Renamon (
diamondstorm) wrote in
damned_institute2010-04-13 01:15 pm
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Dayshift 49: Bus 2
Morning hit without warning, with the sheer knowledge hitting the Digimon before anything else that today they were going back to Doyletown. Her feet hit the floor and she rotated her right shoulder experimentally. The skin stretched tight, soreness persevering, but it moved fine. She stretched her fingers then curled them into a fist, staring at the tanned skin that was her right arm. If something happened this time... She would be more useful. Her mind replayed the events of last week, and Renamon stilled, considering.
There wasn't much time left to her as the nurse bustled in with an armful of clothes, the same shade as the weeks before. The woman murmured a cheery complaint that it was too cold for skirts and left Renamon to change. The pants were preferable to the past two weeks, though the other item she was left with gave too much to irony. She frowned at it for a minute, then slid it over her head, reflecting that this motion in days or weeks past would have left her shuddering. It meant she was becoming used to this human body, and that was nothing that boded well. She grabbed her notebook before being led to a bus, and slid into a seat halfway down the aisle, pressing against the window. Again, the previous night had been more than short. Was it just her, or was there something more to it?
[for Haseo!]
There wasn't much time left to her as the nurse bustled in with an armful of clothes, the same shade as the weeks before. The woman murmured a cheery complaint that it was too cold for skirts and left Renamon to change. The pants were preferable to the past two weeks, though the other item she was left with gave too much to irony. She frowned at it for a minute, then slid it over her head, reflecting that this motion in days or weeks past would have left her shuddering. It meant she was becoming used to this human body, and that was nothing that boded well. She grabbed her notebook before being led to a bus, and slid into a seat halfway down the aisle, pressing against the window. Again, the previous night had been more than short. Was it just her, or was there something more to it?
[for Haseo!]
no subject
"Nothing to write home about," he added. His posture took a turn for the worse again as he slouched. "Not like most people here—like Sora, anyway." Not that Sora could write home. Riku had a feeling bottles didn't travel very well from this world back to Destiny Islands.
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Expecting danger here was different from expecting it during nightshifts. With the latter, a person always knew the possibility was there, could almost grow desensitized to the thought in time, but nothing was set in stone. A night could be uneventful in a loose sense of the word. But with the field trips now… They hadn’t been expecting what had happened last. The night hadn’t yet set in before those things had started to appear, and the attack had been on a much greater scale than anything she’d seen in the hospital. The risk, and thus the foreboding, was worse.
Absently, Tsubaki leaned forward a little to better view his face. “So has anyone told you about the field trips?” she asked. She kept any uncertainty out of the question.
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"I guess ... if there's anything to tell, let me know." He welcomed any information that could make his arrival in this town go a little more smoothly. Any information in general was what he wanted about Landel's and this new town, but he realized it would probably hard to get. That wouldn't mean he'd stop trying.
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“But mostly you should be careful. The last time there was a field trip, everyone was still in town when it… changed. Like what happens at night. There were enemies everywhere.”
Which only gave the facts. She couldn’t do justice to the scene.
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"Why can't we just take a bus out when that happens?" He figured if everyone went mindless, it might actually be their opening. A very difficult opening, but one all the same. A diversion with some headed back home and others headed out to the great beyond could possibly work. Then again, he knew he was missing some facts. "The monsters—they aren't that cunning. Right?"
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Riku looked away for a moment, and she remained silent until he spoke again.
“There’s no telling for sure it will,” she felt she should say. But they weren’t words of blind hope, either. Maybe everything would be fine (at least about returning from the town unscathed). Or maybe Landel had something else planned. Always, with this not knowing, it was…
But Riku’s question was compelling. What ways could they escape? Tsubaki hadn’t yet exhausted that possible avenue just because… “No, not the ones I faced. They were… more instinctive. But they were different than the ones that appear around the hospital. They were, uh, zombies.” The word wasn’t unbelievable to her, but merely strange to think about, knowing Sid-sensei and the kind of nonviolent zombie he was. “The buses usually stop outside a park with some nurses on them to watch patients who stay behind.” In other words, there was wide open space in all directions that needed to be crossed before getting to the buses. And after that, there would be nurses to face, mutated nurses.
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"Do we get our powers back if this happens?" It seemed like a good question to ask. "Not the full ones—the limited ones."
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At least there was that. And at least Riku had now heard the worst case scenario firsthand. But Tsubaki had some experience in tactics, stacked odds, and the determination of those fighting for the right reasons—so she had to disagree with his phrasing. The more they learned, there would come a time when they could flip the tables; she knew this, whether or not it took the edge off of her fraying feelings.
She cupped her hands around the leftover portion of bagel, done with it while she could still talk with Riku. “I still think there’s a chance. Besides what we’ve been talking about, it might reveal something about what’s going on. But there is a hardware store and other supply places.” Tsubaki paused for a beat. Their reality was rather pitiless. “In case something happens.”
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"Thanks for filling me in on all this."
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In some ways, the drive down seemed much shorter than the wait to get everyone loaded on did. Once the park came into view, the nurses began to get ready to reverse the process and disembark their patients; the usual wave of movement went through the bus at the promise of their destination. Tsubaki smiled at Riku, but in looking at what lay past the window, her stomach twisted just a little tighter.
What exactly was with this town and what was going to happen?
“If I don’t you see you again today, I hope it goes well,” Tsubaki ventured. “Tomorrow I’ll leave a note for you on the bulletin to check in.” It was painfully apparent to her that putting up notes or searching for faces in the crowd alone just weren’t enough.