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silentspringmods ([personal profile] silentspringmods) wrote in [community profile] silentspringmemes2023-12-01 05:18 pm

TDM NO. 1


TDM № 1 : December 2023
Part I; Chapter 1. Fires We Don't Put Out

premise & faq rules application invite requests activity NPCs calendar


Hey, neighbor, welcome to the very first TDM for Silent Spring, a semiprivate suburban 60s horrorgame based loosely on the likes of We're Still Here, Holly Heights, and similar. Characters wake up in the uncannily idyllic early 1960s suburbia of Sweetwater, Maryland, an integrated bedroom community of Washington, DC - in the same household as a complete stranger to whom they have apparently always been married, at least according to the eerily and unwaveringly chipper neighbors who seem to know a little more than they should. This TDM will give you a place to test out the setting and get some sample threads if you're going to apply for an invite. Right now there are at least 20 slots available to the general public.

This game and its world, including this TDM, heavily feature nuclear panic, the Red Scare, conformism, sexism and restrictive gender roles, heteronormativity/gender binarism as it relates to being forced into a 'nuclear family', surveillance, gaslighting, brainwashing/propaganda, disinformation, pollution/contamination, poisoning, loss of control, and uncanny valley. IC consequences can involve anything from social shunning to sleep deprivation torture, brainwashing, and nonconsensual administration of large doses of haloperidol. These are the crux of the game and cannot be opted out of — this game offers a very specific flavor of horror and it is up to players whether or not they want to engage. The atmosphere is a dystopia, and while people can certainly bond with each other in extreme circumstances, the point of this game is not an ingame domestic AU, found family, 'adopting' other characters, etc. Although this TDM has been opened for everyone to enjoy, I ask that you be respectful of the work I've put into cultivating a very specific environment. You have full permission to borrow this setting/premise for PSLs focusing on those things.

universe/setting information, role assignment, and FAQs

I. National Everyone-Smile-at-One-Anotherhood Week

Maybe you were on your deathbed, taking your last gasping breaths. Maybe you had just drifted off into sleep. Or maybe you were just in the middle of another ordinary day—but whatever the case may be, you now wake staring at an unfamiliar popcorn ceiling, dressed in a coordinating pajama set or nightgown straight out of the Sears catalog. A complete stranger lies asleep beside you. Perhaps a dog or a cat you don't recognize lies sleeping on a red tartan bed on the floor behind the mahogany footboard.

This is your house, but it’s not your house: on one of the twin dressers in the room, the morning light reflects off the cover glass on a framed photograph of the two of you standing side-by-side and smiling like figures in a Norman Rockwell painting, maybe with a third, also unrecognizable younger party in the foreground between you. A Civil Defense booklet titled ”Survival Under Atomic Attack” hangs halfway off the corner of the dresser, its pages and cover curling upwards with wear atop a dogeared Macy’s Christmas catalog. The other dresser hosts a watch box and a compact radio: yours, if you’re the one wearing the coordinating flannel shirt and pants, or your new husband’s, if you’re in a babydoll-style nightie.

It’s not immediately clear if you’ve found yourself in the fifties or the sixties, at least until you throw on the robe hanging on the back of the bedroom door and head out into the driveway at some point. There you find a rolled newspaper tossed onto the concrete beside a shiny new car, dated December 1, 1960.

Prompt Details:

— All characters wake in a normal human body with any disability aids (including glasses or contact lenses) converted to the most common form of them in the 60s unless a modern development like a sip/blow powerchair is needed for them to be playable. Although cutting edge technologies like myoelectric limbs were just starting to come around at the time, they were not common and readily accessible, and therefore are not allowed.
— Characters have no powers, and regains will not happen in this game. If they biologically need something to function that is fantasy in nature (ex: have to drink blood), that need is gone and replaced with only a normal human’s needs.
— Characters will find their belongings, up to 3 items from home, around the house in normal places for each item to be: a book on the shelf, a framed photo on a flat surface, etc. Items that don’t exist in the regular universe in 1960 may not be brought (ex: gameboy, pokeball, wizard’s staff).
— Characters may bring one normal, non-livestock pet, or may meet said pet for the first time when they wake up in Sweetwater. They can also be petless.
— No items or weapons from after 1960 are allowed, and no weapons more powerful than a hunting rifle or handgun can be brought with them. One weapon per character.



