Catherine Chun (
arkproject) wrote in
uploadednet2018-10-21 08:32 am
Entry tags:
001 █ radio
[ Sometime after radio communications are restored to people at the mall, Catherine acquires one and clicks it on, broadcasting to all receivers. ]
Sooo... what's it like out there? Seriously. Anyone who's been out-- tell me what it's like?
I'm trying to make something that can help. Oh, my name's Catherine, by the way. Nice to meet you. [ She sounds calm, even-voiced, more sincere than sarcastic. Let's face it, this is not the worst next place she could've gone after PATHOS-II. Not the best, but there's other, living humans, so Catherine can make do. She just wants to make herself useful. The objectives seem completely obvious to her, and provide an immediate direction: help everyone survive. ]
Sooo... what's it like out there? Seriously. Anyone who's been out-- tell me what it's like?
I'm trying to make something that can help. Oh, my name's Catherine, by the way. Nice to meet you. [ She sounds calm, even-voiced, more sincere than sarcastic. Let's face it, this is not the worst next place she could've gone after PATHOS-II. Not the best, but there's other, living humans, so Catherine can make do. She just wants to make herself useful. The objectives seem completely obvious to her, and provide an immediate direction: help everyone survive. ]

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Hello? Catherine, this is Dean Winchester. Are you here in the mall?
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[ To Catherine, the fact that she has a body of any kind now is the bit that's hard to adjust to; all the rest is situation normal, which is probably apparent in how very un-distressed she sounds. ]
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[He gathers up the few items he's purchased or "borrowed" into a pack, and heads out of the dark ice cream parlor (but not before grabbing a whole jar of chocolate chips on the way, because, c'mon, why not?).
On the way, he continues talking with her over the walkie.]
I haven't actually been out there yet, but I've seen some things from inside. It's... not good.
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Well, whatever you have to say would be helpful. I'd like to make a robotic scout to take a look around, but if it gets munched in two seconds, it's going to be a lot of work for nothing.
[ Catherine, meanwhile, has been assiduously avoiding the doors, windows, and any trace of the outside and the mist. She's not a coward, but she knows where she's most useful, and it's way back here in Radio Shack. Aside from which, she's more than a little worried about damaging her shiny new android body with who-knows-what out there -- a body she has no idea how to repair, and she definitely can't just upload herself into a new one if something goes wrong. Yeesh. Her mortality rearing its ugly head again is freaking her out, a little. Secretly. ]
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Well, I've only seen bloody chunks of... things, so I don't think whatever's out there cares much about electronics.
[It's just his best guess. For all he knows, the things could be collecting and trading tech like some kind of card game. He turns down the hallway where he thought he remembers seeing the Radio Shack and is rewarded.]
Hey, I'm here.
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[ She's sitting on the floor in the aisle with the internal computer cables, surrounded by tiny screwdrivers and bits of wiring and microchips and assorted tech. She's a slight, very human looking Taiwanese woman, slightly ruffled but otherwise completely average and unharmed. ]
Dean, right?
[ That sounds normal. Totally normal. Ugh. Catherine has not missed in-person interaction. She just needs to fake it. Not a weirdo workaholic hermit here, not at all... ]
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Yes, Dean. Hi.
[He offers her his hand to shake.]
You been here long?
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Um-- a few hours. Today. It's been a little frustrating. This isn't what I'm used to working with.
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So how far from 2007 are you from?
[He awaits some strange pain or prickling sensation - he and Ariadne had both been victims of strange physical reactions when they talked about what was happening - but nothing happened. This entire place was far too unpredictable for Dean's liking.]
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Last I knew, it was 2104. Computer chips do not look like this anymore. [ Especially irritating since, clearly, she has several highly advanced models embedded somewhere in her. She has to, to be handling the complexity of her scan. ]
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Well, I don't know much about that kind of thing, but I can do recon or collect parts for you. Pretty much anything. I've been here three weeks and I am just about bored senseless without something to do, y'know?
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How are you with building metal frames? I had someone who was doing that part, but he... [ Catherine hesitates. She's actually not sure what had happened to him after he volunteered to run out into the mist to get their radios. ] It's been a while since I saw him.
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Even now Shinichi is found with the familiar notepad in hand, letting his counterpart jot down at will, the quick scritches of pen against paper the only sound in the quiet area. He's taken to moving stealthily these days, adopting a much less clumsy walk than used on his first days here. No more running around panicking, either. Now he slips behind things and hesitates before moving forwards, and steps lightly -- which means he can accidentally sneak up on people even when he didn't mean to.
