Is anyone else getting a sinking feeling?
Transcript
Doug: By the time we had arrangements for her here, it was easier to just–
He rubs the back of his head, gesturing with the other arm helplessly.
Doug: –Keep doing it, than find a clan with a matriarch willing to adopt.
Mel: Well, I hope I can provide her with some stability going into college.
The panel background is absent. A school of lanternfish flicker past in the inky blackness over Mel's head.
Mel: It was a hard enough transition for my two bio kids, but with her circumstances…
Doug: We’re thankful for your help. Jovia cuts foster sponsorship on her 18th birthday.
The window of the room no longer shows sun and leaves, but open black water. A deep-sea ray swims past. Otília checks her phone and frowns in irritation.
Otília: It’s been ten minutes. Should I bang on her door?
Doug smiles as Otília gets up from her chair.
Doug: Isn’t her room just above us on the second floor?
Otília: Oh– yes. Why?
The abyssal plane lurks behind the comic panel, sea cucumbers and brittle stars crawling languidly over the ooze.
 
		           
		          



32 thoughts on “Runaway to the Stars: Page 216”
jade stormcloud
Aw shoot, I just got into this comic, and now I’m caught up! Can’t wait to read more. I hope we learn more about what her childhood was like. Was she kept at the care center until 15? or passed from foster home to foster home throughout? She must have had a very difficult time. Do any of the others who looked after her still keep in touch?
cinna
Whoa, I didn’t even notice the gulper eel on the previous page until I went back after reading this one! I’m glad I did, because I adore how effectively the scenery sets the tone… a gradual reveal that creeps in until it encloses the page itself. Not only does it reinforce Doug’s intuition that Talita is listening in, with that sense of being watched (that lanternfish just turned to look me in the eye!), it’s also an interesting visual metaphor for why she hasn’t come to join them.
Here we see humans and their residence surrounded by the dark abyss of deepsea fish– uncanny creatures, familiar and enigmatic at once, shaped by wholly alien conditions. Herself surrounded in a world built for humans, how would it feel to be Talita in that room right then?
Brilliant storytelling.
astrobun
[muffled In Too Deep plays from downstairs]
guest
hello I am under the water please help me
Ellipsis
Well. Hm. His we get to learn whether Talita knew about the culling thing before this.
JoB
Doug: “… just whisper at the ceiling.”
Joysweeper
Otília doing the airplane ears…
Enai
Ooh, I was wondering if cat people could do that! Neat.
Peter Jensen
Gillie’s also doing it on this page:
https://www.runawaytothestars.com/comic/rtts-page-162/
NTLS
OH GOD MY HEARTSTRINGS MY EVERYTHING
Tumorhead
Jay u watching the deep sea ROVs? A fellow ROV head?? 😀 this is just how it feels when you have a stream on the TV while hanging out lmao
Teod
I think I figured out the wayer thing, aside from the metaphor. This section is from Talita’s perspective. She’s listening to them through the floor, so their voices are dulled, like if they are underwater. This is also why there are more high angles than usual (I think?) – her perspective is from above, even though she’s not actually seeing them.
1d4-nadg
I thought it was just a metaphor for Mel feeling out of their depth. The water appeared on their pannels last page, and not when the others were talking.
Hubert
Damn no one adopted her.
blythe
honestly was probably for the best, since female centaurs dont rly get attached to infants that arent their own. talita wouldve been last priority compared to the “actual” children, and still at high risk of being culled or abandoned. now there couldve been a chance for a mujash iank to have claimed her, or another male matriarch, but those are very uncommon.
furubatsu
I can’t remember if it was in a in-character QnA or not, but Talita does explain that there were A LOT of reasons she never expected to and was never (up until college) adopted; Primarily that she was a very expensive child to raise and while in the system she had the government pay for things like food and clothing (even if she had to get crafty in adjusting her clothing to fit her body), it’s expensive being an obligate carnivore in space and the meat she can eat would’nt even be the same meat a human can eat.
SquirrelGoblin
This comic just makes every day so much better. I want a shirt.
creatureofthelaboratory
and now he’s going to reveal that talita could hear them the whole time
Guest
Sad to see Jovia also throws foster kids to the curb once they turn 18. I guess some things never change.
Jay Eaton
Jovia has a UBI and social housing programs for adults that have made homelessness in Nexus Jovia very uncommon, but life on only UBI living in a cheap government dormitory is hard enough for a human. Talita needs more accommodation than is available through government safety nets alone, and she doesn’t want to move to the homeplanet where her cost of living would be cheaper but she has no social connections. Outside financial support was what allowed her to go to a Jovian college and maintain a higher standard of living without having to fight a mountain of bureaucracy that doesn’t understand why she doesn’t just want to “go back to where she came from.”
Maned Wolf
walter-and-jessie-looking-at-bowing-ceiling.jpg
Zuorai
The one fish looking down at Mel. I wonder what that means
Also I’m in love with Talita’s catmom
Sabella
What, that Mel doesn’t exactly have Talita’s best interests in mind? That they’ve been building a gilded cage for her all this time?
Teod
I don’t think they’re malicious. But they might want to feel like they’re helping more than to actually help. Most of the time there is no difference between the two, but the points where there is are really painful.
blythe
tbh i really dont like how people are quick to demonise Mel. Yes they fall short in a lot of places but theyre not a *bad* person by any means. They couldve simply refused the opportunity to foster once they figured how difficult itd be. Not to mention its not like Talita herself is without flaws either, and we hear most about Mel from her point of view.
Enai
Yes. Mel is a flawed individual and apparently not *nearly* as good at dealing with people as they’d like to think, but not malicious.
.
Not every minor antagonist is evil or even just indifferent. One can be *entirely good-willed* and still harm another person.
Joysweeper
Yeah people are really just jumping and leaping to put the most cruel possible interpretation on each of their lines. I really don’t think they’re a bad person whose selfishness shows through each and every interaction. More a flawed one who’s good in some ways and quite terribly inadequate in others.
gnome_artificer
Moral ambiguity and nuance, in the fiction I read? How dare Jay. I demand that all characters a clearly labeled paragons of good, or the worst villains ever. Their actions and intentions are irrelevant. / I’m being sarcastic in case it isn’t clear.
Sabella
Please don’t misinterpret what I’m saying as Mel being Pure Evil. The road to hell is paved with good intentions. I see Mel doing a lot of things for Talita, but never really asking for her input on anything. She never looks comfortable with the decisions being made for her that just so happen to also benefit Mel’s standing in the galactic community.
DanielBro
can someone remind me why we are supposed to dislike Mel in the first place?
Kyrean
Not to spoil, but some of us are also bringing to this discussion ambivalence towards Mel due to reading ahead on Patreon.
Mel may be well-meaning, but there are some definite question marks to how often intent matches impact… and whether they actually intent to do good by everyone, or just to appear like they do.
Eux
gosh this is such a cool amount of imagery!!!!!!