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[Location - Arrival Plaza] [Open] New Blood
The smell of blood surrounds Brier as she regains consciousness in a strange room. Everything is sticky, her head hurts and it takes her a moment to realize that other parts of her should hurt as well. She opens her eyes and looks down, through the rip in the shoulder of her shirt and jacket, but where there was a wound before she passed out, now there is none. Exploration of her gut yields the same conclusion. Nothing there but a scar.
She scans the room and notes the lack of windows and doors. Fear stirs her stomach - and then she hears the voice, welcoming her.
- - -
Brier slides the comm unit into a pocket, though she still doesn’t feel quite comfortable with the device and stands, heading for the door.
As Brier steps out, into the corridor, she rubs her hands on the legs of her uniform, trying to reduce the stickiness. It doesn’t help. Half to mostly dried blood is everywhere on her uniform jacket and the shirt, undergarments and skin underneath. It’s on her arms, her hands, and a small smear is on her head, where she put a hand to the pain there.
She lingers at the door for a moment, when she sees there are others outside, embarrassed by the state of herself. But it isn’t as if she can hide in the starkly decorated, windowless room forever. She steps outside and walks into the plaza, stareing at the surroundings with wide eyes.
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"Oh no. I...I don't know how. But the wound has healed." She tugs at the tear in her jacket at the shoulder to show the woman the faint scar. Usually Brier would not show her skin in such a manner, but she is so nervous and the fact that the wounds simply healed is so confusing and alarming that she is not quite thinking straight.
She looks down. "I'm sorry. I know I look alarming. I'm sorry." She tries again to wipe the blood on her hands away onto her pants, with the same results.
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She pats the bench next to her in what is somehow both a reassuring and industrious manner. "Why don't you sit down, dear? You look like you could do to catch your breath."
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"Are you sure? I might get something on it." she says.
She looks around the space again.
"I...didn't die, did I? This isn't...." she struggles for a moment, feeling it somehow blasphemous or at least taboo to suggest aloud that this might be the afterlife, "Some sort of purgatory?"
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She pauses when she sees something in Brier's expression. "Spaceship?" she repeats. "Do you know what that is, honey?"
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The answer might not be surprising. She rather like something out of a fairy tale - not something a main character would wear, but something a bit character would. At least, she would, if she weren't covered in blood.
"I didn't much understand the tutorial." she admits, very softly. "I listened, but I didn't really understand."
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"It doesn't matter anyway, really, does it? Wherever we are, it's where we are." She takes a deep breath. "No use lamenting it. Where do people here eat?" She asks. "I've got a terrible headache. And I need to wash my hands."
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Brier is shepherded off--through a peculiar garden with what looks like an asymmetrical gazebo, over a path of reflective tiles--to a small building attached to the main building; this, the woman explains, is what passes for a restaurant in these parts, and she is the one who runs it. "I'm Norma," she says in passing; "What's your name, honey?" And she takes Brier around the back (inasmuch as there is a back: the floor plan and kitchen are rather open) and presents her with a sink, liquid soap and rag included. Norma eyes Brier in case indoor plumbing is a revelation to her as well.
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"It's like no place I've ever seen." She says, following Norma into the restaurant.
Brier does indeed look to be unfamiliar with the workings of a sink. She reaches down to unbutton her jacket, revealing a shirt which is even more ripped and bloody than the jacket was. She glances over at Norma, an unspoken plea for help.
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Harold Finch stands looking in, holding the leash of a large dog in hand, gazing at the empty room.
"...hello," he calls after an awkward pause. "Is anyone here? The-- the computer said this was an... eatery?"
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She looks a little stymied by the situation, but comes out a few steps to the kitchen side of the counter and manages a smile for the man's benefit. "Yes, this is my restaurant. Go on and sit down if you like, I've just got to--" What she's 'just got' to do she doesn't elaborate on, and instead goes back to Brier's side to help her with more washing up. Sitting down at the counter would indeed afford an alarming view of the two women, the one bloodied and the other getting bloodier with every moment.
