thegreatexperiment: (Tired)
Samantha "Sam" Moon ([personal profile] thegreatexperiment) wrote in [community profile] sixthiterationlogs2017-07-09 03:36 pm

Is this all as strange as it is seeming? Was I dead or was I only dreaming? [OPEN]

WHO: Samantha Moon
WHERE: Around town
WHEN: Post-quake
OPEN TO: OTA
WARNINGS: Some shell-shock. And because it's Sam, a lot of swearing.


As hard as Sam tried, she couldn't stop thinking about the night of the Rain of Fire. Compared to what had happened to her and the life she knew that night, an earthquake should have seemed like small potatoes. She lived in stupid California, for fuck's sake. This shouldn't have been enough to scratch up memories of the Rain, like a scab being ripped off her elbow. But introspection had never been Sam's greatest talent. So she understood herself less than complex physics or genetic sequencing or the right way to make fun of people who actually liked Walter Keane portraits. And when the memories flooded her brain, she was helpless to stop them, much less understand.

Sam was fast. She’d been fast even before she died. High school track team. Only for a hot minute, it seemed, but it had stuck with her. And it served her well, now, as she raced through the jumbled and ripped up streets of Los Angeles, jumping over steaming craters in the concrete, dodging around debris that was so twisted and mangled that she couldn’t even begin to guess what any of it had originally been. Was that bent metal rod a piece of the international space station? A support beam from a skyscraper? A fender? No way to know, no time to care.

She raced along Vine, her wig tilted to a terrible angle, her clothing ripped and torn. Her shadow stretched out in front of her, illuminated by fires from every direction. No matter which way she turned, she couldn’t erase the image of Sterling Engelhart being sucked down into the earth. “He had a piece of me with him,” Elizabeth kept moaning to Aubrey, before she succumbed to torpor and the hunters opened fire. If Sam believed in miracles, she’d call it one that no one had been shot. She’d separated from Grace and Avery at the Ordo library, then immediately turned tail and started back for home, despite their protestations that she should stay with them.

Even in this state of emergency, Sam was still afraid to reveal her secrets to them. Karen had well-ingrained the notion that no Kindred could really be trusted. The streets were full of the dead, dying, and bewildered. Most of the people that she passed seemed to come to life only when a large chunk of building fell from above. And then there was screaming and running and still more dying, as if they were reliving the first volley of space junk and satellites all over again.

“Joanna!” she heard someone screaming. “Joanna! Where are you?”

Sam did the math in her head. Based on her rough estimates, Los Angeles had probably lost well over one-third of its population tonight. And it was still too soon to make a final call. The looting hadn’t begun yet. And the panic. That too would inevitably raise the death count. And as for the rest of the world? Who knew?


Sam walked to a pile of rubble, leaning over to move a piece. She didn't hear anyone or anything underneath. With a scowl, she kicked it. What had it even been? A shed? A supply store? A fucking outhouse? There was another way this was different from the Rain. The landscape was still alien, whether it was pristine or wrecked. She was an outsider, a foreigner without any landmark to navigate by.

Her walkie crackled from her belt. “Mother to Sleepwalker.” Avery’s voice. He sounded formal. It was the same voice he used when he was in Court. “This is Mother to Sleepwalker. Come in Sleepwalker.”

She yanked it free, bringing it to her mouth. “This is Sleepwalker.” Her voice didn’t tremble too much. That would probably come later.

Avery’s tone softened. “Are you all right?” he asked.

“I’m fine,” she said, trying to force herself to believe it.

“I wish you’d stayed.”

“I have to go.”

“Will you at least tell me where you are?”


And there was yet another way this was all different from the Rain. There wasn't anyone around here like Avery, anyone to worry about her whereabouts or even care if she was alive or dead. For all she knew, she was dead and now a fucking ghost, haunting this clown rodeo. Angrily, she pressed the heel of her palm against the side of her head. She wanted to force the memories out. And maybe hide her face a little, as her expression crumpled.
theintercessor: (backward glance)

[personal profile] theintercessor 2017-07-10 09:10 pm (UTC)(link)
"You just pissed at it for falling down," he asks, looking from the beam to the booted foot that kicked it. His gaze keeps trailing the ground, back up along the trees to the horizon, given meaning again by a sun that rises and sets. Jude knows about shit you say and shit you don't, actions that don't make sense to anybody else. He's not going to drag it out of her.

