lawful_perfect: (Not amused)
Manfred von Karma ([personal profile] lawful_perfect) wrote in [community profile] damned_institute2010-03-07 11:32 am

Day 48: Sun Room [Second Shift]

Hmph. While this Rude was the proverbial "man of few words," von Karma found more potential use from him than a number of the other patients he had met put together. He would still ask Franziska about the man... as well as the other people he had learned that she had been spending time around. Many of them were utter fools, especially that Kibitoshin.

He ignored the nurse as she insisted that he stay indoors, lest he "catch his death of pneumonia." Already having planned to meet his daughter in the Sun Room, the prosecutor had no intention of spending the cold, gloomy morning in the Courtyard anyway.

It appeared that he was the first to arrive in the spacious room. Gray light from the overcast sky filtered in through the glass windows high above, making it somewhat more difficult for von Karma to peruse the notes on the bulletin board as he awaited Franziska's arrival.

The lines in his forehead furrowed as he saw Kibitoshin's note to her, asking her whether she was "feeling better." What made that blasted oaf think that it was any of his business how she was doing or to worry about her?! She had been raised to take care of herself, damn it! ...Did Franziska say or do something that would lead the clumsy idiot to think otherwise? This, among other things, von Karma would ask her.

After removing his daughter's response to his original note from the board -- and noting that Ms. Taura had yet to reply to his other note -- he sat down at a table in a remote corner of the room, claiming this space that would afford him and his daughter the most privacy.

Mew?

What was that noise? And what was that tugging sensation at the leg of his pants? He peered down in the direction from which the irritating sound had come and was greeted by a tiny orange kitten that had the mistaken notion that his leg was a climbing post. Infernal creature! One glance at his face, and the furry little nuisance was suddenly at the other end of the room, having cleared it within several skittish bounds. Good riddance!

[Waiting for his Dear Daughter]

[identity profile] iwhipthefool.livejournal.com 2010-03-08 02:10 am (UTC)(link)
She had her powder. The prosecutor had awoken to find it neatly packed away as she'd had it last night, but she had little time to do anything other than confirm its presence before she could hear her nurse coming. Janet was a loud woman, often chattering with the orderlies as she came down the hall, and Franziska, for once, was thankful for that. She locked her drawer where she hid the powder and her father's fingerprints and then turned, arms crossed when the door opened behind her.

"Good morning, Wilhe--"

"You're late."

"We thought you might like to sleep in a bit. You're always so stre--"

Franziska's hand slammed onto the table, causing a pen left there for some strange reason to jump and roll in a frantic circle. "You're late," she repeated, earning an exasperated sigh from the nurse. Good deed or no, Franziska hated being left to sleep longer than she liked. "I have things to attend to. Take me to the Sun Room immediately."

Even as her nurse hemmed and hawed, saying she should go outside and enjoy the fresh air, Franziska managed to get to the Sun Room without much difficulty. What lay ahead of her was like a gauntlet, a dangerous task that could mean her death as a von Karma if she took so much as a single wrong step. She had to be a model of perfection, keep her emotions off her face, and never let her father know that she was all but one step away from incriminating him as an attempted murderer. The victim was gone, but the case and the other witnesses remained - or so she hoped. If she lost both of them, fingerprints wouldn't matter a wink. Sure, she could pin him for the crime, but for what purpose? Justice?

At one time, she would have thought that would be all she needed to drive her forward. Now she wasn't so sure.

"You called, Papa?" she asked, being sure to curtsey as she drew within range. It was strange, seeing him like this again. The last time they'd spoken, he'd believed he was someone else. Now, he seemed back to normal, if the fleeing kitten and the scowl on his face was any indication.

[identity profile] iwhipthefool.livejournal.com 2010-03-09 05:26 am (UTC)(link)
Ah, there was no question that he was himself again. None of the strange awkwardness or the unfamiliarity hung about him now. He was the same pillar she'd always known, as stern and unforgiving as ever. As he motioned to the chair across from him, Franziska bowed her head and took it, wasting not a single movement as she perched on the edge of the chair, ankles crossed, legs to the side. Even if she wasn't in a formal setting, her father commanded that sort of...atmosphere. Everything he did was done with such grandeur and--

