Kate Kelly (
lastofthekellys) wrote in
sixthiterationlogs2016-09-11 10:04 am
of earthquakes and aftershocks
WHO: Kate Kelly
WHERE: The Inn
WHEN: 10th September and a few days after
OPEN TO: Inn Residents, whoever else might be in the building: then, everyone!
WARNINGS: TBA
STATUS: Open
Earthquake
It's 5pm, or would be, if anyone paid much attention to things like clocks here. Sunset isn't for another two and a half hours or so, and the day's been hot. Not as humid as it has been. The Inn is mostly quiet, as it's hours after the midday dinner and the only people around either live at the Inn or have reason to be there. Supper will be made soon, as it's been a good day with the food supply.
Then, a minute later, the ground starts to shake.
Repairs and Aftermath
The Inn hasn't been as badly damaged as some other buildings. Foundations are still strong, walls haven't been cracked. But it's a big building, with lots of furniture and light fixtures, and it got shaken.
Having been turned into the unofficial community centre, it'll take some work and a few days to get everything straightened up again.
There's also the little matter of the water supply...
ooc: this is a party-style post, so set up your own OTAs or tag around and have fun! Setting is both for the day of the quake and a few days after to try and fix things up.
WHERE: The Inn
WHEN: 10th September and a few days after
OPEN TO: Inn Residents, whoever else might be in the building: then, everyone!
WARNINGS: TBA
STATUS: Open
Earthquake
It's 5pm, or would be, if anyone paid much attention to things like clocks here. Sunset isn't for another two and a half hours or so, and the day's been hot. Not as humid as it has been. The Inn is mostly quiet, as it's hours after the midday dinner and the only people around either live at the Inn or have reason to be there. Supper will be made soon, as it's been a good day with the food supply.
Then, a minute later, the ground starts to shake.
Repairs and Aftermath
The Inn hasn't been as badly damaged as some other buildings. Foundations are still strong, walls haven't been cracked. But it's a big building, with lots of furniture and light fixtures, and it got shaken.
Having been turned into the unofficial community centre, it'll take some work and a few days to get everything straightened up again.
There's also the little matter of the water supply...
ooc: this is a party-style post, so set up your own OTAs or tag around and have fun! Setting is both for the day of the quake and a few days after to try and fix things up.

no subject
Or would it be unexpected?
Looking down at her hands, Raven brought them close to her face to inspect. Finger brushing against the open palm of her left hand, she pursed her lips. "Got any bandages?"
There was a nice, long cut along her palm. Raven hadn't felt it sting until she'd pulled her head out of the water system game, and now found any movement of her hand pulled at the skin uncomfortably.
no subject
"How bad is it?" he asked, moving to take a look. Of course something like this would happen when they don't have any clean water to wash out wounds with just yet--that's the sound of the universe laughing at them. "I guess you can't do battle with ancient plumbing like this and expect to get away scot-free."
But it wasn't too bad at all. A gash, fairly shallow. She probably wouldn't even need stitches.
"Yeah, I have something for that." He nodded his head at the stairs. "Let's go upstairs. The good news is you'll survive."
no subject
It wasn't deep, but she knew it'd be uncomfortable. A hand that stung as she moved it could be easily ignored, but Abby Griffin's voice was in her head, and she was really worried about losing her hand. The town didn't have Abby Griffin as its Head of Medical, and so Raven's tolerance for a cut that'd been born from old pipes and other pieces didn't make her feel incredibly confident.
The town needed Raven Reyes with two good hands and two good legs, and so she was forced to take care of herself for the good of everyone else.
She didn't wait for him to take the lead. She began to walk to the stairs, and climbed it on two good legs. Not glancing over her shoulder, she said loudly, "Are you a medical professional, too?"
no subject
"Sit," he said, directing her to a chair in the kitchen.
A scavenger hunt for supplies in his room turned up with some mulched plantain leaves, cloth bandages, and the little clean water he'd collected from the trees in the park. It wasn't much, but he felt it was still safer than the spring water, which had had him wary every since they'd found it. Even so, the choice was Raven's and when he set his supplies down on the kitchen table next to her, he said, "Do you want to try the spring water? This isn't it, but people keep saying they think it has healing properties."
