meta: verse descriptions
Sunday, May 10, 2009
I'm bored. Instead of reading Death of a Salesman, let's see if I can summarize and describe my verses, hm?
Errerrin: Once upon a time, a god was sealed. After nearly a thousand years, he's waking up. On one side is an ancient but dwindling organization racing against time to reseal him. On the other: a young prince and princess desperate for power to guarantee their city-state's survival in an upcoming war against monsters everyone thought extinct.
Darkcity: About one Samuel Richard Grey, whose wife is killed by vampires and who thus makes the probably unhealthy decision of seeking revenge... by eradicating the vampire population. He gathers similarly insane vampires to his cause. When he's not being a homicidal little shit, Sam is a PE teacher at a pretty crappy public school.
Boneyards: Code just wants to save his sister. Liam just wishes life were less boring. Elle thinks they're both idiots. None of them ever thought they'd have to save the world, but sometimes, these things just happen.
This verse is shiny because it's post-apocolyptic.
Etherworld: Methis--a mercenary who struck a deal with the dark magician, Sezhrarn, in order to resurrect his dead wife. Lucas--a fairly normal boy, other than having a few really, really creepy powers. Other characters include Aliza, a dragon; Camen, a fallen prince; and Trisha, a mother.
Errerrin: Once upon a time, a god was sealed. After nearly a thousand years, he's waking up. On one side is an ancient but dwindling organization racing against time to reseal him. On the other: a young prince and princess desperate for power to guarantee their city-state's survival in an upcoming war against monsters everyone thought extinct.
Darkcity: About one Samuel Richard Grey, whose wife is killed by vampires and who thus makes the probably unhealthy decision of seeking revenge... by eradicating the vampire population. He gathers similarly insane vampires to his cause. When he's not being a homicidal little shit, Sam is a PE teacher at a pretty crappy public school.
Boneyards: Code just wants to save his sister. Liam just wishes life were less boring. Elle thinks they're both idiots. None of them ever thought they'd have to save the world, but sometimes, these things just happen.
This verse is shiny because it's post-apocolyptic.
Etherworld: Methis--a mercenary who struck a deal with the dark magician, Sezhrarn, in order to resurrect his dead wife. Lucas--a fairly normal boy, other than having a few really, really creepy powers. Other characters include Aliza, a dragon; Camen, a fallen prince; and Trisha, a mother.
Labels: _meta, verse: boneyards, verse: darkcity, verse: errerrin, verse: etherworld
posted by Imaan at 11:30 AM
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fic: boneyards, fire in the warehouse
Saturday, April 25, 2009
Prompt: fire in the warehouse
Liam awoke to the thick smell of smoke and heat heavy against his skin. He registered the dry crackle of flames even as he jerked his body up, rolled over, and shook Code’s shoulders. "Wake up," he said. "Wake up!" he repeated, but Code didn’t move or open his eyes.
Liam was strong, but Code was bigger than him. It was awkward carrying the younger boy. In the end he threw Code over his shoulders like an oversized sack.
He left their bags behind.
The fire was a strangely quiet enemy; by now it had swallowed one wall, and the windows were blocked. It stretched, orange-yellow-blue, from floor to ceiling. There were no exits so Liam made one, drawing back and kicking. The wall crumpled like foil under the force of his kick; behind him, the fire guttered at the sudden onslaught of air, engorging.
Liam didn’t put Code down until he couldn’t hear the fire’s grabbing hisses. Then he was abruptly aware of the dull, aching exhaustion in his limbs, the way his chest heaved from panic. Code was stirring.
"Put me down," he mumbled, the words chasing each other, awkward and stumbling. Liam did. Code grunted as he hit the ground.
Code put his palms against his eyes, as if he had to stop his eyeballs from falling out. "Someone started that fire," he said, slowly, and even then Liam had to think for a moment, separating the slurred sounds into proper words.
"Yeah," he said, because he didn’t think warehouses could spontaneously combust. "But we’re out."
"The bags…" Code started, then stopped, shaking his head. "It doesn’t matter."
At least he was starting to sound coherent.
"Thanks for saving me," Code said.
Liam just looked back over his shoulder. His breath was calming; the world was dulling again, his senses no longer buoyed by panic and fear. He couldn’t think of anything to say, so he didn’t.
Liam awoke to the thick smell of smoke and heat heavy against his skin. He registered the dry crackle of flames even as he jerked his body up, rolled over, and shook Code’s shoulders. "Wake up," he said. "Wake up!" he repeated, but Code didn’t move or open his eyes.
Liam was strong, but Code was bigger than him. It was awkward carrying the younger boy. In the end he threw Code over his shoulders like an oversized sack.
He left their bags behind.
The fire was a strangely quiet enemy; by now it had swallowed one wall, and the windows were blocked. It stretched, orange-yellow-blue, from floor to ceiling. There were no exits so Liam made one, drawing back and kicking. The wall crumpled like foil under the force of his kick; behind him, the fire guttered at the sudden onslaught of air, engorging.
Liam didn’t put Code down until he couldn’t hear the fire’s grabbing hisses. Then he was abruptly aware of the dull, aching exhaustion in his limbs, the way his chest heaved from panic. Code was stirring.
"Put me down," he mumbled, the words chasing each other, awkward and stumbling. Liam did. Code grunted as he hit the ground.
