Gyda Ragnarsdottir (
like_quicksilver) wrote in
riverviewlogs2017-12-08 10:51 pm
Entry tags:
(no subject)
who: Gyda and various
what: Arrival and getting settled
when: Early December
where: Portal, then clinic (possibly her new quarters)
warnings: possible mentions of illness and child-dealth
Portal: closed to Ivar;
The last thing Gyda recalled was just succumbing to sleep, the drinking hall turned sickroom appearing in her eyes so fogged and slow that she wondered if it was a dream even so. She felt so weak, cold and drained that the thought of death no longer seemed an issue: if she could just sleep, she'd feel better, she knew it. She wasn't sure how long she'd been sleeping, only that she closed her eyes, and slowly she was aware that the sounds were different. So many people were sick that the only sounds in the hall were of people coughing or her mother's voice.
Now, she couldn't hear any of that. There were no voices, but she could ‘feel’ there were people around. Gyda opened her eyes, seeing people in shadows, but she couldn’t tell of they were men or women-all she could see was that they were beckoning her to join them, and she felt compelled to obey.
Somehow, she was able to summon up enough energy to slowly push herself up, and towards the door they were pointing toward. Still weak and feverish, she draped the blanket over her shoulders and forced herself to move, stepping through the doorway. The figures didn’t follow her, and she couldn’t see her mother or the others from the hall, but that didn’t stop her from stepping through.
Her breath caught when she stepped through, the steps nearly making her trip, her mind fuzzy from fever and seeing all of the green. Part of her wondered if she had died, if the shadows were those who’d come from Hel’s domain-and yet, none of the stories told of her Hall being this green.
.
Clinic: OTA (final logs to either Marco or Ivar)
The past few days seemed all a blur, her waking in and out of sleep, seeing the same strangely dressed people coming in and out of the room they placed her in. They kept asking asking her things, and more prodding, having the strange stick in her mouth. Atleast they finally removed the needle somehow dripping fluids into her arm-the needle didn't hurt, but her arm was itchy and sore even when they took it out. The bright colored..things..they had her swallow were bitter, but she did notice she felt a little better some time after taking them. She took them along with the different tasting liquids they gave her: she recognized the chicken soup, but the rest she couldn’t even recognize as food.
Her deepest worry in this case wasn’t the illness; that was a mere inconvenience by now. What scared her was that she was by herself, her only family being a brother she didn’t know. She’d never been without her family before and the thought of what would happen now hurt more than the illness she was just recovering from.
Her third day though, she woke up feel more alert than she'd been in days, even in Kattegat. After the usual 'check up' and being told that the fever had finally broken, the female healer said was just about ready to be dismissed; all she had to do was answer some questions. Before she left, she showed, Gyda how to use the other box right by her bed, the one with the strange runes. Her eyes opened wide as she witnessed a scene of someone talking to her through the box,, but when she waved an arm and called to get their attention, she was told by the healer that the person wasn’t really there, it was only their image.
When she left to get her some fresh clothing (and ‘papers’), Gyda was still fiddling with the controls on the device, until it showed a man talking to someone as he was cooking. The whole of it didn't make sense, but it was entertaining, and above all it was distraction, something her mind craved more than than solid food.
.
what: Arrival and getting settled
when: Early December
where: Portal, then clinic (possibly her new quarters)
warnings: possible mentions of illness and child-dealth
Portal: closed to Ivar;
The last thing Gyda recalled was just succumbing to sleep, the drinking hall turned sickroom appearing in her eyes so fogged and slow that she wondered if it was a dream even so. She felt so weak, cold and drained that the thought of death no longer seemed an issue: if she could just sleep, she'd feel better, she knew it. She wasn't sure how long she'd been sleeping, only that she closed her eyes, and slowly she was aware that the sounds were different. So many people were sick that the only sounds in the hall were of people coughing or her mother's voice.
