Ivy always knew she'd live to regret her tolerance for well-meaning stupidity.
>> Ivy Langley continued from
the world was spinning but only in grey
Obviously Ace didn't know where they were going. At best he'd chosen a place totally arbitrarily and was trying to get there based on the poorly-drawn landmarks on the map and the position of the sun or whatever—even that rapidly became impossible as dark clouds encroached on their sky—and at worst he'd dragged her off in a completely random direction. Both were stupid, and honestly Ivy didn't care which was true. It wasn't as though she or anyone else had a manner of determining where anyone was without simply finding them by chance. Where would she go, given the chance to direct? Where was Myles? How the fuck was she supposed to know?
This was as good a plan as any. At least she didn't have to think too hard. All the sleep she hadn't gotten and the stabbing pain in her side that reasserted herself with every step despite the painkillers she'd stopped to take and the creeping shadows that faded over the hours but never faded completely all combined to make planning an impossible proposition. At least someone could keep an eye on the horizon, even if that someone was an idiot.
At least that someone was quiet, mostly. At least he taken her bag for her, after a while, when the pain began to overwhelm her and she'd started to fall behind.
At least. Ungrateful, maybe. But when the sky opened up and started raining hell on her head she felt no desire to be grateful toward anyone or anything.
All she had by way of protection was the stupid hat that she now felt inexplicably too attached to to take off her head. It kept rain from ruining her makeup, at least, but all she could do for the rest of her was try to walk a little faster and ignore the worsening aching and then Ace was dragging her by the hand and
that certainly didn't help but there was, at least, shelter. Shelter under a tree, littered with... shoes. The odor of rotten leather floated in long before they actually reached it, but any reprieve from this goddamn rain was worth the relatively minor cost.
She took her bag from him, put it on the ground beside him, sat. She wondered how sturdy these bags actually were, and if she was going to open it to find her clothes waterlogged and muddy—but the alternative was to sit on the ground and get her
current clothes waterlogged and muddy, which wasn't better, exactly. Her shoes, hardly made for this much walking, were already irrecoverably filthy. She thought she had a pair of sandals in her bag, not that those were much better for walking. She could scavenge something here, maybe, but the thought of wearing something so old and rotten made her skin crawl.
He was quiet again, until he wasn't. When she opened her mouth her tongue stuck to the roof of it for a moment, dry and stale. It had to have been a few hours since they'd started moving and she hadn't spoken a word. She swallowed and licked her lips absentmindedly as though trying to restore them to function.
"Yes."
Ivy then realized she had only partially processed any of what Ace had just said, and that "yes" was probably not the best response.
"I mean, everything is fucked, yes." The water on her skin felt less cold, now that it wasn't assaulting her. The humidity was oppressive. She pulled her hair over one shoulder and started wringing it out like a damp rag.
"I understand, though. The... it's still there. When I try to follow it disappears. If that makes sense?" It didn't, most likely, but neither did any of this. She had never planned on consuming anything stronger than alcohol and god, she could use a drink, now that she was thinking about it. Wasn't there alcohol in their first aid kits? She'd be more likely to kill herself than actually get drunk, attempting that, but desperate times, desperate measures? She'd put a pin in it for now.
She studied his face. It looked... solid. Real. She was beginning to readjust, but she still felt like she'd stared at that face for an eternity.
"... How did you know, anyway? That it was drugs, I mean." She tilted her head at him, curious. Of course, she knew the answer. She'd picked up on every story and rumor coming out of Swiftball, partially out of her usual need to collect such things and partially to see if she needed to do damage control for her own night's activities. Ace, and Kayden, she believed it was, they were rather less subtle with their night's activities.
Still, these things were always more interesting dragged out of the person in question. It wasn't of any use to her, now. But it would fill the dead air, for the moment.