Hook, Line and Shrink [Doc]
Posted: 25 Jul 2014, 02:38
- - The following transcript was a live chat roleplay - -
Pyper: Pyper had to hover the phone three inches from her ear while the dial tone purred robotically. If she didn't, it'd split her head and she might let her thoughts out again. Calling Doc, the screen showed when it was brought away to look at.
Doc: Doc's phone rang. He glanced at it, but did not recognize the number. It could be someone from the hospital, or the lab, needing more instruction. He answered the phone as he would if he were speaking to a human. "Dr. Nilson." It was abrupt and to the point, as one might suggest of a Doctor on call.
Pyper: Click. Before she could rationalize that Phoenix would never send her to doctors like the ones that imprinted themselves in her history, Pyper ended the call. The immediate disappointment made her brows wrinkle in a bemused expression. "Again," the utterance cast out the right corner of her mouth and her finger scrolled through to 'Doc.' Rrrr, rrrr, chanted the ear piece.
Doc: Doc pulled the phone from his ear as he heard the click. He looked at the screen, it was indeed disconnected. He was tucking the phone back into his jacket pocket when it rang again. He sighed and pulled the phone back out answering it tersely, "Yes." His tone was one of thinly veiled annoyance. If this was some kid playing games, he would hunt that little ****** down, gut him, and use his intestines as a bowtie.
Pyper: "What are your credentials? Do you shock people? Phoenix gave your number to me. I'm .. Ramona." She used the same alias she had prior to crossing the borders into Harper Rock. It was likely that her sire already forewarned this Doctor Nilson about her calling. Pyper didn't want to entertain taking the risk.
Doc: Doc lifted an eyebrow as a demand for his creditials came across the phone. But then the voice told him who she was, Phoenix childe. "I am surgeon, an endocrinologist." He paused, he wouldn't lie to her, but she may not like his answer, "I have shocked patients before. But not as a form of treatment.. more because it amused me to do so. However, if it is that important to you, I won't shock you, without your permission." His tone had dropped the brusquenss and was one of reluctant truth.
Pyper: A lot of people required permission to do things. The similarity between how these other vampires lived and the way the ward worked put a gnawing sensation in the pits of her stomach. Axel had asked for permission when questioned about the techniques he personally used to break individuals. Pyper was unaware - based on past experiences - that doctors needed a mutual agreement with a patient. "So there is something wrong with my endocrines, and Phoenix wants to fix them? How does she know? Did you tell her?"
Doc: Doc frowned slightly, he closed his book and set it aside. His voice because serious and businesslike. "Phoenix said you might to talk. Only talk. I have no idea the state of your glands, if they are like most of our kind. They have ceased to work in a manner that I have been trained in dealing with." A brief pause, "However, talking does not require anything to do with your glands. And talking is all Phoenix suggested."
Pyper: The sound of scratching answered Doc at first, as Pyper's fingers plucked and moved the chaotic vines of wires that circled around parts of the cell phone she was holding. Then her eyes traveled slowly to the east to watch a zombie drag its foot behind itself while it walked. She stopped fidgeting, cleared her throat, "We are talking now."
Doc: "Yes we are. Sometimes, not all the time, a person can talk to someone, knowing that whatever they say for good or bad, will never be used against them. And it helps that person to say it aloud to someone. A phone is not ideal for that sort of talking. Phone can be bugged."
Pyper: Pyper had never let an insect in her phone. It was always in her pocket, but people stole things all the time. Easy for them to find her money, so the phone wouldn't be a problem. "And there will be no shocks. Where do you talk? What are the things there? Is it a hospital?"
Doc: "No. No shocks. Shocks are not condusive to theraputic conversation. Typically if someone wants to talk with me, we do it in my office. Not a hospital. I have a desk.. a couple of plants." He paused, "Take that back.. a couple of dead plants. A bookcase, a credenza, a laptop, two chairs, a side table.. and Phoenix' cushion." He ended, then thought to ask, "Do you require a cushion?" Was it ethical to allow patients to share cushions?
