meemz ([personal profile] meemz) wrote in [community profile] bakerstreet2014-09-01 06:12 pm

picture prompt meme.


the picture prompt meme

i. COMMENT WITH CHARACTER
ii. OTHERS LEAVE A PICTURE (OR TWO OR THREE....)
iii. REPLY TO THEM WITH A SETTING BASED ON THE IMAGES.

THIS POST WILL BE IMAGE HEAVY.



Link to an image:
 

Embed an image in your reply:
 

You can control width and height of your pictures:
 


abidinglaw: (pic#1539232)

[personal profile] abidinglaw 2014-09-02 01:53 pm (UTC)(link)
"She murdered a boy."

The tall man raised his eyebrows as she passed, but he didn't turn his head to follow her.

"The laws in these lands are what we make them. Indeed, that is the way that laws have always been."
Edited 2014-09-02 13:53 (UTC)
wolfwild: (ɪɴ ᴛʜᴇ ᴛᴇᴍᴘᴇsᴛᴜᴏᴜs ᴘᴇᴛᴛɪᴄᴏᴀᴛ)

[personal profile] wolfwild 2014-09-04 10:46 am (UTC)(link)
"Murdered!"

Ah. And there, the nerve was struck. What calm composure Lady Lyanna -- Nym Snow -- had gathered to herself broke upon the naming of the crime. She busied herself with the tricky ties that would hold the fur-lined curtains back and let light stream inside. Grey thin dissatisfying light, but light all the same.

"And so you run her down like a dog. Was the boy important to you?"
abidinglaw: (pic#1539224)

[personal profile] abidinglaw 2014-09-06 10:51 pm (UTC)(link)
What he took from this reaction was that Snow had met the girl, and he supposed that she had fancied her for a weak and innocent creature then. She had helped the red headed menace, and knew now to her horror that her kindness had aided a murderer. If Norrington did not strongly suspect that he was homing in on the information he needed then he never would have been so forthcoming with these details of his own task. As it was he felt that Nym had overstepped the bounds of polite curiosity several yards prior.

"Not at all - I could not even tell you his name. I saw him but briefly -- I suspect that my employer meant to instill a spark of anger that he might be assured I would not merely flee with my advance. He need not have worried. But that is neither here nor there. Does the girl abide here still? If not, then where did she flee? And how long ago?"
Edited (Oh, Norrington word-jumble, I enjoy you so.) 2014-09-06 22:53 (UTC)