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scarletspeedstr.livejournal.com) wrote in
damned_institute2008-11-20 12:50 am
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Day 37: Breakfast
[for Sylar, I believe]
At the sound of the intercom, Wally jerked awake and blinked around at the room. He’d fallen asleep. He should have been up and keeping an eye open for ZEX, but he’d fallen asleep waiting on his bed.
“Idiot,” he groaned, ruffling his hair and sighing in annoyance. “Way to help a guy out, hotshot.” Hopefully ZEX hadn’t dropped by and thought he’d left or something, or wouldn’t be too mad at him for just forgetting about it like that. If he was lucky, he’d be able to catch up with the other patient at some point and explain what had happened.
Rolling himself a little awkwardly out of the bed, Wally took the opportunity to stretch his injured leg and test how well it was holding up. It was feeling a bit better, not so much that he could abandon his crutch or that it didn’t pull painfully if he wasn’t careful, but better. Tony had apparently made it through the night in one piece as well, which was a relief. He really didn’t feel comfortable about the thought of his roommate wandering about on his own with an injured arm. Not when Wally himself could relax and fall asleep in the apparent safety of their room.
Yeah, he wasn’t going to let himself forget that one in a hurry.
It was at that moment that the door swung open to admit one of the nurses. She seemed surprised to find him awake and ready to go already, but smiled warmly. “Hungry, are we Mr. West? Well in that case, let’s get you to the cafeteria. The staff have provided some delicious French Toast as well as a range of other foods I’m sure you’ll like. Now will you be needing a hand with your leg, dear?”
“No thanks, I can handle it,” Wally replied, smiling back. After all, it probably wasn’t the nurses’ fault that this place was so messed up, so it wasn’t like picking fights with them would do anything. With a cheery wave goodbye, Wally slowly made his way to the cafeteria, keeping a tight grip on his crutch all the while. Obtaining a plate of food was only slightly less difficult than it had been yesterday – he didn’t have the painkillers to work around this time – but he managed well enough, coming away from the buffet with a tray containing a plate piled high with slices of French Toast and slathered in maple syrup, butter, and sugar, as well as a glass of juice. Not quite as good as some coffee would be right now, but the sugar would hopefully make up for it. And, with how few people were here at the moment, he could afford to take more food than might have been considered ‘normal’ – he’d have most of it gone by the time anyone came to keep him company, then he could just worry about how many extra serves would be allowed before he aroused suspicion.
Feeling pretty happy with how things were looking so far, Wally hummed faintly to himself as he dug in to his breakfast.
At the sound of the intercom, Wally jerked awake and blinked around at the room. He’d fallen asleep. He should have been up and keeping an eye open for ZEX, but he’d fallen asleep waiting on his bed.
“Idiot,” he groaned, ruffling his hair and sighing in annoyance. “Way to help a guy out, hotshot.” Hopefully ZEX hadn’t dropped by and thought he’d left or something, or wouldn’t be too mad at him for just forgetting about it like that. If he was lucky, he’d be able to catch up with the other patient at some point and explain what had happened.
Rolling himself a little awkwardly out of the bed, Wally took the opportunity to stretch his injured leg and test how well it was holding up. It was feeling a bit better, not so much that he could abandon his crutch or that it didn’t pull painfully if he wasn’t careful, but better. Tony had apparently made it through the night in one piece as well, which was a relief. He really didn’t feel comfortable about the thought of his roommate wandering about on his own with an injured arm. Not when Wally himself could relax and fall asleep in the apparent safety of their room.
Yeah, he wasn’t going to let himself forget that one in a hurry.
It was at that moment that the door swung open to admit one of the nurses. She seemed surprised to find him awake and ready to go already, but smiled warmly. “Hungry, are we Mr. West? Well in that case, let’s get you to the cafeteria. The staff have provided some delicious French Toast as well as a range of other foods I’m sure you’ll like. Now will you be needing a hand with your leg, dear?”
“No thanks, I can handle it,” Wally replied, smiling back. After all, it probably wasn’t the nurses’ fault that this place was so messed up, so it wasn’t like picking fights with them would do anything. With a cheery wave goodbye, Wally slowly made his way to the cafeteria, keeping a tight grip on his crutch all the while. Obtaining a plate of food was only slightly less difficult than it had been yesterday – he didn’t have the painkillers to work around this time – but he managed well enough, coming away from the buffet with a tray containing a plate piled high with slices of French Toast and slathered in maple syrup, butter, and sugar, as well as a glass of juice. Not quite as good as some coffee would be right now, but the sugar would hopefully make up for it. And, with how few people were here at the moment, he could afford to take more food than might have been considered ‘normal’ – he’d have most of it gone by the time anyone came to keep him company, then he could just worry about how many extra serves would be allowed before he aroused suspicion.