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--the visual impact of dark red stains makes the breath wheeze out of him. Finch makes an involuntary noise, then says-- "Bear, zit--" before hurriedly hobbling in the direction of the two women, face aghast.
"Are you alright? Is she alright--? Should I call a doctor," Finch manages, fumbling for the new strange sleek phone he'd been given, before coming to the unhappy realization he has no idea what he'd call or if there are doctors. He stumbles to a stop, staring at the bloody stains on this shy-looking young woman, scanning for injuries with rather more urgency than a simple passerby might evince.
(Detective Carter, she's barely been buried a week, and John, John is hurt, John is missing, John is God knows where--)
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From the small tears in the cloth, the pattern on the cloth of the blood radiating out and down from a place in her shoulder, and another from the lower left side of her stomach, one could surmise that the blood is probably hers, and that she probably lost a lot of it. Enough that her statement might seem very improbable.
On the other hand, this is a somewhat improbable place.
"I'm not hurt," she repeats. "Norma says that it happens sometimes when people come here. Wounds heal. The wounds are gone." She does not favor him with the view through the hole in the shoulder of her clothing that she afforded Norma.
"I'm...sorry if I scared you."
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"Ah. Right," he says faintly, and takes a little step back, glancing between the two blonde women sheepishly. "Sorry, I-- saw the blood and-- please, don't let me-- interrupt."
Bear whines from over there; Finch shuffles back that way, and sits down heavily in one of the chairs, his hand absently going to the fur at the dog's neck and burrowing in for what comfort it may provide in this unsettling moment.
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"I'm sorry." she says, for the umpteenth time. "Thank you very much, Ms. Norma."
"I understand why I alarmed you." Brier tells the man, looking down, her hair falling in her eyes. "The wounds were very bad. But they're gone now."
"I hope I didn't make you lose your appetite."
She thinks about her own appetite. She knows she should be hungry. She knows she should eat, but her stomach won't seem to settle. She reaches to but a hand on it but shies away from doing so, remembering the blood on her shirt.
"And this is where people eat?"
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She doesn't wait for answers, just disappears briefly into the back and leaves the two of them in awkward silence.
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"I'm afraid I don't have the slightest idea what's going on. Besides what the-- the voice said when I... got here."
He looks between the two ladies as if hoping some answer will materialize from either of them.
"Ah-- my name is Harold," he offers. He looks as though he might offer a hand to shake, but 'Norma' is busy with tea and the pale blonde girl is just a few seats too far.
Bear 'solves' this, for a certain value of 'solve' -- he bounces to his doggy feet and comes up to Brier with a plaintive doggy whuff and an inquisitive look, as if he too wanted to ask if she were alright.
"Bear, stop that-- he won't bite you," Finch hastens to reassure the girl. "Bear! Hier!"
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"We had dogs. My family." she says. "He seems sweet."
"I'm Brier." she says. "I've only been for a few hours."
She scratches behind Bear's ears and glances up at Finch. The curiosity in her eyes does not travel so far as to move her to ask a question. Instead she waits, eyes on the man, for what he chooses to share. She takes in his posture and tailored clothing and begins to formulate an opinion on what sort of person she is dealing with.
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"It's nice to meet you, Brier," he offer carefully. "I think about an hour, here. It's quite... quite the shock, isn't it. You... arrived injured?"
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"Do…you want to hear? I don't imagine it is a good thing to talk about while eating. But I can explain."
"Were you doing something important?" she asks him. He looks important to her. "Do you know how we got here?"
She smiles at Bear. "Good boy…" she whispers.
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"I would, yes-- if you don't mind explaining. It might be meaningful, if there's some-- common thread in all this."
He smiles a faint toothache smile at the idea he was doing something important. "Walking my dog. And no, I'm afraid I have no idea.
"He likes to be scratched on his chest."
