It's usually preferable to connect the Bifrost between spots in the open air, but Thor has learned that the rules are different when one has a PINpoint enfolded into the very fabric of one's weapon. Stormbreaker deposits them onto the tiny ship with the usual flash of brilliant rainbow light, but without tearing through the roof, as Hofund would have done even in Heimdall's far more skilled hands.
It's a good deal more cramped in here than he'd been anticipating, but fortunately Blaze is of a height with himself so he doesn't have to duck to stand up. Still, there's something subtly disquieting about the small space, though he can't quite put his finger on what's bothering him. With space at such a premium, he finds a place to stow his axe for the time being, and comes to stand behind the pilot's chair as the small ship makes its descent.
Some might fear that the storm may cause the ship to crash, that the lightning may do a greater damage to them than they are prepared for. Thor is not sure he could ever fear a storm, whether he was the one to call it forth or not. The wind sings in every breath he takes, the thrum of thunder in his blood, and if anyone was sparing the effort to look closely, they might see an echo of the lightning deep in the blue of his eyes. Even through the metal skin of the ship's hull, he can feel the storm's call to him, held at bay by whatever shields their city.
And beneath that...
Thor can't help but lean forward a little, as if he doubts his eye, his metal hand grasping the back of Blaze's pilot seat to keep himself steady. He has seen many moons of all sorts, planets in orbit so close to one another that their surfaces all but kiss, tricks of gravity to keep them from tearing each other apart. What he sees now is something else, something he doesn't recognize, something very much not of Earth. Not the Earth he knows, at least.
He nearly asks the city's name as they come in for a landing, but with a title like that, he supposes it doesn't matter. He likely wouldn't recognize it anyway, even if they knew. Instead he tilts his head slightly, watching the ground get closer and closer, a hidden jewel beneath the strange alien moon nestled in the mountains. "That's quite a title," he says instead.
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It's a good deal more cramped in here than he'd been anticipating, but fortunately Blaze is of a height with himself so he doesn't have to duck to stand up. Still, there's something subtly disquieting about the small space, though he can't quite put his finger on what's bothering him. With space at such a premium, he finds a place to stow his axe for the time being, and comes to stand behind the pilot's chair as the small ship makes its descent.
Some might fear that the storm may cause the ship to crash, that the lightning may do a greater damage to them than they are prepared for. Thor is not sure he could ever fear a storm, whether he was the one to call it forth or not. The wind sings in every breath he takes, the thrum of thunder in his blood, and if anyone was sparing the effort to look closely, they might see an echo of the lightning deep in the blue of his eyes. Even through the metal skin of the ship's hull, he can feel the storm's call to him, held at bay by whatever shields their city.
And beneath that...
Thor can't help but lean forward a little, as if he doubts his eye, his metal hand grasping the back of Blaze's pilot seat to keep himself steady. He has seen many moons of all sorts, planets in orbit so close to one another that their surfaces all but kiss, tricks of gravity to keep them from tearing each other apart. What he sees now is something else, something he doesn't recognize, something very much not of Earth. Not the Earth he knows, at least.
He nearly asks the city's name as they come in for a landing, but with a title like that, he supposes it doesn't matter. He likely wouldn't recognize it anyway, even if they knew. Instead he tilts his head slightly, watching the ground get closer and closer, a hidden jewel beneath the strange alien moon nestled in the mountains. "That's quite a title," he says instead.