Code put his palms against his eyes, as if he had to stop his eyeballs from falling out. "Someone started that fire," he said, slowly, and even then Liam had to think for a moment, separating the slurred sounds into proper words.
"Yeah," he said, because he didn’t think warehouses could spontaneously combust. "But we’re out."
"The bags…" Code started, then stopped, shaking his head. "It doesn’t matter."
At least he was starting to sound coherent.
"Thanks for saving me," Code said.
Liam just looked back over his shoulder. His breath was calming; the world was dulling again, his senses no longer buoyed by panic and fear. He couldn’t think of anything to say, so he didn’t.
Labels: _fiction, c: code, c: liam, verse: boneyards
posted by Imaan at 10:39 PM
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fic: boneyards, risk
Monday, April 20, 2009
Why do I like writing from Code's point of view so much? Huh. Anyway, 459 words. Companion pieces are Finding, Yesterday's Child, and Purpose. This one is the only one to feature the boneyards the verse is named for, though.
Code is one of the most depressingly practical characters I've ever created.
Risk
He was warm--hot--there were hands on him, soft, a woman whispering soothing words into his ear. And then the cold rushed in, chasing away the dream, and he opened his eyes and saw morning.
Code shifted. There were bones digging into his back; fragments drew red patterns on his left arm. Above, the ribs they'd slept against cast striped shadows onto the ground. The boneyard was utterly silent. Code touched the black sheet that covered Liam. When he felt the slight stirs of movement, the rise-and-fall of a thin chest, he withdrew his hand.
It felt--stupid--checking to see if Liam was still alive every time he woke up, but he still did it. It made Code feel better.
He checked their bag. There was a bottle of water, mostly clean. There were cigarettes, but they were Elle's, and untouched. He tried to picture her--wherever she was, traveling and searching, without her customary cigarettes. It didn't fit.
There was an extra blanket, but no food.
Today, his arm hurt. Code pressed it against his chest and flexed the thin fingers. He would need to hunt. He would have to leave Liam alone. It was a necessary risk.
He'd left his mother alone, once, and when he'd come back he'd found her gone, with blood on the ground, his little sister hidden in a place no babe should ever be--half-buried under the sand, her scent masked by mushrooms.
But he needed to hunt. It was a necessary risk.
He'd left his sister alone--not just once, but twice, and thrice, and many more times after that. He learned which scents drove predators away, that movement attracted attention, that the wind was as much enemy as friend.
Liam wasn't his sister. And it was a necessary risk.
Code leaned forward. "Liam," he said. "Liam, I have to go. I'll be back."
Liam didn't answer. Code thought he heard a slight hitch in his breathing. He was probably wrong. He drew the blanket tightly over the man, covering him completely, and hid the dark color as best he could under old bone and fragments sharp against his skin. He thought he understood Elle's need for cigarettes.
He stood. His footsteps broke the deep silence. The shadows on the ground had shifted slightly, warming slightly as the morning grew older. Code wrapped his fingers around Wyndham's knife. He didn't think about Liam. He thought about traps without bait, about insects in hidden nests, about worms and chrysalises. The morning was still cold, and he thought briefly, irrationally, of Ilsa, but then the wind brushed against him and he raised his head and smiled as he registered the tangy sweetness.
It was morning, and his arm had stopped aching.
Code is one of the most depressingly practical characters I've ever created.
Risk
He was warm--hot--there were hands on him, soft, a woman whispering soothing words into his ear. And then the cold rushed in, chasing away the dream, and he opened his eyes and saw morning.
Code shifted. There were bones digging into his back; fragments drew red patterns on his left arm. Above, the ribs they'd slept against cast striped shadows onto the ground. The boneyard was utterly silent. Code touched the black sheet that covered Liam. When he felt the slight stirs of movement, the rise-and-fall of a thin chest, he withdrew his hand.
It felt--stupid--checking to see if Liam was still alive every time he woke up, but he still did it. It made Code feel better.
He checked their bag. There was a bottle of water, mostly clean. There were cigarettes, but they were Elle's, and untouched. He tried to picture her--wherever she was, traveling and searching, without her customary cigarettes. It didn't fit.
There was an extra blanket, but no food.
Today, his arm hurt. Code pressed it against his chest and flexed the thin fingers. He would need to hunt. He would have to leave Liam alone. It was a necessary risk.
He'd left his mother alone, once, and when he'd come back he'd found her gone, with blood on the ground, his little sister hidden in a place no babe should ever be--half-buried under the sand, her scent masked by mushrooms.
But he needed to hunt. It was a necessary risk.
He'd left his sister alone--not just once, but twice, and thrice, and many more times after that. He learned which scents drove predators away, that movement attracted attention, that the wind was as much enemy as friend.
Liam wasn't his sister. And it was a necessary risk.
Code leaned forward. "Liam," he said. "Liam, I have to go. I'll be back."
Liam didn't answer. Code thought he heard a slight hitch in his breathing. He was probably wrong. He drew the blanket tightly over the man, covering him completely, and hid the dark color as best he could under old bone and fragments sharp against his skin. He thought he understood Elle's need for cigarettes.
