Iman Asadi (
etherthief) wrote in
bigapplesauce2015-05-07 09:42 pm
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Don't Believe Me Just Watch
"All right kids, here's what it is," says Iman cheerfully. She's punchy today. Spent the last couple days helping Greta move into the formerly-ROMAC apartments, now just apartments - under whose maintenance, well, that's still a bit of a jumble but Greta has a home now, a good safe distance from the former Base, and moreover, it's a beautiful day for some science. She flexes her left hand and gestures demonstratively at the park's edge, the river beyond it, and more to the point, the Rift's border. Not that anyone she knows of has tried escaping Manhattan via the East River, but Satan's notes definitely helped her construct a solid map of its perimeter, and now that she's so close she can almost feel the crackle of energy, tingling a little in her fingers. Exciting stuff.
It's dawn, almost no one's out yet, and at least one of her companions doesn't look too pleased with the choice of hour, but he never looks pleased, so it's moot.
"This is the Rift's edge," she says with a mostly mocking long-buried academic air. "Runs all around the waterfront keeping us boxed in. The rumors tell us that its recent, what do we want to call it, tantrum was immediately preceded by two rifties breaching the border, if not physically, then some other way. We don't know how they did it but we know it can be done." She gives Greta a little smile. They know now that the escapees were Andrew Noble, his husband, and their children, the very same Greta had been looking after - and she knows Andrew had been her first friend here. But the escape has left them with something very important: a proverbial jumping-off point.
"What I'm gonna do is feel it out with this baby." She gives them a little wave with her left hand. "This is what I do back home, and this is possibly the first and last time I'll ever be presented with so clearly delineated a membrane. So if I can't breach it, I can at the very least interact with it, study it, get some idea how far it might bend under the right circumstances. And that's what I'm gonna do."
Well, she's excited anyway. Rush knows he's more or less here to spot her in case something goes horribly wrong, an eventuality she's assured him won't happen, she'll be careful, she promises. Greta, she invited for a little clean fun showing off, and because, well, she wants Greta to know if there's hope of getting home. Much as that eventuality pains her to think about.
Anyway. She cracks her knuckles unnecessarily and gives them a big grin.
"Ready?"
It's dawn, almost no one's out yet, and at least one of her companions doesn't look too pleased with the choice of hour, but he never looks pleased, so it's moot.
"This is the Rift's edge," she says with a mostly mocking long-buried academic air. "Runs all around the waterfront keeping us boxed in. The rumors tell us that its recent, what do we want to call it, tantrum was immediately preceded by two rifties breaching the border, if not physically, then some other way. We don't know how they did it but we know it can be done." She gives Greta a little smile. They know now that the escapees were Andrew Noble, his husband, and their children, the very same Greta had been looking after - and she knows Andrew had been her first friend here. But the escape has left them with something very important: a proverbial jumping-off point.
"What I'm gonna do is feel it out with this baby." She gives them a little wave with her left hand. "This is what I do back home, and this is possibly the first and last time I'll ever be presented with so clearly delineated a membrane. So if I can't breach it, I can at the very least interact with it, study it, get some idea how far it might bend under the right circumstances. And that's what I'm gonna do."
Well, she's excited anyway. Rush knows he's more or less here to spot her in case something goes horribly wrong, an eventuality she's assured him won't happen, she'll be careful, she promises. Greta, she invited for a little clean fun showing off, and because, well, she wants Greta to know if there's hope of getting home. Much as that eventuality pains her to think about.
Anyway. She cracks her knuckles unnecessarily and gives them a big grin.
"Ready?"
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The cab is indeed still waiting for them when they draw into its view. Rush shoots her a wry upward pull of his mouth, small and sidelong, darkened by the troubled notch of a faint frown. "No obstacle is lacking in workarounds." He releases her hand deftly to open the cab's door with a quiet click, and angles his chin to indicate its interior. "I'd know."
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This is not the place for that conversation.
She curls up against the window, staring dully out as the scenery moves by, the driver delivering them back to Greta's building.
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She considers going out after her, trying to catch up, but Iman had wanted to be alone, and the streets are so crowded. She can't even spot her from the window. And Iman had said she would come back - what if she did, and found the apartment empty? No. Greta can't go out looking for her.
So she does the next best thing. A few anxious texts to Rush later, she at least has his assurance that he'll try and track her down.
The scarf is still in a sorry little pile on the bedspread. Greta picks it up and folds it neatly, then holds the little bundle in her hands and stares down at it for several long moments. Her arms twitch and her chin drops, an aborted motion to lift the thing and bury her face in it, but no. This time, it's not home she's missing. She returns it to its usual place, slides the drawer shut, and looks around the apartment in a miserable daze.
Just… the worst kind of fool.
She can't stand the thought of more actionless waiting; she had her fill of that while Iman was unconscious. So she sets about making bread, the motions easy and familiar, enough so that she can still go through them with her attention largely divided between her phone and her worries.
Rush texts her. He's found Iman. Thank goodness.
More waiting. More bread. Until she reaches the part where she has to cover it and let it sit, leaving her with nothing to do but wipe down the counter, and once that's done she'll have nothing to do but pace unless she decides to straighten the rumples Iman left out of her bed, and she's not sure she could bring herself to do that.
