The scar on her leg is hidden from view, and very few have seen it. It's a surgical scar, long and clean, knit back together perfectly. Something morbidly pretty to hide the defect of how the bones beneath porcelain-pale skin healed. She doesn't actively show the scar, but the limp is prominent.

She refuses a cane, always has. It holds no real support, she says, and only furthers to remind her that she is a cripple. It won't help. It can only hinder her more. People respect that. Why should she need it when she hobbles faster without it than with it.

A little cube-avatar pops up next to her head, within the cylinder of blue screens projected by the little chip she has placed on the ground under her. One of the ceiling crews, those in charge of keeping the Dome far above from decaying and crashing down on the city below.

There is a panel loose, he says. They're checking for any sort of damage to both the supports and the surrounding panels. They'll rivet it back down when they're sure it's safe, but they'll need the heavy guns next to the trucks. She relays the news to a small group of Cablers with little to do amid the hustle and bustle of the rest working to stabilize another skyscraper for anchoring. They will be on standby.

It started when she first started talking, a dull throb in her right leg. She shifts her weight more to the left, but it's still there. For a brief moment, her face twitches in emotion. Lips drawn thin just a bit before resuming its usual apathy. The leg does this every time they talk of panels, a not-so-subtle reminder to herself of why the Dome panels are important. Why they were slotted into the maintenance schedules every week.

Dome panels are heavy. She knew that even before the first one succumbed to gravity. Almost twelve years ago now. It wasn't long after they moved in, while they were slotting into their respective societal niches.

She's lucky she wasn't wholly crushed, it was her split-second instinct to run at the echoing sound of screaming metal that likely saved her from worse.
It's only sad to say that her right leg wasn't as lucky as she was.
It was the only time she remembers showing physical emotion publicly.


A/N: Just a little thing that I was thinking about earlier. Had to get it down before I let it slip away again. Famine needs more love from me.