GG } a wolf (
lupa) wrote in
multiversallogs2012-04-22 12:58 pm
Entry tags:
→ it is a lovely thing that we have.
Who: GG and YOU. GET IN HERE.
What: Fun with a warwulf.
Where: Everywhere! Particularly Mafaton and in and around Flag Hill, but she really is exploring everywhere.
When: All week and more.
Notes: Specify when and where in the header. Feel free to meet her in human or wolf form, though be aware that she doesn't speak when wolfed; if she's on all fours, she'll be either in Mafaton or in a fairly rural, isolated area, particularly the forests and mountains around Flag Hill. The write up here is just a prompt or an infodump, don't feel you have to base anything on it. And feel for to PM me for more stuff. /jazzhands
Warnings: TBA.
The question is this: what to do first?
Food. Shelter. Medical attention. They repeat themselves over and over in her brain, a mantra of survival. Except the first two, at least, come easily; Lea's already landed herself an enormous stretch of land in Flag Hill, and food is...everywhere. There's prey- lots of it, too, none of it mutated by an apocalyptic blast or hardened by living life in a wasteland, not as thin and wiry as it was at home and not the subject of intense competition between her and any other starving predator.
Of course, while she enjoys the freedom to hunt, the things that happen in the forests around Flag Hill aren't exactly sweetness and light. It's easier as a wolf; she went deep into the woods in her human form once, and very quickly went out again.
Anyway, Baedal has restaurants.
Not that renourishing herself is as easy as that. She ends up throwing up a lot of what she eats, unable to stomach nearly as much as she wants to. Wolves are built to feast or famine, but humans aren't. Werewolves aren't. So: medical attention. The tricky part. Healthcare is free for newcomers- she needs some proof that she's a newcomer- she can get proof from the Valhalla Inn if she stays there and she doesn't want to- she can get proof from the Employment Office but they say they can't sign anything if she isn't working or looking for work- she says she's not well enough to work- they require a note from the doctor- that's not free.
Crisse. Out of the fire and into the bureaucracy. So it is, then, that GG spends a lot of her first week or so in Baedal shouting at people behind desks and eventually starts hanging around one of the werecreature support centres (yes, really). The people in there (it is blissfully dark and cool, though it does smell of frightened animals, which puts GG somewhat on edge) sigh and say things like yes, this happens a lot. Xenians tend to be in worse health than humans, she learns from pamphlets; the unemployment rate is higher amongst them. They are in general poorer, less represented, with a higher chance of being murdered, attacked...
GG puts the pamphlet down (on the floor, where some of them are placed for the ease of clients who find themselves most comfortable on four legs- it's strange, being somewhere that's made with you in mind) and leaves. The service put her in contact with a thankfully sane and capable xenian doctor happy to take charity cases; a blessing, though a charity case isn't what GG enjoys being, so she tries not to think about it and promises to pay once she has a job.
In the meantime, she explores. She familiarises herself with the city- nose first. It's not uncommon for her to close her eyes, all the better to build up the picture in her head; the warm smell of horses, cigarette smoke, mud, cement, cold blood, hot blood, human blood, vampires, a something else and a something else- she can't put names to them, but she knows them by scent. She goes out at night, mainly, though coming to Baedal left her rather jet-lagged, for want of a better word; in her world it had been night, in Baedal, day. She bears the sunlight occasionally. After all, the city, while not sleeping, is rather balanced in favour of those who prefer daylight- apart from Mafaton, where she wanders a lot, conscious of the fact that people here likely know what she is; one only needs a halfway decent sense of smell to know that she's a wolf playing human. Once or twice she shifts, leaves her clothes in one of the discreet changing rooms the were service provides with the dingy lockers operable without opposable thumbs, and gives up on the disguise. She's not sure taking to the streets as a wolf would be a good idea elsewhere, but no one in Mafaton bats an eyelid. ...Except when they do.
