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Save Our Earth Mods ([personal profile] ourearth) wrote in [community profile] saveourearth2018-12-23 02:49 pm

Baby it's cold outside [mingle]

Date: 23.12.2018-30.12.2018
Characters: Open!
Note: Timeline behind cut at the bottom of the post!




23-24th December
With the schools out for Christmas, and the last few days of Christmas shopping closing in, there really is no escaping it now. Everyone but the best prepared is rushing to finalise the last little bits. Excitement is gathering as the shortest day of the year comes and goes.

The weather reports for Christmas are standard: grey, with light showers and patches of sun. As usual, a high chance of snow was predicted at the beginning of the month, but as the day approaches it has changed back to the more seasonal and typical (if less picturesque) weather: rain. But, with days to go, that suddenly changes again, as the weather reporters talk about the sudden turning of an artic wind, bringing with it sub zero temperatures, and maybe, just maybe, a white Christmas.  Temperatures drop to -5c during the day and -10c overnight, particularly cold for this part of the world.  On the morning of Christmas Eve, with less than 24 hours notice, the snow begins, falling lightly at first, and then heavily. By lunch time, the south east, including Mossgate, is a foot deep in snow and chaos has spread. Just a covering of snow is enough to cause panic, with infrastructure and transport unequipped to deal with it, and this is unexpected and heavy, and there has been no time to prepare. The trains have given up, promised refunds, and stopped. The busses have also all but stopped, and in Mossgate town centre just one or two an hour are running to the villages to ferry home those still stuck in town. Gatwick airport, which is having it's worst year since the ash clouds in 2010, has also officially given up and closed, redirecting flights to Stansted or Birmingham. Just after midnight, even the motorways close, and the smaller roads are unpassable much earlier. Panicked shoppers, trying to grab supplies for the unexpected weather, are being shooed out of stores early so that coworkers have a chance of getting home before the last transports stop. And it's still snowing. By nightfall there's almost two feet of snow, an almost unprecedented amount, and the news is talking about the possibility of powercuts and disruptions to water supplies. Sure enough, around 8PM, a powercut hits Mossgate and the surrounding area, wiping out the last of the Christmas cheer in the town centre as the festive lights go black – along with everyone's houses.

Christmas Day
Christmas morning opens to fresh, white snow all around, picture post card beautiful, and small showers keep it fresh looking for most of the day no matter how many snow angels, snowmen and igloos are built. That's probably little compensation for those stuck: the news is full of heartfelt stories of the struggle to get home for Christmas, and of locals in towns and cities along the southeast welcoming people stuck into their homes for Christmas. While the power is back on in Mossgate town centre by about midnight, the surrounding areas, including Moss Manor village, are still without power, with the word from the electricity board that it's unlikely to be fixed anytime soon. Neighbours with gas cookers and stove tops suddenly become the most popular people around (but at least with the temperatures outside dealing with food from the fridge and freezer is relatively easy).

In Moss Manor, the church hall, which has both a gas cooker and gas heating, is opened up for those who are unable to stay in their own homes. People are invited to bring along what food they have to share and join in with a community Christmas. The community feeling is only shattered when the power comes back on at 5:20PM, just before the repeat of the Queen's Speech on BBC2 and Strictly Come Dancing on BBC1 start. A short but fierce battle ensues over which to show on the big screen. With moments to go, Pat Marsh puts her foot down and casts the deciding vote for Strictly, promising that she'll show the Queen's Speech from iPlayer directly afterwards.

As if that isn't enough, Mossgate and it's surroundings have one other surprise waiting for them on Christmas morning. Father Christmas has been through the entire council area, and apparently not one single person has been good. Every fire place has been decorated with traditional stockings full of neatly wrapped coal, one stocking for each member of the family. For those who don't have a fireplace, the oven has been selected as a replacement, and the stockings hang merrily from the oven door instead. If it's a prank, it's seen as bad taste, especially in homes with small children, but it's also generally agreed that given the weather it's rather backfired (not that anyone still has a coal fire but still).

25th-30th December
The snow finally stops overnight on Christmas evening/Boxing Day morning, but it remains cold, the temperatures only picking up at the weekend. Between the remaining snow and the ice formed where it melts, transport remains awful, with the connections to the villages particularly bad. Due to the Highspeed line, the trains from Mossgate to London are back up and running by the 27th, but other routes take days to be cleared. Likewise, the motorways are at least traversable by the 26th, but some smaller roads are still unaccessible until the weekend. Food supplies are slow to come through, and when the stores reopen on Boxing Day after Christmas closures, the shelves are immediately stripped bare again, especially of essentials such as bread and milk (although anything and everything is subject to panic buying, up to and including shampoo).

All of this chaos doesn't stop some people going out to the Boxing Day sales, with queues forming outside Next, which has advertised it's traditional early opening times of 6AM, despite the cold and the snow (and the fact that they don't actually manage to open until almost 7 due to lack of staff).

