Howard Bassem (
iselldrugstothecommunity) wrote2012-10-14 05:15 pm
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But Time Takes Time, You Know [Musebox]
It's hard to research things that haven't happened yet, Howard discovers. Rather than hitting the library, like he would have on Stacy, he has to spend a lot of time thinking, sitting around talking to Barbara about every detail he remembers of his family history. Every year that passes by, the memories get a little more obscure, a little less refined, and he starts to panic, thinking that he won't have enough information to track down his family at all soon.
Over endless cups of tea, Barbara asks questions ("do you remember your mother's maiden name? do you know where your father's parents were from before they came to California? do you remember what their professions were?") to try and drag out the useful information, but it ends up being a stray memory of a Christmas dinner that puts the pieces in place.
"My grandma has to be in San Francisco. They had a one year wedding anniversary ornament on the Christmas tree of the Golden Gate Bridge, and I'm pretty sure they got married in 1969."
What they were doing in San Francisco is beyond his knowledge, but it's the closest they have to a shot. He doesn't know what hospitals his parents were born in, or where his paternal grandparents might be now, or even what year his parents are going to meet. It takes a lot of agonizing before he decides to spend all that money he's been saving in a can under the sink on plane tickets for him and Barbara to go there, but when he invites her she agrees that it's important to him, and besides, how often does one get to vacation in America?
So they both have suitcases packed and a promise to be back in ten days, waiting for Ian in the kitchen to come drive them to the airport. Howard's nervous, naturally, because he's not sure how he'll introduce himself to total strangers as their grandkid from the future. But he's come to relax a bit - a bit - over the last few years, and as such he just chews his lip and bounces his leg a bit rather than panics. He even got six hours of sleep last night. It's truly a miracle.
Over endless cups of tea, Barbara asks questions ("do you remember your mother's maiden name? do you know where your father's parents were from before they came to California? do you remember what their professions were?") to try and drag out the useful information, but it ends up being a stray memory of a Christmas dinner that puts the pieces in place.
"My grandma has to be in San Francisco. They had a one year wedding anniversary ornament on the Christmas tree of the Golden Gate Bridge, and I'm pretty sure they got married in 1969."
What they were doing in San Francisco is beyond his knowledge, but it's the closest they have to a shot. He doesn't know what hospitals his parents were born in, or where his paternal grandparents might be now, or even what year his parents are going to meet. It takes a lot of agonizing before he decides to spend all that money he's been saving in a can under the sink on plane tickets for him and Barbara to go there, but when he invites her she agrees that it's important to him, and besides, how often does one get to vacation in America?
So they both have suitcases packed and a promise to be back in ten days, waiting for Ian in the kitchen to come drive them to the airport. Howard's nervous, naturally, because he's not sure how he'll introduce himself to total strangers as their grandkid from the future. But he's come to relax a bit - a bit - over the last few years, and as such he just chews his lip and bounces his leg a bit rather than panics. He even got six hours of sleep last night. It's truly a miracle.
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No, he's never going to get over that.
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"Of course I don't mind," she replied, "nap all you like."
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He doesn't wait for the announcements, just finds a comfortable spot on the chair and tries to use his sleep debt to battle back the caffeine he just drank. After a little bit, it works, and he sleeps until they're somewhere over the Midwest. Something in his sleep bothers him, drawing tense lines into his face, but he doesn't stir. When he wakes up he blinks and rubs his face, entirely disoriented.
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"How are you feeling?" Barbara asked him softly, for most of the cabin were still asleep.
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He glances over to the stewardess, now taking someone else's order. "Making friends?"
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"Seems that way," she replied. "I think she was a little bored, being the only one awake. The others are all catch up on their sleep."
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He looks around at the sleeping passengers. "Sorry I'm making you travel so far. I'm buying you clam chowder when we get to San Fran."
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By the time the duo made it to California, Barbara was exhausted. They waited for their luggage by the carousel, where they had to fight, elbows bared, with the other passengers for a chance to spot their luggage.
Despite finally having their suitcases in hand, they had not yet won the war. Still, they had to catch a taxi (or 'cab' as Barbara was told to refer to them by), to their hotel and check in. The 'cab' was nothing like a taxi, in Barbara's opinion.
And while Barbara wasn't often the one to call anyone incompetent, the hotel had indeed come close to being listed under that adjective in Barbara's mind. Until they were upgraded due to a stuff up by someone, and their rooms being cancelled on them, then rebooked and moved over to some place else.
Eventually, she was able to collapse onto one of the beds. "I'm not getting up for several hours," she told Howard, muffled somewhat by the pillow she had landed face-first in.
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There isn't really much to do in the hotel room, especially since he doesn't want the light on as it might wake her. He tries to write in the dim light, but after a while he gives up. He checks to make sure she's still sleeping soundly, checks that he has a room key and has left one for her, and then slips out into the San Francisco day.