She's not out of apocalypse mode just by virtue of washing her clothes and taking a bath, of seeing doctors and fussing about bureaucracy. When presented with food she still catches herself thinking how much of this can I save for later, how much of this should I ration out to the people depending on me- she's still wary of buying things (you can buy things here) because what if she has to move suddenly? She can't weigh herself down. But she tries. She still looks like a soldier- straight back, long stride, unflinching glare, unsmiling mouth, practical clothes, a kind of regimented shabbiness that speaks of a woman who has bigger things on her mind. She has never been party of an army- but apocalypse survival is a kind of fight all of its very own.
Perhaps it's wrong to be so unnerved by a city that works- well, that nearly works, she corrects, thinking about that pamphlets again. There's almost a desire to pronounce it too complicated, too difficult, too alien and stay indoors, or stick to the compound and the forest- but that would feel like giving in.

no subject
Ilde smiles at him as the door closes-- then leans against it, hand at the collar of her coat, and scrutinizes her unplanned companion. Ivan will probably have an opinion about her using his apartment as a sanctuary for a strange werewolf - and knowing him it'll probably involve the phrase 'SPCA' because he's a prick - but he's not home right now and this is more interesting than what she had planned today, anyway, so that's a problem for later. Anyway, there are worse people she could be getting to know better. Hal, for one.
“You should come upstairs,” she says, unbuttoning her coat, since GG seemed to grasp the first exchanges. “He might linger. We can see from the window when he fucks off.”
It's always a little incongruous when Ilde cusses with her precise and princessy diction, but if she had to offer an opinion, she'd probably think the fact she's talking to a wolf is really the strange part of this.
(At some point it might occur to her to introduce herself.)
no subject
It doesn't totally express 'hi, I can either be a wolf incapable of speech, a half-wolf monster or a naked woman, which is most appropriate for this conversation?' either, which is a shame, because it's a question GG would like answered- although not before she works out what, precisely, she did to the vampire, and how she can avoid doing it in future.
It would be a shame to lose Mafaton, after all; she likes it. But she also understands the concept of territory, especially like this. Which is why she allows Ilde to go first on the stairs, lowering her body slightly, automatically, in a show of deference. She's not sure Ilde lives here (to translate from wolf-brain, which is a confusing jumble of information from all her senses resulting in the general idea of vampire territory which is suddenly something which seems like a bad idea) but she's clearly here a lot, whereas GG is a stranger.
On a less animalistic level, of course, the gesture's also a mix of 'thank you' and 'don't feed me to your vampire friends'.
no subject
Still, something about being actually followed by a wolf is slightly unsettling, deference aside; she can feel her there but she can't hear her and it makes her feel momentarily blind, unsafe. She isn't helpless (and she isn't unarmed), but she's acutely conscious of her own weaknesses, 'lack of impulse control' chief among them.
--but it's fine. It's fine, and she lets them into the apartment - a singular vampire's territory, as opposed to the vampire-controlled canton at large, but Ilde's perfume lingers in it and some of the more personalizing touches are more her hand than his. She doesn't live here, can't live here, but she splits enough of her time that it's almost-but-not-quite semantics. When she crosses to the window, hiding herself behind a glamour of clear glass and empty space, the irate gentleman is (as anticipated) still outside the building. It's not completely unusual; he has reasons to be there, which is why he knows her comings and goings in the first place, that she has on occasion had reason to bring a dog here.
An actual dog, not a werewolf.
“They tend not to like outsiders here, very much. Sometimes less than others, I guess.” It's almost absent, but from habit she looks towards GG as she says it; that'd be very useful if GG could currently talk or if Ilde were at all able to read the responses of a wolf, which she isn't. “Um-- I don't know how it works, for you, but if you could possibly have two less feet, that might make things easier.”
She's an odd little thing, but politely well-meaning. At least right now.
no subject
It's not a reassuring look, but she explains; "--I'm afraid there is a, a clothing issue if you want me to look more human."
