Rachel Conway (
gotbottle) wrote in
multiversallogs2012-03-18 07:12 pm
Entry tags:
Striking in complete silence / devastating, isolating, until I lose control
Who: Raylan Givens and Rachel Conway
What: Saving the day! Aaaand opening up a CR can of worms.
Where: Champion's Walk, Griss Twist.
When: Backdated a few days, in the midst of monster madness.
Notes: N/A
Warnings: Violence against monsters.
She'd been driven from her apartment three days ago, driven from her neighborhood a day after that. Rachel had managed to pack a bag on her way out, slung across her body now, full of what meager first-aid supplies she could gather and everything she could possibly use as a light source.
...Not that she intends to go that route. Ever. But better to be prepared for something you don't have to do than to be pushed into that corner and not be ready.
She's been moving through the city, doing what she can, sleeping when she can. She's hardly prepared for this; she's been a book editor and a tea house waitress and a low-level volunteer for a political party, there's nothing in her background to ready her for circumstances like these. But she couldn't just hide somewhere and not try.
The side streets tonight are reasonably quiet, if demolished here and there, bearing scars of earlier skirmishes. She makes note of buildings that look like they'll stay standing, and when she comes across the odd person wandering the street, she checks to make sure they don't need medical attention and then she shoos them off to the nearest safe place.
But as she nears Champion's Walk, the odd people become groups of people, and they're not wandering, they're fleeing. She catches the ones she can, directing them to a safe place, unable to get much out of them besides "monster" and "didn't want to be trapped."
There's a knot of people running through the open back door of a business that faces Champion's Walk. She fights her way through, dodging people, and she gets out the front door. She still can't see much--there's a group of people coming toward her, and some more, lit by the few street lamps still working, congregating by some buildings on the next block.
And then a shape moves between her and a lamp, flitting by so fast there's only a silhouette, and an impression of size. Great size.
She can't just stand here and do nothing.
Back through the shop she goes, back out the back door, but instead of joining the others fleeing onto the side streets, she takes one that parallels Champion's Walk. She sees another stream of people coming down an alley, and she squeezes through, popping out into the crowd of people gathered there.
"Who's in charge?" she asks the nearest person. "Is there anyone helping you guys right now?"

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But as he steps out into the road, he stops, wary. The thing is hard to get a good look at, but it's paused a few yards away. It looks long and stringy, like a cartoon victim of the rack. But when it moves, it's a blur again. Raylan raises the shotgun and pumps off two rounds.
His aim is perfect. Which is why it's too bad that the shots have absolutely no effect on the thing barreling them down.
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...No. This makes no sense, those shots were dead on, how is this thing still upright, let alone coming at them... Oh, God, it's coming at them, whistling again, that awful sound somehow more angry than before.
It seems to be teasing them now, but not in any way that would amuse. No, this is cruelty, the thing slowly advancing on them, revealing more and more of its horrible, stretched, skeletal body as it moves. It lets out that shrill cry again, and she realizes the thing has a tiny little hole for a mouth.
The gun didn't do anything.
Oh, God, but she can't, not now, not here.
...Not in front of him.
But she edges toward the lamp post--specifically, the large circle of light it casts on the pavement, all the same. "Raylan... If that thing doesn't stop... Get somewhere behind me, okay?"
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Granted, he doesn't have much of a plan after that. He'll improvise.
The thing is closing. It's playing with them, that's clear. But he doesn't see a lot of other options.
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There's an odd calm in her voice, her hands moving to open the bag slung across her body.
"But we can't defend ourselves, if we run. Your gun's not doing a damned thing to it."
She glances down at the pavement, studying something (her shadow, where it falls) and she shifts around a bit (getting the light more fully behind her, making the outline nice and crisp).
"And i'm unarmed, if I run."
She feels pretty sick to her stomach right about now, pulling a large, heavy, metal police flashlight from her bag.
"I'm sorry. But I think I might at least be able to stop it for a minute. Maybe. If I don't run."
She punched out a shadow once, when nothing else worked, to bring a lamp back to the gods. It feels like a lifetime ago, like it happened to a different person.
She wishes it had.
"Get ready to get the hell out of here, if you can."
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The thing seems like it might have been waiting for him to look away. It goes for him, inhuman fast.
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It is being held. Rachel still stands in the arc of light thrown down on the pavement by the street lamp, her face a mask of hard-fought concentration. Her shadow falls at her feet, just as one would expect, but as it stretches away from her, it is doing what ought to be impossible. It hovers above the pavement, darker than it should be, more solid than it should be. It's vaguely person-shaped, long arms stretched out and wrapped around the monster's neck and shoulders.
And the reason it can strain against her, the reason it can gain even a tiny bit of ground, is because the farther out of the bright arc of light her shadow falls, the thinner it is. She apparently can't sustain it out there.
She takes a step back, and she heaves, and the thing goes rolling across the street. She picks up the big flashlight she'd pulled out, sparing Raylan an almost apologetic glance as she turns it on. "It's probably pretty evident that there are a lot of things I should've told you." She shifts the flashlight to her left hand and she uses it to cast a shadow of her right onto the streetlamp's pole. She twists the echo of her hand and the lamp post twists too, falling.