Fortunately, the knock comes just as she's finishing the counter.
She opens the door, and there they are - Rush looking typically inscrutable, Iman with her hijab repurposed into a sling. Greta lets out a heavy sigh, and there might be a hint of and-what-sort-of-time-do-you-call-this to it, but for the most part, it's just immensely relieved.
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He sweeps in once Asadi has crossed that threshold and spreads out the unexceptional arrangement of tools procured from the desolate canvas of his old apartment, depositing them neatly in a lateral spill over one of the more immediate lateral surfaces. Asadi had not been terribly responsive for the majority of the trip and had crossed into a territory of locked, deadened silence, and it had been a state of affairs he had found manageable if not ideal. Greta, he has found, is rather more adept at interpreting and reciprocating those nameless conversational cues and he will leave that task to her capable skillset while he organizes his own.
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Finally she looks up at Greta, feeling her heart sink with the shame of what she'd said, how she'd treated her. "Greta, I-" she stammers, feeling herself flush. "I'm so sorry."
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"Oh," she says softly, appalled. "No, it's--I'm sorry, I, I shouldn't have..." Oh, dear. This is all wrong.
And she should probably give Iman the space she obviously wanted and might still want, but now that she's standing right in front of her... she can't stop herself. Greta closes the little distance between them and pulls Iman into her arms, taking care with her left shoulder. "I'm glad you're back," she murmurs.
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"I just needed to breathe," she murmurs. "I'm sorry it was like that. I..." She won't get any further, she suspects, without her voice wavering, and that would be unacceptable. After another moment she pushes back gingerly. "I'm okay," she lies.
That's done. She can't hide there anymore. Slowly, heavily, she turns to look at Rush.
"What are those for," she says dully.
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With more effort than is possibly necessary, he tears himself from that skewed position and faces Asadi fully, punctuating the sharp jerk of motion with the meaningful supination of a hand. "Though it is your choice, naturally."
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"Come sit down," she urges, gentle and practical, giving Iman a light, encouraging nudge in the direction of the table and then going on ahead to pull the chairs back over from beside her bed. "There will be food soon, but in the meantime, you two can..." she flaps a hand at the tools in general incomprehension.
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"You think you can fix this?" she says, and it's not at all a question. There is no grain of hope in her inflection. It's a challenge. She nods pointedly at his menagerie. "With those?"
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"I think I intend to do whatever I can," he says quietly, his tone a delicate veneer over the sudden expectation of flagrant doubt and opposition. "Unless, of course - you have some sort of objection."
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She can't keep the edge of bitterness out of her voice. Yes, Rush helped finalize the death of the limb, but he did it at her request, to save her life, and it's not something he can take back now. She's too tired to humor him. She can't afford hope.
"This technology doesn't exist here, we can't just rubberband it back together good as new. We helped bring down the only place that might have had the resources, if you remember."
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"Nothing," he hisses with an abrupt flare of icy self-possession, one hand unfurling into the savage jabbing of a finger in her direction, "is not fixable. I create workarounds all the fucking time. You haven't evaluated what we have on hand. You haven't even attempted to."
His eyes harden with a cold, faintly mocking edge, digging the bladed edge of his tone behind every ground syllable. "In fact, you've made an alarming number assumptions in the last thirty seconds alone. You seem quite eager to dismiss any and all possibilities, Ms. Asadi; I never categorized you as defeatist."
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She wants to get up and pace but she doesn't have the strength or the balance. She sits tense in Greta's chair, staring him down even as her voice starts to betray her, starts to shake. "Don't tell me I'm being a defeatist, don't you fucking dare. This isn't defeat, it's survival. I know this tech better than you do and I know there's an extremely low fucking probability that we can get it back to what it was, so no, I don't want to waste any energy trying, because I'm not that person anymore. That person is gone. If anything happens to either of you now I can't go busting you out, I can't do shit. I'm nothing now. Just some regular fucking nobody."
Well.
She didn't mean to say about half of that.
But it's too late now. Just like a lot of things.
Never going home. Never gonna be that person anymore.
All gone.
She buries her head in her hand and shakes with brittle laughter.
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"No," she snaps, aghast. "'Nobody'?! How--how can you say that?" She can feel her face flushing, and this is probably a mistake, snapping at her again, but she can't just let that awful sentiment go unchallenged. "Don't you dare presume to tell me that you're worth nothing to me without your arm. I didn't even know it was a prosthetic until a few weeks ago! Was everything that happened before then worthless?" She cuts herself off, quivering a little with the effort of holding herself back - not just from saying more, but from marching right up to the table and doing something truly regrettable, like whacking Iman upside the head.
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"You're not," Rush growls, the words ground out, slow and deliberate, between teeth gritted on an unstable edge, "nobody. You're fucking brilliant and you've one of the finest minds I know. Your worth is not defined by mechanical or technical skill. I'd have thought that was fucking obvious."
