thecatinahat (
thecatinahat) wrote in
sixthiterationlogs2017-01-08 05:11 pm
Entry tags:
(no subject)
WHO: Cougar Alvarez
WHERE: By the river
WHEN: January 8th
OPEN TO: All!
WARNINGS: Pyrokinesis violence against fish
STATUS: Open
It had started, strangely enough, that morning when Cougar had woken up. Normally, his toes are the iciest thing known outside of actual glaciers in the Arctic, so when he wakes up not having to press his toes to Jake's heater body, he should have figured out that something strange is going on. Dressing in at least three layers (and topping it off with a warmer hat than the tarp one), he heads out after leaving a note that he's gone exploring.
As always, since the gifts, he brings the rings. He doesn't like leaving them out in public and he still hasn't figured out what the binary on the inside means. True, the box says they're from Jake, but plenty of things have arrived here. Maybe they're not what he thinks and they're just another clue.
Cougar leaves the rifle at home, but brings his binoculars, heading first into one of the parts of the woods he's set up with snares and traps. There's something under his skin, like a spark desperate to get out. He thinks back to others and how they seem to have had strange powers of ice and fire, which is definitely something he could have used before. On a hunch, Cougar glances around him to make sure no one is there in case he accidentally is wrong, but then he concentrates with his eyes closed, hands pressed together before turning outwards. With a sharp crack, the evidence is there. Cougar opens one eye to see one of the trees look like a very specific strike of lightning has struck it.
Grinning slowly, Cougar knows all of Jake's comics have quotes about this. Power and responsibility and this and that, but he's like a child as he tests it out, making fires, setting small areas ablaze (before using the snow to put them out) and it's the river he turns to next.
"Here, fishy fish," he coaxes, crouched by the side of the river after he's cut a small hole using a fiery tip of his finger near some slower moving water, waiting for the fish to swim by. The speed at which he grabs the fish out of the water, that's not a new power, but being able to gut it on a rock and cook it up in the same moment? It's something he could get used to.
He's in the middle of frying up his second this way when he hears a twig crunch nearby, his muscles tensing a little out of habit before he calms. "It's hot, if you want some," he calls the warning over his shoulder. "Fresh fish," he says with a smug smile, snapping his fingers to show off the fact that he's as good as a butane lighter, now, able to cook anywhere.
WHERE: By the river
WHEN: January 8th
OPEN TO: All!
WARNINGS: Pyrokinesis violence against fish
STATUS: Open
It had started, strangely enough, that morning when Cougar had woken up. Normally, his toes are the iciest thing known outside of actual glaciers in the Arctic, so when he wakes up not having to press his toes to Jake's heater body, he should have figured out that something strange is going on. Dressing in at least three layers (and topping it off with a warmer hat than the tarp one), he heads out after leaving a note that he's gone exploring.
As always, since the gifts, he brings the rings. He doesn't like leaving them out in public and he still hasn't figured out what the binary on the inside means. True, the box says they're from Jake, but plenty of things have arrived here. Maybe they're not what he thinks and they're just another clue.
Cougar leaves the rifle at home, but brings his binoculars, heading first into one of the parts of the woods he's set up with snares and traps. There's something under his skin, like a spark desperate to get out. He thinks back to others and how they seem to have had strange powers of ice and fire, which is definitely something he could have used before. On a hunch, Cougar glances around him to make sure no one is there in case he accidentally is wrong, but then he concentrates with his eyes closed, hands pressed together before turning outwards. With a sharp crack, the evidence is there. Cougar opens one eye to see one of the trees look like a very specific strike of lightning has struck it.
Grinning slowly, Cougar knows all of Jake's comics have quotes about this. Power and responsibility and this and that, but he's like a child as he tests it out, making fires, setting small areas ablaze (before using the snow to put them out) and it's the river he turns to next.
"Here, fishy fish," he coaxes, crouched by the side of the river after he's cut a small hole using a fiery tip of his finger near some slower moving water, waiting for the fish to swim by. The speed at which he grabs the fish out of the water, that's not a new power, but being able to gut it on a rock and cook it up in the same moment? It's something he could get used to.
He's in the middle of frying up his second this way when he hears a twig crunch nearby, his muscles tensing a little out of habit before he calms. "It's hot, if you want some," he calls the warning over his shoulder. "Fresh fish," he says with a smug smile, snapping his fingers to show off the fact that he's as good as a butane lighter, now, able to cook anywhere.

