Mʀ. Wʀᴏɴԍ (
fe_male) wrote in
sixthiterationlogs2016-09-26 11:41 am
sorry mario
WHO: Tony Stark
WHERE: The Fountain, Blacksmithy.
WHEN: 25 Sept.
OPEN TO: All
WARNINGS: Tony Stark.
STATUS: Open, ongoing. Like I'll ever remember to edit this once it's not.
ᴛʜᴇ ғᴏᴜɴᴛᴀɪɴ
ʙʟᴀᴄᴋsᴍɪᴛʜʏ
WHERE: The Fountain, Blacksmithy.
WHEN: 25 Sept.
OPEN TO: All
WARNINGS: Tony Stark.
STATUS: Open, ongoing. Like I'll ever remember to edit this once it's not.
ᴛʜᴇ ғᴏᴜɴᴛᴀɪɴ
He squints.
Both at the sunlight and the fact that the world seems to have rearranged itself somehow in the last little while since he most recently took survey of his surroundings, and he's not entirely sure to which direction things have swung but he knows he doesn't like it.
Level one, assessment. He's sitting up on the bottom of a probably-concrete pit outside, and he can hear wildlife. No, wait, not a pit, a fountain, unless one makes the argument that a fountain without any water is technically a pit anyway. "Somebody changed my clothes, sure, why not, that's not weird at all. That hasn't happened since like. Ninety four." Investigating the backpack tells him very little aside from the fact that someone around here apparently lacks forethought and that he's retroactively pretty happy this fountain is empty aside from one increasingly irritated engineer.
"Alright, I don't know what kind of game this is, but it's pretty crappy! Like, terrible. Duke Nukem wouldn't even touch this with a wavebird, and now I'm just talking to myself in a hole. Fantastic. I have red pants, a peacoat, and nothing to get out of here with."
Shouting into the void seems like potentially a Bad Idea, so instead he's gonna poke around and see if he can finagle something out of the pipework maybe. Probably with running commentary to himself.
ʙʟᴀᴄᴋsᴍɪᴛʜʏ
Well this is familiar. His hand releases the strap of his backpack over his shoulder and trails over the edge of a shelf. Tony hasn't seen much of wherever the hell this little place is - nothing even really indicates whatever country he's supposed to be in now - but he can't really say it looks that appealing. If there's a blacksmith, then this might be a little bit more rustic than he's comfortable with. Either that or he's found the last bastion of hipsters. That might at least explain the overalls.

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Although part of that statement merits a little following up, so he shifts gears and continues on with, "Rescue him after?" Tony feels like somebody would have told him about that.
As for her other response, Tony allows himself some dramatism and lets his head loll back on his shoulders for a moment with the force of his eye roll. "Of course you haven't, because that would probably entail getting some answers and who wants those?" He sighs, looking over again but this time for a reason, towards the rest of the village. "Guess I oughta find a bungalow to call home."
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The lump in her throat is only growing larger, despite her best efforts to push it down. "And then I arrive here, only to be told that Steve Rogers is well and alive in the future," she says. "Which means I gave up on Steve and I don't think he ever would have done that to me. It means I gave up on rescuing him and he was alive out there." She blinks rapidly and turns her head to the side as she wills the tears in her eyes gone. "I should have pushed Howard to keep looking. He certainly had the money and the resources."
She says nothing to his settling into a home. He ought to, yes, but on that avenue, she can offer no advice. Even she has simply fallen into inertia in her own living situation, but it seems adequate enough that she hasn't thought to leave it despite the occasional awkwardness of living with Barnes.
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"We didn't find Steve until 2012. Dad, he - he went back to looking for him later anyway, he just sort of took a break for a little while I guess." Tony's gonna get hives, why is this happening. "And SHIELD recovered him so the transitive property sort of means you both won the world's longest game of hide-and-seek anyway."
There's more about how people move on and they need to, or how mourning happens in different ways, and it's weird that he's comforting her like this when it used to be the other way around, but he's not really sure how to get into that just yet. There's so much happening right now that he's getting bogged down in the processing.
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"I'm selfish," she admits. "I wanted him to come to the Stork Club. I went," she admits, "foolishly, I went." Still, in a way, Steve is gone for her. Even here, being here, she's not sure what to make of it.
Clearing her throat, she sheds her sadness like a snake's skin sloughing off. "Would you like me to show you the houses before I go home?"
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Anyway, she abruptly shifts her posture and appears to move on from the topic, which - thank god - means Tony can as well. "Uh, sure, yeah why not, if you don't have anything else to do." If there's a bit of a tone in his voice it's less questioning and more on the edge of hopeful. The longer they speak, the more he realizes he's missed her.
