etherthief: (excited | omg | science!!)
Iman Asadi ([personal profile] etherthief) wrote in [community profile] bigapplesauce2015-05-07 09:42 pm

Don't Believe Me Just Watch

"All right kids, here's what it is," says Iman cheerfully. She's punchy today. Spent the last couple days helping Greta move into the formerly-ROMAC apartments, now just apartments - under whose maintenance, well, that's still a bit of a jumble but Greta has a home now, a good safe distance from the former Base, and moreover, it's a beautiful day for some science. She flexes her left hand and gestures demonstratively at the park's edge, the river beyond it, and more to the point, the Rift's border. Not that anyone she knows of has tried escaping Manhattan via the East River, but Satan's notes definitely helped her construct a solid map of its perimeter, and now that she's so close she can almost feel the crackle of energy, tingling a little in her fingers. Exciting stuff.

It's dawn, almost no one's out yet, and at least one of her companions doesn't look too pleased with the choice of hour, but he never looks pleased, so it's moot.

"This is the Rift's edge," she says with a mostly mocking long-buried academic air. "Runs all around the waterfront keeping us boxed in. The rumors tell us that its recent, what do we want to call it, tantrum was immediately preceded by two rifties breaching the border, if not physically, then some other way. We don't know how they did it but we know it can be done." She gives Greta a little smile. They know now that the escapees were Andrew Noble, his husband, and their children, the very same Greta had been looking after - and she knows Andrew had been her first friend here. But the escape has left them with something very important: a proverbial jumping-off point.

"What I'm gonna do is feel it out with this baby." She gives them a little wave with her left hand. "This is what I do back home, and this is possibly the first and last time I'll ever be presented with so clearly delineated a membrane. So if I can't breach it, I can at the very least interact with it, study it, get some idea how far it might bend under the right circumstances. And that's what I'm gonna do."

Well, she's excited anyway. Rush knows he's more or less here to spot her in case something goes horribly wrong, an eventuality she's assured him won't happen, she'll be careful, she promises. Greta, she invited for a little clean fun showing off, and because, well, she wants Greta to know if there's hope of getting home. Much as that eventuality pains her to think about.

Anyway. She cracks her knuckles unnecessarily and gives them a big grin.

"Ready?"
andhiswife: (pained)

[personal profile] andhiswife 2015-05-15 03:18 am (UTC)(link)
Nothing. There's that word again. Greta wants to object, but can't really think of anything reassuring to say that couldn't just as easily be taken as awful. She's glad the limb isn't painful, but how much comfort can be milked from that when it's also effectively dead? It would be like someone trying to ease her mind over her absent family by pointing out that at least her son can't wake her up in the middle of the night anymore. It doesn't even qualify as a silver lining, let alone some kind of boon.

So she says nothing, just supporting Iman on her way over to the bed. Once her friend is settled on the mattress, Greta sits down beside her.

"I'm sorry, too," she says, though it's no more her fault than Iman's. But if they're going to toss out general apologies for one another's rough days, there's no question of whose was rougher. "That the Rift... did that." She shakes her head and stares down into her lap for a moment, then looks back up at Iman. "But it could have been worse," she starts in what she hopes is a bracing tone, though she can't keep her voice from wavering a little as she concludes, "We could have lost all of you."

No, no. She needs to be the strong one. Greta curls an arm around Iman's shoulders and presses a kiss to her temple. She's alive. She's here. She may not be fine, but at least she's still here, and that is enough. "I'm glad we didn't," Greta says, and her voice is perfectly steady.
Edited 2015-05-16 02:13 (UTC)
andhiswife: (smile - pensive)

[personal profile] andhiswife 2015-05-18 01:32 pm (UTC)(link)
The grip on her hand and that little concession are a pleasant surprise. Perhaps this means Iman's coming back to herself, if only by degrees. Or perhaps she's just making a particular effort in response to Greta's own unsteadiness, held largely but not entirely at bay. Either way, it's encouraging. Greta doesn't have enough poise to regret losing it for a good cause, and the steady run of Iman's thumb over her knuckles is relaxing.

"It has a little ways to go, yet." She gives her friend's shoulder a gentle rub. For all that Iman had said she didn't want to sleep, she seems close to nodding off. "Why don't you have that lie-down? The bread's not going anywhere." If Iman dozes off, that's fine, and if she manages to stay awake long enough to eat, so much the better. So long as sleeping and eating both happen, Greta doesn't much care about the order in which they occur. "And neither am I," she adds with a faint, reassuring smile and a gentle squeeze of Iman's hand.
andhiswife: (glow)

[personal profile] andhiswife 2015-05-22 12:44 am (UTC)(link)
Well, this is a bit awkward. Greta hadn't expected Iman to drag her along with her, and by the arm farthest away from her, no less. Her smile takes a turn for the bemused (and slightly panicked) as she finds herself in immediate danger of landing right on top of her friend - a fate she avoids only by executing an odd little twirl. For a few tense moments, she fears she'll either fall off the bed or start laughing. She can't laugh, not when Iman's that close to falling asleep and thanking her so sweetly; that would be terrible.

So she doesn't, by sheer force of will. And she manages to balance herself on the portion of mattress Iman's left for her, curling toward her friend to make certain she's not going to fall to the floor. It's not the most comfortable position in the world, but she can manage until Iman drifts off. It won't be long, from the looks of things. And yes, they're a bit close, but if Iman minded, she could easily move back.

She doesn't. Her eyes are shut, and her breathing is slowing. She probably hasn't even noticed. Greta studies Iman's face for a few moments from this unusually good vantage point. She's paler than usual, and a little drawn, but that's better than how unnervingly slack her expression was the last time she was laid out on this bed. It's not a pleasant memory, and Greta's brow furrows. Then she lifts her hand - the one Iman hasn't already imprisoned - and gently brushes back her friend's hair, tucking it behind her ear. Iman stirs, and Greta snatches her hand back with a twinge of guilt... but her friend doesn't wake, and Greta thinks she looks a little less drawn than she had a moment ago. And if her grip on Greta's hand is weakening, it's by slow degrees, not sudden and awful like before. She's all right, just drifting off.

And she's going to be fine.

They'll make sure of it.