II. Death of a Salesman

You haven’t had much time to acclimate to your new life—maybe a day or two at the most—before there’s a knock on your door. When you open it, a man in a hat and a brown two-piece suit smiles at you, holding a briefcase in one hand and a brand new vacuum cleaner in the other.

“Hey there! My name’s Charlie and I’m here to tell you all about the latest in vacuum technology. Is the man of the house home?”

Regardless of what you say, Charlie the vacuum salesman finds a way to barge into your home and set up his briefcase and vacuum in the center of the living room. He insists that everyone in the family join him to watch, and then the demo begins as he tells the family how inadequate their current vacuum is and how the dirt it leaves behind will make you sick and make your wife look like she can’t keep up with running the house—but if she just buys this vacuum, she’ll be the envy of all of her friends, and isn’t it great timing that there’s a Christmas special on this very unit right now?

He tells the family he’ll give them ‘a moment to think on it’ while he fills up the water canister for the steamer function in the kitchen sink. Characters can hear the faucet running and then shutting off, but the salesman doesn’t emerge with a water tank—he emerges with a butcher’s knife.

“You took too long!” He announces. “I better get to the next house!”

With that, he charges, and begins to attempt to slice or stab whoever’s closest. You’re in luck, or at least it initially seems—it’s two or maybe even three against one. But once you attack him, you’ll notice something odd—the salesman doesn’t seem to react to being sliced at or stabbed, and if your character has a gun, gunshots don’t stop or even slow him. Shooting him in the head, cutting his jugular vein, or beating him on the back of the head are the only ways to kill him - good luck!

Should your household manage to kill him before he kills you, something even stranger happens. The moment he takes his last breath, lying in a pool of his own blood, there’s a knock on the door. If characters ignore it or say “one moment please!”, the knocks get more and more vehement until the hand is practically banging on the door. If they still ignore it, the neighbor strolls around to the window and looks in to see if they’re home, cupping her hands to the glass— but doesn’t react to the dead body. Instead she just smiles brightly, gives an enthusiastic little wave, and points to the door.

When characters finally open the door to let her in, they’ll notice that she’s holding a mop and bucket, smiling brightly.

“I thought you could use a little help cleaning up the mess!”, she says, barging past just like the salesman did before her. At no point does she stop smiling, or seem to register that it’s a dead body—she just starts mopping up the pool of blood, occasionally dunking her mop into the soapy pink water of the bucket, never referring to it as anything other than the vague “the spill”.

If characters ask her for help disposing of the body, she’ll bring in her husband, a similarly cardboard figure who assists the ‘man of the house’ with digging a grave-sized hole in the back yard and dropping the body in. The next day, the ground is undisturbed.




III. We'll become silhouettes

Whoa there, Neighbor! I hope you and your picturesque new family didn't get so comfortable you lost sight of the looming Red Menace. No, it's not just confined to the silver screen: the Communist threat is everywhere, maybe even in your own home—and the skies above. Around 1:15 PM on December 20th, they hear the sound: the air raid sirens clustered like bananas atop the tall poles dotting the city come to life like singing frogs on a bank, sending out long, drawn out calls in a chorus of overlapping pitches. The radios in every room crackle on as if by magic, and a man's transatlantic voice reads the announcement:

"Your attention please. This is Ron Chapman, one of your official civil defense broadcasters with a special message. Military authorities have advised us that an enemy attack by air is imminent. This is a red alert. You are advised to go to your nearest shelter area immediately. Find shelter. There is not time to leave the city.