Pyper: Needles were left off of his list, and it helped that they'd not meet within a nauseatingly clean-smelling medical facility. "No cushion." Using one hand to the ground, she got up and toed her way around the Corvidae Flats, ignoring her stomach and the blood pack she could have bought to search for something she could catch. Something that would run away. It some times bested the feeling she got when she stitched. "When do we talk in the office?"
Doc: No cushion. So it appears, thus far that Phoenix was the lone 'admitted' cushion cuddler. Good. "That would be up to you. As well as what we spoke about. The point of this type of conversation is to help you. Sometimes, having someone hear a problem helps you figure it out. They can offer suggestions, or ideas, that may trigger the solution. And for people with no problems, they like to talk in order to bounce ideas off someone on a trusted environment."
Pyper: "You only suggest from what you hear me say? You don't look into me? See the different things I think?" Pyper had ever come across another telepath directly but knowing that there could have been other 'ones' (a general term since she'd forgotten what people called her too many times) that would see her past and some indication of her real name made her uneasy. "If I said right now? I could come in. Briefly... " She steadied herself vocally, forced complete sentences. ".. and see the plants, and books. See the papers and certificates. Do you have them on the walls, like on the television?"
Doc: "Yes you could come now. My diploma is not in this office however. I leave it in the hospital office. Where I do surgery. And no. I will not look inside you.. unless you want me to perform surgery on you. Which I doubt."
Pyper: "I don't know where." The hand not holding the phone pried the sewer entrance cover from the pit before she jumped down. From his wording, Pyper still didn't know whether he could read her thoughts. So she thought about the blood packs and how the bags made the blood taste like plastic. "You saw the alphabeast. It attacked you."
Doc: "My office is in the back of Genesis Solutions in the Honeymead Market. Shopping mall. And yes, It did attack me. Fucked me up pretty good. But it is dead, and I am still here. So shall I expect you?"
Pyper: "I wanted to take its bones," she sounded disappointed. "Yes. I have a map, somewhere. I can find it."
Doc: "Yes.. I would have loved to have a piece of it too. I heard Olive was the one that killed it. I do not know her, but perhaps you could contact her, see if she had one and was willing to bargain?"
Pyper: "Olive. I will find her, and see if she wants the drugs I have. Roderic told me not to take it, it might make me sick. I will knock, when I get there."
Doc: "I will wait for your knock." He disconnected first. He thought she was the type that would wait for the disconnect. Possible paranoia, but then again, it could be caution. He took the books that littered his desk, and started filing them back into the bookcase. He wanted things orderly when .. if she arrived. There was a fifty percent chance she might change her mind. Many did, as they started second guessing themselves.
Pyper: With him waiting, the appeal of hunting a stray human down had to be set aside for after their talk. Phoenix would be happy, and maybe smile, to know that Pyper went. This in mind, the transit ride passed by without the nervous fluttering in her nerves. The twitch in her hands had gotten worse. So much that she couldn't hold a pen to write in her journal. Should she have brought it with her? It had things that they could talk about. Honeymead she read the rotating, overhead panel that announced each stop. With the map, the building wasn't difficult to find. Fifteen minutes, roughly estimated, and her knuckles curled and tapped against the door to what's assumed to be his office.
Doc: The knock, that sounded against the door, came much quicker than he had anticipated. A woman of her word. A nice first impression. He rose and made his way to the door and opened it. He smiled sliglhtly, it was a crooked closed mouth smile. A correction took place in his mind, a girl of her word. "You must be Ramona. Please come in." He knew her name was Piper, from what Phoenix had told him, but she wished to be Ramona, and Ramona she would be. He stepped back to allow her to enter unimpeded.
Pyper: The lines of his mouth were more subtle than the very expressive individuals that made up her lineage. Altaires were truly the only people that she knew, and most of them not well enough to be frequently social with. Doc, and Jesse (technically) were the only two she had willingly wanted to meet. Her smile never came, because her eyes began to play ping pong in their spaces to take in the objects in his office, as he had listed to her earlier. Half steps guided her inside, it was painful but after a set of five, he had enough room to shut the door. "If I lied, during the talks, how would you know?"
