herald_ingress: (Default)
It's been a very long time since Ingress hosted anyone on a visit to Haven. When she was younger, Tom and Door were frequent guests, sometimes bringing Gavroche along during her longer and longer stays. Mary Lennox came for a brief holiday when Ingress was 14, easing her homesickness after Ingress had moved there for her permanent transition to her new world. Then Ingress became busier with her training and lessons and much more adjusted, and Portico and Egress were born. While she understands why Tom and Door will never bring the children to visit, it hurts a little, although she'd never ever admit it to them or make them feel badly about it. She had no idea that when Megwyn chose her all those years ago, it was, essentially, like she was being taken away from them without their consent. She gets it now.

But now she has guests! She's nervous, but not in a bad way; she knows things will go smoothly with Lan Wangji and Wei Wuxian's time in her world. They'll steer clear of Court, where there might be more questions asked than they want. Savil looks forward to meeting them; Vanyel - miracle of miracles - will actually be there.

Most importantly, Megwyn will finally get a chance to meet these new friends she's heard so, so much about.

She opens the door, stepping from Milliways into the clearing where she always finds her door. She decided a long time ago that it would be wiser to take a walk into the nearest forest before disappearing to the inn at the end of the universe.  It's a beautiful day, blue skies and dappled sunlight through green leaves, and Ingress breathes deeply because she is home.

"Welcome!" she says, beaming over her shoulder at her guests. Then she calls, "Megwyn, we're here."

The bright white presence of her Companion enters the clearing, and a voice chimes in each of the visitor's minds.

::Greetings. It's wonderful to finally meet you.::

PFSB

Dec. 4th, 2020 08:26 am
herald_ingress: (thoughtful)
 When Ingress stops by Bar today, there are no notes for her. She assumes the Reverend Daughter is well, or well enough, but she’ll check on her later, to make sure.

Right now, though, she’s getting one of those coffee drinks she likes. She’s knackered. It was a short circuit this time but a busy one, and she’s had less sleep than she prefers.

”Oh, and Bar, would you please put that caramel whipped cream stuff in? Thank you!”
herald_ingress: (Default)
It is with some relief that Ingress' clothes all stay in place when she walks through the front door. Not that she minded her Halloween costume - it was a great night away. She had fun showing off her assets, made out with a handsome lumberjack out by the lake, sipped Atlantean with dear friends, and laughed so much her cheeks ached the next morning. But to be perfectly honest, she's more comfortable in her white tunic and trousers. And much warmer!

She stops by Bar first, greeting her, thanking her for just the right amount of Atlantean the other night to not cause a disastrous hangover, and asks for an alcohol-free chocolate milkshake. She also leaves the book she promised Harrow with her.

Then she sprawls onto a sofa by the fireplace and relaxes. This is much more pleasant than spending the evening in her room or at the tavern in Haven.
herald_ingress: (glare)
The door slams behind Ingress as she strides into Milliways. She hesitates in front of the House of Arch painting, but if she goes there she'll cry and be coddled, and her sister will give her the look that always says "Come home, we'll figure it out, just come back home to us." There is no figuring it out, not even with Tom's help. She was chosen for a reason. She wants to be a Herald. She wants to be with her companion. She wants to be a part of her new world, her true home now. She wants and wants and never stops wanting.

And, oh, tonight, she is tired. Tired to the bone. Tired deep down to her soul.

The last time she came here, she laughed like she had when she was little with her practice sword and tutu, when everything was bright before her and nothing could go wrong. When she went back to Haven, no time had passed; Megwyn asked her why she hadn't gone after all. Ingress hadn't answered right away, and then she'd simply said "I changed my mind" and then changed the subject.

When Megwyn found her here, all those years ago, she had been broken, possibly beyond repair. Door had tried so hard to be everything her sister needed her to be, but she was, Ingress knows now, ridiculously young, and she had Tom to deal with, too, even though he tried his best to fix them both as they stumbled together into life as a family. But Ingress had shattered that day in the greenhouse when the blood rushed out from her mother's throat onto the roses, and she'd been snatched, kicking and screaming, away from her home. She'd broken into more and more and more pieces during her silent captivity; isolated, cold, and in the constant dark with nothing but scuttling spiders for company.

She'd tried to open the door for Islington when he had her brought to him. She'd tried so hard. But she was too little, and the door he wanted was too far away, and when he screamed at her, she'd tried again, tried so hard that her ears hurt and her nose bled, but it still hadn't been enough and back she'd gone into the dark. She was fed irregularly, and, after a while, she stopped crying. She stopped hoping. She stopped feeling anything at all. When Door saved her months later, she had to learn how to be a little sister, how to be loved, how to be Ingress again.

