Jack Ryan (
did_unkindly) wrote in
weathertop2013-02-23 02:59 am
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darling it's better down where it's wetter
It's been a day, it's been a day, it's been a whole damn day -- as near as it's possible to tell in this soggy excuse for a city. It's been a day since he killed Fontaine. And Jack is no closer to getting out. He's still down here. He did everything he was supposed to do and he's still down here.
All he's found is locked-down bathyspheres. Broken submarines. Even the goddamn boats are out of service. Where's Tenenbaum? Where's his fucking rescue?
Jack stares about into the greenish gloom, checks the ammo in his pistol, and then kicks and yanks off the rusting panel of a vending machine. His hands are soon full of little wires and pipes. A few seconds later, he straightens up with a grunt, and the machine gives him a tidy discount on a couple glowing hypos of EVE.
With his visit extended indefinitely, he's begun to wonder how many of them are left.
Now arbitrarily divided into chapters!
Part One: A Scene at the Rapture Adoption Agency ~or~ You Found [Pot of Ham]!
Part Two: Come On-A My House, I'm Gonna Give-A You Candy ~or~ Sinclair? More Like Sin Pantalones!
Part Three: Dream Sequences are a Fresh New Concept in Fiction ~or~ It's My Existential Trauma and I'll Cry if I Want To
Part Four: Southern Education Jokes ~or~ Engineer, Engifar, Engiwherever You Are ~or~ The Grave Escape
Part Five: Golfing Accident Memoirs ~or~ Mom... Dad... I'm Immortal ~or~ How To Make Friends And Immolate People
Part Six: Is It A Pie? Is It A Plane?? ~or~ Two's Company, Three's a Row
Part Seven: Escort Missions! In Rapture! Council's In An Uproar ~or~ Bioshock: Cheesecake Edition
Part Eight: Bread, Milk, BATTLE! ~or~ Pleasant Conversations, How They Bore Me
Part Nine: Choices, Schmoices ~or~ Baby's First Moral Philosophy ~or~ Go Away I Want To Take A Damn Bath
Part Ten: A Man Snoozes; A Slave Delays ~or~ The Four Second Rule Applies To Drugs
Part Eleven: A Hearty Meal ~or~ Skeletons In The-- That's Not A Closet
Part Twelve: We All Live in a Secret Submarine ~or~ Plasmids: Not Even Once
Part Thirteen: Paging Dr Tenenbaum To Surgery ~or~ Bribery And Deduction
Part Fourteen: The Prodigal Son Returns
All he's found is locked-down bathyspheres. Broken submarines. Even the goddamn boats are out of service. Where's Tenenbaum? Where's his fucking rescue?
Jack stares about into the greenish gloom, checks the ammo in his pistol, and then kicks and yanks off the rusting panel of a vending machine. His hands are soon full of little wires and pipes. A few seconds later, he straightens up with a grunt, and the machine gives him a tidy discount on a couple glowing hypos of EVE.
With his visit extended indefinitely, he's begun to wonder how many of them are left.
Now arbitrarily divided into chapters!
Part One: A Scene at the Rapture Adoption Agency ~or~ You Found [Pot of Ham]!
Part Two: Come On-A My House, I'm Gonna Give-A You Candy ~or~ Sinclair? More Like Sin Pantalones!
Part Three: Dream Sequences are a Fresh New Concept in Fiction ~or~ It's My Existential Trauma and I'll Cry if I Want To
Part Four: Southern Education Jokes ~or~ Engineer, Engifar, Engiwherever You Are ~or~ The Grave Escape
Part Five: Golfing Accident Memoirs ~or~ Mom... Dad... I'm Immortal ~or~ How To Make Friends And Immolate People
Part Six: Is It A Pie? Is It A Plane?? ~or~ Two's Company, Three's a Row
Part Seven: Escort Missions! In Rapture! Council's In An Uproar ~or~ Bioshock: Cheesecake Edition
Part Eight: Bread, Milk, BATTLE! ~or~ Pleasant Conversations, How They Bore Me
Part Nine: Choices, Schmoices ~or~ Baby's First Moral Philosophy ~or~ Go Away I Want To Take A Damn Bath
Part Ten: A Man Snoozes; A Slave Delays ~or~ The Four Second Rule Applies To Drugs
Part Eleven: A Hearty Meal ~or~ Skeletons In The-- That's Not A Closet
Part Twelve: We All Live in a Secret Submarine ~or~ Plasmids: Not Even Once
Part Thirteen: Paging Dr Tenenbaum To Surgery ~or~ Bribery And Deduction
Part Fourteen: The Prodigal Son Returns
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--it's open.
Not wide open, not even visibly open until he gets close and starts examining it. But the doors are thrust slightly apart, a small amount of light escaping through them. He throws up dust as he gets close, the motes spiralling in and out of this almost imperceptible glow.
Someone has been through here.
He thinks he might prefer the apathy, because this makes his stomach drop.