Doc: "I would not." His brow furrowed somewhat. "But why would it matter? Anything you say .. or I say.. is not to be repeated. That is what we.. both you and I must agree to, before we converse. A safe place to speak. So if you lie to me, and I never repeat it. Why does it matter if it is a lie?" He slowly shut the door, and then crossed to the seat he normal sat in when he spoke to Phoenix. If she wanted to peruse the room it was fine.
Pyper: "My name isn't Ramona." A test, something to use as a bait. Weeks will go by and she'll wait to see if the information creeps up. Someone would use this secret casually and she'd know not to trust him. Arms covered in bandages to keep the bite marks from the zombies clean until they healed swung limply at either side of her. She still hadn't recorded the healing time for minor scrapes. The bookcase came up along her side, and she stopped, glancing at the words on the spines. Pyper tipped her head as far as her neck would allow to read them.
Doc: "Alright. It isn't Ramona." He canted his head to the side as he looked at her, "It did not suit you, so that is good. What if I call you Casey instead? Or do you have something else you prefer?" He paused, "I prefer Doc.. but my name Charles, if you prefer that."
Pyper: Was she Pyper in here? As the plaster molding caught her eyes, she shook her head. "I don't like Casey. The name, on the papers where I lived said that my name is Lucretia." The very taste of the birth name itself warmed her saliva, it wasn't something she'd been use to hearing. Not since being under the care of Dr. Proulx, and his assistant Anais. "You don't like Charles?" Now her head was twisted so her eyes bore into him. Pyper always looked as though she stared through people rather than directly at them.
Doc: Doc debated, then decided he would trust her. "Not the name, so much as the way the name, can, be said. Said with such a condescending and disappointed tone. It annoys me. Therefore I prefer 'Doc'. But Lucretia. A very large name for such a tiny girl. It has a diabolical reputation. Do you live up to that name? Or do you not know it's history?" His tone was conversational, not condemning or approving; more curious than anything.
Pyper: "I like Charles," she stated, pivoting the rest of her body to face the other chair. No step was taken immediately. Perhaps the concept of sitting still, as her hands fidget to keep the tremor undetectable, was impossible. "I never knew why I was called it. Just that I was. Will you tell me?" One step towards the chair, but she'd wait until he wasn't looking. "I don't know very many things. Things that other people have known for a long time. Or I did, but I've forgot. Hard to tell, some times."
Doc: "Lucretia Borgia was her name. I cannot tell you accuracy when she lived, just that it was in the middle ages. Somewhere between 1200 and 1600. Lucretia was the daughter of a Pope." He looked at her, "Popes back then could buy their titles. They didn't have to be men of god. But you can imagine.. being Pope gave one power. And the Pope used that power. Mainly through his daughter Lucretia. There is some schools of thought that say she wasn't a pawn, she was the archetect of her own path.. others say she was a tool of the Pope. Either way.. three very prominate men of their time found themsevles married to her.. and then promptly dead. It was said they could not deny her sexual pull."
Pyper: Mid-step, her leg halted, foot hovering from the ground. He was looking. If their eyes met, his locking in with her countering pale blues, Pyper refused the semi-voluntary action of blinking. "We are opposites. I've never had sex. I know that people pair, and they do things with their clothes off. Or on. We make fadebeasts." A pause, to consider whether to elaborate. Regardless of whether it's necessary to voice or not, Pyper continued, "Axel said that if I made a fadebeast that it'd not be able to do the things that I can do. It couldn't see what you've done days ago. Couldn't wear your skin to be you, in a vision. Is that true?"
Doc: Doc nodded at her admission. "Fadebeasts." He could not comment, no he wouldn not comment, on what had transpired with Phoenix. Doctor patient confidentiality. So he prevaricated from other experiences he had had. "Yes we do make fadebeasts if we copulate. It is random. Not every coupling causes one. But it does happen. I have terminated three fadebeast pregnancies. They are not something you want to have happen. That said, if it does happen.. they can be terminated. As I have done previously. My advice.. before you chose to copulate because it is enoyable in the right situation, know your options ahead of time."
