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Jun. 3rd, 2013 12:15 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
There's been a break from the weird stuff.
There often is. Even with the Troubles rising again, sneaking from the shadows and striking where they're least expected, they don't stop normal, every day life and the normal, every day problems that come with it. Bar fights and treed cats, elderly folks forgetting where they'd put the barbecue grill last fall and reporting it as stolen; parking tickets, beach permits. Everything needed to keep Haven running smoothly, cheerfully. Just another friendly little town on the coast of Maine. Stop by. Have some pancakes.
It grates.
He takes to wearing his sleeves rolled down after the third time he caught himself staring at the burn on his arm. Eleanor patched it up, taped on a clean gauze pad, and scolded him for being careless, but the bandage fell off in the shower and though he'd conscientiously replaced it, he's sick of looking at it. Remembering. How it didn't feel. How it did. Pressure in his chest, watching the flame lick at his skin like he'd been watching it on TV.
So he buttons his sleeves at the wrist, and ignores it. It's not like there isn't plenty to keep him busy. Parker still doesn't know the ropes in town, and she's not likely to for a while yet. Haven folk are glad enough to take a tourist's money, but let them stick around and they soon find the layer of steel under the welcoming sand of the town. She's been running into one closed door after another, and getting frustrated, and he wonders if maybe she doesn't toy with that old Herald photo just about as often as he runs his fingers over the shape of the bandage that sits under his shirt sleeve.
Nothing much happened today, though. A few calls, some paperwork, going over the filing system with Parker and finalizing the paperwork necessary even for an on-loan federal agent, and now it's quitting time, meaning he's headed out, walking with long, measured strides that he's got to pace against Parker's shorter ones, reaching to open the door out to the street as he's glancing over towards her.
"Need a lift?"
He wouldn't mind, and the Bronco's right there.
Or, would be, had the stairs and street not vanished, to be replaced by what looks like a bustling bar.
Nathan's eyebrows climb slowly up his forehead, the only outward sign that he's looking at anything out of the ordinary at all, but all he says is: "Maybe not."
There often is. Even with the Troubles rising again, sneaking from the shadows and striking where they're least expected, they don't stop normal, every day life and the normal, every day problems that come with it. Bar fights and treed cats, elderly folks forgetting where they'd put the barbecue grill last fall and reporting it as stolen; parking tickets, beach permits. Everything needed to keep Haven running smoothly, cheerfully. Just another friendly little town on the coast of Maine. Stop by. Have some pancakes.
It grates.
He takes to wearing his sleeves rolled down after the third time he caught himself staring at the burn on his arm. Eleanor patched it up, taped on a clean gauze pad, and scolded him for being careless, but the bandage fell off in the shower and though he'd conscientiously replaced it, he's sick of looking at it. Remembering. How it didn't feel. How it did. Pressure in his chest, watching the flame lick at his skin like he'd been watching it on TV.
So he buttons his sleeves at the wrist, and ignores it. It's not like there isn't plenty to keep him busy. Parker still doesn't know the ropes in town, and she's not likely to for a while yet. Haven folk are glad enough to take a tourist's money, but let them stick around and they soon find the layer of steel under the welcoming sand of the town. She's been running into one closed door after another, and getting frustrated, and he wonders if maybe she doesn't toy with that old Herald photo just about as often as he runs his fingers over the shape of the bandage that sits under his shirt sleeve.
Nothing much happened today, though. A few calls, some paperwork, going over the filing system with Parker and finalizing the paperwork necessary even for an on-loan federal agent, and now it's quitting time, meaning he's headed out, walking with long, measured strides that he's got to pace against Parker's shorter ones, reaching to open the door out to the street as he's glancing over towards her.
"Need a lift?"
He wouldn't mind, and the Bronco's right there.
Or, would be, had the stairs and street not vanished, to be replaced by what looks like a bustling bar.
Nathan's eyebrows climb slowly up his forehead, the only outward sign that he's looking at anything out of the ordinary at all, but all he says is: "Maybe not."
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Date: 2013-06-19 06:11 pm (UTC)Who gets continual doors. Who has them appear out of the blue, like the one at the station. He glances at Parker, wondering about the possibility of walking a suspect into the station, only to wind up here, instead.
And if his Trouble still works here, so would theirs. He's willing to bet even a place this bizarre doesn't want to deal with someone who can control the weather based on her mood, or who's dreams become reality. "What are the chances someone from here could follow one of us back without us knowing it?"
Spillover in either direction is a no-go. He won't let anything else into Haven, no matter how friendly the first person they met here was. One person isn't a whole...whatever this is. Planet. Undefined mass of space.
She said sometimes the door closed, and wouldn't open again. He wonders how that works with it not being a prison.
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Date: 2013-06-20 10:48 pm (UTC)Because it would be pretty inconvenient for it to stay permanently attached to the doors of the station. Her hotel might not be much of a home, but it's hers, it has her stuff, it's got a good enough shower and she doesn't want to be stuck with only this place and the station. She's already stuck in Haven for better or worse, especially now that she might have found her mother.
