It's startling, how simple it is, and how instant. He blinks, blinks again, and actually has to close his eyes to give himself a second as the world sharpens into intense detail. Doesn't help that at the same time he can suddenly hear the soft trickle of her toilet running, the footsteps of someone passing in the hall, the minuscule creak of his chair as he shifts his weight. It's startling, though he'll be relieved once he's used to it again. He knows that.
"It's what I signed up for." Not like he really understood that as a kid, but he's been in for way too long not to know it now.
He opens his eyes slowly and blinks a couple more times to try and get himself acclimated. It's like walking into bright afternoon light after being in a dark room all day.
"As a teenager, I would guess," because it's not like she's unaware of how the army works.
"You're older now. You've been through a lot, I would guess. Just from what we've talked about. You have to serve, what, three years to get a full ride through school? A tour of duty is a year or less. And you've done a lot more than that."
She looks to David earnestly.
"You have other options. So I'd like to know what you actually want."
"Yes ma'am," he says, confirming his enlistment age. He scratches the back of his head, awkward.
He doesn't know what he wants. It doesn't particularly matter. Never has. He's had people telling him where to go, what to do, presenting him with the next natural steps his whole life.
"I can understand that," she says gently. "But what you want, and who you want to be, are hugely important right now. And it's not something that you can defer to other people for.
And that's the problem, to him. He's not sure how to want. Not in the capital-W Want way that people seem to mean when they say that word. He's a soldier. It's what he is, it's what he's been practically since high school. He does what people want.
David shifts in his chair, leaning back a little. "Yes, ma'am."
"But I'm going to guess that's not something you're prepared to do yet," she says a little more quietly, "so we're going to work up to that."
There's a pause as if to say 'you can correct me if I'm wrong here, but that's where I'm at'.
She lets her shoulders settle a little.
"So right now, I'm going to ask if there are any pain points you've been feeling while you're here. Things you need, things you'd like, things that would make being here easier. That can be personal gear, personal items, or changes to your room, including a toilet and sink."
"I'd rather not change my room." That's easy enough. John already posed that question and David discovered he did, in fact, have a preference there. "It's... It's someone else's."
They're going to talk about Caleb sooner or later. He has to be in David's file. There's no way that he's not. But he doesn't have to, yet. Not yet.
He studies the table, frowning. "I-- Honestly I don't need much. Basics are more than covered here."
If anything he's sometimes overwhelmed by the options.
"Your name's Saga Anderson, you work with the FBI back in the world. You were Arthur's warden. You're... more than baseline, as far as humans are concerned. You and the writer know each other, as I understand it. Beyond that not a whole lot."
Questions. Questions. He feels blank, like he's been given a test he didn't study for, somehow. He doesn't know how to ask any more. If he needs information he's given information. Most of the time he doesn't need information, as far as his superiors are concerned.
"Uh. I suppose-- How do you and Mr Wake know each other?"
"I pulled him out of a dimension known as the Dark Place," she offers up to him easily enough. "He'd been trapped there for over a decade. I was in town working on a case having to do with a cult that was being blamed for a number of murders near the lake that serves as the gateway to that dimension."
She considers before adding-
"I got pulled into his narrative, became a character in his story. It's how I learned to start writing my own story. That you need to, if you want to get the ending you want."
"It was a lot more complicated than that," she admits, "and, it turns out, a lot more personal. I found out a lot about myself."
She tilts her head with a crooked smile.
"Like that part about not being a 'baseline human'? Yeah, I wasn't aware of that until about a week before I got here. It was... let's just say it was an experience."
She definitely does, though. And it feels good to have gotten what she was hoping for.
"Well," she says, "it started with finding out that I had family who was alive. After my mom died, I... figured that was it. My father was never in the picture, and I assumed my grandfather was dead. But" she starts off fondly, though it's bittersweet, "it turns out he and his brother were in that town, Bright Falls. They'd moved there years ago. And, as it turns out, that's where I was born."
He's interested in spite of himself, and leans forward a little as she talks. He's not used to being told a story--he's usually the one prompted to tell them.
"Were you young, when your mother passed?" There's more weight in the question than he means for there to be.
"I was fortunate. My mom only passed away a few years ago. She survived long enough to see me get married. Have my daughter. She and Logan, my little girl, were inseparable during the summers."
There's a genuine wince.
"Logan took it hard when she went. But we were lucky enough to be able to say goodbye."
He blinks at the mention of Logan. Nods slowly. "I can imagine. I don't really recall what it felt like myself, but I know someone young takes it hard."
"You don't recall?" she prods gently, and then in the face of getting another 'no, ma'am, she adds- "Does that have to do with the project? What was done to you?"
He can give a simple answer that way but it'll tell her a little more about the file she can't read yet.
