keep it gucci (
rhizomatic) wrote in
bakerstreet2013-01-30 02:10 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:
(no subject)

Time to re-explore that childhood (or get one for the first time). Rules are as simple as usual!
૪ Post up your character -- name and canon.
૪ When replying to someone's post, go and RNG for option one, and see just how conscious you'll be of the trouble you're in.
૪ You can hit it up further for options 1-11 of wat do, and then, let it rip!
૪ Cue crack, hilarity, fluff, angst- a full spectrum of genres.
૪ ????
૪ PROFIT!
You're Just An:
1. Adult mind in the wrong body - looks like you really shouldn't have drank that potion, after all! Better hope nobody sees you like this, and that the effects aren't permanent...
2. Adorable bitty all rounder - Maybe it was an accident, maybe not. But your size is your age, with all the mental attributes that come with it.
Okay, So Wat Do?:
1. Back to school! First day back, middle of term with a small bullying problem? Time for your bitty to get some edumacation. Play with some friends or get the teacher involved! If your adult instincts are still all there, maybe you could play yourself up as a child genius; who knows? Someone might catch you out...
2. It's adventure time!~ Them kids have all the imagination. Quickly! Your damsel in distress needs rescuing from the dragon! It's time to kiss the bride! Play time has no rules, and neither does this prompt- except for curfew. Mother dearest always said to be back before dark.
3. Gots a boo boo! Oh dear, looks like someone's gone and skinned their knee. This requires a serious operation of silly jokes and coddling, before those tears start to fall and never seem to stop.
4. I think I love you! Young love is just so beautiful. Maybe you're pulling pigtails, so to speak. Maybe you have a crush on your teacher, and you just HAVE to get it out there. The clearest sign of love is always a note, however- just make sure to make that 'yes' box really big, so they know exactly where to tick.
5. They went away. We all lose loved ones, sometimes. Maybe the rents have just split, maybe your best friend is moving away. Maybe the only reply that can really be given is that "they're in heaven now, sweetheart". Whatever the reason, they're just not there, and you want to know why.
6. Off to the circus! Or the theme park. Or the aquarium. It's babies day out, with all the crack, fluff, and panic inducing moments implied. Pet a lion! Go on the Ferris wheel! Just try not to lose your adult companion, or things could become dicey.
7. You're in big doo-doo, mister. You missed curfew by ten minutes. Your Sunday best is covered in mud and god knows what else, and you let rip that new swear word you picked up from that friend you're not allowed to play with. You bet your ass you'll be in the naughty corner for weeks.
8. Big ball of FUBAR. You went and got yourself lost, at no fault of your own. The big kids pushed you down the well, and left you there. All you know is you're in a huge amount of trouble, and a little kindness is going to have to go a long way to get you safe.
9. Go the fuck to sleep. Dreamland is good, trust me. No really- don't get out of bed, you're fine right. There. Its time for bed, or to prepare for it! Bath time doesn't mean run down the halls naked, but if you catch a quick break, I'm sure you can achieve great things.
10. Time to shine! This is your big moment, right here. That dance recital you've been working hard on, the Christmas play, and you're the tree. This is a big point in your life, a time where you can show off your skills and make history! This is it. You're making it happen.
11. Choose your own adventure! Re-roll, or get out another idea that appeals to you.
no subject
"Do you think they're still gonna play the show on television, even now?" During all this chaos, Isaac wondered if at least television would remain unaffected. In his mind he thought so, like television programs were safe from the monsters.
no subject
Alice imagined knowing him then, of him coming to her as a young man and asking what she thought of Joan, or Marie, or whomever the girl might be. Would they both live long enough for that? It was a morbid thought. I'll make sure you live long enough to meet your future wife. She vowed this silently as she stared down into his bright blue eyes.
