treadswater: (by the wine-dark sea)
Annie Cresta | Victor of the 70th Hunger Games ([personal profile] treadswater) wrote in [community profile] farsickness2021-02-28 09:07 pm

have we ever thought that being lost is our destination? | Locked + OTA

WHO: Annie Cresta
WHEN: 28th February, first part of March
WHAT: Arrival
WHERE: Gazin
WARNINGS: Anxiety attack in Arrival section + general anxious thinking in other threads. Will add if anything more shows up.
NOTES: Feel free to add a wildcard situation if you want! Annie will be scoping out Gazin a lot.




ARRIVAL | Locked to Lyanna Stark

She wants to be anywhere else. She wants to be somewhere away from the television, away from her house, away where she can't be found at all. No one. No journalists to ask her awkward questions because oh no, oh no, it's the Quarter Quell and the arena will soon be down to the final eight. And Finnick will live. He'll live past that. And then Annie is going to be in world of trouble because... Because...

Because they made the jabberjays scream in her voice. Because Finnick had been mad with desperation.

Because Snow had made the rules very clear and then he'd given the nod to force whats-his-name, that fucker of a Gamemaker whose name she can't remember right this very fucking second, she's so fucked, they are so fucked, and they hadn't done anything wrong. And now, and now there'll be journalists asking questions and Annie had bolted from the living room as soon as her feet let her. Bolted where? She doesn't know.

She just wants to be somewhere else-

The cold shocks her. Her feet trip as snow suddenly clings to her ankles, and Annie stumbles onto the ground. The cold, wet, snowy ground. Her gasp pulls cold air into her lungs and she starts to cough at the sudden icy conditions. Maybe it's a good thing: it stops her from screaming.

In a daze, Annie reaches out to push herself up from the ground, her other hand still clutching her shawl to her chest. She'd. She'd been running through a doorway, down her hall and, and had something blurred? She can't remember. But she can't have been drugged. Her steps had moved smoothly from one to another. No pause. Just suddenly... This.

Snow. A forest. A wooden crossroads and a cold wind chilling her through the thin cotton of her blouse.

Now I really have gone completely insane, Annie thinks, and she starts to laugh.



LATER | OTA

Gazin is strange. Annie can't make sense of it. She has a room now, on a loan from the tavern. She'll have to pay for board in a week. She has clothes. The faded dress is too big, the stockings patched and mended, the boots will need a repair soon, the cloak smells musty. But they are clothes and if she puts them over her own blouse and skirt, she's warm enough. It's enough. It's enough to be another data point because oh, no, the Capitol would not put her in such things. She knows how the Capitol works, how the arena fashion works, and none of this is what they'd do with her.

She's worn out from her bout of hysterics in the forest, so for a few hours that first night, Annie can be found in the tavern's main room listening in on conversations. Watching the dynamics at play. Trying to work out what, actually, is going on.

(When she goes to bed, she makes sure the door is blocked and she already has an idea of where to run if she has to climb out the window.)

The next few days, Annie can be found walking around Gazin. She's put on that old cloak but only sometimes wears the hood up. It restricts her vision and she is still jumping at shadows. Maybe this isn't all some new and excitingly detailed hallucination, but she's on edge enough that she's risking the cold to broaden her field of vision.

She visits shops, including a jeweller to get a price on the bangle she's least attached to. Not that she trades it in just yet. You only do that if you can't afford to bargain, and Annie has a week. She can look around to see where she'd get the best price. Once she can talk without nervousness, without her awkward laugh. She walks around the market, still watching, and one day, she even ventures out to the river. If she's to pay the loan, she'll need money, and trading bangles will only last her so long. She can fish. She can.

She'll just have to work out what she can fish in this ridiculous weather.

ylgr: (Default)

[personal profile] ylgr 2021-03-13 03:24 pm (UTC)(link)
When the girl rises to her feet so does Lyanna, her cloak still held in her arms. For the girl to borrow once she’s earned a little trust enough for her to take it. She’s still calm, her voice still gentle, giving the girl plenty of space. “If they’d gotten you I wouldn’t be here. I’ve never heard anyone speak with an accent like yours in all of Westeros. And I don’t know what this... arena is that you’re talking about.” Unless it’s some strange sort of name for a tourney. But it sounds different. Lyanna’s own accent is very much the Stark accent. The accent of Winterfell. Those that were born and raised there.

“I’m Lyanna Stark. And you were home, yes.” She doubts she will be believed but she’s going to continue to try. “I was, too.” In a way. Being with Rhaegar felt as much like home as Winterfell had. “Until I found myself standing by strange signs in a place I’d never seen before. And Gazin is nowhere on any map of Westeros.”

She doesn’t know if the girl will believe her, but she’ll continue to try. She needs to get her somewhere warm. Somewhere safe.
ylgr: (🐺 ...)

[personal profile] ylgr 2021-03-14 02:51 pm (UTC)(link)
“It’s all right. It’s a lot to deal with,” Lyanna reassures her, soft and gentle. The girl is lost and cold and scared and doesn’t trust her at ALL but she hopes that she’ll at least let her get her somewhere warm. “I’m going to put the cloak on you.” Her voice is still gentle and calm, but still authoritative. She moves closer, slowly, so she doesn’t startle her, and then, if the girl lets her, she takes the cloak from her and wraps it around her shoulders. Once she clasps it so it stays put, she steps back, to give her space. It swims a little on her, but it’s warm from Lyanna’s body heat and will help keep some of the cold at bay.

Next. To get her to the inn. “Come with me, all right? We’re just going to walk a little ways into town. There’s an inn, with a fireplace. Warm food, and drink.” She needs to get her somewhere warm, before hypothermia sets in worse. Even if she doesn’t STAY, she’ll at least be able to warm herself.