I have no idea, I'm afraid. Russia? It might explain Miller's hostility towards Winter. [He doesn't sound convinced, though.] And furthermore, if the impact was neutalised, what did happen to Norfinbury?
[aka his second least favourite thing in the world after fungal pneumonia. It makes sense but doesn't. He was around for the nuclear scares of decades past. He remembers how they worked.]
Not in the town itself, no - or the impact could hardly be considered neutralised. But if there had been other impacts, if there had been war on a greater scale... still, a nuclear winter would explain the weather, the plague, not the structural damage.
The destruction is simply too extensive to be the result of weather conditions. Even extreme weather over a long time. A hundred years aren't that much to a building. No... there was something else.
no subject
Date: 2016-10-23 08:10 pm (UTC)far pa st
*Since "before the town was built" was probably a long time ago.*
but fu ture is justas
like ly
whatdid oth er man
see
?
no subject
Date: 2016-10-23 08:54 pm (UTC)"One mostly neutralised impact", Robert Miller said. And here we are.
no subject
Date: 2016-10-23 09:04 pm (UTC)im pact
neu tra lis ed
?
or where camefrom
no subject
Date: 2016-10-23 09:20 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2016-10-23 09:38 pm (UTC)im pact
made pla gue
?
*He doesn't know how nuclear stuff works but he's pretty sure its bad for your health.*
no subject
Date: 2016-10-25 02:56 pm (UTC)[aka his second least favourite thing in the world after fungal pneumonia. It makes sense but doesn't. He was around for the nuclear scares of decades past. He remembers how they worked.]
Not in the town itself, no - or the impact could hardly be considered neutralised. But if there had been other impacts, if there had been war on a greater scale... still, a nuclear winter would explain the weather, the plague, not the structural damage.
no subject
Date: 2016-10-25 04:31 pm (UTC)?
no subject
Date: 2016-10-25 07:52 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2016-10-26 01:09 am (UTC)a gain