Wearing || Setting: Abandoned Factory, Newborough
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If Laura wasn't in the catacombs killing Ancients and collecting old sword parts to work with, she was at the forge. Practice makes perfect, they said, right? That was all that Laura did. For lack of anything better to do. And anyway, she liked the brightness of it. The heat of the flames as they melted the metal; the red sparks and the molten orange of the hot steel. Even her peculiar curse couldn't leech the colour from such a vibrant rebirth.
The clothes that she wore were old. Something she had collected from her apartment the last time that she had been there; it had been a hasty departure, after she and Kinney had realised their fate was sealed into some kind of nightmare, and Laura's studio apartment was way too open to the sunlight for them to be able to stay there. The dress, boots, and red leather jacket were getting worn down. The sleeves of the jacket were blackened from the forge; the gloves that Laura used didn't reach high enough. Self-taught, there was no doubt plenty that Laura was doing wrong, safety-wise. She always ended up with sparks in her eyes and half blinded by the time she was done, and scorch marks in all kinds of places.
But she healed. And the pain didn't bother her all too much. That, too, was a reprieve from the sensation that she was being followed around by death; that there was some huge gaping hole in the atmosphere that disappeared every single time she turned around to try to face it.
She stood at that forge, bleakly determined. Sunglasses covered her eyes and her dark blonde hair was pulled back into a messy bun. Her jaw was tense as she hammered at the blade, the clink-clinking the only sound that she could hear. She was oblivious to all else. Of course, she knew she was in a public place. She knew that this forge wasn't hers. Soon enough she would buy her own forge and install it in her new sewer apartment. Or, maybe she wouldn't. Maybe she'd make that apartment as warm and cosy and comfortable as she could make it, given she had no other place to go to be warm and cosy and comfortable.
These were the things she thought about while she worked. Anything, anything to keep her from thinking about her mother, who'd be alone this Mother's Day; to keep from thinking about the scones that she would not be baking and the flowers that she would not be buying for her mother. A black hand squeezed her heart every time she thought about the woman who had given birth to her, but she would not cry. She would not think about it. She would just continue to work.