Dustin Silver (
quark_assassin) wrote in
revivalproject2022-06-19 01:23 pm
Stargazing
WHO: Dustin, Open
WHERE: Temba, on the roof of a moderately tall building on the northwest side of town
WHAT: Dustin is trying to handle a wicked case of interplanetary jetlag.
WHEN: Several nights in mid-June, post-Calibrations
WARNINGS: Language
To call today 'a weird day' would be one hell of an understatement. In Dustin's mind, he thinks it more accurate to call it 'a bust.'
The first few hours of his arrival felt like a blur. Wandering like a wild animal through the abandoned city, accidentally finding another person, getting some provisions from him, discovering another person and some spaceships; learning that life on other planets exists, interplanetary and interstellar travel is possible, the multiverse is a thing. On another day, Dustin would look at the flux of data the Agrii downloaded into his head by itself as a huge boon, one that he could spend the rest of his life investigating to its furthest reaches.
But this is not that day. His options to investigate his new world are woefully limited - in some cases intentionally so, if what Cal told him about the data points and expertises has merit. He's got no tools. No adequate facilities to operate out of. No materials to test with. Not even any documentation to base his studies off of. He is completely and utterly alone.
...Well, okay, none of those things are technically true. Other people that have been here longer than him almost certainly have tools and have restored some buildings specifically for experimentation and workshopping. They might even know of some alien plants and animals with unique reagents to study and apply, or have claimed an expertise to help answer some of his questions. Even if they didn't, Dustin has found the so-called 'Welcome Center' (he refuses to think of it using the Agrii's phonetic spelling) and knows he could at least try to request some of the things he thinks he needs, or take an expertise for himself.
And yet, he doesn't. Instead Dustin sits in a state of self-imposed misery, too suspicious of the Agrii to use their resources, too anxious of the other inhabitants to directly ask for help. About the only thing he has going for him is that he knows where he can find food, and he's been given clearance to wander in and out of that place as he pleases. He doesn't even trust the beds in the ship that eventually opens up for him; as soon as Dustin discovers that he shares a room with four other people, he goes to a locker, grabs all of the sheets and towels out of it, snatches a pillow from one of the least-slept-in-looking beds, stuffs all of it into a sling made out of his outer two sweater layers and gets the hell out of there.
As he searches for a more appropriately isolated place to sleep in, Dustin gets the first inclination that his circadian rhythm is fucked. He can't claim to have a perfect sense of time and is used to taking midday naps anyway, but he feels like it's been a very long day and the sun isn't in the right place in the sky to justify it. Perhaps he has confirmation bias from checking the clock app on his tablet, where he was surprised to find it reading 21:00 hours. The sun shouldn't even be out right now. Maybe they're at higher latitudes than the plant growth and heat would suggest? Maybe the days on this alien planet are longer than he's used to? Maybe the clock's just wrong? None of these ideas make Dustin any less tired. He finds a mostly-intact building, builds himself a nest of blankets and towels, and settles in to nap.
He wakes up again to find that not only has his nap turned into an exhaustion-fueled, full-blown sleep, but also that the clock app is reading 26:30 - which doesn't make any sense. At least the sun's set by now. However, now Dustin is very awake and still lacking in the materials that are directly at his fingertips, but he's unwilling to take.
So he does what would normally be the first thing he'd try if he found himself somewhere strange: Figure out where he is. In a sense, anyway.
Over the next few nights, Dustin goes through the motions of a project. He rotates what building he sleeps in, but always returns to the same, tall-ish building in the northwestern corner of Temba. He clambers up too many flights of stairs that were made for creatures much bigger than him with a makeshift pack of his sleeping supplies, a bit of food, and a bundle of large sticks and kindling, until he makes it to the roof. There he refuels the campfire he built on the first night, grabs a few pieces of charcoal from it, lights it up again in the far corner, turns his eyes skyward and watches. A few minutes of silent observation later and he starts drawing on the roof itself. By the end of the first night, the rooftop is covered in circles, dots, traced lines of movement and annotations - a crude charcoal star map. The following nights see him add subtle changes and pick out landmarks, like distinctive star clusters, what might be a nebula, the phases of the moon. Thankfully it's been clear enough the past few days to attempt this.