He stood. His footsteps broke the deep silence. The shadows on the ground had shifted slightly, warming slightly as the morning grew older. Code wrapped his fingers around Wyndham's knife. He didn't think about Liam. He thought about traps without bait, about insects in hidden nests, about worms and chrysalises. The morning was still cold, and he thought briefly, irrationally, of Ilsa, but then the wind brushed against him and he raised his head and smiled as he registered the tangy sweetness.
It was morning, and his arm had stopped aching.
Labels: _fiction, c: code, c: elle, c: liam, verse: boneyards
posted by Imaan at 7:20 PM
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art: boneyards, elle
Friday, January 30, 2009

Labels: _art, c: elle, verse: boneyards
posted by Imaan at 9:27 PM
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fic: boneyards, purpose
Sunday, January 25, 2009
Just wanted to convey an idea. Chronogically, it takes place after Finding. 162 words.
Purpose
After the third time he caught Code trying to struggle out of the shelter, the man just threw up his hands and said, "Fine, I'll fucking carry you."
He had surprising stamina, and he didn't complain at all. Code mumbled an apology into the man's hair, which was as rough and coarse as the backlands surrounding them.
The man grunted. "Why are you out here, anyway? There's nothing here."
"I'm searching for the old cities," he said.
"Why? They were the first hit by the Darkening, weren't they? They're empty."
"Yes. But it's been twenty years. It should have lifted by now."
The man grunted interrogation.
"It's something my mother told me," Code said finally, and hated the doubt that seeped into his tone at the words. "The Darkening is a cycle, and it's mobile. It never stays in the same place for very long."
The man laughed, the sound touched by bitterness. "You talk like it's alive."
"It is," Code said, simply.
Purpose
After the third time he caught Code trying to struggle out of the shelter, the man just threw up his hands and said, "Fine, I'll fucking carry you."
He had surprising stamina, and he didn't complain at all. Code mumbled an apology into the man's hair, which was as rough and coarse as the backlands surrounding them.
The man grunted. "Why are you out here, anyway? There's nothing here."
"I'm searching for the old cities," he said.
"Why? They were the first hit by the Darkening, weren't they? They're empty."
"Yes. But it's been twenty years. It should have lifted by now."
The man grunted interrogation.
"It's something my mother told me," Code said finally, and hated the doubt that seeped into his tone at the words. "The Darkening is a cycle, and it's mobile. It never stays in the same place for very long."
The man laughed, the sound touched by bitterness. "You talk like it's alive."
"It is," Code said, simply.
Labels: _fiction, c: code, c: liam, verse: boneyards
posted by Imaan at 10:32 PM
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fic: boneyards, yesterday's child
Tuesday, January 20, 2009
Set before Finding. Sort of a prequel, except not really. I just like messing with Code, I guess.
Another vomit-the-idea-out-as-quickly-as-possible-before-it-goes-away sort of thing. So uh, yeah, it's really rough and unedited. Also there's a fair bit of info-dumping and world-building. Sorry.
This one's 592 words.
Yesterday's Child
Wyndham's car was situated near the back of the train, where the dogs were kept. None of the guards stirred or even showed interest as Code approached. He'd worked with most of them for nearly a decade; they didn't regard him as a threat.
He was more careful about pushing open the door, but it was well-oiled and slid open with little noise. There he paused, cocking his head like the dogs gathered around the train, carefully listening. He heard only deep, even breathing.
Wyndham's family was sprawled across the floor. Code navigated the mess of limbs nervously. At least he already knew where the knife was.
They had guns in the supply car, but their crew was steadily moving into the Second Crescent, a long strip of quickly-recovering land situated near water. With more than forty people riding in the trains and a half-dozen acting as scouts, their migration couldn't possibly have gone unnoticed. There'd be constant guards--people and dogs--stationed near the supplies. Code knew. He'd just got off his shift.
Besides, he wanted--something. A momento, because after this, he wouldn't be allowed back. Deserters were never welcome. So... a souvenir, something personal but not easily missed. Guns were precious, and easily stolen. Knives were more common.
He found it, finally, still secured in the pack Wyndham always had on him. "It's bad to be so predictable," Code whispered to the sleeping man; the words brushed against the still air, their presence if not their identity staying.
He left, closing the door shut behind him. He picked up the pack he'd dropped near the wheels and affectionally stroked one of the dogs. "Goodbye," he said. It wasn't at all the audience he wanted.
He should have said goodbye to Ilsa, at least.
He should have said goodbye to his sister.
He couldn't, though. If he did, he'd want to stay. And he couldn't afford that. He couldn't. His sister was depending on him, even if she didn't know it.
Code straightened, gaze drawn to the Second Crescent. It was easily seen, even from this far back in the train; they were on high ground, and the grass that stretched out before them was almost as green as the sweet, healthy color in hazy childhood memories. There were even scraggly, twisting lines that might have been called trees. Code knew that, in a few days' travel, they would see the water.
The Crescent was paradise, if your crew was strong enough to challenge the people already settled there. For Wyndham, the move had been a matter of necessity; their numbers had swelled, and impossible to support in the eastern savannahs. So they'd moved.
Code hoped Wyndham's plan succeeded. He was entrusting his little sister to the crew, after all. It was important she live. He needed a reason to come back, and a reason to go, and a reason to keep fighting.
