Jen Daring (
thebrownacid) wrote2014-08-09 08:47 pm
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Entry tags:
Random Encounters
[This is a casual rp starter for scenes with Jen Daring, the world's most harmless Malkavian Antitribu. It serves as a warmup spot for character ideas for the After Gehenna game.]
San Francisco was a fishing village now. Bay water lapped the bases of the surviving skyscrapers, so clear now you could see down to the shattered street. Some brave divers went for artifacts down there: jewelry, surviving tools, random items to decorate their chambers with and claim bragging rights just for surviving. An old hubcap could cost you your life now that the Farrallones and the Bay were wed in one stretch of water over the drowned city. Sharks--the main risk in the area and also the main livelihood. They might get a fisherman now and again, but most nights in the high village with its precarious catwalks, it was they who became dinner.
When the sun went down the fishing crews lowered ropes down the side of the buildings and hauled up the boats along with their catch. The hard, ugly end-of-the-day work was necessary, for one breed of shark hunted at night and could take out even the few old yachts they had left.
The grunts and creaks of the ropes and thunk and scrape of the rising boats were the first thing Jen heard when she woke that night. She opened the closet she was curled up in and spilled out, yawning hugely. The outer wall of the hotel room she was squatting in had shattered outward, and a huge, battle-scarred gray cat crouched among the bricks, messily dining on a pigeon the size of a football. He looked up at her with his one good eye and meowed conversationally.
Within half an hour they had both eaten, and Jen was sitting quietly on the edge of the cracked rooftop plaza of the hotel. Other villagers, human and otherwise, milled on the rooftop by torchlight, enjoying a barbecue out in the cool night air. The cat sat next to her, keeping watch. Jen was a little unfocused, distracted by the blobs of golden and royal blue light dancing through the air. She knew something was going to happen soon and she should be here for it, but not what.
San Francisco was a fishing village now. Bay water lapped the bases of the surviving skyscrapers, so clear now you could see down to the shattered street. Some brave divers went for artifacts down there: jewelry, surviving tools, random items to decorate their chambers with and claim bragging rights just for surviving. An old hubcap could cost you your life now that the Farrallones and the Bay were wed in one stretch of water over the drowned city. Sharks--the main risk in the area and also the main livelihood. They might get a fisherman now and again, but most nights in the high village with its precarious catwalks, it was they who became dinner.
When the sun went down the fishing crews lowered ropes down the side of the buildings and hauled up the boats along with their catch. The hard, ugly end-of-the-day work was necessary, for one breed of shark hunted at night and could take out even the few old yachts they had left.
The grunts and creaks of the ropes and thunk and scrape of the rising boats were the first thing Jen heard when she woke that night. She opened the closet she was curled up in and spilled out, yawning hugely. The outer wall of the hotel room she was squatting in had shattered outward, and a huge, battle-scarred gray cat crouched among the bricks, messily dining on a pigeon the size of a football. He looked up at her with his one good eye and meowed conversationally.
Within half an hour they had both eaten, and Jen was sitting quietly on the edge of the cracked rooftop plaza of the hotel. Other villagers, human and otherwise, milled on the rooftop by torchlight, enjoying a barbecue out in the cool night air. The cat sat next to her, keeping watch. Jen was a little unfocused, distracted by the blobs of golden and royal blue light dancing through the air. She knew something was going to happen soon and she should be here for it, but not what.
no subject
"I do. We must have that much in common. But..."
But. Roland. Not a 'big wolfie', not going to heal.
no subject
"The unit's sealed, water resistant, and armored against impact so it'll protect your head. I'm gonna ask Jen and Eight to stick with you guys. Don't you be shy about lettin' them meat shield you, all right? Eight especially is real tough."
Jen salutes around the bundle of cat currently in her arms.
no subject
no subject
He doesn't speak up, continuing to search through Catherine's bag of fun and goodies.
no subject
"Check the side pockets, I have some flare guns and a flash grenade or two. Careful where you aim those, right? Heh."
Jen sighs and closes her eyes. "Distraction. I gotta figure out a distraction."
Maggie looks over curiously. "Can't you just use your powers to get them high?"
