markwatney: (004)
Mark Watney ([personal profile] markwatney) wrote in [community profile] sixthiterationlogs2017-10-19 06:07 pm

The birds have flown their summer skies to the south;

WHO: Mark Watney
WHERE: 6I Inn
WHEN: 19 Oct 2017
OPEN TO: ALL Closed to new threads


I think most people have an unspoken list of things they intend to do when they have the time and inclination. Mine I usually actually write down, even in a place like this where paper and writing implements are scarce — Days with much downtime don't happen often, and my list is embarrassingly long. It helps to have a note so I can look everything over and figure out what's most pressing. I managed to get off of Mars this way, so I figure it's not a bad system.

Today, though, my choice was made for me. I woke up to two things: A box with my name on it, and a sky full of snow. Fortunately, all of the harvesting had been done on the less cold-hardy plants already, and unless this cold snap dragged on into something long-term, it would be good for what we picked later in the season. Sweetens the berries.

I've got plenty of ways I could fill a free day, but the snow and that mystery box left little question what needed to be top of the list: Taking a census before winter fully moved in. As far as I could tell, while various people in various places took notes about events and connections, we'd never had one central, definitive list of everyone in the community, where they were living and how long they'd been around. With a second village in the mix now, this information was more important than ever. A proper census would give us the tools to start to prepare for winter in earnest — Not just in predicting how much food and firewood would be needed, but what roads needed to be cleared, medical preparations and more.

The box I mentioned before, it helped with this. It was full of items that were a huge help in getting organized: Pencils, binders, blessed paper. And chalk. There was only one place to use that.

After carefully copying the information that had been collected on the blackboard at the Inn, I wash down both sides and jump right in: At the top of the outfacing side, I make three headings:

Name - Residence - Apx. Arrival


Beneath this, I start with my own info:

M. Watney - W. outskirts, blue - 1yr, 4 mo


"Why haven't we named the damn streets yet?" I mutter, and then began writing in what information I know on the rest of the villagers, leaving blank spaces for others to fill in next time they're at the Inn. But seriously, though, one more thing added to my to-do list: Street names and house numbers.
pretendtoneedme: (shield buddies)

[personal profile] pretendtoneedme 2017-12-15 12:37 am (UTC)(link)
Mark's assessment of him isn't wrong, although it's not exactly a "jump." Clint's been on this kind of thing before - watch duty, really, supervision, making sure everyone's okay in an established routine. He's done it for military and government teams multiple times, and possibly even more for kids, though he hasn't hinted about that bit to Mark. But it is something he knows how to do, without thinking about it, and so that makes him a decent choice for the job.

"I can do it sometimes." Clint pauses, studying the board for a moment, before stepping back a pace and closing his eyes. His fingers twitch a very little, almost like a dog or cat that's running in its sleep, still keeping a grip on that chalk. After a few moments, his eyes open again and he steps forward once more to a blank corner in the lower right and starts sketching. Loose impressions at first, just strokes of the chalk, but Mark will probably be able to tell it's a pretty accurate map of the village's road system quickly, such as it is. "I was thinking about making ice cleats - I can take the last of the nails I saved and punch them through some leather strips, tie them over my boots. We don't have a lot of nails, though, and they'd be pretty shoddy next to the real things." Still, better shoddy than nothing. "We should try and put up some sort of rope between buildings, too - if there's a storm, we don't want people trying to cross from one to another without a guideline. Too easy to freeze to death that way."