Code turned around, a clean one-hundred-eighty degrees. In this direction lay the backlands. He'd be able to subsist on hunted animals and foraged food for the first month. And then would come the acid rain.
He wasn't sure how he'd survive that, only a vague certainty that he'd done it before, when he was little, his little hand clutched in his mother's larger, rougher one. He remembered emptiness, stretching from his feet to the horizon, never approaching but never receding, either. And above, the sky, drawn in strange colors. And the smell of the rain, too.
It was a memory that smelled of freedom... or maybe, and more appropriately, fear.
Well. He'd find out soon. Code hefted his pack and began walking. He didn't look back.
Another vomit-the-idea-out-as-quickly-as-possible-before-it-goes-away sort of thing. So uh, yeah, it's really rough and unedited. Also there's a fair bit of info-dumping and world-building. Sorry.
This one's 592 words.
Yesterday's Child
Wyndham's car was situated near the back of the train, where the dogs were kept. None of the guards stirred or even showed interest as Code approached. He'd worked with most of them for nearly a decade; they didn't regard him as a threat.
He was more careful about pushing open the door, but it was well-oiled and slid open with little noise. There he paused, cocking his head like the dogs gathered around the train, carefully listening. He heard only deep, even breathing.
Wyndham's family was sprawled across the floor. Code navigated the mess of limbs nervously. At least he already knew where the knife was.
They had guns in the supply car, but their crew was steadily moving into the Second Crescent, a long strip of quickly-recovering land situated near water. With more than forty people riding in the trains and a half-dozen acting as scouts, their migration couldn't possibly have gone unnoticed. There'd be constant guards--people and dogs--stationed near the supplies. Code knew. He'd just got off his shift.
Besides, he wanted--something. A momento, because after this, he wouldn't be allowed back. Deserters were never welcome. So... a souvenir, something personal but not easily missed. Guns were precious, and easily stolen. Knives were more common.
He found it, finally, still secured in the pack Wyndham always had on him. "It's bad to be so predictable," Code whispered to the sleeping man; the words brushed against the still air, their presence if not their identity staying.
He left, closing the door shut behind him. He picked up the pack he'd dropped near the wheels and affectionally stroked one of the dogs. "Goodbye," he said. It wasn't at all the audience he wanted.
He should have said goodbye to Ilsa, at least.
He should have said goodbye to his sister.
He couldn't, though. If he did, he'd want to stay. And he couldn't afford that. He couldn't. His sister was depending on him, even if she didn't know it.
Code straightened, gaze drawn to the Second Crescent. It was easily seen, even from this far back in the train; they were on high ground, and the grass that stretched out before them was almost as green as the sweet, healthy color in hazy childhood memories. There were even scraggly, twisting lines that might have been called trees. Code knew that, in a few days' travel, they would see the water.
The Crescent was paradise, if your crew was strong enough to challenge the people already settled there. For Wyndham, the move had been a matter of necessity; their numbers had swelled, and impossible to support in the eastern savannahs. So they'd moved.
Code hoped Wyndham's plan succeeded. He was entrusting his little sister to the crew, after all. It was important she live. He needed a reason to come back, and a reason to go, and a reason to keep fighting.
Code turned around, a clean one-hundred-eighty degrees. In this direction lay the backlands. He'd be able to subsist on hunted animals and foraged food for the first month. And then would come the acid rain.
He wasn't sure how he'd survive that, only a vague certainty that he'd done it before, when he was little, his little hand clutched in his mother's larger, rougher one. He remembered emptiness, stretching from his feet to the horizon, never approaching but never receding, either. And above, the sky, drawn in strange colors. And the smell of the rain, too.
It was a memory that smelled of freedom... or maybe, and more appropriately, fear.
Well. He'd find out soon. Code hefted his pack and began walking. He didn't look back.
Labels: _fiction, c: code, verse: boneyards
posted by Imaan at 11:28 PM
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fic: boneyards, finding
Sunday, January 18, 2009
I sat down and coughed up this 2,222 words in one sitting. I'm only stopping now because it's nearing eleven and I should go to bed.
It's a very rough draft. There's no editing. Enjoy!
Finding
After years of traveling with Wyndham's crew, Code had forgotten how hard it was to go through the backlands alone. He only had a small pack with him and a coat with proofing thin enough that just one night of rain would render it useless. Code's only option, then, was to move as fast as possible immediately after the acid showers ended and hope he found shelter before the sky darkened again. It wasn't practical, but it was feasible, if only barely.
Unfortunately, "shelter" was rarely an accurate word to describe the places he sought safety in. The one he was in now was really just a glorified hole in the ground. A piece of uneven, thinning metal acted as the roof. The ground was littered with corroded rocks and sand. Code had to gather these into a pile, sit on top of them, and then watch gloomily as rain leaked in, eating away at the foundation of his sanctuary.
Twenty years after the Darkening, the rainfall was lighter than before, nor as frequent, but that didn't mean much. Code's right arm, covered with scars and oddly mottled skin under the bandages, was proof of that.
He sat with his boots under him, most of his weight on his toes. It was uncomfortable, but only his boots were sufficiently proofed. His coat he kept above him, far away the gathering liquid. The level was rising far higher than he'd anticipated, but it wasn't like he could do anything. Worse still, if any backland creature caught him here, he was near-defenseless.