Warning for Ilde's sake, not hers; she's given up on modesty at this point. Of course, whether or not the lip movements of a talking wolf-woman are close enough to human for her to read is rather an important question.
no subject
“I can take mine off as well, if it'd make you more comfortable--?”
--but she's never actually been very good at relating to the concept enough to realize that if GG were having personal modesty issues, this would probably not help.
After a beat, “I'm mostly deaf. I can't read your lips that way.”
no subject
In that case-- GG stretches and twists again, fur recedes into skin and she shakes herself like a dog getting out of water, acclimatising to the new shape. She stands up, not particularly bothered by her lack of clothes. There comes a point where it's just broadly irrelevant.
"Sorry about that," she says. "It's fine. I'm okay with it. I was mentioning it for your benefit. Some people like it better when strangers wear clothes."
She takes a deep breath- not actually having remembered to introduce herself either. "He's still out there." She doesn't have to look.
no subject
Hard to say; it might just have been a warning, which is nothing out of the ordinary.
Then--
“I'm Ilde. You're from my world, I think.” It's oddly placid, reserved; her world or the other one like it, and either of those options are...complicated, differently. But she's been getting good at discerning one magical signature from the other, and she'd met werecreatures before Baedal. She remembers how it felt, understands it better now with practise.
no subject
She's being wry because being outright self-pitying isn't her style, but she's fairly sure they can both agree that if they are from the same world, said world is- well. Pretty fucked up. "How do you know?"
no subject
“Hello; I averted a catastrophe in front of your building, so don't be surprised if your apartment smells like werewolf when you get home.” Watching GG by the sofa, not quite on it, there's a voice in her head that sounds alarmingly like her boyfriend making a crack about dogs on the furniture, which prompts her to add-- “If your objections contain the phrase 'SPCA', not only do I not care, I'm definitely not fucking you. Text me.”
--best girlfriend ever.
When she picks up the thread of previous conversation again, she does it seamlessly as if that interruption never happened, or at least as if it never really interrupted anything, switching back and forth between trains of thought like they're all running concurrently. “You know scents. It's like that. But different.”
Helpful.
no subject
She actually does know what Ilde means, too; it's probably how she'd describe her sense of smell and ability to differentiate people by it, amongst other things. You know, you just know, it's like seeing things but different- like colours, but different.
"I get it," she says. "So, uh-" She drums her fingers awkwardly on her arm, casts a look around, evidently not exactly relaxed and not exactly sure what to say. "Who's your vampire?"
Yep; chances are, Ivan will forever be Ilde's vampire in GG's head from now on.
no subject
(There is a conversation that she needs to have with Sonja and she-- doesn't want to, because it doesn't fit the narrative that she tells herself of them in her head, there's not supposed to be Sonja's path and Ilde's path, they are not supposed to be separate, it is-- not now.)
“There's a few of us. And from the other one.”
no subject
"The other- oh." Not something she wants to think about. She's having trouble keeping every new bit of information straight in her head, if she's honest. Fortunately, she's good at dealing with these things...in some capacity. Though right now, honestly, she wants some kind of emergency. When she's left to rest and sort things out in her head, she just goes around in circles. She needs something to do.
"Yeah. I haven't met anyone from- the other yet. But there are people I know here." Though she'll stay. clammed up with regard to their actual identities- for no reason but habitual suspicion, a desire to control.
"I'm new." She glances over her shoulder, in the direction of the window. "I guess I have things to figure out in terms of...etiquette."
no subject
Having business there is one thing, and it's not as though there's no one outside Mafaton who ever has a reason to come and go, and it's certainly not as though only vampires live there (the goretax speaks to that), but soon after a mess the city is still rebuilding from, and with the way some vampires just don't like werewolves-- Ilde's tone isn't critical, just matter of fact. It's a complicated time to be anyone.
