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damned_institute2007-10-26 08:37 am
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Entry tags:
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Day 28: Bus 2
Momo tugged on the collar of the light blue sweater she was wearing as she followed her nurse to wherever these buses were, winding her hair up into its customary bun as she went. It was an odd feeling, knowing she was about to go outside of the institute's borders. Maybe the Head Doctor was about to make an error and the shinigami, as well as everyone else, would no longer be limited and they could finish what they started several nights back.
That was probably too much to hope for. She was feeling better this morning, even with the blood moon, and was mildly looking forward to the bus ride. Captain Jack said he was going to be here this morning and even if it wasn't customary breakfast in the cafeteria, she's be satisfied with him sitting next to her on the bus.
The nurse handed her a muffin, some napkins, and a small box with a straw. She stared at this box for a moment before shaking it. From the sound it contained liquid. How odd... Momo wasn't sure why they would but liquid inside a small paper box - it didn't make any sense to her and she wasn't sure how one was supposed to get it out of the box.
Clambering onto an empty bus, Momo chose to sit in the very back near the emergency exit. Maybe she could force her way out of it as they were moving and escape the limiter enough to come back and level the institute, freeing everyone. Or maybe she just wanted to be able to see everyone that was on the same bus as her. Wishful thinking versus reality.
That was probably too much to hope for. She was feeling better this morning, even with the blood moon, and was mildly looking forward to the bus ride. Captain Jack said he was going to be here this morning and even if it wasn't customary breakfast in the cafeteria, she's be satisfied with him sitting next to her on the bus.
The nurse handed her a muffin, some napkins, and a small box with a straw. She stared at this box for a moment before shaking it. From the sound it contained liquid. How odd... Momo wasn't sure why they would but liquid inside a small paper box - it didn't make any sense to her and she wasn't sure how one was supposed to get it out of the box.
Clambering onto an empty bus, Momo chose to sit in the very back near the emergency exit. Maybe she could force her way out of it as they were moving and escape the limiter enough to come back and level the institute, freeing everyone. Or maybe she just wanted to be able to see everyone that was on the same bus as her. Wishful thinking versus reality.
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A moment's pause then, and he added, offhand, "Come to think of it, I don't think anyone I've spoken to has been here for long."
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Silence fell then, for a few moments as the nurses escorted more patients on board the bus.
Information seemed apropos. Trade for trade. "I've been here not long. A day, perhaps. And an unusual sort of night."
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"It's not that unusual, from what I've heard," he replied, lowering his voice so that it would be difficult to pick out over the general mill of conversation, were anyone inclined to eavesdrop. His gaze shifted away from Emma, sliding easily over the bus to mark out the position of the staff. "Though I suppose the nurses would probably say that most of us have a lot of nightmares. Or are flat out delusional."
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Dark eyes turned upon Sam with a bland look for his briefly sharp one, and blinked once, in sleepy reptilian fashion. "Do you suppose this little outing will feature a library at some point?"
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He had returned in expression to utter mildness, attention split between conversation partner and flow of traffic onto the bus. "I don't know what they have planned," he admitted. "There weren't many details. If the town's not so small it shares a library with the county, it's probably workable."
Which turned his thoughts around again to the night before, and the research that needed doing. Not to mention a brief flash of hope for some method of communication with the outside world. Mildness slipped briefly into abstraction.
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Not to mention the lack of any money with which to purchase time with. But, M mused to herself, with a careful ease to her pose as a nurse ventured a look their way, that particular hill could be taken when the time came. Somehow.
The arthritis she emphatically did not have, plus approximately four decades out of the field, would likely put a damper on any shenanigans involving stray wallets. On the upside, she looked remarkably like someone's grandmama in this getup. Harmless, really.
The sort of smile worn by dragons briefly touched her lips at the thought.
"I do so enjoy a good library. So many things to learn."
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The touch of cynicism faded as he glanced idly out the window once more. "The library here was disappointing."
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(Admittedly, a young Barbara Mawdsley had been all of seven years' old at the time of Germany's surrender, and far more keenly interested in the possibility of her school being bombed than the reasons behind it.)
"Of course, Orwell's mistake was that he gave people too much credit. No need to be nearly as heavy-handed with history and the news as the government of Oceania was when you've got a Page Three girl in the Sun and a football match on."
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"I don't know if it was a mistake on Orwell's part - if it wasn't glaringly obvious, half the readers would have probably missed the point."
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Just an old woman amusing herself with the philosophizing of the young, you see.
