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Laura Moon ([info]spitandviolets) wrote in [info]mirage_rpg,
@ 2008-08-10 19:35:00

Previous Entry  Add to memories!  Tell a Friend!  Next Entry
Entry tags:anakin skywalker, arrival, complete, day 10, laura moon

Who: Laura and Anakin
When: Day 10, Late Afternoon, but does time really matter in a hurricane?
What: Arrival
Where: Forest
Rating: TBD
Status: Open


Death hurt Laura. She was not talking about the act of dying; that had actually been exceptionally easy. Really, one moment her head had been in Robbie's lap, it occurred to her that oh my God, I'm going to die, and the whole nasty ordeal was over. She didn't even remember going to the hospital, though she knew that she did not die at the scene of the crash. She had waited, for some strange reason, until Wednesday morning. So, a more accurate statement would be that undeath hurt Laura. There was a constant, parching thirst in every cell of her body; there was a complete absence of heat in her frame. She had been such a warm person in life that she would murder for even a fraction of it. In a way, she had murdered for it. Blood, hitting her icy flesh, imbued her with a bit of warmth until it went cold. And in death she had learned that people were so easy to kill once you weren't so prejudiced about the whole thing. It was like they were taunting her as she was able to feel the blood pumping through the veins of the living. There was also the matter of decomposing. While she was not exactly dead, she was certainly not alive, and her body was subject to the laws of nature that affected any body. The maggots in her lungs created a nasty cough, and she felt things moving deep inside her now and then. Really, the whole mess was quite disgusting, and it was almost painful - if she could feel pain.

Death was not as painful as drinking from Urd's Spring had been. The Norns had given her the water than nourished the tree of life, and she honestly thought that she was dying again. It had frozen her insides cold, and it felt like liquid ice, if one could imagine that as anything other than water. Though she had thought it impossible, she had blacked out. When she had awoken, though, the side effects were remarkable. While the water had not restored her life, it had restored her death. Months had been shaved off of her decomposition and decay. For the first few hours, she had possessed breath, blood, and warmth. She was not alive, but she was less dead, and there was a certain mental clarity that had come to her. She knew where she must go, what she must do, and she left Ash Farm (as well as her poor Puppy, her only love) to fulfill her destiny.

Destiny, however, seemed to be wanting to throw another wrench in the works. As of late, Laura had taken to traveling under cover of the forest. While she looked, most times, like a sickly living person, she haded passing for alive. What she really wanted was to be alive. Her second largest desire was warmth, and she wasn't sure what she would do to find it. She had learned what being unfaithful to her husband had caused once already; she wasn't going to tempt fate again to teach her a second time. Karma was a bitch. The forest got denser as she traveled through it, which seemed odd to her as she should have been approaching a highway. She needed to hitchhike in order to get where she was going. Faintly able to see the sky, Laura noted that it looked like it was getting darker. Eventually, rain began to fall. The wind was picking up. Had the storm caused by the warring gods reached all the way to Virginia? Her question was answered, however, when she emerged from the forest's edge into what seemed to be a full blown hurricane. The wind whipped her hair, and several branches flew past her. Thankfully, her superior speed allowed her to avoid them. There was no highway, there was no civilization. The terrain didn't even look remotely like anything that would be in Virginia. Really, it was a little too...tropical...for that. And instead of it feeling like March, it was positively balmy.

Though she could not ignore the storm, she could weather it slightly better than a living person. The whipping water falling into her eyes did not cause her to blink, nor did she notice that it felt like razor blades. Small pebbles picked up by the storm hit her, nicked her, but she did not bleed despite the small holes in her flesh. The wind was the main problem as she walked; her body, which was no longer filled with organs and blood, but instead formaldehyde, glycerin, and lanolin, was lighter than an average person, and the high speed and force of the wind kept knocking her down. Her hair became matted, the white knit top clinging to her body now completely transparent, and her skirt actually tore. When she fell, she stayed down, her eyes unblinkingly staring at the sky. "What rotten luck," she murmured, and she closed her eyes. She focused on the auras of the living, saw their multitude stretched out before her. Some blazed like the sun, while others flickered with barely the strength of a taper. The living, they were so fascinating. The thing that bothered her, though, was that they were not as numerous as they should have been. The United States usually blinded her in her mind's eye. And, most troubling, Shadow's beacon, unique and traceable from anywhere, was not visible to her. A pause and she remembered: Shadow was dead.

"Puppy!" Laura said into the storm, her eyes shooting open. She would have screamed, but her dead, emotionless voice really wouldn't allow it. She stayed on her back on the ground, not really motivated to get up. Shadow wasn't there, and she did not know how to get where she needed to go. What was the point in moving when she'd only fall down again? "What am I supposed to do now...?" Even though she was dead, she was comprehending that the whole situation was feeling pretty hopeless.



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[info]angry_jedi
2008-08-17 08:48 pm UTC (link)
The first words out of the woman's mouth were, "You're not human".. Anakin wondered what she meant by that. He may be from another planet, another galaxy even, but he was still human. "Maybe", he thought, "...it's the high level of midi-chlorians in my blood...could she possibly sense such a thing? Could it have anything to do wih his unknown father?"

It may have been a trick of the storm raging around them, but her voice sounded terrible...he didn't know how to describe it...she sounded like someone speaking from beyond the veil of death.