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She was planning to give the fish to the inn, assuming she was able to find and catch any fish here.
The smell of cooked fish reached her nose before she reached the rivers edge and she paused. Her brow furrowed and she turned towards the smell, her expression openly confused.
"How are you doing that?" The fire thing...
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This would have been very helpful in the field, especially if he could have weaponized it, but he'll make do here. He just needs to make sure not to touch the chickens for a while. "Lucky gift," he finally decides on saying. "Hungry?" he asks her, nudging a bit of cooked fish towards her.
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She was a little envious of that fire power though she'd probably end up burning something she wasn't supposed to with it.
Moana stepped closer, placing her basket and spear down before scooting a little bit closer to the fire. She couldn't really feel it beneath all her layers but it was there and it was a welcome hea to her face. "I don't want to eat your food. Besides, I'm going to catch fish." She pointed to her basket and spear. " So you aren't normally able to control fire?" She thought he might be a demigod or something. "Do you know how long it'll last? Does that mean fire doesn't hurt you?"
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He gestures towards the fish again. "Go ahead," he prods. "I have food at home," he says, his accent thick around the words. The chickens have been laying decently, even if he did have to bring them into the house and convert Jake's old room into a hutch of sorts.
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"I'm still planning to catch some fish if you want me to repay your kindness." She wasn't greedy and everyone's been pretty nice since she arrived. She wanted to give a little something back.
When she was finished eating she was inspecting the bones carefully, turning them over slowly, looking for something very specific.
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"If it's a future, my future, I hope it's good."
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Her dark eyes looked up at him. "Do you want to know your future?" It was a question that nagged at the back of her mind. Would she choose the sea or her island? She still didn't know and given how much time she had here she kept thinking about it.
It was one of the reasons she'd decided to go fishing today. Fishing was something she knew and it was something that could take all of her attention.
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"Yes," he finally decides, thinking that it can't hurt to see what she has to say. "What do you see? In my future?"
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With a quick nod of her head she inspected the bone a little bit more carefully, her dark eyes focused on it and then on the man sitting across from her. A bit of a smile tugged at the corner of her lips though she tried to keep her expression steady.
"Let me see." She hummed as if whatever she was doing took a great amount of thought. "It pretty much says that you'll do what you want and let your heart guide you." Moana was totally making this up but she knew he was stubborn, being able to suddenly control fire power when only just waking up with it was proof of that, he also clearly did whatever he wanted so she figured it was a good guess from just meeting the man.
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He takes his ice axes with him, just in case. Not that he's too concerned about the ice itself. It's the wildlife he's more concerned about. For what might be the first time, he sort of wishes he had his gun on him.
(He doesn't know the statistics of guns vs. grizzly bears, but he figures they have to be pretty favorable towards the guns.)
Eventually, he winds up towards the river, leaning down to press against the ice with his fingertips, testing how strong it is. A little ways down, he hears noises. Not wildlife noises, but talking. And the accent strikes him as familiar. That's where he finds Cougar and the smell of frying fish, and he's about to ask why the other man is cooking it out here instead of back at the inn when Cougar snaps his fingers and strikes a flame.
Sonny's heart leaps into his throat, a loud startled sound escaping his mouth. It sounds like it was supposed to be some sort of words, but that they didn't quite make it there. Instead, he gapes for a second, hand over his beating heart like an affronted soccer mom.
"I-- What? How did you do that? What even is that?"
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If fire powers is bad for a Catholic, those rings might be even more of a strain to understand (but, he doesn't know Sonny that well, so maybe he won't care). "It's fire," he responds in a deadpan, stating the obvious. He shoots the flames just a little higher. "Don't worry, this sort of thing happens here. Maybe worry," he amends, because it really isn't normal.
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He takes a startled step back as the flames leap higher. Honestly, he's not sure what to make of this. Cougar had already told him that strange things happen here. Mysterious amnesia and the such. But that's a little different than sudden fire-bearing powers. If Sonny believed in magic, he'd call it witchcraft.
He doesn't believe in magic. Sometimes, these days, he's not really sure what he believes in. Despite what he's seeing right now, the flames dancing from Cougar's hands, he's still not sure that he believes in magic.
"This just sort of happens?" he echoes, still mystified. Still staying a little bit back. "That doesn't hurt?"
