Joy and Other Things Also
[Nick had never really thought of himself as a guy who liked drama, but damned it he wasn't getting used to it. Even without their various catastrophes the missions and errands they went on with the Vaultie weren't exactly walks in the park. He'd gotten up to more nonsense with those two than in the preceeding 80 years. Couldn't complain, though, he's also been happier than he's been in that whole span.
The last foray they took into the virtual space had been a rough one for a variety of reasons. (Not the least of which being how close they both came to being overwritten like a spare USB drive.
In truth, Nick felt he ought to be a little more hesitant to load himself back in, but he wasn't really. He was a little hesitant to load Hancock in with him, but once the ghoul had demanded to come along, Nick couldn't tell him no. Nick needed the interface to debug his emotional capacitance (Joy) and check the registry changes that program had written into him. The moment he'd casually mentioned that was what he had on the schedule, Hancock insisted, and so here they were. Nick had put it off for a week or two, just to give him time to convalesce, but he couldn't exactly put it off forever.
When he was finally starting to get buffering problems, Nick bit the bullet and hauled his paramour along with him to the seventh floor. Having those pods installed in Neon Flats was useful, if a little...tangentially traumatic. Without the drama, the VI turning things into a haunted maze, and the Vaultie dressed up in Hancock's skin with his rabid Id behind the wheel...well, it wasn't so forboding. It was just...a little dusty.
Nick loaded in first (after double checking the locks on the doors) and then Hancock did at his liesure, and despite all the strange errors, the environment seemed stable. The representation of his CPU, that great, big dark, domed room with a consetallation of thoughts and templates above, loaded in crisp and clean as anything. That was a good sign, even if the plinths and the walls failed to load in around them. ]
Don't say I didn't warn you: this is going to be one boring date.
[Nick stops at the podium and pulls up the menus and an array of windows. His processes are all running as intended, the only odd man out is Joy, so the only one who will load outside of him will be her...unless his thoughts start really wandering.]
Just doing diagnostics today, not a daring heroic to speak of.
The last foray they took into the virtual space had been a rough one for a variety of reasons. (Not the least of which being how close they both came to being overwritten like a spare USB drive.
In truth, Nick felt he ought to be a little more hesitant to load himself back in, but he wasn't really. He was a little hesitant to load Hancock in with him, but once the ghoul had demanded to come along, Nick couldn't tell him no. Nick needed the interface to debug his emotional capacitance (Joy) and check the registry changes that program had written into him. The moment he'd casually mentioned that was what he had on the schedule, Hancock insisted, and so here they were. Nick had put it off for a week or two, just to give him time to convalesce, but he couldn't exactly put it off forever.
When he was finally starting to get buffering problems, Nick bit the bullet and hauled his paramour along with him to the seventh floor. Having those pods installed in Neon Flats was useful, if a little...tangentially traumatic. Without the drama, the VI turning things into a haunted maze, and the Vaultie dressed up in Hancock's skin with his rabid Id behind the wheel...well, it wasn't so forboding. It was just...a little dusty.
Nick loaded in first (after double checking the locks on the doors) and then Hancock did at his liesure, and despite all the strange errors, the environment seemed stable. The representation of his CPU, that great, big dark, domed room with a consetallation of thoughts and templates above, loaded in crisp and clean as anything. That was a good sign, even if the plinths and the walls failed to load in around them. ]
Don't say I didn't warn you: this is going to be one boring date.
[Nick stops at the podium and pulls up the menus and an array of windows. His processes are all running as intended, the only odd man out is Joy, so the only one who will load outside of him will be her...unless his thoughts start really wandering.]
Just doing diagnostics today, not a daring heroic to speak of.
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[ Rouge AIs can be tricky bastards; OG Snow had rigged their system to kill about sixish people, but they worked for the Institute, so does that even count as anything beyond Community Service? Far as he can tell, Snow was actually the key that had unlocked Neon Flats to begin with; they had been here the whole time. His broken copy shared the room with him for about five seconds before attacking.
If it has to be one ghost in a machine or another... well, chips on red-- or white, rather. ]
To get Neon Flats unlocked in the first place, way back when, he had to plug a holotape into the lobby's terminal. Think he could'a mentioned at the time it was a damn AI.
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[That has Nick's attention. Institute holotapes are something Nick is excruciatingly familiar with and he puts two and two together with speed.]
Well, that sounds easy enough. Unfortunately, and for obvious reasons, I unhooked this system from the building before hopping back in.
Seeing how I gotta uplug to fetch it, might as well finish the rest of the to-do list while I'm in here. Hope you're ready for more code because there's a lot of it.
[With a sweep of his arm, Nick clears the flag notifications. He can't seem to turn the phantom plinths off, which is disconcerting, but they aren't actually interrupting any other functions. They're just a new feature and, thus far, relatively benign. He can work around them.
The next task on the dockett is figuring out the problems with Joy and why she's throwing errors. Nick pulls up banks of code first, his logs, her logs, her file as it currently sits in his hard-drive. He spreads the lot out before him like a triptych and columns of code just fly by, bathing the room in shifting, dappled blue light.
Nick watches the numbers and variables scroll for a while, ostensibly checking for any obvious errors. There aren't any. If there were, he'd have found them when she first registered back in the system. He's stalling.
The wounds that Hancock wore, inside and out, the worry the facet's faces at the idea of Joy taking their place? Signing up to be tortured? It all bodes poorly for what she experienced outside of Nick's control.
Joy isn't like the other programs, not precisely. She's developed, matured, grown in complexity and depth over time. She's ephemeral in a way that his other facets aren't and durable in a way that he can't begin to quantify. Joy bends itself to fit the situation--it's Nick's ability to see the silver lining, to be empathetic, to expect the best out of people. He hadn't lied to Hancock when he said she was a tough cookie--she could withstand just about anything--but she'd carry that experience back with her...and Nick, well, he's afraid. He's scared to confront the torture that Hancock suffered, face to face, at the hands of the guy he advocated for so vehemently.
Unfortunately, Nick can only commit to this charade for a minute or two, without giving up the ghost. He spends another few moments resigning himself and lets out a huff of breath.]
Everything checks out on paper, so why the dramatics?
[Nick wonders aloud, mostly for Hancock and to cover his attempt at delaying the inevitable. When he can't drag his feet any longer, Nick pulls up the command prompt, overrides his security function, and force loads his malfunctioning facet.