He began reprimanding her and Franziska remembered why she'd always secretly feared being called to see him. It was times like these that she was reminded that she would never be as perfect as he was. She took the first blow with remarkable strength, merely lowering her head slightly as she thought of her reasoning. That was simple. "Seeing that my enemies are not here, and there are few who see to stop me in my investigations, I saw no harm in disclosing my room number to a man who would not understand code if I laid it out for him like the English ABCs. It was either that or spend a considerable amount of time trying to explain something quite simple to him." Because for all of Kibitoshin's usefulness, he was a straightforward and honest man (alien?), so the use of complicated codes or different languages would do little but frustrate them both. Or so she thought. And Gumshoe was Gumshoe. Scruffy would have gotten up in arms if she gave him the wrong room number - or look like a kicked puppy by the time he realized her intentions. "Unless you think there is someone in this Institute who is going to attempt harm upon a von Karma, that is. Our name may not carry the same weight as it used to, but there are still few here who could even dare think of going up against either you or me, Papa."

[identity profile] iwhipthefool.livejournal.com 2010-03-10 12:48 am (UTC)(link)
The way his eyes narrowed, Franziska could easily pick out his next target. Others might not notice the small clues he put forth during questioning, but having grown up studying his every move, learning how to imitate and mimic him, she had learned each and every one. If she hadn't, she would have been labeled a failure and likely tossed aside. Everything in her father's life was about perfection and the pursuit of that same ideal. At times, Franziska was almost jealous of her sister for she never fell under this scrutiny. She had a normal life, far from the law, with a husband and children like any other normal person had. It only took a moment, but Franziska remembered why she was just 'almost' jealous. The banality of normal life would drive her insane.

"It amazed me that the nurses could not see through it," Franziska commented with a flourish of her hand as she brushed her hair over her shoulder. "But that only speaks to the intelligence of the staff. As for Kibitoshin, his usefulness outweighs his dangers. He is a very efficient battering ram, for instance." And a loyal companion. Much like Scruffy, actually, in the way they both managed to annoy Franziska far too much, but she needed their sheer bulk to get around this place and there was something undeniably...something about them. She didn't have the words to explain the strange feeling they evoked in her, but she figured that it must not have been important. They were useful, that was all. And while it was difficult to balance their necessity with their foolishness, but they both held potential for training.

"But as you say, Papa, I am trying to limit my interaction with all of them as much as possible. I call on them when I need them, and when they are with me, I train them. They will learn to curb their foolish behaviors or the fools will end up learning their lessons painfully." If only she had her whip to snap. Her fingers flexed with the lack of it, like feeling a phantom limb and trying to exercise it. Such an odd sensation.

"Is it not our duty to impart perfection upon our underlings? We are without the cooperation of the police here, or the prosecutor's office. To that end," she said, feeling like she was gearing up for her closing argument in court. "The time I spend with these fools is for their own well-being, however limited that time is and will continue to be. I do not intend to socialize any more than is absolutely necessary."

[identity profile] iwhipthefool.livejournal.com 2010-03-12 02:10 am (UTC)(link)
"I have noticed that staff everywhere are the same - fools in need of a firm hand and a good whipping to teach them to do their jobs." Because really? Really? These clubs were obvious covers that anyone, even her niece's dog could see through. And yet they worked. It made Franziska wonder just how far the facade went and how much the nurses were actually noticing.

Speaking of noticing, Franziska couldn't help but watch the way he gripped his sleeve. It was something she'd seen since she was a child and yet, as of a year ago, she'd believed she'd never see it again. There was something comforting and familiar in that somewhat disapproving gesture and while she wouldn't show it, she did feel better for the sight of it.

"Thank you, Papa. As you've taught me, I try to utilize people as they should be used." She made a small bow and then returned to the point at hand. Kibitoshin's insistence that he ask after her personal wellbeing had been annoying her for some time now, but he refused to stop. "I gave him nothing of the sort. The fool just likes to believe whatever he wants, regardless of how many times I hit him to train him otherwise. I believe it might be like a nervous tick. Which I will eventually beat out of him, or he will lose the honor of my acquaintance." Friendship wasn't even part of the equation. She would never call anyone a friend. She didn't have them. Kibitoshin was useful like Scruffy was useful. She had to remember that. People were pawns and she was the Queen of the board.

But her father was still the King.

"For someone with such a thick head, the training will take some time. I apologize, Papa, if his foolishness has caused you any trouble. I will beat that out of him if it has."