Jen pouts fiercely. "They don't deserve it."
no subject
He digs through his purse, taking a few things out to make room for a weapon or two. Mostly it's spare fabric that he removes, typically useful but right now not nearly so useful as weapons. "Donald's made a bomb or two in his time. Such a thing could be a fair distraction if he could find the parts."
Congratulations, man. Roland has just volunteered you.
no subject
"We're running out of time. I couldn't make a bomb in five minutes, that's stretching my skill a little. Flare guns are close."
He's pulling those out, where they disappear into his backpack. Fun toys.
no subject
Jen has gone quiet, frowning thoughtfully, but then nods slowly. "If not sleepy then slowed down lots at least. I can do that."
no subject
no subject
"Any other weapons you won't be using yourself?"
no subject
Danica's radio hissed and she snapped out of her trance to grab it. "Petra? ...Right. Right. Okay. Tell me what you've got."
Jen's eyes glaze again, and this time, she whimpers in fear. Catherine and Eight glance at her worriedly.
no subject
no subject
no subject
Danica starts passing on the information as she gets it. "Between five and six...old Pack...oh right. Shit. No, of course they weren't gonna be friendly, not if they remember us." She pauses, listening.
Whatever gets said next, she doesn't relay or respond to. Instead her eyebrows just go up, and she mumbles an acknowledgment and signs off.
"Old Sabbat pack. They may have been hunting us. Or maybe just here. But they're old school. Humans are just meat to them and I don't think they like to see us mingling."
She swallows and glances down as the others go quiet, watching her. "They've got some...modified...ghouls with them. They made them out of the sharks."
Maggie rubs her face. "Could you be more specific?"
"They gave them lungs. And legs."
"...fucking landsharks."
"Yes."
no subject
Being a stranger to this land is working in his favor, here - while he's concerned about the, ah, walking sharks, he's coming into this expecting anything, knowing of sharks only as vague, distant legends he used to hear about as a child. The rest of them, to whom all the creatures here are supposed to exist by certain rules, seem to be having a harder time accepting things. Roland isn't worried, either, that he and Donald are going to be useless - his aim is the same as it ever was, and Donald might be able to track who they're looking for even if he doesn't have anything that belonged to them to scent first.
no subject
Hasn't it been ten minutes yet? He's ready to move. Do something.
"Six of them and... how many sharks?"
no subject
Jen and Catherine exchange glances, then Jen speaks up. "Brain damage or fire. Or massive body damage. I hate having to fight but you need to know how if you do it. Oh I wish it didn't have to be."
Catherine touches the Malk's shoulder. "Jen."
"I know, I know." She wipes something red out of her eye. "Let's get moving."
Danica raises her voice again. "We have a total of fourteen targets according to Petra. Six pack members, six shark mounts and two watch sharks. That we know of. There's a gondola round the side of the building we can take down to water level. Follow me."
no subject
no subject
"And how will we recognize the ones in need of rescue?"
no subject
"Jen," Maggie collars the young Malkavian and tugs her along. "Stop talking about my sire's frank-n-beans and get moving."
Danica leads the way to the drop gondola, a spike-bottomed affair bolted together from a combination of old bolt hull and corrugate steel as makeshift armor. Most of the Pack moves silently, and it's the Malkavians and Catherine who keep closest to the newcomers.
no subject
no subject
Into the boat goes the 'big wolfie'. No comment about Tarzan vampire beanie wienies. (It is funny, though, the rambling.)
Silence is golden. He hasn't spoken a word.
no subject
"Torpor's kinda like when a water bear gets all dried up and can't move any more. Tardigrades. They can survive all shriveled and dormant for a long long long time. Even in a vacuum! But they're not conscious and they come out all starved and need healing and stuff. Danica can fix it."
"Yeah," grumps the witch. "If I get the chance before they diablerize him or something."
no subject
So probably he'd be too distracted to care much about her words even if he did understand them. He looks to Donald instead, eyebrows raised in a silent question: Did you get any of that? Or, more probably, Was any of it important?
no subject
He's not whispering, a whisper sometimes turns out to be louder than speaking normally and quietly. Very quietly. He's learned over time exactly how good Roland's hearing is.
"A sort of coma. They must have forced the one on our side into it. Hence him needing rescue."
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)