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”I was in a fight.” She says. She looks down at the hole in her shirt. "He was better than me. We both knew it. We both knew it was a fight I couldn't win, but I had to. Otherwise he would have..." She trails off, her hand on Bear stilling.
"He stabbed me. In the shoulder. And then, when I tried to keep my feet, in the gut. I fell, then. There was so much blood I was sure I was dying..."
She stands and sits on the chair, not meeting the man's eyes. "Then I woke up here, and the wound was gone."
"I am not sure what kind of common thread there could be, there, but I am not always very smart."
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"Bear," Finch scolds absently, the scolding not even making it into his tone as he listens, brows drawn together. He looks rather pale-faced at the mention of stabbing, and he is silent for a handful of seconds in the wake of Brier's soft concluding assessment.
He hesitates a moment, then asks cautiously, "Are you... religious at all? This would seem to qualify as a near-death experience for you."
Though not for him, and Finch rubs his hand absently back and forth on the counter, thinking.
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She bites her lip and casts about for a change in subject "The place where you are from, does it have...spaceships?"
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"Sort of. We have--" he pauses, as he registers Brier's tech level, judging by her clothes at least, may be well back of his own, hang on, reassess...
"...we have vehicles that can leave the earth," he says carefully, "and fly up in the stars, and that's the literal definition of a 'space ship,' but it's nothing at all like all of this."
Finch tries for a game, reassuring smile. "I don't know how much you know about boats? If you ever made a toy boat with a leaf and a twig, and then compared that with a real ship that carries passengers and cargo... I think that's about what my 'space-ship' is compared to this place.
"I'm guessing you don't have spaceships where you're from?"
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She rubs her arms and says, carefully, "I am worried. I have a lot of questions and I am not sure I can bring myself to bother Norma. Do you have any idea where we are supposed to go to sleep?"
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He fusses a bit with Bear's collar, then glances up at the question. "I'm... from what I've gathered, you simply find a room you might like and, well, appropriate it. Squatter's rights, haha. There doesn't seem to be rent, or hotels, or anything of the sort. So... just, um, select something that makes you feel safe, I suppose."
Harold's face reflects that he's somewhat aware of the absurdity of what he's saying. He gamely tries for a bit more:
"Perhaps you might find something close to-- Norma's-- restaurant. That way there'd be someone close at hand if you had problems. Did you get something like this when you arrived?" he asks, pulling out a very sleek little smartphone from his pocket.
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She nods and takes out her device. "I am not sure just how to work it. It talked to me a little though. Before."
"I am not sure anywhere here would make me feel very safe, but it seems like a lot of people settle near here. If I can go anywhere, it might be smart to go further.
"I wonder if they have b..." she trails off before saying the word 'baths'. As alone and unsure as she feels there are probably lines she shouldn't cross discussing with a strange man.
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"I do know a little about machines like this," he says carefully, "if you'd like me to try and help you figure out how to use it?
"Would you find it easier if you could use it by talking to it, and if it talked to you?"
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She offers it too him. "I am not sure I would ever be able to use it properly on my own. But being able to talk to it might help."
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Finch clears his throat. How does one express the significance, the usefulness, of instantaneous communication to someone who's never had it at their fingertips? Hmmn.
"If you should wind up hurt or lost," he says carefully, "you could use this to call someone else-- myself, or Norma, for instance. Even if just for a safeguard against, say, falling and wrenching your ankle, it's worth learning how to use, I'd think.
Finch takes the device, starting to maneuver through the screens with only a moment's orientation as to her item's particular interface.
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"Thank you. For your help." She sighs, leaning on her hand. "I'm very sorry, but I think I may need to go find a place to lie down. Mr. Finch. When you are finished."
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Fortunately, the interface is simple enough by Finch's standards. He elicits a few voice commands from Brier to calibrate things, but in short order he's passing the phone back to her, after explaining how to send out messages.
"Get some rest, alright, miss Brier?"
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