checking in? (
checkingin) wrote in
checkingout2015-03-03 09:01 pm
Entry tags:
- ! arrival,
- allison argent,
- bellamy blake,
- cassie blake,
- chris argent,
- cissie king-jones,
- clara oswald,
- clary fray,
- clint barton,
- coraline jones,
- emma swan,
- gary "eggsy" unwin,
- harry hart,
- helen magnus,
- jace herondale,
- jack harkness,
- jim kirk,
- killian jones,
- leela (doctor who: gallifrey audios),
- leo fitz,
- lucrezia borgia,
- lydia martin,
- newt,
- nogitsune (teen wolf),
- oliver queen,
- peeta mellark,
- red reddington,
- robert capa,
- skye,
- spock,
- tim drake
a gent of good intent who's content to be ( OPEN )
Who: Everyone!
Where: The initial arrival rooms, the main lobby, all over the place.
When: March 3rd
What: Welcome, newbies.

Where: The initial arrival rooms, the main lobby, all over the place.
When: March 3rd
What: Welcome, newbies.

ARRIVAL.
you wake up when you hit the floor in a dark room, and the air is knocked out of your lungs. the carpet is threadbare, worn with use, kind of dusty. and you're not the first person to endure this crash landing. nor will you be the last.
once your vision rights itself, you can see the well-lit hallway through the doorjam straight ahead of you. not to say there’s monsters in the shadows, but something propels you towards that door and out into the bright hallway beyond.
and once outside your room, you can hear it: the steady thrum of rain outside.
MAIN LOBBY.
there's a staircase at the end of the lengthy hallway you tumble out of. grab your suitcase and follow the dull green exit signs on the ceiling until you reach the disappointingly bland stairs that lead you down to the ornate old fashion hotel lobby.
to your left is a warmly crackling fireplace, to your right is a lobby desk. straight ahead are three large sets of doors, though only one of them is open to the public. and outside the few (curtained, permanently dark) windows is the continually steady hiss of rain. once you leave the hallway you wake up in, you won't be able to return.
welcome to the hotel.
FRONT DESK.
though there is a bell and a plaque designating the desk to be the main desk, the customer service desk, there are currently no staff members behind it. none shall answer your calls, either.
terribly sorry for the inconvenience.
SCREENING ROOM.
on a long pull-down screen, a silent version of the phantom carriage will be playing on loop. at the back of the room, between the neat rows of fold out chairs, mounted on a wobbly table is the old-timey projector, and mounted on the walls are some rather old speakers that warble out "terrifying" old music.
along the curtained windows is another long table, with a large bowl of popcorn and a large hot drink dispenser full of hot water, but without any tea or hot chocolate packets around.
OTHER.
the ballroom is currently closed, and the grand doors locked.
there is no main door leading to the outside, good luck trying to find one.
the doors to the courtyard and breakfast hall are unlocked, but looks like you've missed the morning meal. sucks for you.
ROOMS.
EXISTING GUESTS.
you've a room key with your assigned room number on it. all the new guest residences will be located on floors three and four. while there is an open elevator in the main lobby, and the buttons light up inside, the doors will not close. all in all, you'll be better off taking the stairs.
while they're the same stairs you undoubtedly came down to get to the lobby, the door to the endless hall everyone woke up in will not reappear between the main floor and the subsequent residential halls.
there are twenty rooms per floor. feel free to get to know your surroundings; or your neighbors as they trickle in around you.
EXISTING GUESTS.
it's late when the newcomers arrive, there's a good chance you'd been about to go to sleep (or just waking up, who knows, your mom's not here to tell you when to go to bed or get up). but if you're paying attention, you might hear the hustle and bustle in the lobby below; or maybe you're just drawn there because your gut told you to go join the commotion. whatever the case may be, go mingle!