Indeed, when he hears the voice, it's definitely close enough to take him by surprise. He pauses, at first thinking it's directed at him, when he tilts his head around a corner and catches the woman who is speaking, into one of the radios. His own was left behind at his "campsite" this time, to free his hands for any potential supplies he may encounter.
Shinichi knows Catherine by association; he's made it a point to introduce himself to nearly everyone else in the mall by this point, not only because he's a painfully polite young man by nature, but also for the fact Migi wants to consistently take notes on everyone here, even just on people's surface behaviours. She's seemed quite pleasant to him, amiable, but there's something distinctly off about her. It could be dismissed as awkwardness -- and Awkwardness is his figurative middle name, so he gets that -- but after encountering a variety of oddities around this place, he supposes he is a little wary.
It doesn't stop him from still being polite. Even if the politeness comes after lingering long enough to eavesdrop on what she just said, process it a little, and then act. When did he start doing that? ]
Ms. Chun! [ His greeting is bright, left hand lifting in a wave. ]
I was just looking around and heard you over here. You're trying to make something that can help?
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Anyway, this is the most relieved Simon has ever been to hear from Catherine. And not only is this moment up against some incredibly stiff competition, it also occurs shortly after he’s inadvertently passed out in one of the massage chairs.
It results in the radio flying across the floor when he jerks up into awareness, where it probably hits the button once or twice and transmits half of Catherine’s name in the ensuing kerfuffle before he’s secured it.
And even then, Simon waits until the end of her surreally casual message, where she identifies herself, to respond, clutching the radio in both hands like the lifeline that it is. Now that it works. How did Catherine get the century-old walkie-talkie to work before century-old Simon did? That’s just how life works. ]
Cath- Catherine, can you hear me?
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Not bad. I mean, I can do the basic stuff.
[He noted her hesitation regarding her cohort, but filed it away for later. He didn't know her, and didn't want to intrude, but he had a feeling if the guy had gone outside, it hadn't ended well.]
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I'm hoping it lacking a real brain will keep it immune from most of the mist's effects. I can give you a sketch to work from if you feel up to it. [ As long as she can stay busy with this project -- whether it leads anywhere or not -- Catherine can keep it together, no problem. ]
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But she has to think about it now, because Simon's here. ] Simon-- are you here? When did you get here?
[ A muddle of feelings jumbled together makes the words come out with some pressure behind them, a sense of urgency. ]
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For some reason, he hadn’t expected the emotion in her voice, and feels a prickle of guilt at the sound of it. ]
I- I don’t know, it feels like days. Are we in some kind of game? I looked for a server room, or... something, but the only thing that’s out of place is those... cryogenic pod things.
[ yeah ok simon that’s what they are. ]
And the customers. If they’re brain scans, they’re bad ones.
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It seems the majority of those who wander out are rendered apart by something lurking out there. The one person I saw manage to return was physically uninjured, but was quite disturbed by the event. I'm not certain if the mist has any sort of mind-altering properties that would play into that, but I wouldn't rule it out.
You say you're making something?
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As long as it doesn't have to look great, I can cobble something together.
[He's already looking around for something with wheels, and as luck would have it, there's a decently sophisticated radio-control car on display. He's pretty sure he can start there and just tear it down enough to house the rest of her robotics. He takes down the display unit and another in the box. As he starts digging into the box, he glances at Catherine.]
So are you an engineer?
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She pauses before putting pencil to paper. ] Oh-- yeah. I'm an intelligent systems specialist. Designing robots to chart territory man isn't meant to go is actually my job.
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Getting actual information is useful, so she moves right along. ] I'm making an exploratory remote-controlled robot. So, it shouldn't be affected by mind-altering anything, but I'm hoping whatever's out there is less interested in metal and wires than it is in human flesh, or this might be a very short-lived exploration.
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They're definitely not brain scans. Way too limited. Seems more like a rudimentary A.I. [ Maybe she'll be lucky, and Simon will just keep asking her expository questions... Uh-huh. Catherine already knows she won't just be able to sweep everything under the rug; she's not even sure, for once, if she's capable of it. But the urge to do so is very strong nevertheless. She has to squeeze her hands into fists, pressed on her thighs where she's kneeling, surrounded by electrical parts and her radio. ]
... Otherwise, I don't know. [ Her voice gets quieter. ] Sorry, Simon. This time, I don't have any answers.
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(No surprise people think she's a little odd...)