Whatever that really means. It's no secret Jess has reservations about it.
no subject
Sitting down on the chair, her posture didn't suggest she was comfortable. With her back pulled away from the rest, she sat as though she was ready to leap up and run away — or go back downstairs to cut her hand up some more.
Watching him, she eyed him with an arch to her brow when he spoke of the spring. "You really believe in that?" Her voice didn't contain a bite; it was more musing, quiet in its tone, as she wanted to know his opinion on what she'd heard around town.
A spring that could heal. She wondered where that was on her ground. She could've used it a long time ago.
Holding out her hand, palm up, she left it on the kitchen table as though it wasn't a part of her. She didn't even look at it. "Sounds like something people just want to believe in, you know?"
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Taking a mortar and pestle down from one of the kitchen's cupboards, he sat and added in the bits of plantain so that he could grind it up further.
"All things considered, it could cure blindness and it'd still be suspect the way it just appeared in an area we frequent, right when we needed it. I for sure don't believe in coincidences."
no subject
She looked down at what he was doing with the mortar and pestle, but wasn't focusing on that. She was quiet for a long while, and when she spoke again, she wasn't looking at him. "Were you hurt before you came here?" She looked up then, looking him over as though she expected him to wear new bruises, as though summoned by the mere recollection of them existing.
no subject
Fortuitous coincidences were just traps that hadn't been sprung yet, in his opinion. And he didn't appear to be the only one who thought so.
"Hurt?" He thought that maybe she was referring to the fountain water and shook his head. "I was in one piece when they picked me up," and added, "It obviously didn't make much of a difference." Being in fit condition hadn't done him much good against these people; they'd whisked him away like the others all the same.
no subject
Raven wondered if she was the only person in the town who had had a life-changing injury. Not being able to feel half her leg, let alone support her own body, was one of the worst hands to be given in life. She might not often think pitifully of herself, always opting to think positively and even outrageously arrogant and ignorant to her actual current condition, but Raven suspected her trip in life had been the worst of anyone here.
She didn't advertise it, though. She liked being thought of as useful, and not someone worth pitying.
It made her more determined to give no one a reason to pity her as she did herself.
"I wonder if the water in the fountain is the same in the spring. Everything needs to have a source, right?"
no subject
Jess was briskly efficient applying first aid, using his free hand to hold hers over the sink while he rinsed the cut out. Enemies in the field didn't wait for you to putter around applying bandages to your comrades; the High Garda had trained him to be quick, and when the wound was as clean as it was going to get, he took the damp cloth to the area around it.
"What do injuries have to do with the water in the fountain?" he asked as he swiped away dirt and grime. No one who looked at her hands would doubt Raven's chosen profession. She had grit layered into her skin as much as he had ink on his.
Or... he'd had ink on his. Past tense. He hadn't written a single word in a journal for ages.
no subject
She'd gone through worse. There was a slight echo of an ache in the base of her spine from the wound she'd acquired from John Murphy. A cut on her open palm was nothing in comparison.
Watching him work, she figures Abby would think his technique to be efficient. She wasn't going to lose her hand from any lack of care or thoroughness.
She shrugs her shoulder, not answering him immediately. She keeps her eyes down on her hand, moving her fingers and wincing at the fresh sting. "Just that … I had a pretty bad cut on my leg from the last moment I remembered. And I didn't have it when you pulled me out."
It's close to the truth.
no subject
Intent on cleaning the area around her wound--calling for Magnus a couple of days from now because Raven has an infected cut would be a poor way to celebrate their success--he gaze remained rooted on what he was doing until she brought up her leg. He paused, cloth hovering just over her skin.
Her leg. The limp. He remembered the unusual way she'd favored it the day he'd met, a quirk he'd gradually noticed less and less of as time went on.
Jess looked up. He controlled his expression well enough, but not his eyes--the questions jumbled to the surface in them. "That's the deal with your leg--you had an injury before you got here? And it was healed?"
no subject
To admit she had lost most of the sensation in her leg would be to confess to weakness. And Raven Reyes wasn't weak.
She wished she hadn't brought it up at all, but she needed to know. Had anyone else come through the fountain and found that what had previously been broken had been fixed? Had it felt as normal as it should've, if all had gone exactly to plan and it'd healed as she had expected?
