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damned_institute2010-05-21 09:59 pm
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Nightshift 49: 2nd Floor Staff Lounge
(From here.)
Touya stepped through the door and stopped. He'd been in quite a few closets in his time of various kinds, and this was not a closet. Not unless Landel started storing couches and paintings of puppies in his closets. Did he take a wrong turn?
He turned to look outside the door, maybe check the plate on the front, but it slammed shut as Yue walked through. Dumbfounded and disoriented, Touya struggled for something to say.
"Uh..."
That was about all he had.
Touya stepped through the door and stopped. He'd been in quite a few closets in his time of various kinds, and this was not a closet. Not unless Landel started storing couches and paintings of puppies in his closets. Did he take a wrong turn?
He turned to look outside the door, maybe check the plate on the front, but it slammed shut as Yue walked through. Dumbfounded and disoriented, Touya struggled for something to say.
"Uh..."
That was about all he had.
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As soon as he stepped through the door, however, the door closed behind him without being touched, and the guardian's wings half-spread again in surprise -- and found no resistance. Instead of the storage closet with rows of shelves they were in... what was this? It looked like some kind of lounge area, and it wasn't a room he could recall entering. He glanced around with a small frown, taking a cautious step farther into the room. "I don't know this room," he observed warily, forgetting the small fight he'd attempted to start in the hallway in favor of this somewhat baffling occurrence.
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Although it definitely was easy for Sakura to make such a mistake, both Touya and Yue usually weren't as spacey as she was. Was something going on? Regardless of whether or not they had made a mistake though, they probably needed to backtrack a bit and make sure they knew where they were. It would be bad to get lost at night... and during a storm... and when monsters were about...
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Touya walked further into the room, looking at the painting on the wall with a slight frown. Why would such a cushy room be next to a janitor's closet, though? It didn't make sense. Looking back at one of the tables, he spotted a pack of cigarettes behind a lamp and a half-full pack of gum under a chair. Hey, people were always asking for cigarettes on the board--it could be a good trade item.
"Must have taken a wrong turn," Touya said with a shrug, scooping up the pack of cigarettes and crawling down onto the floor to fetch the gum. "Let's find the right door."
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"Renovations" indeed.
He watched the corners of the room warily as Touya poked around, then gave a small nod and turned back to the door. Maybe if he opened it then it would go to the right place. But where exactly was the right place from here?
[to here]
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This time he was a little more prepared. Instead of staggering, Dean just kind of made an awkward shift forward, catching himself on the wall before that sensation like he was going to tumble over a railing hit him full force.
Smell was gone. Dean sniffed again as he brought his flashlight up. Yep. They hadn't just left the kennels, they'd full on jumped somewhere else. Dean was still running through what could be causing it. Wasn't like he hadn't come up with a list but the problem was narrowing it down. None of this felt particularly douchey, so that cut out a Trickster. Felt more random. Dean reached up, adjusted the strap of his duffel bag as he checked the room out. Like the storage room, this just seemed like a regular...well, a regular room. His flashlight fell on a table, magazines scattered on it. Wandering over to check, he picked one up and - just like Sam said. The date was all wrong and they didn't even have a year. Even just flipping through it, checking for any celebrity gossip, it was all just kind of there. Nothing real specific. In fact, he didn't even recognize the hot chick splashed on page 30.
Great. So much for that. They'd have to keep looking. Dean dropped the magazine back on the table.
The place didn't have any other doors or windows as far as he could see, just the way they came in. Checking the cabinet and fridge didn't yield any salt. Place was pretty empty of anything they could use right off the bat.
Dean came back to the Doctor, shaking his head. "Dead end," he said, and paused. "You gonna be okay?"
The other patient hadn't flipped out at the boulders and a roadkill death. Seeing him look at the freaks back there in the cages? Guess some things just hit him differently, he guessed. Dean didn't think the Doctor was going to break down on him or nothin'. If he was that sorta guy, he would've been a mess already.
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But as long as they were getting tossed from place to place, he had to see what, if anything, he could find out. Given the normalcy of their newest location, this might be a good place to start.
Dean had looked at one of the magazines from a table full of them, and the Doctor decided to check them out himself after the other man had moved on. Magazines should have dates, and a date was needed to know when they were dealing with instead of simple generalities and estimates. The Doctor checked the magazine Dean had looked at first, scanning the front and back for a date or any particular headlines. There was no date, and nothing specific on the cover to place it in less certain terms. Frowning, he checked the rest of the magazines, even flipping through one that had looked promising, but they were all vague. Generic. Dateless.
The Doctor looked up from the magazine table when Dean asked if he was okay. "I'm alright," he said simply. The kennels had bothered him, but there was nothing he could do about the creatures right now. He may not have liked it, but he recognized it; he would simply have to try to find them again and see if there was anything he could do to help them.