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It's both for a friend of hers, but also for Tony himself. After all, where he comes from, she's a sort of support for him and she thinks it's only right that she offers that now. Besides, he seems a good boy (and what a strange thing to think, given how much older than her that he is).
'he seems a good boy' leave me here
He never really has been one to let silence dominate a conversation, so once they start walking, he starts multi-tasking. "So, question. I've got red - clearly - and there's a fire symbol on my backpack. Do you have like, a water symbol? Do we get together to create Captain Planet?"
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"What on earth is a Captain Planet?" she demands, when it continues to poke at her and annoy her terribly.
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She just sounds so irritated, he can't help but laugh a little bit. "By product of sustainability movement targeting kids. Also produced one of the most catchy theme songs of pretty much any cartoon ever, I can actually hear it playing in my head now."
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And yet...
Tony might not be Howard, but in some ways, a Stark is a Stark. "Sing it," she insists.
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Soon, they're arriving at some of the homes, down the block from where Peggy is staying. "Apart from the aesthetics on the outside, they're fairly similar," she says. "Beds, linens, curtains. Unless you've the ill luck of picking a home that's been ransacked for materials."
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"Maybe later."
Anyway, they're closer now, so he's kind of sad that it does, in fact, not really look that much more encouraging. "I'm sure you'd tell me if I did that, right?" he says, somewhat playfully. "So, totally furnished - stocked? Nobody lives in any of these? Aside from fountaineers."
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"For one, the very moment that I arrived, there wasn't a soul but us, and yet, someone set off an air raid siren as warning before a windstorm hit." She's yet to be able to explain that and it irritates her more than she thinks it should.
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Anyway. Whatever.
He mulls that little nugget over for a few moments before finally responding. "Where's the siren?"
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Anyway. That is weird, the siren. Not knowing, how it went off, why it went off. "How far out have you guys managed to explore? I mean, we can't be completely isolated." There's a moment, then he amends. "Okay we could be, but evidence strongly indicates to the contrary. Unless we're either extremely lucky with a very well hidden, abandoned, and malfunctioning security system, or the alarm goes off on a regular, albeit very long interval."
In many cases, Tony is irritated about the interruption to the mystery he was working on back home. In most, however, at the moment, this one is a welcome distraction. This one at least literally can't be his fault. Probably.
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"Or, rather, that we've got captors," she says darkly.
lord i wish he was current bc he'd suggest 'the upside down' for the name
An experiment does... Actually not sound inaccurate. No interfering except to change the independent variables, introducing new catalysts and quietly observing, having a confined and controlled environment - they just have to figure out some sort of common theme among whatever random shit happens to them. As for the other idea, he shrugs a little bit. "Captors tend to be pretty direct and immediate with the whole 'telling you what they want' thing," he starts, before continuing. "Unless we're leverage against someone else, but that doesn't really jive well. Kidnapping doesn't really look this much like Skyrim; I'm liking the experiment idea a bit more."
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All she knows is that she doesn't like being pushed around and told what to do. It makes her bristle and bark, hating the way it makes her feel trapped. "You keep saying things I absolutely don't understand," she reminds him wearily. "I'm an old woman, remember?" she dryly jokes.
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Tony's also curious as to what could possibly be the point, but unfortunately all that sort of information gathering means observation over time. Which means... time, and waiting. Something he's neither all that fond of, nor historically very good at.
He glances at her when she jokes, a bit amused because that's better than any other potential way to handle all these things he's learning. "Yeah, that's probably not gonna stop either, but I guess I can try." Anyway, he's glad she didn't question whether his awareness of how kidnappings usually go was theoretical or otherwise. He continues on, "If it is an experiment, commonalities would hopefully be visible after a while. Patterns, testing us on the same skills in different ways. We'll just have to keep watch."
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She leads him down another path of homes, some of them affected by the quake, including hers (which had collapsed in half). "People keep arriving in a fountain," she points out. "Not to mention the predominant habit of something terrible happening, only for something beneficial to swoop in on its heels."
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Tony's somewhat distracted by the damaged houses, because that's something to file away for later, and he wants to see what's in the walls. What better opportunity than walls that are already cut away for easy viewing? So his response comes slightly delayed while he's investigating a little bit. "I assume that means something bad just happened," he says, turning back around and brushing his hands off. "Since I'm here now."
8D
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"There was the massive earthquake that destroyed my home," is her prim, even reply. "I'm not sure your arrival is enough to make up for that fact."
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"Any other patterns?" Because that's the best way to move past awkward things - you just sort of pretend it didn't happen.
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