( in the night ) ic inbox
![]() @ kent landmark, rm. 404 "Hi! This is Clark Kent. Unfortunately, I'm not here right now, so please leave a message at the tone and I'll get back to you as soon as I can. Thanks for calling!" text | voice | action | etc. |
![]() @ kent landmark, rm. 404 "Hi! This is Clark Kent. Unfortunately, I'm not here right now, so please leave a message at the tone and I'll get back to you as soon as I can. Thanks for calling!" text | voice | action | etc. |
no subject
I'm very glad to hear that.
With one notable exception, arriving in Beacon is usually a more mundane experience.
Which would make you either very unlucky, or something of a troublemaker.
[Growing up among the Gotham elite, flitting through the upper echelon of socialites with loose or sometimes no morals, Bruce has learned that there are two ways to go about conversations. Directly, or with sleight of hand. Loyalties have historically been a shell game, and his own natural earnestness, his preference for setting a course and following it, have come at a high cost. Even now, with the city and arguably the world far behind him- it isn't a method he's abandoned.
It's the same sleight of hand that redirects their conversation now- where instead of talking about how busy or not busy he is, about the dubious nature of what passes for 'all right' in Beacon, his gaze goes to the beams along the back wall.]
I'm sure having a project on your hands will help.
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Whereas Bruce is some masterful player of the conversational arts, Clark is simple. He’s simple in that he’s confused at the mention of projects until he follows Bruce’s line of sight, and then there’s another sheepish noise and a brief nod of the head. ] Oh, that’s what you’re talking about. [ Clark’s the type to just ask when he’s curious about something; it’s fortunate that he’s able to read people, that being said, and that he’s met enough types to know when someone enjoys being roundabout and difficult for no particular reason.
His best friend back home was unnecessarily cryptic about everything, too. ]
Yeah—um, someone found a greenhouse recently, right? At least, she said so on the… the computer… [ The term Clark is looking for is “network”. He crinkles his nose and moves past it, assuming Bruce in all his Gen Z wisdom ought to pick it up faster than Clark ever could. ] And you need to cross a, um, river to get there. She was able to fly, but [ lifting both his hands up to mimic flapping with his palms, Clark lets out a sigh ] I obviously can’t.
I thought a bridge’d be good. [ Settling again, he leans back into the sofa, thighs parted just a bit so his joined hands can rest between them. ] Built all sorts of things back home, so, um, it isn’t too hard.
Mostly I wanna grow all sorts of vegetables. [ Clark sounds quite excited about it, and the grin on his face matches the hope in his tone. ] It’d be nice, don’t you think?
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Be careful not to wade in while you're building. Something lives in the waterways.
A few people have died that way.
[To the uninitiated this might sound like discouragement or disapproval- but it couldn't be further from the truth. A bridge would be useful, allow people without metahuman abilities to access larger areas and explore new locations. Bruce is responding with the best armor he can provide: knowledge, information. It is not the only way for a person to perish here in Beacon, but all bodies of water present a special kind of danger. Not all spirit attacks will snuff out a flame.
The shards of glass that Bruce keeps hidden beside his bed, the remains of Jim Gordon's lantern- are a testament to that.
The thought surfaces, and Bruce quietly closes it away. Another time. Another place.
Not here.
Bruce considers the garden instead, watches the easy, optimistic smile settle on Clark's mouth, watches his hands come to rest between his legs. It's a good sign, he thinks. The readiness to act. The sense of community. The corner of his own mouth tugs, an echo.]
But I can't say I'd complain about fresh produce. There's a worrying number of pickle jars collecting in the general store.
With so much on your agenda I realize it's in very poor taste. But I'm here to ask for a favor.
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For the rest of this, though? Clark’s glad to have received some form of approval. Though he isn’t one to do things for the praise of others, that doesn’t make it any less enjoyable to get it. Clark Kent’s only human, after all.
Albeit an especially eager human, given the way he says (without hesitation, as for all his shyness Clark is as earnest as they come), ] I’ll do it. [ He’s not thinking about “poor taste” or “oh no, I don’t have time”, even when he hasn’t heard all the details of it yet. It’s probably a touch naïve, but there isn’t anything in Clark’s countenance that suspects he says “yes” because he’s an idiot. If anything, as meek as he tends to be, there’s a quiet confidence to him. A certainty that anything Bruce says, he can do.
This is less because of his own personal abilities and more because he never gives up, and when you never give up, you're bound to find a way to do anything.