Pyper: Pyper had to hover the phone three inches from her ear while the dial tone purred robotically. If she didn't, it'd split her head and she might let her thoughts out again. Calling Doc, the screen showed when it was brought away to look at.
Doc: Doc's phone rang. He glanced at it, but did not recognize the number. It could be someone from the hospital, or the lab, needing more instruction. He answered the phone as he would if he were speaking to a human. "Dr. Nilson." It was abrupt and to the point, as one might suggest of a Doctor on call.
Pyper: Click. Before she could rationalize that Phoenix would never send her to doctors like the ones that imprinted themselves in her history, Pyper ended the call. The immediate disappointment made her brows wrinkle in a bemused expression. "Again," the utterance cast out the right corner of her mouth and her finger scrolled through to 'Doc.' Rrrr, rrrr, chanted the ear piece.
Doc: Doc pulled the phone from his ear as he heard the click. He looked at the screen, it was indeed disconnected. He was tucking the phone back into his jacket pocket when it rang again. He sighed and pulled the phone back out answering it tersely, "Yes." His tone was one of thinly veiled annoyance. If this was some kid playing games, he would hunt that little ****** down, gut him, and use his intestines as a bowtie.
Pyper: "What are your credentials? Do you shock people? Phoenix gave your number to me. I'm .. Ramona." She used the same alias she had prior to crossing the borders into Harper Rock. It was likely that her sire already forewarned this Doctor Nilson about her calling. Pyper didn't want to entertain taking the risk.
Doc: Doc lifted an eyebrow as a demand for his creditials came across the phone. But then the voice told him who she was, Phoenix childe. "I am surgeon, an endocrinologist." He paused, he wouldn't lie to her, but she may not like his answer, "I have shocked patients before. But not as a form of treatment.. more because it amused me to do so. However, if it is that important to you, I won't shock you, without your permission." His tone had dropped the brusquenss and was one of reluctant truth.
Pyper: A lot of people required permission to do things. The similarity between how these other vampires lived and the way the ward worked put a gnawing sensation in the pits of her stomach. Axel had asked for permission when questioned about the techniques he personally used to break individuals. Pyper was unaware - based on past experiences - that doctors needed a mutual agreement with a patient. "So there is something wrong with my endocrines, and Phoenix wants to fix them? How does she know? Did you tell her?"
Doc: Doc frowned slightly, he closed his book and set it aside. His voice because serious and businesslike. "Phoenix said you might to talk. Only talk. I have no idea the state of your glands, if they are like most of our kind. They have ceased to work in a manner that I have been trained in dealing with." A brief pause, "However, talking does not require anything to do with your glands. And talking is all Phoenix suggested."
Pyper: The sound of scratching answered Doc at first, as Pyper's fingers plucked and moved the chaotic vines of wires that circled around parts of the cell phone she was holding. Then her eyes traveled slowly to the east to watch a zombie drag its foot behind itself while it walked. She stopped fidgeting, cleared her throat, "We are talking now."
Doc: "Yes we are. Sometimes, not all the time, a person can talk to someone, knowing that whatever they say for good or bad, will never be used against them. And it helps that person to say it aloud to someone. A phone is not ideal for that sort of talking. Phone can be bugged."
Pyper: Pyper had never let an insect in her phone. It was always in her pocket, but people stole things all the time. Easy for them to find her money, so the phone wouldn't be a problem. "And there will be no shocks. Where do you talk? What are the things there? Is it a hospital?"
Doc: "No. No shocks. Shocks are not condusive to theraputic conversation. Typically if someone wants to talk with me, we do it in my office. Not a hospital. I have a desk.. a couple of plants." He paused, "Take that back.. a couple of dead plants. A bookcase, a credenza, a laptop, two chairs, a side table.. and Phoenix' cushion." He ended, then thought to ask, "Do you require a cushion?" Was it ethical to allow patients to share cushions?