Your state civil defense director has just issued the following instructions: Please remain calm. Every precaution will be taken for your protection. Keep your radio tuned to this place on the dial throughout the alert period for information. Telephone service to your home may be cut off to permit military and civil defense authorities to carry out vital operations. Do not attempt to join your family or children if they are now separated. They will be cared for where they are. Obey your civil defense warden and find shelter NOW. Take shelter in your basement or in your nearest shelter area. If you can plug in your radio in the basement, take it with you. Use a portable radio set if you have one. Otherwise turn up the volume of your radio so that you can hear it in the basement. Keep calm, don't lose your head. If you are at work, obey your civil defense authorities. Go quickly and calmly to their designated shelter. If your children are at school, they are being directed to shelter by their teachers. If you are in an automobile, pull over to the curb and then go immediately to the nearest shelter area. Do not leave your car where it will block traffic.

This station will continue to stay on the air throughout the alert period to bring you authentic information and official instructions. Stay tuned to 640 or 1240 kilocycles on your radio for official information. Refuse to listen to unauthorized rumors or broadcasts. This is your official civil defense broadcast . . . Your attention please. This is Ron Chapman, one of your official civil defense broadcasters with a special message . . ."


If characters are at the high school, teachers will usher them out of the classroom and down a single packed cement staircase in the direction of the basement, past a yellow and black sign on the wall over the hand railing that reads FALLOUT SHELTER. They don't visibly panic—but it's clear to almost everyone that the teachers are just as afraid as they are, if not moreso. They've simply been deliberately trained not to show it, though there is a quality to the eyes that training can never reach.

The portable emergency radios echo off of the cement floor and stacked barrels of drinking water lining the walls opposite unopened boxes of survival rations. Teachers call roll in strained voices, accounting for every student left in their care—and then, once everyone is in, the heavy metal door to the shelter is closed, shutting out the aboveground world as Principal Jones tells everyone to stay quiet so they can hear the portable radios.

Characters at home have the option of going into the basements of the homes they awoke in, which have some survival rations but hardly qualify as fully outfitted bunkers, or disregarding the civil defense office's commands and risking it to seek safety in the community fallout shelter beneath the Sweetwater Fire Department. It is up to each "couple" whether they split up or seek safety in numbers, whether they prioritize immediacy or amount of protection.

If characters decide to hunker down in the fallout shelter under the fire department, they will be joined by dozens of their terrified neighbors. Responses vary dramatically: some seem almost catatonic, as though unable to believe that the events before them are really unfolding; others weep with fear. A woman breaks free of her husband's arms, screaming that she has to get her son, but a firefighter keeps her from climbing back up the staircase more and more people stream down.

Regardless of where characters choose to shelter, they are trapped there for the next five hours, listening to the Maryland civil defense director's warning circulate over and over in the claustrophobic space. Now might be a good time to field any questions to Dick Clark, your town Civil Defense Officer and Police Chief.

—until at last, the message changes.

"Your attention please. This is Ron Chapman, one of your official civil defense broadcasters with a special message. Military authorities have advised us that the anticipated enemy attack has been diverted. You may now leave shelter and rejoin your families. This concludes the red alert. Your attention please . . ."

Uh oh. Hope you didn't say anything in the heat of the moment you might now regret.



IV. There's no place like (your new) home for the holidays

What a stressful week–even if the townspeople don’t seem too phased by it. In fact, they’re acting as if nothing’s happened at all, and will laugh off any suggestion that anything different might be the case. The neighborhood Christmas party at the grand neocolonial home of HOA president Marjorie Taylor proceeds as planned on the 22nd of the month–Characters’ wardrobes, of course, already contain some cocktail attire, but if it doesn’t suit their tastes, they can find all of the latest fashions on display in the completely normal department store.

Punch made by Marjorie herself is served in a tremendous green Tupperware bowl, though those who would prefer a simple cocktail will have no trouble finding one on any of the bar carts around the house. Mistletoe dangles from the arch leading to the secluded hallway lined with doors to the guest room and downstairs bathroom, out of the sight of those who might judge a character for stealing a kiss from someone other than their new spouse. Married couples dance in the living room while their friends perch on the couch like an overloaded liferaft to watch. The air of the room is bright, jovial, loud - the red threat looms in the dark unknown beyond the windows, but for the moment, all is well. Enjoy yourself, neighbor!




