dr_riley (
dr_riley) wrote in
revivalproject2021-06-07 03:10 pm
It's just another day
WHO: Drake and whoever happens to find him, despite his best efforts
WHERE: Cave/Research office/”Severe” subdivision
WHAT: Coping via avoidance and overworking
WHEN: Post-Event
WARNINGS: None as of yet
Off the prison bus
It hadn’t been the first time that Drake had felt helpless, but his time in the false reality had been one of few times he’d look back on and feel he’d been utterly useless. The entire time, he remembered having an underlying knowledge that everything was wrong, somehow. That his thoughts weren’t his own, but were reinforcing themselves with their own will.
At night, he dreamed of a standing pool of bright water, and during the day, strange letters and numbers, symbols, words and concepts popped into his conscious mind. He was constantly having flashbacks that weren’t his. And underlining it all was a feeling that he was supposed to be doing something much more important than approving cafeteria menus and developing a standardized curriculum. Something grander than the heroes. Bigger than the city. Vaster and more humbling than any petty human constructs, rituals, or squabbles between nations on Earth.
Now he knew what it was, and that he was separated from it, stranded with no way home. Fresh from emerging from the invasive and frightening effects of a complete memory stamp. Like everyone else still milling, confused, embarrassed, or disappointed, nearby.
Drake retreated to a nearby wall and stood against it like a mouse seeking safety and stayed still there for a long time, looking listless and shell shocked.
Research offices
So rather than do something healthy, like talk about it, he did what he always did when he didn’t want to think: he worked.
In the monastic silence of an old research lab, he sat in a corner on the floor with his knees drawn up in the twilit semi-darkness of emergency lighting, surrounded by clips and cables and scribbled notes about Agrii technology that he thought were important and complex enough that he might not be able to figure them out on his own if he gave up his current expertise. A few power and/or control crystals lay in a carefully arranged pattern beside him and his face was uplit from his tablet while he ran diagnostics and recalibrated various systems on the mobile probe he’d brought back from Coruscant. He didn’t know what time it was, but it was probably either very late or very early, judging by how hunger and exhaustion had come and, finding themselves ignored, gone away again.
Needless to say, he was not expecting anyone to find him.
Green Sector Residences
He would also attempt to explore the strange, fenced in complex nearby in an effort to find out if there was any usable equipment within. An armoury. Intact lab equipment. Any records indicating what it used to be. Or maybe just a room that looked comfortable and safe to inhabit.
From the outside, Drake might be seen trying to find a way through or over the fence, and if there isn’t already a hole or a gate, he isn’t above taking bolt cutters to it if he can find a pair.
From the inside, he could be observed by the unsteady waving of a flashlight as he makes his way through dim, cracking hallways, testing doors and elevators, trying water faucets and light switches, and hoping that the floor doesn’t collapse beneath him.
He probably should have put out a network post calling for help to scour the place; if nothing else, it would let everyone now where he was in case something happened to him. But he wasn’t always the most careful with his own safety.
WHERE: Cave/Research office/”Severe” subdivision
WHAT: Coping via avoidance and overworking
WHEN: Post-Event
WARNINGS: None as of yet
Off the prison bus
It hadn’t been the first time that Drake had felt helpless, but his time in the false reality had been one of few times he’d look back on and feel he’d been utterly useless. The entire time, he remembered having an underlying knowledge that everything was wrong, somehow. That his thoughts weren’t his own, but were reinforcing themselves with their own will.
At night, he dreamed of a standing pool of bright water, and during the day, strange letters and numbers, symbols, words and concepts popped into his conscious mind. He was constantly having flashbacks that weren’t his. And underlining it all was a feeling that he was supposed to be doing something much more important than approving cafeteria menus and developing a standardized curriculum. Something grander than the heroes. Bigger than the city. Vaster and more humbling than any petty human constructs, rituals, or squabbles between nations on Earth.
Now he knew what it was, and that he was separated from it, stranded with no way home. Fresh from emerging from the invasive and frightening effects of a complete memory stamp. Like everyone else still milling, confused, embarrassed, or disappointed, nearby.
Drake retreated to a nearby wall and stood against it like a mouse seeking safety and stayed still there for a long time, looking listless and shell shocked.
Research offices
So rather than do something healthy, like talk about it, he did what he always did when he didn’t want to think: he worked.
