Bran Stark (
summerschild) wrote in
driftfleet2015-11-25 03:48 pm
Entry tags:
mingle ye blue fishes
Who: The crew of the Blue Fish, and visitors
Broadcast: Nah
Action: Aboard the Fish of Blue
When: 11/25 and onward
[We're baaaack! Whether or not you enjoyed your time aboard the Marsiva, there's really no place like space home. With a couple of new features to explore, it's time to mingle the hell out of this ship, comrades.]
Broadcast: Nah
Action: Aboard the Fish of Blue
When: 11/25 and onward
[We're baaaack! Whether or not you enjoyed your time aboard the Marsiva, there's really no place like space home. With a couple of new features to explore, it's time to mingle the hell out of this ship, comrades.]

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[He holds up his communicator to point at the screen.]
A bit like this, only bigger, and you can watch stories.
[He looks content - an expression that hasn't been on his face much in the year and a half since his fall. Of course he would prefer to be living in the company of Sansa, but the Blue Fish is at full capacity, and he doesn't want to leave Allen and Toph. Sansa's frequent visits are nice, though. There is something sad behind her smile, but he tries to bring it out as often as he can.]
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[ her eyebrows flicker upwards -- only momentarily -- and she looks shocked. shocked, and charmed. certainly, there had been televisions on the marsiva but she hadn't gone near anything that looked altogether too odd.
sansa pulls thread and needle through her embroidery frame, and glances (between stitches) at her brother. ] What manner of stories?
[ good ones? sad ones? exciting ones? ]
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[His tastes in future media are questionable, in part due to being introduced to it by Shawn Hunter. But he isn't aware of this.]
Shawn told me there are all sorts, though. Scary ones, and funny ones, and ones about people in love.
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Like books in a library. [ although she's quite certain no one has ever written any books about falling sharks. she hopes not, at least. it sounds abominable. ]
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Yes, only the box shows you what's happening instead of thinking it in your head.
[Bran has always been thrilled by magic and wonders, and the strange inventions he's encountered here certainly fall under that heading. He would love to show Sansa every little thing he's discovered, but he doesn't want to overwhelm her.]
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[ ah, there returneth the old chill in her voice: the slight snub, as though sansa stark alone knows what's fashionable and what isn't. pretending to be that kind of girl made her feel a little more...normal. ]
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There were others, a hundred or more. Some of them showed impossible things, but some were just like home.
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[ she betrays a lot more honesty when she sits beside her brother. although she hides the brunt of her sorrows, she isn't afraid to express a down-to-the-bone dissatisfaction with the westeros she's left behind. by all accounts, this place feels safer. ]
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Trying not to let himself tremble, he reaches over to edge his hand up beside Sansa's own.]
... I wanted to ride to King's Landing. I wanted to save you and Arya.
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Of course you did. [ she doesn't doubt her brother's bravery. not at all. but she doubts he could have made any difference, and his proclamation only puts her in mind of how joffrey would have put bran's head on the castle walls as well. her jaw tightens. ] I thought of you often. I missed you.
[ perhaps not at first but -- over time, she'd missed every sibling with a heavy ache. and so much grief. ]
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[He hooks his finger around hers, and leaves them linked on the arm-rest of his chair. It's the only comfort he can give her, apart from his presence.]
... You know of what happened to Winterfell.
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They celebrated in King's Landing. [ they celebrated everything that hurt her. ] And they said you died.
[ i wept for days upon days. ]
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I didn't. I didn't die.
[He knows this is a secret, that not even Jon could know, but Ino was right - telling his dear sister can harm nothing, so long as knowledge cannot be carried home. And Sansa deserves to know. Just looking at her hurts, to see how frail and weary she is, and know that he couldn't save her from it. He wants her to smile again.]
We hid in the crypts - Rickon and I, and Hodor and Osha and Howland Reed's children. We hid, and they killed everybody else.
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[ her voice cracks and breaks. a fine mist rolls across her eyes, but she dares herself not to cry in front of her baby brother. she'd managed to be porcelain and steel before a whole court -- she could manage it with bran, as well. ] Bodies, Bran. There were bodies.
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[If he were to speak any more quietly, he would be making no sound at all. His heart still feels heavy with guilt at the thought. Two innocent boys - and so many others - died because he could not hold Winterfell.]
It wasn't us, Sansa.
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she nods. ]
Then I am glad. [ ... ] I thought I was the only one.
[ the sole standing stark: the heir. she didn't want that responsibility. ]
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The only...
[No. No, that's not true. Because they don't know what happened to Arya, no one knows, and she was always so strong. And Jon Snow may not be a Stark, but he's alive and fighting at the Wall. And that leaves...
All at once, the cold certainty sinks into his stomach.]
... Robb?
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I thought -- [ what? she knows nothing of out-of-step chronology. ] If you were alive, certainly word would have reached you. Bran, didn't you hear...?
[ guilt and anger bubbles in her belly. i'm so sorry. ] It happened at the Twins.
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Robb is dead.]
N-no.
[It's the only word he can force out. His face is white as ice.]
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she can't even tell him that their brother died bravely, in battle. all that's left is humiliation and hurt. and (sansa realizes with a second surge of sorrow) bran must not know about their lady mother, either.
the wheeled chair is an awkward contraption, but sansa works around it. she pushes her thread and needle aside and lets it fall to the floor. she stoops to wrap her arms around her younger brother's shoulders, and in an act of bold sentiment that shocks even herself she cradles the back of his head with her palm.
she hugs him near to her. ]
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Sansa isn't warm and soothing like Catelyn, not after what horrors she must have been through in King's Landing. She doesn't smell like a fire in the hearth and sweet summer herbs, but he clings to her like a lifeline, and as he presses his wet cheek against her shoulder he strives to imagine himself home, before everyone left him. Everyone left him and none of them came back, and perhaps they never will. Robb won't. The thought won't stop repeating in his head.
Robb's dead. Robb's dead. Robb was killed, just like Father. I will never see Robb again.
Then, another awful thought creeps in, sharp as a needle. It takes the wind out of him, and as he lifts his head from Sansa's shoulder he can only whisper.]
Mother...?
[He feels as though he already knows the answer.]
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even though a lie would be kinder. ]
Mother stood beside Robb always in the war, I think. She went where he went, and sure enough she was at the Twins alongside him. [ her lower lip trembles. she tries very hard to be the grown-up proper lady she needs to be in this second. ] They murdered her. And they murdered Robb.
[ whispers and tears. ]
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... She left before I woke up. [The words are bitter, but his voice is hollow.] You all did.
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[ she sniffles. there is an ache in her rib-cage. ] Before the end, I think even Father regretted leaving Winterfell.
[ it brought nothing but ruin. ]
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It isn't fair, though. He can't push that on Sansa. Just one look into her eyes can tell him that she has seen and suffered enough.]
... Stay here. Please.
[It's barely a whisper, as his fists loosen just slightly against her back.]
Can you stay on the Blue Fish?
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