Night 56: Bus Unloading Area

Jun 14, 2011 23:10

[from here]

....Make that the cold night air. God, how did she not think of a coat?! Morgan: 0, Landel's: a hundred. She rubbed her bare upper arms, smearing blood from her injured right shoulder onto the fingers of her gauntlet. Normally she'd wipe it clean; right now, she didn't care enough to bother. She just wanted to keep moving and make up ( Read more... )

morgan, guybrush

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Sorry for the delay! D: sheepwood June 18 2011, 09:58:47 UTC
Guybrush followed Morgan out the door with as quick of a step as a guy with busted ribs and a minor concussion could muster. He grabbed hold of the handle as he crossed the threshold, pulling the door shut with a snap that echoed in the quiet night around them. The process hadn't been pretty, but they were out of the institute and facing the possibility of freedom: cold, questionable, tentative freedom.

"Yeah," he responded to Morgan's question in a hushed tone, wary that there were probably more guards waiting for them somewhere. "Aside from adding another bruise to my growing collection, and that span of time where I couldn't tell if it was me or the room spinning uncontrollably, I'm all right. And I don't see any of this miasma stuff she was talking about anywhere, so I guess she really was a little off. You know, brainwashing aside."

Guybrush shut his trap with a short gasp as he caught sight of the blood. There went the E rating for comic mischief and violence. "Morgan, your shoulder!"

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No problem. D: fangirlfatale June 18 2011, 15:41:13 UTC
"Oh, that?" Morgan rolled her eyes dismissively. "It's fine. Probably just a sprain." A bleeding sprain. It wasn't that bad, though. The two throwing knives had been small enough that the wounds were neither really big nor really deep; there probably wasn't even muscle damage. Not even worth noticing for someone who'd been skewered through the gut and lived to tell the tale ( ... )

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sheepwood June 20 2011, 06:49:56 UTC
Guybrush took a few quick steps, rubbing his head as he caught up to Morgan to walk beside her. He turned off his flashlight and tucked it into his sash, the pale light of the moon enough illumination to see the road. It probably was a good idea to not draw too much attention to themselves, anyway, given the substantial number of visible injuries between the two of them. He wasn't sure he believed Morgan's insistence that she was fine, but he was willing to give her the benefit of the doubt: if there was anything Morgan wasn't going to do, it was die. Again. Or at least not of something something less obviously fatal than being impaled on her own sword. She'd never outlive the embarrassment ( ... )

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