But maybe there are better things to do with it than look at the wreckage.

"I'm gonna loop back to the inn and see what's left over from lunch," he says. "If you aren't out here 'cause you need anything, you can come with."
theintercessor: (hiding; scarf)

[personal profile] theintercessor 2017-07-11 06:29 pm (UTC)(link)
Jude raises his brows right back, the offer not one often made and easily rescinded if she isn't inclined. Socializing has never been a natural thing, or--the natural way he did it hasn't always worked. It had been easier on campus, where there were people who found every odd thing funny or interesting, had dragged him into things on their own whims.

He's not going to drag anyone; he's just going to start walking, let her follow.

"They have been. People lost homes, inn already serves meals. Got to feed people if they're going to run around fixing anything."
theintercessor: (intrigued)

[personal profile] theintercessor 2017-07-12 05:51 pm (UTC)(link)
"It's about the only thing here that does," he agrees.

Maybe that doubt was what had her such a skinny thing; maybe she was like him, slipping in late and scavenging what was left, and she was waiting a little too long to get at it. Maybe there's a kind of vanity that goes with wearing a wig in a closed canyon. She wouldn't be the only one, he's seen ladies in fairy-tale gowns sewing up the hems when there's crops to tend and animals to feed.

There's time in the day for both, he imagines, earthquakes notwithstanding.

They walk a time in silence, whatever weighs on her starting to weigh on them both. He doesn't know what he's supposed to say: with Parker he never had to say anything, just put him in the passenger seat and drive until he came back from wherever his head went. Food was usually part of that too. Instead, when it sits heavy enough, he just says the first thing in his head: "You're not doing real great here, are you."
theintercessor: (Default)

[personal profile] theintercessor 2017-07-13 07:49 pm (UTC)(link)

"But some people do," he answers, trying to follow the thought where it goes, trying not to guess the right thing or clamp up when he can't find it. He was in a cave for two days and no one was looking for him: that's a scary thing, even if he wasn't looking for friends. Not knowing how to talk to people didn't stop it mattering when you come back from the dead and find yourself surprised anyone cares enough to take some care. "I guess it helps if they come in with people they know."

The lady by the fountain, she seemed fine, here with her sister and friends. She probably made friends easy too--she'd gotten him to talk about New York and Pennsylvania, like he wouldn't dismiss every topic as pointless otherwise. "I just mean, you're not going to make it living on the fringe." He isn't either, and he's surprised to want to.

theintercessor: (come closer)

[personal profile] theintercessor 2017-07-14 03:06 am (UTC)(link)
It's the way he thought when he arrived--and he's met other people who do it, trade favors, expect something for their assistance. In a survival of the fittest situation, it would make perfect sense, and she'd have to find something to offer.

But he saw the way people worried after Credence, and he'd dug him out of the cave without expecting anything in return. He can't imagine the purpose Credence would ever serve to him.

"I don't think people here care about that," he says, feeling the words out as he says them. His speech is often a bit slow--measured and rusty. "I mean, you have plenty of time to learn what you need, if you bother with it. But I don't think it matters. I don't think anyone's playing a game, here, they're just getting by, and part of getting by is knowing people."

Even back home, things hadn't gotten really bad until he locked himself in the dorm and stopped going out.
theintercessor: (backward glance)

[personal profile] theintercessor 2017-07-14 08:51 pm (UTC)(link)
Did he not give her a name the last time? Gaps in his memory are so common he's learned to accept whatever sounds most like himself in explanation, and it's plausible. Hers doesn't come to mind either--he's just been putting paper in the storeroom as he makes it, aware of the need.

Girl in the blue wig was odd enough out from the village, it probably worked better than a name if he wanted to find her.

"It's Jude," he says, stepping onto a log fallen or rolled onto the path, sunk enough in mud that it's probably more of a pain to move than a necessity. Turning, he offers her a hand up.
theintercessor: (intrigued)

[personal profile] theintercessor 2017-07-15 11:38 pm (UTC)(link)
Dismissed, the hand lifts on the wrist, points the fingers out, and curls back in just as easy. It pulls the cut on his palm just enough to remind him it's there, and maybe he shouldn't be offering it anyway. "Nice to meet you, Sam."