Perhaps unfortunately for Dustin, the cloudless summer nights also mean that the flickering light of his rooftop campfire carries quite a distance. He's definitely not staying hidden, and there's nothing stopping people from getting to the top of the building like he did to investigate. This little secluded observatory is not likely to stay so isolated for long.
WHERE: Temba, on the roof of a moderately tall building on the northwest side of town
WHAT: Dustin is trying to handle a wicked case of interplanetary jetlag.
WHEN: Several nights in mid-June, post-Calibrations
WARNINGS: Language
To call today 'a weird day' would be one hell of an understatement. In Dustin's mind, he thinks it more accurate to call it 'a bust.'
The first few hours of his arrival felt like a blur. Wandering like a wild animal through the abandoned city, accidentally finding another person, getting some provisions from him, discovering another person and some spaceships; learning that life on other planets exists, interplanetary and interstellar travel is possible, the multiverse is a thing. On another day, Dustin would look at the flux of data the Agrii downloaded into his head by itself as a huge boon, one that he could spend the rest of his life investigating to its furthest reaches.
But this is not that day. His options to investigate his new world are woefully limited - in some cases intentionally so, if what Cal told him about the data points and expertises has merit. He's got no tools. No adequate facilities to operate out of. No materials to test with. Not even any documentation to base his studies off of. He is completely and utterly alone.
...Well, okay, none of those things are technically true. Other people that have been here longer than him almost certainly have tools and have restored some buildings specifically for experimentation and workshopping. They might even know of some alien plants and animals with unique reagents to study and apply, or have claimed an expertise to help answer some of his questions. Even if they didn't, Dustin has found the so-called 'Welcome Center' (he refuses to think of it using the Agrii's phonetic spelling) and knows he could at least try to request some of the things he thinks he needs, or take an expertise for himself.
And yet, he doesn't. Instead Dustin sits in a state of self-imposed misery, too suspicious of the Agrii to use their resources, too anxious of the other inhabitants to directly ask for help. About the only thing he has going for him is that he knows where he can find food, and he's been given clearance to wander in and out of that place as he pleases. He doesn't even trust the beds in the ship that eventually opens up for him; as soon as Dustin discovers that he shares a room with four other people, he goes to a locker, grabs all of the sheets and towels out of it, snatches a pillow from one of the least-slept-in-looking beds, stuffs all of it into a sling made out of his outer two sweater layers and gets the hell out of there.
As he searches for a more appropriately isolated place to sleep in, Dustin gets the first inclination that his circadian rhythm is fucked. He can't claim to have a perfect sense of time and is used to taking midday naps anyway, but he feels like it's been a very long day and the sun isn't in the right place in the sky to justify it. Perhaps he has confirmation bias from checking the clock app on his tablet, where he was surprised to find it reading 21:00 hours. The sun shouldn't even be out right now. Maybe they're at higher latitudes than the plant growth and heat would suggest? Maybe the days on this alien planet are longer than he's used to? Maybe the clock's just wrong? None of these ideas make Dustin any less tired. He finds a mostly-intact building, builds himself a nest of blankets and towels, and settles in to nap.
He wakes up again to find that not only has his nap turned into an exhaustion-fueled, full-blown sleep, but also that the clock app is reading 26:30 - which doesn't make any sense. At least the sun's set by now. However, now Dustin is very awake and still lacking in the materials that are directly at his fingertips, but he's unwilling to take.
So he does what would normally be the first thing he'd try if he found himself somewhere strange: Figure out where he is. In a sense, anyway.