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"Maybe someone is going to get cigarettes," he jokes, completely even and without a hint of teasing in his voice (which is the clearest indication that he is joking). "I will be useful."
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Or, try to get used to, at least. He still can't help but to feel a little bit uncomfortable by it.
"You'll probably be useful without the cigarettes," Sonny says, and it's with a faint, almost hesitant smile. "You're not gonna like... set anything on fire, right? Like burn anything down?"
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Because what if something does happen? "It's made me very warm," he advises. "My toes, usually ice, but this morning? Toasty," he deadpans. Gesturing to the fish, he nods for Sonny to join him, if he wants. "Hungry?"
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And it seems just like that, Sonny's over the whole thing. Of course, that's not entirely the case — the fact that Cougar has suddenly adopted these powers in the first place is weird, and probably leaves a lot of room for concern. But despite hardly knowing each other, Sonny is putting a large amount of trust in Cougar, choosing to believe that he has no ill intentions, and won't be doing anything bad with the fire.
Maybe it's because he knows Cougar is a man of God. But Sonny is also far too trusting in general.
"Yeah, actually." He laughs, finally coming closer. "How is it every time we meet, you end up cooking for me?"
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He wants to ask about the church, too, but that can wait. Better to fill someone's stomach before you start making demands.
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He hears the other being before he sees them, and circles to avoid running into them directly while keeping an ear on where they go. He finds a place to get a good look at Cougar as he heads to the river. He doesn't appear to be armed—nor injured. But there's no one else nearby…? Following Cougar's origin vector, while making sure not to lose him as he moved away toward the river, Cassian found the bolt-struck tree and gave it a cursory look. What he sees makes him frown; he can't tell what just happened but it was powerful enough that he's going to. Just then, from behind him, Cougar sets a new blaze and Cassian again whirls and drops into cover. He goes into full surveillance mode, following Cougar as he tests, setting new blazes.
Cassian can't make out what weapon Cougar could possibly be using. Nor his objective. He seems to be setting fires for the pleasure of it. But with the snowcover, and locations he's choosing, neither does intent seem to be burning down the forest. For all his air of uncalculating glee, there's something of the experiment about this.
When Cougar goes to the river, Cassian's still shadowing him. It's the flash-frying of the first fish that finally gets Cassian to accept what he thought he'd been seeing: there is no weapon. It's the man himself.
…All right. No use approaching as hostile when everyone knew everyone else. And they all needed one another—for information if nothing else.
So, making a decision, Cassian at last straightened, and found a good place in the bush to come through, and deliberately stepped on some twigs to see what first move Cougar chose.
That it was grinning and offering him some of the fish (rather than, for example, firing on Cassian)… confirmed more suspicions but was still a relief.
"How are you doing that?" Cassian asked, not hiding his bewilderment but keeping it (and his approach) on the friendly side of awed as he picked his way over to a spot across from Cougar, where he could sit and join him. (Without actually sitting yet.)
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"Magic," is all he says in turn, more curious about the accent the other man has. "Where do you come from, in Mexico?" he asks, not bothering to slow down like he might for Veronica or one of the others. It's the first time that he's heard something like home, here, and it surprises him with how much it's good to hear it.
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The question makes Cassian display a genuine, spontaneous expression: surprise. "What is Mexico?" he asked in the same language (—in a flawless apparently Mexican accent). "And how do you know this language?" It had been rather a specialized pursuit for Cassian to learn, from the linguists who'd been deciphering inscriptions on the Massassi ruin walls and extrapolating from living descendant dialects elsewhere in the Yavin system.
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"Do you not remember your life?" he poses in English, thinking maybe this is amnesia at play, again.
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"I remember my life," Cassian answered pensively, noting in turn that their accents in Galactic Basic were akin as well. …Which, while he tried to figure out how/whether to offer notes to compare, also begged the question: "May I ask what name you give this language?"
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Maybe he comes from a place that knows Spanish, but just calls it something different, though he can't imagine where that would be, especially not when the accent is so right.
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And since it wasn't really a security risk—even the system-specific one was spoken elsewhere—he answered, "I know them as Yaval and Basic."
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It should be stranger, but he's already met enough strange people from out of time and place that he's beginning to get used to it. Being a Loser does mean you get good at adapting and Cougar's an excellent Loser.
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