"You can figure out your own stories to fill in the blanks too. We can find you a notebook and pen to write them down even. What's to say your version is not the truth too?"
no subject
"If they knew about you, they'd make you into a comic too."
no subject
"Time to get some sleep. We'll have breakfast and then see how the day looks. Have good dreams, alright?" Alice moved to her own cot after turning the battery powered lamp down to its lowest brightness. After she got into bed she whispered. "I'm glad I found you."
She was up before Isaac the next morning, and she left the shelter in her usual get up. Alice searched inside the house they were sheltered under and she found a notebook, some markers, pens and pencils. She came back down and found Isaac just rousing, and she set the items on the floor by his cot before she went about making breakfast, Bisquick pancakes and sausages.
"'morning, sunshine." Alice smiled over at him. "I have something for you there." She nodded toward the items.
no subject
When she spoke again he opened his eyes and blinked around and rolled his body over to see the gifts she brought him. A wide smile spread on his lips and he reached down to touch them. Smoothed his fingers of the book and flipped it open to rub gently at the first page, pinching it in between his thumb and forefinger. Then the markers were rolled gently and slowly beneath his fingertips.
"Thank you." He said politely over breakfast. "I'm glad you found me too.." He thought about her saying that and he felt special. And he reflected a moment on even just that. It felt impossible for anyone to find him and through all that horror up there he prevailed until Alice came for him. It was like it was meant to happen and Isaac felt good about it.
no subject
They set off on foot and walked for a few hours without any problems. When they came across a gas station, Alice reached down for Isaac's hand and carefully lead him toward it. There were a thousand abandoned cars around the town but not a drop of gasoline in any of them, they had been scavenged and left like carcases to rust in the weather.
Alice tried every pump but it was dry, as she had figured. "Let's see if they have some snacks. Are you thirsty?" Alice hugged Isaac's head to her and smiled down at him as they headed inside. It all sounded and smelled clear enough, so Alice began looking around the store and let Isaac wander and take whatever he might like. As for herself, she went straight for the counter under the cash register and was pleased to find for herself a handgun with a full magazine.
"Maybe I could teach you to shoot some time," she mentioned. A second later there was a low moaning sound and Alice immediately brought up her gun. There, not three feet away from the boy, was a zombie. At some point it had probably been a teenager but it was so rotted it was hard to tell. "RUN TO ME!"
no subject
no subject
"There might be more, hurry!" Alice jumped off the freezer and ran for Isaac, and she picked him up to get him on his feet and took his hand as she made for the front doors of the gas station. She opened the door and saw five more zombies closing in on them, alerted by the smell of them and the sound of her gunfire likely.
"There should be a back exit, come on." She pulled his hand and they ran through the store together and down a hallway, through a storage area and finally to a back door. Alice took in a breath before she opened the door and looked out. It was clear- not exactly clear, her eyes landed on a motorcycle. I don't believe in luck any more.
She ran to the motorcycle, letting go of Isaac's hand only when they reached it. There in the ignition were keys. Feeling a spark of hope she sat on the bike seat and turned the keys, then grinned at Isaac as the engine started up. "Come on!" Alice held out her hands and helped Isaac to sit on the seat in front of her. Seconds later they were speeding off away from the gas station and down the street away. When she looked in the small, shaking side mirror she saw at least twenty more zombies being left in their dust.
no subject
He didn't cry, it was the wind whipping at his face, it wasn't anything more than that. That's what he thought when they were finally off the motorcycle and somewhere safe. That's what he told himself when he wiped away the tears with the back of his hand. He couldn't focus anymore on his mom's face when those monsters popping up to block his memory of her. He was afraid of that, of her turning into one, of her being that undead monster. Coming after him with claws. He thought about it now. What if she returned and she was changed? Another fresh set of silent tears fell and he wiped at them quickly.
no subject
The woman and child made their camp in one of the back offices, which Alice barricaded the door of just in case. She felt pretty safe here, but what was safe any more? They had some of their food, jerky and cheese and apple juice for lunch. She noticed Isaac was still teary-eyed and she shifted to sit closer to him and she wrapped her arm around him and rubbed his shoulder. "It's okay to cry. I cry sometimes too, when I'm really scared or exhausted."
no subject
no subject
"We're headed west, to the coast. I heard there's a place there where everyone has boats and live on the water. The undead, even if they come out they just sink to the bottom of the ocean and rot down there. They can't swim. They've made lives for themselves, and there's other kids too. You can make new friends."
