My name is Max. (
theroadwarrior) wrote in
driftfleet2016-01-08 02:44 pm
Entry tags:
action.
Who: Max and the crew of the SS Starstruck and any visitors.
Broadcast: N/A
Action: Max is sick after falling into a frozen lake. He is insufferable about it.he's been awful active for an antisocial dude
When: January 8-9th-ish.
[After a rather disappointing day of nearly freezing to death thanks to big ugly creatures, hallucinations, and generalized know-nothingness of an arctic terrain, Max is confined (at last) to a bed aboard the SS Starstruck. Well, partly. A slight fever and a sneezy, lethargic exposition is apprently not enough to keep him pinned down.
A sick Max is even more insufferable, turns out.
It's just — difficult for him to explain in words, what being still does to him. It's one thing to sit in a driver's seat, or even a passenger's seat, and to get out and feel your ass and legs numbed after hours of going on and on until the guzzoline runs dry. At least you can see the open world whizzing passed you.
But a bed. For one thing, Max hasn't slept in an actual bed in... He's not sure how many days. Not counting the rare occurrences, he's not even sure he's slept in anything more than a car's reclined seat since he first began his journey on the dystopian-gone-apocalyptic roadways. This is torturous. He's fairly sure Peggy and Nami and Furiosa are out to get him for sure. As it turns out, no-nonsense women are still far and beyond his greatest weakness and adversary. He's been shed of his bulky uncomfortable jacket and left in his mid-sleeve shirt, and in that way he's looking like an paradox: the most comfortable discomforted man in the galaxy.
So yep, when people aren't looking, he's getting up and wandering back into the cargo holds, where he had originally spent most of his time. In fact, one could probably board a shuttle and find him passed out asleep in the driver's seat, swaddled up in blankets. And still with a mildly sour disposition. Be careful waking him, he swings sometimes.
He only wanders to the main control room, where the crew would pilot their ship, when it's empty enough. Otherwise, he'll dip into the kitchen and eat, because being sick back home didn't mean avoiding food; if you were needing sustenance and it was there, you had to keep going, force something down to keep your strength up. Max was fairly good at it.
Unlike... you know. Being horrible at staying put.
On the bright side, he doesn't consider returning to the planet?
Not yet, anyway.]
Broadcast: N/A
Action: Max is sick after falling into a frozen lake. He is insufferable about it.
When: January 8-9th-ish.
[After a rather disappointing day of nearly freezing to death thanks to big ugly creatures, hallucinations, and generalized know-nothingness of an arctic terrain, Max is confined (at last) to a bed aboard the SS Starstruck. Well, partly. A slight fever and a sneezy, lethargic exposition is apprently not enough to keep him pinned down.
A sick Max is even more insufferable, turns out.
It's just — difficult for him to explain in words, what being still does to him. It's one thing to sit in a driver's seat, or even a passenger's seat, and to get out and feel your ass and legs numbed after hours of going on and on until the guzzoline runs dry. At least you can see the open world whizzing passed you.
But a bed. For one thing, Max hasn't slept in an actual bed in... He's not sure how many days. Not counting the rare occurrences, he's not even sure he's slept in anything more than a car's reclined seat since he first began his journey on the dystopian-gone-apocalyptic roadways. This is torturous. He's fairly sure Peggy and Nami and Furiosa are out to get him for sure. As it turns out, no-nonsense women are still far and beyond his greatest weakness and adversary. He's been shed of his bulky uncomfortable jacket and left in his mid-sleeve shirt, and in that way he's looking like an paradox: the most comfortable discomforted man in the galaxy.
So yep, when people aren't looking, he's getting up and wandering back into the cargo holds, where he had originally spent most of his time. In fact, one could probably board a shuttle and find him passed out asleep in the driver's seat, swaddled up in blankets. And still with a mildly sour disposition. Be careful waking him, he swings sometimes.
He only wanders to the main control room, where the crew would pilot their ship, when it's empty enough. Otherwise, he'll dip into the kitchen and eat, because being sick back home didn't mean avoiding food; if you were needing sustenance and it was there, you had to keep going, force something down to keep your strength up. Max was fairly good at it.
Unlike... you know. Being horrible at staying put.
On the bright side, he doesn't consider returning to the planet?
Not yet, anyway.]

action.
Didn't get to keep the gun — made a... um. Deal to split meat with the natives.
Kitchen's fully stocked. Should last a while, if it's properly cared for.
action.
Save up your credits and perhaps by the time we stop at another planet or waystation, you might find something worth purchasing.
action.
[It's a bit snarky, if you read between the serious nature of his voice.
He moves to stand, using the shuttle wall as support for a more prominent limp as he scans the small space. He may never say it, but he's extremely glad for Ino's medicine — he's getting back to the basics. Funny, he's only two inches taller than her. But it's the broadness of the bastard that makes him seem more sturdy.]
Should get these armed, too. Hidden weaponry on them. Blades and guns.
Should be a priority.
[After he arms himself, of course.]
action.
If you'd like, certainly. [ he wants for make-busy work, and for the security of knowing there's a weapon to hand when he needs one. she can't fault him for that. ] We could see to it. You and I.
[ it's a lot like a truce -- an offer of a joint effort. peggy's not certain the atroma will even allow one of their shuttles to stay subtly armed, but it's the attempt that's most important now. ]
action.
