http://loadsavepoint.livejournal.com/ (
loadsavepoint.livejournal.com) wrote in
circle72010-11-08 01:41 am
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let's rank up this social link
The Circle had a surprisingly efficient (if paranoid) mail system for the quantity of its members. Bentley supposed you had to be careful with your mail in a business like this, after all. In fact, his packages were a few days late as it was - unsurprisingly, considering the contents could seem suspicious. Not to mention that you had to use certain sellers that wouldn't abuse the knowledge of a giant mafia station's location, but he guessed there was some middle man that did the pick up then brought it to them. (Maybe he'll ask the boss about that later.) It finally checked out, and the doctor was notified that all was good for pick up. Bentley's mood was particularly cheery as he made his way to the meager 'post office,' ID ready.
Luckily, the office wasn't busy today. Most people were working, while Bentley had other duties to perform today; duties that involved the packages that were almost in his possession. Bentley checked the small slip of paper in his pocket, confirming the locker number his mail would be in. Approaching the tall locker marked A-23, the doctor lifted out his ID, sliding it into a small slot and pressing his hand to a small monitor on the door of the locker. His fingers widened, then closed in together, and the computer gave a beep and displayed the words, 'Identification Confirmed. Please wait.'
Luckily, the office wasn't busy today. Most people were working, while Bentley had other duties to perform today; duties that involved the packages that were almost in his possession. Bentley checked the small slip of paper in his pocket, confirming the locker number his mail would be in. Approaching the tall locker marked A-23, the doctor lifted out his ID, sliding it into a small slot and pressing his hand to a small monitor on the door of the locker. His fingers widened, then closed in together, and the computer gave a beep and displayed the words, 'Identification Confirmed. Please wait.'

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"Just some much needed parts," he answered, and that usual nervousness that was usually in his voice was replaced by something more excited. The parts in question were in three boxes stacked upon each other, all labeled with a bright red, capitalized, 'HANDLE WITH CARE.' Lacking the foresight, however, Bentley hadn't grabbed a dolly to wheel his packages out. With a sudden smile, he turned again to Evan. "Want to give me a hand?"
But something occurred to him, and he frowned, mumbling to himself and looking at Evan's side. "Or maybe not, given your wound..."
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"Anyway, it's not medication. Any hospital goods get delivered directly to the ward. These are the parts I needed for some prosthetics," Bentley answered, the excitement clear on his face. Being a doctor wasn't exactly fun, but somehow, this 'hobby' - he supposed it could be called that - was a different kind of challenge that he always came back to. (Even if memories of Back Then made its way through particularly when he did)
ARGH
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The trip from the mail room was fortunately not far from their destination, though it certainly wasn't the living quarters. Their destination was a specialty hall. (A little further down was Calibri's lab - a lot of work stations were down this way, though the chemist's in particular was rather... secluded and sealed off. For everyone's safety.) Bentley stopped in front of a room two doors down, setting down one of the boxes to scan his ID and let his (left) hand be scanned. The door slid open, and Bentley picked up the package again, sidling inside and nudging the light on with his shoulder.
"Welcome to my work area," he said with a smile over his shoulder, setting the parcels down on a table. The room was rather barren, if you looked at the walls and floor, but the tables were littered with papers, bolts, tools, metal, wires, and more. The display screen on the wall that came to life as Bentley flipped another switch showed a mechanical hand from the inside-out, similar to an x-ray revealing a skeleton underneath, though the shown parts were definitely not that of a human's: his current project.
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The sliding door almost shut on Evan, and though he managed to push it back open with his foot, it jostled him and the box a little. They were in the New Space Age, surely, but technology still had one fault that had yet to be fixed by human and nonhuman hands alike - it didn't always work correctly, and sooner or later, it broke. Nonetheless, he finally managed to slip into the room and plopped down the large box onto the table, its weight making the entire thing shake (despite the obvious HANDLE WITH CARE label on the parcel). Another thing he had learned in space - things weren't nearly as fragile as people made them out to be.