Nick expects to get hit with something gruesome, he's braced for it in fact. With the horror of Hancock's physical injuries, Nick half expects her to load up tethered to a wheel, screaming and flayed open. His mind races through every sick, twisted bit of torture it can conjure (a library that Kellogg vastly expanded) and tries to prepare himself, to imagine Jenny in those positions before he has it thrust upon him--
That--that isn't what hits him.
Nick gasps--not inhales, not habit--as his capacity for joy, for the full scope of emotion kicks back in.
The emotion that hits him is overwhelming, powerful, crushing--it's like a wave breaching a sea-wall. He can do absolutely nothing to fight it as it comes crashing down on him. He's helpless as it sweeps him up and away. It staggers him and then brings him to his knees, even in this place, this simulation. The windows in front of him are printing endless code and not a single flag is thrown as he collapses. There's no klaxon, no red light, no other aspects there to join them, just an arresting depth of feeling that he's entirely unequipped to comprehend.
Nick, Kellogg, none of his templates have a record like this, not even close, and Nick is drowning in it. He chokes as the irises in his throat close and sieze up, as his eyes try to water. He drops forward farther, hands and knees against the floor, and eyes wide open.
He--he's afraid, yes. Yes, of course he is--and that emotion isn't his, is it? No, not exactly. A thousand shades of it play against itself--there is fear. But, more than anything, as he's dragged down into the abyss by the overlayed memories playing behind his eyes, he feels--
--warmth?
Joy appears on the plinth as Nick is consumed by the echoes of her torment. Nick's eyes are wide and unseeing, adrift in a sea of feeling. All the data she's folded into herself, all the new twining fractals of complexity she's acquired are like a riptide. When Joy's finally fully loaded, standing in her rightful place, she's not Jenny and her attention isn't on Nick.]
Hey, Sugar-Bomb.
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[ Unplugging from the building was a reasonably cautious move, Hancock concedes, and it's not too problematic to hop back into reality for two ticks now that no one is shutting off the escape hatch from digital Lala Land. Hancock's whole goal here to play emotional support; he's not expecting Nick to entertain him with picnics or fireworks this time. He just wants to be here, on the off (read: good) chance things get ugly.
Seems to be too a common happenstance, lately.
He's-- patient isn't exactly the right word, Hancock has trouble staying idle; but he keeps himself reasonably occupied while Nick sorts through the streaming code like a brook of blue light through the room. He has no idea what he's looking at, what Nick could be looking for... and it occurs to him, that perhaps, Nick might be gathering his strength. It's not a certainty in his mind, Hancock doesn't know enough about synth programming to comprehend the details of what he's seeing.
For all he knows, a backwards six in this mess could make everything go bananas.
But he quits the frivolous pacing, pockets the knife he'd pulled from his coat (manifested from his memory) for something to fidget with. As Nick
doomscrolls, the ghoul approaches at his side and lingers there; a quiet, firm sense of support.Guilt settles over him like a casket saddle; a feeling he typically bucks against but decides he has no right to, here. Jenny decided to help him-- it was her choice, to take that away would be cruel. But to allow her to endure pain-- torture on his behalf, was that also not cruel? Should he have fought harder to bear his own punishment? Could he have violated her will to free him from it? The emotional complexity is staggering and Hancock finds himself shifting his weight from heel to heel in a subconscious attempt to vent the prickling unease. ]
Dunno, you tell me?
[ He's aware Nick's statement was largely rhetorical, but offers a curious, gentle reply regardless; he doesn't have to, he wants to. He wants to be here just in case he's needed--
and it seems he is. When Nick gasps and falls Hancock is already beside him; the ghoul catches his companion by the elbows as he drops, eases the fall by the impulse of compassion and the instinct to protect. He's on his haunches in front of his overtly overwhelmed companion, hands sliding up from the synth's elbows to his shoulders and clasping tight. ]
Hey, hey, hey-- I gotcha, I'm right here, talk to me
[ Vicious concern rips through him like the claws of a deadly mutant lizard. Nick said this should be safe, right? So why--? Are the memories of his torture so ruthless, so unbearably brutal that--?
He tries to catch Nick's eyes, tries to see that he is being seen, tries to console his suffocating soulmate with such meager tools as a hand on his cheek and the ghoul's presence through that torrential crush of emotion.
He doesn't even notice when Jenny-- when Joy pops in, not until she speaks. His gaze follows the familiar voice like an asteroid falling (burning, crumbling, crashing) by the demands of gravity; a weightless thing suddenly made crushing by circumstance. ]
Don't [ The word tumbles out before he can think-- he's suddenly and irrationally angry, but it only translates across his tongue into heartbreak. This... he was not prepared for. And she's not even trying to be cruel. But seeing the avatar of his mother, hearing her speak when he'd been the one to dig her grave--
He wasn't ready. It feels like a knife through the ribs-- actually, it hurts more. ]
Please [ He can count on one hand the time's he's seriously leveraged true pleading against Nick, and of those few occasions, most are carnally coded. This is different. He can't look at her and it's almost, almost enough to make him stand and back away... but he won't. Nick needs him-- or maybe he needs Nick? He's not moving. Both his hands return to the synth's shoulders as he looks, stares only at his companion's expression, willing himself to unsee everything else. ]
Please don't call me that; starts off a bad train'a memories
[ The full sentiment comes with a raw note of apology; he doesn't know if Joy thought he'd be happy to see this ghost, if this change was just the shift she needed to survive that particular hellscape. Maybe she had no choice, maybe this was the only way. ]
I can't... can't look at ya like that. Can ya-- shit, I really gotta be here for Nick right now. Take the knife outta my heart, would ya?
[ He'd like to have asked more kindly; his humor is thin and fraying apart, a tissue-paper Band-Aid on a crumbling dam about to bust and drown a city in the flood. ]
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She didn't take this face for him.
She took it for her.
For all the coyness in their conversation way back when, Joy doesn't actually have much control what she manifests as. Before now, she had been defined by parameters set by others--she'd been amorphose with just ViMa, then Jenny was the picture of joy when Nick was loaded in, and now, well, it was still arguably defined by someone else. Hancock's adoration, the weight of his grief, had driven his mother into her as the most defined measure of joy, of love that she had ever seen. In the haze of repitition, of wipe and restart, the distinction between herself and Hancock, his mother or her mother, they had ceased to have any sort of functional meaning.
He begs, voice curled in and painful, and Joy can't quite comprehend it. He turns away and that plays strangely through her perception--as does the request that follows, spoken to Nick as equally as to her. She steps down off the plinth and her gait isn't the delicate peppy hop of Jenny or Hancock's carefree stride, but it's not quite his mother's either. The steps, the gait that Joy knew were from a dash across a room, they're stilted and creak against floorboards that aren't present here.
