Ser Gendry Waters (
bullhorned) wrote in
driftfleet2016-06-25 07:17 pm
Entry tags:
01. Oh not this again.
Who: Gendry
Broadcast: Nope
Action: SS Golden, Planetside
When: Today and June/July
The Golden
He hadn't been on the Marsiva all that long, but he had been on the vast ship long enough to come to the conclusion he didn't care for it at all. The food was strange and it all reminded him a little too much of the Station, which he'd never really liked all that much in the first place. More than that, he'd noticed how different things were around here. It reminded him of blood granite, though he didn't really mind that part all that much. All that business with Shards had always been an enormous headache equal only to the amount of times he banged his forehead in the tunnels of Troichean Beinn. Still, he hadn't been prepared for being in space. He hadn't figured out how to deal with that, so he'd made the decision not to.
When he arrived on the Golden to fanfare and annoying bits of confetti, the first thing he did was scowl. The second thing he did was find a direction to glare at and then scowl a little bit more. It was not that Gendry was extremely upset, it was just that brooding was something of an art form for him and he was at his best when boiling in sullen silence. All thanks to a bit of a chip in his head, he now knew exactly what he ought to be doing. So after mumbling his greetings to anyone who just so happened to be about to welcome him, he found himself in the engineering room. There were a few tense moments where he tried to grasp exactly what it is he was looking at, why he seemed to know so much about it, and if that was the sort of thing it was worth getting worried about. In the end, he decided that as long as he had valid reasons for hitting, then he might as well get on with it. There was a valve that he could instinctively see needed a great deal of banging, so he did.
Don't Hug Me I'm Scared
By the time the first native had got around to giving him a reassuring hug, Gendry had concluded that he now knew of three worlds he held a deep contempt for, which coincidentally happened to be all of the ones he'd experienced so far. But it was better than the ship, so he simply took extra care to watch that no one got close enough for any unexpected proximity. After spending a few hours wandering about the market area of one of the primary settlements, Gendry had found exactly where he ought to be. He'd found a smithy and after talking up his own experience (he'd apprenticed with dwarves after all!), he'd found himself gainfully employed and under the incredibly misguided idea that he had simply found a new planet to live on, this was how the rest of his life was going to be, and that he'd better just decide to be happy with it because that's simply how it was.
Rather than engineering as he was supposed to be, Gendry spent quite a lot of time making whatever was required of him, though it generally tended to be of the more mundane tool-like variety. When he wasn't working, he was finding places to buy his meals, trekking back to his private treehouse in an attempt to avoid risky hugs, and not actually paying all that much attention to the forests because he'd only just been in a world chock full of magical forests and this one didn't really seem all that exceptional to him.
(ooc: Gendry will just be here and there, trying to start his life entirely over because this is just the sort of thing that tends to happen to him. Find him at a smith, or out shopping, or trying to shoo little native children from trying to hug his leg because why)
Broadcast: Nope
Action: SS Golden, Planetside
When: Today and June/July
The Golden
He hadn't been on the Marsiva all that long, but he had been on the vast ship long enough to come to the conclusion he didn't care for it at all. The food was strange and it all reminded him a little too much of the Station, which he'd never really liked all that much in the first place. More than that, he'd noticed how different things were around here. It reminded him of blood granite, though he didn't really mind that part all that much. All that business with Shards had always been an enormous headache equal only to the amount of times he banged his forehead in the tunnels of Troichean Beinn. Still, he hadn't been prepared for being in space. He hadn't figured out how to deal with that, so he'd made the decision not to.
When he arrived on the Golden to fanfare and annoying bits of confetti, the first thing he did was scowl. The second thing he did was find a direction to glare at and then scowl a little bit more. It was not that Gendry was extremely upset, it was just that brooding was something of an art form for him and he was at his best when boiling in sullen silence. All thanks to a bit of a chip in his head, he now knew exactly what he ought to be doing. So after mumbling his greetings to anyone who just so happened to be about to welcome him, he found himself in the engineering room. There were a few tense moments where he tried to grasp exactly what it is he was looking at, why he seemed to know so much about it, and if that was the sort of thing it was worth getting worried about. In the end, he decided that as long as he had valid reasons for hitting, then he might as well get on with it. There was a valve that he could instinctively see needed a great deal of banging, so he did.
Don't Hug Me I'm Scared
By the time the first native had got around to giving him a reassuring hug, Gendry had concluded that he now knew of three worlds he held a deep contempt for, which coincidentally happened to be all of the ones he'd experienced so far. But it was better than the ship, so he simply took extra care to watch that no one got close enough for any unexpected proximity. After spending a few hours wandering about the market area of one of the primary settlements, Gendry had found exactly where he ought to be. He'd found a smithy and after talking up his own experience (he'd apprenticed with dwarves after all!), he'd found himself gainfully employed and under the incredibly misguided idea that he had simply found a new planet to live on, this was how the rest of his life was going to be, and that he'd better just decide to be happy with it because that's simply how it was.
Rather than engineering as he was supposed to be, Gendry spent quite a lot of time making whatever was required of him, though it generally tended to be of the more mundane tool-like variety. When he wasn't working, he was finding places to buy his meals, trekking back to his private treehouse in an attempt to avoid risky hugs, and not actually paying all that much attention to the forests because he'd only just been in a world chock full of magical forests and this one didn't really seem all that exceptional to him.
