Dejah Thoris (
dejah_thoris) wrote2015-06-09 05:49 pm
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Entry tags:
Prodigal
After a long day in the forge, and a long night of pacing the corridors of the bar looking for Curtis, Dejah had come back to her rooms and tried to work on the prostheses. She'd made significant progress, building the initial layer of isolates and imprinting the neurological signature she'd recorded the very first day onto the layer itself. It took an incredible amount of focus and when she was done, she lay her tools on her work bench. Bleary-eyed and exhausted, she made her way to the bed.
She didn't wake for many hours. Not even the recurring image of Curtis's shy smile melting into the leering grin of Matai Chang could manage to stir her from sleep. It was late in the day when she rolled over and peered at the window. The sun was going down. Or was it coming up? She couldn't tell.
She didn't wake for many hours. Not even the recurring image of Curtis's shy smile melting into the leering grin of Matai Chang could manage to stir her from sleep. It was late in the day when she rolled over and peered at the window. The sun was going down. Or was it coming up? She couldn't tell.
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(She's taking so much care with him. Even now, he's a little baffled by it.)
"Because of the train, or what?" he asks.
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"My memory is -- do you know what 'eidetic' means?"
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"No," he says. "I don't remember."
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She chews her lip, fingertips idly fiddling with the buttons on his shirt.
"I don't want you to think I look at you and see him. I don't. When I say you remind me of him, it's -- something more. It's like hearing a familiar melody in the middle of an entirely different song."
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"Feels like it's a hell of a lot to live up to sometimes," he says at last, quiet.
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"Believe me when I tell you, you already have, in your own way. I would not be here with you if you had not already done so."
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The doubts stay coiled in the back of his mind: quiet, for now, but lingering nonetheless. It's the same old shit he feels when he looks around her room and sees all the stuff she owns. Voicing it won't get them anywhere.
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"And then there's train. I never want you to think I believe I'm above you somehow. Different, yes. But never, never better. And if I say something that makes you feel that way, I want you to call me on that shit."
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And then snorts an equally tiny laugh at her words, in spite of himself. (That's not how he expected her to phrase the sentiment.) Composing himself, returning to the gravity of what she's saying, Curtis nods.
"There's some..." He pauses, trying to figure out how to say it. As he does, he winds his fingers through Dejah's hair. "It's not always in things you say. It's stuff I know you can't help. Like -- how you dress most of the time, and what you've got in here..."
He sighs.
"I still gotta figure some of my own shit out. I forget I'm off the train, you know?"
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Her eyelids flutter at the caress, and it's clear, he's having an effect on her, but she's focusing on his words.
"I do. One of the things I love about this place... It lets me put down a lot of what I carry in Helium. I love Helium, but sometimes, I forget I need to rest."
She takes a breath, a soft, contented smile on her face. "Do you want me to remind you? I mean, if you want to talk about it. Or -- something..."
Again, she falters, grinning despite herself.
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"Reminders might be good." Soft. "If I take it too far. I don't want to get pissed off too much at things that're...I don't know."
He doesn't want to say normal. The train was normal for Curtis. What came before, the parts that've come after -- that's the anomaly.
"I guess just what I said before. Things you can't help."
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"I understand. You're not angry at me. But you are angry, about what happened. To you. To your people. Sweet Issus, do I understand that -- helpless feeling, and the rage it brings."
The answer was right in front of her face, for so many decades. They were sabotaging her work, and she can't help but feel, if she'd only been smarter. Quicker. If she'd known then, what she knows now, then she could have saved so many people. She understands better than he knows.
"It all right to be angry, so long as you don't let it consume you."
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"It's kinda hard to keep it back sometimes," he says. "Just looking around, seeing the shit people take for granted here." His smile goes crooked. "Thank God for the gym, huh?"
(And occasional brawls with Dejah's friends. Er.)
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"Yes, the gym. And now the forge perhaps?"
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"Yeah. That too. Easier to forget what I wanna forget when I'm moving around."
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Quiet, she asks, "What about the outside? Are you ready to go for a hike yet? I hear there are butterflies in the upper meadow, I'd love to see them."
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"Maybe?" he says after a moment. "How long a hike we talking about?"
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Better to have a chaperone, she thinks. Just in case she loses her mind or something.
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A full day sounds too daunting. He's gone outside a few more times since, but after a while, the sheer size of the grounds starts to get to him. Too much sky; too much space.
"I'll ask him. He still thinks grass is one of the best fucking things in the world, so he might be up for it."
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Color Curtis intrigued!
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The arm is on its stand on her work bench, and when she picks it up, he can see it clearly. The upper and lower arm seem to be complete. The hand itself remains a bare metallic skeleton. She brings it and the same small pendant he'd seen before back to where he's seated on the couch.
She settles beside him, the arm resting over her knees. "Want to give it a little test drive?"
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Tentatively, he reaches to touch the prosthesis, sliding his fingers over the metal plating. That's going to be a part of him soon. Uneasiness flickers again, then vanishes just as fast; it's a tool, she told him, no different than a crutch or an umbrella hook.
(Except for how much goddamn nicer it looks.)
"Right now?" he asks, and immediately thinks, that's a dumb question, of course right now.
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"Here, hold it like this." She shifts it into his lap, palm up. "We're going to have to construct a stand for you, so if you want to take it off, it'll be easier to put back on. Now, the pendant is still keyed to your neurosignature." She slips the device, now on a thin silver chain, around his neck, tucking it under his shirt so it's against his skin.
After a moment, a pale blue light start to flicker down through the device, like water wicking through fabric, seeping along the individual threads.
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The fingers of the prosthesis twitch.
" -- Jesus!" He jerks back without thinking. The prosthesis wobbles. Just before it topples off his lap, some signal from Curtis' brain hits the neurotransmitter: the fingers grab onto Curtis' leg, the disembodied arm steadying itself.
Curtis just stares.
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