Now, she couldn't hear any of that. There were no voices, but she could ‘feel’ there were people around. Gyda opened her eyes, seeing people in shadows, but she couldn’t tell of they were men or women-all she could see was that they were beckoning her to join them, and she felt compelled to obey.
Somehow, she was able to summon up enough energy to slowly push herself up, and towards the door they were pointing toward. Still weak and feverish, she draped the blanket over her shoulders and forced herself to move, stepping through the doorway. The figures didn’t follow her, and she couldn’t see her mother or the others from the hall, but that didn’t stop her from stepping through.
Her breath caught when she stepped through, the steps nearly making her trip, her mind fuzzy from fever and seeing all of the green. Part of her wondered if she had died, if the shadows were those who’d come from Hel’s domain-and yet, none of the stories told of her Hall being this green.
.
Clinic: OTA (final logs to either Marco or Ivar)
The past few days seemed all a blur, her waking in and out of sleep, seeing the same strangely dressed people coming in and out of the room they placed her in. They kept asking asking her things, and more prodding, having the strange stick in her mouth. Atleast they finally removed the needle somehow dripping fluids into her arm-the needle didn't hurt, but her arm was itchy and sore even when they took it out. The bright colored..things..they had her swallow were bitter, but she did notice she felt a little better some time after taking them. She took them along with the different tasting liquids they gave her: she recognized the chicken soup, but the rest she couldn’t even recognize as food.
Her deepest worry in this case wasn’t the illness; that was a mere inconvenience by now. What scared her was that she was by herself, her only family being a brother she didn’t know. She’d never been without her family before and the thought of what would happen now hurt more than the illness she was just recovering from.
Her third day though, she woke up feel more alert than she'd been in days, even in Kattegat. After the usual 'check up' and being told that the fever had finally broken, the female healer said was just about ready to be dismissed; all she had to do was answer some questions. Before she left, she showed, Gyda how to use the other box right by her bed, the one with the strange runes. Her eyes opened wide as she witnessed a scene of someone talking to her through the box,, but when she waved an arm and called to get their attention, she was told by the healer that the person wasn’t really there, it was only their image.
When she left to get her some fresh clothing (and ‘papers’), Gyda was still fiddling with the controls on the device, until it showed a man talking to someone as he was cooking. The whole of it didn't make sense, but it was entertaining, and above all it was distraction, something her mind craved more than than solid food.
.

no subject
Ivar's reflexes were fast enough to catch her before she fell to the floor. Yes, something was definitely off with this girl. "Steady there. You're alright." He could feel how warm she was even as he held her there. She was burning up with fever. He also noticed the way she was dressed. Could it be...? Was she from his time?
no subject
"Father..." She saw his eyes, recognizing them as her fathers. "What..what happened to your hair?" And why was he in that chair? The differences were enough to nearly make her laugh. "Is this..Valhalla?"
She must've died from the fever, but how could she be in Valhalla if she hadn't died in battle. Unless..unless he wasn't killed in battle? It was all too much, the thoughts swirling in her head like fog.
no subject
He brushed her hair back from her face in a rare show of compassion, spurred on by the fact that this girl seemed to have come from his home world. There was something about her face that reminded him, oddly enough at the moment, of Lagertha. Not the spiteful, wretched woman he'd known now who had murdered his mother, but back when he'd been younger, the shieldmaiden who'd take time out of her day to tell the Ragnarssons stories of the raids she'd taken part of.
He looked up, ordering several other Guard members. "Go get a doctor quickly. She's very sick and needs to be tended to right away."
no subject
The hand at her head felt real though. She reached up to take hold of it, surprised when it felt warm and firm, not cold and stiff.
Gyda turned her head when she was aware there were others coming near, her posture tensing when she saw they were armed. Her hands gripped the strange metal chair he was in, her body too weak to put up much more of a fight. "I'll go.."
She hated sounding this weak, but the man was right. Wherever she was, she was still sick.
no subject
He looked up and saw that one of the doctors on staff was approaching. He gently gripped her by the shoulders to keep her from trying to move too much. "Shh, it's alright. Save your strength." The doctor came over, putting a gloved hand on her forehead.