His eyes widened at the 'project' on the work table, if one could even call it that. Without even approaching, he ran through the possible reasons a spaceship medic would need a working, functioning robot, and came up with few choices. Maybe Bentley needed an assistant. Maybe he just wanted some company. Maybe he needed a standing mock-up of every possible prosthetic all hooked and wired up together. Maybe he was just crazy. All were similarly possible.
Evan whistled, and settled with, "You're building a modern Frankenstein here, doc. Boss know you're doing this?"
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However, mock-ups only did well as a base - Bentley needed measurements for the people he made replacement limbs for, as to match the missing limb's counterpart, which is what the screen showed to the right of the slowly rotating 3-dimensional image of the robotic hand. It looked similar to Bentley's, if lacking the metal forearm.
Something occurred to Bentley, and he turned to Evan with an apologetic smile. "Thanks for you help, by the way."
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He approached the table, waving a flesh and bone finger through the holographic display, pointing to bits and pieces of it. As children, none of the Dominico kids were particularly scientifically inclined (though if some of the younger ones had grown a sudden fondness for it, he wouldn't exactly know). They were a family that had gone through mandatory education as an obligation; there were always more important things in the day - jobs, money, even girls, at times. "What's this? Where's that hook up to?" he asked, pointing to a wire that extended much further than even the elbow joint, if the forearm were visible. It must have hooked up into the body itself.
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"They're very sensitive to the electric pulses in your body. They pick those up, and I use that current to trigger what the prosthetic does," he answered. "Unfortunately, it's a bit painful. Some have to be embedded in the muscle to pick up the pulse."
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Somehow, that just brought to mind of Bentley attaching a complicated Swiss Army knife contraption to his elbow, and though Evan didn't share that particular thought out loud, he did grin in amusement to himself. He had the feeling that the doctor might find that idea actually fascinating.
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Bentley laughed at the second. "No, it's for someone else. Got commissioned recently by a lady in the fifth circle." On second glance at the 3D model of the hand that was being crafted, it did look thinner and longer than the average (human) male's hand.
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"Nothing functional! That's not my area," he said, a big grin stretching his mouth, revealing small dimples at the corners. "Though I could probably design something that moves with the eye muscles that are still there, but it wouldn't help him to see. That's a more sensitive technology."
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Stepping back, he leaned against one of the emptier counters, where he figured he wouldn't be in the way of Bentley bustling about. The doctor seemed quite absorbed, but the company, even if not conversational, wasn't poor. Rather than interrupt with more questions, he began prying open the sticky tab sealing his own envelope shut, quietly ripping the paper and the insulated vacuum wrapping inside of it.
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"What've you got there?"
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Do you, Bentley? A glimpse into the illicit intimate affairs between men and women in the space age?!
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Perhaps in a show of surprising gentleness, Bentley clamped metal fingers over the letter, keeping it folded. His brow was wrinkled and cheeks still reddened with warmth.
"N-no. That's all right."
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Oh. He had been teasing.
Bentley opened his mouth to say something, but it never quite made it out, hand falling to his side. His right hand raised instead as he took a step back, rubbing his face abashedly as his shoulders sagged.
"You're awful, Evan."
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"Probably!" he said brightly, neither prying nor pushing, and simply enough, he let it go at that. "But should I ever have any real steamy love letters from a current planetside sweetheart, I'll be sure to show you first, doc. And should you ever need advice for letters of your own, my door is always open."
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After a moment of silence, in which he seemed to be contemplating something, mouth twitching left to right, he added, "Maybe with different matters, though. If your offer stands for other things." For Bentley, this was going out on a limb. As surrounded and crowded as life was in the Circle Station, by strangers and patients alike, and as long as he had been here, he was still much of a loner, and didn't have experience with asking for someone's company.
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