As if summoned by his thoughts, Code heard the distinct crackling sound of feet stepping in sand. His eyes snapped to the opening at the top of the shelter. Moments later the scant light was blocked by a silhouette.
Code reached for the knife tucked securely into his belt. It was Wyndham's most prized possession, ostensibly a gift from his mother. Code had felt guilty for taking it. Now he only relieved.
Code suddenly frowned. The silhouette he saw was in possession of a head, and two arms, and two legs--but that was impossible. If it was a human, he'd be screaming or writhing in pain, as Code had, once upon a time. Maybe it was the angle. Surely no human could stand in the rain like that.
He changed his mind a second later, when something--someone--dropped through the opening, landing with a splash that made Code wince. He didn't even notice the few droplets sizzling through his clothes, though. He was too transfixed at the sight of the man in front of him.
Code had never seen someone completely wet before, except when his little sister was born, and even then it was because she was a newborn covered in amniotic fluid.
It was amazing. He was just standing there, rain dripping off him, completely unaffected and unbothered. Maybe he was proofed. Ilsa had been going on about that before Code had left, but common sense dictated that even if there was a way to proof a human being, he shouldn't be standing so casually like that.
"Would you look at that!" the man said. The words startled Code. The accent was strange--too much emphasis on the consonants, maybe--but...
Surely, if he was from a nearby crew, they'd have heard of this miraculous proofing. Or maybe it was new.
"How can you stand in the rain like that?" Code asked, face completely blank.
His eyes were yellow.
"You're from a crew, aren't you? You must be, huddled up like that."
When he grinned, he revealed sharp teeth, causing Code to move involuntarily back. When some of the rocks shifted, skittering down, he froze, his entire body tense. The yellow-eyed boy in front of him laughed.
"Are you a scout? Because if you are, you should hurry back and tell your crew not to come anywhere near here."
"I'm not. I mean, I'm not a scout. And I left my crew," Code managed. The words stuck in his mouth and against a suddenly clumsy tongue, garbling half the words.
Sharp eyes narrowed. "Oh. Then I should probably kill you."
That was the only warning Code received. The man darted forward. Code brought the knife up, thrusting his upper body forward to bear the weight. He felt it slide pathetically easily into the man's flesh, skidding against a rib before jarring to a stop. Then they both tumbled back, and Code screamed in fear or pain or maybe both. He managed to jerk his body so that he landed on his right arm.
Ilsa had told him that he would never feel anything with it again, that the rain had washed off his nerves. She was wrong. Worse, the water hit his leg and torso, and although the coat stopped most of it a second later it didn't matter, because it leaked through.
Sense burst clumsily through the agony, somehow. He remembered that the stranger was proofed, somehow, and he threw himself with a pained grunt against his assailant. A moment later the man was under him, breathing harshly, wild eyes glaring up, like an absurd living platform on which Code found relative safety.
He really was proofed, Code marveled, because water was seeping into his knife-wound and he wasn't bothered at all. The man jerked up, maybe to grab at him; Code just reached forward, grabbed the knife, and twisted. The man screamed and aborted movement.
The rain was lightening, finally. Code jerked the knife free, then reached forward and in a practiced movement slit the man's throat.
He died without any fuss, already weakened from Code's initial strike.
The burns didn't hurt, not yet, as if his brain was filing the fact away for later. He was breathing hard. His arm, already of limited movement, now wouldn't move at all. When he stood up, he stumbled, because of his right arm.
He needed filtered water, to wash off the acid, and he needed clean cloth, to wrap the new burns. He had access to neither; his fight with the man had resulted in his pack being thrown into the deeper waters. He wasn't about to risk using anything he'd stored in there.
Code poked at his coat with the tip of his knife. Maybe a quarter of it was still dry. Gripping the section between his knees, he managed to roughly cut the salvageable portion, which he then used as protection for his hands as he stripped himself of his ruined clothes.
Somewhere, in that quartered-off section of his mind, the pain registered as he peeled wet cloth off his body.
He was now standing half-naked above a dead man. If his little sister were to see him, she'd make her usual out-of-place joke, probably involving necrophilia. And he'd laugh in response, and then hit her.
Except, of course, she wasn't there. Code looked up into the sky, which was now clear. If he was lucky, he would have a few hours at least before the rain came again. Somehow, he'd have to make it to the next shelter in time before then, even with a wounded leg.
It never occurred to Code to rest, to stay in this shelter until he felt better enough to move again. He had to keep moving. His little sister was running out of time.
-
Code was lucky. The rain didn't come again for a long time--or maybe it was that the seconds were stretching longer, with each limping step sending bursts of pain through him. It was only his right side that was really injured but his entire body was suffering.
The next shelter he found was a lot more reliable. As before, it was a hole in the ground, but there was a proper and respectably deep ditch for the rain to collect in. He was beginning to suspect that someone, maybe some group of adventurers, had set these shelters up in the backlands on purpose, to help whatever idiot next decided to travel through them.
He sat down, back against one dirt wall, and tried not to shiver. When he pressed his hand against his forehead he thought his skin was hot. He hoped he wasn't coming down with a fever, or an infection. His sister couldn't afford that.
The rain was very light, this time. It would let up soon. That was good. Despite the... the interruption, he'd made good time today.