Catherine looks blank but receptive on being greeted, lifting her hand too-quickly in return wave before lowering it. When he asks about her project, she relaxes, comfortable talking about that. ] Yeah, my real job is programming the A.I. for robots that assist with sustaining human life on the ocean floor, so making a robotic helper to scout for us isn't too far from that in principle. [ Her light tone fades into a grimace. ] The parts I have to work with, on the other hand... Not easy.
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The idea certainly sounds useful. What information are you looking to obtain with it? Visuals of what lives out there would be useful, but so would determining the scope of the fog's coverage.
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Can’t you just... can’t you dig around in the mainframe or something? The technology can’t be that different if it can handle us, right?
[ Simon doesn’t labor under the delusion that Catherine always has answers. She just usually has answers. She’s his sole answer-provider when it comes to suddenly finding yourself a digital clone in a deserted human settlement, so his tone is a bit dismayed and incredulous. ]
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I'm not sure yet, though scope of coverage isn't a bad idea. Mostly, it's so if we need to leave the mall, we have an idea of where we're heading -- if there's any other safe zones, that kind of thing. We can't expect to be able to stay here forever, and wandering out into the mist without a map seems... bad.
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How am I supposed to do that? Simon, it doesn't work that way-- I told you-- [ Catherine breaks off in frustration. ] There's limitations to what I can do. There's always been limitations. I thought that was pretty clear by now.
[ Nope, not bitter at all. Augh. She hadn't meant to let that slip through. She's so frazzled from everything going on right now, and Simon's in the unique position to know exactly the right buttons to push, to know her just too well to put up with the polite fiction that she's above and beyond all this. ]
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What are you talking about? You did it all the time when you were plugged in in PATHOS-II. You can’t see anything?
[ Obviously she’s still in digital form, because human Catherine is Other Catherine (and human Simon is Real Simon, because.... logic), so obviously she should be able to spread her consciousness across this whole simulation somehow via means Simon can’t even visualize, much less understand. Or, if not that, at least do it a little, an even more nebulous concept. ]
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[ Come on, Simon, catch up. It doesn't even occur to Catherine that they need to go over that she isn't a digital presence anymore, because she assumes the same thing that happened to her happened to Simon. It should be obvious, right? ]
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The alien has recently decided that scouting some potential allies in this place is the next course of action. So when she replies, Migi perks up -- suddenly tense and alert, fingers twitching and very much startling Shinichi, who gasps... loudly.
...She isn't the only one who may come across as odd. But he can try to play that off as a reaction to her words, which admittedly are pretty surprising. ]
A robot? That's... that's... wow.
[ The spider that is his hand flinches almost aggressively, impatient. And Shinichi knows what that means. Migi wants more information -- because the knowledge that Catherine programs artificial intelligence in robots is no doubt starving his curiosity. The human can practically feel the alien snapping at him: 'That's... that's... wow' is hardly a useful statement, Shinichi. ]
Um-- what kind of robots did you program? I mean, what did they look like? Like androids?
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He's suitably impressed with her title.]
That sounds sort of fun.
[Dean's a problem solver, so he understands the allure of such a job.]
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He’s already walking in a random direction, because just standing around making noise here is freaking him out a little. If this simulation’s implemented calories, post-PATHOS Simon is going to burn so many. ]
Well, you’re in something. How are you talking to me? Where are you?
[ It’s impatient, too, but a toothless, bickery impatience, borne of what’s started to be a seed of understanding that Catherine is maybe sincerely unable to predict the conclusions Simon comes to, or fails to come to, as the case may be.
Unselfconsciously sussing out the one layperson neuron they have in common is just kinda what he does now. ]
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You have realized there's no Omnitools here... right? This is 2007. There's no mall-wide system for me to be in apart from some security cameras.
[ Okay, she'll back up for him-- back way up. This is still better than having a real argument, which had seemed all too likely a possibility when she'd first heard his voice, though she was still relieved. ]
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It’s a simulation like the ARK, why wouldn’t there be a system for you to be in? There’s nobody left. Somebody has to be maintaining it as a scan from the inside somehow, right? I mean, if we’ve actually time traveled—
[ Simon has been so focused on a digital environment where the creator herself would be inside of it — while it floated in space — that the idea makes more sense to him than it probably should. More sense than it would to somebody from not-an-apocalypse, you know, without a computer floating in space full of human brain-clones with exactly one programmer on board. ]
Just... look, how do I get to you? [ impatient!! CATHERINE!!!! ]