Dejah Thoris (
dejah_thoris) wrote2015-07-29 07:44 pm
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[M'ways] Room 1001
It was after dinner and she'd finished up her work for the day. She shook out her hand, stretched the muscles of her fingers, hoping that the tendon would stretch with it. It hurt more and more with each passing day, but she had other things to worry about. Curtis was supposed to meet her after he'd worked out and checked on Edgar.
That was two hours ago. She finally broke down and touched two fingers to her bracelet. It pulsed blue and she got the sense he was in his room. Strange. She touched it again, just to be sure. No, he was there. Alive and attached to the pendant.
She decides to go down and say hello, find out if everything's okay. A few minutes later, she's knocking at his door.
"Curtis?"
That was two hours ago. She finally broke down and touched two fingers to her bracelet. It pulsed blue and she got the sense he was in his room. Strange. She touched it again, just to be sure. No, he was there. Alive and attached to the pendant.
She decides to go down and say hello, find out if everything's okay. A few minutes later, she's knocking at his door.
"Curtis?"
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The jolt's smaller, but much more unpleasant this time. Please, he thinks: don't let her ask for details about that.
" -- so I ended up taking care of him most of the time. Other people helped," he's quick to add. "Most of the kids kinda got raised by committee. But all of 'em had at least one person they went to the most."
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God help them all if that had been the case.
"Little brother...kind of. I don't know. He's Edgar."
It's still as shitty an explanation as ever, and still the only one Curtis knows that encompasses what they mean to each other.
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Her voice drops to barely more than a whisper. "And you've already watched him die once. I understand."
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Curtis lets out a long, faintly shaky sigh, leaning his head against Dejah's. His foot keeps up the slow swing of the hammock, like the sway of the train.
"You know I sometimes thought he was irritating as hell. I haven't thought that too much since we got here."
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"Did I ever tell you John disappeared on our wedding night?"
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From everything he's heard about John, he doesn't seem like the type to get cold feet.
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Woola came to me in a panic. He can track a scent over hundreds of miles. And John was just... Gone. Not in the city. Not anywhere.” Her hand curls into a first around a handful of the soft knit fabric. Her entire body nestles closer to him.
"Ten years we were apart. I knew he was alive somewhere, I could feel it. Turns out, one of the Thern came, transported him back to Jasoom, purely out of spite. It took him ten years but he outwitted them. Found another amulet and came home to me."
She's not quite sure why she's telling him this, other than its a part of her history. The humor returns to her voice. "He used to joke that the best part of that whole mess was, when he got back, I never complained about him leaving his boots in the middle of the floor ever again."
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Ten years. That's barely anything for someone with Dejah's lifespan, but it's, what, a quarter of the time she and John were married? To have so few years together (by her standards), and to have a chunk of that yanked away with no warning, a loved one disappearing with no sign...
(He's thinking of the kids again. Of Gerald, querulously telling his wife he'd be okay, not to worry, he'd come back.)
"I'm sorry you went through that," he whispers.
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"Thank you. I taught me to appreciate the people I love while they're here, because tomorrow holds no guarantees." She pushes away just enough to look into his face. Her eyes glow in the half light. "It also taught me, you humans are incredibly tough bastards. Clever. Resourceful. If something's happened to Edgar, I'm sure whatever it is, he can handle it."
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He strokes his palm over her hair, cradles her cheek. Doesn't say anything right away.
"He spent almost his whole life in the tail," he points out, soft.
It could be agreement. It could mean what Curtis was thinking earlier: Edgar barely knows what the outside world can be like, even on a thawed Earth. What it can do to you.
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She turns her head to place a soft kiss on his palm, and whispers, "What can I do to help?"
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"You said Woola can track people?"
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"Do you have something Edgar wore?"
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(The narration won't say anything about grins that may or may not happen, however.)
He takes her hand, standing up with considerable more ease than she did, and casts a look around the tiny room. "Um -- "
The only thing immediately visible is the twine Edgar made. It's been a while since those socks were on his feet, but maybe it'll work. He snatches it off the table, holds it out to Dejah, and said, "Here. It's old socks."
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She heads for the door, woman on a mission.
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Even without the two of them striding along faster than normal, it's a quick walk to the forge: an elevator ride, a cut through the bar, and they're outside in minutes. Curtis does his best not to fidget, with mixed success.
"How's your hand doing?"
He's not expecting anything but the usual it's fine, but he could use the distraction.
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Even walking at a clip, she reaches out and slips her good hand into the crook of his arm.
"Better in the long run, I feel, so it's worth it. In fact, I think I might be ready for a full trial run. After we're sure Edgar is all right."
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Even the allure of the new arm feels dimmed right now. It's like following the light of the engine straight through the whole train: find Edgar first, worry about everything else later.
"Sure you don't want someone to look at your hand?"
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"I'm not sure it's to that point yet. I just need to put some heat on it, maybe massage out the sore bits. I'm sure it's nothing."
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Last thing either of them need is for Dejah to overwork herself to the point of serious injury.
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She fishes in her pocket for the ball of twine, and whistles. A moment and a puff of dust later, Woola is standing before them, two hundred yards from where he'd been sleeping beside the forge.
"Woola. Do you remember Edgar?"
The calot grumbles a little, looking puzzled. He glances at Curtis and back at Dejah.
"Yes, that's right. Curtis's friend. Here, you can smell him here." She offers the calot the ball of twine. He sniffs it once, twice, and then his face splits in a calot grin. Yes, he remembers that smell.
"Find him, Woola. Find him now." Dejah's voice drops low, and the command is unmistakable.
Woola's face takes on a look of grim determination, and he lifts his nose to the breeze. He takes a few steps towards the bar. Nope. A few steps towards the stables. Nope, not there either. When he turns his head to the lake, his entire demeanor sharpens. Before either one of them can speak, he disappears in another puff of dust.
"This shouldn't take long at all," Dejah says, trying her best to sound hopeful.
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Oh, for fuck's sake, stop it.
At least Woola smelled something. That means Edgar can't have gotten far. He nods, quick and a little jerky, all his attention on the lake.
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"He can cover an incredible amount of ground in a very short time," she assures Curtis. "I'm sure we'll find him in no time at all. Come on."
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He follows after Dejah, still scanning the lake for any sign of movement: the blur of Woola racing along, anybody who might look like Edgar, hell, even the squid. The squid understands English, doesn't it? If Edgar fell in --
Okay, now he really has to fucking stop it if he's seriously considering enlisting Julia Fruitnugget in the search for Edgar.
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