Captain Crozier (
goingtobeunwell) wrote in
singillatim2023-11-02 06:51 pm
this place wants us dead
Who: Francis Crozier & Open to All
What: Captain Crozier comes to town
When: Early days of November
Where: About town, along the outskirts
Content Warnings: Potential mentions of lead poisoning and scurvy, cannibalism, starvation, violence, body horror, murder, alcoholism. Just #Franklin Expedition Things
I. Along the Main Road - Crozier Comes to Town
Crozier's breath rattles around his caribou-lined hood, the steady sound of crunching ice and rocks underfoot familiar music to his steady trudging. How many miles are behind him now? How many miles has he apparently forgotten? Even now the lead must still swim in his nerves and veins; how else could he explain the sudden appearance of trees and an entire North American-style village? Surely he's hallucinating now.
A pale ghost in Netsilik furs, Crozier holds fast to his ice knife in his only remaining hand and begins to explore the buildings. What he's searching for he doesn't know -- a sign of human life? Something to eat, a place to stay? Something to wake him from this nightmare?
II. The Church -- Uncovering the Graves
Milton couldn't be more different than King William Land, his home by accident and then by choice. Things grow in this place, there are pockets of warmth, hills and caves and homes to hide. The ice isn't all-consuming, looming and screaming and groaning as it shifts and moves and destroys.
But he feels the breath of something Wild and Divine on his neck. Something lives in the darkness of the trees and speaks through the pops and hisses of the Aurora. Are their souls at stake in this place too?
Crozier touches the amulet sewn into the space above his heart as he wanders the churchyard. As he looks for the names of the dead of Milton he idly recites the names of his own dead. They're with him even now, even dragged away as he is from their bones and makeshift memorials of scattered papers and silverware.
III. The Basin -- Ice Fishing
There's so much plenty here, an embarrassment of riches to be found in the wilderness and little town. Once he's found a place to live he sets about making himself useful; they should be gathering fresh meat while they're in between storms.
There's no seal to be found, but apparently there's a decent spot for ice fishing nearby, and so off Crozier goes to bore a hole and try his hand at catching some food.
What: Captain Crozier comes to town
When: Early days of November
Where: About town, along the outskirts
Content Warnings: Potential mentions of lead poisoning and scurvy, cannibalism, starvation, violence, body horror, murder, alcoholism. Just #Franklin Expedition Things
I. Along the Main Road - Crozier Comes to Town
Crozier's breath rattles around his caribou-lined hood, the steady sound of crunching ice and rocks underfoot familiar music to his steady trudging. How many miles are behind him now? How many miles has he apparently forgotten? Even now the lead must still swim in his nerves and veins; how else could he explain the sudden appearance of trees and an entire North American-style village? Surely he's hallucinating now.
A pale ghost in Netsilik furs, Crozier holds fast to his ice knife in his only remaining hand and begins to explore the buildings. What he's searching for he doesn't know -- a sign of human life? Something to eat, a place to stay? Something to wake him from this nightmare?
II. The Church -- Uncovering the Graves
Milton couldn't be more different than King William Land, his home by accident and then by choice. Things grow in this place, there are pockets of warmth, hills and caves and homes to hide. The ice isn't all-consuming, looming and screaming and groaning as it shifts and moves and destroys.
But he feels the breath of something Wild and Divine on his neck. Something lives in the darkness of the trees and speaks through the pops and hisses of the Aurora. Are their souls at stake in this place too?
Crozier touches the amulet sewn into the space above his heart as he wanders the churchyard. As he looks for the names of the dead of Milton he idly recites the names of his own dead. They're with him even now, even dragged away as he is from their bones and makeshift memorials of scattered papers and silverware.
III. The Basin -- Ice Fishing
There's so much plenty here, an embarrassment of riches to be found in the wilderness and little town. Once he's found a place to live he sets about making himself useful; they should be gathering fresh meat while they're in between storms.
There's no seal to be found, but apparently there's a decent spot for ice fishing nearby, and so off Crozier goes to bore a hole and try his hand at catching some food.

