Octavia Blake (
okteiviakom) wrote in
fandomtownies2019-10-17 02:09 pm
Entry tags:
The Docks at Port of Fandom, Thursday Afternoon
Octavia had handwavily abandoned the flower shop at lunchtime. The morning had been enough to show her that this week's quiet extended all the way to her work: the phone stayed silent, and no one came in. None of the existing orders even needed to get done today. All these things meant she didn't feel bad about cutting her day short, especially since she hadn't been feeling like staying cooped up indoors, anyway.
She'd stopped by at the apartment to get some things, then at The Perk for a pumpkin spice latte to go, and then she'd walked all across the island. Through the park to Black Swan Drive, then right on Griffin, then down along Loon Drive until she was at the port. And there she was now, sitting on a dock with her legs hanging over the edge, right where the Cape Rouge usually was. Or at least where it had been for as long as Octavia had known about it, which was maybe too short a time to make 'usually' applicable. Maybe too short a time to justify her even choosing this specific spot for spending her time in - so good thing, then, that she was just here to check up on the docks' porg population. Duke wasn't due back for almost another week, and maybe the birds were getting lonely.
Sure.
She'd brought along the book Liam had given her for her birthday. North American Wildlife, an illustrated guide. She had it open on her lap, and a few of the porgs that had waddled over as soon as she'd shown up were now curiously prodding at the cover. She shooed them gently a little further away when they decided to see whether the pages were edible while she leafed through them.
One particularly brave porg tried clumsily climbing onto her lap, as if it was curious to read, too. Or just thought that was the warmest place to be right now. "I don't think you guys are in this one," Octavia told it with the tiniest huff of an amused sound, as she let it do what it wanted to. "Moba."
She was yet to make it to the part of the book that had puffins in it.
[ooc: Ooopen.]
She'd stopped by at the apartment to get some things, then at The Perk for a pumpkin spice latte to go, and then she'd walked all across the island. Through the park to Black Swan Drive, then right on Griffin, then down along Loon Drive until she was at the port. And there she was now, sitting on a dock with her legs hanging over the edge, right where the Cape Rouge usually was. Or at least where it had been for as long as Octavia had known about it, which was maybe too short a time to make 'usually' applicable. Maybe too short a time to justify her even choosing this specific spot for spending her time in - so good thing, then, that she was just here to check up on the docks' porg population. Duke wasn't due back for almost another week, and maybe the birds were getting lonely.
Sure.
She'd brought along the book Liam had given her for her birthday. North American Wildlife, an illustrated guide. She had it open on her lap, and a few of the porgs that had waddled over as soon as she'd shown up were now curiously prodding at the cover. She shooed them gently a little further away when they decided to see whether the pages were edible while she leafed through them.
One particularly brave porg tried clumsily climbing onto her lap, as if it was curious to read, too. Or just thought that was the warmest place to be right now. "I don't think you guys are in this one," Octavia told it with the tiniest huff of an amused sound, as she let it do what it wanted to. "Moba."
She was yet to make it to the part of the book that had puffins in it.
[ooc: Ooopen.]

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It’d taken forever to scrub the bloodstains out of the deck.
Duke considered pulling into a different slip when he saw Octavia waiting—the last thing he wanted just now was company. That felt pretty, though, passive aggressive and maybe a little cowardly. He was already basically running away from one giant set of problems. He didn’t need to add more.
He nodded to her as he came out to secure the dock lines, but otherwise avoided looking at her. It was an old habit, practically ancient; facial bruises were hard to hide, but if you hung your hair in your face and just didn’t look at people, you could usually avoid having to explain them. . . .
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But that didn't last.
"Monin hou," she told him, in reply to his nod, but her expression had already fallen into something of a frown. One of them was usually chattier than this, and it wasn't Octavia. "Thought you weren't coming back 'til next week."
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"Yeah, well." He gestured vaguely, a sort of belligerent shrug. "I'm early."
He'd made his delivery in Halifax, but otherwise had headed straight back for the island after leaving Haven. He was actually hoping for some weird transformation, something that would shove him right out of his head and turn the damn troubles into so much background noise.
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He may have been avoiding looking at her, but she was watching him closely. "Something happened." She wasn't a fan of asking questions where everyone involved knew they weren't actually questions.
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"No shit."
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But force of habit meant her gaze also immediately dropped lower, like she was scanning him for further injuries beyond the face and apparently his hand.
"Fuck whoever it was," she decided, like the great purveyor of comforting words that she was.
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No. What happened to Nathan was the worst of it.
He laughed without humor. "Oh yeah, I definitely did that. Several times. In so many different ways."
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Then she looked up again. "So what do you need?" she asked, managing blunt and sincere at the same time. It was a gift.
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He couldn’t remember the last time someone had asked him that. At least as more than a perfunctory, “What can I get you?” way, like from a waitress at a restaurant.
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This wasn't that, no.
"Bad things have happened," she said, with a slight drawl. "What do you need now?"
She had suggestions, maybe even to her own surprise, but she was holding off on those for a second.
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But he wasn't asking Octavia. She was asking him.
All of which led to him just kind of gaping at her for a moment. "I don't know," he said finally. ". . . Booze, probably."
He'd spent most of the last few days at the bottom of a bottle already. Pretty much any time that he wasn't actively driving his boat. Hence the bloodshot eyes.
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Not judging, just noting.
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"Yeah, well. Maybe it's a long route."
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And then probably reject them, she thought, but that didn't mean she shouldn't give it a shot anyway.
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He waved her aboard, nearly tripping over a couple of porgs who'd already managed to hop themselves back aboard. He managed to resist the urge to kick them, but only barely. The three stowaways that had managed to hitch a ride to north all appeared to still be aboard themselves, anyway. The damn things had only managed to fuck Duke over, not the whole northeast seaboard of his home universe.
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The porg waddled along after her.
"Option one," she drawled, "is that I can drag you to the preserve and give you my sword, and you can hack at a tree until your arms hurt too much." Not that she'd ever done that.
... Also not that something similar had been part of her original plan for today.
"Sometimes being exhausted washes away everything else. For a little while."
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He sat heavily on the crate instead, leaning forward with his hands draped between his knees.
"Sounds like a bum deal for the tree." And like it might set off another round of -- whatever the fuck that had been that made him want to kill people. "There an option two?"
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An unfortunate bit of foreshadowing, that statement right there.
"Or more." She shrugged. "So, from the other end of the scale..." The end that came less naturally to her, although that didn't really show in her casual-for-Octavia demeanor. "We can sit and I can pointlessly braid and unbraid your hair --" She remembered the way he'd practically melted into her couch. It wasn't about the braids, not then and not now. "-- and we can talk or not, your choice." A beat. "Booze optional."
Another shrug.
"So's telling me to go to hell and leave you alone."
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He hadn't done more than rinse it since diving into the ocean after Nathan.
He sighed, looking down at his fingers, the fading red lines across them the width of a thin steel cord. "Maybe we can just -- hang out. You can tell me what I missed around here this week or something."
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And when she spoke again, it was all soft. Or gentle, at the very least. "We can do that," she said, nodding. "Maybe I can even pad it out a little just how uneventful it's been here."
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Like, say, him! A Fandom explanation for whatever that rush he'd felt back in Haven would be amazing. Fandom things didn't tend to last. If it was a trouble, he'd be stuck with it for years.
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Of course, she paused sort of halfway through that latter action. "Did something like that happen?"
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