Sam Winchester (
collegedropout) wrote in
driftfleet2016-10-24 02:56 am
Entry tags:
voice. a quick sad post.
Who: Sam Winchester
Broadcast: fleetwide
Action: Red Fish
When: after a sad shuffle :C
[Sam's very much subdued the day that Dean vanishes. If he reacts more viscerally to it, to knowing that this Dean was returning to his inevitable death at Sam and satan's own hands, nobody'd know it — he closes himself up in his room, keeps himself distant for a little while. It helps, because it also gets him away from those damned echoes that have begun to snowball. He's tried his best to ignore them, and with Dean suddenly gone... he doesn't trust himself to be anything but stressed at the sight.
Anyway. Um. Best to move forward, right...? Get back into things. Working at the bar keeps his mind busy, as does helping with the garden, and there's also helping with the weird messages from the planet, and — dammit, Sam, get back into things. Fake it 'til you make it. This too shall pass, if you pretend hard enough that you're fine. So he breathes in deep, breathes out, and addresses the fleet.]
My brother, Dean, um. Dean Winchester's left the fleet. I wasn't sure how many people knew him, but...
[A pause.]
Anyone want to talk? I could use something to keep me occupied. Your choice of topic, just shoot. I can be a pretty good listener, too.
[Help me get out of this funk, huh.]
Broadcast: fleetwide
Action: Red Fish
When: after a sad shuffle :C
[Sam's very much subdued the day that Dean vanishes. If he reacts more viscerally to it, to knowing that this Dean was returning to his inevitable death at Sam and satan's own hands, nobody'd know it — he closes himself up in his room, keeps himself distant for a little while. It helps, because it also gets him away from those damned echoes that have begun to snowball. He's tried his best to ignore them, and with Dean suddenly gone... he doesn't trust himself to be anything but stressed at the sight.
Anyway. Um. Best to move forward, right...? Get back into things. Working at the bar keeps his mind busy, as does helping with the garden, and there's also helping with the weird messages from the planet, and — dammit, Sam, get back into things. Fake it 'til you make it. This too shall pass, if you pretend hard enough that you're fine. So he breathes in deep, breathes out, and addresses the fleet.]
My brother, Dean, um. Dean Winchester's left the fleet. I wasn't sure how many people knew him, but...
[A pause.]
Anyone want to talk? I could use something to keep me occupied. Your choice of topic, just shoot. I can be a pretty good listener, too.
[Help me get out of this funk, huh.]

voice.
action.
He appears on the bridge, long and lanky with a jacket tucked under one arm.
He's got a charm about the awkwardness, though his brother's always been smoother than him. Mostly. One could say it's a gift of his, though — or even a survival technique — to appear meeker and polite and more harmless than he actually is. Inverted socialite. Is such a thing common? He prefers solitude now in his life but drowns in it too often.
Here, the awkward highschooler, 30-something-going-on-200-something.]
Hey. Brought some tea leaves I planted from a planet ago; figured I'd try them.
action.
she rises to her feet and sets her work aside. ] Home-grown? [ a dip of her chin. ] What an unexpected treat.
action.
I did a lot of gardening in the last world I was trapped in.
Less space, more empty forests where you have to grow things yourself or suffer without tea.
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To be honest? I'd get a feel for it. You never know when it'll become a necessity.
[He's totally not pulling a Max Rockatansky and implying that they may be without self-producing food one of these days and could therefore starve out — but that's also exactly what he's saying.
He starts down the hall, a tall lanky shadow.]
I'll admit, I'm not much of a gardener. My girlfriend had been the one who showed me how to not kill a plant.
action.
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Though, you can probably relate to your loved ones being doomed by proximity.
So, don't do that.]
Then I'll just have to keep an eye on your section of the gardens for you.
[He gives a cheeky little grin.]
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What, would that be a bad thing? Maybe I'll do it for a credit a day.
[Then he would make enough credits in a month to, like, buy a shirt.
It's gr8.]
action.
I'm not convinced I can afford you.
action.
His grin persists.]
Then what about a bartering system? Cup of tea for my services.
action.
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Today's a free-be. Courtesy of me.