In the monastic silence of an old research lab, he sat in a corner on the floor with his knees drawn up in the twilit semi-darkness of emergency lighting, surrounded by clips and cables and scribbled notes about Agrii technology that he thought were important and complex enough that he might not be able to figure them out on his own if he gave up his current expertise. A few power and/or control crystals lay in a carefully arranged pattern beside him and his face was uplit from his tablet while he ran diagnostics and recalibrated various systems on the mobile probe he’d brought back from Coruscant. He didn’t know what time it was, but it was probably either very late or very early, judging by how hunger and exhaustion had come and, finding themselves ignored, gone away again.
Needless to say, he was not expecting anyone to find him.
Green Sector Residences
He would also attempt to explore the strange, fenced in complex nearby in an effort to find out if there was any usable equipment within. An armoury. Intact lab equipment. Any records indicating what it used to be. Or maybe just a room that looked comfortable and safe to inhabit.
From the outside, Drake might be seen trying to find a way through or over the fence, and if there isn’t already a hole or a gate, he isn’t above taking bolt cutters to it if he can find a pair.
From the inside, he could be observed by the unsteady waving of a flashlight as he makes his way through dim, cracking hallways, testing doors and elevators, trying water faucets and light switches, and hoping that the floor doesn’t collapse beneath him.
He probably should have put out a network post calling for help to scour the place; if nothing else, it would let everyone now where he was in case something happened to him. But he wasn’t always the most careful with his own safety.

no subject
But this man seems remarkably normal.
"You are aware that the old hotel in the town center has perfectly usable rooms as well?"
no subject
"Right. Well. I happen to be doing some research and development," he gestures at the large, wheeled probe, "so. Seems as suitable a place as any, given I'm fairly sure that was its purpose." He hadn't explored thoroughly yet, but when he did, he hoped to discover some usable diagnostic equipment, or even the means to build more complex and sensitive systems.
At the old hotel remark, he pulls one corner of his mouth back uncomfortably. "Yes, I've heard as much, thank you. And when's the last time a structural engineer's been 'round to do an inspection?"
no subject
When those faintly glowing eyes open again, they settle back on Drake. "The same time someone did an inspection on this building. If safety is your concern, staying there remains the more reasonable choice as there will be others around to actually notice the building collapsing."
He gives those words a moment to settle, then adds: "I'm Jonathan Sims. I work on the library - And I live there."
no subject
There was only one creature Drake knew of that made the eyes of a person glow, but it wasn't...quite like that.
"Drake Riley." He said slowly. "Doctor Drake Riley. I don't really live anywhere. But do tell me about the library; I was told that the Agrii never developed a writing system."
no subject
"For the most part the library is empty and partially inhabited by mothcats. What available records are presently there, be it in the shape of written or audio format, are information gathered and experiences made by those the Agrii have brought here."
no subject
He frowns when he hears that the library is mostly empty.
"Shame, that. How far back do those records go? I'm given to understand that there are still people here that were present when the Agrii left the planet. But that was...what a couple hundred years ago?"
no subject
"The ones that were present during the recording of the video I shared are no longer here. These records only exist on the Agrii ship."
no subject
no subject
no subject
"That wasn't obvious, actually. I've known people who've lived for many hundreds of years, but not without outside intervention." Such as an alien symbiote keeping them alive, or technology meant to rejuvenate cells. "So do you know where they went between the times they were here? Or where they are now?"
Had they figured out how to go home?
"And no. I wasn't aware that the planet we visited was relatively hundreds of years younger to anyone who'd otherwise recognise it. D'you think that means anything? Did the Agrii choose that point in time to prevent deserters?"
At this point, Drake would have happily rolled up an office chair and offered a half eaten bag of Cheetos to continue this enlightening conversation, except that he had neither.
no subject
He takes a step towards a nearby counter and lightly pokes at one of the pieces of whatever it is Drake is working on in here. "Coruscant was chosen because the Agrii hoped to find some clues there. The time may have been coincidental, but we did find that Holocron message. Not that that one has been any more reassuring."
no subject
"So you were on the ship, then? And someone pulled the old switcheroo on... Oh dear. So you mean that the Agrii no longer have the ability to retrieve or return people? Were you there, did you see what the transportation process looked like when the device was stolen and replaced with the core? How d'you know no other ships were nearby? Proximity sensors? And who figured out how to install and operate the energy core? I might like to compare notes if they're still here."
He taps his pencil on the floor with nervous energy, now seeming to be talking to himself since he's frowning down at his notes instead of looking at Jon.
"Ga Re. That's the uh. Commander of the fleet, so to speak. Why would he want to send everyone home? Have they given up the idea of restoring a planet that's, for all intents and purposes, uninhabitable to them?"
When Jon gently prods the device on the counter, Drake just keeps on without breaking pace or tone or even looking up, "Don't touch that, I don't know what it does yet."
Now he looks up.
"What holocron?"