But as the temperatures rise back to a seasonal temperature in the single figures, things start to return to normal in time for the count down to New Years.

Timeline:
  • 24th: Heavy snow starts unexpectedly in the morning
  • Transport is badly affected
  • A powercut hits the Mossgate area at around 8PM
  • Power is returned to Mossgate town by midnight, the villages including Moss Manor won't have power until well into the 25th
  • 25th: Stockings appear overnight for each member of the family in every home containing coal
  • Moss Manor church hall is opened to the community
  • Moss Manor and the other villages have no power until 5PM
  • 26th-29th: Panic buying and lack of supplies affects food availability
  • The snow continues to affect transport
  • 30th: Temperatures return to normal for the time of year (0-10c)
iamnotgod: A man, holding a folder in one hand and gesturing with the other, looking off to the right. (And WHAT Is This?)

Re: Dec 25 [Network]

[personal profile] iamnotgod 2018-12-25 01:45 am (UTC)(link)
[Tenderly laying down the coal-filled stocking so it won't spill, Walter turns his attention quickly back to the feed.]

Would you say there's no way to test these for fingerprints, either?

[Because, well, they are stockings. He's been trying not to handle them too much in any case.]

lovedramamoron: (surprise)

Re: Dec 25 [Network]

[personal profile] lovedramamoron 2018-12-26 02:08 am (UTC)(link)
It is difficult to test fabric for fingerprints, but it is technically possible. [Jimmy had read the articles about the technique, but he had never attempted it himself,and had no idea whether they could even acquire the equipment for it. ]
iamnotgod: Black and white picture of a man looking up and off to the right. (What Even Is This?)

[Network][Video]

[personal profile] iamnotgod 2018-12-26 02:42 am (UTC)(link)
Either we can try it ourselves, or we can push for the officials to look into it.

[Somehow, Walter expects Mahira Khan to have been blindsided by this as well.]

Those are our options for getting it done, anyway.
lovedramamoron: (pic#10629360)

Re: [Network][Video]

[personal profile] lovedramamoron 2018-12-31 01:25 am (UTC)(link)
I'm guessing there isn't much chance of an official looking into it. [Jimmy sighs.]

And the only method I've heard of for taking fingerprints from fabric is still experimental. I only know the theory. And even if I did know enough to try it, we'd need access to gold, zinc and a specialized vacuum chamber.
iamnotgod: A man staring up and off to the right. (And He Asks Why.)

Re: [Network][Video]

[personal profile] iamnotgod 2018-12-31 02:19 am (UTC)(link)
[Jimmy's got the right of it; Walter heaves a sigh as well even if it feels mostly for show.]

Bit too much to ask of any one household in Mossgate, I'm afraid.

And oh, people can look into it - but I wouldn't be surprised at this point if there's not much to find.
lovedramamoron: (Default)

Re: [Network][Video]

[personal profile] lovedramamoron 2018-12-31 06:03 pm (UTC)(link)
As long as nothing was stolen, I doubt anyone will look into it in depth. People are usually more concerned with that than with people being given things.
iamnotgod: A man, hands up at chest level, staring left and down (In The Dark)

Re: [Network][Video]

[personal profile] iamnotgod 2018-12-31 08:35 pm (UTC)(link)
[Not having more to add at the moment, Walter nods and rests his head on one hand with a sigh.]

We could risk independent investigation...

[It's a tentative suggestion, though.]
lovedramamoron: (pic#12712918)

Re: [Network][Video]

[personal profile] lovedramamoron 2019-01-01 05:19 pm (UTC)(link)
I'm beginning to wish that I'd pursued becoming a detective rather than a writer. I know about investigations, but I've never tried to conduct one myself.
iamnotgod: A man, holding a folder in one hand and gesturing with the other, looking off to the right. (And WHAT Is This?)

Re: [Network][Video]

[personal profile] iamnotgod 2019-01-01 11:41 pm (UTC)(link)
What, as an independent investigator?

[Walter's not dismissing the concept out of hand, here - certainly his own thoughts about what he could do at 17 were, er, skewed. And subsequently disproven.]

Sort of a surprise there isn't one with a Number already, given the sheer spread of who has one now.

[Rather, who has one and is known to now.]
lovedramamoron: (pic#10629360)

Re: [Network][Video]

[personal profile] lovedramamoron 2019-01-04 02:05 am (UTC)(link)
That's true. Has anyone done a survey to see what the spread is now?

[He shrugs.]

I wanted to do that originally, you know? But independent investigators like Poirot and Marple don't really exist in the real world.
iamnotgod: A man staring up and off to the right. (And He Asks Why.)

Re: [Network][Video]

[personal profile] iamnotgod 2019-01-04 02:24 am (UTC)(link)
[Walter shakes his head.]

Nothing vocational, at any rate.

[And Jimmy's right on that second point, so he just shrugs.]

True. Certainly most couldn't expect to be as successful.

[Even if it's just because they get burdened by red tape.]