Subject: "Everyone Pays the Price Now"
Author:
Posted on: 2013-07-04 22:28:00 UTC
This is canon, but won’t happen for a good while yet. Thank you, hS, for picking a topic that allows me to be a tease. Has not been beta’d. Sorry, EF, more seriousness.
Vania jolted awake at a sudden sound, throwing her ponytail into her face as she lifted her head.
Through her obscuring hair and unfocused vision, she saw Sora floating face up with his eyes closed—the “Continue” screen of Kingdom Hearts 3.
Knocking again: the sound that had woken her up. Two hard thuds.
Vania huffed a sigh and let her head her head fall back against the bleen-colored bean bag chair, flipping the ponytail back out of her face.
She addressed a muffled scuffling behind her. “Doooooooc. Would you please get the door when you’re already up? I’m barely awake down here.”
The scuffling stopped. The knock repeated.
“Doc?” Vania tilted her head upwards to see the rest of RC251 upside-down. She was completely alone—no partner and no minis. “Uh.”
Maybe Doc was right about that bug problem.
A really noisy bug problem.
Another pair of firm thuds distracted Vania from her confusion. “Coming! I’m coming!”
“Me too!” shouted Luxury from somewhere nearby.
Vania wrestled her way out of the bean bag chair, spilling more stuffing out of the duct tape holding it together. “If you’re a spam bot, you’re getting thwacked!” Vania warned as she stumbled to the door. She opened it and started to say, “Can I help—” before stumbling back with open mouth and eyes.
“Hello, Vania Tolluk.” The man wore a torn grey vest over a yellow t-shirt, and blue jeans dribbled with dark red splotches. “I see you have a new partner, now.”
“Paul.” Vania’s attention was drawn back to her former partner’s face, and the messy, slightly spiked bleach-white hair above it. She remembered that Paul had done his hair that way to make it look more anime, and remembering that made her remember everything how is he here what did I do get out GET OUT
“I see you remember, now. No more excuses, no more avoidance.”
“Get out!” Vania yelled, her voice rising to a hysterical high pitch. She tried to fling the door shut and back away. The door, however, banged against think vines that were growing in the way, swinging back open, while Vania’s ankle caught on a tree root poking from the RC’s floor. She landed on her back, staring up at Paul, blinking away the raindrops every time they fell too close to her eyes.
Eyes. Paul’s right eye was now all black pupil, while his left was an empty field of white.
“You’re not Paul!” Vania yelled.
“Paul is only a memory now,” said the something wearing Paul’s face. “Thanks to you, Vania.”
“Noooo . . .” Vania moaned and spun around onto all fours, pulling herself away from “Paul,” clawing through video game cases and leaf litter that were wet from the increasingly heavy rain. If she could just reach the console, beat the sound of footsteps following her, and make a portal . . . the console should have been this way, but all Vania could see was the storm-darkened jungle.
“What about Doc, Vania?”
“No!” she shouted, her voice scratchy from anger and screaming. “Get out get out GET OUT!” She flipped over and glared into “Paul’s” inhuman eyes with the animalistic fury in hers. The blood drops were smearing down his jeans from the rain. He leaned in close to her face, frowned, and asked, “Are you going to kill Doc, too?”
Vania gave one long shriek as answer, before closing her eyes tightly and pounding both fists against her forehead. “GETOUTGETOUTGETOUTGETOUT—
“—Get out!” Vania yelled as she jolted awake.
Agent Doc froze with eyes wide at the RC door. “Sorry, Vania. I was trying to be quiet.” He stepped in further and set a pile of books and pamphlets neatly on the floor in front of his bookshelf. “I wanted to look up how to get rid of our bugs, but I used someone else’s RC so the portal wouldn’t wake you.”
Vania closed her eyes and listened to the minis begin to stir again after her outburst. “No, you’re fine. I just woke up from a bad dream.”
“Oh. Well, I’m sorry about that. Do you . . . want to talk about it?”
“Well,” Vania started, then furrowed her eyebrows. She looked up at the ceiling for a few seconds, then shook her head hard. “Apparently not. I can’t remember it at all.” She settled back into the bleen bean bag chair and looked at the TV screen. She nudged the directional pad down twice, then selected, “Load Game.”