Lois Lane (
skepticgirl_1) wrote2017-09-06 12:06 pm
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high achiever, don't you see? baby, nothing comes for free
I was going a little out of my mind with ideas and stories and no real outlet for them. So when the posting popped up that someone was asking for writers to work on a new independent publication, I seized on the opportunity. Who knew? Maybe it would end up as a paying job and I could get myself out of the home. I was being picky on that front, I knew, but there were so many choices that I was being denied, just by being in Darrow itself, that I wanted what power I did have to be exercised exactly how I wanted it to be. No burger slinging jobs for me, only something I loved.
There was a light rain drizzling down as I made my way to the coffee shop, so my hair was a bit frizzed despite the now damp hoodie I had on over my shirt. At least my trusty boots were made for walking in the rain and my messenger bag, carrying vital notebooks, was waterproof.
I scanned the crowd of coffee and sugar addicts that had been drawn to the warmth and caffeine through the rain. There in the back I saw an Asian woman surrounded by books and papers. Yup, that pretty much matched the description plus the image I had in my mind. I don't think I would trust any reporter who didn't have a full desk.
I grabbed myself a double chocolate mocha with whipped cream to drown out the taste of coffee, which I was still getting used to, and headed over to the table.
"Hi?" I said. "Cindy?"
There was a light rain drizzling down as I made my way to the coffee shop, so my hair was a bit frizzed despite the now damp hoodie I had on over my shirt. At least my trusty boots were made for walking in the rain and my messenger bag, carrying vital notebooks, was waterproof.
I scanned the crowd of coffee and sugar addicts that had been drawn to the warmth and caffeine through the rain. There in the back I saw an Asian woman surrounded by books and papers. Yup, that pretty much matched the description plus the image I had in my mind. I don't think I would trust any reporter who didn't have a full desk.
I grabbed myself a double chocolate mocha with whipped cream to drown out the taste of coffee, which I was still getting used to, and headed over to the table.
"Hi?" I said. "Cindy?"
no subject
"You know four people here?" I boggled, too surprised to phrase my question correctly. She knew what I meant, of course. That seemed like an awfully high number, a suspiciously high number, and I had to wonder why she got to have connections but I couldn't even find a single person who had been to Metropolis. "I can't even find people who know my city."
I shook my head at her question; I wasn't here for the bird things, but it was so recent that I had heard about it a lot. "But yeah, there definitely is a connection there, I think, between the evil doers and the weird stuff. Like I said, kids with mechanical tentacles. Where did they get that tech? Who was helping them? In my experience, sixteen year olds don't have the resources or the drive to do something like that without guidance. And that KIRIN thing? Wow. I mean, wow." I couldn't even imagine what those poor people had been through, and then to have it just fade away like it was no big deal, like watch dog groups didn't immediately need to be set up or new laws passed.
no subject
Until if and when it ever became appropriate to share them which was not at all her decision to make.
"And there might be even more people who could plausibly be from my world, but that I can't easily play three degrees of separation with," she went on. "People who obviously know about New York, who might even have lived in a version of New York with the same President of the United States, and so on. Lots of people are from the United States. So there are clearly indications that things here aren't completely random."
Her lips quirked slightly at the mention of the Cephalosquad. Cindy needed to be careful not to give away too many details of that incident, having been there personally, but it was definitely the sort of news that would have been noticed by people like the two of them people who were looking for the strange and inexplicable.
"Yeah, there's definitely some kind of shadow network, you could say, that's funneling funds into the wrong hands. Hands who'll use it to exploit something, or someone, and never in the favor of those of us from outside. Kirin's Horn is the worst such group that I know of, far outstrips the local gangs. Hydra's another."
no subject
I did notice too that Cindy wasn't using any names, which was a little weird but also not? She might not have been thinking about it, but I was curious nonetheless.
I nodded a little as she continued. It did strike me as odd that there were a lot of people here who knew some place like New York, who had some common baseline, but everything else could weave away so drastically. Or that we were all so very white, for the most part.
"Hydra sounds like something out of Worlds-- Uh." No one knew about Worlds War 3 around here. I had to get with the program. "A video game, back home. Is that some kind of creature? Because I'm bad a the mythology thing that evil organizations seem to love."
no subject
Even a brief, casual conversation like this felt more rewarding in any number of ways.
"God, I wish I was still caught up with all the latest video games. Maybe if this paper really gets off the ground," Cindy said, trying to keep the conversation sociable. "But yeah, a hydra is a mythological creature. You've probably heard some kind of reference to it before, if the myth exists in your world cut one head off, two grow back in its place. Most known in my world thanks to Disney's Hercules, I suspect, or maybe the fact that we're all somehow required to learn Greek and Roman mythology in elementary school would have extended that knowledge just as much. Who knows. Anyway, it's definitely an aspirational sort of name for the group that exists. The hope is naturally that any one of their agents can get caught and eliminated, so to speak, without the core organization itself faltering or weakening in any way. Individuals are dispensible."
She pursed her lips, leaning back in her chair. "Which feels pretty heartless to me, but I guess that's kind of the nature of a villainous organization. The potential gains outweigh the morality."
no subject
I felt a pang again, of disappointment, of honest anger, at the fact that the city's controller(s) had taken me from my world just as I was about to meet SmallvilleGuy, face to face. It wasn't fair that that very second had to be the one when my life changed.
I cleared my throat and shook my head slightly, moving on from the memory. "But, anyway... Yeah, that sounds a little familiar. And also very creepy and heartless, I agree. But it makes it kind of easier to realize where to focus your attack. Why bother with taking out the heads? You know they're not the threat. Just distract them while you go for the throat. Or, er, body. I mean, if we're taking this kind of literally, which people seem to do. So what's their M.O.?"
no subject
It made her wonder if there was something similar that could be dropped into the government, which seemed even more dangerous than rallying up a mostly younger set of kids.
"But yes, anyway, as for Hydra," Cindy went on, breathing a deep sigh and rolling her eyes. "It's the most clichéd story in the book. World domination. Turns out that indeed, sometimes people just want power and they don't care what it takes to get it. And it ends up spawning a lot more creativity than you'd necessarily expect."
no subject
Then again, given the way everything worked in Darrow, someone would have happily told me all the rules and the history and the current rivalries, but they wouldn't ever mention the mind control aspect. Because this entire city's native inhabitants were mind controlled, in my book.
"World domination?" I echoed, skeptical. "But how can you dominate the world when you believe that the world consists of one city? Or-- Do you mean Hydra's from outside Darrow? And it came here?"
no subject
It really was something to head down to Darrow's tiny equivalent of Koreatown, little more than a block or two, and feel practically like she'd been transported to her grandparents' social circles. Except no one could actually talk about specific towns or cities. So hard to find a good doenjang jjigae, she could remember one old woman lamenting.
But any mention of Seoul or Busan was met with blank stares.
"Anyway, there is a Hydra in my world, probably others. Can't say for sure if it's those same folks who started it here, or if Darrow was inspired to come up with a good knock-off, or what," she added. "Maybe it's a mix of both, with native Darrowians being recruited by someone on the outside. But the methods seem similar enough to the Hydra I knew."