I think it is. [She peers beyond the door a little more
closely, and then steps into the hallway. It doesn't feel like an illusion
- if it is, it's got even her fooled. She puts her claws away so she can
check her communicator, and sure enough, she has no inmate. A slow, warm
smile spreads across her face, but she doesn't share the display just
yet.]
[He walks past her, up a flight of wooden stairs, and pushes a door open. The original was a very plain bathroom where old men have been taking showers for thirty years.]
I'm not sure why you wanted to see it, but there it is.
[She follows, looking from the bathroom to him.] ... Inmate
cabins don't have bathrooms. [This is when she holds up her device
to show him the display, indicating that she has no inmate assigned to
her.]
[Her smile gets wider, fueled by a swell of pride.] I think
you did. Do you ... want a party? Or ... I could ... we could ask
Hilda to make a celebratory dessert that we can assuredly trust.
[Admiral cookies are shifty.]
[Holy shit. He finally did it. After six months of trying and twelve more of just kind of doing his own thing and trying his best to determine what thing is the right thing, here he is.
The biggest thing to hit Ford is I'm not dead anymore. And then: I could go home. And, after that -- I can't go home.
Because he can't. Not until he can prove from the outside that it's real, or bring his family out of it. Maybe, if he got in communication with the other Barge, he could see Stan and the kids, but is that kind of communication even possible? Did he give them homing beacons? If he didn't, he should have.
He places a hand against the wall to steady himself, finally bringing his focus back to Laura and what she's saying.]
No, no. No party. I don't think this is something I want to publicly celebrate. It doesn't feel right!
...
...
...but I suppose I wouldn't turn down Hilda's baking.
Re: action
I think it is. [She peers beyond the door a little more closely, and then steps into the hallway. It doesn't feel like an illusion - if it is, it's got even her fooled. She puts her claws away so she can check her communicator, and sure enough, she has no inmate. A slow, warm smile spreads across her face, but she doesn't share the display just yet.]
Ford ... does the Mystery Shack have a bathroom?
action
Of course it did. Stan made the tourists use portable ones outside, but I did build it to be a lab, you know.
Re: action
Could you show me where it would be, if it were here?
action
[He walks past her, up a flight of wooden stairs, and pushes a door open. The original was a very plain bathroom where old men have been taking showers for thirty years.]
I'm not sure why you wanted to see it, but there it is.
Re: action
[She follows, looking from the bathroom to him.] ... Inmate cabins don't have bathrooms. [This is when she holds up her device to show him the display, indicating that she has no inmate assigned to her.]
Re: action
Re: action
I think you did.
[Her smile gets wider, fueled by a swell of pride.] I think you did. Do you ... want a party? Or ... I could ... we could ask Hilda to make a celebratory dessert that we can assuredly trust. [Admiral cookies are shifty.]
Re: action
The biggest thing to hit Ford is I'm not dead anymore. And then: I could go home. And, after that -- I can't go home.
Because he can't. Not until he can prove from the outside that it's real, or bring his family out of it. Maybe, if he got in communication with the other Barge, he could see Stan and the kids, but is that kind of communication even possible? Did he give them homing beacons? If he didn't, he should have.
He places a hand against the wall to steady himself, finally bringing his focus back to Laura and what she's saying.]
No, no. No party. I don't think this is something I want to publicly celebrate. It doesn't feel right!
...
...
...but I suppose I wouldn't turn down Hilda's baking.
[He's not crazy enough to say no to that.]