Glen (
intricate_engineer) wrote in
glowfic2016-01-15 12:50 pm
Entry tags:
between then and know
It was a trap.
Glen should have seen it coming, but she'd thought the offer might be genuine. Wasn't the possibility of immortality worth the risk?
Well, not this time.
Her pendant, her way out, was broken.
She tried to use it anyway.
Glen should have seen it coming, but she'd thought the offer might be genuine. Wasn't the possibility of immortality worth the risk?
Well, not this time.
Her pendant, her way out, was broken.
She tried to use it anyway.

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She doesn't have the expertise to determine if it's real, but she takes several pictures of it anyway.
She also photographs some of the other intact bones and the insides of several broken ones.
She goes to inspect the walls.
Are they stone? Is this a natural cave?
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Among the broken furniture in this room is a heavy wooden chest, upside down and smashed apart with some unrecognizable trash scattered nearby. It's in slightly better shape than the fragments of chairs and tables and what might once have been an empty bookcase, not to mention the round metal plate folded nearly in half; perhaps what's left of the chest might contain some useful object or other that wasn't destroyed with the rest of this place.
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A sack of extremely dessicated vegetables.
A few scraps of fabric that disintegrate at the slightest disturbance.
More than a dozen loose marbles of varying sizes, all made of something not quite exactly like coloured glass. They pour out of the chest and roll across the floor when it shifts during investigation.
Two books in surprisingly good shape, and one that falls apart like the fabric into dust and paper fragments.
A small empty crystal vial with a faceted crystal stopper, and the shards of a few more like it.
A pair of heavy gloves, miraculously intact, made of what looks like dark brown leather with a silvery sheen.
A selection of tools, some recognizable (tongs, tweezers, a mallet), some less so. Many feature the same silvery-brown leather as the gloves.
Another metal plate, similar in character to the bent one but undamaged and about twice as large - more than a foot across, where the other was more like six inches. This one also has a fancy ceramic backing. The metal side is perfectly flat, almost but not quite mirror-polished.
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She wants to inspect them more closely, but it's going to get dark soon, if it hasn't already.
She seals the books, carefully, inside a plastic bag and sets them back inside the chests.
She does the same with the paper fragments, lifting them one by one, salvaging what she can.
Then she begins gathering pieces of wood. She makes three piles near the broken door.
Fragments, medium, and large.
For now, she ignores anything she can't easily carry. She inspects the wood for fasteners as she goes.
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Much of the furniture seems to have been held together by well-fitted wooden pegs. Here and there, the shape of a piece suggests that this chair or table or box was actually carved all at once from a solid block, improbably enough. Nails are rare, but there are a few, and some metal hinges from broken boxes.
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The design of the furniture is interesting. It suggest a high level of craftsmanship. The furniture carved out of a single piece of wood suggest genetic engineering, magic, or giant trees. The lack of other technology makes her doubt genetic engineering, but doesn't rule it out.
She heads outside to judge the time and the weather.
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She shouldn't need to worry about being eaten. There have been no signs of life whatsoever. No recent kills, no droppings, not even any living plants.
But it's going to get cold soon, very cold if the other deserts she's lived in are anything like this one.
She's wearing light clothes and is already getting chilly.
She needs a fire.
She has wood, but no matches.
She doesn't have a blanket either, another emergency basic she didn't think to include.
Glen is the architect of interplanetary travel. She'd never expected to be stranded. She'd prepared to be injured or holing up somewhere safe until the danger passed, but stuck? Never.
Of course, she thinks, staring at the wood. Even then, matches would have been useful. Glen's just never had much thought for wilderness survival.
She wishes Alex was here. This is, essentially, his job.
Of course, if he was stuck here, he'd be trying to survive until Glen could come rescue him.
She could start a fire with her computer's generator, but it's unlikely she could dismantle and reassemble it with the available tools. She's not going to sacrifice her computer, not unless things get truly desperate.
