Ianto Jones (
torchwoodteaboy) wrote2011-04-09 12:05 am
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[RL WITH SULU][backdated to 03-20] Shoreleave: Part 2
Ianto had thought that one day on the planet had been exciting enough, but the prospect of another, when Sulu had mentioned it, had been too good to pass up. They'd had such a nice time on the beach, after all. It was only fair that they do a little exploring, let Sulu look for the alien plants that he would want to and get to watch the other man geek out about something for a while. Ianto himself had been embarrassingly excited about the planet and the beach and all the previous day, after all. It would be nice to be able to be the one to sit back and watch the excitement on someone else for a change, reverse roles from the previous day.
They hadn't gotten too early of a start. After all, this was a vacation for the pair of them, and it wouldn't do to have to wake up in the wee hours of the morning (if there were such a thing in space, Ianto didn't really even know). But they gave themselves the better part of the day, and after having a bite to eat (Ianto wasn't sure he would ever get enough of being fascinated with the replicators), and a quick stop by Ianto's flat for more clothes for him (he needed long pants if they might be venturing into the jungle, after all, it was only practical) they found themselves beaming down to the planet again, Sulu with his kit and Ianto with...well. The clothes on his back, really. He didn't really have anything to bring along himself, since they were mostly going to be exploring inland this time.
Ianto looked up at the clear blue sky above him, and smiled at the fact that even the weather seemed to have adjusted so that it was cool enough for him to be comfortable in jeans, but not too cool that it wasn't still pretty warm. "...god," he said. "It's like this place is gorgeous every day." He shot a smile sideways at Sulu. "Better not let me visit for many more days, I might want to stay," he joked.
They hadn't gotten too early of a start. After all, this was a vacation for the pair of them, and it wouldn't do to have to wake up in the wee hours of the morning (if there were such a thing in space, Ianto didn't really even know). But they gave themselves the better part of the day, and after having a bite to eat (Ianto wasn't sure he would ever get enough of being fascinated with the replicators), and a quick stop by Ianto's flat for more clothes for him (he needed long pants if they might be venturing into the jungle, after all, it was only practical) they found themselves beaming down to the planet again, Sulu with his kit and Ianto with...well. The clothes on his back, really. He didn't really have anything to bring along himself, since they were mostly going to be exploring inland this time.
Ianto looked up at the clear blue sky above him, and smiled at the fact that even the weather seemed to have adjusted so that it was cool enough for him to be comfortable in jeans, but not too cool that it wasn't still pretty warm. "...god," he said. "It's like this place is gorgeous every day." He shot a smile sideways at Sulu. "Better not let me visit for many more days, I might want to stay," he joked.
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Ianto smiled as Sulu all but skipped ahead of him to look at the plants, pointing out the fish in the river, at which Ianto had to do a double take. "...oh my god, they're enormous," Ianto said, stepping forward to get a better look at the fish in question, making sure that he was staying safely out of the way in case...who knows, he were to fall into the river or in case they jumped out and...something else happened. Ianto was nothing if not practical, even when visiting and exploring new and exciting places such as this one.
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"And yeah - they're definitely the biggest thing we've seen on the planet so far. I bet they'd be great for barbequing," he said with a grin. Actually, that was pretty tempting - maybe they could catch one and have an old-fashioned roast later. Of course, he'd have to check them and make sure they weren't poisonous, but he sincerely doubted it. They probably tasted like catfish.
He was so busy contemplating just how the fish would taste roasted over a fire and checking the readings of his tricorder that he didn't notice the soft noise of something moving in the trees across the river. Even if he had - it was probably nothing.
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But then something rustled in the trees along the river, and though it was soft, it was definitely the sound of something other than the wind. Ianto, standing closer to the other side and less preoccupied than the other man, heard it quite clearly. He took a step back, a step closer to Sulu, because really. He'd heard what birds sounded like, and they didn't sound like that, and Sulu'd insisted that there were only birds and fish there, and fish didn't move in the leaves, so. "...did you hear that?" he asked, cautiously, his eyes not leaving the treeline where he'd heard the rustling even as he inched his way back to where Sulu was.
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Then, the trees rustled again, the bushes by the riverside visibly shaking as something moved about them. Sulu paused, not as worried about it as Ianto was but still a bit cautious. "It might be one of the antelope-type things the ensigns have seen," he offered tentatively, because while it was the most likely explanation, saying it was just a deer was usually the first part of things going horribly wrong in these situations.
