shroudofgray: (A quiet triumph)
shroudofgray ([personal profile] shroudofgray) wrote in [community profile] tushanshu_logs2016-01-11 11:01 pm

(no subject)

Characters: Yorda and Cain
Date: January 11th, 2017
Location: Northern coast.
Situation: Cain finds a half-drowned girl on the shoreline. Yorda is her weird self.
Warnings/Rating: Dad jokes.


Yorda's first thoughts upon waking were I am dead. He second thoughts upon sitting up, wet sand and seaweed sliding off her, were I can't be dead. Everything hurts.

Pain wasn't entirely unfamiliar to Yorda. She'd taken a few falls and had the wind knocked out of her. But she'd never felt the raw ache of coming back from the brink of death. She flexed her hands, fingers curling and uncurling as feeling gradually returned to her extremities.

"Ico...?" She meant to call out more loudly, but her voice was hoarse and it sounded more like a pathetic squeak. She frowned, gray eyes scanning the foggy shoreline. Something felt off, but what specifically she didn't know.

She pulled herself up to the dry sands where she could rest away from the lapping waves. She needed to rest and recover some of her strength - any greater feats were beyond her.

And then, hopefully, she could find her friend.
insertdadjoke: (♊ if you gave me a chance)

[personal profile] insertdadjoke 2016-01-16 08:07 am (UTC)(link)
Cain saw her beginning to shut down and hid his frown. This girl was definitely apart from the norm on every conceivable level, so the fact that she needed to rest and yet didn't factor her surroundings into it was only another tick on the list. He didn't move, didn't want to startle her.

"Before we part ways, I'd like to take you into the city first," he said. "You're welcome to rest, but it's safer, warmer and more comfortable there. Someone's even set up a place for newcomers to stay when they get here."
insertdadjoke: (♊ my heart continues to beat)

[personal profile] insertdadjoke 2016-01-21 05:50 pm (UTC)(link)
He could read the hesitance in her body language. It wasn't hard, and he knew he would have to speak persuasively to convince her it was safe. Whatever experiences she'd had before this hadn't been good, not only from this reaction but the fear for her friend from earlier. She would be safe in the Hotel; the real real trouble was going to be getting there.

"Quite a lot," he answered honestly. "Most people keep to themselves. There's too many people to bother everyone. I would be there too," he added, "so if it got to be too much we could go somewhere quiet. How does that sound?"