Elizabeth (
tearmeanewone) wrote in
thisavrou2017-05-23 10:46 am
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
![[community profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/community.png)
[Voice]
[With all of the quantum shenanigans Elizabeth has ever been involved with, this has to be the one that feels the strangest.]
[The doctor and nurses had been uncomfortably nice, even though Elizabeth had reassured them that they didn't have to treat her delicately. If this was a tragedy, she had no point of reference to mourn it. Seeing them give each other significant, sad glances was only irritating. What was possibly even more annoying though was that Elizabeth waited for the memory of her previous self to come back to her... but it wasn't. If she'd been here before, if she'd broken the rules again, memories of what she'd been like, what she'd said, how she'd died-- they would have been there. Sooner rather than later. But days went by and nothing came. She wandered around the hospital, the staff asked if she wanted to contact someone ("Who do you suggest?" she'd ask, and they would usually shrink back. No one knew who to call), and the day the 'Ingress technician' stopped by asking to talk to her she smelled a scientist and refused to let him in the room. The next day they suggested she go back to her apartment.]
[They drove her to a nice place, that they informed her she'd purchased, and once she'd been inside for a few minutes and her vitals remained stable, they took their leave to let her "get reacquainted".]
[And there she was with the strangest feeling in the world: not knowing what happened to her here.]
[There's an entire room of books-- which makes sense immediately, but the collection is the most eclectic thing she's ever seen. There are clothes in a hamper, rotting food in an ice box, dying plants on a porch, a wadded up blanket and many, many empty mugs. She was lonely, even before her apartment went abandoned for days. Did anybody know her?]
[The basic functions of the device on her wrist were explained to her on the ride to her apartment, but she's still unsure and careful as she makes selections and sets up a broadcast.]
This is Elizabeth DeWitt, formerly of the Moira's crew... [There's a long pause, and she finally realizes there's no way to avoid being straightforward.] ...I'm looking for anyone who knows me. There was an accident-- [Or incident, probably.] --and I've been told I left my timeline months ago and have been living elsewhere. Anyone who can shed some light on where I've been and what I've been doing... I'd like to speak with you.
[The doctor and nurses had been uncomfortably nice, even though Elizabeth had reassured them that they didn't have to treat her delicately. If this was a tragedy, she had no point of reference to mourn it. Seeing them give each other significant, sad glances was only irritating. What was possibly even more annoying though was that Elizabeth waited for the memory of her previous self to come back to her... but it wasn't. If she'd been here before, if she'd broken the rules again, memories of what she'd been like, what she'd said, how she'd died-- they would have been there. Sooner rather than later. But days went by and nothing came. She wandered around the hospital, the staff asked if she wanted to contact someone ("Who do you suggest?" she'd ask, and they would usually shrink back. No one knew who to call), and the day the 'Ingress technician' stopped by asking to talk to her she smelled a scientist and refused to let him in the room. The next day they suggested she go back to her apartment.]
[They drove her to a nice place, that they informed her she'd purchased, and once she'd been inside for a few minutes and her vitals remained stable, they took their leave to let her "get reacquainted".]
[And there she was with the strangest feeling in the world: not knowing what happened to her here.]
[There's an entire room of books-- which makes sense immediately, but the collection is the most eclectic thing she's ever seen. There are clothes in a hamper, rotting food in an ice box, dying plants on a porch, a wadded up blanket and many, many empty mugs. She was lonely, even before her apartment went abandoned for days. Did anybody know her?]
[The basic functions of the device on her wrist were explained to her on the ride to her apartment, but she's still unsure and careful as she makes selections and sets up a broadcast.]
This is Elizabeth DeWitt, formerly of the Moira's crew... [There's a long pause, and she finally realizes there's no way to avoid being straightforward.] ...I'm looking for anyone who knows me. There was an accident-- [Or incident, probably.] --and I've been told I left my timeline months ago and have been living elsewhere. Anyone who can shed some light on where I've been and what I've been doing... I'd like to speak with you.
voice;
Would you like to meet up so we can discuss it in person? Last time, I brought homemade snacks! [Remembering the important things here.] Maybe that and a little show of my powers will jostle something.
voice;
...Powers? [Homemade snacks sound great, but first-- powers?]
voice;
That's right! I have the power of teleportation.
voice;
Someday she'll say things out loud and this won't be a thing anymore, whoops.]...you mean you can spontaneously transport yourself without any kind of machine? [Incredible...] How? [Really, she's asking what made him able to do that kind of thing. For her, she lost her pinky and gradually tears became a part of her everyday life. Was it similar for Kurt?]
voice;
Kurt shall wait patiently for the day!!]That's exactly what I mean! I'm a mutant and the teleporting is my 'mutation,' as it were-- something I've been used to for years now. [He pauses, hmmms with contemplation then continues:] It's not a perfected technique, but as with many talents, the statement 'practice makes perfect' fits well.
The more I train, the further I could go.
voice;
WHAT A GOOD]A mutation? ...As in a genetic mutation? [Something hits her-- he's like a Houdini splicer. But, at the very least, he sounds more sane than all of those ADAM-addled lunatics.]
So this is just an innate ability-- nothing happened to allow you to start teleporting? [Hell, maybe Andrew Ryan was onto something about humans evolving. He was just trying to force the issue instead of... waiting for people like Kurt to be born? Maybe?]
[The man built a city underwater to escape the government. 'Waiting' was probably not in his vocabulary.]
I'm sorry if I'm asking too many questions, I've been to a place where people voluntarily mutate their genes to gain certain abilities. [She'd done it too, technically.]
voice;
Well, mutants are born with something called the X-gene, which allows us to develop powers at a certain age.
[Pushing it to the limit seems like Andrew Ryan's style.]
There's no reason to apologize, Miss Elizabeth! Though, if you don't mind, might I ask what sort of abilities those people were trying to achieve? Have you ever— [he hesitates, reconsiders then shakes his head.] Nevermind.
no subject
I did. [She can guess the end of the question there.] Though it seems to have... reversed itself in the time I've forgotten. I can't seem to use those abilities anymore, which I can't say I'm upset about. Drinking too much of that stuff will drive even the sanest person crazy. [Elizabeth had known that since the first time she'd watched Booker drink one of them. He'd stared at his hands and screamed at what looked like absolutely nothing.]
It's probably better to leave the evolution to those who are born to it.
no subject
[Elizabeth responds to his inquiry anyway and the blue boy inclines his head, imagining what it could possibly be like to reverse those sorts of effects.] So, you avoided addiction to this ingestible concoction? I'd say it's for the best, too. Straying away from substance abuse is always a positive thing, right?
[Or so he'd assume.] Agreed. Forcing oneself to mutate seems like it would be a rather painful process.
no subject
I didn't use enough to become addicted, though I can't say that even the first time was a good idea. Truth be told, I didn't know if I could withstand the effects, but I needed the tool. It was a life-or-death kind of situation. But if I had the choice and it wasn't necessary, I would have certainly strayed away from substance abuse as you say.
Not only because it is painful-- and the things you see after drinking it are usually gruesome-- but because short of whatever happened to me here, it usually isn't reverseable.
no subject
Mmn ... that would change things, then. Under those conditions, I'd say I wouldn't have hesitated to use it either.
Ah— [He wonders how this is going to sound, ends up throwing caution to the wind anyway.] Not reversible, you say? They can implant themselves with these powers, yet can't find a way to keep ill effects from happening to them afterward?