ragecore: (ellie | 140)

[personal profile] ragecore 2026-01-05 04:34 am (UTC)(link)
Ellie follows the woman to the window with her eyes until another sharp throb in her ribs overrides her focus. And so while this woman – Root – spies a watchful look out the window from the lurking safety of windowpane’s edge, all Ellie can do is hunch over with slow, shaky breaths and restless back-and-forth rocking, willing the pain under control with as much might as she has left in her.

The woman’s offhand allusion to medical supplies being around drags Ellie to attention. That’s what she needs: to patch herself up, something purposeful and solid to pin herself onto.

“Yeah,” she rasps, nodding, short and fast. She attempts to push herself straight in the rickety chair – and she can’t; she gasps and blows out a agonised sharp breath, and then slumps in defeat. “C-Can you…?”

Bring the supplies to her. She will attempt to make a go of patching herself up on her own, if she can manage it. And then she will ask questions. Figure out who this woman is, what happened, where they are. Where Abby is.
ragecore: (ellie | 121)

[personal profile] ragecore 2026-01-12 11:26 pm (UTC)(link)
Every inch of Ellie that has survived for months on ruthless mistrust and hateful grief and cold-blooded readiness to fight back at any sign of threat tenses as the woman approaches. Her breath picks up; her muscles tighten and brace; her watchful gaze is pinned on the woman like an animal ready to lash out. Ellie watches her kneel in front of her and she rakes an icy watchful look all over her – at the rifle the woman has slung over her shoulder, at the medical supplies in her hands, at her face. She hurriedly scrambles over the woman’s offer – Do you want me to do it? – in her racing thoughts.

After a chary deliberating beat, she relents: there is no way she can tend to her ribs or even her raw wrists on her own. She has no choice but to trust this woman. Root, she repeats to herself, turning the name over again in her mind. She nods as she lets her weight rest upon her elbows propped on her knees.

Ellie swallows, and ugh, her tongue is sandpapery, her throat is parched with thirst. She licks her dry and cracked lips, tongue dragging uselessly across it. Her hands, hanging slack between her knees, are trembling from pain, from exhaustion, from unnerved adrenaline at the nearness of this woman kneeling right before her.

“Why?” she asks. It’s a question to Root confirming that she had dragged her all the way here, wherever here is. “Why didn’t you just… save yourself?”