Voices from Heaven (
thespaceopera) wrote in
driftfleet2017-06-09 10:20 am
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
![[community profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/community.png)
Entry tags:
- !atroma,
- !mingle,
- anthony j. crowley,
- aurae "tempest" le paulmier,
- chuuya nakahara,
- daryl dixon,
- edna,
- fenris,
- ginko,
- ignis scientia,
- jack sparrow,
- katherine "kitty" pryde,
- keith,
- lance,
- lumiére,
- max rockatansky,
- mikleo,
- mon-el,
- nami,
- noctis lucis caelum,
- nono,
- okita souji,
- otono-tachibana makie,
- pavel chekov,
- prompto argentum,
- riona cousland theirin,
- sam winchester,
- sayid jarrah,
- shinji ikari,
- signy mallory,
- sokka,
- steve rogers (ou),
- takashi shirogane,
- takeshi,
- uraraka ochako,
- vash the stampede,
- velvet crowe,
- yuan ka-fai,
- yuri katsuki,
- zelda
i know you, that look in your eyes is so familiar a gleam
( for N-Z characters )
Before you post your toplevel comment, please:
1. Check the first letter of your character's name as its written in our tags. N-Z names comment here, and A-M names go to the other post.
2. Make a note in your comment if anything especially triggering or graphic might show up in the Calibration. If you're not sure if something's worth noting or not, we suggest listing it anyway, just to err on the side of caution.
3. Put your character's name (it can be shortened or different from the tag, this time) in the subject of your comment. This will help visitors find you easily, and help us update the list below.
4. Post your comment! It's fine if everyone's Calibrations end up looking and reading very different from one another. As long as you're having fun and following our guidelines, you're good to go. :)
5. If you have any questions or concerns during Calibrations, you are welcome to send them towards the mod team at any time, as always.
no subject
To reveal you standing there in wait. Well done you offer, before firing a shot purposefully high. It sends him running, though there's hardly any place to go. You stand between him and the exit after all, and even the rows of weapons on display have been rendered useless through your earlier assault.
He tries a different tack; so young and naive, and foolishly optimistic, appealing to the man who you used to be. As if you could feel anything but loathing for that man, Captain Rip Hunter, time and time again made into a puppet by those who would use his intelligence and ability for their ends, and never his.
He let his family die, after all, and why? So the Time Masters could install a despot to the throne of the world, for fear of some alien invasion? To preserve the sanctity of history, of reality by not using the Spear? In all of time, Captain Rip Hunter was the only man who knew where the fragments were.
He could have regathered them, used them. Could have made right the wrong done, once and for all.
He didn't.
You will never forgive yourself for that. But now, with the Legion, you are free from those misguided principles that would prevent such a reasonable action.
Jax traps himself in a corner, and you aim your gun at him. He offers up the one thing he still can, the location of the fragment you're after, and smartly so. But the young man is quite clever indeed, and no doubt he's rigged the hiding spot in some fashion.
Show me, you demand, and with your gun still pointed at him, you head out of the room.]
no subject
So much.
Natasha isn't sure if it's that Rip was telling the truth, and every memory is equally invasive, equally difficult, or if she's especially lucky. She closes her eyes for a moment.
If she's meant to judge this, she won't. But she will apologize to Rip later, when they face each other in the real world.
It's bad enough being forced to share like this. Worse with someone who's nearly a stranger.]
Not enough yet?
no subject
The difference is, one could be argued to prove him a good man; the other, he saw himself as a fool.
She offers no comment on the memories themselves. He expects her to; others have before her.
In the end, however, she merely asks if it isn't enough—and with regret, Rip shakes his head.]
I'm afraid not. [There's a pause then; while he cannot control specifically what she sees or chooses, there is some guidance he can offer.] Is there anything you want to know? Keeping in mind that learning something is unavoidable, that is. I can—narrow down the options, I believe.
[Show her things that are perhaps less cruel, somehow.]
no subject
Of course, she has questions.]
We don't always get what we want though, do we?
[Them specifically, or people in general, she doesn't bother to define. Either way is true, so there's no reason to put too fine a point on it.]
Which would you pick?
no subject
Though there's less to mull over than one might think.]
It appears I can't answer that. [To make such a specific recommendation based on his own opinion; interesting limitation.] Though I can tell you that if you're hoping for something mundane, you're rather out of luck.
[Filling out reports or doing quiet calculations likely wouldn't be interesting enough for public consumption anyway--assuming this is still being broadcast somehow.