In the back of his mind, in the same place he shut away the agony and doubt and fear, was the nagging worry for food. Backland animals were too poisonous to eat, as were any vegetation he'd come across. What food he did have he'd left next to the man's corpse, and anyway it would be soaked through by now and too dangerous to consume.
Water, too. He didn't have the equipment needed to purify water.
Code closed his eyes, feeling a headache building. All this worrying was frankly useless, so he tried to dredge up happy memories, instead.
Most of them revolved around his sister, with her sweet face and bright eyes. Her personality didn't at all match her innocent appearance, but that was what Code loved about her. She was at once worldly and naive, able to sing songs that made Code blush and yell, but there was a lot she didn't know about.
She didn't know about their mother, and she never would, because Code would never tell her. And she didn't know about life before--all this. The rain, and the poisoning, and the fires.
Code did, even if his recollections were hazy, like a dream. For him, life started the moment his sister was born. Everything before that was blurry, indistinct; everything after that was sharp, like a too-long film Code could peruse at leisure. She'd been a perfect miracle, the envy of the crew. And then, years afterwards, when they'd joined Wyndham's crew, she'd been a miracle to them, too, and a source of hope. Babies could be born, perfect and whole. You just had to be lucky enough.
Code opened his eyes and realized with horror that he'd been sleeping.
It was still raining, or maybe it had started raining again. It was completely dark. He tried to sit up and found that something was covering him.
He groped at the material and thought, blanket. It had the waxy, alien feel of something that had been proofed.
Then he realized something else: His right arm was covered in bandages, as was his leg and the wounded parts of his chest and hip. His fingers skirted uneasily over the cloth. He felt horribly awake, his senses sharpened. He smelled the sour-red scent of some sort of medicine. And something else--
Meat, Code realized, and sat up. The blanket pooled in his thighs.
There was the whisper of movement, and then light flooded the shelter.
Code's eyes took a second to adjust. And then--
"I just killed you!" he blurted, slamming his entire body into the corner of the shelter. The movement jarred him, but he didn't care. He groped for his knife, but it was in the man's hand, held in a lazy, comfortable grip.
The man grinned at him, showing again those sharp teeth. In the dim, yellow light, Code saw the line across his neck. And his shirt was stained by dried blood. "You did," he confirmed. "Hurt like a motherfucker, too. And would you relax?" he added disdainfully. "I went through the trouble of patching you up, why would I bother to hurt you now?"
"You... you did all this?" Code said.
"Yeah. I followed you for awhile, actually, thought it was pretty pathetic the way you limped along like that."
Code just stared. He couldn't have spoken if he wanted to.
The man held something out. It was the meat Code had smelled earlier, and the scent made his mouth water.
"It's safe for you to eat," the man said at Code's stare.
Still, Code didn't move. The man had failed to die, or he had died and come back to life, but Code had injured him. He could be injured. And, although he was taller, his frame was far lighter. Code weighed more. If he threw himself at the man now, when he wasn't expecting it, he could escape, since the man had gone through the trouble of giving him a proofed blanket. With the blanket and his boots, he would be safe in the rain.
And he could get his knife back while he did it, twist the main around, maybe severe his spinal cord this time--see if he could recover from that. Take the time to break his neck, break every bone in his body if it came to that, before he fled. It would be easy. Code was good at surviving.
He lunged forward. His fingers curled around the meat, and then he was back in the corner, huddled like an animal, wary eyes on the man's amused features.
"Thank you," he said, the words coarse against his throat.
"Sure. You're welcome," the man said, and grinned. He stepped forward, put the knife in front of Code, and then stepped back, the torchlight shifting with each step.
Code ate, first. It was good meat, and he didn't die immediately, so perhaps the man hadn't been lying. Then, he inched forward, and curled his fingers around the hilt of his knife. He looked up, but the man didn't move, just watched, all signs of amusement gone.
Code went back, under the blanket, his knife secure in his hands. He said, "Do you have any water?"
It's a very rough draft. There's no editing. Enjoy!
Finding
After years of traveling with Wyndham's crew, Code had forgotten how hard it was to go through the backlands alone. He only had a small pack with him and a coat with proofing thin enough that just one night of rain would render it useless. Code's only option, then, was to move as fast as possible immediately after the acid showers ended and hope he found shelter before the sky darkened again. It wasn't practical, but it was feasible, if only barely.
Unfortunately, "shelter" was rarely an accurate word to describe the places he sought safety in. The one he was in now was really just a glorified hole in the ground. A piece of uneven, thinning metal acted as the roof. The ground was littered with corroded rocks and sand. Code had to gather these into a pile, sit on top of them, and then watch gloomily as rain leaked in, eating away at the foundation of his sanctuary.
Twenty years after the Darkening, the rainfall was lighter than before, nor as frequent, but that didn't mean much. Code's right arm, covered with scars and oddly mottled skin under the bandages, was proof of that.
He sat with his boots under him, most of his weight on his toes. It was uncomfortable, but only his boots were sufficiently proofed. His coat he kept above him, far away the gathering liquid. The level was rising far higher than he'd anticipated, but it wasn't like he could do anything. Worse still, if any backland creature caught him here, he was near-defenseless.