"I had a pretty bad cut," she repeated. It wasn't exactly the truth, given a bullet to the back and said bullet damaging nerves beyond anyone's original expectations was much more than a mere cut. "And it's gone. It shouldn't be gone."
This town was odd. The scar remained on her lower back, and there were other pigmentations on her skin that should've went away if the town was insistent on stealing her disability, but she could walk, and so the internal damage of her leg had been taken away instead.
no subject
No wonder she was curious about the water.
"Why didn't you say anything before now?" He was hardly the type who could point fingers at someone for keeping secrets, but that had been a long time to sit on this kind of revelation. Would they have given her medical treatment just to dump her in an uninhabited canyon? Why?
no subject
"Let me trust a bunch of people I don't know," she said, a little sarcastically. Raven punctuated it with a roll of her eyes, and an accidental shift of her hand. She stilled it immediately in the hope of avoiding a motherly-like reprimand.
It was easier to shift the focus of her silence toward her distrust of people. It made sense to not speak up immediately. No one in this town was from home, and no one seemed to have a clue as to what was happening. The more she kept to herself, the safer she should be.
It also helped her remain locked in a world where she could ignore the fact she'd become permanently broken.
"Why would I say anything? Who knows what these people would think."
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Pot, meet kettle. Jess realized how ironic it was for him to be advocating for full disclosure, with how many times he'd kept information need-to-know. He'd withheld truth of Thomas' execution from Glain and it had blown up in his face--quite literally, with her fist doing the exploding.
Still, he couldn't really blame Raven. He'd have done the same thing. Actually, he knew he would have done the same--keeping quiet about a potential injury would have protected her. He could see the crystal clear logic of her decision.
"I don't think it's insane, in case you're wondering. No more insane an idea than anything else that goes on here. But that might be proof they held us unconscious for some time before we woke up. Think about it. What if it wasn't the water itself that healed you, but our mysterious benefactors when they processed us?"
no subject
She didn't owe anyone anything. From the people who had mended her leg to those who resided in the town. Raven knew the information could be valuable, but it was hers to use and find out, and she was never much of a team player when she didn't trust the skill sets of those around her.
Telling Jess was difficult enough. Though she trusted him as she had Clarke when she first met her, she still didn't want to tell him everything. He was hiding something, not quite similar to Clarke's interest in her then-boyfriend Finn, but he wasn't being completely open and honest with her, either.
Despite feeling tempted to inform him her nerves were no longer permanently damaged, she kept it to herself. Let him think it was a cut that might have required stitches that had her walking with a slight limp and wince.
"And why would they do that? We still don't know what they want from us. If they did this to my leg, then that changes things, don't you think?"
no subject
Reluctantly, he had to admit that it also added some weight to a possible connection between water and people thinking it was healing them. He was far from ready to give up on empirical thinking and jump on board with the idea they had some kind of Fountain of Youth on their hands, but between Raven and the fountain, and now the spring, the suspicious coincidences were piling up.
Whatever the case, treating Raven's leg definitely suggested the people behind this wanted her to be in fighting form. The million dollar question was--what for? It didn't make sense to him, no matter how many different ways he went over it in his head.
no subject
Her leg was a more important factor than she was willing to give it credit for in the grand scheme of the town. By keeping the fact her leg had suffered permanent nerve damage a secret might be hurting their odds in figuring out what the people who owned this town wanted.
But Raven wasn't ready to acknowledge the fact she was a cripple. There was a weakness found in it, and Raven Reyes was never weak.
Being in this town helped her live in a denial she'd been aching for for three long months. She deserved to feel on top of the world and like her old self, didn't she? Without pain shooting up her hip and without hobbling and being given pitiful jobs where she had to sit, she felt like herself again. A raven who was no longer caged.
"Pfft," she shook her head. Quietly, "This is so fucked up."
no subject
Leaving aside the fact he was just now hearing about this, the news created more questions as it answered. Big or small, a cut would need time to heal. Days or even weeks, depending on the medical treatment. Exactly what else had these bastards done to them while they were unconscious?
Fucked up was right. And the rabbit hole seemed to just get deeper and darker the farther they fell.