"Mm, perhaps," she admitted. "Of course, it now breeds a new crop of insulated young idiots -- yourself excluded, dear," she nodded to him, "Who operate on the principle that because they can have plenty of food and a great deal of sex, the world is nothing like Orwell's."
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And even as he chatted, all youthful philosophy without true direction, he mulled over how to divert the discussion's track, turn it towards the insanities of the night previous.
After all, knowledge is power.
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But, at last growing weary of philosophy, however pleasant a cover, she allowed her side of the conversation to taper away into a look past Sam and out the window, eyes narrowed in an attept at analysis of the trees and the hills and the odd bird.
"I don't suppose you have any botany to go with your philosophy courses, young Sam."
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Plants useful in warding off malevolent entities likely weren't the sort of information she was looking for, he imagined.
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"It's all the wrong continent for me," admitted the very obviously British old woman, lips compressed as if the Americans surrounding her had done this on purpose.
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"On the other hand, if there's a church or two, one might perhaps be able to claim sanctuary. There are a few cases every year of someone holing up to avoid deportation."
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Or, apparently, woke up in the wrong place.
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"I -do- believe they usually contain such things as telephones, however, and likely without too much security around them, if things are done over here as they are at home. Houses of God, sanctity for security and all that."
From her tone, it could be inferred that M preferred to do as much as possible for security via terrestrial means before seeking outside, upside, assistance.
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Alec Trevelyan would never, ever, ever admit this in a million years, but the whatever-it-was in the Sun Room the previous night had scared him. Horribly. He barely caught a glimpse of it, but a very strong hunch told him that it was Bad News, capitals and all. For the first time, he was actually thankful to be waking up in bed. They hadn't made much progress, which irritated him to no end, but they hadn't had to tangle with that...that thing either.
He'd argued with the nurse for a bit about the clothes he'd been given to wear. Due to the scar, he was sensitive about what he chose to wear. Nobody looked good in Landel's grey, so he had to live with it. But damned if he was going to put on a ratty tartan overshirt of his own free will. When the threat of sedation was brought into play, he'd capitulated. Either way, he was going to end up in that shirt. He chose the path of least resistance.
I've got to find Javert, he thought, inspecting the inhabitants of bus two. There was no luck on the first one, so he was either on this one or the third.
"I -do- believe they usually contain such things as telephones, however, and likely without too much security around them, if things are done over here as they are at home. Houses of God, sanctity for security and all that."
Trevelyan froze. It isn't.
A quick glance told him that yes, it was - M, the bloody head of bloody MI-6 (or SIS, or whatever the hell they were calling it today) was on the bloody bus, which meant she was in the bloody Institute. Which meant that this had to be one hell of a British mind trick if they went to such lengths to bring her here, too.
Holy fuck, they really want me to crack, he thought with a sort of demented euphoria, and ducked behind one of the seats.
There! Thursday! She wasn't Javert, but she was someone to talk to. And damn, did he need to talk to someone. Now.
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"Leave out the mental institution, and one might well be a stranded tourist, with one's wallet either mislaid or mugged--"
But at that juncture, a surreptitious sort of scramble from just ahead snapped at M's attention, and a sharp look upwards framed the hanging face of Alec Trevelyan in her minds' eye and left it blazoned there even as the man himself escaped to safer seating.
"What the devil...?" escaped her, mildly querulous at the world once again not revolving to her orders, and the sharp look dissolved into the sort of rapid thought processes and analysis-patterns that had given the Evil Queen of Numbers her subordinate-bestowed nickname in the first place.
Trevelyan, it had to be. She'd never particularly met the man -- he'd existed more as photographs and dossiers, his tenure as a double-0 having begun before her own tenure as M. But it behooves spies both past, present and promoted to retain a memory for faces.
A flurry of plots and counterplots began to spin themselves behind those dark and aged eyes. One hand lifted delicately to pinch at the bridge of her nose, and she wondered of Sam whether "I don't suppose you know who that fellow is?"
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He grimaced as he realised the lapse - something he'd never do on a normal job, he knew - and resolved to repair it when next he had a chance.
However, he was not left much time to self-chastise. The man ahead caught the hunter's attention, and Sam's gaze stayed fixed bemusedly on the back of the obscuring bus seat for a moment. At Emma's question, he shook his head. "I've never met him," he replied, a touch apologetic. "Seemed spooked by something."
It was not, quite, a question.
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Absently, she wondered "Do you meet any people you've met before?"
It was not, quite, an answer.
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