Every kind touch, every detail of that memory outside of blood and fire, flesh and tears, is something Joy has gathered close to her. Thread by thread, piece by piece, she saved them and wove those details, beautiful and heartbreaking alike, together into a blanket. She huddled into them, pulled them tight, and contented herself with the fragments of love while she endured the horrors before her. They were hers, grasped and torn from the tragedy, saved for later, and...all of the most beautiful moments, every last piece of joy in that memory, wore the face that she has on now.]
Alright, sweetie--anything you want. Are you...doing okay? Is he?
[She reaches, intent on placing a kind hand on his shoulder and giving him a warm smile, but her hand never makes it. Nick, through sheer force of will, regains some of his functions in that split second. Like a drowning man breaking the surface, Nick sucks down a desperate, ragged gasp as he forces his throat to release. He lurches, twists blindly and his skeletal hand shoots out to catch his errant aspect's before her fingers can graze Hancock. Nick and his dedicated OS is still struggling to churn through all the instances replaying behind his eyes. Each one had been logged, each one a separate entry, all of them identical in tragedy. Thankfully, he still has a few aspects that aren't part of his core processes and one of them struggles free to stop this.
It's not Nick who catches her hand, per se, so much as it's Nick. The detective's got the reins for the moment and grimaces as he turns. He tries to take a seat but even with Hancock's help, he just ends up half sprawled on the floor. He can't see a damn thing, eyes locked on the middle ground, but grip on Joy's wrist is vice-like.
For the most part, Joy just seems to be stuck in place. Her face the picture of polite concern, or warmth and caring, but she has an almost dazed look to her. She doesn't respond to the grip and even though he's struggling to tread water, Nick manages to spit out a command. Joy's locked up and Nick is threatening to follow suit.]
ViMa! The hell are you doing? End Program!
[He's never been so glad to hear that damned buzzer nor to see Joy vanish.]
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Hearing her speak is not any easier to bare, sans his cute little nickname. For one stark moment he's irrationally terrified-- is this torture, again? Is he back in the pod? Was all this sprawling safety just to get him to drop his guard? In the digital world time is only a trick of perception, after all.
He has to crush the fear under his bootheel; it's stupid and useless and doesn't serve the moment. He's still not looking at her, but he can sense that hand drift close and it makes him stiffen like a cornered, abused animal. He doesn't want her to touch him with unsound, ridiculous anger. It's not directed at her like an arrow; it surrounds and drowns him like a whirlpool. It's not for anyone but-- himself? It was Himself that leveraged this memory to hurt him, after all.
And she's asking him something and he can't-- his hands on Nick's shoulders get tight, a motion starved for support opposed to providing it; it's like the floor is gone, like there's no air to breath and nothing to feel beyond this Lazarus' despair. It feels like he's right back in the lion's den-- but he's not, god damn it. It shows when Nick (someone in him, one piece of him) manages to break the surface of his emotional turmoil and stop the ghost of Hancock's mother from placing a hand on his shoulder.
He feels like an utter failure. He's supposed to be the bedrock here, the eye of the storm, a bloodless sanctuary. Instead he's drowning right beside Nick, in the worst position possible to pull him out of the undertow. All he can do is buffer the synth detective's fall a little, stop him from going completely ass-over-tea-kettle, but it feels like a poor compensation for the anchor he's supposed to be providing here.
The buzzer sounds and the ghost of birthday's past vanishes, and it feels like pulling a knife out of his gut so he can finally bleed out. Cold common sense rushes in to soothe his surprised, searing suffering-- she's gone, she was never actually here, there's no reason to feel like-- just put it down, put it away, everything is okay-- check on Nick, because we know this pain already and he doesn't.
A steely expression hijacks the heartbreak on his face; he'll stuff all that crippling pain in a box (under the floorboards?) for later. ]
All'a hell and highwater to choose from and she had to live through that [ His disgust is pointed at himself, the bruised and battered apology in his tone all for Nick. ] Shit, Nick, I... I'm so sorry ya had to see--
[ He shuts his mouth because his emotions are bucking against his instinct to keep composed; he'll silence himself before he lets his voice crack, broken-in to choose a show of strength over honest weakness. His fingers gently slide from Nick's jaw down the side of his neck, grasping there at either side. ]
I gotcha [ Is all he can manage in the moment. ]
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He blindly gropes until he finds Hancock's knee with his good hand. For lack of a more accurate term, Nick looks a little green around the gills as he tries to stabilize himself again. Hancock is talking, apologizing, but Nick's auditory processing is just catching up to the broken please, the demands that Joy stop. It conflicts with the ghoul's current cadence so hard that Nick can only wince.
It's another thirty seconds before the buffer is cleared and Nick can see again and he spends all of them hanging on to Hancock and absorbing the brunt of those memories. When that scene finally reaches its last itteration, it cuts off with Joy's--Hancock's--Nick's hands slippery with blood, right as their mother grasps their ankle. Then, almost as if it never was, the tsunami of turmoil is over.
The first words out of Nick's mouth are the original edition's, but the sentiment goes entirely unchallenged by the rest of his facets.]
Christ--
[Even without Joy, however, the echoes of her newfound complexity have already colored Nick's interpretation of events. It's perhaps the most rosate view of such a horrible day that it's possible to have and Nick, he's at a loss.
Nick's eyes finally manage to refocus and he directs his gaze to Hancock at his side. Nick wants to dismiss that apology, like he usually does with Hancock's tendencies for self-reproach, but the expression on Hancock's face undercuts that reflex. It's all Nick can do to lean in and pull him into a crushing hug, to cling to him like a child after a nightmare, like that horrible day had just happened.
What the hell is he supposed to say?]
--That was--is--I--I can see why that'd qualify as torture.
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He's only knocked out of his instinctive programming to comfort when Nick lunges at him and wraps him in that crushing embrace-- then all the pain Nick's feeling on his behalf flows into the ghoul, empathetic osmosis, and he has to struggle to keep breathing evenly.
This is absolutely worse than bearing this pain himself. He shouldn't have let Joy do this for him. Regret and guilt are very comfortable bedfellows. ]
Yeah... I can guess what memory she was runnin' through, not many with my old lady actually qualify for torture
[ He wants to take that pain away-- or take it back, but none of the placations that were ever passed to John ever helped him. He could say it was a long time ago, he could say those scavvers were probably dead in a ditch by now, he could say his mom wouldn't want him to carry these scars-- but none of that ever erased the pain of losing her how he did. ]
I'm sorry... useless right now, but... I wish I could take it back. That pain... that memory... that's not supposed to be yours to suffer with. I'm so fuckin' sorry, Nick. Didn't-- didn't Faraday say somethin' about how his new installs can delete memories? Maybe... I dunno...
