Daja Kisubo (
fireforger) wrote in
trans_92010-01-27 11:11 pm
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Daja fired up the forge, feeling a sense of pride and accomplishment as she watched the burning flames. It had taken her some time to fully clean our the dust and other strange debris, organise and clean the tools, and get everything into working order - but she now had a place where she could work her craft.
But now it was time to get to work. Metals were scarce, but she had found some pieces of scrap-metal that were workable, and so she began the task of melting them down into something she could use.
She wondered if anyone would respond to her message – she hoped she had managed to use the omnicomm correctly – or perhaps even see the smoke from her forge, and visit her today.
But now it was time to get to work. Metals were scarce, but she had found some pieces of scrap-metal that were workable, and so she began the task of melting them down into something she could use.
She wondered if anyone would respond to her message – she hoped she had managed to use the omnicomm correctly – or perhaps even see the smoke from her forge, and visit her today.
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How strange this was. Here she was, having a conversation about the nature of magic with a cat! She wished her siblings were here, so she could tell them about it.
"Thank you very much for offering to show me the way to the 'station', Rhiow," she said.
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Rhiow hopped down from her ledge and paused for a brief moment of grooming. It was only polite - after all, you never knew who you were going to run into out in the City, and one should always have one's best face on. "Just follow me, I promise I won't go too fast."
She set off at a brisk trot, but one that Daja should easily be able to keep up with.
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"What kind of place is this 'train station'?" Daja asked as they walked.
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"Grand Central Station is a hub of train travel that used to be in my home city of Manhattan. Ehhif would take the trains on their daily commute to work or school. The subways run throughout the city and the passenger trains go to the surrounding counties, or other cities." Rhiow flirted her tail to the side. "Grand Central itself is a beautiful building."
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Up ahead, she could start to make out the statuary surrounding the giant clock. The words 'Grand Central Terminal' weren't quite visible to ehhif eyes yet, but Rhiow could make them out - a little. They were getting close to their destination.
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They came up to the looming facade of the terminal, and Rhiow trotted up to one of the glass doors, tilted her head and narrowed her eyes. "It would be very kind of you to open," she said in the Speech, putting her magic behind it, and the door swung open obligingly, allowing Rhiow and Daja to enter the main concourse - still dishearteningly devoid of people.
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When they arrived at the terminal, Daja wasn't at all bothered by the lack of people - instead, she was too busy admiring the architecture and construction of the place, and curiously watching Rhiow's use of magic. "This place is beautiful!" she remarked.
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She put her whiskers forward in a smile and held her tail high, proud of her home. "Welcome to Grand Central," she said. "In my time the ehhif built it around sixty sunsround ago, as they count it, and it's still one of the busiest buildings in New York." She paused. "Well, it was," she amended, and there was no missing that note of regret and sorrow.
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"So people come here to...travel to other places?" Daja asked, looking around curiously. "In 'trains', yes?"
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"That's right. It wasn't much more than a waystation, although there were a couple of eating places underground. And underground we go - this way." Rhiow turned away from the four-face clock in the middle of the main concourse and headed toward the Lexington track complex, the one that had survived because it was on the same level as Vanderbilt Hall.
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"Underground?" Daja repeated, as she followed Rhiow. "These trains travel under the earth?"
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The licked her nose as she walked. Another reminder of the total destruction of her world, that.
They came to the underground level, with the small concrete islands of the platforms interspaced between the tracks, stretching only as far as the walls of the main concourse, truncated by the limits of how much of the building had been brought aboard. "And here we are. After you, this is your salvage after all."
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"Yes, this will be useful," she said to herself, running her hands over the steel. She looked curiously at it's construction - "How exactly does it help these trains travel?" she wondered out aloud - and peered closer to see how easily it would be to remove the steel.
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"The wheels of the trains travel on the tracks. It evens out the ride, and also helps the train to stay stable - when they're traveling at high speeds, even little bumps could cause it to flip over. Not that it doesn't do that if the track itself is damaged." She flicked her tail slowly. "Derailments are one of the greatest dangers of this type of travel."
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She saw Daja inspecting the tracks and suddenly had a horrible thought. "Dh'asha? Please don't touch that one until I figure out if it actually has any electricity running through it. That's the third rail - it's what powers the trains - and the electricity is enough to kill someone instantly."
Rhiow walked over to the third rail and squinted down at it, listening intently for the telltale hum of electricity being conducted through the metal.
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"Would there even be any lighting left?" she asked. "It's hard to imagine that people were able to trap it in here in the first place. Especially without magic."
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The rail practically sang to her. It could - oh, it could. If the wizard was kind enough to switch the generator on it could run several thousand volts! That's what it was rated for! ...But right now, no... it wasn't live.
Rhiow smiled. "No, nothing's running through here right now, the generator's off. It's perfectly safe. And the electricity isn't trapped. Metal attracts and conducts electricity very easily. It's why ehhif used to put metal rods on the sides of their houses, in places where there were frequent storms. The lightning would strike the metal and travel into the ground, leaving the house alone."
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"My sister, Tris, is a weather mage," Daja explained, as she started on the end of one of the rails, using her magic to help pull it up. Later, she could come back with some tools to do this without taking so much of her strength - but for now, she wanted to just get a small piece to take back to her forge. "She would grow lightning in her hair. But it was hard to control, so she would store in braids that would keep her magic controlled but let her access it when she needed to. But I know the electricity must come from somewhere, if they don't store it. How do they create it without magic?"
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"Why are your atoms moving so slow?" she asked it, cajoling. "Why don't you speed up a little, shake out the rail ties and the couplings. Wouldn't this be a much better shape for you to take?" she asked, giving the rail a folded spiral shape in her mind. "Here's a little energy to do it with. Here, a little more. That's right-" The rail began to shake itself out of the gravel and curl backward, rolling itself up into a spiral. When it came to the joint in between it and the connecting piece, the rivets popped out and the coupling fell to the side, and then it stopped moving, laying curled on the ground.
Rhiow could already feel the drain on her resources. "I could do that another couple times if you need me to," she said.
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