Aiden Price (
thecounselor) wrote2017-08-14 08:30 pm
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Entry tags:
The Doctor is In
[Dr. Price's office is just about exactly what you'd expect from a psychologist's office in the year 6972. There's a large chair next to an equally large and comfortable couch, and a coffee table within reach of both. On the other side of the room, there's large desk with some kind of a computer screen made of glowing light. The metal walls in here have been covered with dark wood paneling, and the lighting is warm and comforting.
There is one of those shitty brass-handled green plastic-shaded lamps on the desk. Why is it there? Aesthetic, apparently.
The desk is flanked by bookshelves filled with nonfiction. There's of course the DSM-40, right next to the DSM-238. Both editions look about the same age, curiously enough. There are also various other books on psychology, psychiatry, and... Artificial Intelligence?
Huh. Everyone's gotta have some hobbies.
There's a long counter with various kinds of tea and a kettle that sits on the counter next to a button, as well as a small sink expressly for washing dishes. There's also a door in the back of the room that probably leads to Dr. Price's personal quarters (good fucking luck).]
((OOC: This is where you can tag if you want to chat with Dr. Price one on one. Y'all know how office hours work by now.))
There is one of those shitty brass-handled green plastic-shaded lamps on the desk. Why is it there? Aesthetic, apparently.
The desk is flanked by bookshelves filled with nonfiction. There's of course the DSM-40, right next to the DSM-238. Both editions look about the same age, curiously enough. There are also various other books on psychology, psychiatry, and... Artificial Intelligence?
Huh. Everyone's gotta have some hobbies.
There's a long counter with various kinds of tea and a kettle that sits on the counter next to a button, as well as a small sink expressly for washing dishes. There's also a door in the back of the room that probably leads to Dr. Price's personal quarters (good fucking luck).]
((OOC: This is where you can tag if you want to chat with Dr. Price one on one. Y'all know how office hours work by now.))
no subject
It doesn't happen.
Her memories had helped, oddly enough. Remembering the intel she'd gathered from Project Freelancer, the way she'd found a contact, transmitted it, and finally escaped the whole Project entirely...it helps. You've done this once, you can do it again.
Good thing she hadn't remembered, when Price first asked if she'd be willing to do this, that she'd died in the process the first time around.
She checks the hallway outside the Counselor's office once she gets back to the ship, but no one's around; not surprising, given how few of them are left. It's a lot easier to avoid running into people now. None of Blaze's robots are there either - no evidence of being watched - so she takes a breath, knocks on the door, and when the Counselor answers, enters the room.
She gets right to business this time. As soon as the door is shut and she confirms they're alone, she steps forward, laying the dogtags on the desk in front of him and meeting his eyes. A part of her is watching him, still wondering - will he recognize them? Does he know what she'd done? A larger part is still all but vibrating in mingled apprehension and triumph, leftover adrenaline still coursing through her veins. ]
I got it.
[ She doesn't even remember to call him "sir." ]
no subject
Very good, Agent Connecticut.
[He opens up his computer's holographic screen, takes the dog tags and prepares to load them in as he boots up his computer in safe mode.]
Did you have the opportunity to examine what you found?
[It's an implied invitation - if she did, she can brief him on what it is while he loads it safely. If she didn't, then she's welcome to stay and discover with him.]
no subject
There was - there's a video, of a trial like ours. They were investigating someone named Bolton White. And a medical file -
[ But he's got it up on the screen now, and she gestures to it, her expression solemn and intense. ]
...There's no name. But whoever he was...it's amazing he even survived that.
no subject
It appears as if their condition has continued to deteriorate since this incident happened approximately a year ago, but there's no death record and these logs are all recent. Perhaps a better question would be who he is.
[He uses a pen to indicate to her the date of the original report, in late 6971, and then the dates that progress through most of 6972. Then he looks back up at her, something like intrigue and satisfaction in his eyes.]
Who do we know who has appeared to have sustained severe deep-tissue injury, Agent Connecticut?
no subject
...Blaze Dudely? But...
[ She falls silent, looking back at the report on the screen. ]
...He's getting worse.
no subject
It certainly would explain the sense of...urgency, to his vendetta.
no subject
He wants revenge, before it's too late.