Over the next few nights, Dustin goes through the motions of a project. He rotates what building he sleeps in, but always returns to the same, tall-ish building in the northwestern corner of Temba. He clambers up too many flights of stairs that were made for creatures much bigger than him with a makeshift pack of his sleeping supplies, a bit of food, and a bundle of large sticks and kindling, until he makes it to the roof. There he refuels the campfire he built on the first night, grabs a few pieces of charcoal from it, lights it up again in the far corner, turns his eyes skyward and watches. A few minutes of silent observation later and he starts drawing on the roof itself. By the end of the first night, the rooftop is covered in circles, dots, traced lines of movement and annotations - a crude charcoal star map. The following nights see him add subtle changes and pick out landmarks, like distinctive star clusters, what might be a nebula, the phases of the moon. Thankfully it's been clear enough the past few days to attempt this.
Perhaps unfortunately for Dustin, the cloudless summer nights also mean that the flickering light of his rooftop campfire carries quite a distance. He's definitely not staying hidden, and there's nothing stopping people from getting to the top of the building like he did to investigate. This little secluded observatory is not likely to stay so isolated for long.

no subject
"Charting," he says, his steps slowing to a halt again. The front point of his helmet tips up towards the night sky. "It unfortunately won't yield much results. This may not be a known star system. That's not even considering temporal differences."
no subject
Dark clothes, potential voice modulation, never takes off the helmet...Feels like he's trying to hide something.
The teen's paranoid internal ramblings are cut short with Felwinter's answer. He noticeably bristles. Felwinter might be right, but the (intentional or otherwise) implication that what he's doing is pointless rubs Dustin the wrong way - and actually seems to drag some details out of him as his pride gets the better of his judgement.
"I'm aware," Dustin retorts, feeling his face grow hot. "It's a reference point. For if we travel anywhere else in this solar system or local cluster, I mean. If I repeat this every few months, I should have enough data for parallax calculations. Could prove useful if we're ever able to take these spaceships off this rock."
There's a pause as Dustin suddenly recognizes that he's been rambling.
"...Besides, I want to compare with Sh'ka later." No excuse for this one - Dustin's just curious. He awkwardly trails off, anxiously rubbing the back of his neck and looking into the middle distance. "What's it to you, anyway?"
no subject
And once Dustin decides to speak up in his defense, Felwinter is silent, listening, whether it had been his intention or not to draw out further explanation. He nods thoughtfully then.
"...for the time I've been here, I have not experienced travel off-world," he admits, not that he means to disappoint Dustin. "Reference may be useful, however. I know not what to expect beyond here. He turns, looking back across at the teenager then.
"Nothing."
no subject
Or maybe that's more to do with the warlord's last answer. "Really?" he says, folding his arms and narrowing his eyes. Dustin's in no position to challenge Felwinter on anything, yet in spite of his uneasiness - perhaps because of it? - he finds himself unconsciously looking for one. Something to elicit a human-like response out of this guy. "So you just hop rooftops and sneak up on people in the middle of the night for fun? Don't give me that bullshit. Why are you here?"
no subject
"When you pose the question as specifically as that: curiosity," he replies, coming to a stop once again to look at the teenager. "Several nights ago I saw firelight out on a rooftop, but it did not spread. I come to investigate in the day and find the roof marked out in charcoal," he says, slipping a gloved hand from behind him to gesture at the roof itself. "It was not complete then, so I wondered that there would be continuation. I have observed the fires these past nights and decided you would return yet again so that I'd finally see who was responsible."
no subject
He can't find one.
Eventually Dustin lets out a breath, shoulders slumping, and finally turns to go get that new piece of charcoal. "Fine," he says, waving a hand behind him. "I hope this satisfies your curiosity or whatever, Felwinter. Felwinter, right?" This is a hypothetical question, so Dustin doesn't wait for an answer. "Now that you've found me out, did you want something? Or are you just here to watch me close-up instead of stalking me from wherever you were the last few nights?"
no subject
Felwinter waits. He'd wait all night if Dustin tried him, but it seems he doesn't have to.
"I have not been stalking you. Is it considered stalking to watch the light of a campfire from afar off? This is the first time I have seen anyone here." There's just the faint crunch underfoot as he steps off of the ledge and onto the roof itself.