He noticed her staring at his cybernetic hand. Could she possibly know? Did this woman have some power. Perhaps she was telepathic? He immedately took measures to put mental blocks in place to guard his thoughts.

Lifting the woman onto her feet, Anakin knit his brows...she was much lighter than she appeared to be...everything was not as it appeared to be here. He didn't sense any tremors in the force, but he would keep his eyes open. He didn't have to keep his eyes open long for something else odd to happen. The woman looked his hooded robe over, rejected it and slipped it back onto him, moving from one side of him to the next, in the blink of an eye. If that wasn't enough to give him pause, this...'woman'...had just pointed out her damaged skin, which was not bleeding and only seemed to bother her aesthetically. "Great Pit of Carkoon! Whatare you?!", Anakin exclaimed excitedly, looking at Laura's damaged flesh.

When she suggested moving under cover of the trees, he automatically moved in that direction, reaching for his first aid kit, "I have a spray in here that seals wounds", he handed it to her, "It's a synthetic skin...it will match to the shade of the skin it touches". Looking at her, he very much wanted her to use the synthetic skin to repair her wounds. He finally caught on to something she had said, "Of course I have blood pumping through my veins...don't you?".


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[info]spitandviolets
2008-08-18 08:26 pm UTC (link)
If Anakin had mentioned to Laura that he was wondering if she was telepathic, she probably would have laughed, and hard. There wasn't much that could make her laugh these days. She had a tendency to give half hearted, sad, broken smiles, but that was about it. Laughter was reserved only for irony, which seemed to be one of the only things that still made her almost feel something. The idea of her possessing psychic powers of any kind was outrageous to her. As far as Laura was concerned, that was silly, senseless, fantasy talk. Yes, she was the walking dead. Yes, she knew for certain that gods existed. Hell, she even knew for a fact that there was something greater out there in the beyond (though she couldn't remember what it was; she'd only gotten a glimpse). The idea of psychics, on the other hand, was one that was bot amusing and a bit absurd. She'd have been forced to check his temperature (not that she could really tell the difference between pleasantly warm and burning up anymore) and ask him if he was suffering from dementia. Luckily for Anakin, he hadn't mentioned it.

"What," she said, studying his face. He wasn't half bad looking. Part of her wished that Robbie had been half as dashing and young. In all honesty, he'd been a bit of a letdown in the end; Shadow was better, really, in every way, and her substitute for love had gotten her killed. There was something that was just too serious about him. He looked like a kid still, though she wasn't so old herself; she had only been twenty-seven when she died, and would now forever be twenty-seven. Though she wasn't sure she was twenty-seven. She vaguely remembered lying about her age so she'd seem older than she actually was. Huh. Regardless, a handsome kid like that should smile more.

Following him to the trees, Laura took a seat and looked down at her nails. They were a mess, and they weren't growing at all. Part of her had to wonder if there was a nail salon anywhere around. Acrylics would probably be her best bet at this point. While her nails would regrow when she drank from Urd's Well, they certainly weren't getting any longer or better while she sat around decomposing. She wanted to at least pass for living, as much as she hated it. It was becoming plain to her, especially when he exclaimed something about Catmandu or whatever, that she wasn't really passing for alive. Not with him, at least. Then again, he wasn't human and it seemed that he had some kind of computer glove.

Deciding to not beat around the bush, she smirked a little. A flash of lightning seemed to illuminate the pale girl, making her even whiter and paler than she usually was. She grabbed her hair, wringing it out as she took a seat at the base of a tree, and looked up to him with those dark blue eyes. "You don't need to worry about me. What am I? Well, that's a complicated question. I'm wet, first of all, though that's no fault of yours. I'm lost, and I hope that isn't your fault either. This doesn't look anything like Virginia, or the highway I was headed for. By the way, what the heck is a great pit of Cardamum or whatever you said? I'm also lonely, and I'm cold, though you seem to be taking the edge off of those."

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[info]spitandviolets
2008-08-18 08:26 pm UTC (link)
Reaching out, Laura took the spray. She didn't expect him to do it for her, after all. This kid seemed a little too cold for that. Lifting her arm, a quick press of the top of the canister put the synthetic skin over the hole. She raised her eyebrows and gave a little smirk. "Nice. Not sure how it does the color bit, but what's it made of? Silicon? Rubber? That weird cyberskin stuff that they seem to be making playthings out of these days? And am I going to have to peel it off if and when my real skin comes back?" She hugged her knees, not shivering, not even breathing. In fact, if he'd been paying any attention at all, he would've probably noticed that she hadn't taken a single breath since they'd met. Nor had she really blinked, though she kept her lids low enough that it wasn't that noticeable.

"And to answer your question, well..." Here it was, she supposed. She'd only had to explain it to Shadow before. Reaching down, she touched a gold coin on a gold chain around her neck. Her fingers stroked it absently. Puppy, give me strength. "No, I don't have blood pumping through my veins. Not anymore. I used to. I think I remember how it feels. I can feel yours. It's like a distant echo, or a pulse that isn't mine, or the rhythm of a song long forgotten but always playing. Don't worry, though. I'm not going to do anything to you. I admire that strange feat that separates you from me. You don't appreciate it until it's gone. But, I guess the most appropriate answer to 'what are you?' is, well, I am dead."

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