Nathan's actually not too far off one her own growing questions, which she might as well toss out. A press out of her shoulders, and tuck of her head, even as she looks around them at the idyllic, but still foreign, landscape and that building behind them, "What all do you have to watch out for here?"
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Date: 2013-06-22 02:52 am (UTC)"No, nothin' can go through your door unless y'escort it out. I think of it as kinda like a special key built into your touch; someone else opens the door, it opens t'their world. You open it, it opens t'yours. So folk can't wander in an' out of your world, unless that happens t'be where they already come from. Where did y'say y'were from again?"
Kate doesn't know everybody, but she knows a fair few. If anybody else from their town comes here, she might know.
"Ah, as for there bein' a pattern — no, I don't think so. The door always changes for me 'cuz I'm never in one place very long; maybe someone more stable gets a stable door, but I couldn't say for sure. The Miss has this uncanny way of knowin' what works best for everybody. Ah, but I do know that if y'bring somethin' back with you, say a napkin or a coaster, it makes it easier t'find your way back here.
"Everybody's subject t'the same rules, but there are animals in the forests here. Far as things t'watch out for go, we've got these nasty li'l critters most folk call demon bunnies; they got red eyes, an' belch fire. I know, but I'm serious. They don't often wander outta the woods, so as long as you're not trompin' through after dusk they mostly leave you alone. Everythin' else is pretty harmless. Birds, squirrels, the squid in the lake."
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Date: 2013-06-24 04:38 pm (UTC)A moment's consideration, and he adds: "2009."
There's a longer pause, as he mulls over her last comment, face scrunching thoughtfully.
Fresh-water squid. In a lake that smells both like a lake and like a sun-warm sea. Trimmed by impossible woods, hosting demon...bunnies.
"Good to know."
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Date: 2013-06-24 05:20 pm (UTC)She has a hard time trying to picture this place as always civil. Not with the basics.
Not with the fact Kate's readily admitted most everything else is potentially hearsay and myth.
There's that pause of Nathan's, and even shorter words, which Audrey has gotten to know pretty well. She's pretty sure they could probably take it from here. Building, grounds. The door she'd like to check again. Comments she wouldn't make with a local anymore here than in Haven.
"If that's all," She smiled a little more pastedly, politely cheerful, as though to make up for the very little Nathan said or did sometimes. Another thing she was getting used to. "Do we just wander around and take it in now?"
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Date: 2013-06-24 05:48 pm (UTC)"Doesn't sound familiar. Haven, that is. Y'might be the first here."
Hard to say. However, as with everything else they've discussed so far, Kate leans heavily toward the comfortable, the easy to digest. Not wanting to cause a panic or a fear keeps her from mentioning the occasional dramas of the bar — which, to be fair, can be more frequent than occasional.
They can have one day where it's just 'weird', and not necessarily dangerous. Even if it doesn't engender a lot of trust just yet. Audrey's smile might be pasted, but Kate's is sincere enough.
"That is what we're doin'. My first tour guide took me 'round the stables, the libraries, the inlet jus' down thataways. There's a lot t'see, an' it may take you a while. But, well — y'have all the time in the universe."
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Date: 2013-06-24 11:31 pm (UTC)"Anything in particular you'd suggest starting with?"
The lazy way his Maine accent drops the ends of his words and the beginnings of his sentences almost mirrors her own Texas drawl when he speaks, though his might offer an impression of economy, near-cheapness, of words, rather than something more laid-back and easy-going.
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Date: 2013-06-25 04:58 am (UTC)New places, that she doesn't belong and got dropped into, are old hat enough. Awkward, ill-fitting sort of feeling, like you're somewhere where your jacket is too big and your shoes are too small, simply because you don't blend. Because you never belonged here. Stand out like a sore thumb, because your family hasn't lived here for fifty or sixty years. Not that she's talking about any place specific.
Not that it bothers her in the slightest. But she'd rather not feel like she was holding her tongue the whole time. Would rather feel free to call a spade, a spade on this place and be able to talk to her partner. Wants a moment to just stare at it and frown without feeling rude and like it's going to cost her the next two months worth of everything else she'll want to know by that time.
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Date: 2013-06-25 05:39 am (UTC)She turns to Nathan, giving his request due respect, and thinks rather seriously on her answer.
"The inlet's one'a my favorite places. Warm, quiet — private. An' lovely t'look at. I'd start there, stop by the stables on your way back if y'fancy animalkind, an' then investigate more inside. Of course, once you've had your fill, y'should let me buy you both a coffee 'fore you head back home."
Seems important, sending them off someplace more private, and even more important saying so. They've got a funny body language; curious, new-fitting reliance seeps out their pores, and giving them some time to talk amongst themselves might be exactly what they need. Never hurts to be friendly, though. So, should they find more questions along their travels, Kate will have the coffee waiting at a quiet table.
She tips her hat, blue eyes smiling at each in turn, and before Nathan even answers Audrey's query she excuses herself with a few more kind words.