"Are rooftops your usual choice of medium?"
no subject
Shaking his head slightly, he picks up a thick piece of charcoal from the salvage pile, tests his thumb against it. Then, satisfied with its durability, he navigates back to the same spot he left off at just a few minutes ago. This is remarkable, considering that the spot in question is just a square foot of dark lines on a several-dozen-foot circle of similar lines and dots, yet Dustin does so immediately, from the opposite direction, and picks up where he left off without so much as a pause to look back up at the sky for reference. He's even swapped hands for a better marking angle.
"No."
Dustin pauses briefly to shoot Felwinter a deadpan stare. He ponders leaving it there, or challenging the armored man on how weird it feels to him to know that he's been watched for the last few nights, but thinks better of it. It'll be easier to concentrate on what you're doing if you talk about it, instead of getting sidetracked by an argument.
He sighs and finishes the path. "My other options are lacking," Dustin admits. "No paper or writing tools to speak of in the rubble. The Agrii must not have needed them. Or they've already been looted or degraded over time. Decided to make my own instead."
no subject
Again he waits until Dustin finally decides to continue with his response. He nods even though the other returns his attention to his drawing. "True enough. But that does not mean others haven't procured some by now. Have you tried the library? The collection is...very limited, but Jonathan Sims may have the supplies you might have use for."
He looks out at the rest of the roof again. "It's excellent work. Alternatively capturing the image with your tablet should also suffice, but it would require being taken from a reasonable height," he observes as he lets his gaze travel skyward, as though calculating where about it would be best.
no subject
So Dustin ignores that train of thought. "Not needed," he murmurs, answering instead Felwinter's second set of points. "I can replicate all of this again later. Otherwise I wouldn't be marking it in something water-soluble."
He shifts a couple of feet to his right to record the minor drift of what seems like a nearby star, but hesitates, instead following Felwinter's gaze upward. Not needed, but...
"Seven meters."
Without further comment, Dustin resumes his work.
no subject
"Hm."
Felwinter nods to himself as Dustin gives a more exact measurement. "Very well. When it is completed, then," he says, still looking at the space between roof and sky as though visualizing that distance. "In daylight, of course," he adds, considering the rooftop again.
no subject
"You could--" He cuts himself off with a shake of the head, rolling his eyes. "--Ignore me, of course you fucking can. Makes total sense. I mean, how else did you make it up here?" Dustin waves his free hand dismissively while he resumes marking with the other, annotating a large dot with the words 'Red supergiant(?)' in architect's handwriting. "Whatever. Why? I told you I don't need to save this. Why do you want to?"
no subject
He steps carefully over the lines that Dustin's laid out so as not to smear them underfoot as he walks around to study some of the dots more closely. "I plan to head out of the city to see if anything can be found beyond it. But reference will be necessary if I am to keep my way, and that I can find the path back. By day is one thing, by night is another. I would like to be as prepared as possible."
no subject
"Are you now?" Hiking--the one thing the scrawny teenager recognizes he is not equipped to do. Not just because of the obvious physical limitations, but also because he doesn't have the exact navigational tools that Felwinter is referencing. "I'm a long way from turning this into an astrolabe. No rotational center of reference, either - at least not one I can immediately identify. If you try to base your primary direction off of the present model, you're gonna get lost if your trip lasts for more than a few days."
Dustin props his chin on the back of his hand, pensive.
"Building a simple compass isn't totally out of the question. Hardest part would be finding or making a magnet." He shrugs. "Or you could just, I dunno, leave some marks on some trees. Doesn't sound nearly as interesting though."
no subject
He does not disagree about the potential problems of using the stars however. Even watching the nightsky all these nights has not given him too much insight, save that nothing has come hurtling down from the heavens to crush him here.
no subject
He stands up, taking a long moment to stretch out his back. It's been a long night already for him; starting his evening by clambering over five flights of stairs didn't help. It's time for a calorie break.