His posture’s straightened somewhat now that they’ve gone into serious territory, at least as much as it’s allowed. Clark pushes his glasses up his nose. ]
What is it?
no subject
Bruce leans forward and offers the bouquet of flowers, and the moment he releases them into Clark's hand, a small SD card is left behind.]
I'd like you to make this available to the public.
[Apparently he's less interested in explaining the oddities of shapeshifting flowers than he is about the card itself.]
It's an app that can translate Morse code, both text-based and sound-based. It can be installed on any of the tablets.
no subject
Oh. [ The flowers are a card now. Clark cocks his head to the side, brows furrowing as he holds it up between his thumb and forefinger. His other hand is used to adjust his glasses to help him look at it, help his eyes focus.
His heart rate calms somewhat. This is definitely easier to deal with than flowers (and does, blessedly, pull a less emotional reaction). ]
How do you make this "available to the public"? [ The card is placed back into his palm, fingers curling securely around it but not too tight. ] Is there someone I should talk to?
no subject
Make an announcement on the network.
[Bruce's hands return to the only safe place for them right now- his lap.]
It can be used on any tablet. And the community at large can direct you.
Tell them you found it, anywhere will do.
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Okay. [ He holds his hand and the card inside it to his own chest, nodding once. ] I can do that.
Thank you for trusting me.
[ Clark seems to be grateful for a lot of things. He's even more open about it. ]
Is that all you n-needed me to do, Bruce?
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Until this moment Clark has been polite and accommodating and not quite vulnerable as much as he's come across as- inexperienced. He'd been in some degree of shock after the attack in the woods, but hadn't decompensated or given himself over to adrenaline. He's asked questions that elaborate on a factual understanding of life in Beacon, not simply a subjective view. He'd said he was a reporter, these qualities would fit the bill. But something feels off.
You don't want to be associated with it, lines up against the stuttered is that all you n-needed.
Maybe he's over-thinking it. Maybe he's just bothered by the choice of words.
Thank you for trusting me.
Is that what he's doing?
Bruce straightens, stiff-backed in his chair, while the rest of his body remains almost unnaturally still.]
Yes, that's all.
Are you going to ask for anything in return?
no subject
He rises from his seat, nearly stumbling on his way to the kitchen, but at least he manages to put the memory card into his pocket as he messes up his steps to keep it safe. He hadn't been lying; he'll definitely make that request of his happen.
When Clark reappears, he has a plate with three corn muffins on it, the plate small enough that around the muffins is about an inch and a half left of plate to keep them from falling off. The muffins are sweet, freshly baked; they definitely explain the pleasant smell that'd covered the whole of the apartment. Clark's covered the whole thing in cling wrap to protect the goods from the outside, because his intentions for them with regards to Bruce are: ] Take some. [ He's smiling as he says it, holding the plate out in two hands. ] I m-made too much. You'd be doing me a favour helping me finish them.
The corn was canned, though. Fair warning. [ Just like the one Bruce gave him before the stew, remember?
Clark Kent never forgets. ]
no subject
Nothing about Clark Kent had gone as expected and Bruce, who has spent considerable time and effort and energy on learning how to anticipate the future, how to predict the people around him and course correct in the moment- finds is deeply offputting. He'd said it in part as a formality, an attempt to be polite and express a measure of gratitude. Favors are a currency in and of themselves in Gotham, and his understanding of Kent to this point has led him to believe that whatever the ask might be, the price was likely to be a small one.
He wasn't expecting muffins.
Bruce looks at the plate, wrong-footed.
His hands move on reflex, before he makes a conscious decision to take them- but it does nothing to keep wipe the perplexed crease between his brows.]
You really do prefer to keep busy. [A beat.] Thank you.
[His hands find the plate, and then it too, becomes a bouquet of flowers. Bruce looks at it. He doesn't sigh, but he does exhale a little longer than he would otherwise.]
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He fixes his glasses, what with how they'd been jostled in his jump. ] That's just like the c-card, huh. [ Which means the whole thing is probably harmless. Not ideal, of course, but harmless, and as long as Bruce is okay, Clark supposes he is, too.
But the sad fact remains: ] Gosh, I hope you get to eat them somehow.
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I'm sure I'll manage.
[Somehow this does not sound optimistic- just long suffering. The flowers lift just a little, as he begins to climb to his feet.]
The effects only last for a month, either way.
Thank you for seeing me. [His gaze flicks away, in the direction of the card.] And for that.