Credits & Style Info

May. 10th, 2018

3ofswords: (a little startled; attentive)
[personal profile] 3ofswords
WHERE: Treetop Village remains, Southwest of 6I
WHEN: May 10 and onward
OPEN TO: Mark Watney
WARNINGS: N/A

Kira wakes up in increments, a funk clinging worse than a hangover as he decides whether or not to open his eyes. He has aches his shit mattress doesn't usually beat so badly into his body, and it's cold. Mornings have been rough, the sun warming up the village closer to noon. Strange dreams, thankfully devoid of badgers. He's withdrawn lately, acclimating to the retun of his powers--well, power, singular. Some days he's laid in bed, waiting for the right sense of timing. Now is when to roll out of bed. Now is the moment to go out. A sense of beats to hit in the day, but no major disasters.

Just the funk. The sense of something on the horizon, some kind of separation, and nothing they can do about it. Back pain isn't a disaster, but he wishes it got specific enough to warn him about sleeping on his side.

Or waking up in a strange room.

Kira rolls over, in his old scrubs and Ty's parka, slapping an arm down over the side of the bed.

No table. No glasses, no dog. The birds chirping are up close and, when he cracks his eyes open, looking down at him from a branch crossing through the roof. Startled upright, he finds the break, but it's--not a break at all. The window to his left simply allows for the branch to continue though. Coughing, he realizes his movements have lifted a cloud of dust from the decrepit bedding, and when he rolls out of the bed, his sock covered feet skid and catch on worn boards. The bed itself is hanging off a frame, a wide hammock woven over posts and slipped from one.

As he looks around, it's obvious the furnished room isn't one of the houses back home. This isn't a morning of waking up in a stranger's bed, a little too much to drink or smoke the night before. He's alone, no footprints in the dust but his own. Some of the furniture looks similar enough to have been dragged out of the village, but the rest is hand-made, vines and branches woven together into baskets, roofing, even sections of floor.

His next step breaks the morning quiet with a crack, and he surges forward as his foot drops through a worn out board. Grabbing at the window, he catches on the sill, an arm flung out into the cool air. He caughs and catches his breath, dragging himself flush with the wall and waiting for the burn of pain along his calf to run warm with blood or fade into simple scratches. He's too busy staring out at the trees, unfamiliar structures built into branches and walkways strung between.

"Alright," he murmurs, sucking in a breath. "Yeah, this might as well be happening." The pain along his leg starts to lessen, and he tests his weight on it as he leans further out of the window, widening the scope of he doesn't fucking know what.

Keep calm, figure it out. He's smarter than this.

No, not this early he isn't. "HELLO," he calls out into the birdsong and breeze. "IS ANYONE OUT THERE?"
underpinnings: (devil may care)
[personal profile] underpinnings
WHO: Owen Prichard
WHERE: Grasslands, Old Corrals
WHEN: May 10 and onward
OPEN TO: Oliver Queen
WARNINGS: N/A

Owen lifts his foot up from the mossy rocks around the spring, and puts it down in dry grass.

He stumbles the next step forward, boots acclimating to the flat, solid earth, his senses adjusting from the rustling forest to the open wind and sun of a wide field. Sucking in a deep breath, he blows it out, arms coming up and shoulders hunching, elbows slightly out. All of him braced as his eyes clear and he realizes--he's travelled miles in a single step.

Another breath, one more. Each slower and steadier than the last. Weird shit happens here: at least he's not underwater this time. At least he feels more or less the same, in his clothes and with his bow slung over one shoulder.

Lost space; maybe not so much lost time.

Looking around, he has some bearings--he recognizes the shapes on the horizon, a few of the mountain ranges he'd seen on the trek with Karen. Once he gets his heart rate down and his feet moving again, he can pick a direction based on that, or--

To his left, he hears running water, can see the dip in the land where it might slope into a stream. Likely as not, it'll lead to the river they crossed to get the moss, and he knows the way back from there. Maybe he'll find out what those flying snakes taste like; it's a long enough walk that he'll need something, unless he can find one of those nuts they accidentally fed to the antlered buffalo that dragged them home.

Looking to his right, he sets the question of how and how far aside for a moment. One post set into the earth draws his eye to another, and the detris resolves into segments of a fence. A little further beyond, a lean-to stands somewhat intact against the wind.

Cover won't hurt, while he finds a way to keep his sanity clutched tight in both hands. He feels better slinging the bow down his arm and nocking an arrow; no telling what might already be using the structure to escape the wind.
treadswater: (Default)
[personal profile] treadswater
WHO: Annie Cresta
WHERE: By the lake
WHEN: 10th May
OPEN TO: Finnick Odair
WARNINGS: TBA



It is morning. Was morning. No, no, it is still morning. Still feels like morning; Annie will look at the sun to double-check, but later. First, she has to get her bearings. Again. A month and a bit, judging by rough time estimate and the clock on her wrist (which she doesn't trust) and zip, whoosh, blink and whoospie-daisy, she's somewhere else.

This time, without the hours of panic which had lead to her collapse a month ago, Annie just reacts. She immediately crouches down, turning her small body into an even smaller target. Just in case.

It feels like the same day, the same time. Morning, what passes for spring in this arena. A quick glance at her watch and it hasn't even been two minutes (if she trusted it, which she doesn't). But she's not in the (her) yard with her geese, filling up their woven pool. She's on a shoreline. A lake, not a river or the sea. It doesn't quite smell like the sea.

She doesn't panic. Not this time. It's all happened too fast. She doesn't yell, she can think enough not to yell, but carefully, slowly, she lifts her head to peer around more.

There.

Finnick.

His backpack is no longer in his hand, but on his back - he must have swung it there after he zipped and blinked and found himself here. He's armed, still. That's something. He moves, fast, behind a tree and all right, good, he can think and she can think and everyone can think and it is fine. They've had the same idea. Hide.

Silently, Annie shakes her head. Not now, she tells her thoughts. She needs to think in a more orderly fashion than the slipping chaos it is so easy to go along with. She also needs to talk to Finnick. The distance is too far to crawl without drawing attention to herself, too many patches, but she can move closer. Carefully, and slowly, and always keeping herself alert to the sounds around them.

It's not that different from the forest around the villages, she thinks. Mostly the same sounds, but with a few strange birds tumbled in there. She doesn't have a sensation of being watched, but that could be wrong.

Once she's close enough to Finnick, lying down with her hands braced against the ground in case she needs to push herself up and run, fast, she tips her head a little and asks, quietly.

"Where the hell are we this time?"
ethnobotany: ({ stretched myself beyond my means)
[personal profile] ethnobotany
WHO: Beverly Crusher
WHERE: Off to the northwest and homeward bound
WHEN: May 10th
OPEN TO: Jean-Luc Picard
WARNINGS: tbd

In hindsight, Beverly will say she should have expected something like this to happen.

Next to holodeck malfunctions, transporter malfunctions are one of the top problems on Starfleet ships. One would think they would have come up with a way to make them foolproof, but not yet. So, all told, Beverly has been whisked away suddenly more times than she might care to count. She really should have expected to one day turn around in the hospital only to find herself stepping out into a section of ground that is very definitely not part of the village. Either village.

In fact, she can't even really see much of the villages. Assuming what's on the other side of the trees and whatever else is in fact one or the other.

Folding her arms over her chest, she glares at the horizon, thinking this will be a long trip back. "What I wouldn't do for a tricorder here," she huffs, as though she hasn't had that thought almost every day for the last year.