Finished with the cloth, he set it aside. "And your leg--it hasn't affected you since? No stitches, no scar?" He couldn't recall seeing any sign of a stitched-up gash, recent or otherwise, on Raven's leg when she'd changed in front of the fireplace, but for the sake of her modesty he hadn't been looking that closely.
no subject
She was sure he'd call her stupid for letting him believe it was a cut, selfish for not informing them promptly of the fact her leg was healed properly, and desperate to examine it to see how well it was healed altogether. But Raven couldn't let herself even think of uttering the words. Despite how she liked Jess and how she'd grown to find him irritating in a way she thought Jasper Jordan to be, she didn't want to admit it to herself.
If she admitted it to him, it'd be real, and Raven didn't want it to become her reality again.
She shook her head. "No." Her hand shifted in his as she moved her other to touch her leg. She couldn't pull her pant leg up like this, with one hand in his and possibly needing to remain still. "Sometimes I forget that it was injured in the first place."
no subject
It'd been apparent from the very first moment Jess had woken up gagging on water in a completely different part of the world that their faceless overlords could pull off mind-boggling feats. Helping heal a girl from the source of her limp just so she could run the risk of eating poisonous berries, or getting crushed in an earthquake, our burning away her stomach lining with tainted water are all examples.
Mind-boggling and insane.
Done with the sink, he let her hand slip from his grasp and gestured back to the table, letting her know it was all right to sit back down. "Wish I could say I could take care of this cut with the same flair. Sorry, you'll have to settle for a bandage. But the trade off is that you get to stay conscious the entire time."
For a brief, covert moment, Jess lifted his gaze and presented the back of her head with another look of thought, quietly considering. This town had its complexities, and so did people. So did this girl.
He wasn't so naïve to think the way she'd framed the injury was the whole truth of the story. There was something in the solemn way she spoke about it that teased at him, a thread just out of reach that had the feel of a half-truth. After all, people rarely offered up stories, whole and complete; Raven had just demonstrated that. Bits and pieces of them, yes. Their favorite bits. Polished pieces. The ugly, unvarnished truth was usually the last thing to come out.
"How did you get it?" he asked her as he slipped back into his seat and slid the mortar closer. "The wound to your leg, I mean."
no subject
Getting her hand stitched up, or even just patted down with a clean, damp cloth, would never compare to being ripped right open and operated on without anaesthetic and while being conscious. It wasn't something Raven liked to boast about, not like that time when she'd saved Sinclair's ass on the Ark.
She walked back to the table, taking a seat as she looked at her hand. She winced when she folded her fingers into her palm, feeling the flesh stretch as she did so. But that didn't mean she'd stop herself from repeating the action a few moments later.
Not wanting to look at Jess, she kept herself busy looking at her hand before she stopped herself from curling it around the edge of the table. Looking up at him, she answered with little emotion, "I cut it on the metal of our drop ship. I was underneath it trying to fix something, didn't realise a panel was looser than anyone expected. A real deep cut that could've gotten infected, but I guess the stars were watching out for me that day."
A psycho had let loose on the entire camp, gun in hand, and had chosen to aim his bullets into the floor when she hadn't been quick enough to crawl away. It wasn't a story she wanted to tell. It showed too much vulnerability, and Raven wanted to erase it from her story.
no subject
Jess was silent for a beat. Even if her response was peculiar, what could he say about it? Maybe she just didn't want to remember what had taken her out of commission, or the strange powers at work that had put her back in commission. He could hardly fault her for that.
"So this klutziness is a habit. Good to know," he remarked. He took some of the mushed plantain onto his fingers. "This might sting a bit."
Dabbing it over the cut, he made sure there was an even layer to act as a seal, then reached for the bandages, winding it over top and around her hand. Almost done.
"Let me know if it's too tight."
no subject
She'd survived a bullet to the back and surgery without painkillers. She could survive him placing something cold and stingy on her open cut.
Still, she breathed deeply through her nose, forcing herself to relax. It was odd to be taken care of by someone who wasn't Finn, Clarke, Abby, or Jackson. They'd all been talkative in their own ways, their bedside manners differing. She'd preferred Finn's to Clarke's once, but now she'd grown to want to fend for herself, fearing Abby and how she'd lock her down in a bed and grill her until her leg was back in function in a desperate need to get away from her.
Jess was okay. That was all she'd let herself conclude.
Watching him work, she asked, "Where'd you learn to do this?"
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