Given there's no reason not to, it's an entirely unpleasant thought.]
As you said, Miss Romanoff. We don't always get what we want.
no subject
No, I wouldn't expect that. No memories of standing in line at Starbucks. Watching Netflix.
[If only. Can't blame a girl for trying, though. Consider it her due diligence. If she has to do this, she wants to make it as comfortable as possible.
Seems like that's the only thing she can do.
She goes for the med bay.]
no subject
What she does bring up is far from a fairytale; it's a tragedy, though you hardly see it that way as you stand over Sara's body, so weak and pale from the injury inflicted earlier. Seems Martin, now crumpled on the floor behind you, had managed to save her—for all the good it would do in the end. After all, you've got your hand wrapped around her throat, and even as she so ineffectively grips at your fingers, you hold tight while she struggles to breathe.
All to an end. Jax appears in the doorway, no doubt drawn in by the scream Martin let out as you knocked him unconscious. He starts to come at you, his intentions clear, but the gun you draw stops him where he stands. You ask him again, your voice clear: he's been defeated. He will not let Sara die, and you know this. Where is the piece of the Spear?
And yet he still resists. So much bravery for an entirely foolish cause, and with a sigh you fire, close enough that he thinks you mean to hit him—near enough to force him to duck and roll away. He's quick to stand once more, but the advantage remains yours. Not only are you armed, your hand remains on Sara's neck; you tell him that they don't both have to die, and close your fingers cruelly tighter.
As expected, he calls upon your so-called better nature. Inside your telescope, and then Jax looks at you with naïve expectation, implores you in Sara's name because you cannot kill her—you cannot.
It might have been true once. You look down at her, prone and helpless still, and think of a time gone by.
When you had been just as foolish, once.
You say her name as if it's supposed to matter to me. But just as before, when you shot her, you feel utterly nothing for the woman now entirely at your mercy. Jax stands near, perhaps waiting for you to prove some of your "former self' remains—or for the opportunity to take you down.
He won't have it. You meet his gaze, your own cold, your voice unfeeling.
She doesn't.
It's easy to snap her neck; the sound of it fills the room, and you take your leave. Jax might follow you still, but not yet. First the despair would overwhelm him, granting you the time you need to finish your task.
You walk into the darkness, leaving the medbay behind—leaving the memory behind, and Natasha once more finds herself unmoved on the bridge.]
no subject
The more she sees, though, the harder it will be to leave questions unasked.
She rubs her own neck absently, very well aware what it feels like to be on the other side of a strangulation.]
So that's it. We just keep this up until I've seen all of them?
no subject
He understands well why she needs that time. Even without the implications of her gesture, those memories are hardly easy ones--nor do they fit so neatly in with the impression most have of Rip Hunter as he is now.
All for reasons that can be easily defined in the end--but she does not ask that question, and thus he won't provide it's answer.
Instead--]
Actually, three seems to be the designated number.
[Indeed, behind her comes the sound of doors opening; the entrance to the bridge itself, past the parlor on either side.]
Not that I can stop you should you wish to be more, but--there's a bit of a minimum in play.
no subject
[Natasha frowns, not going for another memory since it seems she doesn't have to, but not in a rush to take advantage of the way out either.]
But you're stuck here either way? Doing this again?
no subject
[His expression mirrors hers: a frown as Rip mulls over what he knows.]
It's a rather odd brand of cognitive intrusion, but none of us seem to have much choice in it, do we?
no subject
That might be the worst part of it.
no subject
I'd dread to think what aspect you might consider worse than the unwilling invasion of one mind by another, and with full access to the memories contained within.
[Though there is an answer that comes into Rip's thoughts even as he asks, and all too easily. Thus far, it's merely observation--that they know of.]
no subject
[And he may have noticed, she tends to avoid that as much as she can. They've been forced into a very intimate situation quicker than either of them would have ever consented to, revealed things they'd preferred not have put on display.
Couldn't really be blamed if they wanted to maintain some boundaries after that.]
I'll talk to you again, though. Sound like a deal?
no subject
But the agreement to talk is at least an easy enough one to make. Rip nods his head.]
A rather fair one, in fact. I would say I'll be looking forward to it, but--
[He gestures upward with a hand. Rip highly doubts anyone is looking forward to the consequences of such meetings.]
no subject
[Neither of them are looking forward to that. But she thinks both of them can see the value in it, the productivity.
She nods a lat time before heading for the door.]