Sakura had mentioned a library on the second floor, but there was one on the first floor, wasn't there? It was for the patients, sure, but that didn't mean there wouldn't be any useful books. Not that he knew for certain, since every time Hanatarou had been in there previously it hadn't been to pay a lot of attention to the reading material
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The library was quieter. So much space for so little information, but it was peaceful. And this one actually stayed put.
"It was a library last night, too. The one upstairs. We opened the door, and then we were on a beach. Costa del Sol, I think she called it?" Taura sighed, but it was one of remembered contentment. "It was nice." Nice enough they'd all felt a little guilty for the pleasure, knowing that countless others were still stuck behind. They'd already been planning to come back in force when the Institute had made their decision for them. Just...two different decisions. Neither she nor Rika had been given a choice; she had a feeling Cissnei hadn't, either.
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"It was nice. We spent a while just...well, honestly, trying to figure out what the heck had happened. Then we started making plans. Where to go, how to try to find a way to get back here with some real firepower. But nothing really happened. We were just talking." And enjoying the sunshine; it had been the first time Taura'd really felt warm in a few days. "Oh, right! Her clothes changed -- but not ours." Or their bodies. "She was wearing something very beachy." Or just Betan, where climate control was just an excuse to crank the heat up and go around half-naked, or so it seemed ( ... )
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As she explained what had happened, Zack couldn't help smiling at the image of Cissnei in her bathing suit while the others with her had remained in their uniforms. So it only switched around for the people who were actually from there. That was interesting to note, but in the end, Zack was more concerned for his friend than the technicalities of the situation.
"So... you heard the intercom while in Costa del Sol?" he asked, his bright eyes widening slightly at the very thought. That would have been pretty surreal to experience, and he wondered what the implications were. "And... does that mean you're roommates?" That was the only way that Taura could have known of ( ... )
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"And yes, she was my roommate. She was very kind." It sounded so banal when she just said it, but it was true. Almost everyone here had been; even the 'techs, and they didn't seem to be lying, even if they had to be.
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"Like they've forgotten we're human." Depersonalization, not sadistic cruelty. She looked down at her hands, big and ungraceful and omnipresent reminder of how literal that first word was. "I guess all we can hope is that they forget what humans can do, too," she said, one lip twitching back towards optimism. Action, direct or indirect, was still Taura's favorite consolation. The assignments should be going up soon. One more shot, Homura. Then, plan B. Whatever that is. It probably ( ... )
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"I wasn't there...but the person I heard it from had no reason to lie. Armand St. Just died the night of the last trip to town." She couldn't leave it at that, though. It wasn't fair to leave all of it at their captor's door, even if fair wasn't even in their vocabulary. "Another patient went berzerk. And he wasn't a fighter." In spirit, always. In training, not at all.
"He wasn't the only one, but it's gotten harder to let people know over the bulletin." Her voice was matter-of-fact through the whole thing; training meant empathy was best shown after the mission was over, although this whole place never stopped blurring the lines between on-duty and off.
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Long blonde hair and silver eyes, that had been all TK-622 had said. He hadn't asked for revenge, or even implied he was going to do it personally. He'd just sounded resigned to the fact. Taura had taken it to imply that death wasn't unusual -- with all the hazards here, it would be resoundingly strange if it weren't.
"I'm not entirely sure. TK was pretty upset, and I didn't ask. He'd know. TK-622 -- he and Armand were good friends." Taura wasn't sure why it mattered; if the woman had just gotten so engaged in killing the walking corpses that she'd missed seeing who was in front of her, or if he was asking something different. Killing rages happened, especially among the untrained. What else could have turned one patient on another when they had no history -- or at least none TK-622 had known about? Unless... "I don't think she was brainwashed, if that's what you're asking." The brainwashed patient-prisoners seemed to guard, not attack, anyway. Which made sense: why go to the trouble of transporting all of them here ( ... )
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