Alice wiped his other cheek clear of tears. "And your mom, she probably headed that way too. Maybe she's even waiting for you there."
no subject
"Mom, no.. mom.. don't go.. mom.."
"I'll be right back."
"See, I told you, nothing to worry about."
"Mom, he left.. the man.."
"It's okay, he has people he cares about that he needed to leave for.. but you and I will stay here. This will be our haven."
"What about dad?"
"He's at the office, he's going to stay there too.. until an evacuation plan is figured out."
"Isaac, I'm going to go find Dad.. you stay here."
"Take me with you!"
"I'm sure he's at his office, it's only a block away, this place is the safest place.. I made sure."
"Don't leave.. don't leave!"
"We'll be back for you.. with help. I love you. Stay here, don't leave, don't let anyone in."
"Mom!…Mom!!.. MOM!!"
Isaac went to sleep thinking about the span of days that led up to his mom leaving, and the days after in which he was alone. All alone. His dreams suffered for it, and he dreamed of his mom fighting off a monster, a necromorph and it was too strong and all he could do was watch from the little peek hole from the painted window. They couldn't see him, but he could see them. Then he woke, cold, upset, and looked to where Alice slept. His mom wasn't waiting for him, he had hope when she said it, but his dream changed his mind. He moved over to Alice and settled down next to her beneath her blanket and curled himself around her.
no subject
The next day after breakfast Alice sat Issac down and showed him the handgun she had taken from the gas station the day before. "I'm going to show you how to take this apart and clean it, and then we're going to go into the woods and do some target practice. I want you to be armed, so you can better protect yourself. Alright? A good weapon is only as good as it is clean, it's very important. That's true for most machines."
Alice showed him how to take the magazine out safely, then began showing him how to take it apart. When it was in pieces she carefully went about showing him where to clean, how much to file, where to put the tiniest drop of special oil. When it was all clean she handed him the pieces. "Let's put it back together now."
no subject
The target practice he hadn't hit a single thing, the force of the gun was something to get use to and he decided he needed upper body strength, especially in his arms. So, after the practice shooting, he started to climb trees. Jog, roll around, and train off of what he thought was training. Training to prevail, he thought. He needed muscles like Alice, like Treeman. He needed to be stronger so that when he used the gun it didn't give him too much kick back.
Every night he wrote in his book as well, he spent time writing about Treeman then about Alice. About how cool both of them were, about what they could do, and what he thought they could do. In the coming days he would feel better, stronger mentally, and even more encouraged to continue to work out physically to become stronger that way as well.
no subject
But they were wrecked, some burnt, others sawed into pieces. She turned to face what had been an encampment that the sea dwelling people had used as a base for meeting and for storage. There were fields here and gardens where they had grown food. It was clear to her what had happened here, looking at the evidence of the corpses they found. It wasn't zombies that had done this, it was other people. It was impossible to tell if it had been a group of people passing through that had slaughtered these people for their food, or if it had been a civil war and the town folk had turned on each other. Whatever the case, there was nothing here for them but yet another place to pick clean supplies off bones and death, to dust off anything useful and continue on their way.
She looked over to Isaac, who had grown an amazing amount in the past few years. This wasn't the first "sea town" they had found, but the others had either been overrun with zombies or like this, burnt and ruined. Alice didn't know how to tell Isaac that she didn't know of any more. She didn't know where to go next, and they never had found his mother.
