mindyourmegan

mimicry

Chapter 8: Crossing Lines

Residue

Every act of intimacy left a mark—astral, physical, sometimes both. In the world of the Railroad, it wasn’t superstition; it was protocol. The body was a vessel, but also a transmitter. Two people touched, and the current lingered—sometimes for days, sometimes for years, depending on the depth of the bond and the history behind it.

Those with high astral sensitivity could see or feel these traces: colors in the aura, a taste in the frequency, a shimmer at the edge of vision. Everyone else relied on gossip, team rumors, or old wives’ tales, but the rules were enforced all the same.

The world split the crossers into two camps: those who could mimic through deep astral resonance—rare, envied, sometimes feared—and those who had to cross teams and clans by physical means alone.

The Mimics

To cross by astral bond was a privilege—one reserved for those who’d been trained, attuned, or born with the talent. Astral mimics could move between Leah and Lilith, Blue and Gray, never needing a physical touch to adopt the resonance of another clan. Their passage was seamless, sometimes undetectable. They passed tests with ease, blended into new teams, carried secrets from one council to the next.

But privilege had its price. Astral crossers were always watched. Some clans saw them as untrustworthy, too flexible for their own good. Others courted them, hoping to harness their power for the Railroad. For Kellyanna, the gift was both a shield and a burden. She learned early to hide how easily she could blend in—how, with a glance or a meditation, she could slip through a boundary no one else could see.

The Body Brokers

For most, crossing teams meant crossing bodies. Sex was the original passport: a ritual, sometimes a transaction, sometimes an act of longing or desperation. The effect was immediate and obvious—after an encounter, the mimic could temporarily take on the frequency, accent, or even instincts of their partner’s team. It was risky: too many crossings, and your signal “stank” in the eyes of the Blues. Not enough, and you stayed stuck, unable to pass as anyone but yourself.

Physical crossers faced judgment at every turn. Some wore their exploits as badges—brash, unashamed, daring others to call them out. Others hid, ashamed or afraid, worried that being found out would mean exile, erasure, or worse. The low-frequency wards were full of those who’d crossed too often, or with the wrong partners, or without the right consent. Rumors said the only cure was cleansing or quarantine, but even those rituals couldn’t erase the mark entirely.

The Tension

The Railroad was rife with stories: • A household torn apart when one partner admitted to crossing astrally, while the other insisted that only bodies could bond. • A mission gone wrong when a physical mimic was caught passing as Lilith in a Leah compound, their aura still tinged with the scent of last night’s lover. • Operatives envied for their easy passage, or ostracized for their inability to mimic without “paying the price.”

In the field, the stakes were higher. Missions required blending in, gaining access, making allies in hostile territory. Sometimes that meant feigning desire; sometimes, it meant surrendering to it. Kellyanna watched, learned, and sometimes participated, always measuring the risk against the need.

Kellyanna’s Ledger

Kellyanna kept her own ledger—mental, never written. She could count her crossings both ways: the bonds she’d made by spirit, the lessons she’d learned by skin. Some partners had left traces that faded in hours. Others, she still carried years later, their frequencies tangled with her own, surfacing at the oddest times—a laugh, a habit, a craving she couldn’t explain.

She envied neither camp. Astral privilege brought suspicion. Physical mimicry brought risk and rumor. Both demanded secrecy, both left her with a hunger for authenticity—a place where she could just be, not always perform.

The Cost of Crossing

The world policed what it could see. The Blues judged, the Grays measured, the Greens whispered, the Ks kept score. Every crossing had a consequence: an invitation withdrawn, a privilege lost, a reputation altered. Some survivors took pride in their adaptability. Others wore their wounds as warnings.

At the end of the day, Kellyanna sat with her team, field logs open, silence stretching between them. She thought about what it meant to cross—a choice, a compulsion, a privilege, a punishment. She remembered the ones who couldn’t pass at all, stuck forever in their first skin.

No one was truly free. But some, for a little while, could move between worlds and taste the illusion.

Tomorrow, there would be another mission, another test, another line to cross.

To be continued…

#railroad #consent #mimicry #crossing #astral #fieldnotes #privilege #survivor #worldbuilding

Field Notes: The Link Quest, Part 2

Crossing the Divide

Every crossing was a test—not just of passwords or protocols, but of the conductor’s truth. The resonance check was relentless: if you lied, the air trembled. If you crossed without consent, the corridor tightened, sometimes knocking you back. And if you’d spent too long on the Leora side—drawn in by pleasure, secrets, or freedom you couldn’t admit—the scent of it clung to you. Blues narrowed their eyes, whispered among themselves. Some Leahs performed quick rituals: an old song, water over the hands, elders fanning out the static. But no one was truly fooled. You could cover your tracks in code, but not in energy. The Railroad’s survival depended on this—trust wasn’t a gift; it was a frequency you couldn’t counterfeit.

The Price of Experience

For a Leah to cross to the Leora side, there was always a cost. You had to show your level—what you’d risked, what you’d survived. Leoras looked for the real scars, the risk in your eyes, the desire you couldn’t hide. If you hadn’t tasted loss or wildness, if your stories were too clean, the door stayed shut. You brought yourself, whole and raw, or you went back to Leah’s comfort, changed and a little lonelier for trying.

Some Leahs pushed the limit, and their return sent ripples through the nest. The Blues caught the wild edge in their field. The A’s tracked every deviation. The K’s watched for leaks and loose talk. Everyone knew: you don’t come back unchanged. You can’t.

The Screaming Nuns

Then there were the legends—the so-called screaming nuns. Women who crossed in uniform, energy blazing with a hunger for freedom no aura mask could hide. They became a scandal and a beacon, their astral signals louder than any confession, their laughter echoing through the corridors long after the night ended. The Leahs called them sluts. The Leoras called them sisters. The truth was, they were survivors who refused to shrink, wearing the cost and the joy of their choices for everyone to see.

Mimicry and Memory

Sleeping with someone meant you carried a trace of their team, their clan, their world. With each new lover, each shared ritual, you picked up a piece of their resonance. It was more than mimicry; it was a passport. If you’d been with a Green, you could move through gossip like water. If you’d lain with a Gray, logic sharpened in your bones. The best operatives—those who could pass anywhere—had loved, lost, and risked enough to wear every signal for real. But the residue was real too. Longing, grief, old wounds, and the risk of bringing someone else’s ghosts along for the ride.

The Loneliness of the Invisible

This kind of life carried a particular ache. Lovers and partners who could never praise each other in public. Teammates whose best moments were shared in silence. You held the record privately—a squeeze of the hand, a coded song, a smile that meant “I see you.” Sometimes, you replayed old words of praise in your mind, because that’s where they were safe. The world never saw your real family, your real victories, or your real heartbreak. You learned to wear your loneliness as proof you chose survival—even when it cost you the world’s recognition.

Tensions at Home

Living with other teams or factions brought its own frictions. If you couldn’t mimic, or you dropped your mask, the cracks showed up fast—resentment in the kitchen, silence at the table, tension in every ritual. You either learned to flow between codes, or you moved on to save your own peace. True belonging was rare, and sometimes survival meant keeping your distance, no matter how much you craved connection.

To be continued…

#linkquest #railroad #fieldnotes #survivor #resonance #mimicry #consent #lore #screamingnuns #worldbuilding