Samantha "Sam" Moon (
thegreatexperiment) wrote in
sixthiterationlogs2018-10-01 12:20 pm
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I'm waving through a window, oh, can anybody see, is anybody waving back at me? [OPEN]
WHO: Samantha Moon
WHERE: Various Locations (see below and put one in your subject!)
WHEN: First week of October
OPEN TO: OTA
WARNINGS: Will update as needed, but just assume Sam's potty mouth
WHERE: Various Locations (see below and put one in your subject!)
WHEN: First week of October
OPEN TO: OTA
WARNINGS: Will update as needed, but just assume Sam's potty mouth
Kitchen at the Inn
It scared Sam a little bit that she was starting to develop a routine. But she was. And whether that meant she was settling down or giving in, she couldn't really say. And she wasn't sure she wanted to analyze it too much. At any rate, for the time being, she was just sort of going with it. Which meant that the first thing she did in the morning was swing by the kitchen. She always waited until after people had done their breakfast thing, so she wouldn't be in the way. Or, more accurately, so her Rube Goldberg-esque distillery wouldn't be in the way.
She usually made about three batches of potato vodka every day, at this point. As long as there were potatoes. She was always careful to cut out the eyes and save them for the botany freaks. Sometimes, she would experiment, trying to mix in different flavorings.
They usually all tasted vile.
But that was fine, since the vodka was strong enough to burn off a normal person's taste buds, anyway.
There was something calming about sitting on the counter, watching the way the diamond-like bubbles traveled through the tubes. Like one of those glittery stress-relievers on the corner of a professor's desk. Sam played little mind games, counting and following and observing. Anything she could do to avoid thinking.
Didn't help much. She still saw Avery's name, like a fucking neon sign on the inside of her eyelids, every time she blinked.
Spear Fishing
Sam decided it was pretty safe to assume that she'd never go down in history as a singularly spectacular fisher. But there was a gross, morbid satisfaction to spearing fish. Likely, it was a combination of factors, the most obvious being that what she really wanted to spear was the faces of their generous Overlords. At least fishing was more productive than hitting a tree with a lead pipe. Her hands still stung from all of the cuts and bruises she'd inflicted on herself. Not to mention the ones Danny had given her.
She wadded up to her calves in the water. The Overlords had given her a pair of black, short pants with laces up either side that, unfortunately, delighted her little Goth-loving heart. And they were perfect for getting wet. Sometimes she wore them with her scrub tops or some of the shirts she'd collected over the past year and a half, but today, she was just in a sports bra.
One thing she would absolutely never take for granted again was the way the sunlight felt on her skin.
Schoolhouse Library
Of the many gifts she'd received from the Overlords, the one Sam trusted the least was the large set of colored pencils. She'd watched one-too-many horror movies growing up. She kept expecting some bizarre plot twist. Every time she'd draw with red, someone would lose blood. If she drew monsters, they'd come to life. Somehow, drawing a picture of something might whoosh it into the circus. The usual tropes from her life before she was, in fact, the monster at the end of the horror movie.
But there was nothing.
Which wasn't to say she started to trust or anything like that. But she did start to draw.
And out of a desperate need to be useful to someone, she'd taken it upon herself to start decorating the library with headers for each category of books. Science. Sports. Mathematics. All of it. With perfect, neat handwriting, she labeled the sections, then drew little pictures around and through the letters. Spinning planets with rings of fire. The pennant over Wrigley Field (if only...). An elegant Pi, like a rusty shed with a roof curved by the rain.
The project was good for long nights, when Sam couldn't sleep. But sometimes, she'd be in the middle of drawing something that would remind her of...
She blinked and saw it again. Avery's name.
And somehow, on stolen bits of paper and old napkins, his face started to appear, thin and bony and redheaded. Just like she remembered him. Just like he'd been when he...
...no. There was no point in thinking about what he'd done to her any more.
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A part of her wished she could. But, of course, then she remembered what had happened when she got drunk off of Bucky's blood and...
...yeah.
That never needed to happen again.
She shook her head and started to put her pencils back into the case. "If you're looking for a good read, they have some Gregor Mendel here." She gestured to the science section. "Man, I used to love that dude. Because I was a total and utter nerd."
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"Gregor Mendel?" Bruce was surprised to hear it, and also, delighted, smiling. "I'm fascinated by the choices they have here. I think it might all be part of the experiment, as if encouraging us to read up on specific things will help." There were stranger things that could happen. He felt like either everything was a clue or nothing was. Or there were red herrings, but they didn't know what it could be, so they might as well note everything.
