Liz (
alethiometric) wrote in
bakerstreet2012-11-12 08:18 pm
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Entry tags:
The Promises Meme
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the promises meme• Comment with your character's name and fandom in the subject line. • Select an option or roll RNG for a prompt. • Play! promptsi. family. A promise made in the name of family, whether literal or metaphorical. ii. business. No personal feelings involved. Just a working agreement. iii. romantic. A promise to your lover, something that binds you together. iv. enemy. Looks like you made a deal with the devil. v. too good to be true. A promise with hidden caveats. vi. false. A promise you don't intend to keep. vii. broken. A promise you've betrayed. viii. fulfilled. The time has come to make good on your word. ix. bound. A promise you have to keep, whether by threat, blackmail or magic. x. secret. A pact you can't reveal. xi. forever. You're promising forever after. xii. never. You promise that something will never happen. Ever. |
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Great to see you, too.
[It's a relief, at least. Speaking of the backs of cars, he's been in the back of his to get one of the few personal belongings not misplaced. A black leather jacket, zipped up against the cold.]
Are you going to believe me if I tell you I was looking for a different bar?
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I'd believe that before I'd buy into you being worried about me.
[But she smirks, flattered, before handing him back his bottle.]
I need a break before I turn blue, get in the car? [She unlocks the door for him on her way around to the driver's side to get in and turn the key in the ignition. Heat; she seriously needs some heat.]
What was it like when everyone got back? Did they kickoff the witch hunt?
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You decided to stay out, on your own, in woods where another woman recently went missing, on the kind of night that could give you hypothermia just from leaving a window open. I wasn't worried about you at all. [Double-bluff denial. All the cool kids are doing it.] I did figure that if you wanted to call me an idiot for walking out here, I'd have a fair rebuttal.
[He stretches his legs as much as they'll stretch in the limited space, rustling the bag again for the accompanying bag of chips he'd picked up with the alcohol.]
Witch would have been one of the more polite terms used. Some of your townsfolk are starting to make me feel less apologetic for punching one of them.
[Also part of the reason he'd gotten out of there to walk Emma's roommate home.]
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And I know that after David woke up from a coma and somehow went running through the woods, anything is possible. But if we don't find her soon... [Then Regina is going to force her to change it from a rescue mission to recovery. She pulls off her gloves and rests her hands against the steering wheel, feeling come back slowly as the heat warms them.]
Oh, by the way, you are an idiot for walking out here. [Did he think Emma was just going to let it go? She fights a smile with that.] I'm letting it slide since you brought alcohol.
What's the plan, are you heading out tomorrow?
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It's up a main road! [He protests, over his shoulder.] Not like I was swinging tree to tree. Besides, I'm Australian. Born and raised in the bush. [If that internal lie detector she's had installed isn't pinging off the charts now then there's something wrong with it, and he's smiling as he settles back into his seat.]
What's your excuse? Guy wakes from a coma, cheats on his wife, stirs up a mob - coming out here, you're practically asking to be on the next installment of 'As Storybrooke Turns'.
[Chase has seen a lot of soap opera. Very little of it through free will. Sometimes this place sounds startlingly reminiscent of one. His cheek twitches, though, an involuntary facial tell, when she asks about heading out.]
Maybe tomorrow.
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Maybe? [Maybe she doesn't buy it. She reaches for the bottle as she studies him, debating whether or not to say anything about that.] I believe that like I believe you're the outdoorsy Australian you say you are. [That could have been put more delicately. She swears at the taste as she takes a deeper drink and tells herself that is the last one, especially since she has to drive home later.]
If you keep this good behavior up, we might just be sad to see you go.
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He dips into the chip packet before shaking the bag her way.]
I figure I can call in the morning and see how much I'm needed. Driving too early might not be a great idea.
[Not when he plans on staying out here as long as she does. He's not admitting that yet.]
I really was looking for a different bar.
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You know, I can take care of myself, Robert. [Which, of course, is said with the confidence of a woman who has never had any other option. She would have known when to stop looking even if he hadn't come around, but now she's considering calling it quits for the night - she has to make sure he gets back to Granny's safely, he's not allowed to walk back the way he came. He might end up lost or sick that way.]
