bullhorned: (Freakin' Highborns)
Ser Gendry Waters ([personal profile] bullhorned) wrote in [community profile] driftfleet2016-08-01 04:53 pm

02. this is my life now

Who: Gendry
Broadcast: NEVER
Action: On the Iskaulit and the Golden
When: August

The Golden

He'd went to sleep in his nice comfortable bed on the planet, completely oblivious to the notion that the fleet would be leaving that very same night. It was simply one of those things for which he'd had no intention of worrying about it. He woke with a start later because his augment was designed for one thing, which was to tend to the ship's engines. So when the ship began to sound just a bit ragged, he instinctively rolled off the floor the Atroma had unceremoniously dumped him in.

So they were right. He muttered some curses, then pulled himself up to his feet and went to work. After an hour making careful calibrations and monitoring the sensor readings (thank gods he'd learned to read!), he was finally able to return things to what he thought was comfortable. He would afterwards reflect that he really had absolutely no idea what he'd been doing, but the important thing was that the ship hadn't blown up and that this was about the best anyone could hope for. Though as he looked at the contents of what he had to work with, an idea had begun to come to mind.

Some days later, his crew would find him having already removed many of the panels off the stove as he tried to find a way to increase the heat. This was only his preliminary efforts, but he was fully convinced that he could cobble up the components he would need to make a workable forge up here in space. He had the experience, the knowledge, and absolutely none of the permission required to make it a reality.

(tl;dr: find gendry tearing up the kitchen, working on the ship, or paying a little too close of attention to what the exercise equipment is made of.)

The Iskaulit

At some point, someone had the decency to tell Gendry that he wouldn't have to live the rest of his life confined to one tiny ship trying to take things apart in order to stay busy. Instead he was able to live his life confined to several ships, one of which was large enough to be its own sort of marketplace. So one shuttle ride later and he was there!

There was absolutely nothing that interested him. The purpose of the gym eluded him, he didn't want to meditate, he barely could read so books were right out, he wasn't feeling particularly devout, and he hadn't been long enough away from the planet to feel particularly sentimental about seeing plants being grown. So that only left the space bar. With the well practiced ease of a man who spent an awful lot of time on a medieval world, he ordered an ale. What he received wasn't quite as frothy or watery or dirty as what he was used to drinking, but it was certainly a beverage. Eventually a few drinks later and he finds himself sitting on a bench in the public art display, staring at the mural of an artificial sunset.

(tl;dr: gendry can be found at the bar, checking out the art exhibit, or otherwise just wandering the iskaulit taking in the sights for the first time..)
steeledskin: (# and i know that i can survive)

[personal profile] steeledskin 2016-08-02 12:14 am (UTC)(link)
"I notice when someone stares. Why shouldn't I?"

It was invasive -- not simply because of the staring, but because all forms of attention are, in a sense, invasive.

"Wouldn't you notice if someone was staring at you?"
steeledskin: (# you won't go hungry)

[personal profile] steeledskin 2016-08-02 12:19 am (UTC)(link)
A soft sound: frustration, mingled with defeat. She couldn't compete with that kind of apathy -- not least of all because she knew how it could secretly engender defiance. She'd used a similar tactic herself for moons and moons.

"It mayn't matter to you, but it matters to some."

Matters to me.
steeledskin: (# la belle dame sans merci)

[personal profile] steeledskin 2016-08-02 12:25 am (UTC)(link)
Bold. Brash. And mouthy, too. Her cheeks colour, and her lips purse in a tight knot of a frown. Sansa set aside her needlework. Sitting, tense, with her hands folded on her lap. She asked:

"What quarrel do you have with me?"

She was plaintive, again. Sore -- as though she feared having to fend off another enemy. But what had she done wrong in this instance, aside from laugh at him down on the planet?
steeledskin: (# but you don't succeed)

[personal profile] steeledskin 2016-08-02 12:36 am (UTC)(link)
Sansa swallowed hard. Her fingers closed around her communication device -- a fail-safe, in case she needed to call for help. Sansa was a liar, and she could sniff out other liars. And she thought for certain that Gendry was lying to her. Or, at the very least, he was not speaking in good faith. Something dragged beneath the surface of their conversation, like sickly sea-weedy tendrils.

There isn't anything to forget, she almost said. But she knew better than the needle a wild animal. Instead, a meek: "As you say."
steeledskin: (# i'm doing everything i can)

[personal profile] steeledskin 2016-08-02 12:52 am (UTC)(link)
A muscle twitched in her jaw -- and she had to swallow her retorts, because they weren't safe to speak aloud. Instead, she (bravely) rose to her feet. At the very least, she no longer felt compelled to sit like cowed creature.

"I would be so grateful," she answered. All her haughtiness was a smokescreen. "It is otherwise impossible to find peace. Thank you, ser, for your concession."

Perhaps she forgot how he'd asked her not to call her by that title. Or perhaps she remembered that precise detail, and twisted it now like a knife in the flesh.
steeledskin: (# and my path is a jungle)

[personal profile] steeledskin 2016-08-02 01:10 am (UTC)(link)
She was confused. Lost, and turned-around, unable to understand from where the young man's venom found its origin. Did he hate her? Is that why he stared and prickled and grunted? Or was he like Marillion -- rotted to his core with lust, and now was resentful that he was caught watching her? Sansa's heart beat fast against her ribcage. So fast it hurt. So fast that as she watched him walk away, she felt all the peaceful work of her morning's meditation come undone.

She stood for a good three minutes after the young man departed. Stood, tense, until she realized her whole body was trembling. And even then, she counted out five minutes more in order to give him ample time to clear the hall, the Iskaulit, and the shuttle bay before she dared move.