Credits & Style Info

righthandrook: (pic#12951635)
[personal profile] righthandrook
WHO: Evie Frye

WHERE: South Village Fountain

WHEN: March 16h

OPEN TO: OTA

WARNINGS: Nothing, will update if needed.




I. The Fountain


Water filled her nostrils at sudden consciousness. The Ganges? She didn’t remember being by the river or a river. But memories didn’t matter when what she needed to do was swim up and out of the water. Sunlight was glimmering above and easy enough to kick up to. Air was taken in sharply as she broke the surface. Blinking away water she saw this wasn’t a river at all. Instead the boundaries were distinct and she found herself in a fountain. One deep enough for a person to sink in. Unusual.


Pulling herself up the side, she landed quietly as possible with the squish of her shoes against ground. Instinct had her reach for a hood that wasn’t there. Evie’s hand reached up again, feeling for the missing piece of fabric that should have been there. And it was then that she noticed the color of her sleeve. And the strange change of fabric. And the strange lack of fabric. Arms out, she looked over herself. What sort of decency would allow this? They looked nearly like undergarments, so simple and plain. She liked the color at least, a deep blue. Self inventory found that her weapons were missing. No hidden blade, no blades at all, no bombs, nothing. That nearly made her feel as naked as the strange clothes. And a strange bracelet that looked nothing like she had ever seen before.


II. Strolling through Town


She was decidedly not in India anymore. And this looked not at all like England either. Which left, well, the rest of the world really. Just not any of the parts of it she had been to. The itch to pull up her nonexistent hood was still there, however she noticed there were some other people in similar clothing. And others in different outfits entirely that bordered from familiarish to not at all.


First step. Establish surroundings. Integrate with the population. Blend. That was doable. In theory. People liked to talk and once she was familiar with the layout of wherever she was maybe this anxious buzzing in her mind would stop. If she was here for now she'd need to know where things were, where to go and where people said not to go. Structures were being noted and mapped as she walked along, faces and voices observed as well in case there seemed to be ones that popped put for interest.


There was none of that instinctive viewing of her surroundings, not as it had been. There was no glowing of targets or information. Concern buzzed in her mind again but she had plenty of skills to sort people out while seeing them as they were. Maybe they were all important. It was a possibility. At least none seemed to give off the instinctive look of enemies. Which might mean nothing at all.
relentlessness: (Brow)
[personal profile] relentlessness
WHO: Jacob Frye
WHERE: Fountain, Inn, Bunker, Around
WHEN: 12/3, first part of the month
OPEN TO: Evie, OTA
WARNINGS: Will update if needed

To find the gate is open )
covers: (Default)
[personal profile] covers
WHO: Evie Frye
WHERE: The bunker and the inn
WHEN: Forward dated to November 27th
OPEN TO: Locked to Altaïr (bunker) and OTA (inn)
WARNINGS: Nothing as yet, will update if needed


your songs remind me of swimming


the bunker ; locked to altaïr


As far as awakening in unexpected places goes, finding oneself unaccountably underwater is probably among the most disorienting. Like anyone else, Evie inhales a little out of shock before reflex kicks in and forces her to hold her breath. She's in a glass box of some sort, and though the water is clear her view of what's outside is distorted by the curvature of the glass — a tube, then, rather than a box? Evie balls up a fist and bangs on the glass as hard as she can, which is considerably so, but it doesn't so much as crack.

It's only then that she actually starts to panic a little bit. She's always been remarkably cool-headed, but it's starting to become clear that either she's going to have to find some way of escaping or she's going to drown. Evie can hold her breath — her father made sure she and Jacob were both taught how to swim — but only for a couple of minutes at best. She knows she's going to die sooner or later, just like everyone else; in fact, she has made her peace with the fact that that might be sooner, rather than later, given her work. Yet to die in this way seems cruel, awful — inhuman, in the sense that the water certainly doesn't care if it kills her, because it can't.

Though she knows it's likely futile, she hammers on the glass again — and then there's movement beyond, in her peripheral, a figure she can't clearly see. Moments later, the water drains out of the tube and the glass opens up. Evie stumbles a little, but doesn't collapse, grabbing onto the edge of the tube with one hand as she leans forward to cough water out of her lungs. Her hair is hanging in her face, she's dressed in a strange dark blue shirt and matching trousers, and there's a weight on her back she didn't really feel when she was floating — a pack of some sort, perhaps, but she can't afford to look at it just yet.

"What in God's name—" is the only thing she can say right now, the words half-gasped as she tries to catch her breath.


but somehow i forgot


the inn ; ota


Later, after she's inventoried the contents of her pack, changed her clothes, and done her hair up properly, Evie makes her way to the common room of the inn. Still confused and a little disoriented, she nonetheless has sense to know that inns, pubs, taverns, and the like are where you go if you want information, a drink, or — in this case, as she's just realizing she's actually famished — food.

"Pardon me," she says to the nearest person, "but could you tell me where I could get something to eat?" A brief pause, then, "I haven't any money, but if there's any work that needs done—"

She and Jacob did odd jobs for pay for a while, after all. Even if some of those jobs veered into the somewhat questionable or — all right, downright illegal. The point is she's far from being too proud to do work in exchange for something she needs — though, come to think of it, she hasn't seen anyone exchanging money here, and that's strange.