Day 51: Breakfast

Yuffie Kisaragi, indomitable bouncing ball of sunshine and unfathomable ebullience, was tired. It'd been a long night full of gibberish and getting nowhere fast.

"Can't I—"

Plucky, who had been busily loading a plate full of French toast and bacon, tittered. "I'm afraid not, Hanna, darling. A chat over a nice, hearty breakfast would do you a world of good, don't you think?"

"Aaaaactually—"

"Come on, let's find you a seat. Plenty to choose from this morning!"

For a long moment, Yuffie seriously considered doing something—anything—to act out. Punch her nurse, rub jam in an orderly's face, climb a wall and hang off the ceiling, jump on a table and parody Loveless… A ruckus like that would definitely jolt her back into gear, right? Sedation aside. And it'd turn Plucky's good day right on its head, which was always a bonus worth shooting for.

But, by the time she'd reached a decision—and it was an epic decision, a really awesome one; everybody'd appreciate the genius, she was sure—she was already alone. Her breakfast tray had been set down neatly by the nurse, who had left with an infuriatingly winsome smile.

"Wow," Yuffie muttered. Shaking her head, she picked a chair at random and threw herself into it. She kicked back, one arm slung across her eyes, to wait. For what, she wasn't totally sure. Some moron to decide that she looked like good company? That was how it usually went.

[identity profile] gamingsostfu.livejournal.com 2010-08-16 10:38 pm (UTC)(link)
Matt refused to give the younger man a full reaction to that statement - or any reaction, really. He had the upper hand here, the brunet knew, and he wasn't about to give it away. So it's not English that I'm hearing everyone speaking, he resolved, his eyes narrowing at empty space, off to the side, as he contemplated. He spoke fluent Japanese, yes - one of the many advantages of being brought up in a House like Wammy's - but at that exact moment, he could swear he was listening to Ishida speak English to him. To be honest, he was somewhat ashamed that he hadn't wondered about the varying origins the other "patients" seemed to come from; not everyone in the world spoke perfect English, like he'd been hearing them speak since his arrival in Landel's house of weird.

He'd noticed, his first day, that Minako was a Japanese high school student. Why, then, had he been so all right with her speaking fluent English? All right, so it was more than likely that she'd learnt such grammatically correct English in a top knotch school in her country, but she'd even greeted him in English. Now that he thought back on the entire situation, it should have set off some bells.

But it hadn't.

Matt silently berated himself as he tried to think of how to handle answering this particular line of questioning. There was really no other conclusion for him to come to, based on this new information, other than that Landel had to have some sort of mechanism at work, right at that moment - something with the ability to alter brainwaves, or some shit along those lines, to give everyone in the facility the impression that they were hearing everyone else speaking their own native language. Which, strangely enough, wasn't an illusion; they were actually having a coherent conversation, one in which both parties were speaking completely different languages and hearing the responses in the one they needed to hear to understand fully.

"Nah," he finally responded, "the language doesn't screw up all the time." In his own mind, he was starting to sound paranoid even to himself, so he wasn't entirely sure if broaching this subject with someone he didn't trust as far as he could throw him was a good idea. Probably not. Mello, though... That was when he decided their next course of action, and Mello could throw a hissy fit all he liked, but Matt had himself convinced that Landel had to be somewhere in the building, controlling all these mechanisms. They needed to find him, but he wasn't on the second or first floor - of that he was sure, and Mello had probably figured it out already as well. That meant that there was either a basement or a third floor - or both.

Only one way to find out, really.

"I'm not sure why they messed up last night," he answered, honestly for once. "There doesn't really seem to have been anything for the crazy doctor to gain from it, to be honest. Maybe it was just to fuck with us?" The idea seemed plausible to Matt. Landel seemed like your run-of-the-mill mad scientist; who knew what was going through the man's head? "The man on the intercom was probably the one who did it. He's the sadistic bastard who runs the place and kidnaps the most random people you've ever met right out of their beds." The brunet was pretty satisfied with that explanation of the Head Doc.

"Every night so far, it's been something different though." He finally took another bite of the french toast, before it got too soggy. "My first night here, the doors went mad. You'd open one, and it'd lead somewhere completely different than it was supposed to. One of them actually opened up into downtown Tokyo." Matt glanced away. He didn't enjoy mentioning that event, and he wanted to make it obvious that he wasn't going to go into detail. "But they were just fine the next morning." A shrug. "Go figure."
Edited 2010-08-16 22:40 (UTC)

[identity profile] repelling.livejournal.com 2010-09-19 11:55 am (UTC)(link)
The length of Mason's delay spoke volumes. Unfortunately, their contents offered little of concrete use to Uryuu. He would hardly sit there, staring, waiting ever-expectant for the reply -- while Mason took his time, Uryuu smeared grape jelly on his toast, and disposed of half of it. His mind raced while he chewed, the act near mechanical.

Depending on what Mason eventually came up with, Uryuu felt he could venture a guess as to the wait. The longer the pause, the less he felt inclined to trust what would be said. At the moment, it probably related to the matter of languages. Had it been to do with "shit pulled at night", the wait could be attributed to distress, or the search for a sufficient summary. Given how easily Mason had mentioned it, Uryuu doubted that.

The answer came, and Uryuu found himself trusting it despite his misgivings. As unnatural as the idea of relying on another person was, he had little choice. Better a patient than an employee. He could confirm these details with others, as well, and given the topic, see for himself. In any case, once Mason began talking, Uryuu's feigned concentration on the meal returned to bottom rung, and he looked across at the other guy, steady and absorbing.

Despite the crude language, the guy was clearly savvy. The man of the hour, Head Doctor Landel himself, certainly seemed the type to do things for no reason other than malice, or boredom. Any reason at all. And after the languages overheard, even he wondered from where everyone else had been taken. The doors sounded absolutely absurd, though it was only one more impossible thing on a teetering stack of others--and not all of them had been placed at this Institute. It had begun in Hueco Mundo, perhaps even Karakura Town.

"Go figure," he echoed, tone dry but not scathing - a recognition of Mason's unwillingness to expand, despite Uryuu's interest in hearing more. A very brief pause to consider his next question, so short as he'd taken time while masticating to organize them.

"Are there frequent escape attempts at night? What is outside this Institute?" And, were there monsters out and in, as Maito Gai seemed to say?