Do ya wanna forget it?
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Hancock, at least, seems to realize what memory Nick's just crashed through several hundred times. It would have been an overwhelming experience with any memory at all, that many repititions, each identical, each distinct and separate. Any computer, even one as advanced as Nick, would have trouble with any file copied and pasted so many times and that experience was not insubstantial.
Despite his feelings of uselessness, Nick absolutely considers Hancock an anchor and the ferocity of his hug is both for himself, to keep from drifting away in that memory, and to provide some consolation to that raw edition of the man he loves. Nick listens, stares off at nothing, and Hancock...he apologizes again. This time, Nick hears it, hears the guilt in it, hears the dedication, and finally, finally he has context for that stubborn, protective streak.]
What?
[Nick draws back reluctantly, keeping his hold on Hancock but shifting to look him in the face. Lamplight eyes focus on Hancock's face and refocus again. Nick's brow dips and he's sure Hancock can hear the gears grinding in his skull. Nick feels--he's not fully sure--the scope of emotion he can experience is doing doubletime but, most of all, he feels the yawning, hollow of bereavement.
Does he want to forget it?]
Do you?
[It's not meant to be contentious, or angry, but that emotion was a crash course in the finer points of emotional turmoil. The instant Nick unlocked it, it shifted the foundations of what and who he is. So...maybe he sounds a little defensive, a little hurt, but it's not his hurt. He is a voyeur of a voyeur, but Nick has to believe that copies matter--he has to.]
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Hancock didn't really think before the suggestion left him-- god, every time the smallest bit of fear breaks the surface of him and dictates an action (or inaction) for him (like asking that question, like staying behind the skeleton of that stairway) it's a mistake, isn't it? The mental chains around himself get tighter-- not on Id, not on any of the triad Nick as met, but on the most restrained aspect of all: Hancock's Fear. The bondage bites, his teeth grind, he inwardly scolds himself for letting the impulsive offer off his tongue.
No, he wants to say. No, he doesn't want to forget.
But every junkie is running from something. Hancock is always running. The refusal he wants to give dams up his throat and behind it builds a terrible crushing shame.
Yes, part of him wants to forget. But he can't say that either, can't admit the bottom bedrock of his deepest shame when Nick asked in prickling defense. So instead the ghoul only looks away, pulls back into himself and locks down that shame that allows him to kill himself a little more every day. ]
Fair
[ Is what he finally manages to mutter, a dodge of that question much less tactful than his silver tongue typically grants him. ]
Dumb question, I guess [ It's not the same, Hancock reflects; he never had a fully functional, permanent 'delete' button. Best he got was mashing the 'snooze'; brief bits of chemical reprieve always guaranteed to fade back to the familiar pain. It wasn't so much running away as Avoid, and inevitable Approach.
Being unable to actually forget made it safe to Want to, to try to. It's different for Nick. Hancock swallows the knot in his throat. He tries again to give Nick the answer he wants to, to tell him that he doesn't want to forget, because that's what he's supposed to feel, isn't it?
But he can't. He shuts his mouth again. He fights the powerful cravings for any kind of escapism he could reach-- they're not real, the chemical comforts in his coat, not unless he Wakes Up, and he might just still be needed.
Even though he feels like he's only making things worse. ]
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As he pulls away in spirit, if not in actuality.
Nick doesn't have any platitudes to offer, even claiming that he understands is a raw deal and a spit in the face all at once. Neither of them have the words to explain this, but now that Nick has this context both for Hancock's...everything, and for what...all that feels like to a real, human person--
He can't let the conversation end like this.
Hancock hadn't meant to share that memory with Nick and, if he was a gambling synth, Nick would put money on the fact that he'd never have spoken of it again, not once for the rest of his life, not if there were any way to avoid it. Nick can't blame him for that...because that's precisely the same reaction that Nick Valentine had.
That's precisely why Nick, despite reeling from this seismic shift, has to prod at this old wound.]
I--uh--there's somethin' I gotta show you, two somethin's in fact.
[Nick releases him but only so he can try to rise. He stumbles a bit, still tangled in the vertigo of all of...that, but Hancock is close enough to lean on. He knows the ghoul would never let him just fall. That's--that's why he has to--]
Give me a hand? Got the rug yanked out from under me, there. Not sure I can get up without some help.
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'course. I gotcha
[ His inclination for gentleness returns like a tide, inevitable gravity for someone who has time and time again earned the very best of him. Even though that painful query of his is still bouncing around the ghoul's brain, demanding an answer he can't give. He sets it aside, stands and offers Nick his hand and his strength to pull him to his feet. ]
Easy does it
[ His smile is a small reflexive curl at the corner of his mouth; he's capable of tenderness whilst nursing emotional wounds; every ounce of gnawing uncertainty he's feeling is entirely his own. ]
Y'alright?
[ On his feet, if not in general. His hovering is not quite as apparent as Nick's can be, but he's here, he's close, he's not leaving Nick alone in trauma that doesn't even belong to him. Even if Hancock can't say what he feels he ought to (what he feels he owes his mother) he'll bite back the urge to drown out his own ineptitude as long as he can fucking bear to.
As usual, the ghoul finds the most comfortable target for the blame to be himself. ]
Take a second if ya gotta... don't gotta rush, I ain't goin' nowhere [ a promise to them both. ]
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Eventually, he regains some balance and the lightshow above slows to a crawl.
Nick's got his feet under him but he almost stumbles again as Hancock gives him that gentle assurance. His careful, tender assistance is a whipcrack of difference from his anger, from the grief and fury Nick just lived through. He means what he's saying, Nick knows that, but it's not really--it doesn't line up right with the jagged pull of Nick's thoughts.
Hancock switched his upset off, like flipping a switch, and Nick--he has a moment, a flicker of cowardice, as he considers the ghoul. He could let it lie, never mention this whole fiasco again--no, he would eventually have to unpack Joy. He wasn't about to resign himself to an eternity without happiness--
Nick has to press his skeletal hand against his eyes. It doesn't do much to abate the sensation, not the pounding headache nor the swimming his vision was doing, but there's comfort in the motions. He's scattered but--he isn't. His thoughts are racing, disjointed, but all the facets of him are perfectly aligned.]
Yeah--I'm--[Nick starts and his voice hitches as he stops.]--I--no? Not sure how to explain it. Alright isn't--
[Applicable?]
