equivo: (i've been doing bad things lately)
krouse ([personal profile] equivo) wrote2032-03-25 02:45 pm

etraya inbox

"This is Krouse. Leave a message."

[ un: blackhat | text | voice | video ]
skaikru: (pic#15637675)

[personal profile] skaikru 2024-06-10 05:31 am (UTC)(link)
( tragically, today her nose rumples are reserved for a computer. the annoyance directed at windings and odd dates, the confusion compounding every time she glances over her shoulder to find the companion bots just idly plodding along in the background allowing all of this. but clarke hears his assent, and appreciates it. this is good, she'll follow up with him later.

krouse's first version of the question gets a mild hum of acknowledgement — a maybe, in the form of an almost coy hmmm. but upon more a more direct ask, she answers easily. breezily. covergirly. )


Oh, I'm snooping through Aurora's computer.
Edited 2024-06-10 05:32 (UTC)
skaikru: (pic#9056150)

[personal profile] skaikru 2024-06-10 06:20 am (UTC)(link)
( the importance he places on silence pays off, the scuffle of lunging after a dropped cigarette not even registered because her eyes have just alighted on the very recognizable shape of a folder on screen. )

The computer. The one she has in the basement of the hospital, hardly guarded and not even under lock and key. Though it's obvious why none of that was required, I can't read a single thing in here.
skaikru: (pic#8798421)

[personal profile] skaikru 2024-06-10 07:15 am (UTC)(link)
There's a few of the omnics — ... the bots around. They're all being very pleasant.

( and the light, higher pitch of her voice falls here. because isn't that so very suspicious? clarke had pressed on when she hadn't immediately been dragged away from the opportunity to pry, but still wildly confused as to why. is it just because there's nothing to find, or because aurora and echo believe she wouldn't be able to muscle through the hieroglyphic style text to find anything they don't want her to stumble upon?

almost on cue, when she looks over her shoulder this time, one of the orange painted robots shuffles forward and politely inquires if there's anything it can help her with. and clarke's voice pitches right back into a very (fake) casual high pitch. )


No, I'm fine, just looking. Thanks.

( and somehow that's enough for it?? because it just turns around and goes back to whatever it was meandering with in the first place. a harsh gust of air is snorted out of both her nostrils, and with a faux smile still broadly plastered across her face, clarke turns back to the screen and taps on the folder. )
skaikru: (pic#11470438)

[personal profile] skaikru 2024-06-10 09:04 am (UTC)(link)
The room's clean. No miles of hardware you might expect when it comes to keeping a city this size up and running, it's just a computer. There's a couple files. I'm seeeeeeing...

Yeah, I think those are relatively regular uploads from somewhere every month. ( from elsewhere presumably, which has proved to be aurora's canned response whenever anyone inquires about the whereabouts of echo. ) But I can't figure out where, it's all just — symbols. There was a really, really big one back in what looks like January, but when we got here it was already spring, right? There was all that rain. April showers bring May flowers, or whatever people used to say in the old world.

So was January when Echo picked this planet? And sent Aurora down to start canvassing and laying the groundwork for the infrastructure? How do you think they came up with the name, Etraya? Worlds don't generally have names unless there was a native population around to give it one in the first place.

( she's really just spit-balling for the sake of spit-balling here. with the mild, poorly executed ulterior motive of maybe kinda hoping something she says would trigger a response from the companion bots or computer itself, but thus far they all keep buzzing along. )
skaikru: (pic#11782191)

[personal profile] skaikru 2024-06-12 07:33 am (UTC)(link)
( there's a reason they're not stopping you. )

— yeah, either they think it's not important, or they think I'm an idiot who can't figure it out.

( we're idiots, more likely. all of them, since it wasn't like clarke had jumped through specific hoops or even asked to be granted access to this basement. both of them, considering there's been no interference with this audio call thus far and aurora is undoubtedly watching, like she always is. and maybe there's something to that, this level of encryption is significant and even clicking on the standard, english keyboard is offering her no easy translation key to the symbolic text that most of this information appears in. it'd be frustrating if she were sober; lightly intoxicated as clarke currently is, it's downright infuriating.

for an unseen entity that might as well be acting as their god, for being as omniscient and all known as to specifically tailor the tests to their weaknesses and histories — echo sure does seem to underestimate the traits that probably made them the best candidates for world champions in the first place.

for clarke, that's bull headed stubbornness. give her an inch, and she'll take a mile. )


Weather reports and maintenance sweeps should be a daily occurrence, and something I imagine Aurora could handle internally. All of these look like incoming transmissions, and they're on a — ( monthly pattern. )

...did you notice exactly how long ago the newest group of people arrived here?
skaikru: (pic#11470439)

[personal profile] skaikru 2024-06-16 06:22 am (UTC)(link)
No they have not, ( clarke agrees easily, but also with the tonal shift of someone who's trying and failing to hold a conversation. all of this would have been information better communicated after the gathering stage, and ideally sober. yet here she is, having dialed krouse up on a whim and subsequently subjecting him to peak anxiety and the occasional long moments of silence while she taps through the touch screen.

but at the same time, information is information. if he'd had to ask about the room, he'd obviously never been down here. and there's a bit of a payout at the end of her studious quiet, having finally revealed — )


Oh, they've got files on every single one of us.

