iamresponding: (bucketless - wry grin)
Nova Prime / Rich Rider ([personal profile] iamresponding) wrote in [community profile] legionworld2016-01-02 08:59 pm

Imagine There's No Heaven

Who| Rich Rider and YOU
What| Laying face down in the grass in Central Park like a goon
Where| Central Park in the Habitat area of the ship
When| Same day he woke up, natch
Warnings/Notes| Nothing really.

Rich hated being told to slow down. There was a part of him that was screaming at him to be on the move. After all, there had to be 8X8 planetary distress calls to answer; this universe was supposedly as much of a mess as his was.

But the medicos here refused to budge on the "you need rest and time to adjust, especially since you need to adjust to the prosthetic arm" thing so here he was resting and trying to adjust. Kind of. If tooling around the whole ship without stopping was the same as resting and adjusting. Because he couldn't seem to stand still.

Admittedly, even just walking was hard. The Nova Force was still there -- he could feel it -- but it was definitely diminished somehow and that meant his invulnerability and superstrength were gone. Without that pinpoint precision and body awareness it gave him at full capacity, his extremities were a little numb and he was clumsy as anything, just like he was the last time he'd lost the Nova Force.

So after a whole day of pacing around the ship from place to place -- and constantly tripping over his own feet as he did it -- he walked through Central Park (Central Park! Made just for him, reconstructed out of old historical records!) and tripped one last time over his own feet, practically falling on his face in the middle of Strawberry Fields, not far from the "Imagine" John Lennon memorial.

Then he just...stopped. Finally. Because he was alive and he felt grass on his face. How long had it been since he actually felt grass? So he kicked off his boots and socks, too, digging his toes into it.

He'd almost forgotten what grass felt like, but it was itchy and smelled green and earthy and non-sterile in the way everything in space didn't. And as itchy as it was, it was...nice.

Apparently, the Human Rocket could slow down for at least a little while. How 'bout that?

Since he was focusing a bit more on the grass and the light artificial breeze, and his own breathing (he was alive, he was breathing) he wasn't focusing on how it looked to be a grown man face down in the middle of a field.

Truth be told, it looked pretty ridiculous.
nerdninja: (40)

[personal profile] nerdninja 2016-01-04 05:45 am (UTC)(link)
The question of what this guy was doing facedown on the ground was still up in the air, but Donatello ignored it to reach out and shake his hand.

"Donatello."

(The question of "why facedown in the grass" probably had a less interesting answer than the many other questions on his mind, after all.)

"So, what do you think the odds are that out of infinite possible locations in infinite possible universes, they'd grab multiple people from New York?"
nerdninja: (08)

[personal profile] nerdninja 2016-01-06 08:11 am (UTC)(link)
"I always figured my world had a pretty good reason for most of the mutant population winding up in the same place, at least."

Well, maybe more like two reasons, and their names were Baxter Stockman and Oroku Saki. Not that the Foot's operations had been in any way limited to only New York, but the best way to stay on top of things was to focus on the place they were happening, and then it became kind of a chicken-or-the-egg situation.

"If everyone who's busy trying to play God doesn't start from the same place, it's just that much harder to try and steal each other's work, for one thing." (And of course, the accidental byproducts of their work don't have the means to just pack up and set themselves up halfway across the world just like that, either.)
nerdninja: (42)

[personal profile] nerdninja 2016-01-10 05:24 am (UTC)(link)
"It's mostly an animal-mutating thing so far, but I figure a nutjob like Stockman would think animals to be easier to keep control over than people." Less of a potential trail, easier to replace...

Stockman hadn't planned on them getting enough of the psychotropic serum to start thinking like people, of course, but Donnie couldn't really complain about that lack of foresight.

"There were at least a couple of mutants that started human and just had the animal DNA brought into the mix, though." Bebop and Rocksteady for sure, but...well, who knew about Bludgeon and Koya. (And who cared, really.) "But as far as we know, there's only maybe...fifteen, twenty of us out there, total."
nerdninja: (42)

[personal profile] nerdninja 2016-01-12 08:54 am (UTC)(link)
"A small group wouldn't be bad if half of them weren't jerks, thugs, or possibly terrorists."

It's said with all of the blunt teenage attitude that he usually saved for when he thought his family was doing something particularly stupid. There was no love lost between the Hamato family and any of the mutants still working with the Foot (and Donatello least of all), and then Hob...

...well, he was never quite sure what to make of Hob, and that was the problem, even if Slash and the others seemed okay.

"If you had to get it somewhere, instead of just being born with it...it's easier for people to think of you as like them, probably." That was the dividing line he was used to seeing, anyway. Hob didn't trust humans - even the ones who became mutants later. They'd chosen it. They didn't wind up that way because someone else had decided they were worth less and thus fair game for science. What did the accidents like them have in common with Bebop and Rocksteady?
Edited (repetitive sentence structure be gone X() 2016-01-12 08:54 (UTC)
nerdninja: (25)

[personal profile] nerdninja 2016-01-13 05:45 am (UTC)(link)
"That's got to say something about how weird your life is when you're less human than someone who hatched in a pet store."