Feeling pretty happy with how things were looking so far, Wally hummed faintly to himself as he dug in to his breakfast.
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He had a good look at the angles of it thanks to the way Kaiji was focusing on the food on the table. Usopp stared for another moment before offering back a hesitant, "Do I know you?" Well, of course not, there was no way he'd forget a nose like that.
Which was bad news, because it meant he couldn't describe himself as the person with the biggest nose available. Sure, his was longer, but this guy had more of a bridge, it might confuse someone. What else could Usopp go by? There was still the pirate bandanna, on the days he thought to wear it, but little costume decorations could easily be mistaken too.
He put a sausage link in his mouth whole and started chewing distractedly. He'd thought that people in other worlds all had small noses, but maybe it was just rare, like back home...
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... Huh.
... Huh.
Maybe they were brothers or something. Or maybe that bastard Head Doctor was just really into collecting people with rare characteristics. That was probably it. Kaiji had met a girl with pink hair the other night: all bets were pretty much off at that point.
"Um, nevermind," he said evasively. Wait, shit, that didn't answer the question! "I mean, no, you don't."
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"Oh. Okay." Usopp tilted his head as he looked over Kaiji a little longer. "... Sorry, but how'd you get me confused with someone else? Were you just looking at the hair, or something?"
He wasn't sure he'd seen anyone else with dark, curly hair here, but it was more likely than the nose, right? "I'm U... the great Captain Usopp."
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"Your face," Kaiji answered absently. It was probably the most awkward way to put it imaginable. Embarrassingly so. "I mean, you don't really look like each other that much if you think about it." Nope, still awkward. "From a distance, maybe." Was that a shoveling sound? Kaiji was definitely digging himself deeper at an alarming rate.
Oh hey, there was a good distraction. What the hell could this kid possibly be a captain of? A team, maybe? Kaiji couldn't imagine someone with a nose like that being into too many popular sports, since most of them involved the risk of some kind of injury or high contact. How easily would such a long nose like that break? The way it looked, he felt like he could just sweep his hand up across the table and snap it like nothing if he wanted to. God, that would be creepy. Why was he thinking about it?
"Captain?"
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"What do you mean?" Usopp leaned across the table a little, staring. "Someone else here has a nose as great as mine?" It wasn't a sensitive spot, rather a point of pride. After all, he'd gotten it from his mother. He rubbed it a bit, leaning back into his seat and frowning. "That'll be really confusing for people. You didn't mean the rest of my face, right?" It wasn't something he was ashamed of, but he also realized it tended to dominate the rest of his face pretty thoroughly. "That's a little disappointing."
It was as an absent aside that he agreed, "Captain Usopp. Right now I work for the Strawhat Pirates, though, and I'm not their captain, more like vice-captain or back-up."
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Kaiji really didn't need to get more similarities to Badou over a conversation about noses.
"I didn't get a good look at him," Kaiji admitted. It had been dark, after all, and he hadn't wanted to get totally mesmerized by that weird-ass nose so he avoided staring as much as possible. Nighttime was dangerous, and death by getting distracted by noses ranked pretty high up on the dumbass scale. "It wasn't the same though," He tried to think of a tactful way to describe the odd man from last night, "I don't know, it's weird as hell. Like a box."
Tactful indeed.
'Strawhat Pirates' sounded more like a name for the bored children of farmers than a legitimate pirate crew. Was there even such a thing as a vice-captain? It wasn't like Kaiji actually knew much of anything about pirates. Or bored farmhands for that matter - it didn't make a difference to him which. "Pirates," he chimed back incredulously, still absolutely unsure of whether he should take this with a grain of salt or not. Where did the Head Doctor find these people?
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It was good news, even if it wasn't perfect. Heck, Robin never called him anything but 'Longnose,' having to clarify that it was a round long nose might be trouble. But it was better than two identical noses like that. There was really only space for one in the crowded Institute, in Usopp's opinion. Relaxing a little more, Usopp went back to his meal for a more casual, less frantic conversation.
"Sure, the Strawhat Pirates. We got that name after the hat our Captain wears; he's here too, his name is Luffy. We were sailing the Grand Line so he could become the Pirate King when we wound up here. Well, first he came here, and then the rest of us have shown up bit by bit over time, although we don't have the whole crew here yet or anything." And some had disappeared, then reappeared... Usopp didn't think anything was strange about the idea of being a pirate at his age, although it was true that his previous crew had consisted of bored twelve year olds. "What's your name?"