Alice walked slowly down the pier toward him and offered him a small smile as she neared. "I don't see any zombie bodies. We can hold up here for a few days, get our supplies in order." It was all she could say, and she felt terrible saying it. There was nothing she liked less than giving Isaac bad news. It seemed like there was only ever bad news.
no subject
When Alice moved toward him, Isaac met her by hopping off the boat and onto the pier. "I was thinking about making an energy efficient boat.. something that charges electricity and recycles back into the propeller, what do you think?" He was pretty happy about his idea. He had grown smarter by the years, stronger, taller, and his hair darkened to a dark brown, almost black, like his father's.
no subject
"That's an excellent idea. We could cover so much more ground- er, you know what I mean." Alice laughed softly as she looked at him briefly. He was getting quite the serious set of muscles on him, toned and used often. He was getting just old enough now it was impossible for her not to notice the man he was becoming. "Do you really think you can do that? I saw a lot of tools in the storage shed back by the road."
no subject
no subject
I don't believe in luck. Alice looked away at his towel then up his arm and to his chest. She gave an uncertain smile and then a slow nod. "Let's camp out here for a few days and see if they have the parts that you need. It's worth a shot. They have seeds and farming supplies here we could take with us. Maybe we'll get lucky?" Alice had said it often enough to Isaac that she knew that he knew she didn't believe in it.
Alice started to walk past him, and her hand came up to pat his stomach on the way by. "I'll go clear out one of the huts for us to live in for now. We'll need to gather up and burn the bodies if we're going to be here longer than a few days."
no subject
no subject
"I-" She had nothing to say, and she looked away and felt moisture coming to her eyes. She swallowed her emotions down and gave a nod before looking back up at him. "Maybe you're right. It feels like giving up to me, but maybe it's not, maybe it's just appreciating what you have."
She gave him another nod and gently took her wrist from his hold and pet his chest before dropping both hands. "If this is what you want, Isaac. You know I hate disappointing you? Tell me what you need from me."
no subject
no subject
"I'll see if there's any gas in the vehicles left." Alice moved to him and hugged him briefly. "Don't go too far, okay?" Her mothering tone in her voice them as she looked over her shoulder at him while walking away.
It took them two days to find the next town, and it was a fishing village more or less. From the shops Alice could guess it used to be a tourist destination too. She spent some time in one of the gifts shops, looking at bumper stickers and snowglobes, feeling nostalgic. If they found this island it would be like starting life in a new world, a world without all these haunting memories. For some reason it was difficult for her to let go but the more she thought about it the more she knew it was for the best. Isaac needed something permanent and Alice wanted to give him that if she could, if this was what he wanted. Maybe she wanted it too but she was too afraid to try. She would be strong for him like she always had.
They scavenged a lot of fuel from the vehicles in this town as they made their way to the docks. When they got there, Alice was astonished at what they found. There were about a dozen boats all moored, and every single one of them looked complete. They were dirty and weather worn yes, but they weren't damaged. She pulled the old motorcycle down the wooden dock and stopped it, then laughed as she looked behind her at Isaac. "Think you can work with these?"
no subject
Isaac made sure the waste tank was functional and their fresh water supply was operational. He had adapters, screws, extra tanks hanging off of the side of the boat, secured by tight rope. Adhesive sealant, towels, the fridge working off batteries, extra power-tech Marine AGM batteries, battery cables, gel-tech marine batteries, extra battery switches. He was spoiled for the whole nine yards and feeling utterly confident.
Furthermore, they had supplies and resources to use for when the food in the fridge ran out. Fishing poles, lines, nets even. Extra chains, an underwater storage chest that set beside the lifeboat. He had even rigged, built, and installed an Air-X Marine Wind Turbine that produced 400 watts of power at 28 mph winds. He was feeling pretty good, and the complete preparation for all of this took less than a month. Nearly three and a half weeks and he was jonesing to get out to sea.
"It's done."
(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)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)