I was just going to keep taking breaks. [Pretty much all night. Is there something wrong with that?]
I know there's something out here, I just need to find it.
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Looks like I found the only place.
[And yes, that was before Ruby and Mary Margaret pointed out they hadn't seen her around, which had come after Chase had noticed that fact for himself. There's something about being trapped behind a food service counter: you can spend a lot of time watching the door.]
You don't want to go back yet, fine. But you shouldn't be out here alone. I've done a lot of night shifts, I can handle one more.
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But alone, I'm good with alone. I work well alone. [Generally not by choice though. She leans back in her seat, quiet until she realizes how ungrateful it sounds when she's being defensive. He was allowed to come looking if he wanted to, but Emma feels guilty to have sent him out into the cold like this.]
Not that I don't appreciate you coming out here, because I do. [She offers him a smile this time, not hiding it the way she's usually tempted to.] I'm guessing this isn't the type of night shift you're usually stuck on?
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[He didn't come for the gratitude. There was a time when seeking praise motivated everything he did, but three years working under House knocked most of that out of him. Not to say he doesn't crave approval, he's just stopped expecting it. Now he's suspicious of praise given too easily. It's pleasant, but devalued compared to the kind that requires work.
He leans forward, elbow resting on the now-warm dashboard.]
Besides, if Kathryn's still out here to be found, at this point she's likely to be in the kind of condition where having someone like me around might come in handy. And that's exactly the kind of night shift I'm usually stuck on.
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Mary Margaret refuses to believe that anyone could suspect she did something to Kathryn. [If she hasn't already found out that she's wrong about that, she will soon enough. Emma knows she should be home with her, but the need to support her is overshadowed by the need to do something useful to prove that she had nothing to do with this. It's not every day that someone goes missing, it's important that the town sees the sheriff following procedure.]
And David's more worried about Kathryn than he is about covering his own ass, so both of them...I don't know. [And that thought has her tempted to reach for the bottle again. She gives a little shrug and smooths her hands over her knees instead.] I'd like to think that Kathryn is somewhere waiting to be found, but if we're realistic about this, there are plenty of other things that could have happened to her before she left town. Regina's made it clear that she'll take my job the second it looks like I'm not exploring every option.
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I refuse to believe Mary Margaret did something to the woman. We're not actually in a Soap. The husband... would be more plausible, if anything were plausible. A woman's more likely to be [He clears his throat and picks a word to settle on-] attacked by her male partner than by any other assailant. But if he managed to hide her this well, why leave the car?
[As a (mostly) objective observer at this point, it's not the emotional draw that has Chase turning Emma's case over in his head. It's interesting. Though he didn't come out here for a piece of the puzzle.]
All right. Say for now you've explored this option and you're not going to trip over her among the tree roots. What would be next?
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I can tell he didn't have anything to do with this, he was honest with me. [Emma gives Chase a warning look. She knows there's a chance she could be wrong about it, but all of her instincts are telling her otherwise. The husband's the easy first suspect, right?]
I think I need to go back out there. I can't shake the idea that there's something out there to explain all of this.
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[The questions are still half to himself, but he finds himself looking past Emma to the darkness where the line of trees begins.]
Something that picks people up and drops them in the woods? [He chews a corner of his lip.] Sure I'm the only alien in town?
[He smiles a little, refocusing on her with a brisk nod.]
All right. You lead the way.
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[She has to ask, even if she reaches for the bottle for one last sip to prepare herself instead of waiting for an answer. Then she hands it to him and kills the ignition, following his gaze to the woods. It's a lot to ask anyone to go out on a night like this, nevermind a guy who's just passing through.]
Come on, we'll go find the alien.
[Out she goes, turning her flashlight on and shutting the driver's side door. She shivers slightly, the cold becoming more of a shock to her skin after the warmth of the car.]
And you're right, David doesn't have a motive. A case could be made that he was angry, but why would he be this sloppy?
Trust me, he's telling the truth.
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Of course. After this car, I need to stretch my legs.
[He zips the bottle into his jacket as he gets out and walks around the car to join her, following the spill of electric yellow from her flashlight.]
