[Mia's already well aware the jellyfish can display their memories, already having witnessed Maya's-- but here she still is in the Jellyfish library, watching as many of the strangely recorded histories as she can. She can't avoid everyone entirely, but she has tried to visit with as few other people present as possible.
This time, when she's pretty sure she's mostly alone, she doesn't try to stop the projections of the jellyfish when they feed on something that's been pulling at her mind.
Now, Miss Fey, I'll take what's mine... the papers.
A voice that sounds like it's underwater plays from the shadowy figure before Mia's perspective. Well, it's less of a shadowy figure and more... obnoxiously purple, in the dim moonlight filtering through the blinds of what is definitely a law office, down to the low-pill carpet.
I'm sorry, but I can't give you what I don't have.
The figure isn't pleased with the response Mia's memory gives. He frowns, then smiles again, gesturing past her.
Miss Fey, you are a poor liar. Why, I see it right over there... That must be "The Thinker" that swallowed those papers.
The 'camera' of the memory begins to pan around the room. A jump from the clock on her desk resembling the famous The Thinker statue, to the image of her assailant moving toward the clock-- then around the room again as Mia looks for a way out. "How could you know...?" She asks, but the figure is in the way of her path out of the office.
The figure makes a clicking sound with his tongue, and mimes a phone call with his hand, thumb and pinky as the speaker and receiver. Ho hoh. You are not cogniferous of my background? Gathering information is my business, you see.
I... I should have been more careful. Mia's words ring out through that bubbly, watery sounding filter of the passage of time, clear and apparent as the words she knows for sure she said-- words she still believes. The camera spins as her assailant approaches her, clock in hand.
Ho hoh. My dear Miss Fey... I am so very sorry. But I am afraid I must ask you for one more thing. Your eternal silence... Farewell, Miss Fey.
And then, like a TV cutting out short, the image is gone, and Mia is left there staring into the jellyfish as they float away. Her arms remain crossed and she doesn't move a limb or her face, but she does let out a long sigh.
It's not every day you get to relive your own death, especially not where curious teenagers can see it.]
And yet, he can't stop finding himself in it. Even for a glimpse of the people he's left behind, the ones he can't see again- even if they beat this thing, the ones who won't come back- it's intoxicating. He'll gladly deal with the skeletons in his closet, if he can find a moment's peace.
Of course, it makes it so easy then, to spy other people's skeletons, too.
It's unfortunate that he's as curious as he is. He knows it's wrong, he should just leave. But he finds Mia, and, well...he hadn't spoken to her in a little while. Considering her little sister got the rundown of his pretty pathetic life, he's been meaning to...check in, something.
But, he doesn't anticipate catching something like this, when he does.
Just...how many people here are like him? After all? ]
Jesus. [ It's involuntary. He doesn't realize it, not until it's already out. ] Shit- uh- Mia...?
[Really, she should have expected someone coming back.
I should have been more careful. Rings through her head again as she spins to face the source of that 'Jesus', and--
Ah.]
Alex.
[It's calm, despite her wide eyes and the lift of one hand to her chin. She still remembers his name-- and after his help saving Maya, she won't forget.]
I didn't realise you were here, I'm sorry.
[At least she doesn't seem angry, though her surprise doesn't fade too quickly.]
[ He's looking at the other fish. The jellyfish. Trying to make sure any who've taken a liking to him don't come their way. ]
Death. [ Eventually, someone's going to tell him he's crazy. Someone's going to tell him, again, that it doesn't work like that. It couldn't have. So, he's guarded. As with everyone. ] Just... It's just Death. With a grudge.
[Another little laugh. She and her sister are always on the other end of someone's grudge, aren't they? It doesn't strike her immediately as literal, especially given she remembers how it felt to be dead. To defy death.]
[ He wants to almost clarify it. That Death itself is what has a grudge against him--or maybe that's too far. Maybe he's giving himself too much importance, and he's just...a gnat. An annoying fly, who it let buzz around for longer because it just didn't care enough. Because it was too much of a hassle.
He can never decide, just what It felt of him. ]
...Lots of people are like that. All this...you see it as luck? A second chance?
But Mia can read the discomfort on Alex's face; his assumptions aren't the answers he's looking for. She doesn't know what answers he's looking for, but she does know her truth.]
Alex, I think I should tell you- I was active as a spirit after my death. For three years, actually, before we all ended up with the Bureau.
My sister and I and the other girls in our family were spirit channelers, and Maya was able to call me back from the dead several times. In the meantime, I watched from beyond the veil. That's just how it was.
I don't know that the Bureau will keep me alive or give me a 'second chance' when our task is done, but... I know I'm here to help her. That's all I mean.
[ His mouth's dropped open, in a kind of fascination and- and wonder. It's probably a strange reaction? ]
And that's where...the Director... [ It all clicks together, and that almost-positive, almost-relieved atmosphere evaporates. ] ...So you think when this is all over, it's...back to that again. Back to being...that.
[ A fist takes hold in his stomach. And he- ]
Why wouldn't they? After all this... What right do they have, to send you back to that?
[Mia watches every move of Alex's, each of his responses answering a new question of hers. Before she answers his though, she has one of her own, and trades a truth for a truth.]
To be honest, Alex, I haven't thought about it before you asked me. But...
[Oddly, Mia's expression stops changing. It's unreadable again- gentle, but unreadable. That's not an altogether foreign sounding concept; even though she was at peace while dead, other spirits didn't have the same advantage- often as a result of how they died.
Mia takes a few steps closer before she speaks again.]
Where I'm from, death... Isn't always the end of the story. And someone once told me not to give up until things were really over.
[Her head tilts slightly to the side.]
If it's not over, I can't decide what the Bureau will and won't do, now, can I?
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