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All of the pirate talk was baffling. Kaiji could logically piece together that the 'Line' that Usopp referred to was a place near or consisting entirely of water unless these were some really messed-up pirates, but the mention of a Pirate King went over his head. Why would pirates need a king? Pirate politics obviously weren't his forte.
"My name's Kaiji." His introduction felt lackluster compared to Usopp's, but it was honest. He hadn't earned any interesting titles, nor did he have any desire whatsoever to make one up. He was just Kaiji, nothing more, nothing less, unless someone actually felt like using his family name which he rarely even bothered to mention to people.
The bit about Usopp's crew slowly showing up one by one interested Kaiji more than the bizarre fact that there were apparently relatively young pirates with ridiculously long noses hanging around here. "You think they're trying to get all of you here?"
Even though Kaiji knew little to nothing of pirates, he did know about working with people. He was knowledgeable enough about the subject to know that the best way to kill a group was to split it up. It wouldn't make sense to bring an entire crew of any kind of people together in this place.
Well, that wasn't entirely true: Technically Kaiji, Usopp, and everyone else here made up a group of people. They just weren't really organized or unified.
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He'd gotten too much... how did Luffy eat so much meat all the time? "I don't think they're trying to get us all... it's been pretty weird, to be honest. A few of us were here, and then went away, and then came back. And one of us just disappeared again, a couple of days ago." A little eerie to think he could just up and vanish one day, and he wondered how the others would react. Well, Sanji would probably take it more calmly than Nami's disappearance, at least.
"But we've got our captain, and me as our reliable vice captain and first mate and sniper, and a lot of our best fighters are still here too. So I don't think Landel sent any of us away because he was intimdated, or anything like that. It's kind of random, I think." Usopp considered it a bit more. "The person who was sent away last was one of our smartest people, but our doctor is still here, and he's pretty smart too. I really don't know."
Kaiji seemed to listen well, but he didn't talk a lot about himself, Usopp noticed. On the other hand, Usopp really liked talking, especially about himself, so he thought he could make up the difference in conversation.
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As Kaiji was listening rather intently to all that Usopp had to say, it took a moderate reminder from his eager stomach to get him to split up his attention. He wasn't a fan of multitasking, but he was a fan of eating. "Random," he grumbled between cut-out bits of toast, "It figures." Stupid enigmatic evil people and their stupid unpredictability. He stabbed at his food a little more forcefully in mild frustration, "Nothing about this place can just make sense. The old bastard's probably just trying to mess with your heads."
He paused for a moment: there was something else that didn't make sense about this, and it was more on Usopp's friends' side than the Institute's. "But how could they let themselves get caught and dragged here again?" Whether it was an actual pirate crew or not, one would tend to think that they would want to prevent this kind of thing from happening again as much as possible.
The king of not learning his lesson and getting pulled into things he didn't want to get pulled into really had no room to talk here, but it wasn't like Usopp knew that.
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"Huh? Oh, well, the same way we got caught in the first place, I guess." He shrugged. "The guys who were here before said they don't remember ever being here. Maybe they take away our memories of being here, or something, when they send us back." Pausing, and poking at one of the sausages on his plate with a fork, Usopp added, "Some people say that patients who leave were just 'cured' and believed the things the Institute said, then were sent off to a fake home, or something. But I don't believe that. For one thing, it doesn't make sense; if the doctor here wanted us to really believe in those fake lives, why would he have the whole night horror thing going on? Or let us meet people who remember the exact same stuff we know, like my crew? And where would people go if they were 'cured,' what use would he have for that?"
Sighing, Usopp leaned his head against his arm for a moment. "I don't know what use anyone would have for any of this place, though. But I do know the people who were taken from our crew would die before they'd get brainwashed into giving up their dreams."
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On the other hand, Kaiji knew for sure how he ended up here. Or at least, he was pretty certain. And it made sense. Mostly. If anyone was familiar with them personally (which was next to impossible), they would probably say that it wasn't unusual or surprising.
"You know, I can think of a few things it could be used for," he announced matter-of-factly. Kaiji's contempt for the wealthy and familiarity with the horribly sadistic with too many resources on their hands let him piece together good ideas of why someone would start such an establishment as this. That, and he frequently had an overactive imagination when it came to these things. He could be wrong, but-
No, he was never wrong in his usually-unfounded assumptions about people. Never.
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He had to be curious when Kaiji declared he knew a possible reason for the Institute. "So, what would that be? A motive, I mean. I can't figure out what anybody'd get out of this place. Even the things that seem to make sense don't really, when I think about them a little more." Usopp shook his head and started on the last of the overabundant sausages.