Ivar felt he should stay with the girl, considering that there wasn't anyone else who would be responsible for her. "What's your name?"
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"Gyda.." She answered. "Ragnarsdottir." There, she couldn't appear weak, not if she wished to do her family proud. Yet, that didn't stop her from gripping the side of his chair for balance.
One of the doctors set a hand on her forehead, frowning when he realized how hot her forehead was. "Alright, Ms. Gyda. We're going to help you feel better. You just have to come with us."
Carefully, she went with them, her limbs feeling almost detached as she walked.
no subject
Only Bjorn ever talked about her, always melancholy reminisces that made sorrow cloud over his face. He'd only heard brief snippets, things that Bjorn would say like, 'She would have been thirty this year and had a family of her own.' The grief would make his voice go tight and he'd refuse to say anything else despite the curious prodding from Ivar.
Ivar knew time ran funny here in Riverview, that people could be brought in at any point in their world's history. But he'd never considered it could bring in someone who had died. Ivar let her be led away by the doctors, but he wasn't going to stay here at the portal. Gyda was family, even if he knew nothing about her. He'd known how confused he'd been upon arriving here. Having someone from home would have been a great gift.
So he went to the hospital. While the nurses and doctors were none too pleased to see their least-favorite patient, they were pleasantly surprised. He was very calm, merely asking where his sister was, and when he could see her. Then he took up a post outside her room, not moving, an intimidating and faithful watchdog waiting for the moment when he could see the sister he'd never known.
no subject
Once inside the room, she conceded that she was too weak to put up much of a fight, and in the end, she let them do as they wished. However, that didn't stop her from asking this question or that, as much as her energy allowed. If she had mind to, she would've laughed at their methods, like when they put the strange stick in her mouth and used that to tell if she had a fever (as though it wasn't obvious enough). To the female healer's credit, she seemed to understand her reserves and explained everything that was going on. Gyda could tell she was worried though, even through the haze-though that didn't surprise her either.
The final and most curious thing they did was stick a needle in her arm, one that was attacked to a strange, see-through sack containing what looked like water. The female healer (doctor..they called her doctor) told her it was so the medicine and fluid would get into her system easier than if she would drink it, and even asked if it would feel better if she held her hand. She refused though; after seeing her father once take a knife heated by fire, she wouldn't flinch from a needle.
Then they finally left her alone, showing her how to call on the nurse (as well as the strange box called a tee-vee), before they left the room, telling the man (Ivar, his name was) that he was allowed in.
Off hand, one of the nurses commented that 'they were clearly related' before they left, allowing the two of them some privacy.
no subject
Winter. He thought of her with a bit of excitement. She had an aunt here now. One of the great misgivings Ivar had about his daughter growing up in this place was not being able to know her family. It looked like that was being rectified. Though he didn't always have the best confidence in the doctors of Riverview, he tried to have hope. They could cure things much easier than back home. A fever that would take out a whole village could easily be overcome.
Finally, as he lay there half-dozing, a doctor came out and said that he could see his sister. Snapping to attention, he wheeled himself into her room. His eyes, usually so hard and angry, held a softness to them reminiscent of Ragnar's more gentle moments. "Are you feeling better?"
no subject
One of the nurses showed her one of the 'devices' to move the bed up and down, and she was pressing the 'up' button when the door opened. She turned her head, recognizing the man coming forward. This wasn't her father, she could see that now, but she still recognized his eyes.
Carefully, she pushed herself up, mindful of the needle in her arm. "Yes. My head doesn't ache nearly as much." So maybe there was something to what was being dripped into her arm. "Who're you?"
Why did he have father's eyes?
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"My name is Ivar The Boneless." He paused and then added on. "Also called Ivar Ragnarsson. I was born four years after you died to Father and my mother, his second wife."