[He takes the moment, waits for his disorientation to abate even a little, and his stare returns, pinning his gaze on Hancock's face. He seems manic--feels manic--just to the left of where he ought to be. So he stares, slackjawed like he's going to start speaking again, but the words still don't exist. It's a roadblock so frustrating, Nick could cry--if he could cry. Instead, his grip on Hancock's hand goes tight, a little crushing as he holds on.
His face takes a journey, through a dozen emotions or pantomimes of them, before Nick just huffs a breathy laugh. This isn't what insanity feels like--but he's not sure what this is apart from overwhelming.]
Ever have too much answer to a question? Like you can explain, but it requires a degree and a roadmap to follow along?
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Nick has already seen Hancock's proficiency with compartmentalization, and the skill operates on all levels of his brain; he's learned to switch off what doesn't serve the moment-- he just... doesn't always remember to switch it back on. If this was anyone else, any other circumstance-- well, Hancock's spent his life defaulting to Cut and Run. But he doesn't want to get away from Nick-- just the parts of himself that his paramour's question dragged into the light. ]
You're not gunna topple if I give ya half a step, are ya?
[ It's more a rhetorical explanation of his meaning than a true questions. 'Alright' might be too blunt a term here but at least, Nick doesn't seem like he's going to fall over. He looks like his mouth can't keep up with his brain, like he's learned a whole new language but isn't sure how to properly form the words.
He waits while Nick processes, the cool waters of his concern chummed with that truth he's working so hard to exist beside. Part of him wants to forget. Part of him would. Part of him tries. Part of him is still running away.
Her last words on this earth (meant merely as the only comfort she could cobble together while she hung between life and death) were a simple enough mantra to follow, and yet he's still standing here failing her final request. ]
... Sure, think I follow. Ya ask me how to make Jet outta Brahmin shit and plastic and I can tell ya, but unless ya get the chemistry, the explanations gunna be: with a chem lab
[ The concept isn't too hard to follow; is Hancock missing some kind of context and basic knowledge here? ]
Any chance ya can give me the map and degree, short version? Really like to know where your heads at right about now-- I'll do my best to follow along
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[Nick's still thinking hard, turning thoughts over and over like flipping a rolodex, but he'd been lacking words before and he lacked them now. Nick didn't have any angle in on this topic, nor did Kellogg, nor did ViMa. Three distinct aspects, zero idea how to put this down on paper. Nick's frustration colors his mania in strange ways and, when he's ground down the gears in his head trying to find a way to--to explain this? Or what they need to do? He turns his attention back to Hancock--
Frustration becomes worry and then worry becomes some flavor of fear. It's written all over his face. Nick's emotional capacity has gone fully haywire and he's running the full gamut moment to moment. It's all genuine, but he needs to recalibrate. He needs Hancock to understand.]
Ah--there's nothing for it. I just gotta show you.
[Nick gently pulls his hand back--his fear becomes a sort of mournful resignation--and he grabs a window from the air above the podium. He hesitates, one last time, with his fingers poised over the blank screen. His eyes flick from the window to Hancock at his side. He can't possibly preface this aloud, he's been struggling for the words to encapsulate it since Joy manifested, but he still wants Hancock's consent.
Whether he's stalling or not, even Nick doesn't know.]
If--if you want to call it quits halfway through? I--that's okay. I promise it's okay. You just say the word.
THE SUSPENSE. IT KILLS ME <3
[ As he watches those vivid emotions pass across Nick's face like rolling seasons, the ghoul is left to his own racing guesses at what could be specifically amiss. ]
Keepin' me holdin' my breath over here. Don't tell me my memories flipped a six in your code or somethin?
[ It's a poor attempt at a joke, a reference to a thought he hadn't shared anyway, but he's trying to ease a little tension, fill the air with something other than the uncertain silence that is especially hard to withstand right now. He nods to his companion's explanation that he ought to be shown what's what; sure, he'll take a live demonstration.
Some back burner thought had already been percolating; not an expectation, but a contingency, a possibility. What if, for the purposes of some context that would be impossible to otherwise explain, Nick has a painful, corner-stone memory he'd like to share in kind? But the burning of Mrs. Mcdonough hadn't been shared willingly-- it had been inflicted, with the intention to cause harm. Harm Hancock feels, on some level, he allowed his paramour to take on his behalf.
His theory gets some gravity to it as Nick pulls up a window, and the list of the ghoul's guesses get shorter. He wouldn't be upset to be mistaken here (it'd be nice to be pleasantly surprised for once)-- but he won't refuse whatever Nick has to show him, either. Even though those words make a fun-house mirror of what his broken self had said to him. An errant, unnoteworthy parallel that still manages to sucker-punch him in the gut. Focus Hancock, focus up front. ]
... Gunna be somethin' rough, I take it? I'll keep that in mind... but it's not like that part'a you had the out you're offerin' me, here
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It's not-- [Nick closes his eyes for a second, as though that will help him process more efficiently. Scattered as he is, disoriented by the shifting of his bedrock, he has to get this part right. There's no other option. Once he's gathered the words he wants, Nick finally says:]
It's not penance. I'm not trying to even the score, here.
[Nick takes a deep breath (habit) and lets it out slow. This first admission is close to the core of the problem, but there's no way to extrapolate it out and have it make any sort of sense, not on it's own.]
I just...don't want you to use me to punish yourself...and I'm pretty sure I can't stop you unless you see the whole picture.
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But when Nick puts it into those words, specifically? It's easy to imagine how that could feel, how it could hurt. Whatever Hancock does for others, especially those he cares for, he wouldn't want them to carry it like a burden. ]
Hey, I don't wanna do that either... just hard to watch ya hurtin' when the memories are mine. I get she [ Jenny, Joy, his mother ] --you-- I get it happened cuz ya care about me. I wouldn't want a sacrifice I made worn like a scar, either. But ya get why I'm strugglin, here, doncha? Ya saw... ya saw what happens when I do Nothin
[ More poison stored up in the very core of him, bursting into his bloodstream like a menacing fever climbing. ]
I think I feel ya... I know you're not forcin' me here, I understand this ain't a trade off. This is just somethin' ya wanna give me, if I'll take it. And I'll give it a shot. Show me what ya got, and I'll stand right here by ya. Fair?
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When Joy had loaded into Hancock, she'd been held on a liminal band, not quite embedded in Hancock, not quite embedded in the machine, stuck in a limbo of neither and both. The machine couldn't really tell the difference between present and mostly present, but there was one. Joy isn't even a whole artificial intelligence--she'd been thrust into that space and, for those horrible, repetitive moments, had been closer to a living thing that Nick had ever dreamed. The way she saw that memory was key to that.