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Wait no it didn't.
"You really don't know how you got here? None of you do?" Kaiji let that little factoid sink in over a bite of the comparatively insignificant amount of meat that he had procured. "Even though it wouldn't make sense, I guessed that it was about the same for everyone. But if it was what I remember, you'd know." His expression shifted unpleasantly as another thought hit him: "Everyone would be more pissed off than confused, too."
Kaiji wasn't even going to try to touch the whole time and memory thing. That was all so far over his head that even attempting to piece it together and forcing it to make sense seemed like a bad idea. Was it important? Maybe. Vital? Not really. Not to him and not right now, at least.
"The reason for this place is pretty easy to figure out." Elementary, dear Usopp. The great Detective Kaiji was all over this shit. "I mean, you've heard the way that guy talks at night, right? There's no way you could miss it." The crazy moonlight rantings of a madman. It was about exclusively what Kaiji's theory was based upon, aside from personal experience with batshit insane rich guys who liked cutting people apart. Thinking about it made his blood boil and he began to speak more quickly. "There are people like that out there, you know, he's probably living out someone's dreams right now." He thought for a moment about what he had dealt with where he was from, then elaborated: "They usually go after the kind of people who they figure no one will miss" -he was referring to himself- "so that no one in the public catches them. They can get away with doing whatever they want. Isn't that what everyone wants? Being able to do anything?"
Now, Kaiji didn't want to assume that everyone here was the kind of person that could go missing or die without anyone even blinking over it, but they were the easiest targets. "There are a lot of different kinds of people here," perhaps most disturbingly of all, "it's how you know that the guy who runs this place knows what he's doing."
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It was true that pirates were the kind of people who could disappear easily, but he wasn't so sure about everyone else here. Still, that wasn't the most important part; even Kaiji had commented on the variety in the patients. "I think that's part of it, too, but that can't be all there is to it. I mean--why bother with the whole daytime part if he just wants to see us running around confused? And it's got to cost a fortune, to run things like this. If he's really using normal stuff to just build a playground. It's too weird to be that simple."
Maybe that wasn't a good argument, especially since they were talking about a theoretical lunatic. Usopp tried again. "Some of the stuff here is really unnatural. One night, I was stuck in a room with giant death slugs, I mean, giant leeches. Not just a couple of them, a whole room full! Falling out of the ceiling and everywhere, I practically had to swim out! It was so bad, I don't even need to exaggerate when I talk about it." That was really saying something, although Usopp supposed Kaiji didn't know him that well yet. "And the way people's bodies are changed... and all the weirdness with the radio, and last night, I saw..."
He abruptly changed topics, shaking his own head violently to clear it. "What I mean is, if this is just a giant game for someone, it has to be the biggest, most complicated, weirdest game ever. Maybe it really is, but we can't really be sure of something like that; if Landel is nothing but a crazy guy who has a lot of spare time and likes running us around like mice," there went that metaphor again, "there's no figuring out what he's really after, or what the core of this place is like. There's no finding the secret and breaking out."
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"I can't explain the giant leeches and two-headed dog people and whatever other crazy shit is crawling around," he admitted, "that's all just part of it anyway." An integral part of existing here, dismissed casually as part of something large and largely pointless. Kaiji's logic truly was flawless. "No matter what the details are, there's got to be a trick to it."
Since when was Kaiji the optimistic one here?
It was true, though - if this was a game, there had to be a way to win even if one side was blatantly cheating or seemed to have the upper hand. And, from the looks and sounds of things, if the patients won in the end, they likely had much to gain from it. The odds were stacked against them, but he knew that their efforts would pay off if only they could find the right solution. How? Who knew? Did it matter? The game theory worked out perfectly in Kaiji's head, so much so that he considered it irrefutable.
"There's always a solution," he said firmly, "It might be next to impossible to find, but there's a trick." This was the glass staircase, the creased paper, the device feeding vital stats to his opponent. It was the missing card in the deck, the proportions of rocks, papers, and scissors. It was anything but obvious. If anything, it was totally absurd at best.
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What had Enel gotten? He'd had power, but had just taken advantage of that to try to destroy everything. Usopp paused, unnerved by the comparison. Wasn't Dr. Landel practically God, here? After swallowing back nerves, he went on.
"I can't figure out what the person here wants... unless it's just to make us suffer. And it seems like it'd be easier to make us suffer without going to all this weird trouble. I agree they're playing a game with us, too! But there's gotta be more to it than that. A game to see... who is smarter, or stronger, or survives better, maybe."