"If I can, later, I'll tell you everything. But the most important thing you need to know right now is I don't always have the best control of-- of this." She gestures at the pole with the flashlight, moving around it so the light she felled is behind her. "Get out of here. Or get somewhere behind me and give me plenty of room. Please."
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"We need to get someplace more defensible, when you think you can manage it," he shouts, as an afterthought.
Apparently, Rayan has decided to freak out about this later.
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"That's a good idea," she calls back, stealing a brief glance over her shoulder, "let's get up higher, above street level."
Just as before, it's when its target isn't looking that the monster goes for the attack. It lunges as she turns back, and Rachel doesn't have quite enough time to get her shadow in the right spot to block it fully. She stops enough of the jump to keep it from earing her apart right there, but it sends her sprawling to the pavement, killing any shot she has of repeating that defense.
She panics as the thing leans over her, its whistle ear-splitting in such close quarters. She somehow managed to keep hold of her flashlight, and she takes a few useless swings at its head. But then she remembers taking down the lamp post, and she wonders if she can do that again.
She holds up her hand between herself and the monster's neck, shining the light on it from behind. It swipes at her, claws raking her side, and she very nearly drops the flashlight. She refocuses her attention on her task, raising her hand and the flashlight again. There's a dark, well-defined shadow on the thing's throat now. She takes a deep breath, and she twists for all she's worth.
The whistling halts at once, as if all its air has been cut off. The monster flails harder, managing to claw a row of furrows along her hip, but she doesn't let up. She can't--she's done if she falters, it's got her, and then it'll go after Raylan.
It feels like she's sprawled there for an eternity, pouring every bit of her focus and strength into holding on. After a minute, the monster's movements start to slow and to lose their coordination. Another minute and it seems to go limp. She tosses it aside, scrambling away as fast as her shaking limbs will carry her, crawling across the sidewalk until she's well out of its reach.
But it doesn't stir. She stops, half-sitting, half-sprawling on the concrete, staring at it. And then she lets out a huge breath, almost crumpling with relief and exhaustion.
"I think it's-- I think we're okay."
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"Well, let's not hang around long enough to find out if we're wrong. Can you walk?" He moves toward her, in case the answer is no. Apparently "keep a careful distance" is something he perceives as just a suggestion.
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If she'd had to pick how the whole oh yeah, so there's something i can do that people aren't just supposed to be able to do, it's kinda scary, might be genetics or something, anyway, i'm not normal, sorry conversation would have started--well, okay, dishonest as it was, she thought it not coming up at all was going just fine. But if it had to come up, this was absolutely the last way she would have wanted it.
People finding out never went well even when they were prepared. This already felt like a disaster.
"You were saying a minute ago, a more defensible position? That's a good idea. Find one before something else comes along."
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"Yeah. We're probably not going to catch up with that group, but I've mainly just been trying to herd people to safer places, out of the open. Look for places that are still structurally sound, try to make sure you don't have too many windows." He gestures in a direction at random. "And don't stay still too long."
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She looks over int the direction he indicates. "I came up one of the side streets... Not quite along there but close enough. Many of the buildings I saw on my way in were holding up. We can probably find a spot to catch our breath and make sure nothing follows us away from here. And then we can figure out what to do next."
Which is likely going to involve a whole hell of a lot of explaining and apologizing on her part. She'd do it now and just get things overwith, but this isn't the best place for it.
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"You're okay? You're not hurt or anything?"
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She falls silent again, and she stays that way until they reach the end of the block. " Let's cut through here. There were some apartment buildings back that way. Lots of interior rooms, right?"
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The third one looks stable and the front door is unlocked, revealing a dim corridor beyond. "You ready?" she asks, because, after all, he's the one with the gun.
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"It's quiet down there so far. Hopefully it stays that way." she settles onto the beat-up old couch, scrubbing at her face with a hand as fatigue catches up with her for a moment.
"...I'm sorry," she offers, a bit abrupt. "I should've figured out how to tell you before now so you didn't have to find out like this. We can talk about this at some better time but I just wanted to get that out there."
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"You didn't have to tell me. Not you problem if I assume things." He took his hat off, and sat it next to his gun. "Thanks, by the way, for saving my life."
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She spreads her hands a moment before folding them in her lap. "You're welcome. But I had to." And she's trying to make it sound like it wasn't any big thing, just what one decent person does for another, but maybe there's something in the way her voice softens and she studies her hands that says it's more than that, some internal motivation beyond well, I'd be a dick if I didn't help.
"...Thank you for not leaving me there."
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"Look. There's a lot going on here and I can't... I still can't help but thinking someone got their paperwork crossed when they brought me here. But whatever you can do, whatever you are... Hell. I gotta trust someone, or I should just go back out and take my chances with the monsters." He sounds tired, more than anything. He can't help but thinking he'd love to go to sleep and wake up in a hospital bed in Lexington, Wizard of Oz style.
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Rachel watches him for a few long moments, silent. And then she gets up, crossing to where Raylan sits with his back braced to the wall. She lowers herself so she sits beside him, slightly on the wrong side of "not too close" but not terribly so.
"Thank you," she says, her voice soft.
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After a moment, he adds: "I'd thought you - us. It was something normal. But hell if there's anything normal about this place."
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SORRY
No worries, it happens!
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