Gordon Freeman (
acts_of_gord) wrote2008-07-26 01:50 am
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We Don't Go To Ravenholm- Oh Wait, Looks Like We Do
The Milliways portal door is a capricious, fickle thing. It had opened for Gordon earlier when he'd tripped over the charred, blackened remains of a lurking zombie while firing a sawblade into its still-mobile companion. Then it'd gone and opened again, back to Ravenholm, just as he was leaning forward to check and see whether the zombie that'd loomed over him before had gone.
The blade had flown true and eradicated the zombie threat, but in the moonlight that trickled through the cracks in the boarded-up window and badly patched roof, Gordon could see he still wasn't alone...
The blade had flown true and eradicated the zombie threat, but in the moonlight that trickled through the cracks in the boarded-up window and badly patched roof, Gordon could see he still wasn't alone...
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Rhetorical question, huh? Pretend she didn't say anything.
"This is one of the traps he was talking about."
She glances around, looking for a zombie to drop the car on to.
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Four of them, shambling forward in a ragged group that trails its own cloud of flies? Yeah.
Gordon glances at the cluster, then gestures to the switch in a 'be my guest' fashion.
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"Wonder how he managed to set them up without being attacked."
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WOOMCH.
As the gears and entrapments in the device whose switch Dinah just pulled start slowly creaking the car back up to its former height- the zombies being not much more than a couple of reddish piles of ew now- Gordon shakes his head. "Maybe he had help once," he murmurs. "Or a guard animal, or-"
He goes quiet; he can hear more of the zombies shuffling their way, but he's more interested in what he's just spotted ahead and above. There's a second falling-car trap, and the car looks to be at exactly the right height to make it to yet another second-storey wooden walkway.
"This man is starting to worry me."
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She looks around, then runs to the second lever, waiting for the zombies to line themselves up. "Get ready to jump."
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Today is a good day for someone else to die, and do it properly.
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"Not my favourite mode of travel."
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He still has nightmares of missing the last jump. Repeatedly.
Fortunately the car doesn't have that far to travel, and the walkway's wide enough to get onto without much difficulty. And as they do...
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He glances over his shoulder, then calls, "Press on! I will meet you when I can," before darting back into the building.
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"So we stick to the rooftops, I guess?"
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She's not sure, but she wipes her hands on her pants and nods firmly.
She's going to have to get used to it, after all.
"I'm good."
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It looks as if Father Grigori is right. As they scramble from rooftop to rooftop- sometimes by means of a mere plank stretched across this street or that- Dinah will no doubt note that there are at least two or three zombies wandering blindly through each of the streets below. There's a moment when they have to stop; the zombies can't climb any more, but the headcrabs that haven't found a host are another story.
Let's just say that Dinah has a hell of a kick, shall we?
At least the moon's full and the clouds are few. A rooftop run like this would be a nightmare on a darker evening. Especially when the only way off one particular roof is to duck into a cramped, chemical-smelling attic. "I think this should come out on the next street," Gordon notes, "but we should be ready for anything around here."
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She climbs into the attic behind Gordon and wrinkles her nose at the smell, but aside from saying anything else, she nods.
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... enough to light up the zombie that's just lunged to its feet.
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It turns out she doesn't need to, as a gunshot rings out and the creature falls.
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There's a hissing noise, and a sound like a cat's scream is abruptly cut off as Father Grigori's next round takes down one of the poison headcrabs.
"The two of you have stirred up hell! A pair after my own heart," the priest notes as he reloads his gun. Something in the building catches his attention, and he turns away from the window. A careful listener might well hear him intoning, "Although they call me crazy I care not, for thou art my helper, my strength, and my savior," as he vanishes into the depths of the building in a hail of further gunshots.
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"Where from here?"
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After some thought he adds, "There's a couple of girders running across the street down towards the cistern. If we can cross those we should be able to get into that brick building and make it to the roof from inside. Think you can manage that?"
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"Yeah," she says, nodding firmly. "Yu go ahead I'll follow."
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Gordon sets out along the ledge that leads to the girders; they have the look of something that'd been in place long before zombies and crazy priests. Maybe there was a cargo unloading zone involved, or they'd been planning some sort of reconstruction or shelter- he doesn't know. They just seem solider than anything he's willing to attribute to the man with the penchant for pseudo-Scripture. Solid enough, in fact, that when he spots a zombie through one of the windows in the building where Father Grigori had once been shooting, he pauses to point his gravity gun at a pile of bricks on the ground, twenty or thirty feet below.
As the hail of bricks takes out the zombie in Grigori's building he calls out, "Come on over. We should be good."
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She's alomst there when her foot slips to the side, and she's suddenly falling towards the street below.
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What follows is a remarkably un-super-heroic-looking set of maneuvers. Lacking the kind of training you see in millionaires named Wayne- and not trusting the gravity gun to act anything at all like the Bat-grapple- Gordon moves on instinct instead and sits down, fast. This is so that he can get his legs around the girder and his feet locked around each other at the ankles, a process that's still going on as he leans over to grab for Dinah's hand.
He'll pay for it in the morning, but he'll never not be paying for it if this doesn't work.
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