Wasn't there something about rubbing two sticks together?
But that seems ridiculous, she doubts she could build up enough friction...
Flint. She needs flint. It might still be light enough.
She heads back outside.
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It's been a while since she's used flint and even longer since she's seen it in its natural state, but she can't take every rock.
So she grabs every rock that's a dark black, has broken into a sharp edge, or that has an oily shimmer. She hopes one of the criteria will be effective. If she picked up any gemstones, it's by accident.
She stops when her bag begins to be difficult to lift. She does one last check of the surrounding area before heading inside.
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Inside, everything is right where she left it.
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She begins striking the rocks, one by one, watching for sparks.
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Now to start a fire.
Glen has never started a fire before.
Well, once, but that was an accident! It also involved several unintended exothermic reactions and a tank of hydrogen which doesn't seem relevant here.
She doesn't user her paper, because though easy, it would be a waste of her very finite resources.
She definitely does not use the books.
Instead she takes the knife and begins to shave slivers off a piece of wood. Once she has a small pile, she places several small pieces of wood around it, then strikes sparks into the shavings.
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She accidentally breathes in some smoke and coughs.
She probably should have built the fire closer to the door.
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Burning continues. Different pieces of wood have different characteristics as fuel, sometimes very different - some of them burn fast, while some hardly seem to burn at all. Maybe some of the wood is fake, and made of non-flammable materials.
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It's hard to judge differences in color in the dim light, but records what she can, taking note of the smell of the wood and the different patterns of grains.
She drinks some water and morosely swallows her "dinner".
She's going to get sick of these pills really fast.
But her hunger is forgotten, when she turns to the books and the tools.
She picks up the tools first.
She can't place the silvery brown leather, but maybe some of the other materials will be easier to identify.
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Anything with a handle has it wrapped in that silvery leather. It's held up very well over however long it's been here; none of it seems cracked or stiff.
On closer inspection, those long sticks seem to be various sizes of paintbrush, with steel-ish bindings holding the brush heads to the leather-wrapped handles. Rather than having bristles, the brush heads seem to be made of a dense spongy material shaped into a number of different configurations. Some blunt cones, some cones with rounded points, some chisel-like wedges. It's hard to tell what exactly the brush heads are made of; there aren't too many ways to manufacture a dense sponge like that, and there are no signs that it was cut or molded or otherwise shaped into its present form. As far as it's possible to tell by looking, they might as well have grown that way on extremely well-standardized plants.
Taken in context, perhaps some of the other less-identifiable tools might be paint scrapers or similar; the metal plates could even be palettes. Why someone felt the need to bring a painting kit (and no paints or canvas) to their poorly defended stronghold when fleeing mysterious terrifying monsters is a separate question, and no obvious answer presents itself.
Whatever those brush heads are, they're either unused or very well cleaned: there is no paint residue on any of them, and they're all the same shade of pale blue. In fact, there's no paint on anything.
Among the tools is a small bowl or jar, wide and round with straight vertical sides and a rim that might be shaped to fit some sort of lid, made of a blue-grey stone not otherwise found in the vicinity. It's as inexplicably pristine as the rest.
And one of the mysterious leather-wrapped rods turns out to conceal a small knife, capped like a pen rather than sheathed like a weapon. The blade is not quite two inches long, straight and narrow, with the sharp edge turning a forty-five degree angle at the end to meet the dull edge and form a point. Unlike every other example of metal in these tools, it's also very, very blue. Blue like a butterfly's wings. If she tests it, she'll find that the tiny knife is extremely sharp.
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The knife makes marks in the wood very effectively. It's too small to be a really efficient tool for cutting large pieces of wood into smaller pieces, but its strength and sharpness are more than equal to the task.
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She also pours a few drops of water into the bowl, rolls them around, and checks the water for residue or a change in color.
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The blue knife scratches the leather and makes an unpleasant skreeking noise but no marks when scraped against the metal.
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