hat_einen_vogel (
hat_einen_vogel) wrote in
damned_institute2010-02-12 06:07 pm
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Entry tags:
- anise,
- hinamori momo,
- indiana jones,
- keman,
- l,
- lunge,
- prussia,
- sylar,
- the flash,
- tsukasa
Night 47: North of the Institute
[From here]
It hadn't been the most graceful landing, but at least Prussia had landed on his feet without injury; a twisted ankle right now would not have been the best thing for his escape.
He picked up the torch from where it had landed, and took a moment to check out what lay ahead of him. The land was unfamiliar to him—even in the dark he would have recognized in an instant if it had been German land—and provided little clue as to which direction would be best to travel in. There were no paths, no roads on this side of the hospital or the side around the corner.
He decided to move along the wall for now, and started heading east. He'd see if there was anything compelling in that direction—some landmark he might recognize or a road or anything—and decide where to go from there.
It hadn't been the most graceful landing, but at least Prussia had landed on his feet without injury; a twisted ankle right now would not have been the best thing for his escape.
He picked up the torch from where it had landed, and took a moment to check out what lay ahead of him. The land was unfamiliar to him—even in the dark he would have recognized in an instant if it had been German land—and provided little clue as to which direction would be best to travel in. There were no paths, no roads on this side of the hospital or the side around the corner.
He decided to move along the wall for now, and started heading east. He'd see if there was anything compelling in that direction—some landmark he might recognize or a road or anything—and decide where to go from there.
no subject
Resentment of his situation would only waste time and energy and distract him, but even so, a small part of his thoughts was devoted to a string of complaints. If he had been investigating something like this under circumstances he would consider more ideal, he could send someone with a phone and a video camera, and direct their movements. They would be well-armed, and he would be in a quiet room somewhere with his equipment, a pot of coffee, and a bowl of sugar cubes. The chances that he would need to visit the site in person would be slim, but if he did, he would be well-equipped, instead of straggling around in the dark with a cheap kitchen knife strapped to his back.
-- Jones had a hat, too.
As they walked, L gave an occasional glance over his shoulder, checking with the flashlight, attempting to confirm that nothing was stalking them. It was, he knew, only a small compensatory effort; attacks might come at a charging pace from the wide open spaces much more easily than they'd creep up from behind in the darkness.
Before he could address his companions' statements, the radios sprang to life: the one Jones held, the one in his own coat pocket.
He focused his attention on the woman's voice. So this was "Jill," and she explained Doyle's apparent return as -- a spell?
L's skeptical expression deepened into a frown. The way her broadcast almost sounded like an interjection into their ongoing discussion rankled at him, but he waited to say anything until the instrumental music had begun to fade.
"Well." He was unable to keep a faint sarcastic note out of his tone. "I suppose she has just answered all of our questions."
no subject
Indy stopped in his tracks as soon as the radios crackled on, the better to listen. Jill's opening statements didn't exactly impress him (she sounded like a student groping for an explanation as to why her term paper was late), and the broadcast only went downhill from there. Her only evidence for Doyle's resurrection--if you could call it that--was that Landel hadn't been around for a day? More importantly--couldn't hold the spell? Indy snorted and almost missed the girl's next sentence amid an instinctive rush of derision. Jesus, sounded like the patients weren't the batty ones around here. What hokum.
Well, even if she was legitimate, he didn't have a hell of a lot of confidence that they'd be able to follow her out of the proverbial woods, especially if she was working by herself.
"I hope that's supposed to be a metaphor," Indy commented with a grim sarcasm of his own, picking up the pace again. Stumping through a cold fog wasn't on his list of top ten favorite activities at the best of times. Now he had even more reason to feel irritable.
no subject
The radio fell to noise, then silence. Lunge looked up, face blank save for the slightest hint of tension in his forehead while he processed the message, and then all he could manage was a flat, "I see.". Even L was frowning now, with good cause; he himself had been accepting most of what he had seen in the Institute as the product of technology, science advanced beyond his own understanding. To make such a deliberate reference to 'spells'...
"Not all of them, unfortunately, though she seems to have some understanding of exactly what happened to Doyle," he said finally, once he had rearranged his thoughts. Best to ignore the less palatable aspects of the broadcast for now. "It sounds as though it was not her doing- at least, not the majority of what happened. It sounds as though she's placing that with Doyle himself."