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He turns around to check out Jack's progress, and there's definitely more happening on that side of the room than on his. He gives the length of the wall one last skim for good measure and rejoins Jack.
Jack, who is looking at the door in his way like it caught him stealing two Silver Eagles from a cash register in an ice cream shop in a parallel universe.
"...We going in there?"
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"Uh-huh." Jack gets his fingers into some of the door's moulding and pulls. Then tugs. Then strains. Then, at last, shifts the door enough to get his fingers in the gap and pull some more.
And this is why it's useful to take a guy around with you who's built like a brick shithouse.
Jack's concentrating on getting it open, so he doesn't look inside right away, but as the door opens Sinclair will be able to see a more recently-spoiled room than he might be used to. There's no rotting corpses and the lights are all on, but the trash cans are overturned, and there are holes torn in the couches. It looks like it was some kind of waiting area, lushly-appointed, with paintings on the walls and coffee tables on the floor. To their left, it rises into a broad staircase leading out of sight.
The helpful green Office of Andrew Ryan signs have a presence here as well. They're on the right track.
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...Having said that, it sure didn't take long for it to start its descent into the unholy mess it's about to become.
The last time he was in this room was around the time he first came to Rapture. The first step in growing any sort of roots in this place was of course going to be figuring out how to make himself necessary to The Man. That conversation was probably the most civil one they ever had; everything after that remained professional with deep undertones of distrust and spite. Which is the way things went for most people who had to do business with Andrew Ryan. No one really liked him, but it was almost impossible to get anything done with him working against you.
Almost.
"I doubt there'll be much in here, but I can look this room over anyway if you want to go on ahead to Ryan's office," Sinclair says.
If Jack is gonna need a minute to himself, he should at least have that option. It's some heavy stuff, Sinclair gets that.
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And he... does want to see. It's not like Sinclair's going to backtrack as soon as he's gone and shimmy through the crawlspace on a whim. And Jack just has this impending sense of doom about Ryan's office. A feeling he wants to dispel before he goes in there with anyone else.
"...Good idea," he says, nodding without looking at Sinclair's face.
Now that the door is open he sets off up the stairs, not wasting any time.
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For what, he's not really sure. If Ryan was hiding a sub anywhere, he wouldn't have left evidence of it in a room for his guests. But nonetheless, Sinclair picks up a newspaper and shuffles through it, magazines, observes the pictures on the wall. There's a group photo of Rapture's Best and Brightest, opposite a poster for one of Sander Cohen's god awful productions. Sinclair can thankfully say he's never had to sit through one himself.
He kills about three or four minutes that way before he runs out of ways to stay occupied and decides to find Jack again.
And maybe he ought to announce himself coming up the stairs, but he's not sure what he's about to interrupt, if anything, so he keeps quiet.
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The door is closed; Jack is inside.
Jack...
...when he gets to the office, he has to hack the door. And that itself tells him that either it's someone else's home now, or it's untouched.
And it's the second possibility that turns out to be true.
Ryan is still lying on the floor. There are still bullet-holes everywhere from the bots that strafed Jack as he escaped. He doesn't check yet to see if the red Fontaine Futuristics sign is still in place; he's already crouching next to Ryan's body.
It's soft, beginning to rot. His face is eggshell white, but where he touches the floor, where Jack can see skin, he's turned an ugly blotchy purple. The smell is getting towards horrendous. Which is to say it's not much worse than any other part of the city you could name.
The broken golf club is still embedded in his skull, for fuck's sake.
Jack reaches out to touch it, pull it out or something -- but he can't, he pulls his hand back as if it's been burned.
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It smells something terrible in here, but after the room with the decaying Big Daddy, it's nothing he can't tolerate.
Sinclair gently clears his throat.
"Waiting room's got nothing."
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"I... haven't looked around yet," he admits. "I had to hack the door open."
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He gestures back to Ryan's desk on the other side of the glass divide to let Jack know he'll still have a small amount of privacy if he wants it.
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One thing he will admit to, though: looking at the broken club is bringing back awful memories of moving and not being able to stop himself, aware for once of the fact that he wasn't in control of himself at all. He tenses, scowls at the floor, looks up at Sinclair for a moment.
"I don't," he says.
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"Kid," he says, sighing like he's searching for the right words. "You don't have to be a tough guy about everything. Go ahead and take as long as you need."
And with that he starts for Ryan's desk, actually somewhat curious about what he'll find. This is a rare opportunity, and although he's not sure exactly what he's looking for other than evidence of a submarine, he is sure he'll know it when he sees it.
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At least Sinclair didn't comment on the unusual murder weapon. Jack really doesn't feel like explaining himself about that one.
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But they already had the conversation on why Sinclair has no intention of eliminating the word "kid" from his library of endearing terms. Still, Jack's tone makes him a little sad.
"You're somebody's kid," he says, raising his voice a bit for Jack to hear him. "Didn't you have folks back in Kansas?"