ii the church
Her face brightens, and she's wandering over towards the man. Methuselah often returns to the wilds after the feasts, it's not typical of him to stay in town.
"Methuselah, you're back early? But I thou—" She stops suddenly when she's close enough, catching sight of his face. An older man, but younger than Methuselah. Embarrassment creeps into her expression as she steps back a half-step.
"Oh. Sorry, I— I thought you were someone else. The... furs."
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Methuselah though! Is he that old? Maybe he has more grays in his beard than he initially realized. It's been some time since he's seen his own reflection.
"No harm done," he tells her gently, raising up both arms - one gloved hand and one seemingly empty as it flops about - in a gesture of peace. "Are there others who wear furs like me? Do they speak Inuktitut?"
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"Inuk..titut...?" She shakes her head, she doesn't even recognise the language. "Everyone I've met here only speaks English? And Methuselah's the only person I've seen wear furs, but he's the only person we've met who's actually from here."
Although, now she's curious, considering. He doesn't sound like he's from this world, but she could be wrong.
"Are... you from here?"
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One of the houses that Crozier will find is a small cabin with the lights on and smoke issuing from a metal chimney. Not terribly notable in and of itself, but there is a carefully hand-lettered sign on the front porch railing that reads:
HARRY D.S. GOODSIR SURGEON
From outside, one can see activity within: Harry Goodsir, going about his business in his little home.
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It can't be a coincidence, this name in this place, and it terrifies him. He stares at the lettering until his vision begins to tunnel, his pulse rising and rising until it's outright racing, his breath coming in shorter and shorter bursts until he feel like he can't breathe at all.
He grips the rail and holds on to keep from outright keeling over on the spot.
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Goodsir hears something without and goes to the window; looking out, he sees a man in furs leaning on his porch rail, in obvious distress. He throws his coat on and hurries outside.
"Sir—you—please, come inside. What's happened?"
He doesn't recognise Crozier at all, but he does recognise the style of the furs. An Inuk parka. His heart leaps in his chest.
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II. The Church
This current task is an equally undesirable one, but necessary. Many of the dead that were found in this town had to be buried in cold, ice-chipped soil — and several bodies couldn't be buried too deeply. There is a concern that the elements may uncover some of them, a particularly strong wind, a blizzard. So he makes his rounds to the church some days, to check in on things there.
He isn't used to bumping into others out here, where things are so quiet, and still. (But never quite as still as out on the ice. Compared to there, this place is alive, perhaps a strange thought to any others. To Little, nothing can ever compare to that vast abyss of white.)
He's crouching over a mildly fresh grave, one gloved hand gingerly pressing flat upon the earth, making sure it's still compact, and the corpse beneath isn't seeping through. He doesn't yet see the man drifting through the graveyard like a spectre, although perhaps Little seems like one of his own — as still and quiet as he remains. He wouldn't immediately recognise the man even if he were to lift his head and spot him across the distance, not in those furs. Alternatively, Edward still wears his uniformed greatcoat and officer's cap, and although he's cleaned up his appearance a bit, he's left his sideburns long, for warmth.
After a long moment, he finally moves to stand, very slow. And he's staring down at the grave with solemness, quietly breathing in the frigid air. No matter how much death he's known, it catches hold of his heart.
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He sees movement out of the corner of his eye and pauses, a long plume of hot breath crystalizing in the air as he stares.
It's a ghost. An honest-to-god ghost.
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The initial reaction is unpleasant, and he can't suppress a kneejerk flinch as his hand moves up to the strap of his shotgun, not sliding it from his shoulder just yet, but... readying himself. He can't stop his heart from giving an odd, anxious flop, like he's an animal being hunted by something.
The figure wears.... furs, like Silence and her people had, and he gasps quietly, eyes widening. Is it... her? Here? He supposes it could be; it's feasible she make an appearance just as the men could. So Edward takes a step forward, but carefully. A hand lifts as he calls across the distance —
"Lady Silence?"
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cw: cannibalism
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the church
Living in the town's church had some benefits, if Knives chose to ignore the irony of it considering the narrative of his life. The biggest one was the distance between the building and the more populated areas of Milton. He was still coming around to being so close to others, humans especially.