If the silence he lapses into along the path is awkward, he doesn't notice. It's always seemed a problem for other people, and not his to deal with. When a thought occurs to him to speak, he speaks: "I've been leaving paper at the inn; did you find it?"
theintercessor: (Default)

[personal profile] theintercessor 2017-07-16 05:08 pm (UTC)(link)
Looking back, he can see how he's caught her out of something, but he doesn't know and won't ask what. She didn't want a hand up, she probably doesn't want much else, and it isn't the kind of thing he's good at with people he knows far better.

But if it was the paper that helped, he can keep digging that vein. "I put it upstairs in the storeroom, it looks like where they dump extra blankets and clothes when people disappear. I'll show you when we get there.

"What did you want it all for, anyway?"
theintercessor: (backward glance)

[personal profile] theintercessor 2017-07-16 11:44 pm (UTC)(link)
A more astute person might have narrowed that down, there were only so many reasons to want paper. Journal keeping, sketching--maybe building plans or notes about the canyon. Jude has the means, but little interest. He knows what he can keep in his head, what he can touch with his hands, and--even Sam might relate--what he can sketch the shape of.

Writing down all the confusing parts of this place won't make sense of them. It'll just make him think about it.

"I don't think you stop being one because of where you go," he points out, resolving to get back tot he project once the damage to the house is sorted. Making paper had been something to do, not something he'd thought of as particularly important. But it's been used, and there have been requests since her own. "I was at the institute in Pittsburgh," he admits. "Illustration and graphic design."
theintercessor: (no shit?)

[personal profile] theintercessor 2017-07-17 12:20 am (UTC)(link)
"The amount of time you've spent standing around feeling sorry for yourself, you might as well spend it doing something else." Kicking over rubble wasn't important to survival. Hunting for chess pieces and arrowheads hadn't resolved into a way out. Sometimes you just did things to pass the time. "That wig doesn't keep you alive, but you put it on every day. Maybe being who you are is part of staying alive."

Whether or not complaining can be part of who someone is, his frustration doesn't always make room for. Complaining didn't do shit for survival either.

"Anyway," he finishes, looking back at the path under his feet, "It's my paper. People can do whatever they want with it."
theintercessor: (facepalm)

[personal profile] theintercessor 2017-07-17 12:41 am (UTC)(link)
Brilliant move, Sullivan. It's more idle a thought than it should be, making friends never seeming worth the effort. He's supposed to be trying, but that vein of frustration likes to meet the vein of denial, and talking to him always winds up like talking to a wall at some point.

Except the wall could abruptly open its mouth and put you in your place, without you even realizing you had one to be put.

He'd resolved to make the effort, though; he'll probably keep resolving it until it starts to feel natural. Kind of like sewing blue hair on what you were born with, he guesses. "It's a cool wig," he concedes. "I'm just saying, you're allowed to take your mind off things too. You don't have to go till the fields all day."
theintercessor: (Default)

[personal profile] theintercessor 2017-07-17 01:26 am (UTC)(link)
"Maybe you should till the fields then, it might help with that." Finding and executing a task is all he's ever really had, when his own mind doesn't play with reality or rip away sections of time. The episodes have been minimal since his arrival--an odd smell here or there, insects no one else reacts to, batches of paper completed without any memory of the last few hours. Nothing like the gaps between letters from his mother, or waking up in the dorm with a fresh tattoo.

"Is Kosher food important," he asks, almost as dry, "Because I guess we have unlevened bread in the pantry, but I don't really know what else counts."

Glancing back at the question though, he shrugs. "I didn't like or dislike it. It made more sense than New York, and I haven't really been to any other cities." He isn't sure he makes sense himself, in cities. He probably just hadn't given it enough time.
theintercessor: (Default)

[personal profile] theintercessor 2017-07-17 04:20 pm (UTC)(link)
Explaining New York meant explaining how much better his life was without strobing lights or excessive noise. It meant explaining the clubs he didn't remember, the intention of school friends to drag him out of Pennsylvania and show him the scene. New York was some kind of root of the Community, like they hadn't all met on a campus a full train ride to the west of it.

By the time he rode the train home it was a blur of tube shots and blacklights and percussive sounds.

He settles for the usual excuse: "It's too loud." He indicates the buildings and trees on either sides of the path with a sweeping gesture: "I'd rather be here, it's easier." He never feels crushed in by it, even being literally crushed by falling debris.

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