His voices lowers, soft and vibrating with cold, furious intent. "Do you have any idea how many problems with extremely low probabilities of success I have circumvented in the past five years alone. Do you think a lack of technology has in any way impeded me in the past." He straightens, his contempt bare, his scowl hard. "One solves the problem. A solution," he hisses, "always exists."
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She already solved a problem once. It was easy. Arm lost to a malfunctioning door, of all things, sure, it hurt like hell but it was such an easy solve. Mother crying that she'd never be the same again, that her career was over. And she was wrong. That was just the beginning. I'm not less of a person now, mom. I'm more.
And now she's less than when she started.
She recognizes some of the hypocrisy here but it's very distant and not much good to her. She can't bear sitting here like this, pinned under the glares of her two closest friends, the closest friends she's ever fucking had, how sad is that, had to come to a new universe and the first couple people she met were gonna be the most important people, well, things are different here, aren't they? Everyone latches onto each other. They have to.
She has to say something. Has to. Time has run out.
"What if there isn't one this time," she says quietly. "What if we can't fix it, Rush?" She looks up at him, fucking pleading with him, begging him to understand. "I need to be okay if that happens, I need to - I need to be prepared."
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"Unacceptable," he snaps, and he finds he cannot confront the immediacy of that judgment and so he backs to lean against the table, fingers curling over edges, the heels of palms wrapped over wood in an even, bracing press.
Having accomplished that buffer, the space between words and consideration, he continues with a leveling off of pitch and inflection.
Reassurances are not what he would regard as a skillset he possesses, but the necessity of their function is inescapable, and undeniable. He claws for that instinct for consolation, knowing its inadequacy.
The snap of past context layered over present is earsplitting and utterly silent.
"You continue," says Rush, quiet and even and unequivocal. "You live. I could refer to a number of vague platitudes, but I doubt you'd find them very constructive." He suspects that Asadi may, like him, find such aphorisms to be contemptibly short-sighted, and infinitely unhelpful.
He shrugs slightly, a fluid lift of both shoulders. "It took me roughly twenty seconds to decide that you were both interesting and pure dead brilliant. This was prior to any knowledge of technological advantages." With a shadow of his former composure as her arm had fractured under his hands, he inclines his head. "You're gonna be fine."
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But she's not friends with Iman's arm. And as fascinated by technology as Rush might be, she's quite certain that her arm isn't what he dove into the Rift to save.
Greta exhales slowly, leaning against the island with her arms folded. "And you will continue to be worth just as much to us as you ever were," she says, her tone gentler, but no less firm, the cadence giving it an implied 'the end,' like the conclusion of a bedtime story. No room for arguments. That's just how the story goes. "If not more."
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But she can't voice that. Rush will just keep insisting. It's exhausting to fight him on this.
"Okay," she mumbles. She doesn't thinks he can manage any greater response than that.
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It is supremely perturbing to be addressing Asadi without the presence of her typical focus and unshakable resolve, and the silence is unnerving and his short, sharp economy of motion stills and he does not face her because he cannot face her because he cannot look at either of them just now, but the conversational vacuum is unbearable and there is something profound and unsettling that hovers outside his periphery, dense and unaddressed.
"Iman," he says, his voice level and abruptly intense. "You were successful in dismantling a government-sponsored organization in a resource-poor situation. You did what should not have been possible on both my account, and Greta's." His hands snap again over the table's edge and he leans over it and he does not look at them he looks at his tools but he does not see them he stares unwaveringly ahead. He breaks off the words in a short sequence with a low, quiet ferocity. "I intend to return that favor."
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She's not quite sure how to follow Rush's promises, delivered with such intensity that she half expects all of his tools to roll a few inches away from him. But she has to say something; the atmosphere in the room has grown unbearably heavy, and Iman's in no shape to lift it. So she takes up the two cups of tea that have been standing by since just before her outburst and carries them over to the table, nudging aside a screwdriver so she can set one before Iman and the other a few inches from Rush's hand.
"I'll help any way I can, of course," she says mildly. "I don't suppose I'll be of much use with all this, but at least I can feed you." None of them have eaten since this morning, and it's getting on towards lunch. She hesitates by the table long enough to rest a hand on Iman's shoulder, then returns to the kitchen to rummage for a bread pan, the domestic clatter fending off another oppressive silence.
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"Thank you," she says.
Greta's interjection helps pull her out all the more; it gives her something to focus on, something nice, comforting. She manages to reach up, almost in reflex, to touch Greta's hand on her shoulder before she returns to the kitchen. Tea, that'll help. Tea and listening to Greta move about the kitchen like everything is normal, and then maybe a forty-eight hour nap. She lifts her tea to blow gently on it, looking over the rim and the steam at Rush's tools, tired, nervous, not sure how much of this she can handle. She takes a little sip. It's hot but that's good. Sensation is good. Better than numb.
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Asadi appears to be equally grateful for the substance and its beneficial properties, but her trepidation is obvious, even to his limited understanding of minor kinesic cues.
"I suspect we will not be able to begin immediately," he says, fingers curling more securely around the cup and its bracing warmth. "There are a number of concepts with which I will doubtless have to familiarize myself." His understanding of neuroanatomy is most likely woefully inadequate in comparison to what will be required.
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