V. Slip a sable under the tree

Three days after Marjorie's successful neighborhood Christmas party comes Christmas morning. When characters head down the stairs (or step into the living room on the same floor, if they're the 'child' of one of the newly introduced couples), they'll find the fully decorated Christmas tree that greeted them upon their arrival now has a few presents wrapped in metallic reds and silvers resting at its base, one for each party in the household, addressed simply with From: Santa.

The catch? The wrapping paper is impossible to open, the ribbons are impossible to tie and uncut, until everyone sits down as a family and opens them together in a true representation of an old-fashioned American Christmas morning.

Characters will receive 1 extra item from their homeworld abiding by the starting inventory guidelines—but the item has to be deeply personal, and something that they're uncomfortable with others seeing... which, judging by the similar reaction their new housemates have to their own presents, almost seems to be by design. It could be a compromising photo, a piece of subversive literature, a relic of who they were and things they'd rather remain hidden... but whatever it is, they've now been seen with it.



Players may keep TDM threads canon if both players are admitted, and TDMers are encouraged to play around with multiple possible family member matches. Have fun!
coefficiently: ([070])

[personal profile] coefficiently 2024-01-03 07:11 am (UTC)(link)
[There goes the sheet. The rest of the bed clothes trail anxiously after it, skewing at wild angles across away from her across the mattress. For a split second (or two or five, really, as confusion flexes broadly across her face and some mental mechanism begins to fire and spin between the ears), she makes no effort to similarly distance herself from the stranger who's stumbled out of the other side of the bed. She just stares back at him. And then past him, eyeline flicking rapidly to the door beyond his shoulder and the pale blue wallpaper with its bunches of delicate pink flowers, and the dressing table, and the drawn curtains, and—

Her own hands. The wedding band. The prodigious assortment of ruffles across the neck of her sleepwear. The room. The unfamiliar bed. The room.

It's a too rapid assessment. Then she too is moving, throwing back what's left of the covers to extract herself from the bed.]


This is a dream.

[Not an answer. Probably not the last time he'll have to deal with that.]
yupe: (pic#16873172)

[personal profile] yupe 2024-01-06 05:45 pm (UTC)(link)
[ He doesn't ask again. He doesn't really want to know. If she was up there in the stands, if he could tell you the pitch of her screams. But he keeps on looking at her—every sign of life, the flick of her gaze, the flush in her cheeks, the regularity of her breathing.

As he's watching her he's started picking at his clothes. Both hands close on the collar of his pajama shirt, fingers buried in the brand-new-yet-somehow-worn fabric. He sniffs the cloth at his shoulder, fidgets with his drooping cuffs. (Once she notices him doing this, he'll notice too, and stop.) ]


I think it's weirder. [ He says, reluctant and questioning, the words stretched out. His eyes drift to the ceiling, then, finally, he looks around the room. ] Than that.

Are you—you're not hurt? [ There's a real note of concern in his voice. It's just not for her. ]
coefficiently: ([080])

[personal profile] coefficiently 2024-01-07 01:44 am (UTC)(link)
[She notices—or her eye line at least fleets over the shape of his hand picking at his cuff before it skates on. Having moved as far as the window—the room isn't so palatial as all that—before his question prompts an abrupt lowering of her attention, she pauses there with her hand on the curtain.

Two red scars sit on either side of her shin, stark and parallel to the bone. They look better than they should. The leg itself is better than it should be. She's had it pinched into a brace for, officially, not long enough, and yet—]


I'm fine. [Sounds like something about this fact doesn't sit right with her. It snags at the veering point of her focus and yanks it back to the stranger fidgeting across the room.] Should I be?