He starts on the bottom drawers of Ryan's desk, rifling through files and folders of papers, financial records, the boring stuff. Nothing there.
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"I..."
Jack's answer takes a bit too long to arrive. He doesn't want to tell the truth here, but there's a sentiment fighting to get out.
"They're gone."
He's found some more drawers on this side of the room and he opens one, taking his cue from Sinclair. Papers, nonsense, no big sheet with "SUBMARINE THIS WAY" printed on it.
"I don't want to talk about this, mister Sinclair."
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It's a little too deep of a conversation for Sinclair's taste, though, and Jack's already shutting down to that anyway so he doesn't say anything. But part of him hopes Jack knows it. Weak isn't really a word Sinclair thinks he'd ever use to describe him.
The next drawer up is almost empty except for an Accu-Vox recorder, which doesn't play anything. Blank.
"You're still their kid," he says.
And the top drawer is a long skinny one below the center of the desk, which reveals a few of Ryan's personal effects. A watch with a dead battery, unused stationary with his monogram on it, a picture of Diane McClintock, the pretty blonde who might have been Ryan's wife if he'd had anything other than ice in his ribcage. And buried under all of it, a paper folder which Sinclair fishes out and spreads on top of the desk.
There are a few papers. The first couple are diagrams of pieces of machinery, and the last few are blueprints.
...Blueprints. Of Hephaestus and Central Control. He skims over them, trying to orient himself. There's the main room of Central Control...the stairs they just took...
"Hey, chief, come take a look at this," Sinclair calls out, dropping their previous conversation per Jack's request.
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He keeps wishing that maybe he could be wrong, maybe the memories are based on something real, because they sure as hell feel real even after everything he's heard. But all the evidence points to nope, sorry kid, you really are a motherless freak. Maybe the realness of the memories only go to show what a number they did on his brain.
Oh god what the hell is he going to do when they get to land and he can't find them.
Jack's composed but kind of red-eyed when he joins Sinclair across the room (but if you mention it he will fucking cut you).
"Blueprints," he realises out loud. "There might be a submarine dock on them."
He's taken refuge back in emotional numbness, but this is still a pretty capital find.
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And as Jack looks over the blueprints, Sinclair gets just a moment's look at his face. But he's not going to say anything about that. He wouldn't. Whatever Jack is feeling for whatever reason, it's justified and Sinclair feels confident that he already knows what it is. There's a lot of emotion in this room for Jack, and whether it's any sort of remorse or trauma about what happened with Ryan or whether it's just general homesickness, he doesn't need the salt in his wounds. No, Sinclair didn't see anything.
"I'm thinking even if it's not spelled out on here, we should be able to spot one a lot easier. If you see any unmarked rooms, any doors that look like they don't lead anywhere, any doors that look different from other doors. Those are gonna be the best places to start."
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Jack takes a couple sheets off the top of the pile, glances them over. It's all a bit obtuse and hard to read -- lines on lines on tiny notes on symbols he doesn't understand -- but he tries to work out where they are anyway, going off the shapes of the rooms.
"Where are we?"
Concentrating on work. It's how he's distracted himself from a crushing existential crisis so far and it's how he intends to continue, even if work comes less naturally now for reasons he also chooses not to examine.
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"See these stairs here?" he touches the paper. "Those are the ones we just came up. So we're in this room right now," and again, "more specifically on this side of it."
And he wonders vaguely what Jack did learn back in Kansas. He can't be military, despite his skill in combat, for a multitude of reasons including the inability to read a map with any real efficiency. His skill in combat is what keeps Sinclair from thinking he was just a simple farm boy. That one's gonna eat at him until he finds out.
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But once Sinclair points it out he does recognise the room, with its partitioning and odd bulge off one corner, and their general surrounding area. It probably didn't help that he was looking for it on completely the wrong sheet.
So here's the office, here's the stairs... Jack deliberately doesn't look for the WYK room, because they're avoiding it anyway, and searches instead around the edges of the building. That's where a sub would have to be kept, he reasons. Unless Ryan was planning on carrying it on his shoulders to and from the sea.
He frowns at the paper. They passed through doors here, here, and here as well... so the interlocking symbols there must be doors, it stands to reason. But if this is the corridor from which they got into the office, it... it shouldn't have a door there.
"Then what's this?" he hazards, pointing to the erroneous lines.
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The answer doesn't come right away, and he has to force himself to ignore the simmering anticipation that makes him want to say for sure, yes, that has to be it.
He needs to eliminate all the other possibilities first.
"Could be a closet? Something too small to warrant marks on a blueprint," he suggests. It's damn near impossible, but he doesn't want to call it unless he's absolutely positive.
"I don't remember seeing any other doors, did you?"
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This has to be it.
If it's here, that's gotta be where it is.
"Well it sure looks like there's something there," he says. They're close. As in there's possibly nothing more between them and the sub bay than just a door. And they need to find that door.
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So the corners of his mouth flicker up in answer.
"We should -- go and look." Like, right now.
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