When Megwyn found her, when she chose her as her herald, the bond between them mended the broken parts within her enough that, with all the rest of the love and support from her family and friends, she healed quickly. Ingress came out of the dark that day, for good, in her mind and heart, and she lived and she laughed and she thrived.

But even when you're not broken, life isn't easy. Ingress has the blessing of a companion who is always - and will always be - there for her, but she's as lonely as any single young woman hoping with all her heart for more. Her  three week circuit had ended, and she was tired and wounded from a skirmish - nothing terrible, but enough to make her constantly aware of the ache on her left side that kept her from sleeping well. When she got back to her room, her heart full of hope and relief, the message basket beside her door was empty. Cassildra hadn't written. That made two months without word from her, and, what was worse, Mewgyn gently told her no when Ingress asked her to check in with her Companion, Talian, to see if Cassildra was okay. Which meant... which meant Cassildra wasn't going to write her. Ever.

Blast it all, it wasn't as if Ingress had insisted on a betrothal. She was deeply smitten, but she'd tried to play it cool, to not be clingy, as her ex-boyfriend had called her a year before. When Cassildra was posted indefinitely across the kingdom, she'd only had hoped for letters. And for something, maybe one day, more than an empty bed night after night.  But that was looking like it would be her fate.

It was hard for Ingress, even still, to fit in as someone from 'out kingdom'. Someone with strange hair and strange eyes and strange gifts who was oh so lovely, and such a gifted fighter, but never quite enough to secure a place in a beloved's heart.

She slumps onto one of the couches near the fireplace. There are times when she wonders if it would be worth opening the door that she keeps tightly shut within herself, the door with thoughts of her sister and her birth world and just what could be fixed and what couldn't behind it.

Or... maybe she'll get really, really drunk and not think about anything for a while, until her wide open heart pains her just a little bit  less.

PFSB

Sep. 19th, 2020 05:53 pm
herald_ingress: (Default)
It's strange, Ingress thinks, as she slides onto a barstool and a milkshake appears before her, coming here now, as a grown woman. She grins, reaching out and pulling the glass close, bending down to sip through the straw. It's a plain chocolate shake with sprinkles and it tastes like childhood.

For a long time, Milliways has been the "passing through" place where she visited but didn't really stop. Once her schooling and training intensified in Haven, she simply didn't have time to come here often, and when she did go through on the way to the House of Arch, the faces of the patrons became less and less familiar.

But in the past few weeks, she has remembered. So much. In dreams and out of them. When she turned eleven, she had the strangest dream, snippets of which drifted into her memory for days afterward, making her feel like the dream and her reality had crossed over in some inexplicable way.

She feels the same way now. She knows that Milliways exerts a magical influence upon the people who frequent it, and she's fairly sure that something is happening. Something is pulling her here. It's nothing foreboding, but it seems vitally important.

Life as a Herald is not an easy one. She's in danger, often, more than she ever lets on with Tom and Door, who have worried about her since she was a  tutu-clad hellion making friends with anyone who stopped to say hello.  She's been hurt, a couple of times pretty badly, in border skirmishes, and she's lost comrades and friends. Her heart has been broken a few times now. She understands why the adults who cherished her when she was small visited. It's nice to step away from your world and have a drink and not think for a little bit of all that awaits you at home.

Her memories of childhood here always bring a smile to her face. Spinning in circles and making butterflies with Raven, dear Mary Lennox and all their adventures, Lilly and Puck and Havelock and the squids, Captain Jack, who made her laugh and laugh and want to be a pirate, Queen Amy and tea parties, beautiful Susan Delgado and her many kindnesses to a little girl who loved her, Bernard and Tonks and Quidditch out by the lake on a toy broomstick, Kaylee and her robots, Captain Mal and his mom, River and Anthy, all of her tutors and teachers, and Laura and Alanna and Faith and Buffy and Lan and Cuthbert and Spike and the other warriors who taught her the skills that make her unique as a Herald, that give her the edge over the enemies of the Realm.

She keeps coming back to one particular person and one memory. Eddie. Sweet bartender Eddie, who always told her stories and called her Loompah and made her the very best milkshakes. He gave her a yo-yo once. There's something important about that yo-yo; she's seen it in her dreams, too. She knows exactly where it is in her old room in the House, and she's going to stop by and see the family and pick it up. She may have need of it.

But first, she's going to have a milkshake and just stop for a little bit and enjoy a quiet evening at the bar at the end of the universe.



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Ingress

January 2021

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