st_oneswidow (
st_oneswidow) wrote in
strangetrip2019-01-31 11:58 pm
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[GP] Check-in Day
The wheel of the year turned and turned and Curnen found herself at an anniversary of sorts that she flatly didn't want to be remembering but got stuck on a loop of anyway.
This time there was no taking the hell off into the wilderness, though. Nor were there endless, circular recitations of "The Queen of Argyll." Rather than be poisoned by the memory of someone she still hated like everloving fuck, she focused on remembering the friend she'd lost. And besides this being Kash's song, she figured it was never a bad time around here for "John Barleycorn." Perched on the roof with her guitar, she sang of John Barleycorn's dying and rising again, subtle magic weaving into her voice to lead anyone lost in their little bubble world this way.
There was three men come out of the west their fortunes for to try,
And these three men made a solemn vow, John Barleycorn must die,
They ploughed, they sowed, they harrowed him in, threw clods upon his head,
And these three men made a solemn oath John Barleycorn was dead.
It was Kash's song, in her mind, but you talked to half the people around here and it wasn't a bad fit for them, either. From her vantage point, she watched the road.
This time there was no taking the hell off into the wilderness, though. Nor were there endless, circular recitations of "The Queen of Argyll." Rather than be poisoned by the memory of someone she still hated like everloving fuck, she focused on remembering the friend she'd lost. And besides this being Kash's song, she figured it was never a bad time around here for "John Barleycorn." Perched on the roof with her guitar, she sang of John Barleycorn's dying and rising again, subtle magic weaving into her voice to lead anyone lost in their little bubble world this way.
There was three men come out of the west their fortunes for to try,
And these three men made a solemn vow, John Barleycorn must die,
They ploughed, they sowed, they harrowed him in, threw clods upon his head,
And these three men made a solemn oath John Barleycorn was dead.
It was Kash's song, in her mind, but you talked to half the people around here and it wasn't a bad fit for them, either. From her vantage point, she watched the road.
Re: Samirah and Peter
Re: Samirah and Peter
She nodded in response.
"Do you know who is here from Asgard?"
She didnt think she was lucky enough to have someone helpful like Frigga.
Re: Samirah and Peter
"They're not quite like they are in the legends, though," he says, before she can get too excited about it.
Re: Samirah and Peter
Samirah looked the opposite of excited. Thor was not bad in the grand scheme of things, but he could be grating when he did not have access to his shows. Her body visibly recoiled at the mention of her father's name. Was he projecting himself, she wondered, or did he get himself free somehow? She also wondered why Peter would refer to a Valkyrie as if it were their name.
She fell silent as she tried to figure out what to say next.
"I am also a Valkyrie."
It was rare she shared who her father was.
Re: Samirah and Peter
Peter stops there for a moment, hesitating. He dampens his lips.
"I thought you said you were from Boston."
Re: Samirah and Peter
"I am. Valkyrie's are chosen by Odin. Two years ago, he chose me."
Sam still felt the need to prove herself worthy of such a title since she was the only Valkyrie whose father was Loki. She knew that Peter would have no way of knowing that she there was little chance he would judge for for that.
"Our job is to take the dead who died valiantly in battle to Valhalla, so technically we travel through all the realms."
Re: Samirah and Peter
The rest he had managed to glean here. Those myths might not have matched reality perfectly, but neither did the internet's tales about the Avengers, either.
But first...
"Do the Avengers exist in your timeline?" he asks. That was the start of the litmus test for determining whether or not someone was potentially from the same timeline as him. Not that that helped all of the time; there were others from other timelines in which the Avengers existed where he didn't, but it was at least something.
Re: Samirah and Peter
She gestured with a vagueness as if to say this is my life, things just keep getting weirder and I need to accept it and move on.
Re: Samirah and Peter
"So you have Greek gods and Norse ones?" he asks. He's not sure he can imagine more gods on Earth than they had already. "Whoa."
Peter attempts to refocus. "So how did you become a valkyrie?"
Re: Samirah and Peter
Sam didn't think it was stranger than anything else in the world at this point. She was, quite frankly, surprised that the Norse gods and the Greek gods could share space together. The gods she had met were anything by humble.
She debated on how to answer his question.
"When I was fourteen, I saved some people from a frost giant. Odin appeared and asked and I agreed."
Re: Samirah and Peter
It sounds like it. Valkyrie, too, was something of a superhero if the tales he'd heard about her were true. It didn't seem too far off that an entire legion of them could be their own superhero team -- not much unlike the Avengers.
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"I'm not sure I'd call myself that."
She smiled politely, but she felt like she wasn't good enough to be a "superhero."
"Back home, people can't really see through what we call glamour. Basically, their brains can't really handle what they're seeing so they see normal where I might see a frost giant. Most of the time, everyone is oblivious to what's going on around them. My friend fought a fire giant on a bridge in public and everyone ten minutes later called it a freak storm."
Re: Samirah and Peter
"You said most of the time. What happens during that not-most of the time?"
Re: Samirah and Peter
She glanced down at her axe hanging by her side. There were Norse ruins all over the handle and blades.
"I'm assuming you can see my axe. If this place is as strange as it sounds, everyone here must already accepted strange as common occurrence otherwise your brains would have melted by now."
Re: Samirah and Peter
"Yeah, things are -- you know, they're pretty crazy," he says. "Back home, there weren't really people who had powers or anything. There were a few, but nothing like here. Now it's weird if you don't have some sort of special power or ability."
Re: Samirah and Peter
It sounded to Sam that it might be a pattern worth investigating if everyone here was special in some way.
"Does that mean you have something special about you?"
Re: Samirah and Peter
He's not exactly sure how weird that sounds to Samirah, but if she comes from a place where gods give people powers, it's probably not terribly weird.
Hopefully she doesn't hate spiders.
Re: Samirah and Peter
"You got bit by a spider and now have spider powers."
Samirah looked Peter up and down, but she knew well enough appearances were deceiving. She wondered what powers a spider might have.
"So then, are you a superhero in your world?"
Re: Samirah and Peter
"I've been doing it for like... two, two and a half years now?"
Re: Samirah and Peter
"Sounds like we are in vaguely similar boats."
She would trust he had skill if he was at it for over two years. She knew she didn't necessarily look like much on first glance either and it worked in her favor often.
"Is there a need for many superheroes here? Or is there some other way people occupy their time? Mr. O'Neill said people have tried to find a way out, but haven't discovered it yet."
Re: Samirah and Peter
Re: Samirah and Peter
"The undead are no joke... but I'm glad to hear it was taken care of."
The portals had her attention for a little longer. She wondered if there was a way to use that sort of opening to find her way back to one of the Nine Realms. Sam went silent and thought and then she sighed.
"I really hope it's true that time isn't the same here... "
Re: Samirah and Peter
Re: Samirah and Peter
"Well, if time is moving at the same pace, then I'm away from my friends right now while we're trying to do something very important. Plus my grandparents will worry and so will Amir and.... it would just be really inconvenient for everyone."
She did not know if she could explain a long absence if it were days on end.
Re: Samirah and Peter
At least he hopes so.
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