[Her hand doesn't wait for the answer. The curtain comes back with a rasp of fabric along the rod.]
yupe: (pic#16873168)

[personal profile] yupe 2024-01-07 03:36 am (UTC)(link)
[ Since his eruption from the bed, Jupe's been fixed in place—his posture slouched, his hands frantic and then still. When she pulls back the curtain, though, when the light in the room changes, it shakes something loose. Conversation forgotten, he rushes to the window—shaking the sheet from his foot along the way—and snaps the curtains closed again. Stands with his hands on the sill, breath coming and going in spurts.

God. God.

He gives himself three more gods and turns to face her, feeling the window at his back like a glowering eye. He shrugs—stupid, but by the time he realizes he's in the middle of it—and manages a faltering smile. ]
One thing at a time, right? Check out the house first?
coefficiently: ([062])

[personal profile] coefficiently 2024-01-07 06:17 am (UTC)(link)
[It's a lot of movement all at once. For a woman who has been buzzing with momentum since she first set foot on the thin pile carpet, the sudden burst of activity puts her on her heels regardless. She doesn't know who he is. She doesn't know where she is, or where John is, or where the kids are, or the mechanics of why she's in this room, and so the invasion of space jars.

Nevermind that the man seems just as rattled as she is. More, even. That's a comfort, honestly. It's currently the one normal thing at play. So, sure. The curtain is snapped shut before she gets more than just the impression of the world beyond it. Houses in a row. Frost touched lawns. A too blue sky.

(The latter is enough to tell her something, another alarm bell joining the chorus in the back of her head.)

She takes a full step back from the window and his struggling smile.]


The house, [she says, like agreement. ] Okay.

[And then backs up, two more strides—for some reason, it seems prudent to put distance between them—, before she's turning. There's a framed photo on the dresser. Her eyes slips past in, unseeing, in favor of the robe hanging on a hook.]

Which crew did you say you were with?

[He didn't. She knows.]
yupe: (pic#16873164)

[personal profile] yupe 2024-01-07 04:30 pm (UTC)(link)
[ It's a relief when she moves out of reach of the window, but in a kind of abstract way that does nothing for his thudding heart. (Or the memories—which can't be the word, right, when the only thing separating them and him is a pane of glass?) So Jupe puts himself through the motions of relaxing: letting his arms fall to his sides, slowing his breathing until it evens out. He shifts his stance from in front of the window, although he's careful to keep himself between her and the curtains. ]

I'm— [ His confusion changes in the space of that word, from polite puzzlement to something fear-tinged. ] What do you mean, crew? I'm with Jupiter's Claim. I'm Jupe.
coefficiently: ([019])

[personal profile] coefficiently 2024-01-08 03:44 am (UTC)(link)
[Jupiter—

Should be followed by a number. For a split second, the fact that it doesn't makes the rest of his answer into something garbled. She looks at him, momentarily uncomprehending (except that something is wrong with him, discomfort shedding from him in every direction; she recognizes it because she feels something like it herself—a knot in the pit of her stomach that is tightening), and then—

Maureen makes a motion with both hands, like 'Okay, stop'. Hard reset, she tells herself. Get some facts on the board. (Should she recognize the name?)]


You don't know where we are either, right?

[Strange room. Strange clothes. Strange man who's first question had been 'Who are you' not 'Where are we?' It's a valid baseline to establish.]
yupe: (pic#16873166)

[personal profile] yupe 2024-01-13 07:43 pm (UTC)(link)
[ Automatically he listens, his own thoughts on hold. A part of Jupe'll always respond to emphatic gestures made by someone with an air of authority. Even her confusion is briefly intelligible, more intelligible than the rest of it—she's in her head, trying to set the scene. ]

No. [ She doesn't know who he is. He should've realized before, but it means—he clutches at the thought—this, whatever happened to her, it isn't his fault. ] Looks like somebody's grandma's house. [ He observes, making a show of looking around. Not actually taking in much. ]

What [ —the pause a little too pat, the questioning note in his voice a little too pronounced— ] uh, what crew?
coefficiently: ([085])

[personal profile] coefficiently 2024-01-23 06:11 am (UTC)(link)
The Resolute. This doesn't make any sense. There's almost no way we could be here. [Two things clipped together like they belong, the answer automatic and the speculation to follow already veering rapidly away from the possibility of follow up questions like What's the Resolute?