Pyper: Needles were left off of his list, and it helped that they'd not meet within a nauseatingly clean-smelling medical facility. "No cushion." Using one hand to the ground, she got up and toed her way around the Corvidae Flats, ignoring her stomach and the blood pack she could have bought to search for something she could catch. Something that would run away. It some times bested the feeling she got when she stitched. "When do we talk in the office?"
Doc: No cushion. So it appears, thus far that Phoenix was the lone 'admitted' cushion cuddler. Good. "That would be up to you. As well as what we spoke about. The point of this type of conversation is to help you. Sometimes, having someone hear a problem helps you figure it out. They can offer suggestions, or ideas, that may trigger the solution. And for people with no problems, they like to talk in order to bounce ideas off someone on a trusted environment."
Pyper: "You only suggest from what you hear me say? You don't look into me? See the different things I think?" Pyper had ever come across another telepath directly but knowing that there could have been other 'ones' (a general term since she'd forgotten what people called her too many times) that would see her past and some indication of her real name made her uneasy. "If I said right now? I could come in. Briefly... " She steadied herself vocally, forced complete sentences. ".. and see the plants, and books. See the papers and certificates. Do you have them on the walls, like on the television?"
Doc: "Yes you could come now. My diploma is not in this office however. I leave it in the hospital office. Where I do surgery. And no. I will not look inside you.. unless you want me to perform surgery on you. Which I doubt."
Pyper: "I don't know where." The hand not holding the phone pried the sewer entrance cover from the pit before she jumped down. From his wording, Pyper still didn't know whether he could read her thoughts. So she thought about the blood packs and how the bags made the blood taste like plastic. "You saw the alphabeast. It attacked you."
Doc: "My office is in the back of Genesis Solutions in the Honeymead Market. Shopping mall. And yes, It did attack me. Fucked me up pretty good. But it is dead, and I am still here. So shall I expect you?"
Pyper: "I wanted to take its bones," she sounded disappointed. "Yes. I have a map, somewhere. I can find it."
Doc: "Yes.. I would have loved to have a piece of it too. I heard Olive was the one that killed it. I do not know her, but perhaps you could contact her, see if she had one and was willing to bargain?"
Pyper: "Olive. I will find her, and see if she wants the drugs I have. Roderic told me not to take it, it might make me sick. I will knock, when I get there."
Doc: "I will wait for your knock." He disconnected first. He thought she was the type that would wait for the disconnect. Possible paranoia, but then again, it could be caution. He took the books that littered his desk, and started filing them back into the bookcase. He wanted things orderly when .. if she arrived. There was a fifty percent chance she might change her mind. Many did, as they started second guessing themselves.
Pyper: With him waiting, the appeal of hunting a stray human down had to be set aside for after their talk. Phoenix would be happy, and maybe smile, to know that Pyper went. This in mind, the transit ride passed by without the nervous fluttering in her nerves. The twitch in her hands had gotten worse. So much that she couldn't hold a pen to write in her journal. Should she have brought it with her? It had things that they could talk about. Honeymead she read the rotating, overhead panel that announced each stop. With the map, the building wasn't difficult to find. Fifteen minutes, roughly estimated, and her knuckles curled and tapped against the door to what's assumed to be his office.
Doc: The knock, that sounded against the door, came much quicker than he had anticipated. A woman of her word. A nice first impression. He rose and made his way to the door and opened it. He smiled sliglhtly, it was a crooked closed mouth smile. A correction took place in his mind, a girl of her word. "You must be Ramona. Please come in." He knew her name was Piper, from what Phoenix had told him, but she wished to be Ramona, and Ramona she would be. He stepped back to allow her to enter unimpeded.
Pyper: The lines of his mouth were more subtle than the very expressive individuals that made up her lineage. Altaires were truly the only people that she knew, and most of them not well enough to be frequently social with. Doc, and Jesse (technically) were the only two she had willingly wanted to meet. Her smile never came, because her eyes began to play ping pong in their spaces to take in the objects in his office, as he had listed to her earlier. Half steps guided her inside, it was painful but after a set of five, he had enough room to shut the door. "If I lied, during the talks, how would you know?"