He can't really complain, not anymore.
Dressed in outerwear fit for the bitter cold and snow, Knives is outside with an axe in hand and a slowly growing pile of chopped wood behind the church. He only stops to watch the form of what he wishes was a ghost haunting the graveyard here. Perhaps he could call out and interrupt whatever this is, but for the moment he'll simply observe.
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There's more life in this place than he initially expected.
He rises and turns, raising his hand in greeting at the man with the axe.
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ice fishing
It's easy to ignore Hickey at first glance, to mistake him from someone else. He's gone native, as it were, shedding his wools and greatcoat for a water-resistant parka, proper hiking boots, all the clothes of the modern era and none of the 1840s that he arrived in. But as he trudges back to his house, he spots someone fishing. A man, bundled up in furs. Someone who looks native—or at least, who looks like he knows what he's doing.
"Oi!" Hickey calls out, absolutely scaring away any fish that might be there. "Oi, over there, how d'you do that?"
Re: ice fishing
He grunts a little and pulls up his line.
Re: ice fishing
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the church
He waits until the man is directly underneath him. Then, in a voice that Crozier may well recognize as that of a Welshman: "Are you looking for someone amongst these graves, mate?"
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"Wouldn't that be something?" he calls back, Irish accent thick. "No, just curious."
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I
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Here?
He pauses at the end of an aisle and very slowly nods towards the young man in the heavy coat.
"Pardon me," he says cautiously, very aware that there's a rifle strapped to his back. "I hope I wasn't intruding."
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Church
But there’s someone in the churchyard. An unfamiliar face. A new arrival? Or had she just missed someone, given everything. Either is possible. Even without her powers, without the gift of sight that has walked with her since she was a child, she can still all but taste the grief on him. Sorrow and loss. Mourning. Searching for something.
Curious, she drops gracefully down from her perch, landing silent on the other side of the yard. “Searching for something in particular? Or someone?” Her voice is laced with a proper, if not quite solely English accent. English by way of a few other places. "Newly arrived, I take it?”
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"One can determine the make of a town by how it keeps its dead," he answers truthfully. "Aye, newly arrived. Exploring, one could say."
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i
He is crouched on the floor, examining something - a torn scrap of cloth, maybe a remnant of a doll - when Crozier walks in, and Vash leaps to his feet so fast that he steps on the trailing end of his coat, nearly tripping face first into the rickety table (already precarious with a broken leg, but honestly at this point what more damage can he do?) - and only managing to barely steady himself with a yelp.
"Oh!!! Sorry!! I didn't mean to intrude!!"
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i
After all, it's not even like Bigby is the social type or anything, but when you live in a place this small, you inevitably start recognizing all the known faces real soon. It makes anyone he doesn't recognize stand out - and even more so when they're acting like Crozier, exploring the place like they've never seen it before.
Bigby is just emerging from his own claimed hut - somewhat on the outskirts of town - as he watches Crozier try to open the door to the one next to his. He slowly raises an eyebrow, but then draws his own coat a little tighter around himself as he calls out to the other guy.
"You looking for something?"
It doesn't necessarily sound unfriendly, but.. well, Bigby does have a case of resting grump face, with his big eyebrows and all. He can't help it.
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"I'm not certain," he calls back to him. "Getting the lay of the land I suppose."
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cw: mention of cannibalism (though in an animal context)
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I
He judged him for a moment, figuring out whether this new man was a threat or not, before he went back to his previous task. Rorschach was sorting out books into piles. Small softcovers, large softcovers, and large hardbacks were being grouped into three piles. Still, in a slow fashion, he picked up one of the largest books and didn't set it back down. Anyone who thought a book didn't make a good weapon clearly had never been cracked over the head by a nice copy of War and Peace. That thing could have given the hardest head a concussion.
He kept his eye on Crozier but he didn't say anything. He simply remained there, keeping a wary eye on the other man as he went about his work.
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He's visibly startled by the sight, immediately thinking of the exaggerated features of a shaman's mask.
"My apologies," he manages to whisper, talking a large step backwards.
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