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"I saw.." She frowned, trying to bring the memory back up. "In Kattegat, I was..pulled from my sleep by shadowed figures. They pointed towards a sort of doorway. There were others, but they didn't seem to see us."
She didn't think on it at the time, the fever clouding her mind. Now, it her head and body still ached, but it didn't hurt much as it did.
Why did the gods send her here? "What's wrong with your legs? Is that why they call you 'boneless'?" The chair made sense if that was the case, after all, they were able to lower her fever. They would surely provide him with the means to get around.
no subject
"I was born a cripple." Gyda already knows what that usually means for disabled Viking children, so he explains how he survived past his first few days. "And yes, Father tried to abandon me in the woods when I was born, but he couldn't go through with it." Much as Ivar had despairing moments where he wished Ragnar had just gone through with it, he was glad right now that he hadn't.
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And he found her minutes later. Why she was given this chance and not the others, even if she was well enough to think on it, she didn't wish to question. For those who died in sickness, Helheim wasn't bad, but it wasn't Valhalla either.
"Father never does-never did-anything he didn't wish to." She knew what happened to children who were deformed or disfigured, everyone did, even if it was never spoken about openly. "If you were spared, it's clear the gods have something in store for your future, something you don't 'really' need legs for."
Had she been well enough, she would've noted how his upper body was shaped. Clearly he didn't let the deformity get in the way. "
no subject
At the idea of a purpose that he was meant for, Ivar nodded slowly. "Father told me something similar the last time I saw him." The very last time he'd seen Ragnar alive. He'd spoken of how Ivar was the most important Viking to take their people forward and to lead them.
He smiled at her, an genuine expression not many ever got to see. "I'm glad you're here. I've been without family for a very long time." Though Ivar had friends and people here he'd consider a found family, there was nothing quite like having other Norsemen around. He didn't have to explain his actions or the way he thought about things to those who had come from where he was.
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The sight of the door opening got her attention, and when she turned, she saw a nurse carrying a wheeled table with a tray on it. "Ms. Gyda..are you well enough to have something to eat."
She wasn't not entirely, but she also hadn't eaten in days. She nodded in response.
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Ivar's head whipped around when the nurse came in, hand automatically going to the knife at his side. The woman does her best to remain unruffled, but it's clear Ivar's reputation proceeds him. When he sees she's just bringing in food, he relaxes. "The food here is different, but you'll grow to like it."
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Gyda now realized why he was like this; she couldn't imagine being away from her family for that long.
The food now was a welcome distraction, however much she wasn't entire that hungry. The soup, once she lifted the cover, was recognizable enough, though she didn't get what the strings (noodles) in the soup were. Then there was the bowl with the bright red cubes in it, next to that was a cup of something bright orange.
The spoon and knife were in a clear covering for some reason. This, she tore open with her teeth before taking them out. "What's this in the soup?"
She used what looked like a pitchfork to pull out a noodle. Atleast it smelled familiar, like chicken.
no subject
Ivar let her take in the strange food on her own. He'd had an interesting reaction to it as well the first couple of weeks here. There had been a lot of experimentation and questions asked. By the end of it all, Ivar had become immensely fond of pizza. He reminded himself he'd have to introduce Gyda to it.
"They call them noodles. They're made from wheat like bread, just in a different form. I think this is chicken noodle soup." Just wait until she started finding out about Jello.
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So the name was straight forward. The pronged fork also made it easier to eat them with; she'd just drink the broth after.
Gyda went to try a taste of the liquid, but the sight of the cubes got her attention. She poked one of them with her fork, taken slightly aback when it jiggled. "What's this?"
She picked one up with her fingers, squishing it. "What sort of people make something that's neither solid or liquid?"
Growing up, no one told them about not playing with their food. Mostly because it wasn't worth playing with, and if a person didn't eat there was something wrong with them.
no subject
Ivar couldn't suppress a chuckle that came from watching Gyda play with the jiggling mass. "That's Jello. It's a food. Sort of." Though he was kind of dubious on that front himself.