You're lucky, with Winchesters it's usually cheap liquor.
action.
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That's not very becoming for such a proper lady.
[But he snorts, shaking his head.]
Actually, you'd fit right in with the women in the hunting community. Growing up, they held their liquor as much as my old man. I remember... [He blinks, suddenly self-conscious of his trip down memory lane, but figures it's okay.] I remember being five or six, sitting in bars while my dad worked on research. This really nice lady, Ruth, she went around the corner to drag a drunk out by the ear. Gave me a cup of juice and a sucker and taught me how to play gold fish.
[His smile softens, and he shrugs.]
The things that stick with you, I guess.
action.
she places a mug of fragrant tea in front of sam, and then takes a seat for herself. ]
She sounds formidable. And kind. [ -- never mind that she's curious about this hunting community. but: ] Were you often in her bar?
action.
He's certainly the most polite and quiet hunter you're likely to come across. For the most part. Hunters are far more akin to rowdy soldiers celebrating at a pub, a world weariness masked with boisterous and lighthearted (and sometimes quite offensive) banter.]
When my family was around northern Texas, yeah. Um. Sometimes a few a year, sometimes just once a year. It depended on how much work my father had around there. She had a good bar for hunters to mingle and exchange information.
She and dad had a lot of fights. But he tended to get into a lot of fights, when it came to me and my brother.
[He shakes his head, smiling.]
I didn't have my mother. I think -- I don't know, maybe I mentioned it when I was a kid. I can't remember. But she tried to be something nice. Give us crayons or fish out some doll she probably had waiting for hunter's kids passing through.
action.
She must have seen a great deal of it. Children, passing through. Did a lot of hunters travel with their families?
action.
Really, when it came to growing up?
He had nothing to hide. No, the shame and misery and true agony happened many, many years later. When it came to looking back on his youth... Strangely, it feels more like reciting a memoir. Remembering a sweet, sad book. Something like that.
It's nice to remember that kid.
Sam's been trying lately, to not feel like he completely let him down.]
Wasn't as much as you'd think, actually. I remember wishing some of them would bring their kids to work too. [He laughs.] But that was me not knowing what my father did. Didn't know until I was eight. When he'd leave for a few days, my brother told he traveled for work, and my brother's lips were always sealed about what that even meant.
... There was always a bag of guns around, but it was all I ever knew, so until I went to school for a few years I thought it was perfectly normal. The world was big and I was pretty educated on the human evil in it, after all. Stranger danger.
[He still trusted easily, compared to his brother. He was a curious kid, and lonely, very lonely. He was lucky to have Dean to keep him leashed, he supposed.]
action.
Seems as if it might have been a lonely upbringing for the pair of you, at times. [ she sips her tea -- and peggy nods in appreciation. it's got a fine flavour to it. ]
action.
Yeah.
At least I had my brother. Don't know how long I would have stayed if he didn't reign me back in and watch my back as much as he did.
[Considering Dean — not quite his Dean, but still his — had just vanished, he figures it's only fair to his brother that he remember him today. All the shit they've dealt with, all the good Dean's done, especially for him. Even if it hurts, it's a hurt he'd rather have than never have had him at all.
He has to make sure the timeline this Dean was from never happens.
Ever.]
I did eventually go to school, though. Full-ride scholarship and everything.
Goes to show what you can do when you're a nerdy bookworm. Even a traveling one.
[He gives a cheeky grin over his cup.]
action.
[ her education grew into something wholly different. travelling, but different. ]
action.
Hey, you came out great. Besides, I never graduated.
[He drinks, a self-conscious smile ghosting his face.]
... 'Shit happens'. That's the saying. But I'm getting old, so it means I'm getting better at not dwelling on stuff. [That was child's play, compared to what happened afterward — though the loss of Jess is still a yawning hole in his chest. He wishes he had a picture of her, something from their past. Everything she and he ever owned went up in smoke, though.] I've always wanted to go back, but usually I have other responsibilities.
action.
[ ... ] You may yet go back. I think we all surprise ourselves, from time to time.
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hope* wow.
What an interesting accent Peggy
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