( and it is a long list. scrollable, and in plain english as opposed to coded beyond recognition. there is a cheese grater with a taste for human dignity in clarke's chest, and it chips away at hers when she reaches the C's and double taps on her own name. another long stretch of silence as she skims the page. there's her name, her height, her approximate weight. there's her blood type, engineered as a universal donor like everyone on the ark had been, and in parenthesis, Nightblood. there's the note about her missing kidney, a lack in bone density she'd never really considered but makes sense considering spending the first seventeen years of her life in artificial gravity. there's a brief summary of her as a person, which is insultingly bullet pointed.

Stubborn. Excellent leadership qualities. Impressionable. Kind hearted. Traumatized. Repentant. the list goes on, and while her entire buzz has already been harshed, clarke spares herself reading it to completion and just skips to the next bit, which is Likes & Dislikes. and — )


Damn. "Stale coffee, two packets of sugar, one cannister of cream". If I'd known we could have cheated the drink game by just breaking in a little sooner...

( what would she have done? not embarrassed the two of them by suggesting a game of charades? they'll never know now, and clarke sighs; unseen, brings a hand to her face and pinches the bridge of her nose at eye level. )
skaikru: (pic#11782152)

[personal profile] skaikru 2024-06-20 05:37 am (UTC)(link)
( she'd checked her own file first, and there are dozens of others that practically beg to be read next. there's the one on f. krouse followed by a series of nonsensical numbers right there, but clarke has already exhausted the line of questioning she'd had about him and his powers. and in the long run, this isn't what she came for. )

Oh well. Next time.

( absolutely what she will return to pursue at a later date, just on the off chance it ever comes in handy, but what she actually wants out of this venture is to force past the lines of code on the computer and find some sort of back-alley way to speak directly to echo. given their shared history of somehow unintentionally manifesting worst case scenarios, that's not an objective she's willing to share out loud, or even via text, so there is another unhelpful, lacking silence as she buckles down and tries to focus.

only clarke is no hacker. and no matter how desperately she'd like to interpret raven reyes in this moment, none of the windings make a lick of sense no matter how hard she stares at them. and no matter what she taps on, it's just more symbols. two minutes, and an exceedingly frustrated sigh later, clarke seems to remember she's on a phone call at all. )


Oh, I don't mean to keep you. This is going to take a while.
skaikru: (pic#11470438)

[personal profile] skaikru 2024-06-21 11:07 am (UTC)(link)
( she has the return quip of sleeping? locked, loaded, and ready to go — at least before krouse manages to drag them both down into some sort of off shoot of gallows humor.

it can't be entirely a joke, not when she'd absolutely called him up just to have some sort of breadcrumb trail left behind in the eventuality she died for pushing too far. but it feels infinitely more ridiculous when so easily caught on to, then spelled out. any other day and clarke would have felt a flare of embarrassment. but also, any other day she wouldn't have reached out in the first place, so.

she doesn't point out that a search party would be stupid, or that the companion bots could probably draw and quarter her before he even got out the door, if that was their initiative. instead clarke just exhales through her nose, sharply and tinged with good humor before immediately going back to uselessly tapping at the touch screen. )


Well, alright. If you insist.

( tap, tap, tap. then almost as an afterthought — )

If you have any questions for me, this is a great time.

( it's reasonable, it's logical, it keeps them both awake and engaged. )
skaikru: (pic#8798400)

[personal profile] skaikru 2024-06-24 05:06 am (UTC)(link)
Vast, dark, cold, and beautiful.

( clarke isn't so much teasing as she is answering a little too literally, and rambling for good measure as her focus is too diverted towards tapping away at the screen of the computer and squinting at windings like maybe if she glares hard enough she can scare the figures into rewriting themselves into english. the second it exits her mouth she realizes he probably means — )

Living in space is... It was fine, when I was younger. But it was also the only thing I or my parents ever knew. When talking to people whose Earth's never experienced a nuclear apocalypse, it starts to sound a little grim.

