hanzer: (pic#)
ᴀᴅᴀᴍ ᴊᴇɴsᴇɴ ([personal profile] hanzer) wrote 2017-05-22 07:24 pm (UTC)

I'M ALIVE also wrong icon but too lazy to resub rn

[On the heels of that almost-smile is a quiet snort – just about the closest thing to laughter Jill's probably going to get out of him.]

Nice to feel needed.

[The dry retort is all the reassurance Jill gets before he shifts his weight, digging his heels in the dirt and bracing himself for the sudden burden as she drops over the edge. There are worse ways to be used– to be useful. Helping a teammate of his own accord isn't not one of them.

Keeping a tight grip on the rope – and trying to think heavy thoughts – he takes the time to glance out past the overlook, towards the distant edge of the treeline where clusters of run-down old buildings can be seen. Evidence that this part of the archipelago had once been occupied– but no sign of any occupants just yet. Nothing showing up on Smart Vision either, he notes, artificial eyes registering only cool blues and greens on the thermograph. He blinks once, twice, three times before his view shifts back into a more comfortable wavelength – back to grey skies and rolling fog. Not that heat readings mean much here. If he's to believe everything he'd been told at his first briefing, not everything they might be dealing with would necessarily be alive– or even robotic. Undead, like something out of one of those B-rated midnight movies Pritchard was always pestering him to watch. At first he'd thought they'd been joking – some sort of elaborate hazing ritual for the new guy – but quickly, disturbingly, he'd realized that wasn't the case.

Things are never simple these days. If it's not the actual, literal Illuminati, it's zombified bioweapons. He's not yet convinced it isn't both on this island, but– well, that's why he's really here, isn't it?

A sudden tug on the end of the rope grabs his attention, and he peers downwards curiously, the top of his head and a pair of sunglasses poking just far over the edge of the cliffside to be seen from down below. Barely in time to catch the tail end of what must've been a sweet-ass flip. Stuck the landing too.

Nice.

Adam acknowledges her wave with a quick nod, drawing up the rope and putting it away before getting up and moving to the edge of the cliff. He glances downwards – making sure Jill isn't right underfoot – before stepping off unhesitatingly. He drops like a stone, arms spread at his sides, before coming to a strangely silent landing on his feet and dropping to one knee – silent save for a involuntary, pained grunt that he isn't able to bite back quite in time. It was a long fall, certainly – long enough to rattle every tooth in his skull, but not quite long enough for his landing system aug to feel like it needed to kick in. The wonders of technology. Still, the shock absorbers in his cyberlimbs do their job, and a moment later he's back on his feet without too much discomfort.]


We can swap next time if you still feel shitty about it.

[It's a joke, but for all he knows, she'd match his fall– and throw in a backwards somersault and a reverse twist. At this point, nothing would surprise him.

Joining her once more, rolling his shoulder, he follows her gaze over to the treeline. No chance of sighting the old buildings from down here now. Not through the dense foilage on the forest floor, and not through the encroaching fog just starting to roll onto land from the sea – a product of the earlier storms. Adam frowns.]


Didn't catch sight of anything while I was up there. [A pause. Neither of them need to say it to know what he means: doesn't mean there's nothing out there.] How do we want to approach this?

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