Entry tags:
OPEN | prompt one | RAIN
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prompt one | R A I N I have been one acquainted with the night. I have walked out in rain - and back in rain. I have outwalked the furthest city light. I have looked down the saddest city lane. |
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prompt one | R A I N I have been one acquainted with the night. I have walked out in rain - and back in rain. I have outwalked the furthest city light. I have looked down the saddest city lane. |
no subject
Not that I can think of, [ he says with a single shoulder shrug, raising his right hand to scratch at the whiskers on his chin. They're getting long. It'll be time to trim them back again soon. ] Unless you wanted to go out there and enjoy the rain. It's not likely to back for another month or two.
no subject
At first it seems as though she has no intentions of saying anything at all, but: ]
I don't like the smell.
[ Her piece said, she turns back to look out past the edge of the porch at the houses, silent in their neatly bombed-out rows, beyond. ]
no subject
That's fine, [ he concededs, easily, looking back out into the night again. ] You can stay here with me and watch. [ He reaches for the bottle balanced on the bench arm beside him, his daily ration, and begins unscrewing the lid. ] Business will be slow for a few days. People always see the rain and think they're saved. And then they drink and get sick for a while. And then they'll come back to us.
no subject
People came to Harvick in waves, coming and then going again but not without reason or cause. The rain was one of these things that created variation, like a stone dropped into a reservoir of water sending ripples across its surface. ]
More work, [ she says after a while and Baby Jane doesn't mean Harvick so much as herself. When the people came back after a time away they always seemed desperate or angry. Both of these things lead to fights more often than not, and that's when Baby Jane proved most useful.
She seems almost...cheerful at the prospect. ]
no subject
So perhaps he's just old-fashioned for finding it unsettling. He glances at her out of the corners of his eyes as he takes a sip. He's certainly benefitted from her ease with it and won't hesitate to in the future, so maybe he just needs to find a way to strip that particular concern out of his consciousness, let it go, one more casualty of the fallout. ]
Most likely. They'll come about and act as though it's my fault they drank the stuff. I'd be perfectly happy if they never did.
no subject
Logic, however, isn't what keeps Baby Jane by Harvick's side — silent and obedient and loyal. Nor is it a matter of survival, because if Baby Jane is capable of anything it's most certainly getting by on her own. No, what keeps her here, engaged in a conversation to which she only half contributes, all of her attention — both conscious and subconscious — focused on him sitting beside her, is something much more simple than that. It's naturalistic and organic and almost biological. Like the way a mother hawk imprints on a baby bird.
Baby Jane looks at Harvick again. ] I can do that, [ she says, the tone of her voice lifting every so slightly, making her sound just a hair closer to eager. Though the logistics of making sure nobody ever drinks rainwater again are quite complicated (and, in keeping with Baby Jane's method of problem solving, involve quite a lot of dead bodies), she does not seem daunted by this in the slightest.
She hears the word 'happy' and she responds. It's almost Pavlovian by now when it comes to him. ]
no subject
She may not be a normal child but then perhaps there are no more normal children, as Harvick knew them. Perhaps there is just Baby Jane and others like her, made to survive in this world they have now. Harvick fancies himself a scientist before most other things, and he'd like to think he can spot evolution when he sees it. ]
Keep in mind that we need customers left standing afterward as well, [ he murmurs into his the lip of his bottle, almost a gentle correction. ]
no subject
She turns away again, standing now and moving to the edge of the porch. When she extends an arm out into the rain, it's with her hand face-up and her fingers cupped. The water fills the meager bowl and then streams through the seams in it, wetting her hand and the dead ground below. ] You will always be relevant and when they die, others will come. New faces.
no subject
That's why he smiles, watching her catch water in her hands, acting like what she's said is sort of a joke and knowing that it sort of isn't as well. ]
Provided we ensure there are enough people left over to continue the species.
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And, just like all the others, she'll listen to whatever Harvick tells her. ]
Is that what we want to do?
no subject
It's important to be reasonable about killing people, isn't it? Kill too many, and we start looking like just any other gang of lunatics, and people will start coming only when they're absolutely desperate. Reputation matters. For our purposes, for the moment, it's better to be seen as relatively safe.