You'd be amazed how convincing some people can be. I've seen patients fool a whole team of doctors trained to pick up any discrepancies in their story. [He splays his hands, clarifying that.] No patient ever tells you the whole truth. Often that's unintentional. Sometimes it's not. Psychopaths tend to be the most convincing of all.
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The other thing to consider is the coma. Everyone says David was in one for as long as they can remember. [She steps over branches as she heads towards the woods, falling into stride with Chase.]
When he woke up, he took an exit out of the hospital and into the woods. If he was out for months, years, would he lose time? And would anyone have noticed before if he was sneaking around with one woman and distancing himself from the other? They would always assume he was somewhere else.
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[This is why people like House exist. If medicine were like mathematics they could use the same formula on everyone, but some people just have to be outliers.
The ground is much less level in the woods, some overgrown and ancient remnant of America's prehistoric past. Chase somehow manages to navigate the littered pathways between the trees gracefully, keeping part of his attention on making sure Emma achieves the same.]
And I know criminals can too. This probably sounds like something I should be saying huddled over a campfire your flashlight under my chin - we treated a serial killer recently.
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What happened? [When he treated the serial killer. He hasn't been much for sharing, Emma isn't either, but it's pretty dark with the exception of her flashlight. It's freezing. Chase is insane to have been willing to do this, but since they're both here, they might as well keep talking.]
I don't think I could do that. [Help someone who kills people. She's not that kind.]
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Careful, the ground's always going to be damp this near a river.
[It's practically an aside, and probably like teaching an old woman to suck eggs, but he mutters it anyway. And sharing cases isn't like sharing his personal life: in his job patient stories make up most of what passes for small-talk. Although, he doesn't usually tell this one.]
We didn't have the chance to say no. The man we admitted was a homeless guy, sick and being kicked around by local kids in the park. You know those stories. Abusive dad, drug problem, time in rehab. We figured out that whole identity was ripped off around the same time we figured out what was killing him. Unfortunately a little too soon for his DNA markers to come back. When they did, there were red flags from thirteen states... all linked to murder cases involving cannibalism. The guy's still on the run.
[After falling into silence for a second, Chase reaches to catch her wrist - the one holding the flashlight - long enough to bring it up and direct the beam under his chin. Any attempt at looking intimidating lasts all of five seconds before he smiles, letting her go.]
Maybe the dramatic storylines aren't confined to your home town.
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To hear the rest of the town tell it, nothing ever happened until I showed up. [Henry takes it as a sign that she's the savior, but Emma just takes it to mean that they were set in their ways. And coincidentally, her arrival happened around the same time as a few other significant events. She refuses to buy into the idea that anything else is at work there.] No affairs, no one ever went missing. The only person who spent any time in a cell was Leroy when he had a few too many.]
It would be flattering if what they were saying I brought with me wasn't more problems than they know how to manage. [And that's why she doesn't buy it.] Oh, and of course, no one stood up to Regina before.
I guess it explains why she's out to get me. She never thought I'd stick around this long.
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[He's beside her and then he's not, having jumped rather than skidded the last little way down to the riverbank and turned to offer her a hand down.]
You didn't bring any problems with you. You're not responsible for other people's personal screw-ups, however dramatically they end up playing out. Trust me, if someone's life is going to explode, it'll find it's own way. People always blame their issues on what's changed in their lives, without thinking about what might always have been there, building up to this. You're just the hot new thing.
Besides, you're meant to be here to the world, right? Not to police who sleeps around.
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You're right, I know you are. But you should hear how much credit I get for things I had no control over. [Like the clock, for example. She had nothing to do with that.]
Besides, I think we have another hot new thing in town now.
[Women are starting to notice, and she can't say she blames them.
...Is that a howl coming from the trees?]
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If I say hot with any intent behind it, you're going to remind me how hard your punches land, right?
[Obviously she's hot, and he gives her a sidelong look implying there's no way she doesn't know it.]
So far I don't seem to have taken much credit for anything I haven't—
[It sounds remarkably wolf like to the ears of a man who hadn't entirely believed in her sighting until, oh, ten seconds ago. Now he looks at her through the beam of the flashlight.]
Think there are any branches down here dry enough to take a light?
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