He went over to the section in question. "You're in good company. This was my pleasure reading as a kid." Bruce had good memories of that, even if not so much with the rest of his childhood. His brain could never get enough of trying to understand how the world worked. Exactly like how he felt about this place and the situation they were in. Sometimes he felt terrible about it, but most of the time? He was fascinated. Absorbed. Curious.
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"Wow," she said teasingly, know full well about glass houses and stones and all that shit, "you must have been a serious nerd. I don't know about you, but I never found that Mendel really killed at parties."
Now keg stands, on the other hand. Yeah, that was a golden ticket to popularity.
She hopped up onto the corner of a table, letting her legs dangle over the floor. "Guess that explains what you're doing here with a loser like me at this time of the evening."
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The tower was a great home, and he was the fool for giving it all up, but that wasn't really something to think about too much right then. Bruce walked away from the books to head back to her, leaning on a table across from her with the back of his legs. "So I guess that makes us a couple of losers. I'm in good company." Bruce wanted to ask why she was so hard on herself, but they didn't know each other well enough for that yet. But he did remember something.
"You asked me to read your pulse, but I didn't want to vomit on your shoes. Was there a reason for that?"
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The irony, of course, was that Sam had been accepted to Harvard. But chosen Arizona State to chase after ghosts that turned out to be...well...vampires, actually. But real, all the same.
This could have been her.
She sighed softly, as he returned to that awkward encounter in the kitchen. "I guess you were pretty drunk at that point," she said.
For a moment, she considered turning back. But it wasn't like she was hiding any more. She couldn't.
So she held out her wrist to him, beckoning him over.
"Step right up. Try your scientific curiosity."
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He did as she asked, stepping forward but still keeping a respectful distance between them. He never liked crowding someone else's personal space. His hand was very gentle when he took hers, cupping it in his palm and easily pressing two fingers to her pulse. He waited, but the thing was, Bruce wasn't ultimately surprised when he didn't hear a heartbeat. Maybe that was odd, but honestly, considering the people here and everything going on, this was hardly the strangest thing to happen. He used to turn into a giant green rage monster. She didn't have a pulse.
"You said life after death, and I guess that's what this means for you." He wasn't going to assume she was anything until she explained in her own words.
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It was funny. She'd never imagined dropping the Masquerade could go so smoothly. But then again, she'd never really figured the multiverse into her predictions.
That would show her. Or something.
"Yeah, I died about four and a half years ago," she said, as casually as if they were discussing the weather. "I'm kind of the village vampire. And no, before you ask, I don't fucking sparkle."
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The look on his face was genuine surprise and confusion. Bruce had no ability to mask his thoughts, most of the time. "...since when do vampires sparkle?" He was too old and too distanced from society to pick up on most pop culture references. Steve was frozen for a long while, and Bruce was fairly certain he knew more about the world at the moment than he did.
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She took her hand back, hooking her thumbs through her back belt loops and rocking on the balls of her feet. One of her two favorite nervous gestures and occupations. It always felt a little awkward, when someone pointed out how young she was. Mostly because she knew she was staring down the barrel of a potential eternity looking the way she did. Already, no one took her seriously. How would she be able to handle that when she was in her forties? Her nineties? Past double-digits?
The mind boggled.
"It's not a big deal," she said. "Or, at least, I don't want it to be a big deal. But I feel like it's only fair to be open about what I am. I mean, in a village this small..."
She didn't know how to end that sentence, so she let it trail.
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"I used to turn into a giant monster called the Hulk whenever my pulse jumped too high. Mostly anger or fear triggered it. He destroys everything in sight. I'm really hoping that whatever they've done is permanent, because none of you should have to deal with him on top of the rest." Bruce hated talking about it, but on the other hand, she was right. People did deserve to know. He told Kira the truth and some ways to get around it if the Hulk ever came back.
"Do you need blood here? I can offer mine, but I'll admit I'm hesitant, I'm assuming the radioactivity from before could be better now, but I'd hate to accidentally poison you with toxic blood."
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"Okay," she said, holding up a hand. "Back up about five steps here. Let's start with the giant monster thing triggered by anger or fear." Which sounded oddly Kindred, actually. Sam hadn't experienced a single anger or fear frenzy in all the time she'd been here. Not even a hunger frenzy. So it was entirely possible she might have some seriously good news for Bruce.
But exposition was desperately needed.
"Uh...explain that part?"
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And it rarely worked. "For awhile, the Avengers were able to keep him in check, focus the rage in the right direction. But it doesn't work anymore." Not the last time he tried. Bruce frowned, crossing arms defensively against his chest. "He's not here though. I woke up here, and he's gone. We always feel each other, only one of us can be awake at a time." The Hulk was gone. Bruce had a lot of complicated feelings on the matter. "It's good though, he's too dangerous to be set loose here." That was an understatement.