It's not the only thing veering, either. Maureen is turning, moving back around the bed—he can have the window—to the hook where a plaid robe in masculine shades is hanging. She talks as she goes:]


The amount of raw energy required would be— I mean astronomical doesn't even begin to cover it. But we're obviously not dealing with the fabricated housing materials, and that sky— [She shoves her second arm into the house coat that definitely doesn't match her sleepwear, cinches the tie tight, and looks at him with something like expectation lingering at the very edges of her expression. Like he might— what?

Get the math, for starters.]


What's Jupiter's Claim?
yupe: (pic#16873159)

[personal profile] yupe 2024-01-27 01:01 am (UTC)(link)
[ The Resolute is not something you name your harmless observational vessel, but then—he pulls his thoughts back before they go off that cliff. He crosses his arms—almost a self-hug—as she starts moving again, watching her pull on a bathrobe and telling himself it'd be stupid to count the ways she's not a fucking alien. One: she is breathing. Two: she is wearing a bathrobe.

He snaps out of it in time for her question. ]
Jupiter's Claim is the... [ —bestest darn California Gold Rush theme park in the Santa Clarita/Lancaster area, perfect for family outings. ] It's just a little park, out in the desert. Wild West, we have a petting zoo, horse shows. Great for kids. [ He finishes unconvincingly, his tone bright and false as a gold tooth. ] You were saying about the sky?
Edited 2024-01-27 01:02 (UTC)
coefficiently: ([019])

[personal profile] coefficiently 2024-01-27 05:07 pm (UTC)(link)
[The look in her face cycles rapidly from confusion, to flickering concern, to something that looks very like a kind of certainty bubbling up past either of those things to furrow her brow. It's not the answer she was expecting, obviously. But also, it doesn't exactly contradict her thinking.

(She doesn't like that too bright tone of his, either. It sticks as off to the ear.)]


I'm not sure yet. [Yes she is.] Like you said, we'll start with checking the house. Maybe the others will know something we don't.

[They must be the first ones awake. Somewhere nearby, her family hasn't yet jolted into consciousness. Obviously. Because otherwise—

Maureen gives him a too tight, equally manufactured smile and makes to pull open the bedroom door.]
yupe: (pic#16873171)

Enter the Dog

[personal profile] yupe 2024-01-28 08:03 pm (UTC)(link)
[ So she's not gonna be answering any questions. Okay then. Jupe gleans what he can from her shifting expression: no familiarity, zero recognition. No interest in him—good, he reassures himself—specifically.

More questions pop into his head, disorderly, but at the last second he decides it's not worth it. He gives her a nod and, as soon as her back's partly to him, closes his eyes. Jupe listens like it's something you can do as hard as you can, summoning up the noise that came out of that thing and straining to hear past the walls of the house.

He doesn't hear any of that. What he hears is a low, distant thump, like someone falling out of bed. Another. It keeps coming, but it's not rhythmic. His eyes fly open; however far she's made it into the hall, he reaches toward her. Like the word's been jerked out of him: ]
Wait—

[ Too late. ]
coefficiently: ([091])

[personal profile] coefficiently 2024-01-29 12:49 am (UTC)(link)
[It comes flying up the stairs.

Figuratively speaking, of course. Dogs don't usually fly and this one is no exception. They can be excellent bounder though, and this one thumps up onto the landing with a great deal of blind enthusiasm. It's apparently untroubled by how the woman on the landing balks in surprise at her appearance, all tail-wagging, and shaggy, and an eager tongue licking after hands before barging past Maureen entirely to charge through the room and give Jupe a similarly jubilant good morning. And because she is a very good dog who knows the importance of being direct, she jumps into and out of the bed to make a more aggressive beeline rather than delaying this vital business a second by swerving around the furniture.

Maureen, in the hall, peers back after the dog. Blinks expectantly at Jupe.]


