repressings: <user name="goldsteins">, DNT (Can be your pick)
Credence Barebone ([personal profile] repressings) wrote in [community profile] sixthiterationlogs2016-12-08 12:50 am

I want to live where soul meets body

WHO: Credence Barebone and you (ft Annie Cresta)
WHERE: Fountain, inn, and around the village
WHEN: 12/8
OPEN TO: Legit everyone
WARNINGS: Most likely mentions of abuse in tags, will edit accordingly. Spoilers for Fantastic Beasts!
STATUS: Open.



i. Bᴀᴛʜᴇ ᴍʏ sᴋɪɴ ɪɴ ᴡᴀᴛᴇʀ ᴄᴏᴏʟ ᴀɴᴅ ᴄʟᴇᴀɴsɪɴɢ ⇾ closed to annie cresta
It's probably not a good thing to scream when you're underwater. That's Credence's first instinct, to scream, but something instinctual stops him. He feels pressure, an unusual sensation that he soon identifies as being surrounded by something other than air. Credence Barebone is drowning.

Blind panic sets in. Somehow, he's underwater. How isn't exactly the first thought on his mind--instead, it's I can't swim, and he kicks in the strange mixture of somehow warm-and-cold water, though it winds up more as a flail, and tries to reach the dim light that signals the surface.

He's going to die.

Credence is going to survive so much only to wake up somewhere unfamiliar and drown. Sheer stubbornness doesn't quite describe how much he's clawing at the water haphazardly--it's more instinct to stay alive. To endure. He's done it before, he can do it again. He has to, even if he feels consciousness starting to slip away. He's tired. He's so, so tired of fighting. It's all he's done these past few days.

Finally, he manages to struggle his way upwards--just enough to splash a large wave of water over the fountain, pale hand surfacing from the dark waters of the fountain to grasp feebly at the edge before slipping under once more. Credence may be tired, but he's not done yet.


ii. Aɴᴅ ғᴇᴇʟ⇾ inn
Credence has been counting. It's been exactly two days since the girl with the long hair helped him out of the fountain, sputtering and incomprehensible. Two days since he first stayed at the warm inn, and he's still there. He can't quite put an emotion on what he's feeling--it's certainly not homesickness, nor is it restlessness. He feels uneasy, and it's a different type than what's usually ingrained in his mind.

Two days of doing nearly nothing.

Idle hands are the devil's workshop. He tries to not take the phrase that flickers through his mind quite so literally, but after the events in New York City--after what he's done to everyone--it's hard not to. He'd been sitting in a corner, quiet and out of the way, when he decides to fix things.

Maybe it's a small way to fix things--to get rid of the feeling in his chest and the guilt of not actually doing anything when everyone is pitching in to survive. Somehow, he wants to make up for all of the damage he's done. This isn't the best way to go about it but it's a start. With an amount of courage that's abnormal from him, he clears his throat and speaks to the nearest person.

"I want to help." His voice is soft, barely above a whisper, as if raising it will somehow detract from something.

"I used to run--used to help--a church." It's the only equivalent to New Salem Philanthropic Society he can think of. "I want to help," He repeats, and finally chances a look at the other person's face.

"Please."


iii. Fᴇᴇʟ ᴡʜᴀᴛ ɪᴛ's ʟɪᴋᴇ ᴛᴏ ʙᴇ ɴᴇᴡ ⇾ village

It's cold. It's cold and it's not snowing but there's a bunch on the ground, and Credence hasn't really it like this before. Not piled up. He's never been outside of New York City, never further than Broadway and 42nd street except for that one time he walked all the way to Harlem. He's left with the strangest urge to just jump in it, even though he swears he can still feel the chill the air had when it was biting down on wet skin upon his arrival.

He settles instead for smiling. Just a tad, of course, because he doesn't deserve to smile, but it's just him and the sky and someone passing by. Once he notices that someone's there his face immediately returns to it's neutral state, gaze to his shoes.

"It's beautiful," he says in that same soft voice he always does, as if misspeaking will bring forth something unpleasant. "It's not like New York."



iv. I ᴄᴀɴɴᴏᴛ ɢᴜᴇss ᴡʜᴀᴛ ᴡᴇ'ʟʟ ᴅɪsᴄᴏᴠᴇʀ ⇾ wildcard

Credence can be seen wherever there is warmth--he is the quiet, lurking presence in the inn, always listening to conversations. When he's walking around the village, he waits until the night time, and can be found staring at houses in a forlorn fashion. He might even bump into others if his mind is preoccupied, though his reaction to doing so will be abnormal.
booklegging: (⇆ 57)

[personal profile] booklegging 2016-12-31 10:36 am (UTC)(link)
"It's no big deal. I'm in the room at the back, top floor. Drop by sometime, we'll sort you out."

He doesn't mind truthfully. When he's not working or out scouting the canyon in vain for a new lead, the hours pass slowly and beg to be filled; showing Credence a few tricks can eat up time just as well as carving away at his game board. The best thing he could do to help settle a new arrival is get them ready to actually live in their new home away from home, he supposes.

And the exposure to keeping a weapon on his person can't hurt. The more Credence does it, the quicker he'll hopefully go from 'monkey see' to 'monkey do.'

Teamwork is all well and good, but they can't trust that one or more of them won't be separated or stranded somewhere and have to rely on their own wits, absent of the safety in numbers Jess had advised Credence to take advantage of not a moment ago. It'd happened to Kate and Margaery when they'd been lost in the woods. It'd happened to Peggy, stuck on a high ridge without a way down. It'd been most of Jess' life.

The remark that there's still beauty to be found despite what this place has already done to get Credence here sounds like something Thomas would say, and Jess feels a strange pang of homesickness. He doesn't want to confess that the same upbringing that had drilled in him the skills and instincts necessary to keep his head attached to his shoulders has made him rather blind to pretty views. Where Credence sees beauty, Jess sees the ill-intentioned effort put into designing this town. It had always fell to Thomas to remind him there are other sides to life besides just the bad and the grey areas in between.

... And now Thomas is gone, leaving Jess with his bleak views.

"First time away from the city lights?" he says instead of any of that, delivered with the same light tone as one would toss out an observation like 'cool out tonight, huh?' "That was me when I first arrived here. The nights seemed darker than normal somehow. No street lights or carriages trundling past. It was a little weird."