DCI T. NIGHTINGALE (
ettersberg) wrote in
elnysa2017-10-01 09:56 am
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( one. ) voice • scientia potestas est [ id: nightingale ]
[ thomas nightingale does, in fact, know how to use a smartphone. he's owned one for quite a while before the end of the world; google maps in particular has always struck him as rather useful. the knowledge of how to operate such a device comes in handy now as well, though he's not entirely sure yet why he's bothering.
(the answer is peter; peter would want to know and nightingale would hate not to have any answers at all by the time his apprentice wakes up. because peter will wake up, surely. eventually.)
so there is no fumbling, no pauses when the device clicks on except deliberate ones, and a smooth, very british and posh-sounding voice inquiring: ]
It seems magic is not out of the ordinary, here. Someone has already inquired about those who believe in or practice magic, but I'd be interested to hear how magic was regulated, if at all, in your worlds. That, and whether there were particular ill-effects to it.
[ here, there is one of the aforementioned deliberate pauses. ] I'd also appreciate hearing of your experiences with employment.
Thank you.
(the answer is peter; peter would want to know and nightingale would hate not to have any answers at all by the time his apprentice wakes up. because peter will wake up, surely. eventually.)
so there is no fumbling, no pauses when the device clicks on except deliberate ones, and a smooth, very british and posh-sounding voice inquiring: ]
It seems magic is not out of the ordinary, here. Someone has already inquired about those who believe in or practice magic, but I'd be interested to hear how magic was regulated, if at all, in your worlds. That, and whether there were particular ill-effects to it.
[ here, there is one of the aforementioned deliberate pauses. ] I'd also appreciate hearing of your experiences with employment.
Thank you.
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[ he skips the titles and ranks. what would he use? he hasn't been a captain in the british army in a long time. he isn't detective chief inspector anymore because the metropolitan police no longer exists. ] What do you do, here?
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You were in the war? [ He knows it's long past for almost everybody. ]
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[ the war was long past for nightingale, too, but that doesn't mean he didn't fight in it. he's older than he looks, these days. there's a moment's hesitation, some measure of old pain in his tone: ] I fought at Ettersberg.
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[ The next thing Nightingale says takes him back to that day, chasing those Nazi voodoo priests across Europe and further. The crows had gotten to the bodies by the time Bucky showed up, everything just so but absolutely wrong. He hadn't known what to say then, either. ]
Sorry. [ Which is what he'd said to Namor, whose people it was who got wrung up to the posts. It had sounded stupid to him then, too. ]
I got a friend who always knows what to say, to everybody. Me, I just… [ His voice trails off. ]
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[ said not without humour. ]
It's quite all right. I imagine it was longer ago for me than it was for you. [ though for the longest time, he couldn't even mention the word ettersberg without flinching away from the memories, the loss, everything that followed it. ]
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[ there's humour in those words, but it's not the kind that's truly amused or warm. the war is an open wound still, even so many decades after the fact. ]
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Funny how so much can be the same over different worlds. We didn't have wizards, though. [ By we he means both 'the Invaders' and also, more generally, 'the Allies'— though he could be wrong about that last one, he supposes, he knows they didn't tell him everything. ]
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I've met Churchill. Did your world have a Churchill?
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It did, though I've not met him personally.
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[ nightingale is mostly kidding, but it doesn't really show in his tone of voice, which is as even as ever. ]
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So I've heard. They made me practice, over and over. [ He doesn't sound like he liked it. ]
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[ the mild tone masks surprise, and a dose of amusement as well. ] They did no such thing with me.
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