Doc: "I would not." His brow furrowed somewhat. "But why would it matter? Anything you say .. or I say.. is not to be repeated. That is what we.. both you and I must agree to, before we converse. A safe place to speak. So if you lie to me, and I never repeat it. Why does it matter if it is a lie?" He slowly shut the door, and then crossed to the seat he normal sat in when he spoke to Phoenix. If she wanted to peruse the room it was fine.
Pyper: "My name isn't Ramona." A test, something to use as a bait. Weeks will go by and she'll wait to see if the information creeps up. Someone would use this secret casually and she'd know not to trust him. Arms covered in bandages to keep the bite marks from the zombies clean until they healed swung limply at either side of her. She still hadn't recorded the healing time for minor scrapes. The bookcase came up along her side, and she stopped, glancing at the words on the spines. Pyper tipped her head as far as her neck would allow to read them.
Doc: "Alright. It isn't Ramona." He canted his head to the side as he looked at her, "It did not suit you, so that is good. What if I call you Casey instead? Or do you have something else you prefer?" He paused, "I prefer Doc.. but my name Charles, if you prefer that."
Pyper: Was she Pyper in here? As the plaster molding caught her eyes, she shook her head. "I don't like Casey. The name, on the papers where I lived said that my name is Lucretia." The very taste of the birth name itself warmed her saliva, it wasn't something she'd been use to hearing. Not since being under the care of Dr. Proulx, and his assistant Anais. "You don't like Charles?" Now her head was twisted so her eyes bore into him. Pyper always looked as though she stared through people rather than directly at them.
Doc: Doc debated, then decided he would trust her. "Not the name, so much as the way the name, can, be said. Said with such a condescending and disappointed tone. It annoys me. Therefore I prefer 'Doc'. But Lucretia. A very large name for such a tiny girl. It has a diabolical reputation. Do you live up to that name? Or do you not know it's history?" His tone was conversational, not condemning or approving; more curious than anything.
Pyper: "I like Charles," she stated, pivoting the rest of her body to face the other chair. No step was taken immediately. Perhaps the concept of sitting still, as her hands fidget to keep the tremor undetectable, was impossible. "I never knew why I was called it. Just that I was. Will you tell me?" One step towards the chair, but she'd wait until he wasn't looking. "I don't know very many things. Things that other people have known for a long time. Or I did, but I've forgot. Hard to tell, some times."
Doc: "Lucretia Borgia was her name. I cannot tell you accuracy when she lived, just that it was in the middle ages. Somewhere between 1200 and 1600. Lucretia was the daughter of a Pope." He looked at her, "Popes back then could buy their titles. They didn't have to be men of god. But you can imagine.. being Pope gave one power. And the Pope used that power. Mainly through his daughter Lucretia. There is some schools of thought that say she wasn't a pawn, she was the archetect of her own path.. others say she was a tool of the Pope. Either way.. three very prominate men of their time found themsevles married to her.. and then promptly dead. It was said they could not deny her sexual pull."
Pyper: Mid-step, her leg halted, foot hovering from the ground. He was looking. If their eyes met, his locking in with her countering pale blues, Pyper refused the semi-voluntary action of blinking. "We are opposites. I've never had sex. I know that people pair, and they do things with their clothes off. Or on. We make fadebeasts." A pause, to consider whether to elaborate. Regardless of whether it's necessary to voice or not, Pyper continued, "Axel said that if I made a fadebeast that it'd not be able to do the things that I can do. It couldn't see what you've done days ago. Couldn't wear your skin to be you, in a vision. Is that true?"
Doc: Doc nodded at her admission. "Fadebeasts." He could not comment, no he wouldn not comment, on what had transpired with Phoenix. Doctor patient confidentiality. So he prevaricated from other experiences he had had. "Yes we do make fadebeasts if we copulate. It is random. Not every coupling causes one. But it does happen. I have terminated three fadebeast pregnancies. They are not something you want to have happen. That said, if it does happen.. they can be terminated. As I have done previously. My advice.. before you chose to copulate because it is enoyable in the right situation, know your options ahead of time."