"Also a good idea to have backups, though." Dustin starts wandering his way over to the edge of the roof, near where Felwinter originally appeared. "You have a plan? 'See what's out there' isn't a plan, that's a goal. What's your method? Timeframe? Are your anticipated discoveries objectively or subjectively 'interesting?'"
no subject
"We have little other choice but to go on foot," he says, measuring the questions given, rearranging his responses. "Whatever may be out there, there will be dense woods in between. So we cannot estimate how long such travel will take. Given there's been little attempt at exploring beyond the city, we are still planning. I think it should be longer than a few days at the very least."
He shakes his head, looking over at Dustin. "We have been conveniently provided for here, and I use such terms loosely. There is much we do not know, and if there are alternative ways to get away from this place, or secrets that our captors do not wish us to know, I doubt we will find them so close. I realize much of this is assumption, but if there are options aside from waiting for revelations, I will take them."
no subject
No more surprises tonight. The distant light of the campfire is too faint to make out much, but Dustin doesn't risk bringing a torch to further give away his position. It's good enough to make him reasonably satisfied that another flying visitor is not immediately on the way, at least. He slumps down with his back against the ledge and starts rifling through his makeshift knapsack.
"Hmm." Rather than directly agreeing with Felwinter's assessment on the Agrii, Dustin just shoots him a knowing, conspiratorial look as he pulls out a handful of dried baconroom. Preaching to the choir, weird guy. At least it's nice to know he's not the only one who feels that way.
Instead, Dustin focuses back on the mission. "Who else is going with you?"
no subject
"A smaller team will be more efficient than an entire expedition." They can cover more ground, faster, and won't be taking away too much from the scant number who dwelled in Temba. He would have been fine going himself, but Lauri-Ell had brought up a good point that he couldn't really refute, when it came to the possibilities of storms and any other freak occurrences.
He folds his arms behind his back, turning to look out at the vague outlines of the buildings just beyond.
no subject
"Not a bad idea," he says instead, popping another baconroom into his mouth. They've quickly become Dustin's favored snack; they keep well, they're packed with enough protein that he doesn't have to eat very many to fill himself up, and they have a delightfully savory taste besides. Consistent, efficient, satisfying. All perfect food qualities in Dustin's opinion. "Fewer moving parts, less chance for any one of them to fail. How long have you two been planning this out?"
no subject
"Not too long ago, although it would not be the first time plans have been suggested. But I think such talks have also fallen victim to planning due to scale," he admits. "We simply need to consider supplies and perhaps the potential use of any data points that might prove beneficial out there."
no subject
"You trust that shit?" he scoffs. "Letting the Agrii stick whatever garbage they want in your brain? Willingly?"
no subject
Dustin's response is hardly a surprise, and one that Felwinter can't disagree with.
"No," he says simply. "But unfortunately with the way things are, here, it is made impossible to do anything in full understanding without them to some degree." He may not be very emotive, but he manages to inject some bitterness of his own in those words. "They have ensured that most of us touch at least one upon arrival. If there is a consequence from contact of the data points, we have not yet discovered it. But...I am wary."
no subject
The response is automatic and said with a bit more venom than Dustin was actually intending. He pauses briefly to rein in his emotions, stuffing the last of his snack in his mouth and chewing furiously as he stares at the floor in front of him.
"You see it, right?" Dustin continues. "Trap us here, spoon-feed us enough details and missions to make us dangerous, then hold the rest of it back behind a bunch of convenient fucking brainwashing devices? Obvious trap. They've gotta be piggybacking shit off of them. Maybe we don't see it yet, but it'll show up eventually, just fucking watch."
no subject
"You are lucky to have avoided confinement. You would not have liked your information exposed as it was."
The firelight might make him unintentionally more foreboding as he stood there. "There is a tunnel at the eastern edge of the city. It leads to nothing, at least until someone wants us to be led to it.