Nick can't quite pull that off the reverse, installing Hancock into that space astride the border, but it's not for lack of ability. Nick can absolutely program that...it's just, this memory, the original, is so deeply and fundamentally inhuman that he can only give Hancock a sense of how it was.
He could project just about any other memories in his databanks like they had happened yesterday. He could show them like a movie as easily as recalling them. This one (and, to a lesser extent the second) didn't rise to that standard. Nick can't make this memory immersive, can't hijack Hancock's thoughts and senses because, at the time, he hadn't had either.]
Just. Say the word. [Nick says again, not unkindly. The reminder is more for his own nerves than Hancock, but he means it.
He types /run at the end of his wall of code and the world goes out like a flashbulb.
Everything is and, suddenly, with a pop and a transition as violent as a sudden electrical shock, it isn't anymore. This is the oldest memory he has and it's barely a phantom--he found it when he ran diagnostics after their initial Far Harbor adventure. The senses, the inputs, are--well Nick doesn't find them disturbing, but he can't guarantee that Hancock won't.
There is no sense of touch, of time, of up or down, no breath, no heartbeat, no signs of life or thoughts even though he's clearly present. Sound exists through contact vibration only, felt as a reverberation rather than heard. It's freezing cold, this dark place, and that is a sense that he has in spades. Without other sensation it's just a prickling fact, cold, hot, they have no framework around them and it makes them seem distant and surreal.
It's impossible to know how long this memory actually is--it hasn't got a timecode--but he knows it's long. Much longer than he can share.
Which is why he chose this particular segment.
This space, as it happens, is the same room they were just standing in. The dome is empty, nothing but a yawning black abyss above. It has a sort of gravity to it, black stretches out into the darkness, pulling just so against the mind. The muffled sounds of movement, of loading and unloading, lifting and dropping resound through its body. It doesn't know what a body is, or that it has one, or it wouldn't except that the vibrations paint it a detached picture.
Nick's figured this is probably how a corpse would experience being transfered between slabs.
There's no sense of anything--no fear, no knowledge of what fear even is, no thoughts at all just--deep, desperate and directionless yearning. For something. For anything. A command. Another impact sound. Proof that this is somewhere and it is. Any reciprocal stimulus to give it form and meaning.
They aren't stuck in the dark long--or maybe they are--Nick can't measure it himself.
There's another flashbulb jolt and a fuzzy image, out of focus and distant, hemmed in like the light at the end of a long tunnel, comes into being. There's no way to strain toward it, to squint and make it clear. There's no way to interpret it--at least for Nick, there hadn't been. The moment is in binary--nothing gives way to something, 0 to 1, but the background radiation, that desperation and deep maddening loneliness feels like that flipped six, ill-fitting and out of place.
Nick hadn't had visual processing at the time, or rather he hadn't had the code--Hancock doesn't need code to see, so he gets to (or rather: is forced to) enjoy the vague, fishbowl sight of an Institute lab. It's blinding but there aren't eyelids to close, nor irises to mitigate exposure. It's just an endless image, persistent and moving, of a white room filled with blurry, indistinct faces and bodies moving to and fro.
Without time or memory there isn't object permanence. Every moment is only what is percieved in that moment and nothing else, nothing exists before or after. Nick can't convey that to an organic mind, but he hopes Hancock will get the gist.]
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[ Hancock mutters to himself below his breath, a backwards jab at his evil clone for robbing that common phrase and turning it into a little repeating time bomb. Call it quits, and the torture stops. But he never did, he just continued to deepen the fractures in his mind until the damage became more suitable to managing the pain. Three guesses what method will get favored here.
The first thing Hancock is consumed by is-- not blackness, because that's technically what you see on the inside of your own eyelids, and he is not seeing. His brain lurches to recover his snuffed senses but there's so very little to actually feel. His senses keep throwing disorientating Nothingness at him and it's confusing-- and cold, he's extremely cold but he can't shiver, and he can't move. Does he have a body to move? It would be terribly easy to describe the sensation like being dead, but that's not how it reads to Hancock.
It feels more like waiting to be born.
And it's very, very lonely.
That's how he translates that desperate yearning for Anything at all-- another sound felt more than heard, a shift in temperature (that could burn or freeze, because what is Burn or Freeze?) to hook his limited senses upon, to prove that he still has them. To prove he has them at all.
To prove he Is. He doesn't even know what Want is, but he wants to Be.
The introduction of Vision to Sound (or the tactile shade of it) is a blessing as much as a curse; it's wonderful and horrible, it's bliss and terror and what do those things even mean, anyway? It just is, and it's inescapable.
In reality, Hancock's eyes blink and strain for focus, his muscles tense against the sleep-paralysis keeping himself safely tucked into the Memory Pod. His body tries to mitigate the image being poured into his head, to exercise some manner of control over it. If he could just blink, slice in one moment of darkness he controls--
Do human babies experience stress if they don't understand how to blink, yet?
Of course this is a recording, Hancock is a (highly empathetic) witness, and this perspective did not (could not) blink or breathe or hold it's own body temperature. It's like an empty container that must take what is poured inside, must Be whatever it is given, at whatever moment it is given.
He doesn't like that feeling. He wants to keep what he wants, discard what he doesn't. These people in the fishbowl, they shouldn't get to make those choices for him, should they? That's not-- that's not something a living thing should be deprived of, right?
Is... he even a living thing?
But he must be, right? Why else would he think to ask? His eyes ache in reality like he's not blinking-- but he is. His limbs hold onto the cold like he's not shivering, but he is.
Okay. So this is bloody terrifying. ]
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The memory is moving faster than it's meant to, shapes blurring against the relief of the unmoving building, but still seems to crawl. He had no sense of it at the time, but from the outside looking in, it's endless. White on white, a constant low vibration that Nick now knows as servers. The threads of base installations are single jagged bolts of feeling; they're impersonal, neither painful nor pleasureable, just 1 and 0. They light up his limbs like a the flash of striking lightning and then they're gone. When they connect the sense of a body, of form and space are almost, almost within reach.
It's odd, looking back, and Nick has to wonder when he developed proprioception. He had to have it before he was tested, but he doesn't in this old file. There's no sense of self, of position, of what limbs are or are not attached. It might be for the better, he's pretty sure he's a head mounted on an endoskeleton right now.