[ She's thinking hard, both caught up in trying to figure out the mystery and still, somehow, driven by a need not to disappoint the Counselor. To prove herself. ]
Those machines. He's dependent on them. If we could shut them down, or - or sabotage them, somehow.
no subject
By the time stamps on these reports, he administers his dialysis overnight, before his office hours.
[There's an implication, but not a direct order.]
no subject
It’s another to think about actually doing it.
CT goes quiet, staring silently at the screen. Overnight. He’d be asleep, unable to defend himself. But not stupid. ]
...He’ll be guarded. Those robots...
no subject
[During his office hours.]
It's asking a lot of you. You've done well getting us this much information. We can lay low, perhaps organize a united strike or at the very least a diversion.
[But then again, you've all seen how much of a chance you stand against his robots when he expects you to resist.]
no subject
The others, she's not so sure of. Reluctantly, CT shakes her head. ]
The longer this goes on, the more people will die. We have to do something soon.
[ It's already been too long. Too many weeks of waiting helplessly, doing nothing as more and more of them are lost. Just getting the information, as terrifying as it had been, had given her a rush, a sense of accomplishment and defiance that she's eager to replicate.
Besides. She shakes her head, setting her jaw. ]
And if something happens...if we're caught. He'll punish whoever was involved.
[ She won't see anyone else suffer for this, won't watch another execution of someone that might have been a friend, if only they'd had more time. ]
I'll act alone.
no subject
He nods. In understanding, or approval, or possibly even pride. It's hard to say. But his lips turn just the slightest amount.]
If you succeed, you will have struck a killing blow. Whatever happens...
[He's been aloof this whole time, the formal, straight-laced Counselor, practically the same she knew from Freelancer except harder, in places.]
You'll be their hero. [Our hero. But it isn't him that she's fighting for, so he leaves himself out of it.]
You're a good soldier. [He pauses, where he would normally address her as Agent Connecticut. Put distance between them, hold her at bay. Instead he tilts his head a fraction of an inch, gives her a half-smile and keeps his expression hidden in his eyes.] ...CT.
no subject
...I betrayed Project Freelancer.
[ She's not sure why she's telling him this. If it's a confession, or a boast. If she's looking for absolution, or approval. All she knows is that she needs to be honest now. That she can't leave this unsaid. She'd told Varric, but Varric hadn't been there. No one here could really understand the full implications of what she'd done. Except for one person. ]
I stole intel on the Director's experiments. I downloaded it and I defected with it to the Insurrection.
[ Her voice goes quieter. ]
...The other agents...they came after me. And...I...died.
But if that intel gets...got...to the right people...it was enough to bring the whole Project down.
no subject
She deserves the whole story. Now that she knows everything.]
The Project fell apart after your defection. Agent Texas rebelled. She abandoned the Project, and she convinced Agent York and Agent North to go with her. They broke into the Mother of Invention, and...tried. To steal something integral to the project. The Alpha AI.
Agent Carolina was presumed killed in action during the attack. In its aftermath, the Director moved the Alpha to an outpost of sim troopers and assigned Agent Florida to watch over it.
Agent Washington led an attack that destroyed the Freelancer storage facility, along with the Alpha and most of its fragments. I...was arrested, while the Director went underground. [He said bitterly, with a bitter expression.] By the time that the UNSC reached him, he was already dead.
no subject
Too much. There's certainly too much to respond to it all. But a flicker of triumph, of victory, makes her eyes light up when he mentions Agent Texas. It worked.
It had worked. Maybe not exactly in the way she'd imagined, but the Director...
Well. The Project had been halted. And hopefully, some pain and suffering had been avoided. ]
...Thank you, sir.
[ She pauses, watching him. Hearing what had happened is one thing (assuming, of course, that it's all true at all), and it's certainly better than not knowing. Still, that doesn't tell her what the Counselor thinks of the whole thing.
But he'd told her the facts. Maybe his opinion on top of it is too much to ask. You're a good soldier, he'd said. She has to believe that he means that.
She nods, and this time, she lifts her chin proudly. ]
Thank you for telling me.