As if summoned by his thoughts, Code heard the distinct crackling sound of feet stepping in sand. His eyes snapped to the opening at the top of the shelter. Moments later the scant light was blocked by a silhouette.
Code reached for the knife tucked securely into his belt. It was Wyndham's most prized possession, ostensibly a gift from his mother. Code had felt guilty for taking it. Now he only relieved.
Code suddenly frowned. The silhouette he saw was in possession of a head, and two arms, and two legs--but that was impossible. If it was a human, he'd be screaming or writhing in pain, as Code had, once upon a time. Maybe it was the angle. Surely no human could stand in the rain like that.
He changed his mind a second later, when something--someone--dropped through the opening, landing with a splash that made Code wince. He didn't even notice the few droplets sizzling through his clothes, though. He was too transfixed at the sight of the man in front of him.
Code had never seen someone completely wet before, except when his little sister was born, and even then it was because she was a newborn covered in amniotic fluid.
It was amazing. He was just standing there, rain dripping off him, completely unaffected and unbothered. Maybe he was proofed. Ilsa had been going on about that before Code had left, but common sense dictated that even if there was a way to proof a human being, he shouldn't be standing so casually like that.
"Would you look at that!" the man said. The words startled Code. The accent was strange--too much emphasis on the consonants, maybe--but...
Surely, if he was from a nearby crew, they'd have heard of this miraculous proofing. Or maybe it was new.
"How can you stand in the rain like that?" Code asked, face completely blank.
His eyes were yellow.
"You're from a crew, aren't you? You must be, huddled up like that."
When he grinned, he revealed sharp teeth, causing Code to move involuntarily back. When some of the rocks shifted, skittering down, he froze, his entire body tense. The yellow-eyed boy in front of him laughed.
"Are you a scout? Because if you are, you should hurry back and tell your crew not to come anywhere near here."
"I'm not. I mean, I'm not a scout. And I left my crew," Code managed. The words stuck in his mouth and against a suddenly clumsy tongue, garbling half the words.
Sharp eyes narrowed. "Oh. Then I should probably kill you."
That was the only warning Code received. The man darted forward. Code brought the knife up, thrusting his upper body forward to bear the weight. He felt it slide pathetically easily into the man's flesh, skidding against a rib before jarring to a stop. Then they both tumbled back, and Code screamed in fear or pain or maybe both. He managed to jerk his body so that he landed on his right arm.
Ilsa had told him that he would never feel anything with it again, that the rain had washed off his nerves. She was wrong. Worse, the water hit his leg and torso, and although the coat stopped most of it a second later it didn't matter, because it leaked through.
Sense burst clumsily through the agony, somehow. He remembered that the stranger was proofed, somehow, and he threw himself with a pained grunt against his assailant. A moment later the man was under him, breathing harshly, wild eyes glaring up, like an absurd living platform on which Code found relative safety.
He really was proofed, Code marveled, because water was seeping into his knife-wound and he wasn't bothered at all. The man jerked up, maybe to grab at him; Code just reached forward, grabbed the knife, and twisted. The man screamed and aborted movement.
The rain was lightening, finally. Code jerked the knife free, then reached forward and in a practiced movement slit the man's throat.
He died without any fuss, already weakened from Code's initial strike.
The burns didn't hurt, not yet, as if his brain was filing the fact away for later. He was breathing hard. His arm, already of limited movement, now wouldn't move at all. When he stood up, he stumbled, because of his right arm.
He needed filtered water, to wash off the acid, and he needed clean cloth, to wrap the new burns. He had access to neither; his fight with the man had resulted in his pack being thrown into the deeper waters. He wasn't about to risk using anything he'd stored in there.
Code poked at his coat with the tip of his knife. Maybe a quarter of it was still dry. Gripping the section between his knees, he managed to roughly cut the salvageable portion, which he then used as protection for his hands as he stripped himself of his ruined clothes.
Somewhere, in that quartered-off section of his mind, the pain registered as he peeled wet cloth off his body.
He was now standing half-naked above a dead man. If his little sister were to see him, she'd make her usual out-of-place joke, probably involving necrophilia. And he'd laugh in response, and then hit her.
Except, of course, she wasn't there. Code looked up into the sky, which was now clear. If he was lucky, he would have a few hours at least before the rain came again. Somehow, he'd have to make it to the next shelter in time before then, even with a wounded leg.
It never occurred to Code to rest, to stay in this shelter until he felt better enough to move again. He had to keep moving. His little sister was running out of time.
-
Code was lucky. The rain didn't come again for a long time--or maybe it was that the seconds were stretching longer, with each limping step sending bursts of pain through him. It was only his right side that was really injured but his entire body was suffering.
The next shelter he found was a lot more reliable. As before, it was a hole in the ground, but there was a proper and respectably deep ditch for the rain to collect in. He was beginning to suspect that someone, maybe some group of adventurers, had set these shelters up in the backlands on purpose, to help whatever idiot next decided to travel through them.
He sat down, back against one dirt wall, and tried not to shiver. When he pressed his hand against his forehead he thought his skin was hot. He hoped he wasn't coming down with a fever, or an infection. His sister couldn't afford that.
The rain was very light, this time. It would let up soon. That was good. Despite the... the interruption, he'd made good time today.