For Nick, or rather, for the synth on the rack in the lab, the most excruciating part of it all is when something drifts out of reach. The lab lights scorch shadows into his eyes, or they would, if he were organic. The cold ebbs as the technicians run and install and that sense is lost. When the cameras finally go dark, Nick recalls it and can still feel the lurch as it's taken away. There's no more stimuli, not until an impossible moment--
Hancock can't parse code but Nick's brain does automatically, it feels like punchcards being fed through his head, it grinds in a way that is mechanical and unyeilding. What it says, he does. There's no alternative state, no choice and this, mercifully, is something. Being capable of responding to it is to Be. He doesn't have the capacity to ponder, to imagine, to judge, just to do. 1 and 0. He runs the code and, in a rush of more data, more being than he's ever been, his OS is installed atop his BIOS.
Suddenly, binary is an order of magnitude too simple. The bit depth of his existence jumps in exponential leaps giving clarity, space, for...well, nothing. Still, there's form, the ticking of data, processes and he doesn't have the capacity for joy, but that sense hangs amorphous around him. Relief, perhaps? From and to what, he had no idea, still doesn't. The next flurry of data is like the rosy fingers of dawn, it's like color suddenly bursting through the world--light (however metaphorical) falls across him and time begins. The endless procession of moments are still the only thing that's real, if anything is, but now he can count them.
Two million three hundred thousand four hundred and five moments pass for him.
He can conceptualize those numbers, each individual unit, and hold them in his mind at once, but the abstract idea of scale is beyond him. Those numbers Are and because he knows them he Is. They are, without question, the most precious thing in his tiny universe. Before a single tic more, new data arrives. The file is unfathomably large for what is, essentially, a blank robotic husk. It looms, gargatuan and foreboding, like a planet hanging above him, eclipsing the nothing entirely.
Nick's memory starts to fail here, the memory starts to fail here, this template didn't take. He has no idea how many templates they attempted to install in him back in the day, but it wasn't a small number. This first one is barely shaped like a person, but they are everything to him. Then, like a flashbulb, they go out. That presence leaves only a bare echo behind.
That echo is the most precious thing in his tiny universe. He tucks it away with his numbers, collects what is left of it, and continues counting.
The memory hangs after that, as they attempt to install that engram again. The synth on the rack has a catastrophic failure. He doesn't die, he can't, because he's not alive. But one moment he is and the next he isn't. 1 and 0. That doesn't take either, Nick showing Hancock this is proof of that, but there's a finality to the sudden cesation that is impossible to articulate. This is what it means to be a synth, to have and then not, to forget like a machine forgets, to be bereft of even the most rudimentary sense of life and self.]
This is the oldest memory I've been able to dig out.
[Nick speaking is jarring but only because it instantly draws a division between there and here. He is outside and that is inside and the voice is coming from elsewhere. There's an elsewhere to come from.]
Damn near everything between here and my finding that first kid is either corrupted or written over. It's just gone...but I know it was there, even if I can't prove it.
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It's wild when what little senses are alive in this projected perception suddenly die; the temperature vanishes and it somehow amplifies that dreadful loneliness, like a beloved friend suddenly passing away. Losing vision feels even worse, with so very little air to sustain the fire that is existing in this place. Flame, life cannot exist in a vacuum of nothing.
Ones and Zeros aren't nothing, at least. To an organic (and arguably extremely unique) mind like Hancock's it feels stifling, but that's not the projection of the memory; he can feel that the variance, no matter how simple, has substantial gravity-- reverence, even. It provides seams and edges, no matter how basic; it defines and makes him into something with a function.
Then black and white binary bends into something new; impossibly it's almost like every color. Complexity that doesn't yet have definition, relief at being closer to Being, than Not Being. The precursor of what might become happiness, at the promise of perhaps coming alive. No-fucking-wonder Nick was having a hard time putting words to this.
It had been so precious, so seraphic to know what time is, to understand the moments passing. Every little bit of Being gathered together, interlinking, like fractals of ice weaving into a beautiful singular piece of creation.
But then, instead of small friendly fractals, interlinking to create a snowflake, a glacier looms.
That first presence is titanic and awesome above him, like a meteoric extinction event in the night sky. How can he feel so awed and ready to watch the stars fall? Would it end this Almost Existence in favor of something new?
No, not this time. The huge presence breaks on the coast of him like a white wave, receding. The echo it leaves him, like the ocean's breath on the seaside rocks. It didn't stick, the logging failed-- another install attempt, a fiercer onslaught from the ocean, a second tsunami's sigh.
His stone coastline fractures; the broken cliff's edge chases gravity into the crushing ocean; something not quite alive can't die. It can be Unmade. It feels like being Uborn. The impossible colors born of blending that binary all come undone, once again mere black and white, zero and one, and then somehow a state that is less than that. ]
Y-yeah [ The projection is so real-- or perhaps unreal, that it takes him a moment to remember he can speak. To do so is both jarring and relieving-- it seats some tiny aspect of his cognition back with his body; he's breathing, he has a heartbeat, he can feel his clothing on his skin and he could tap out if he really needs to, but he doesn't. The reminder is much appreciated. ]
Seein' why ya were havin' trouble describin'... this
[ If anything, the ghoul's brain is too busy bending the limits of his own understanding to stay so deeply mired in his own turmoil; his disgust at his own cowardice gets quiet, becomes background observer of this thus far incomprehensible state of being-- or rather, Not Quite Being. ]
So... these assholes spent a lot'a time playin' God, huh? Givin' to ya, and Takin' away, in ways that are hard to grasp for those of us born in an organic print
And you don't wanna have anythin' else taken away? That what you're tryin' to get through my thick skull?
[ Nick did say he has two pieces of show and tell here, but Hancock can't help but try and piece the puzzle together, regardless. ]
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Hancock takes in that whole ordeal better than Nick expects. He's overwhelmed, awed, and a little morose--he got all the key notes. This, Nick figures, is about as close as an organic mind can get to understanding how this whole nonsense plays out. It's not pleasant, but it's not unpleasant either--it just is...]
Sort of.
[Nick cedes and the whole phantom memory pulls away, receding until they're standing in the proper space, the domed room that houses his CPU. There's something really odd about missing the sensation of missing things--being bereft of being bereft. It's a kind of feedback nonsense and it makes Nick's head hurt--he'd hurry on to avoid it but, well, he's not entirely keen on where they're going.]
I'm not saying those Institute loons don't play God, they sure do, but I...don't figure I was a supplicant so much as the housing? Ah, no, that's not right. Phrasing's off--
[Nick huffs, displeased and frustrated with his inability to capture any of this in simple terms. Whenever he tries to put it into English, it goes haywire. Everything sounds more...intentional, more malicious than it was. Nick's creation wasn't kind, the Institute has never been big on kindness, but it wasn't hateful.