“They're touchy sometimes,” she adds, an affectionately dismissive summary; she's never taken vampires, en masse, quite so seriously as they'd probably prefer her to. (Or as Ivan would prefer her to, given her questionable self-preservation instinct.) “Not everybody. Some.”
no subject
"Thank you. I don't think I said. For the information, as well as, uh-" She flashes her teeth. "Keeping anyone from ending up as dinner."
She doesn't specify who- although she knows very well that regardless of who would actually have won in a fight, hurting a vampire on vampire territory wouldn't have gone well for her.
no subject
“Anyway, I hate having to walk through blood when I've bought new shoes.”
...yes, that's why she did it, surely.
no subject
She drums her fingers on the sofa and voices a stray thought which has evidently been preying on her; "You know, it's funny- being a wolf a lot of the time means clothes aren't that important? But I'm apparently still human enough to feel weird about the idea of hanging out naked on a stranger's couch." Hence why she's still standing. There's a slightly wry, self-deprecating grin on her face, and she's not entirely comfortable making wisecracks, Ilde being, effectively, an unknown. But she likes her, in an odd kind of way.
...And if it were Ilde's sofa, she'd probably be totally fine with it, she realises. Which just doesn't make sense.
no subject
(Nobody wonders what she's hiding if she doesn't seem to hide much of anything, is the theory. It has mixed results.)
Instead.
“We could always sit on the floor,” she offers, with a hint of humour that's underscored by the blithely earnest way that she delivers it - there are moments Ilde is almost a parody of herself, too much to be quite real temperamentally as well as-- everything else.
no subject
She grins.
"We could, but if you're fine with it, then these, uh-" She pats the sofa with, well. Amusement. But not without admiration. "...mm. Kind of classy yoga retreat decor. I like it a lot."
She means this as a compliment.
So, she gives in. And sits down. And adds; "Is your boyfriend likely to try something about dogs on the furniture or have you got him scared?"
no subject
(There's something about the way she says her name.)
no subject
She's heard of her. Well she's heard of a Sonja who is very likely to have people scared. Lea has...warned her, somewhat- and having seen what Lea can do and therefore knowing what faqra in general are capable of, GG needs no more persuasion to be careful.
"Sonja Garin?"
But you can be curious and careful simultaneously, and GG likes knowing what's going on around her. Well, doesn't everyone? But loyalties and hierarchies are of particular interest to her. Her own loyalty is steadfast, unbreakable; she just wants to know where everyone else stands, and therefore what to think of them. She wonders if it's a pack mentality, wonders how much is wolf and how much isn't.
no subject
“Sonja,” she confirms, peaceably. If Sonja Garin is an urban legend then Ilde is her storyteller, and there's something like a smile when she talks about her - not exactly a smile, but a warmth, a secret thing, like beckoning someone with a crooked finger and no, there is a smile, and (this is where the monsters are). Ilde loves Sonja the way faeries do, pretty and unsettling, loyalty-as-obsession, and that's what she builds her home and her steadiness around, here. That's where she stands.
“We've been here for about a year.”
no subject
--not that GG's loyalty to Lea is quite so co-dependent, but it is distinctly fire-forged, a relationship informed by the ending of the world; in such conditions, absolute loyalty and substitute family is just what's necessary. GG rebuilt herself after the image, a changed person, a different creature entirely, and Lea was always there, a part of the process of becoming the person she is now.
Which is to say that to an extent that doesn't strike her as too strange, and neither does Ilde's not-quite-human smile because for GG, not-quite-human isn't the same as not-quite-right. It would be stranger to smell fae and see Ilde mimicking humanity perfectly, like a discordant note.
"How?" she says, before she really thinks about it. "I mean- ugh, no, ignore me, that's me not being acclimatised yet." They've both gotten used to more. Haven't they? Well, they both must have done, because they've both survived the apocalypse. "You like it."
Not a question. Well, she does too, in a way that makes her feel guilty, because she had things to do at home.
no subject