Yours?
yupe: (pic#16873170)

[personal profile] yupe 2024-01-31 02:39 am (UTC)(link)
[ He's caught darting for the bathroom door. The thing, the panting mass of fur, lands heavily on the floor and plants two paws on Jupe's pajama shirt. He can feel the nails poking through. Something in him wrenches and he backpedals, saying—maybe just thinking—no no no. Undeterred, the dog drops down and commences a thorough inspection of Jupe's feet, sneaking in a lick for good measure. ]

Hey. [ Jupe manages, soft, once he's breathing again. ] Hey boy, easy. [ He offers an open palm to the dog—eagerly slurped—and progresses to ruffling the endless supply of fur on the creature's head. Glancing up: ] The dog?

[ The dog, which when he looks back is sprawled on the floor, belly exposed for easy scratching access. What else can Jupe do? He squats down to oblige. ] He seems okay. [ He reports, like that's the reason for the belly-rub. ] Not starved or anything. [ Reflectively: ] Weird.

[ In that it's a little to close to normal. ]
coefficiently: ([044])

[personal profile] coefficiently 2024-01-31 06:27 am (UTC)(link)
[Later, maybe, when her own nerves aren't jangling in the back of her head and screaming to be answered, she'll actually think, He's jumpy, instead of just sensing it like being stood next to an anxious animal and feeling it hum. Or maybe she'll have forgotten about it by then. Or maybe it won't matter by then. In the moment, half his flinching seems reasonable and the other half she doesn't think about.

Instead she thinks, Yeah. That is weird.]


Will?

[It's not for him. She's half turned, calling the name down toward where the dog originated.]

Penny, Judy. I'm up here!

[Not for long. Jupe can be in charge of petting the dog, she's headed down the—

She stops abruptly halfway down the stairs, attention snagged by one of the family photos neatly cascading down the stairwell wall. A freckle faced red-headed girl slightly too close to the camera, smiling with not enough of her teeth. It's from before Penny had her braces. She's hiding a gap tooth.

Other pictures surround it on the wall. They send the small hairs at the back of Maureen's neck standing.]
yupe: (pic#16873172)

[personal profile] yupe 2024-02-02 03:18 am (UTC)(link)
[ It's almost by accident—okay, it's totally by accident—that his hand brushes something tough and pebbled buried in the fur at the dog's neck. A scab, is his first instinct. Or a chip, a tracker. He's trying to get the dog to hold still, petting with one hand, combing through dog hair with the other, when she starts calling their names.

Jupe's hands stop. He knows that tone—because he knows it, he can hear the fear it's tamping down. Shit kind of goes sideways in his head, thoughts slanting all over the place: what if they're here? Should he be yelling for them, what if they're not? What didn't she want to say about the sky?

Dog ambling at his heels, he drifts to the stairs. He can see the top of her head, on the landing. ]
What's— [ His steps are soft; the dog's are not. She's thundered down to join Maureen, tail swishing against the wall, before Jupe's figured out how to end a sentence.

When he gets there, still a few steps above her, all that comes out of him is: ]
Oh. [ Surprised, but with a kind of dawning recognition. Jupe slips down another step, looking from one photo to the next—vacation shots, dancing close, a picnic. Him with his hair slicked back, in an old-fashioned suit and narrow tie. He fights the urge to reach for one, following her gaze instead. ] When you were a kid?
coefficiently: ([062])

[personal profile] coefficiently 2024-02-02 06:39 am (UTC)(link)
[It's the one color photo on the wall. It sticks out like a sore thumb, dragging the eye back to it despite the disorienting contents of the rest of the frames.

(A beach, her hand shading her face from the sun and the camera's exposure both. The two of them stood in front of a car. A large white dress and a bouquet of flowers.)

For a second, Maureen's attention scatters—flits to her hand, and When was the last time she wore a wedding band?; veers back up to Penny and the wrinkle of her nose; tangles on the trajectory of his question.]


What? [Baffled, an anxious white noise hum that must be her pulse chewing at what is logical. No, she thinks. Penny looks just like John.]

No, [is firmer. A real answer.] It's my daughter.