He ducks his head into a nod, remembering Arthur and John's reactions to this particular information.
"It does and it doesn't. What they did made it possible." A pause as he realizes that makes no sense on its own. "They wanted us to be fearless. Be able to flip a switch in our heads and control adrenaline and that kind of thing. Seems like they never managed to get it that specific."
And her answer to that is just a nod: all she'd wanted to know was whether it could be changed, one, and whether he had control over it. Those were both important things to know.
But not anything that needs to change right now. He's chosen to be this way because it's what he needed, how he could survive. She's not going to push him to change until he's got some other coping mechanisms and support systems to fill the gaps.
"I'm never going to push you on that point, David. I just wanted to make sure that if it wasn't in your control, we figured out a way to get it there."
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"It's what I signed up for." Not like he really understood that as a kid, but he's been in for way too long not to know it now.
He opens his eyes slowly and blinks a couple more times to try and get himself acclimated. It's like walking into bright afternoon light after being in a dark room all day.
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"You're older now. You've been through a lot, I would guess. Just from what we've talked about. You have to serve, what, three years to get a full ride through school? A tour of duty is a year or less. And you've done a lot more than that."
She looks to David earnestly.
"You have other options. So I'd like to know what you actually want."
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He doesn't know what he wants. It doesn't particularly matter. Never has. He's had people telling him where to go, what to do, presenting him with the next natural steps his whole life.
"What I want has never been a particular issue."
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"Including me."
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David shifts in his chair, leaning back a little. "Yes, ma'am."
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There's a pause as if to say 'you can correct me if I'm wrong here, but that's where I'm at'.
She lets her shoulders settle a little.
"So right now, I'm going to ask if there are any pain points you've been feeling while you're here. Things you need, things you'd like, things that would make being here easier. That can be personal gear, personal items, or changes to your room, including a toilet and sink."
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They're going to talk about Caleb sooner or later. He has to be in David's file. There's no way that he's not. But he doesn't have to, yet. Not yet.
He studies the table, frowning. "I-- Honestly I don't need much. Basics are more than covered here."
If anything he's sometimes overwhelmed by the options.
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"Good. I'm glad to hear it."
First assignment set. She's not going to introduce it yet, though. They have other things to deal with.
"Then we can move onto you and me. First off: what do you know about me? And second: what questions do you have that I can address right off the bat?"
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Questions. Questions. He feels blank, like he's been given a test he didn't study for, somehow. He doesn't know how to ask any more. If he needs information he's given information. Most of the time he doesn't need information, as far as his superiors are concerned.
"Uh. I suppose-- How do you and Mr Wake know each other?"
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She considers before adding-
"I got pulled into his narrative, became a character in his story. It's how I learned to start writing my own story. That you need to, if you want to get the ending you want."
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But again it comes down to that wanting. Wanting an ending. Wanting in general.
"How'd it turn out? You get your killer?"
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She tilts her head with a crooked smile.
"Like that part about not being a 'baseline human'? Yeah, I wasn't aware of that until about a week before I got here. It was... let's just say it was an experience."
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It's probably the most uncalculated reaction she's seen from him, other than the times she's startled him herself.
"How'd you find out?"
He doesn't notice that he's asked another question unprompted.
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"Well," she says, "it started with finding out that I had family who was alive. After my mom died, I... figured that was it. My father was never in the picture, and I assumed my grandfather was dead. But" she starts off fondly, though it's bittersweet, "it turns out he and his brother were in that town, Bright Falls. They'd moved there years ago. And, as it turns out, that's where I was born."
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"Were you young, when your mother passed?" There's more weight in the question than he means for there to be.
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"I was fortunate. My mom only passed away a few years ago. She survived long enough to see me get married. Have my daughter. She and Logan, my little girl, were inseparable during the summers."
There's a genuine wince.
"Logan took it hard when she went. But we were lucky enough to be able to say goodbye."
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He can give a simple answer that way but it'll tell her a little more about the file she can't read yet.
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"It does and it doesn't. What they did made it possible." A pause as he realizes that makes no sense on its own. "They wanted us to be fearless. Be able to flip a switch in our heads and control adrenaline and that kind of thing. Seems like they never managed to get it that specific."
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"So... is that something I just turned back on with my request?"
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"The switch is just jammed in one direction at this point?"
She has a thought but she wants to see how he answers.
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But not anything that needs to change right now. He's chosen to be this way because it's what he needed, how he could survive. She's not going to push him to change until he's got some other coping mechanisms and support systems to fill the gaps.
"I'm never going to push you on that point, David. I just wanted to make sure that if it wasn't in your control, we figured out a way to get it there."
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"It wasn't an impulse decision on my part. Not really."
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