( and that always sucks, because the ark in childhood had been the only place she'd ever managed to feel safe. even if that was a self-centered, privileged, biased lens through which to view it. the ark was childhood, and thus still holds a piece of her heart, along with almost all her memories regarding loved ones lost. but time, distance, and perspective have a special way of turning something joyful into something bittersweet. has she ever really known peace? the promise of a death sentence for any minor infraction had swung above her throat like a pendulum since birth, it'd just been a shadow one grew accustomed to. )

Did you mean what the view was like? The food? Recreation? Do you want to know how it all started?

( the simple, the banal, the stuff she's already been over in the middle of corrine's due to an introductory plaque and many times before that. the history. the safe stuff, the bits that were out of her control and thus in no way her fault. )
skaikru: (pic#11920613)

[personal profile] skaikru 2024-06-29 04:55 am (UTC)(link)
( oh. well, now — there's a question. one that somehow manages to strike clarke right between the ribs, puncturing her lungs. air only escapes through her nostrils, but she's still incapable of stopping it as her fingers pause and mind drifts.

what would she like other people to know? in what way could she properly summarize the ark's everything in a way that other people would completely understand? so many small things fall by the wayside here; ask me about our stock in the medbay. ask me about the time strep throat quarantine shut down an entire wing of the ark. ask me about the laws. ask me about our prison system, the class disparity and how little i thought about it because i was one of the privileged. ask me how boring it must have been sometimes, to the point i doodled enough to advance to decent portraits. ask me about the food. ask what it was like to genuinely believe we were the last of our species, and did everything in the name of hopefully seeing through to a return to the ground. ask me how much i loved earth before i'd even managed to step foot on it.

moonshine pulls her thoughts to wild edges in that last stretch, and scatters any better ideas entirely. but in the end clarke still manages to scrounge up )


They could ask what our education was like. I think you can learn a lot about any given population based on what they decide to teach their youth.

And to that I'd answer: our two main mandatory classes were Earth Skills, and then whatever apprenticeship we adopted when we were young. You could pick, but people tended to keep to their own stations for that a lot; sons of farmers because farmers, daughters of mechanics became mechanics, hydro stayed with hydro, anyone could become a guard. My mother was the Chief of Medical, and I was seven when I decided I wanted to follow her. We were also taught general health and safety, and math, and grammar, and — other things. But it always managed to circle back around to the main two. And we weren't even expected to go back to Earth; it was supposed to be another 100 years before the planet was habitable, we were just supposed to pass it all down to our children.
skaikru: (pic#8799062)

[personal profile] skaikru 2024-07-01 05:15 am (UTC)(link)
( clarke's arguably shitfaced, despite being able to hold a conversation. she's also distracted, and frustrated that no matter what she picks at on the screen nothing akin to a chat box pops up, and krouse is also... just krouse. she doesn't mind a lot right now. )

Which one?

( the lost 100 years or children? eh, doesn't matter, she can guess at the bigger conversational hook, and can answer about babies if he )

All our calculations indicated that the Earth was still too toxic to return to. We were going to wait in space for another 100 years, but the oxygen systems on the Ark were failing. My father spotted it first — he was Chief of Engineering, by the way. ( a moment of silence for jake griffin, a moment of silence to figure out how she wants to tell this story. also because clarke's eyes are struggling to focus; for a second the windings had looked like actual words and she'd gotten excited, just to be subsequently let down. ) And they couldn't be fixed. Oxygen was being rationed, the side effects of hypoxia were driving people en masse to the medbay, our systems were not as well maintained as Aurora's seem to be. There was no other choice but to explore the ground as our last salvation.

( there we go, that felt like it summed up the highlights. about as diplomatically as the unity day play. but on second thought, was it a bit too diplomatic? a little too kind? it'd felt like krouse was listening really intently, and actually trying to get a good grasp on what life was like on the ark, and the second best example she could give past education is — )

So the Council elected to pack 100 of the most dispensable people into a dropship and sent us down to test the radiation levels.
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[personal profile] skaikru 2024-07-02 08:29 am (UTC)(link)
( the sorry indeed does not scratch the surface. neither does the reassurance that, yeah, it was a fucked up move on the council's part no matter how few other options they had. this is what she means when she thinks about people from other worlds finding her grim though, she can still see the reason behind the decision — because it bought them time. and served proof enough that more than a thousand souls had managed to survive the secondary ascent and at least avoid death by hypoxia. right now some of them were even in the bunker. humanity would live on.

krouse's second hand indignance validates some of her older hurts, like an ice pack pressed to bruise long forgotten. but ultimately clarke just sighs. hard. )


Like rats in a maze. A lot of us did die.

( it just wasn't the atmosphere that did them in.

... )


But the ground itself was survivable. Turns out four generations of exposure to solar radiation made the ambient levels on Earth tolerable for us. We were better adapted to inhabit Earth than some of the people who'd lived down there the entire time we were in space.
Edited 2024-07-02 08:30 (UTC)

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