no subject
All the time. Men and women. Can't say I'm particular.
[He shrugs with a boyish grin, the sort that does charm most. Doesn't hurt that he puts off enough pheromones to drag most right into his
clutcheshands.]I'd ask about you but given who you think I look like, that might be edging into bad territory again. So, in the interest of keeping the vase whole, how about I offer that we try to track down something to eat instead. You can protect me from anything that might be hiding. Sound good?
[He's teasing. Probably.]
no subject
[ But, she's still standing here, smiling, looking up at him. She probably shouldn't have dated the boy who stole her purse either, but that's sure as hell something she did. She does a lot of things she shouldn't do, even now that she's older and smarter.
She tilts her head, pursing her lips thoughtfully. He's not entirely wrong — there are certain things he could ask that would put her straight in the territory of uncomfortable and unhappy because she still partially sees Malcolm when she looks at him. But he mentions food and her belly rumbles and she doesn't want to pass that up. ]
Okay. But only because you obviously need protecting.
no subject
[And Thea has been relegated to the 'girls' part and beyond the reach of Jack Harkness. He's not particular on who fills his bed, but again, the daddy issues on this one make some of the others seem like nothing.]
[Like a gentleman, he offers her his arm to take if she wants.]
At this point, I'm usually running, so I take it that nothing has leaped out with big teeth and claws to be a good thing.
A last question though, but Thea, this Malcolm... is he hard to kill? Comes back alive from impossible things? Like when he should have clearly been dead?
[It's the question he must ask, must know the answer to.]
no subject
Semantics, Jack.
[ As long as being in the 'girls' category keeps him from hitting on her too much, she's perfectly okay with that. The less he does that the better. ]
Somebody's gotta teach you to fight instead of flight.
[ His question gives her pause, makes her smile start to fade. That's a very specific question with a very specific answer. Her smile has faded, but she does tuck her hand into his arm, more than okay with being escorted. She is a Queen, after all. ]
He was supposed to have died once. [ On that rooftop, by the Arrow. Who she now knows was her brother, wow. ] But he's not dead.
no subject
[Jack's free hand touches lightly on hers around his arm, enough to draw away quickly if she seems disturbed by it. For all his womanizing ways, Jack is capable of being a decent person. He just usually chooses not to be.]
I know it's hard, Thea, but it's important. More than that? Or just that one time? Tell me this, and I promise you that I won't ask you anything else about him tonight. I will do my best to be a good escort, show you the few things I know and even go try to wrestle you a bucket of popcorn from the thieves.
[Because one time could be a coincidence.]
no subject
[ Sometimes she finds that a lot gets solved at the end of a fist (or a gun barrel, or a sword, or an arrow) when you're aiming it at the right person. And then sometimes, you end up unwillingly murdering your friend because you're dad's a dick. Oops.
It is hard, but she wears a brave face, something quiet and determined and blank. ]
I only know of the one time.
no subject
[Those words are quietly said for her ears alone, nothing that anyone else needs to hear. Jack is a big believer in no one else needing to share in private sorrows.]
[For Jack, it was fine and well that he was in the trenches fighting some war or another, but never his daughter... not Alice or his grandson. Not that he knows of at least, not until he's called upon to murder his own grandson to save the world.]
Thank you, Thea. I know that was hard, but I had to know. I wasn't sure. Come on. Let's get you something to eat before you take over the hotel in one fell swoop.
no subject
Somewhere deep down in a place she refused to acknowledge, she almost wishes Jack really were her dad instead of Malcolm. Just for a second.
She doesn't say anything, but she tightens her hold at the crook of his elbow, an acknowledgement. Maybe a thank you, but she doesn't know what she's thanking him for.
She takes a deep breath, steadying herself, shaking away all the thoughts of Malcolm Merlyn. When she looks up at him again, it's with arched brows and the barest hint of a smile. ] I don't think I could take over the hotel on an empty stomach.
no subject
Then our next mission is food. I heard they had popcorn in the theater here, but that others had overtaken it. Think we can reclaim some area?
[The smile he gives her is mischievous and full of fun, a lark instead of a test.]
I'll smile and look pretty while you sneak in behind and grab it all. We can outrun them. I'm good at that.
no subject
Her own hands, long and thin and delicate, support the sort of roughness and nicks and scars that come with swordsmanship. ]
I feel like I should be offended that you're the one smiling and looking pretty, but-- [ Her smile grows and she shrugs. ] There's a reason my brother calls me Speedy.
no subject
Speedy? Is this a kind nickname or the sort you give a sibling that steals your stuff constantly? You're not a teddy bear ransoming type, are you? I would have to be a little disappointed in you if that's the case, Thea. That poor innocent teddy bear.
[A dramatic sigh follows, Jack shaking his head.]
I've ended up being led astray by someone who stole her brother's HotWheels cars. I can feel it. I know about these things.
no subject
I may or may not have been responsible for stealing Ollie's cookies and running away with them when we were little. I could always outrun him and his cookies always looked better than mine.
But innocent teddy bears? [ She places her free hand against her chest like she's deeply offended, mimicking his dramatics. ] I would never.
no subject
[Meaning the Doctor. Lots of running involved there.]
[Jack finds himself liking the sound of the laugh as much as he did her smile. What he wouldn't give right now for the ability to run a genetic scan. She's exactly the type of woman he likes.]
Well, it was cookies. Who doesn't love those? A long as no bears were hurt in the process. They have feelings too, you know.
no subject
[ Which she doesn't necessarily like to do, but she's self-aware enough to know when she's going up against something she can't beat (AKA the time the Arrow busted through her fucking window). So if push comes to shove, she'll book it. ]
It was always Ollie who crossed the line into bear-napping. Sometimes it escalated into full-blown wars. It was serious business.
no subject
Full-blown wars? Does this mean nerf gun darts littered the walls or did you escalate to Lego brick traps?
no subject
Not so much nerf guns as lots of sabotage and booby traps. It drove our parents up the wall. [ She sighs. ] But Oliver was older and bigger and smarter, so he almost always won.
no subject
I despair for any pets you two may have had. I can see ransom notes being paper airplaned down a hallway or someone's puppy held for an Oreo stash.
[He teases, but he's learning too. Jack knows too well that past shapes present.]
Did you steal his hamster? Admit it, Thea.
no subject
We didn't have any pets. [ Which never bothered her before but now she sort of feels like she missed out on yet another typical part of childhood. There's a lot of things normal kids would've gotten to do that she never did thanks to being the daughter of a billionaire. ] I might've, though, if he had one.
no subject
[What can he say? Jack loves to keep a woman laughing instead of crying although he's done enough of both.]
Probably having stolen your mother's makeup to do warpaint.
no subject
[ She smiles a little. She had definitely been the type of kid to use her mother's makeup as warpaint as opposed to dress up. Up to a certain point, at least. ]
You wouldn't be wrong. There's a pretty big age gap between me and Ollie, though. Any fight I won, he probably let me win.