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Speaking of deer...the trees rustled another time, and a creature stepped out of the underbrush and into view, a creature that was vaguely antelope-like in looks. Ianto breathed a sigh of relief, letting himself relax a little bit as he did so. He turned to Sulu, looking slightly apologetic as he did so. "Sorry," he said. "Guess you were right. It's hard not to be a little jumpy, when you've got a job like Torchwood. Obviously I'm just paranoid though, I'm sorry about that." He turned to look back at the deer-like creature in question, as it slowly eased it's way out of the brush towards the bank of the riverway.
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When the strange little deer-like creature came out of the brush, he relaxed almost immediately, grinning over to Ianto as the other man apologized. "Don't worry about it," he said, "It's not like I'm going to hold it against you. Being afraid of the little antelope thing, and all." He couldn't help but tease a little - after all, the thing looked like something you'd want to take home as a pet than something to be afraid of.
That was, it looked adorable and cute until just about the time when the sound of thunder broke through the treeline, the antelope looking up just in time to get snatched up in the jaws of something roughly the size of an elephant, and almost seal-like in shape. Except for the teeth. Those were more like a shark's. His hand was reaching for Ianto's before he'd really had time to process the fact that there was something much bigger than an antelope chewing on a cute woodland creature and looking around at them.
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Just as Sulu was reaching for Ianto's hand at that moment, Ianto was throwing his out to grab Sulu's, his heart in his throat, because that thing was a lot bigger and more terrifying than he was really prepared to handle in that moment. He simply threw his hand out to grab Sulu's, and without a second thought was tugging him as fast as he could in the opposite direction. Maybe running was a bad idea, but Ianto sure as hell was not going to just stay put and watch as it came after the pair of them as well.
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As they ran, Sulu gripped Ianto's hand, pulling and being pulled as they sprinted through the thick underbrush. This was bad - very bad - if only he could risk being distracted so that he could grab his communicator and call for help - but he didn't want to risk falling over. As it was, he was sure he'd trip before too long. "Keep going!" he shouted to Ianto, as though the other man needed any encouragement in that particular field.
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Ianto didn't need to be told twice not to stop running. He quick shot a glance around, not behind them, but at the area, searching for anywhere that they might be able to escape from this thing. Maybe there was somewhere small, some... There. Up ahead to the left, a section of the forest where the trees were packed closer together. Maybe...maybe it would slow the thing down? Stumbling slightly, Ianto yanked Sulu off in the direction of those trees, hoping that it would work and that Sulu would understand why he was, since he really didn't have time to stop and explain himself.
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When Ianto pulled him towards a thick cluster of trees, Sulu staggered but kept his footing, following him without really getting why they were going in that direction. Ianto seemed to have a plan and, well, considering Sulu's plan was to run until they could get away, anything sounded better than that. Then again, the cluster could provide a sort of fence between them and the thing, if it couldn't break through. Maybe that was what Ianto was going for - if so, that was a pretty solid idea.
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Of course, chancing that glance had Ianto looking away from where he should be looking to see where he was going, and so as he turned around his foot caught underneath a fallen branch in front of him and, without the knowledge that it was coming up until it was right there, pretty much sent him sprawling onto the forest ground, hard. At least he managed to avoid falling on his face, he thought to himself, as he came down hard on the palms of his hands instead.
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He didn't bother asking if Ianto was fine, he just pulled him on - if Ianto's ankle was twisted or broken, he'd yelp or shout or do something, and then Sulu would consider a different approach to this whole running thing.
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He was sure of a few things, though. One, that he couldn't keep running like this from the thing forever, and neither could Sulu. Two, that it would be very bad for that thing to catch up to either of them. And three, that he was absolutely terrified, and that adrenaline was probably his only saving grace in this moment, considering he was by no means an athlete by any means.
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He knew he wasn't going to be able to run forever, just like Ianto wasn't going to be able to, but that didn't mean he wouldn't try. They mostly just had to put enough distance to be considered worthless to the creature, but Sulu wasn't sure when that would be.
The trees splintered as the thing burst through them, and Sulu swore, his chest tightening as he started to feel the burn of running in his lungs. He wanted to tell Ianto that he wasn't sure what they could do, but he didn't have the breath to waste on it, and besides - he was pretty sure Ianto didn't have an idea either. They'd put a good amount of distance between them and the beast, but it wasn't enough.
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He looked around, frantically, for some other sort of escape route, as the two of them hurtled through the underbrush. The vegetation that made it difficult for the beast to come after them as fast as it might have liked was also making it near impossible for the pair of them to run as fast away from it as they would have liked as well.