It was...neutral bordering on disregard. The unkindness of indifference.
Whether he was alive or not didn't matter, he wasn't the main attraction. They only cared how he percieved things insofar as it dictated which templates would mount successfully. He was a calculator, a radio, a vcr; DiMa was the one meant to develop sentience and live. Nick was...at best: the control group.]
Don't get me wrong. It'll be a cold day in Hell before I start start stickin' up for The Institute, but that's...they're not important here.
They don't really matter, just a footnote in the grand scheme of things.
[Nick pulls up the window again and types a long strand of code. The code on the window feels like the punchcard sensation. Nick's not talking to the VR buffer, to the memory pods, so much as he's talking to himself. He's weaving through the registry, through all the logs and numbers and moments to find the one he needs.
It's right where he left it, of course, and he sighs as he reluctantly types the command to load them in. Before he hits enter, well, he may as well offer another out.]
This one is--well--it's...a lot. It'll be real hard to cut off once it starts up--you'll see--it's--hmmm. Damn it.
You still in?
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[ It's rhetorical, idly spoken brain-storming; he heard Nick say this isn't the entire point, but he can't help poking at The Institute's ironic lack of humanity when it's so painfully obvious.
The one thing one really should avoid sacrificing on the alter of preserving humanity is... their own humanity. That really should go without saying.
The ghoul makes a dismissive gesture, as though to scatter his own tangential thoughts. Smart Humans being Dumb is not the entire point right now. ]
Hellova foot note, but I got it on the cheat sheet; so what's the second half of the equation here?
[ He muses aloud whilst Nick types, and falls quiet to absorb his foreboding warning. His mind strains for something to anticipate, any idea of what could be next, but the impulse is drawn to his heel. This is nothing like he expected. Guessing can only get him so far, when Nick can paint the whole picture for him; Hancock just has to keep trusting him to show him what he needs so that they can understand each other.
That empathy is worth witnessing whatever Nick needs to show him.
And maybe that is part of the synth's bottom line, too. ]
For you? All in, always.
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This time, when the world cuts back in, there's a ramp. The initial flashbulb of being is followed by sensation building, like blood rushing back through numb limbs. Those pathways are well worn at this point, there's a sense of body, of presence in space, of someone occupying it. It's not the fearful partial existence of a synth on a rack.
Nick has no idea how long transpired between his time in the lab and this installation, but it was significant enough that DiMa had decided they had to escape. Nick had considered asking him to fill in anything he could, but he never had, and probably never would. Even if DiMa still had those ancient memories collecting dust somewhere, it doesn't seem like something that he really wants to know.
This system loads him in like the VR system they're currently occupying. There's a hook against his central programming, at the base of his skull, and it tangles his processes with these. For Hancock it'd be just to the side of how stepping into a memory pod feels. The synth in the memory isn't being put into the world so much as the world is being put in him, but it parses out about the same. That beheamoth of data that hung over them before, that loomed over the vast abyssal vacuum of nothingness, seems smaller now. It isn't, but the nothing around it isn't as dark, as absolute as it was at the beginging.
That's a side effect of digital storage and deletion. It isn't so much removing what's there as it is writing over it. The files don't always match in size, in bit-depth, so there are splinters left over in the wake of a wipe, half-remembered fragments of data, of templates, of sensory records without context or meaning. They clutter the blank nothingness like a swath of distant, glimmering stars. Insubstantial but comforting.
They persist so he knows that he existed, that he exists now.
This template loads into him almost like a dream. It fits the hollow spaces between the fragments, slots into place comfortably, and settles. He's pulled into it then and, briefly, the world exists in stereo. One feed is an office where he's talking (rather: where Nick is talking) to a professor who's seated behind a polished wooden desk. The scene has a faded, watercolor quality to it, like the party and the rest of Nick's internal spaces. The data's edges overflow and smear, capturing the concept of the time with clumsy, analog methods.
It's a bit like looking at developed film against a lamp--accurate but strange, removed, and probably not how it was intended to be viewed.
While he watches himself, he also is himself. What would qualify as an out of body experience from the other direction is the default here. There is a sense, though, that this particular instance is more separated than is entirely normal.
Still, he sits with the professor while he watches himself sit with the professor, and the sound is somehow coming from both. It's muffled terribly in first person but overlayed with crisp, recorded tape in the third. It's a jarring way to exist, on four layers at once, but it's the closest to being alive that he's known so far. He grasps at all of the layers, leaning in and hopes that one clips through him and sticks.
Nick the current is seeing this in that four part stereo, just like Hancock, but with his own cognition on top. It gives him vertigo, dealing with this many layers, but it's important to feel this one out. They wouldn't be here otherwise.
In the office, Nick the former is making stilted small-talk with the dean of medical technologies at MIT. The trappings of the Institute, the bones of it, are all here but Nick's memory doesn't grasp them so his--that is ViMa's--memory fills the blanks with bursts of jagged definition. Nick the former sounds, looks, and in a muted way, feels terrible, on edge, bereft.
That small aspect is a known variable, it strikes a chord inside him, and has a resonance that falls in line with the rudimentary consciousness that they call ViMa.]
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Back to the show, Hancock follows along the further fleshed understanding of existence. This memory is less jarring for it, before the dizzying split-screen effect of watching things from more than one perspective activates. This no longer feels like waiting to be born, or made... but rather like everything is being born, while at the same time, it already exists. Data splinters that are stars, templates like planets in the heavens, a new galaxy of existence slowly yawning and unfurling awake, bit by bit.
And then somehow they all impossibly align; the stars, the planets, the grief shared across two entirely different incarnations of existence. They connect, like puzzle pieces, as though by design. It's as though the consciousness that would be called ViMa suddenly understood (manifested) the concept of empathy, when he felt something in that worn-down detective was like something in himself.
Despite the disorientating layers of the memory, that one strand of this song feels utterly sublime, at least to a heart like Hancock's. How had ViMa grasped a concept that was never given to him? How could he surpass his makers so spectacularly before he was even fully made? Hancock feels fiercely proud of that adorable spindly synth; he managed a mental mechanic that evades organics on the regular. ]
Alright... so what I'm followin' here is that these template-things? Are kinda like your paints, right? The colors ya get on your palette to draw up Yourself with? And some of 'em kinda 'feel good' and 'fit', and others... not so much? That close to what I'm supposed to be graspin' here?
[ Hancock is grateful all his chemical adventures have granted him such a flexible mental state; watching a scene from multiple points of view is rather brain-bendy, but it's also the easiest part of the show so far to wrap his head around so far. ]
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