(ooc: Gendry will just be here and there, trying to start his life entirely over because this is just the sort of thing that tends to happen to him. Find him at a smith, or out shopping, or trying to shoo little native children from trying to hug his leg because why)

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But this time, she said it more slowly -- as though she anticipated some deficiency of sense or intellect might have gotten in the way the first time.
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But he didn't see it. There was no lie and there was no deception. If that was the case, then mayhaps... she'd believe his.
He shook his head at first, but had to lower his head because he wouldn't be able to look her in the eye. "No. Seems not."
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Sansa was caught between pressing her investigation, and relenting. In the end, she settled for half-measures. "A-are you a passenger in the fleet, then? Another ward of the Atroma?"
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"I've left the fleet," he explained. "I ain't got no use for iron ships and stars. I'll stay here."
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"They ain't stopped me yet. And if they do, it makes no matter to you." The subtle accusation was present in his voice, even if not in his actions. He was still standing there, seemingly unwilling to just walk away and be done with it. None of this should even matter to him. He'd arrived on this planet not expecting to see any of the people he'd abandoned a year ago, so he shouldn't be at all dismayed if they simply abandoned him back.
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"It would matter to me if you somehow dodged their leads and escape them," she countered -- but weakly. Her eyes look over his head, as though looking for someone else in the crowd. Looking for someone safe.
"No one else has."
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"Might be I will." He paused, halting his departure if only because there was at least someone he knew he ought to be asking. "Arya. Did they fetch her too?"
Even if she forgot everything about the Drabwurld, she might still at least know him.
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And Jon and Robb and Bran. But her litany of Starks and one Snow was interrupted by the sudden, soft-wet thud against her back. The children from before were back, but had now clambered up to a higher branch -- hanging out the window of a treehouse, they were snickering and clapping each other on the shoulder. The eldest had thrown his half-eaten fruit at her. Not maliciously, he would say if caught and pressed, but because he thought upsetting the young woman with the long copper hair might force her to fall. And if she fell, she might take the grumpy young man's hand. And that, the child thought, would benefit them both.
With a sound of choked horror, she did indeed teeter. Her slippered heel slid on the dry bark, and her foot lost its purchase. Sansa went tumbling downward to the leaves and the detritus and the dirt on the ground below, landing in a heap of blue silk.
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"Sansa," he said sharply. "Are you hurt?"
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"Yes. No. Not a lot." She only fell. Children fell all the time, and they laughed it off. In fact, she could hear children's laughter floating down from up above, and she eyed their grinning faces with sulky judgement. After a moment, they disappeared. Back into the tree-tops.
"Who are you?" He might be a stranger, but she was a proper lady and she'd taken a tumble. So she held out a stiff hand for help back onto her feet. She wasn't so boldly independent as to try standing all on her own. Doubtless, had she tried, she'd trip and fall again and be even more of a laughing stock.
But, she noticed, he didn't laugh.
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"Gendry." He didn't bother with Ser and certainly made no effort to call himself Baratheon, because that meant so little to him. A year ago he'd stopped trying to elevate himself enough to try and appeal to her, so there seemed little point in starting all over again.
He clasped her hand and stood to hoist her back to her feet.
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"Gendry," she repeated. And it was clear she did not know the name at all. But when she spoke it, it tasted like mint. It tastes like something else: bitter, sweet, and dark. Like the fake chocolate flavouring back on the Blue Fish. But much much better.
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"You broke your promise." He breathed in again and the air was once more thick with life and the sounds of nature.
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With a lost look in her eyes, she turns her attention back onto the young man. Gendry. She knew nothing of his name, but when he'd touched her she'd felt a jolt of familiarity course through her body. Sansa wasn't to know that it wasn't her recognition she'd been feeling, but rather his -- hijacked, a moment, by contact.
"Do you know my brothers? My sister?"
Is that why you know my name? She didn't want to trust him, but perhaps she could if he knew her by way of her family.
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He'd rattled them all of from memories he'd shared with her, from those individuals he'd met or either heard her speak of. He might very well have mentioned the name of Eddard Stark as well, but he knew too well by now it was cruel to speak of that. Very nearly he began to speak again, this time about her. But he silenced himself, knowing it made no matter if he did. She did not know him and it would hardly matter if he claimed she did.
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"When?" Her voice was strained, as though she didn't want to ask the question. And yet ask it she must. "When did you travel with my sister?"
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"I did," he said firmly. "She'll remember it. Or not. It makes no matter."
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Mayhaps the Lannisters never had her. Mayhaps she never got sent North. Sansa looked prepared to ask again, to defy his deflection, but in the end she relented. Craven.
What did matter, however: "--Did you keep her safe?"
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"She didn't die," he answered. "But it was never on me to keep her safe."
He'd already had to tackle his guilt for having lost track of her a long time ago. Yet somehow it still lingered in the back of his mind, condemning him for having been unwilling to follow her on the last leg of her journey.
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"But are from Westeros, then," she hastened to clarify.
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"King's Landing."
There was a time, at least before he'd spent two years in another land, when his accent was thick enough for anyone to tell. Less so now, but much of it was still there.
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"How, ah, lovely." She tried to be polite; it failed miserably.
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It was poor enough proof, but he'd had the time to learn about why the current king wasn't a Baratheon at all. Black of hair and blue of eyes were what set him apart as a Baratheon and had caused him no end of trouble because of it.
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"Careful who hears you," she tested his waters. "There's a Lannister in the fleet."
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