Frosty Beginnings

Velemere

Member
Inactive
Sep 30, 2011
9
“Good manners.” She used to think of the words in the same way she felt her guide did. At a point, her opinion changed to what is was today. “There’re two kinds of ‘good manners’: the real kind and the fake kind.” Certain memories rose up and threatened her daydreamed winter. The full and nearly suffocating scent of lavender, the sweet sour of hibiscus, the impossible soft of roses. For a moment, her focus was completely lost. “People where I come from give fake and take fake. Real’s nice, but bull will do just fine.” Some semblance of the calm she had been trying to prepare remained, and she immediately felt stupid for letting any personal cynicism out. “I mean,” she started, her tone corrected to sound indifferent. “That was just a generalization. I bet that ‘fake’ manners can just come from societal anxiety or something, y’know? Misunderstandings and s***.” She probably was not going to come off as eloquent or ladylike after her slip, but she remembered the molding laundry at her back and felt justified to make a mistake. The acknowledgement was just the slightest bit relaxing, and it let the winter back in her thoughts, just as the sound of talking leaked in from the third floor hallway door.

With her luck, they were probably just passing by, and since she mentioned the first floor, it was probably lining up to be another missed chance, but when Alistair opened the door, apparently for her, two girls came in. Spencer stopped, reflexively getting out of the girls’ path, but then to wait. For an instant, relief started to release the breath she held in her lungs as it seemed that nothing was unusual. But then one alerted the other. “I-it’s that guy!” As the girl named Amy’s face contorted in panic, Spencer tensed and halted. Her mind, still unaccustomed to danger, snagged trying to react, but then she heard that easy command, “RUN!”

At the imperitive, Spencer’s sympathetic nervous system charged her, as if with a voltage, and no contrived thought separated her from the word she heard and her response to do just what it said. Her instincts led her back up the stairs. As she ran, the weight of the laundry bag threw off her movement, and she tripped on the landing a floor up, bashing her knee. Adrenaline put the pain out of focus, and she got up, leaving the bag behind as she continued, barely conscious of the awkwardness of her knee. When she fell again because of it, hitting it into the edge of yet another stair, she got up and jumped off the railing. Just as gravity started to pull her down a potential four stories to a broken end, the temperature differences completed, and she launched up to the sixth floor landing with cyclone-like winds.

‘She cleared the railing and let the wind stop just before it slammed her against the ceiling. She landed harshly, almost falling down the stairs, but she stumbled up and rushed through the hallway door, not daring to look back until she shut it. She almost ran, but at the sight of her hands, she stopped for a single second. The dew on her hands was only half liquid; it was turning to ice. She turned from the door and continued to flee, fighting against the strained and hurt knee to her door. She half looked at the lock and half looked at the staircase door as she fumbled the key into the door and pushed inside, locking the door almost before it could shut.

She backed away from the doorway, breathing heavily. She was not safe there. She considered the balcony. If she went outside and jumped, maybe she could reach someplace populated enough that she would have help. The campus, however, was spaced very well. She knew it for fact, she could not jump that far, and even if she could, she would be frozen on the way down; she would be broken or killed by the impact of the fall. Was she trapped? The panic response acted before she could think it through any more. She reached out towards the door, and nature followed her command, violently taking the heat energy out of the air both in front of and behind the door. In seconds, both sides were brought down in temperature so low that the door was sealed with frozen water vapor and dry ice. The cold of the door was enough, for just seconds, to form liquid nitrogen and liquid oxygen, which flash-froze the hallway for several meters away from the door.

When the magic stopped, Spencer’s hand remained raised, trapped in the rime that now covered her whole body. Blind and struggling for air, she slowly broke the ice at her joints and fell against the foot of the spare bed. The magic and the adrenaline were now spent, and her mind regained its thoughts. As the minutes passed, she felt dread. She should have gone with the other girls. Her bag would make it clear, if nothing else, where she had gone. Now, she was in a worse position than she was in before, if her worst assumptions were true about the kindly guide. She considered the door. If she was still in danger, was the ice thick enough? Would it hold? For an instant, she felt a strange sense of guilt, though in the haze of exhaustion and struggling to breathe, she could not figure out why.
 

Lil Lyndis

Well-Known Member
Apr 5, 2008
64
Gender
feed me
Pronouns
they/them
Posting Status
Irregularly
Violet rarely went to classes, it tended to be too cold for her and she couldn't focus well. Today she was staying inside crocheting a scarf and drinking some tea made from herbs she had collected from her garden. Some people might expect her to not eat plants due to her closeness to them, but that wasn't the case. She treated plants kindly and used them as she needed them, though she asked for permission first. She only dried them if their season was nearing its end and they were going to die soon anyway, otherwise she only took what she needed, when she needed it.

There weren't many girls left in the dorms at this point in the day, but she tended to not pay attention to those kinds of things, she didn't even notice there were girls in the hall until she heard one scream. That made her curious. Wrapping the scarf around her neck in a way that she could hold the hook, she grabbed the skein of yarn in one hand and her tea in the other and headed out the door of her room, casually dodging the herbs she had strung across the ceiling to dry.

As she headed towards the stairs, she noticed the temperature dropping and took a sip of her tea to warm her some. Despite knowing that she wouldn't be much help to anyone if it got too much colder, she opened the door with the hand holding the yarn and went inside. It was even colder in here, though she could still stand, she was starting to droop and struggled to keep a grip on her things. She had arrived just in time to hear the word 'Bandersnatch' being said by someone slumped by the wall. "Oh," she said, going up to him and setting the scarf and yarn on him, "Hold this, I'll go get some more tea," she then hurried back into the hall and towards her room. When she got inside she soaked in the warmth for a couple seconds before drinking the rest of her tea and grabbing another mug for the man in the stairs. She then poured more tea from the pot into both mugs, she thankfully always made a potful, and headed for the door, opening it carefully to avoid spilling the tea in her hands. She then went back to the stairs, drinking from her mug to stay warm before opening the door again and setting his tea next to him.
 

Corona Starfire

Ancient One
Inactive
Mar 4, 2007
1,629
MA, USA
Pronouns
He/Him/His
Poor Alistair had been completely out of it up until Violet had returned with her tea. Her scarf had lay casually upon his person until this point, him clearly not even noticing it - if noticing it were even possible for him at this point. After a few seconds he began to come around, snapping out of his trauma-induced delirium and realizing fully what was going on in front of him. He saw a girl with what appeared to be tea, and his first thought was that he had been with some girl up until this point. He had difficulty remembering - which was typically unlike him, but considering recent circumstances it would be somewhat understandable - but he assumed this was simply the same girl he had been with earlier. Who else could she be?

"Oh.." He said, blinking as if trying to focus his eyes. "I apologize for the disruption, m'lady. It would appear some of the students have taken fright of me. I do thank you for the tea.. and the scarf?" He looked down at the scarf in his hands, not quite sure what to make of it. "Did you bring your clothes to the laundry room already? How long was I out for.." He was clearly utterly confused, somehow thinking Violet was Spencer.

He had no idea that Spencer had assumed the worst and ran away from him.
 
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