He went to San Francisco a few times as a kid - his aunt and uncle lived in Sacramento, and his mother always said it was a shame to go so far up north and not do some vacationing. Most of his memories revolve around the cable cars and the wharf, and he knows both of those existed in this time period. The Hard Rock Cafe is probably still just a cafe, not a shrine to the Who and Eric Clapton.
It really hits him, then, that he's back in America. He's been living in the UK for five years, and it's never felt even a little bit like home to him. California's the homeland, with all its memories and all its nightmares. For a moment he just closes his eyes and breathes in the salt air of the bay, trying to decide whether the air just tastes different or if it's all in his head.
He doesn't want it to be difficult to leave. And as such, he doesn't want to consider either option for when he meets his grandparents. If they reject him, how will he cope with that? And worse, if there's instant chemistry, a connection, a family lore he can tap into, how can he go back to Britain? There's nothing for him there. There's Ian and Barbara, and his cats, there's love and support but there's no future for him.
And yet he knows that maybe it's all an excuse, and there's no future for him anywhere. The anomaly, the displaced kid, the paradox, condemned to float forever and mark off his time until he dies.
He tries not to think too hard about it as he jogs down to the wharf. He doesn't remember what he and his parents used to do there, but there's an arcade, he remembers, one of the old-timey ones with creepy dummies and dolls that told your future. It's more interesting than anything else, and a flyer on a lamppost advertises free entrance, so he heads that way.
He spends about an hour browsing through the arcade, then goes back to the hotel to make sure Barbara's still okay, then comes back, then repeats the process. The third time he returns, the arcade is closed, but the security is easy enough to get by. A few picked locks and a jammed window and he's in the darkened building, marveling at the fact that he's finding it kind of thrilling. He remembers parts of this place terrifying him as a child. Laughin' Sal the dummy starts whooping, and he barely jumps.
The coinstampers are still working, so he gets a penny stamped with an image of the bridge and slips it into his pocket. He sneaks out the building, avoiding the police officers who patrol the wharf, and runs back to the hotel. Barbara's still there, still sleeping, and he places the penny on top of her purse on the bedstand before slumping into the other bed. He can tell he's exhausted, but he still feels electric, invigorated now with anticipation and something else. Not fear, exactly, and not really excitement, but a sense of escape he hasn't had in the UK.
As such, he's awake and pacing around when Barbara wakes.
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"Don't tell me that you've been sitting around this room all along," Barbara asked Howard, "that would have been awfully boring."
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"You might want to, uh." He rubs under his eye to gesture where she should wash up. "Or shower all the airplane germs off. Then we can go get breakfast and I can legit welcome you to my home state."
He sounds excited enough by that that the bounce in his leg might be from excitement more than habit or nerves.
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"Why don't I shower and make myself presentable, then we can call Ian to let him know we arrived safely, and then we can go and have breakfast."
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Once she'd showered, combed her hair, and put on something more fitted to the weather outside, she had to look up just how she would call the United Kingdom. A pamphlet by the telephone was most helpful, and Barbara punched in the numbers before dialing her own number. She gestured that Howard come and sit by her, so that they could share the ear piece.
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"We made it!" Barbara called down the telephone line at him.
"That's fantastic news! Only took you a day."
"I'm sorry, we'd have come faster except that the airplane stopped to talk to the birds."
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And because he wants to show Barbara he cares, "how's John?"
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"I'm glad to hear it," Barbara grinned, "at least we didn't wake you."
"No, no. You didn't. Did you want to speak with your chatty son?" John always became Barbara's son when he kept Ian from sleeping. Just like he became Ian's son when he was doing something dangerous.
"Please!" Barbara replied eagerly. There was a silence while Ian probably went to fetch him, then a rattling came down the phone line. More silence. Ian could then be heard in the back ground, coaxing John into talking. He babbled a little, nothing intelligible, but Barbara stilled beamed at Howard.
"John, it's Mummy! Are you keeping Daddy awake?" she cooed at the telephone.
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He has no idea how a kid who's never seen him can 'miss' him. It creeps him out.
So he plans of letting Barbara do her thing and then asking Ian if he can put the cats on the line. As a joke, of course.
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"Sorry, he was trying to eat it. Have an interesting conversation?" Ian asked.
"Oh, yes, he was telling me about how you're letting him stay up late and eat nothing but sugar."
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"Jeez, Ian, even I know how to raise kids better than that."
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"We're going to get breakfast," she continued once the short, soft laughter had subsided, "I only wanted to check in and let you know we'd arrived safely. We'll be home in a week or so, I'll call you from the airport and let you know what time we get in. I love you."
Ian mirrored the farewell and hung up. Barbara listened to the dead line for a beat longer, then carefully put the receiver back on its cradle.
"Right. You mentioned breakfast?"
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(will NPC tag this tonight)
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Altering canon a little. Like a boss.
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not the schoolmarm look! D8
Take it! TAKE IT! ...what?
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