Rebecca Chambers (
herbmixing) wrote in
prismatica2020-08-14 05:50 am
Entry tags:
video | un: r.chambers
Hi, everyone. My name's Rebecca.
[ The video opens on a small, homey apartment, filled with plants and books. Rebecca sits at a small piano, a mug of coffee steaming by her side. She looks...tired, really. It's been a difficult few weeks.
But that's no reason not to keep trying. ]
I was just wondering...what's the state of medicine like in your world? I had thought we were on the cutting-edge back home, but with everything I've seen here, you realise just how far we have to go. Considering everything that happens to us so regularly here, it can be really easy to lose track of your health.
I'm a field medic and a chemist, so I'd never call myself a doctor, but I still wanted to extend an offer to everybody: if you need someone to patch you up or do a quick check-up, call me. If you need medicine - over-the-counter stuff, obviously, not anything serious - then I'll run it over or get someone to deliver it to you. Just... [ She gives a weak smile. ] I want to help a little more, and I don't think being okay with a handgun really holds up against everything others can do, you know?
...anyway, I'm rambling. [ She looks down, playing an idle few bars of a melody. ] I've been staying in a lot. Watching old Disney movies, mostly, and I ended up working on this...
[ She adjusts the sheet music and sets her fingers in position. What follows is a nice little rendition with very few errors. Being able to just concentrate on something helps, a lot. Once it's done, she flashes a quick, embarrassed smile at the camera, then leans over and shuts it off. ]
[ The video opens on a small, homey apartment, filled with plants and books. Rebecca sits at a small piano, a mug of coffee steaming by her side. She looks...tired, really. It's been a difficult few weeks.
But that's no reason not to keep trying. ]
I was just wondering...what's the state of medicine like in your world? I had thought we were on the cutting-edge back home, but with everything I've seen here, you realise just how far we have to go. Considering everything that happens to us so regularly here, it can be really easy to lose track of your health.
I'm a field medic and a chemist, so I'd never call myself a doctor, but I still wanted to extend an offer to everybody: if you need someone to patch you up or do a quick check-up, call me. If you need medicine - over-the-counter stuff, obviously, not anything serious - then I'll run it over or get someone to deliver it to you. Just... [ She gives a weak smile. ] I want to help a little more, and I don't think being okay with a handgun really holds up against everything others can do, you know?
...anyway, I'm rambling. [ She looks down, playing an idle few bars of a melody. ] I've been staying in a lot. Watching old Disney movies, mostly, and I ended up working on this...
[ She adjusts the sheet music and sets her fingers in position. What follows is a nice little rendition with very few errors. Being able to just concentrate on something helps, a lot. Once it's done, she flashes a quick, embarrassed smile at the camera, then leans over and shuts it off. ]

no subject
[ It's more of a relief than it should be to find someone from the same planet, let alone the same country. ]
They really are. When you say it's dangerous back home...what time is it, exactly, in New York for you?
no subject
[ It is oddly rare to find someone else from the United States. So many people seem to come from other worlds. Or Japan. Ash was originally from much further East in the country, but New York is a bit closer to the Midwest. ]
2019.
[ And zombie free, but Ash isn't going to get that she's curious about that. ]
no subject
You're a decade ahead of me, then. Why do you say New York's dangerous then, if I can ask?
no subject
[ You know, because most people don't. It might be a lovely state, and the mansions are likely beautiful pre-outbreak, but it's not among common attractions. ]
I forgot the silver spoon when I got born. It's a great place to live if you're loaded. Not so much if you're not.
no subject
[ Completely fair. Why ever go to South Dakota? ]
I couldn't really speak about it. Everything I know about New York is from movies or police reports.
no subject
no subject
[ You'd be forgiven for finding that hard to believe. The person saying this is most definitely still a teenager, not to mention not even fifty pounds soaking wet. ]
no subject
Besides, she mentioned being a field medic. That means she's had some army training too unless the qualifications are different in her world than his own. ]
Fresh to the field?
[ Despite not necessarily disbelieving it, it is a talking point. It's possible she's around 18-19,maybe a really baby-faced 20-21. ]
no subject
Just a few weeks in. [ She doesn't like to brag, but it seems appropriate, so: ] I graduated college at 18, so I got scouted for special forces right out.
no subject
[ More than 'in the Midwest', he's asking if it's natural in her specific world. The way she phrases the sentence suggests it's not, but it's not sure enough to make him jump to conclusions. ]
no subject
[ She pauses, tucking some hair behind her ear. ]
I guess 'accelerated' is the right way to put it. I finished high school at fifteen, then went straight into college.
no subject
You can drop the modesty routine.
[ Which isn't to say it's an act. ]
If you finished college four years ahead of everybody else, it's not bragging to say it.
Usually those kinda people go into science, maybe mathematics or technology. Not a lot of them go into the police force. If you're a field medic, that'd be military training, too.
no subject
I did get my degree in chemistry, and there were a lot of offers. But I wanted to be in law enforcement. It was a pretty fast training process, so I really only got basic training before I was assigned.
no subject
I'm not saying medicine's obsolete here, but chroma's the bigger thing.
no subject
What about you, um-- [ She realises belatedly she never got his name. ] What do you do?
no subject
[ He can guess what the pause indicates. He already knows her name is Rebecca Chambers. ]
Here? Nothing much yet. It's going in that direction.
[ It's only month three for him. ]
Back home? Nothing a law enforcement officer wants to hear about.
no subject
[ She gives her warmest smile. That last comment is pretty suspect, but...well, what he'd done at home wasn't really relevant. Not unless it was really heinous. ]
That's a mysterious answer if I've ever heard one.
no subject
[ It's not a full story, but Ash doesn't offer full stories, and it isn't a lie. He was a gang leader in New York. ]
I decided to leave the business behind when I came here.
no subject
[ Dang. The dude really just came out and said it to a cop. She had already left law enforcement behind in the same manner, but...well. Points for honesty?
She's taken a little aback. Rebecca grasps for words for a few moments, before faltering down into a small laugh. ]
I kind of did as well, actually. Law enforcement doesn't feel for me anymore.
no subject
Changed your mind after a few months? It can be a pretty ugly job.
no subject
[ There's no need to go into the ugly backstory with someone she had just met. For a gang leader, he seems a nice enough guy, and she doesn't want to burden anybody with it. ]
I think I'm going to go back to my field of study, once I return home.
no subject
no subject
[ That one's almost bragging. She's getting there! ]
no subject
Want some practice? Unless you already got a field medic job lined up here.
no subject
[ Intriguing. She cocks her head and frowns at the camera. ]
I've got a job at an apothecary, so sort of, but - what did you have in mind?
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)