Ianto thought he saw a clearing up ahead, veering off in another direction. Maybe it was the river? If they could make their way back to the river, or a river, maybe...there were some sort of caves or something to hide in? Ianto had no idea, he wasn't quite thinking straight anymore. His lungs and his legs and his chest and stomach were all burning with the strain, but when the choices were either suffer or die, Ianto was quite happy to experience a little discomfort. Making sure he had Sulu's hand firmly in his, he started off in the new direction again.
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Gripping Ianto's hand tightly, Sulu pushed through the last few yards of trees and underbrush and into the light that revealed the clearing. He stopped dead, however, when he saw what was before them. Only a few meters separated the treeline from a sheer cliff, and beyond that was nothing but the ocean. "Shit," Sulu panted, unable to catch enough breath to shout it, feeling desperately out of luck for the first time in a while.
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Only one thing was coming to mind, though, as he stared over the cliff down at the ocean, hearing the creature gaining on them from the forest behind them. It was going to catch them, and it was going to kill them, unless. "...jump," Ianto managed, albeit breathlessly. "We've got to... We've got...to jump..."
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"Shit," he hissed, hearing the thing approaching and weighing his options. Fighting off a giant alien creature with no weapons and a minimal chance at survival, or dealing with what was at least a thirty foot drop that sort of made him want to throw up even thinking about it? It was an obvious answer, sure, but still...
Grabbing Ianto's hand in his, he swallowed hard and nodded, ready to jump the second Ianto made motions to do the same. He was in Starfleet, for crying out loud - 30 feet was nothing. Right?
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He squeezed Sulu's hand tightly in his own, his heart going a million miles an hour, his mind just as fast. He knew that they could possibly die jumping off this cliff. He knew that Sulu had a thing about heights, that he'd had a bad experience with falling and that jumping off of a cliff with him was probably not his idea of a good time of things at all, but they were just going to have to take the chance, and hope that everything worked out in the end.
"I'm sorry," Ianto said, breathlessly, taking a few moments to mentally prepare himself and cling tighter to Sulu's hand, before starting forward, hoping that Sulu would be right after him as he went for the jump, figuring taking a running start wouldn't be at all unwelcome, considering they were about to enter a 30 foot free-fall off a cliff and all.
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Of course, that was assuming he could make any rocks that might be hidden under the surface disappear, but he was too busy internally shrieking at the drop to care - and then they were suddenly in the water, the force of impact making Sulu let go of Ianto's hand, even if it didn't really hurt. As he pulled himself up to the surface of the water, noticing that there were no rocks below them, just sand, he could hear the muffled roars of the creature on the cliff above them.
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As they hit the water, Ianto felt himself wrenched away from Sulu as he hit the water at a bit of a different angle than the other man and shot off to the side a little on a diagonal. Luckily, the water was clear, and he didn't go down too far, so it wasn't too much of a struggle to find his way back to the surface. Gasping for air, breathless not only from the run but also from the fall, Ianto broke through the surface of the water, panting as he looked around for the other man, treading water as he did so.
"Holy... Christ," Ianto said, looking up at the cliff that they'd come from, the sounds of the monster there, then back to Sulu as he finally realized that...they'd actually escaped from the thing successfully there. That it'd worked.
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He wondered how they'd missed something like that, but no one had really gone too deep into the jungle, so he supposed it was possible that they had just missed it. Whatever the case was, they were past it, and from the sounds of it, the thing was giving up on trying to follow them. He wouldn't either, if he were in its shoes, that was for sure. He laughed again, realizing that through the whole stupid thing, he still had his kit with him - it was floating some five feet away from them, having been let go of sometime during impact. "Holy shit, man."
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"Are you alright?" he asked, treading a little closer to Sulu. "What... What the hell was..." He couldn't seem to get the rest of that sentence out of his mouth, however. So instead he settled for the next thing that came to his mind, which was unfortunately, "...we just jumped off a cliff..."
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The fact that he'd done it wasn't really surprising, all things considered - Sulu could overcome pretty much anything if it meant surviving - but hindsight was 20/20 and he was starting to feel a little nauseous again just thinking about it. But, hey. They'd survived. He reached out and grabbed his kit before it floated away and looked at Ianto once more. "Through a forest, off a cliff and into the ocean." He grinned wide, "Who says dates can't be exciting?"
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He ran a hand through his hair, calming his breathing down, slightly. "Alright, well. That's done. Do you see a way out, anywhere? Not that I don't like swimming, but... I'd prefer not to have to scale a cliff-side to get out of here, if there's an option to do otherwise." He grinned at Sulu, sheepishly. "I don't know whether you know this, but I'm not really an athletic, sporty type. You're lucky I didn't pass out on you, running as much as we had like that." Never mind the fact that he had wiped out, that one time. That was neither here nor there.
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