Probably a pet store. He assumed a pet store. But being an ordinary turtle was kind of a weird jumble of memories that didn't really string into a narrative the way everything about the mutagen did.

He leaned forward, gaze fixed on the energy, although he didn't move to touch it. Donnie was scientist enough to have plenty of ideas about what could happen when you just messed around with things you knew absolutely nothing about.

(Which wasn't to say it wasn't tempting.)

"So when you say survive...does it burn out without a host, or is this going to be even weirder than I'm already expecting?" It was an unusual word choice for something that was (he presumed?) just pure energy as opposed to...sentient. Or not sentient but at least alive somehow. Humans survived, animals survived. Plants survived.

Energy?

Not how he'd have put it.
nerdninja: (11)

[personal profile] nerdninja 2016-01-13 08:36 am (UTC)(link)
The play of expressions across Donnie's face suggested he was trying very hard to wrap his brain around a living energy source.

What was it generating energy from? If most living things needed to burn energy to function...what kinds of functions did it even have, if it didn't appear to have any of the usual things that anything with a body had to worry about? Respiration? Circulation?

How did something that formless -

He was doing his level best not to just interrupt the inspiration part of the story with a million science questions, though, but even if it was rather inspirational (an entire galaxy getting its crap together enough to unite like that was an amazing thought, for someone from an Earth that was still as far as possible from doing the same, after all), he couldn't quite keep himself from finally letting the pot of questions boil over with the most simple, direct one possible -

"But how does it work?"
nerdninja: (17)

[personal profile] nerdninja 2016-01-15 05:42 am (UTC)(link)
A star wearing a human skin was such a poetic way of putting it. Donnie wasn't really one to zero in on poetic; he was usually too busy trying to pick things apart on a different level, but...something about the way Rich was describing it felt a little bit like talking to the Fugitoid again.

Hearing things that didn't make any sense to him put in ways that made him feel a little silly for questioning.

(Not silly enough to stop questioning, of course. Nothing ever stopped him from that.)

"You really wouldn't mind?"

Being treated like an object of science was - well, he could understand the objections, having been on the wrong side of it himself once upon a time.
nerdninja: (40)

[personal profile] nerdninja 2016-01-19 07:35 am (UTC)(link)
"Well, you're making sense about it."

Donnie loved people who made sense.

"Has anyone here tried to scan you yet? I think the first order of business should be seeing if there's anything remotely close to the Nova Force on file with the medics here, because if they've dealt with anything close, they might already have a better idea of how to deal with it if something happens than we'd get starting from scratch."
nerdninja: (08)

[personal profile] nerdninja 2016-01-24 10:01 pm (UTC)(link)
"I think I just drive my brothers nuts with it, half the time."

Okay, so maybe he didn't always have the best timing to get distracted on a scientific tangent, but in his defense, they didn't always have the best timing to get focused on all the grudgestuff, either. And questions were important, whatever they were about.

The entire situation with the Technodrome had proven that much, however messily.

"I'm not sure how much I'll be able to get out of it, because it's pretty far out of what I've seen before, but that's no reason not to try."
nerdninja: (31)

absolutely! c:

[personal profile] nerdninja 2016-02-02 05:54 am (UTC)(link)
He looked a little surprised at the boop.

(He got over it fast, though.)

"Powers aren't going to get us back home."

- well, okay, maybe not entirely accurate, given that Brainiac's intelligence was enough to qualify as a superpower, and Donnie's existing mechanical skills weren't really developed enough for the task yet (although he was sure he could damned well get them there, if that was what it came to), and the weird, much more complete understanding of the tech here that he had was definitely a power, but...

...it was the principle of the thing, okay.
nerdninja: (10)

[personal profile] nerdninja 2016-02-04 06:35 am (UTC)(link)
"Not...even that old, technically, but that's the mutagen talking. We grew up kind of fast."

And not only because of the mutagen, really. They'd been able to understand things much sooner than their chronological age would have allowed, but they'd been forced to put that to the test right away. It felt like they'd been going a mile a minute ever since they escaped from Stockgen, and even the things that should've been victories just seemed to lead into still more fighting.

"Interesting's a pretty nice way to put it. But this isn't my first trip to another dimension...it's just the first one that didn't start with getting shot at."

Though he had full faith that they'd run into that snag soon enough, whether they liked it or not.
nerdninja: (02)

[personal profile] nerdninja 2016-02-09 01:02 am (UTC)(link)
Donnie's face scrunched up a bit. "We had one Lovecraftian...thing under New York and that was plenty for one lifetime."

That, honestly, had been what he'd consider one of the worst fights they faced, perhaps because the nature of their opponent meant that so little of their training seemed to really matter. Technodrome had been hell, yes, and he had no desire to take another sledgehammer to the shell, but everything they knew had come together into a plan that worked, albeit with a few wrenches thrown their way. The Gauntlet had been bad, but that had been the culmination of everything they'd ever trained for. Preparing made a difference.

Shub-Niggurath had been nothing like that. It still felt like they'd just scraped through on luck more than anything.