[Santo - The Beach]
[master post]
You have to walk down a ramp to get to the sand. The ramp stretches over sand dunes, with sea oats dotting them, blowing in the near-constant breeze. On the same level as the ramp: a boardwalk, dotted with places to get sketchy-looking fried food, to try your luck at a number of games of chance, to watch performers, to ride roller coasters of the future!!!!
When you walk down the ramp, it's all white sand and blue water. Down about half a mile is a pier that juts out several hundred feet.
It's a nice beach. Not too crowded.
You have to walk down a ramp to get to the sand. The ramp stretches over sand dunes, with sea oats dotting them, blowing in the near-constant breeze. On the same level as the ramp: a boardwalk, dotted with places to get sketchy-looking fried food, to try your luck at a number of games of chance, to watch performers, to ride roller coasters of the future!!!!
When you walk down the ramp, it's all white sand and blue water. Down about half a mile is a pier that juts out several hundred feet.
It's a nice beach. Not too crowded.
no subject
Beat.
River brushes a light hand along the edge of the boardwalk, her eyes still on Rose. She's lucky, or she calculated well: the wind and water and sand have worn it down too much for splinters. "I'm a gunslinger."
Her other hand hangs at her side, dangling easy; dangling just where a holster would be, if she were wearing one over her loose ruffling sundress.
no subject
no subject
That's soft. Shadowed, a little.
"Trained and trial."
And then the shadow slips away again, and she tilts a smile up at the boardwalk, and the other girl. "I'm on the beach," she adds earnestly, in case Rose missed that detail.
no subject
"And it's a nice day," she says, smiling, picking up the thread again.
no subject
River lifts her boots again, and sets them on the edge of the boardwalk. Both palms rest flat on the wood, now, presumably preparatory to pushing herself up; she doesn't move just yet, though.
"Always do," she confides instead. "But now there's sun."
no subject
It's an alien planet. There was a story she read in the fifth grade, something about a world where it rained all the time...
no subject
no subject
no subject
"They're shy," she says to the sky, a little distantly. "Atmo's a veil."
no subject
"You mean in space? There's no sunshine in space?"
Is something wrong with this girl, or is this some opaque future jargon, or a language issue?
no subject
"It's the black," she says patiently, though without condescension.
"Depends on where you go. You can see them. Every one in the direct optical line."
no subject
no subject
"The melanin logistics are complex," she agrees.
Well, her tone seems to imply agreement, anyhow.