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Too outrageous not to be true, then.
They were in the multiverse, after all.
She frowned, a line forming between her eyes. There were a shitload of questions she really needed to ask about this situation. But one in particular rose to the surface and beat out the rest.
"...why green?"
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"I wonder if he's gone because they couldn't replicate the accident, or because they think he's more trouble than they want. Or who knows why, really, but I'm sure it was a deliberate decision." Bruce drummed his fingers on the top of the table, not quite looking at her. "Clones would make sense in this case. The Hulk is a part of my body and my brain most of the time. For that to be completely gone, I'm not sure what it would take, but I'd certainly like to know for my own reasons." To permanently decide to get rid of him? That used to be the goal.
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Which was to say, Bruce might be on to something. Two points of data didn't represent a pattern. But there was the possibility that there was some common theme they'd stumbled onto.
Or it was just the Overlords being control freaks.
Or both. Both was entirely possible, really.
"I wonder if there's anyone else here with a similar MPD-like situation going on that's...no longer going on."
Sadly, the first name to spring to mind was Fucky Darns. But that was different. That was terrestrial in origin and completely in the realm of normal science. Also something he'd told her in confidence.
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"It makes sense. They don't want us to be too powerful. If our Beasts could handle things thrown our way easily, it's not exactly a very good experiment." It would be better to essentially defang them. "Everyone else has lost their powers the same way, but for us it's removing a living entity that used to share our body." So it wasn't the same as simply losing powers, whether you were born with them or not. This would take a more precise touch, and a more precise choice. Unless he was overthinking it, which was always, always possible.
"I'm not sure how we would ask anyone that."
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No way Fucky would volunteer that information.
At least, she didn't think so. Admittedly, he was from Bruce's world, so maybe that provided some kind of cache, but she didn't want to assume. Nor did she want to speak to him ever again, as it was.
"Still," she sighed. "We could get so fucking much done without having to worry about IRB review." She offered him a lopsided smile. How she missed the days when IRBs were the biggest obstacle she was facing.
Another world. Another life. Literally.
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He laughed. "It's a slippery slope to be a scientist without an IRB review, but yeah, in this place, we'd never get anywhere." It was nice to have someone speaking his language who wasn't Tony. "It's interesting, we have a good amount of scientists here, for such a small population." It wasn't like they were in huge amounts or high demand back home. The only time he'd find himself in a room full of scientists is if he was at a conference, not in some supernatural multiverse survival world. "It could be they want us to try and figure it out. Having a lot of people here with no scientific curiosity might lead no where."
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Admittedly, her life already was a fucking messy mix of science fiction, fantasy, and horror.
But it probably wasn't healthy to think of life like a genre.
"I've been here going on two years," she said. "And while I'm not big on the social sciences, I have noticed that a lot of social mores and rules are kind of suspended. I came out as a vampire and no one cared. No one's scared of me. We're all just working toward a greater good." She sighed. "All that to say, I think we could get volunteers. If there are any to have."
Was she proposing a research study to her? Did she have to get down on one knee?
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"I agree. There's no harm in asking and explaining why." Bruce was all about research studies. While he wasn't very good at dealing with people in general, he was confident he'd be fine once they had a focus and purpose. "We'd need the equipment. Someone else asked me about being able to check their friend's blood, I don't know why yet, and said maybe the bunker had equipment to do that."
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Why did she say that?
Sam cringed.
"I mean...you know what I mean."
She really just wanted to...belong. Serve a purpose. Maybe even be fucking useful to someone.
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He isn't bothered at all by her blood reference. Or her being a vampire. "I think in general, we should check everyone's blood who is willing. They've done something to us. Taken things away and can give new abilities too, from what I've heard." Bruce is interested in puzzles, and his interest in science comes from the desire to see how life works. Humans, animals, plants, the world around them, it's a question mark. And now they have more of them. "I'm not sure to what end, what we'll learn from it, but it's better to know than not know."
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But he had a bro of his own. And Sam knew how it was. Given the choice between hanging with her or hanging with someone from home, they always picked someone from home.
She didn't see herself doing research any time soon.
Fuck, she missed Grace. And would have missed Avery too. If she weren't still so furious.
So she shrugged. "I'm here if you need me."
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He smiles at her. "It's your idea, Sam. I'm here if you need me."
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But definitely minus the zits.
"Our idea," she said diplomatically. Nothing would please her more than working with someone. Especially someone as cool as Bruce.
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