But there had to be a neater way to do that, too. He sighed loudly. "Maybe it's just semantics. They're definitely screwing with us, and I don't think it's just the head doctor behind it, but I wouldn't bet there's a real trick for us to win it. It's not that kind of game. Even if we 'win' the stuff they set up for us, it's never going to be the way out. And that's the only game that's really important to us in here, right?"
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Once again, though, Kaiji's brain was set to work in the midst of new ideas. Something in the last thing that Usopp said clicked with him, and in a matter of seconds he was grinning wickedly. "Yeah, well I'd bet that there is." An idea was brewing.
An insane, next-to-impossible, completely illogical idea.
It might have been just stupid enough to work.
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It didn't explain the grin, though. "... Okay, like what? I'm pretty much stumped still. And the people who're trying to calculate how many people traveling how many hours each night carrying what items and fighting what monsters get how far on full moons when it was a sunny day or whatever seem to be getting a lot of information, but I don't know if any of it really comes together to make sense." He'd skimmed some of those, but it all seemed just as random as the rest of this place.
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"If I'm right about the reason this place exists" - Of course he was - "there are ways to test it. But this kind of thing would take everyone doing the same thing at once. It's next to impossible." How many people were there here? How many different types of people were there here? Why the hell would all, let alone most, let alone several, let alone any of them want to follow the directions of someone like Kaiji? Even if he had his moments, he wasn't always the brightest crayon in the box: all of those weird scars were practically a warning not to go along with any of his ideas. Each and every one of them was the result of a bad decision or a way of getting out of the results of a bad decision.
"Anyway, as I was saying, if this place is just a sick show for someone the most obvious way to solve the problem is to get boring." Fucking genius if he did say so himself. "It would sure as hell catch the head of this place off guard, if nothing else. Has this place ever had a time when everyone was doing the same thing at once? If we could get one thing to work, it could lead to others."
Okay, so it was more than a little idealistic. But damn, if every single person trapped here could do the same thing at the same time, it would be impressive. Kaiji wasn't generally one to work with others, but he could adjust to fit the right conditions. He had done it before many times, and he could do it again now if he had to. "Right now we're all over the place. Like a chopped-up animal." Like his left hand the last time he decided to 'stick it to the man.' "We can't get shit done that way." Yeah, even that bastard who punched him in the face earlier could get in on this brilliance. Everyone meant everyone. It wasn't like Kaiji had never worked with unsavory or disagreeable types before.
"If you had a group this big and that organized and this pissed off working against you, you'd get fucking scared, right?"
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His own efforts to get people to talk about chemicals and simple weapons in an organized fashion had been a disaster so far. It might have been partially credited to his own absolute lack of leadership skill, 'Captain' Usopp or not, but he couldn't help thinking that it also had to do with the personalities of people here.
Still, Kaiji's suggestion reminded Usopp of the uncomfortable rumor that he still refused to believe, no matter how many people swore by it. It didn't make any sense. "So if you play quiet and boring--maybe you get declared 'cured' and disappear like so many patients do. We can't be sure what'll happen after that. And if people refused to play along altogether, stayed in their rooms at night, didn't argue during the day, they'd find other ways to make us act. Were you here for the first trip to Doyleton? They attacked us on the buses--it was fight or run for your lives, free entertainment and no choice on joining in or not."
Usopp shook his head, frowning. "Last night I went out exploring with a friend. I saw a lake, or what I think was a lake. Around it, there were bones. I think they were human bones. I didn't get close to it, but was that part of the game? Or is it part of something bigger? Where did so many bones come from?" After sleep, a meal and a conversation's distance, he was able to at least think about what he'd seen.
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Wait, Usopp had asked a question, hadn't he? "I," Kaiji paused for a moment to try to let everything sink in a little further and to compose himself. "I've only been here for a few days," he finally admitted. Okay, so maybe he was basing his decisions and ideas a bit too much on his past experiences. But really, what else did he have? The commentaries of some people who were in the same situation as he here and there, with a few creepy announcements from the person in charge peppered in between. "But..."
The mental image of what Usopp apparently found last night left Kaiji somewhat shaken: not nearly as much as it must have bothered the ones who saw it firsthand. As much as he wanted to hide that fact, it was practically written in capital letters all over his face. A guy with a megaphone or a voice on the intercom may as well have been announcing it: 'Attention all patients and staff, Kaiji Ito is flipping his shit.'
Unfortunately, even scenarios like this weren't completely foreign to Kaiji. And, in his experience, things like that were not only part of the game, but a central point of it. Survival was basically the core of the massive gambles that he had participated in, and those who lost...
"There's a good chance that that's just a part of it, too."