In the back of his mind, in the same place he shut away the agony and doubt and fear, was the nagging worry for food. Backland animals were too poisonous to eat, as were any vegetation he'd come across. What food he did have he'd left next to the man's corpse, and anyway it would be soaked through by now and too dangerous to consume.
Water, too. He didn't have the equipment needed to purify water.
Code closed his eyes, feeling a headache building. All this worrying was frankly useless, so he tried to dredge up happy memories, instead.
Most of them revolved around his sister, with her sweet face and bright eyes. Her personality didn't at all match her innocent appearance, but that was what Code loved about her. She was at once worldly and naive, able to sing songs that made Code blush and yell, but there was a lot she didn't know about.
She didn't know about their mother, and she never would, because Code would never tell her. And she didn't know about life before--all this. The rain, and the poisoning, and the fires.
Code did, even if his recollections were hazy, like a dream. For him, life started the moment his sister was born. Everything before that was blurry, indistinct; everything after that was sharp, like a too-long film Code could peruse at leisure. She'd been a perfect miracle, the envy of the crew. And then, years afterwards, when they'd joined Wyndham's crew, she'd been a miracle to them, too, and a source of hope. Babies could be born, perfect and whole. You just had to be lucky enough.
Code opened his eyes and realized with horror that he'd been sleeping.
It was still raining, or maybe it had started raining again. It was completely dark. He tried to sit up and found that something was covering him.
He groped at the material and thought, blanket. It had the waxy, alien feel of something that had been proofed.
Then he realized something else: His right arm was covered in bandages, as was his leg and the wounded parts of his chest and hip. His fingers skirted uneasily over the cloth. He felt horribly awake, his senses sharpened. He smelled the sour-red scent of some sort of medicine. And something else--
Meat, Code realized, and sat up. The blanket pooled in his thighs.
There was the whisper of movement, and then light flooded the shelter.
Code's eyes took a second to adjust. And then--
"I just killed you!" he blurted, slamming his entire body into the corner of the shelter. The movement jarred him, but he didn't care. He groped for his knife, but it was in the man's hand, held in a lazy, comfortable grip.
The man grinned at him, showing again those sharp teeth. In the dim, yellow light, Code saw the line across his neck. And his shirt was stained by dried blood. "You did," he confirmed. "Hurt like a motherfucker, too. And would you relax?" he added disdainfully. "I went through the trouble of patching you up, why would I bother to hurt you now?"
"You... you did all this?" Code said.
"Yeah. I followed you for awhile, actually, thought it was pretty pathetic the way you limped along like that."
Code just stared. He couldn't have spoken if he wanted to.
The man held something out. It was the meat Code had smelled earlier, and the scent made his mouth water.
"It's safe for you to eat," the man said at Code's stare.
Still, Code didn't move. The man had failed to die, or he had died and come back to life, but Code had injured him. He could be injured. And, although he was taller, his frame was far lighter. Code weighed more. If he threw himself at the man now, when he wasn't expecting it, he could escape, since the man had gone through the trouble of giving him a proofed blanket. With the blanket and his boots, he would be safe in the rain.
And he could get his knife back while he did it, twist the main around, maybe severe his spinal cord this time--see if he could recover from that. Take the time to break his neck, break every bone in his body if it came to that, before he fled. It would be easy. Code was good at surviving.
He lunged forward. His fingers curled around the meat, and then he was back in the corner, huddled like an animal, wary eyes on the man's amused features.
"Thank you," he said, the words coarse against his throat.
"Sure. You're welcome," the man said, and grinned. He stepped forward, put the knife in front of Code, and then stepped back, the torchlight shifting with each step.
Code ate, first. It was good meat, and he didn't die immediately, so perhaps the man hadn't been lying. Then, he inched forward, and curled his fingers around the hilt of his knife. He looked up, but the man didn't move, just watched, all signs of amusement gone.
Code went back, under the blanket, his knife secure in his hands. He said, "Do you have any water?"
Labels: _fiction, c: code, c: liam, verse: boneyards
posted by Imaan at 10:59 PM
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art: boneyards, liam and elle
Tuesday, December 30, 2008
I've been trying to flesh out Elle, Liam's sister. She's the saner of the two, but it's easy to look sane when you have a brother like Liam.She has a very que sera, sera attitude, and is fond expensive food. She doesn't like her name, so she has a habit of making a new one up every time she introduces herself to someone.
Labels: _art, c: elle, c: liam, verse: boneyards
posted by Imaan at 6:35 PM
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art: boneyards
Saturday, December 13, 2008

Kind of a typical image, but I can't really spare the energy for anything more strenuous. @o@
Labels: _art, c: liam, verse: boneyards
posted by Imaan at 12:12 PM
2 Comments

art: boneyards, sketch | fanart: metal gear solid, sketch
Wednesday, December 10, 2008
This is Liam. He is a creepy little motherfucker, and of my Boneyards verse.

And, just because, Raiden from Metal Gear Solid. I love him in MGS4. After exams are done I think I'm going to go replay it ♥


And, just because, Raiden from Metal Gear Solid. I love him in MGS4. After exams are done I think I'm going to go replay it ♥

Labels: _art, _fanart, c: liam, c: raiden, fandom: metal gear solid, verse: boneyards
posted by Imaan at 6:24 PM
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