The magazines had been a bust, but maybe the television would prove more useful. He pointed his torch at it. "I wonder if that gets any news programs at this hour," he said, moving towards the counter where it stood.
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Assuming they'd get something and it wasn't gonna be some weird cockblock like the magazines. Man, that was just dedication right there. Dean was just surprised all over again at the eye for detail - these magazines couldn't be real, not when this kind of stuff should have more tells for the date. Gossip wasn't exactly timeless. But the magazine he'd picked up had been so damn generic that it'd stood out, and he couldn't have been the only one to notice that. The Doctor had picked them up too, and Sam had noticed the lack of date on the newspapers before that. Still, seeding all these magazines and literally wiping out anything that could narrow down the year was way too funky to just be an accident here and there; had to be coordinated somehow.
Dean idled about the room. He'd rather get a move on, but the Doctor wanted answers too. It'd only take a few seconds to check the TV anyway and it wasn't like he had a date or something to rush off to.
He stood off to the side to give the Doctor some breathing room, arms crossed over his chest as he leaned his hip against the mini-fridge.
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He started fiddling with the channel controls, but channel after channel all the television was showing was static. If he'd had his sonic screwdriver, tuning the set to pick up a station it wouldn't normally would have taken no time at all, but without it... He could start tinkering with the set, but that would take time they might not have. The night was already wearing on, and morning always seemed to sneak up quickly.
The Doctor frowned, trying more channels, but they were just the same as the first few. Fruitless though it was, it had been worth the look. No reception on the television, nothing that he could use to place the date—or even the decaded—in the magazines... They seemed unusually determined to keep the date out of sight, and that alone was worth noting.
He turned off the set and glanced at Dean, first joining the man and then heading for the door. "Or not, I suppose. Ready to move on?"
He opened the door and went through.
[To here]
[time-slipping and coming in later]
This room was larger than the previous, and the air about it was less stifling. He trod forward, bare feet on the thick carpeting, towards-- A misaligned strip of carpet caught on a shard of glass protruding from the underside of his foot, moving it backwards. The boy inhaled sharply, dropping into a crouch and carefully letting go of the shotgun. He pulled a foot into his lap, eying it. A bit... worse than he had thought. No matter.
(But was it? Wasn't it more and more delayed? Moments passed before regeneration started, moments and minutes and time. And how, then, would it be this time? How would--)
An expression of fear had settled on to Albedo's face without his knowing. The boy made no move, frozen where he was.
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Still, he stepped back to continue their wanderings, to direct Albedo back to the door, when the variant noticed his brother sit awkwardly on the floor. Here, he realized a mistake the younger had forgotten. Albedo had walked on glass. Of course, he would be sitting.
Nigredo remained stationary but opted to speak, voice rising no more than subdued. "Are you all right?" he asked. "We can stop here." For a while, that is.
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...Hm? And what was this? What an odd development! Wanting to move forward, only to make sure that the other was fine. His sibling was fragile, and when he acted what he was, this inclination grew. How opposite. The same reasoning had prompted violence before, saw Nigredo as prey to tear into and maim. And now, what? Something to protect? It seemed too laughable to be true. Should he search for a different reason, or--
Albedo swallowed once, then stared down again, reaching to pluck out a larger shard. Blood welled, and he watched it as it spilled over. "I'll be fine." Lie. "Sit down, then. We'll rest for a moment."
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Carefully, Nigredo set down the bottle to a nearby table. With no other reason than to wait, he began to walk around the room's perimeter, green eyes fixed on details the child might have missed in his first glance. Logic recognized this as a way for him to distract himself from Albedo's foot but also understood to act otherwise would lead to unpleasantness.
It didn't matter that they'd been close only moments before. That was then, and this was now.
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Beneath his fingers, the telltale glow had started, one wound closing as the other seeped blood. He swallowed, then moved to work the rest out, making a pile of glass next to him. In the minutes that passed, the regeneration would start, slower, and more tolling, than he would have preferred. His head throbbed, and the room tilted on its axis, causing him to put a hand to his eyes. Logic would tell one to eat, give the body back what it had just used, but even with the granola bars in his pocket, Albedo didn't think of it. He merely sat there, then after a minute, started to slowly get to his feet.
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Albedo shifted as though to rise, and the younger turned back immediately. Unlike moments before, he appeared unmoved, stoic. As though a sibling pulling glass out of his feet was normal. The thought slid through his mind in discomfort, but what else could Nigredo say? This could not be helped.
"You should be the one sitting down," he stated.
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"Well... there might be something here," Raine said, looking around. Even if they found any secret passages, they clearly couldn't use them tonight. Still, the long row of cabinets was worth investigating.
