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pullmeoutalive2009-05-18 01:19 pm
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log > for lack of a better place to do so
He had to wonder how it was that, if no one save a very, very select few could leave Whitechapel, he kept ending up elsewhere. Indeed, this wasn't the steam-driven, smog-choked section of city he called home. This was somewhere else entirely - and startlingly modern in comparison to the Victorian England he was so used to.
It was unseemly of him, but he found himself staring - tall buildings all steel and glass towered over him, and over that lay the clearest sky he'd seen in his entire life. The sun was bright, brighter that it had ever been in Whitechapel, with its constant overhang of smoke. All the better, he supposed, that he was wearing his usual attire, complete with dark glasses.
Alabaster stood alone on the street, a tall figure in smoke black stark against the clean, polished world he now found himself in. There seemed to be no one around. This city, if it was indeed a city and not some ludicrous dream, appeared to be deserted.
He reached into the pocket of his coat, fishing out a pocket watch. In this alien place, was Grandfather Clock - his God, and God over Whitechapel - still watching him through the clockface? Or had the connection been severed with his sudden disappearance?
Such things would be answered in due time, he told himself. For now, there was only the question of getting back. It wouldn't do to have Grandfather Clock's elite agent up and vanish in the middle of a rebellion, now would it?
It was unseemly of him, but he found himself staring - tall buildings all steel and glass towered over him, and over that lay the clearest sky he'd seen in his entire life. The sun was bright, brighter that it had ever been in Whitechapel, with its constant overhang of smoke. All the better, he supposed, that he was wearing his usual attire, complete with dark glasses.
Alabaster stood alone on the street, a tall figure in smoke black stark against the clean, polished world he now found himself in. There seemed to be no one around. This city, if it was indeed a city and not some ludicrous dream, appeared to be deserted.
He reached into the pocket of his coat, fishing out a pocket watch. In this alien place, was Grandfather Clock - his God, and God over Whitechapel - still watching him through the clockface? Or had the connection been severed with his sudden disappearance?
Such things would be answered in due time, he told himself. For now, there was only the question of getting back. It wouldn't do to have Grandfather Clock's elite agent up and vanish in the middle of a rebellion, now would it?
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This, however, was something very, very new. He primarily used these mechanical arms for combat, and every human touch they encountered was jarring, swift, and messy. Saga's touch was soft and tentative (and rightfully so), and--- he couldn't quite place it, but it wasn't a bad feeling. Not by a long shot.
He raised his eyebrows, very slightly, the only indication that he felt anything at all. At least, until he spoke. He found himself sounding, much to his annoyance, slightly distracted, "...What does?"
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"Your limbs," she clarified. "It's not like I haven't seen machinery before, but it rusts, or sometimes something falls out of alignment... but this is something else. Everything's connected to something else for a purpose, and this almost feels... alive."
Suddenly realizing that she had been examining his arm for longer than what had to be comfortable for him, she guiltily withdrew her hand. "S-sorry. This is just new for me."
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"To be fair," he said, quickly regaining his composure. "They are alive."
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Saga leaned back, resting her weight on her heels for a second. "You're amazing," she said honestly, giving him a little smile. "Every time I start to think I understand a little more, you say something else that I didn't expect. That means..." She blinked. "They do register sensation, then?"
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Alabaster began to withdraw his limbs as he spoke, each one folding up on itself and slipping back into his sleeves. "They do, though obviously not in the usual sense." He paused a beat, frowning. "It's difficult to explain, but suffice to say I just know."
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With the hand still against her head, she looked up at him once more. "Well, fair's fair. Is there anything you'd like to know?"
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He thought for a moment, casting a glance around the room. "I suppose the basic workings of your home would be a nice place to start." He inclined his head, considering his soot-and-oil-darkened hands. "And a washroom, if it's not too much trouble."
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At the end of the tour, Saga emerged from the bathroom and nodded to him. "The towels on the counter are for you. Feel free to wash up as much as you want. We'll probably have to look into finding you an extra change of clothing while you're here, too."
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Alabaster nodded at Saga in acknowledgment and disappeared into the bathroom, shutting the door behind him.
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"This is why you should never pull all-nighters," she told the cat (who'd resettled himself on one of the arms), pulling her legs up onto the couch and snuggling against the cushions. "You never know when a nineteenth century Inspector Gadget is going to show up in the middle of the street."
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Still, the man was given a welcome by the other awake inhabitant, who meowed loudly. The sound was audible for once, even if the cat himself remained unseen.
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So, he made himself busy, with as little noise as possible. It took some figuring, but he'd gotten the stove to cooperate and went about making himself a fresh cup of tea.
Alabaster had never had much time to be idle, and on those precious few occasions there was never anyone around to witness what a sight Alabaster Donohue preforming everyday tasks was. He worked with quick and easy efficiency, a dozen things happening at once. One set of arms busied themselves with the tea, another set was peeling an apple he'd found in the fridge, another set was leafing through Saga's notes, while Alabaster himself read them. They made very little, if any, sense to him, but he liked to be informed.
He'd rolled up his sleeves, cuffing them at his elbows, showing off Grandfather Clock's handiwork. The general idea had been that of some long forgotten inventor, the basics being mechanical arms operated by wires and levers attached to the fingers. The idea looked good on paper, but was hard to execute. Grandfather Clock had taken it the next step, allowing the arms to be wielded by the user's own mind. Alabaster had gone through years of training - and more jackets and shirts than he cared to admit - before he could use them with any sort of efficiency. His arms were more steel than flesh (more of the tiny limbs lay in wait on his upper arms, hidden beneath the fabric of his coat) and were peppered with bolts and rivets as easily as one would would find freckles.
After a while, he moved to the table and sat. While he used his own hands to sip his tea on occasion, the other sets still held the notes (which he was very intently reading) and his snack (which he would take a bite out of on occasion). An odd sight if there ever was one.
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It wasn't long after Alabaster had relocated to the table that she wandered in, sleepily rubbing at an eye in an unknowing likeness of a drowsy child. It took her a moment to notice that the apple he was munching wasn't being held in the same hands as the notes he was studying, and she had to do a double-take and search out the actual pair.
"... Now that's what I call multitasking."
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Quickly, he finished up the paragraph he'd been soldiering through and lowered the papers onto the table. "Sleep well?"
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A quick glance over his shoulder revealed what he'd read up to, and now it was Saga's turn to arch an eyebrow. "Interesting choice of reading material, though."
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Alabaster glanced back at her, giving sort of a half shrug. "Most of it seems to be going over my head anyway."
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And yet, the brunette was now flipping through pages with no trouble whatsoever, eyes quickly skimming over the words, and recalling the information she'd jotted down. Another page was turned, and then she continued, "What we need to do now is figure out a way to get the rune to appear again. I felt it when you arrived, but unless we can find a way to draw it out, or if it sends something else from your world, I can't locate it. Learning why you're here and what this journey means is a good start for now." How they were going to accomplish that was still beyond her, however.
((sob need to sleep yaaay opening ;; will tag back tomorrow!))
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She didn't speak again until the smell of freshly-brewed coffee had begun to permeate the air, and then she reemerged with a steaming cup. "If it helps, you should be able to return to the very moment you were pulled from. You won't have missed anything."
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Alabaster leaned back in his chair, finishing off the last of his snack as his mechanized limbs folded back into place against his exposed forearms.
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"If nothing else, we should try getting you a little more accustomed to this place, and that means going back out." She folded her arms across her chest, giving Alabaster a scrutinizing glance from head to toe. "Although you might look a little out of place out there. Well, we'll just have to improvise."
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