Max looks incredulous at the idea, like it's not in practice often (it's not).
But eventually, begrudgingly, he turns his gaze away and hums.]
... Better than leaving it unarmed. This whole place could use stashed weapons. If not guns, knives. Tasers, maybe. Good to put people down in case we're — hmm. Boarded. [He glances around the area, talking a bit more than usual — rambling, maybe more to himself than to her. It's much easier for him to speak when it's about things that kill people, you know. Plans to outlive someone else.] Everything here is temporary. Sooner or later, you fight for it or lose it.
Better to start early.
action.
My gun stays with my things. [ a quasi-gentle way of assuring him she owned one. ] And I didn't see much on offer down on Arslae. But there were knives, and I have some credits to spare. I could pop down and haggle what I can out of the market-men before we leave.
[ in the end (sad though it is) his plan remains a clever one. she'll support it. ]
action.
I have credits. Could go look, too.
[Except he's still flustered with fever, hardly good on his feet. He forgot about the whole 'you fell into icy lakes and are sick' issue. Who keeps track of that kind of thing? Not Max. He's got shit to do. If there's one thing that skirts by his need to live, it's his need to be in motion.
He's been losing his mind, confined in his illness.]
action.
[ but the moment she says it, she understands how futile a command it's going to be. there are many ways that max is different from any creature she's ever met -- he's filthy, and rude, and shattered. he's also sick and recovering. but peggy thinks upon her own low moments, and how she would have been livid to hear someone talk to her the way peggy's trying to talk to max. her expression pinches. ]
If you came with me -- [ she offers him the thinnest of olive branches ] -- would you stay close by? And listen to what I say, so I can get you back here in one piece without Nami and all the rest of them shouting me down for my foolishness in letting you back down on the planet for a few hours?
action. 1/2
Yes, he sure does. He even folds his arms.]
Don't need a babysitter.
[Remember how he hung up rudely the second time on the network, when he was an ice cube?
Yes.]
Do I look like a sprog?
action.
The slang — the fond nickname — leaves before he can think, and he stops, expression softening, leaning back. He seems thoughtful for a moment, before rising up and speaking without as much indignation and belligerence. But still that stubborn streak is strong. He reaches for his jacket, given back by Nami, rubs his nose on his sleeve.]
I'll be fine on my own.
[Always have been. He doesn't need a bunch of people pestering him about his health; he can handle it, and he doesn't need to — get these strange connections to his crew anyway, because it's fleeting and he knows that. He was getting to sentimental in the other world, and now he's getting too chatty here. He blames the sickness. Clogs his thoughts up.]
action.
peggy almost -- almost reaches for his arm to stop him. instead, however, she makes it clear that she's not leaving this shuttle so long as he's on it. ]
But it'll be my hide that's tanned for letting you wander off, won't it?
[ she's surviving, too. ]
action.
Shouldn't get hung up on wandering crewmates.
[He plops back down in the pilot's chair, looking a bit more comfortable, a bit more determined to do the task before him. Even if his nose is red and he looks like he should really be sleeping.
... The mussed hair is typical, sick or not, though.]
Worst case, I vanish and you get another space for crew.
[SUCH GOOD THOUGHTS WITH THIS GUY.]
action.
[ pointed. matter-of-fact. she doesn't say it as though it's somehow inherently better. in many ways, it's not. short of being captain bloody america, such a stance is often a death-wish. ]
action.
Same case, same outcome. Wouldn't hold it against you.
[It's honest, because he'd leave people behind if they'd vanished without a trace.
... Most of the time.
There are always exceptions.
Max always seems to find them.
Though — for some her her honesty, he'll offer a bit of obvious honesty of his own.]
I don't... um... stay. For long.
action.
action.
[He doesn't seem too bothered by the whole 'Atroma's will' thing.]
Mmm. I'm used to breaking out of prisoners.
[Whether it's intentionally or not.
Nothing likes to hold him for too long.]
action.
pretend i wrote 'prison's up there yup
We're not in real cages. We're fed. We can sleep comfortably. Arm ourselves over time.
We have room to figure it out.
roger roger!!
[ she grabs a seat next to the pilot. if they're going to the planet, she wants a comfortable ride. ideally, she'd like to fetch a jacket or perhaps some boots. but she fears leaving him alone with the shuttle. ]
But a cage that requires a long-term approach is still a cage. [ even if it gives her everything she'd thought she'd always wanted. old comrades; steve; respect that isn't won by climbing twice as strenuously as any man. ]
It being comfortable shouldn't cloud our choice of words.
no subject
Say what you want; just not a cage to me. It's a leash.
[He seems fairly confident of that. But then, he's been locked down in a cage barely big enough for him to fit in for many weeks. He's not about to say 'cage' is his word for this place, even if others use it.]
There's a big difference.
no subject
so, instead, she nods. ] Also an apt word.
no subject
Could agree on another term being 'pain in the ass'.
[the most serious face at the recommendation]
no subject
[ peggy carter might be (to some extent) kind, but she isn't shy. and pulls no punches. ]
no subject
... To which that means yes, yes she's right, but he's not going to say that.]
no subject
Don't worry, big guy. Your secret's safe with me.
[ someday, she'll run out of silly things to call him. and on that day she might have to ask his name. ]