And for many reasons, not just potential weapons. She hadn't even reached for the nearest cabinet before she got distracted by the coffee maker on the counter. She hadn't had any in a long time, and getting this little sleep, she could use it. The scent of the coffee was different than she was used to, but it might be worth taking the little appliance with them for a multitude of reasons. If it had a heating element, they could use it to boil water...
Raine opened the cabinet immediately above the coffee maker and started searching for actual coffee. If they were going to be stuck here, they should at least have some of the comforts from home.
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Sullen, the ninja leaned against a nearby wall and crossed her arms. She was irritated, she was annoyed and she really just wanted to curl up in bed with her youkai and not go playing portal jump. It was as bad as that one ranch...
"Hey, Raine... Do you think there's some kind of key to these portals like the Sorcerer's Ring?"
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"Like a switch or something to turn them off?" Yukari mused as she rummaged about. "Maybe in Landel's office, but I don't think he'd let patients wander in there."
There really wasn't much worth keeping, but the youkai did come out of the fridge with three cans of soda, setting two on the counter next to Raine. One stayed there while the other sunk into the counter, eaten by a gap. It reappeared in front of the ninja, falling up in a momentary defiance of physics before gravity took hold again and pulled it back down, causing it to disappear in the gap floating before the girl and pop back out of the counter, only for the process to repeat again.
"If you need caffeine, have one of those - coffee'll take a while to brew. Plus they probably only have instant." Yukari generally preferred tea to coffee, and when she did have coffee, she liked it to be something of quality.
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Either way, the cups themselves would definitely be good to have; she crammed as many as she could fit into her bag, glad they were so light even in stacks. Tonight was probably not going to involve finding anything they really needed, but luxuries were nice too.
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She was, oddly, unphased by the mystically floating cans, having resigned herself to whatever antics the youkai was up to in a way of amusing herself. At least this was tame and kinda neat. She had this instinctive acceptance of the gap and what it was doing, probably from the pact.
Sheena sighed and rolled her eyes. "Stop trying to use my youkai like a beast of burden, Raine. If you want that damn pointless thing, carry it yourself."
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"Maybe; Landel's put some kind of space restriction on how many things I can leave in limbo though," she replied dubiously to Raine's question. "I'm down a couple flashlights, but..." Trying to calculate the volume of what should normally be a limitless dimension of space between spaces was something of a novelty.
"Would you even have anywhere to plug it in? I don't recall any outlets in our rooms," the youkai pointed out. It was probably for the patient's safety - as if monsters roaming the corridor were fine, but open outlets were not. Shrugging, the youkai took another sip and set her can down next to Raine's, while Sheena's gradually came to a state of equilibrium, bobbing up and down in place as if floating in water.
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Sorry for the slow guys, I'll try and be more on the ball for you.
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No worries. This is almost done anyways.^^
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Leela stepped toward the rainy, creepy street, but her boot landed on dry ground, indoors, and on something that cracked under it. Once the room decided it was going to stay put, instead of being an unsoothing blur of soothing colors, she looked down. "Ew!" Broken glass, with what seemed to be blood on it. Elaine's commandeering of the bar from the closet was looking smarter and smarter by the minute.
"Look out!" she said, sure that anything remotely dangerous that could be crashed into or stepped on by Chise would be.
[time-skip alternative]
While exploring the room, Chise was surprised at the huge difference the room was compared to the rest of the institute. Several big differences were the reclining chairs, a mini-fridge, a TV, a coffee tab--oh look! Cigarettes! Something that a certain red-headed-nicotine-addict she met on a bus a week ago needed. After taking the package of cigarettes, she discovered that there was only 8 sticks left, enough to last a week if whoever smoked them was smart.
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For her part, Leela couldn't believe her eye--er, eyes. A coffee maker! "What do you say we take a little rest?" It would give Leela a chance to get some much-needed caffeine, and Chise a chance to get her legs back under her, and... smoke? Leela gave the girl a curious look.
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Lifting an eye open, she noticed Leela's stare before glancing down at the cigarettes she was holding onto. "I-I'm sorry, I didn't know you want one. I'm just holding onto these for somebody else. Do you smoke too?" In Chise's eyes, Leela didn't look like the type who smoked often. But then again, she could be wrong about that.
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She left her flashlight on the table (forgetting it wouldn't turn off by itself), took the machine over to the counter, and gave it a suspicious look. "Coffee, please."
Nothing. Not even mockery. Was she really that far back? Leela knew she hadn't landed too far off from the invention of the suicide booth. Well, that was fine. How hard could making coffee the old-fashioned way be? Oh. It would have to be the really old-fashioned way, with the lights out.
"I don't suppose you have two sticks?" she asked Chise.
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