"Some weeks ago many were lured there, even those who've been there before. And once we were within, we were trapped."
no subject
"...Where I'm guessing the Agrii played slideshows of everyone's personal details?" Dustin makes a mental note of the tunnel. East. Noted. Avoid that. "How were you lured in? Same as the data points--mental suggestions?"
no subject
"But the entity that addressed us in the place called "Calibrations" was not of the Agrii. The way the Agrii speak and act is quite distinct. This voice spoke clearly enough and did not bother to try hiding their malicious intent. They hoped to sow seeds of distrust amongst us by having our pasts and any secrets open to each other. To my understanding, they are the Atroma who are responsible for driving the Agrii from their homeworld in the first place."
It's a lot to digest, he realizes, and so he is silent, waiting to see if Dustin has any questions that he might be able to answer.
"...they were not 'slideshows.' Come the night hours, we would automatically go to our assigned rooms to sleep. And there, we would dream." He still isn't sure how that worked out. "It was...some kind of mind-space. It reflected a location we were well acquainted with, or something significant. And there would be...items. Objects that represented memories, memories that would play out when someone would come into contact with them. Somehow we could venture between dreams, between these spaces."
no subject
"Maybe they're right to get us to distrust each other." Dustin folds his arms. His tone is cold, matter-of-fact. "I don't agree with their methods, obviously, but - to my knowledge - we have no frame of reference for why the Agrii choose the people they do. Maybe they're bringing in people they think can be easily manipulated into fighting for them against these Atroma fuckers. Maybe it's not even the first time they've done something like this. It's just as plausible that the Atroma drove off the Agrii for a reason, and they're trying to get us to see each other for what we really are, instead of this hyped-up hero crap the Agrii are feeding us."
no subject
Felwinter shakes his head. "I would not call the Atroma a neutral party, however. They seem to enjoy the show we put on for them. You can assume that we are being watched here, by both the Agrii and the Atroma."
no subject
He pauses, glancing this time around the rooftop, eyes scanning every shadowed nook and cranny.
"How do you think? Strategic bugs? The tablets they conveniently left all of us?"
no subject
"You've been wise to avoid use of the network. I know others have had similar mindsets."
no subject
"Is the surveillance room still accessible and working?" he asks instead. "Sounds like a useful point of research."
And by 'research' Dustin of course means 'sabotage.' Maybe Felwinter will catch his actual meaning behind his raised eyebrows.
no subject
"I have not gone to check in a long while," he admits in regards to the surveillance room, looking at Dustin thoughtfully. "The way in is narrow and I don't know if plans to widen it had ever been carried out. You may be able to fit, however. I have the way through the mines mapped out, if you are interested."
no subject
"It might be for the best if the tunnels aren't widened," Dustin continues. "Besides the chance for natural structural instabilities, disturbing the area could alert whoever is controlling those stations to temporarily shut down their operations or put up security measures before anyone can get there. I can take advantage of that, or build something that can fit if I can't."
A pause. He glances over Felwinter once again, eyes narrowed and calculating. Do I trust this guy?...No. Not entirely. Dustin's gaze softens slightly. But he's been my best source of information so far, and he seems canny enough. Would be a waste not to leverage that. He deserves a trade.
"...You were looking for something to navigate through the forest with, yeah?" he offers. "Meet me back here in a week with the maps--physical copies. I'll see what I can do about a compass."
no subject
"That had been among the concerns when discussing how to widen the opening," he nods. One might be concerned about giving a boy information about such a resource, but Felwinter's already established that Dustin's clever enough that he should be careful about things. Hopefully.
He pauses when the offer is made- not actually expecting any recompense but perhaps pleasantly surprised to have it all the same. Not that it shows. The warlord nods.
"Very well," he says. "In a week's time, then."
no subject
Silently, the teenager palms his charcoal nub from his pocket and picks up exactly where he left off on the star chart. Seems he's ready to get back to work. This would...probably be a good time to let his guest know about that?
...No?
No, he's got nothing. Dustin doesn't even spare another glance up to check the sky.
no subject
There's just the quiet scratch of boots stepping up from roof to ledge, and then the brief flutter of his coat as he leaps into the darkness, with no immediate sound of a landing as he disappears from the firelight's reach.