day? No. It was important that she learn how to work through
    these kinds of problems. Besides, in the other world the book might be
    a little bit--or a lot--different.

    It's a good point

    Walking into this strange, dark building made her aware of how far
    from home she was. The ship she was traveling in was taken from China
    to this land called France by a tornado, and she was the only
    survivor. So she disguised herself as a man and joined the Musketeers.

    I really like the modified version of this origin you're doing now-- ah, but that hasn't been posted yet...

    "You have corrupted church and state!" shouted Athos. "You have
    feasted upon the blood of innocents! But no longer! Your day of
    reckoning is at hand, Cardinal Dracula!"

    yessssss Cardinal Dracula :D

    "Bah! Greater men than you have tried and failed. But enough talk!
    Have at thee!"

    :D :D :D

    "No!" said Aramis weakly, struggling to stand up. "You shall not harm
    my strangely attractive comrade in arms!"

    Heeheehee :3

    She drew the
    other sword she had brought with her, a sharpened wooden bokken she'd
    been given by her merchant father. It was the only thing of her old
    life she had left. "I wooden stake my life on it!" she shouted,

    omfg

    plunging the blade into Cardinal Dracula's heart. Then she realized
    that pun didn't work at all in French. One of her English-speaking counterparts must be tapping into her mind. Oh well.

    XD XD XD

    Dracula screamed in pain. Then he drew a metal object from his robes.
    "Behold the Reliquary of Baphomet!" It glowed and his flesh began to
    shift and change. His bones began to crack and reshape, he started
    growing, and scales covered his skin. "Now at long last you shall see
    why I am called... THE SON OF THE DRAGON!!!"

    SO FUCKIN COOL :D :D :D

    But she was feeling
    excited and energized after living through that battle. She looked at
    the question in front of her and then somehow an answer popped into
    her head, beautifully clear and fully formed. She took up the pencil
    in her hand and started writing furiously. She put the last period on
    the last sentence just as the class came to an end.

    A few weeks later she got the exam back. She'd gotten a B. Every
    question was correct except the one about _The Three Musketeers_. The
    teacher told her that her answer was highly entertaining, but novel
    didn't have any Mind Flayers, whatever those were.

    X3 <3

    Drew "classic, utterly classic" Nilium

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Drew Nilium@21:1/5 to Scott Eiler on Sun Nov 14 05:21:04 2021
    On 11/12/21 7:52 PM, Scott Eiler wrote:
    On 2021-11-12 10:42, Jeanne Morningstar wrote:

    Note: Originally published December 20th, 2011

    I never did get around to writing the story that connects Jenny to the Classic
    LNH, or at least, haven't yet.

    Did you ever notice how Clueless Lad has a girlfriend named Jenny?  I intended
    for there to be a *possible* link to LNH20.

    Ohohoho, nice!

    I've changed a lot in the almost ten (!) years since this was posted,
    and I expect to evolve more as I keep writing this stuff. Onward and
    upward, then.

    I've mostly just grown older.  Still I find, publishing *good* stuff is a lot
    more work, isn't it?  But onward and upward anyway.

    Onward and upward! <3

    Drew "thinks Scott has evolved a lot too" Nilium

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Jeanne Morningstar@21:1/5 to Scott Eiler on Thu Nov 18 17:26:12 2021
    On 11/12/21 6:52 PM, Scott Eiler wrote:


    Did you ever notice how Clueless Lad has a girlfriend named Jenny?  I intended for there to be a *possible* link to LNH20.

    This is defintely floating around somewhere in the huge cloud of plot
    hooks and unresolved storylines buzzing around in my brain.



    If I *never wrote* the original stories, that's all the better!  It's
    just the Powernaut setting all that secret history straight.

    That's basically the approach Drew and I have taken to handling WikiLull
    and the stuff we planned for after that, and it's worked out well, I think.


    I've mostly just grown older.  Still I find, publishing *good* stuff is
    a lot more work, isn't it?  But onward and upward anyway.


    A thing I've often heard but still had to learn for myself is that to
    write good stuff you have to write a lot of weird crap that doesn't work
    first.

    Jeanne Morningstar

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Jeanne Morningstar@21:1/5 to All on Tue Jan 25 23:32:15 2022
    In order to avoid copyleft trolls (https://www.techdirt.com/articles/20211210/12134948095/beware-copyleft-trolls.shtml)
    and other loophole abuse, I am hereby dedicating this story to the
    public domain under CC0. (I'd like to do the same for the Jenny
    Everywhere material I did for Ficly, but some of that is based on
    others' work, I'm still figuring out the logistics of all that.)

    Published under http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/

    To the extent possible under law,Jeanne Morningstar has waived all
    copyright and related or neighboring rights to Preludes and
    Distractions. This work is published from: United States.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)