strove: (so then we can eat them)
thanks clarke ([personal profile] strove) wrote in [community profile] meadowlark2019-04-16 11:12 am

@clarke.griffin

Thank you to Yalena for getting us sorted. [Sort of sorted. Sort of.] Now that we've arrived in New Tokyo and we're stuck inside for a little while, I think we should talk about some new changes that we're facing. I can't be the only one.

But first: a good number of us are here unwillingly, but we have to wait until we're fully prepped before we can go anywhere. Heading outside in these temperatures while unprepared could cost you your life. We all hate being trapped somewhere. I think that's pretty well-established. We also hate having to do anything or be anywhere when we didn't ask for that to happen. At least it doesn't seem like we were drugged, though it wouldn't hurt for Katelin and I to take some blood samples to confirm that. We'll have to store them until we get back.

As for the changes in your lives: have you noticed any? For instance, apparently I'm a lab tech at Giles Bell. I tried to set myself up for a new internship there that I could get easily, but I got ... elevated. Or hired beyond that? I'm not sure what the right terminology is here. Has anyone else noticed this? Or had it happen to them? I got permissions to take leaves from both of my jobs. And no, I'm really not prepared to work as a lab tech. I don't even know the first thing about setting up gels.

As a bit of a personal request ... does anyone think we can make pancakes in the small kitchen here? I have a craving for them. I've not really had cakes of the "pancake" variety before, but I want them now. And if you think we can, can you make them?


[This last bit is Loki's fault.]
998: (my job is hard)

[personal profile] 998 2019-04-20 05:18 am (UTC)(link)
[jon almost laughs--so that's who she sounds like, it had been nagging at him--except there's a melancholy tone to her message. it reminds him of the few times he'd had to discuss robb.]

My apologies. I never saw it written out.

It's funny you ask about the Kings-beyond-the-Wall. I knew one of them, and he spoke of how much trouble he had uniting his people. Lexa did the same. We often spoke of our duties back home, as we shared a similar title--I was Lord Commander of the Night's Watch, an army of sorts meant to hold the Wall, and guard the people of the Seven Kingdoms from threats beyond it--and we were both rather young for it. I told her once or twice that her role was closer to that of a queen than mine own, and I don't think she appreciated it. In my world, at least the part of it I know, a commander is given an army, and a queen is given a people. She spoke as if queens were lesser lords she had the rule of.

The Free Folk have no law or principal to unite them, except their right to do as they please. Families may fight for centuries, exacting revenge on one another. We are not so different below the Wall, except that we're better at it. When the Mad King killed my lord grandfather and uncle, my lord father had no choice but to take up arms against him.


[an EXTREMELY abridged version of the rebellion, leaving out the most important bit.]

Beyond the Wall, he would have had the choice. Lexa always reminded me of one of the dragon queens, who conquered the Seven Kingdoms, uniting them into one realm. She was never free, as Mance Rayder--the King-beyond-the-Wall--was. She found no comfort in the knowledge that she would be returned to her people as if no time had passed. I tried to help her see that the people of the Clock were worth protecting, too. I don't think it made much difference to her.

I'm glad to hear she had friends among her people. When I was Lord Commander, it was difficult to spend time with my friends without setting them up against the other men. The two of you sound as if you have much in common.


[in that they both tend to monologue and ask questions with complicated answers. it's almost uncanny.]
998: (ugh)

[personal profile] 998 2019-04-21 02:26 am (UTC)(link)
There were many dragon queens. The Targaryens brought their dragons with them to Dragonstone from Valyria, before the Doom. They used them to conquer the Seven Kingdoms, after the Storm King killed Aegon Targaryen's envoy and sent him his hand in a box. Lexa reminded me of his first wife, Visenya, the warrior. Visenya carried a sword, and commanded troops from dragonback, while Rhaenys, the other queen, had no sword, and was a diplomat foremost. Though they conquered us, they united us as well. We were not one people before the dragons came. We still make war among ourselves, but now it's what they call a 'civil war.'

They way you speak of leadership is how our lord father spoke of it. A good king or queen, or lord or lady, must feel the same. But there as many if not more bad kings and lords as good ones. Aegon and Visenya's son was called Maegor the cruel, for he made war with the Faith of the Seven and killed hundreds, if not thousands. But he built the Red Keep, which stands in King's Landing today.


[also jon's ancestor. wild.]

All this happened three hundred years ago. The dragons are all dead now. I'm glad I could bring you news of your friend.
Edited 2019-04-21 02:27 (UTC)
998: (sad eyebrows)

[personal profile] 998 2019-04-23 07:39 am (UTC)(link)
[jon is mildly exhausted by this effort, but he does his best to rally all that he knows of dragons, valyria, the dance.]

Most of the dragons died with Valyria. Nobody knows what caused the Doom. I don't know what happened to the ones in the Freehold, where the Free Cities are now. I know Daenys Targaryen dreamed of the Doom, and her father brought his House and their dragons to Dragonstone.

Some hundred years after the Conquest, there was one of the civil wars, with dragons and Targaryens on either side. Most of them were killed in the fight. The one that was left, her eggs never hatched, and then she died, too.