spin_kick_snap (
spin_kick_snap) wrote2016-04-13 05:23 pm
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Entry tags:
- event: personal soundtrack,
- ex-it plot,
- nfb,
- sometimes little sisters are useful!,
- totally fine thank you,
- what: calls and texts,
- what: with great power...sigh,
- where: los angeles,
- where: the li family apartment,
- who: alluka zoldyck,
- who: anders,
- who: dante son of sparda,
- who: eliot spencer,
- who: hanna heller,
- who: minako aino,
- who: raven darkholme,
- who: ringo noyamano,
- who: sarah li
Koreatown, Los Angeles, Wednesday
After discovering that Anders could heal the infected, the heroes of LA had been buoyed up by the knowledge that they could stop the spread of the zombie virus. Regenerator couldn't change anyone who had become of full-fledged zombie, but he was able to heal those they got to in time. It helped that the victims tended to have as much as a whole day between when they were bitten and when they turned. Stealth got word out to the populations that were most vulnerable, promising 'free and discreet care' to anyone who needed it, for whatever reason, and soon people were coming to them, either to be healed by 'Genny or two get heroes to help transport the infected back. 'Genny set up a walk-in clinic in a warehouse Stealth had procured and rather than patrolling, Banzai had started helping him there. She was fast, she was agile, she was good at calming people down--she made an excellent assistant and a new rapport sprang up between them.
They were saving lives. They were making a difference. It even made having to move back in with her family (under the guise of visiting for 'spring break') more palatable.
This rush of good feeling lasted for three days. Just three days. They knew they weren't stopping new zombies from turning, but between the people they were healing and the zombies the rest were killing, they really thought they were making a difference.
They were wrong. They were so wrong.
It was Sarah who woke Kathy up from her nap, eyes wide and a little scared. The fear alone had the bottom dropping out of Kathy's stomach; Sarah didn't do scared. She'd gone to school everyday through Seventeen territory and hadn't even flinched. "Sarah," she said, holding out a hand. "What is it?"
"Something's happening," Sarah said, going to sit on Kathy's bed and curling up against her big sister. "Something big. There was some kind of terrorist attack today--like a biological thing. People were screaming and rioting and attacking one another on Hollywood and Highland. Just out in the street in the middle of the day! Like--people ripped one another's throats out and stuff. It's all over the net--people were taking videos and running and screaming--they attacked little kids! And the way they looked--!" Sarah shuddered, hiding her face. "It was awful. Like a horror movie but for real. I watched people die. It looked like some were getting eaten."
"You shouldn't be watching this kind of stuff," Kathy said absently, stroking her sister's hair while her mind whirled. "It's just going to freak you out. Don't worry, the superheroes will fix it."
"I hope so," Sarah said, cuddling close. "Cause the videos I saw? It looked like the end of the world."
[NFB, but Kathy's going to be calling people. If you want her to call you (or want to call her), ping in and she did!]
They were saving lives. They were making a difference. It even made having to move back in with her family (under the guise of visiting for 'spring break') more palatable.
This rush of good feeling lasted for three days. Just three days. They knew they weren't stopping new zombies from turning, but between the people they were healing and the zombies the rest were killing, they really thought they were making a difference.
They were wrong. They were so wrong.
It was Sarah who woke Kathy up from her nap, eyes wide and a little scared. The fear alone had the bottom dropping out of Kathy's stomach; Sarah didn't do scared. She'd gone to school everyday through Seventeen territory and hadn't even flinched. "Sarah," she said, holding out a hand. "What is it?"
"Something's happening," Sarah said, going to sit on Kathy's bed and curling up against her big sister. "Something big. There was some kind of terrorist attack today--like a biological thing. People were screaming and rioting and attacking one another on Hollywood and Highland. Just out in the street in the middle of the day! Like--people ripped one another's throats out and stuff. It's all over the net--people were taking videos and running and screaming--they attacked little kids! And the way they looked--!" Sarah shuddered, hiding her face. "It was awful. Like a horror movie but for real. I watched people die. It looked like some were getting eaten."
"You shouldn't be watching this kind of stuff," Kathy said absently, stroking her sister's hair while her mind whirled. "It's just going to freak you out. Don't worry, the superheroes will fix it."
"I hope so," Sarah said, cuddling close. "Cause the videos I saw? It looked like the end of the world."
[NFB, but Kathy's going to be calling people. If you want her to call you (or want to call her), ping in and she did!]
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(He knew they did.)
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"That might be best," she said reluctantly. "Not that I want to let you go."
She didn't need help saying that, at least.
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And it made a certain insane idea he was getting seem all the more important.
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Kathy was sure that the lyrics to Lucky had gotten louder. She was choosing to ignore that.
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And now the same "Lucky" lyrics were playing on his side, too. He pitched his voice louder so she could hear him.
"Let's talk later. Take care of yourself, all right?"
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The song changed again. Dammit, Fandom.
"We'll talk soon," Kathy promised. "And I'll be careful, I promise. And--just know I miss you, okay? And I'm thinking about you all the time. No ancient and thoroughly-over crush is going to change how I feel."
Every time I tried to tell you,
The words just came out wrong,
So I'll have to say I love you in a song.
Every time the time was right,
All the words just came out wrong,
So I'll have to say I love you in a--
"Bye!" she said and hung up.
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If the songs could be believed, he loved Kathy. If the songs could be believed, she loved him back. And it didn't make a copper's worth of difference to her plans, as far as he could tell.
"Well," he told the wind and the rooftop garden with feigned cheer in his voice, "I'm thoroughly fucked."