ᴍʏ ɴᴀᴍᴇ ɪs Cᴏɴɴᴏʀ ▲ ʀᴋ800 (
bleps) wrote in
finalflight2018-07-31 11:22 pm
PSL; [It's bigger than us, it's bigger than everything]

((ooc; cont. from here))
[Anything happening within the walls of Hank's house is now being shattered by the blaring of the doorbell. Once, twice, a third time for a bit longer. Less an actual doorbell and more of a buzzer, a harsh thing that is sure to grab the attention of anyone possessing a heartbeat within. The very obvious sign of someone (a certain RK800 unit) at the door, hoping to find the Lieutenant at his home if he cannot be located at his usual haunts. The sort that serves alcohol, mainly.]
Lieutenant?
[The voice should ring familiar, if not slightly muffled by the obstruction before him. Connor stands waiting, straight-backed, staring at the closed door like the obstacle it is to his entry. The usual curl of hair that falls across his forehead sways in the breeze as he waits, only half-patiently.]
Lieutenant! [The downwards cant of his head, just slightly, eyes averted to the side; the look of someone listening for noise within.] Are you home?

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[He yawns again and sighs and asks a question, not really thinking about how weird it kind of is.]
What you gonna upgrade me to, Connor?
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And a question like that? Even harder to know how to answer.]
What do you want to be, Lieutenant? What would you consider an ‘upgrade’ to your current self?
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[He's silent a moment, thinking, then he shrugs a shoulder, blinking hard a few times and taking another slow breath.]
Doesn' matter anyway, does it? Kinda quit my job in a pretty big way, so it's not like I'm gonna start just being a good cop any time soon.
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[Ah, well. He was supposed to be putting Hank to sleep, right? He wonders if this kind of conversation is really going to be conducive to doing that, but for a brief moment, Connor seems to not care as much about the challenge than just… talking, like this.]
You and I both are going to have to find something new at this rate. Something other than detective work.
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[He makes a small, amused noise, because the idea still amuses him.]
I don' know Connor, what do you wanna do?
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I… liked what I did before. [Strange, too, feeling like he’s allowed to say that he wholeheartedly likes something. That he can entertain the idea of choice beyond just middling, throwaway preferences.]
Not specifically cases revolving around deviants but… [A beat.] Finding inconsistencies, discovering leads, analyzing a scene to see if I could locate the one thing that would make it all come together. There was something satisfying about it, beyond just filling the requirements of my assigned task.
[A shrug of his shoulders, something in the curve of his back going slack as he leans against the seat.]
I realize that’s ironic. That my preferences still align with CyberLife’s inherent design for the RK800 model. Maybe some parts of me will never be as autonomous as I like.
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[Hank's words are a little clearer, not really wholly awake still but more focused, now that they've stumbled onto a topic that feels genuinely important.]
Good study habits, being proactive with uh, work and assignments and all that stuff, extra curricular shit. Had friends who hated it, really hated their parents for that, for pushin them. But I... I don't know. It fit. That was me for a long time.
[He shrugs.]
Can't help what you know. And if you like what you know, that's good, isn't it? 's like taking something back from them, taking that RK800 shit and just, doing whatever you want with it.
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[There’s only so much that he can change about himself, about how he was built. A part of him wants to disassociate with that; to view every little designed feature of his appearance, of his interior, as his own. But the rest of him knows that this isn’t reasonable. What he defines as his own analytical mind still has — and always will — CyberLife’s fingerprints all over it.
A bit like human genetics, maybe. Nature versus nurture. The ability to define who you are in life, versus the limitations of what you’re literally made of.]
Did you always know that you wanted to work for the police?
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[He shifts around to look down, pulling a wry, embarrassed kind of face at the armrest between them.]
I wanted to, uh, to prove something, I guess. Something about cops or, authority, or something. I wanted to do something good, change shit from the inside.
[He huffs - again, not a particularly amused noise.]
I don't know, I was young. It was that part of it I wanted, changing something, being, uh- I guess I always knew that part of it, that I wanted to be someone who could do that.
I guess you're making it easier on yourself than I did, wanting to do something just 'cause you want to do it. Realistic goal setting, and all. Who knows, we might still be able to figure out a way for you to do it. Bet we could. That'd be nice.
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My reasoning behind wanting to work with the police doesn’t invalidate yours. [Never mind talk about himself. He feels like his is more important to clarify. Even if Hank always shies away from it.] Wanting to incite change is important.
[Markus, leading a revolution for the sake of his people. Hank, throwing everything away for Connor, so he could force himself out of terrified denial and act as free person.
Connor, who was content to remain a stagnant machine until he was no longer needed, simply because he wasn't brave enough to do otherwise.]
Don’t discredit yourself in that way.
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It's not discrediting, it's just - you can do what you want to do, that's all I'm saying. I'm not like- down on myself, or anything, it's just history. I'm just talking about history. You can do what you wanna do or you can't, that's all. I'm not trying to, like, make a dick measuring contest out of our life's dreams, or anything. I wouldn't treat your- your life that way, you know that.
[Hank lifts his head, finally, to scowl at Connor, and also maybe kind of sort of to check on whether his try at shifting the focus back on Connor worked as well as he hopes it did. They're not talking about Hank's failures, no way, even half asleep - maybe less than half, now - he is way too sober to be talking about that.]
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That isn’t at all the point I was trying to make. But I think you know that — you always deflect, Lieutenant.
[Not down on himself, he said. Connor wants to say he’s never heard something so inaccurate before, but he’s not feeling snippy this time. Only his usual mode of quiet, underlying exasperation.]
I was paying you a compliment. You should accept it, for once.
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[He says it a little because it's true, a lot because he wants to buy himself a little time. And of course he can't keep looking at Connor while they talk about this, of course he can't, so he shuffles up straighter in his seat and twists to look at Sumo instead.]
And I can accept a compliment just fine, if I hear one that makes sense. I know there's a lot of shit you haven't got a hang of yet, but you don't compliment a guy for, I don't know, writing a big check to some charity if his check bounces, that's not how it works. Admire someone who's actually done something or, I don't know, find something to say about me that's actually true, then I'll be right there with you, okay?
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So you’re saying that it doesn’t make sense for me to say that the sort of man you were then is still reflected in the sort of man you are now? Look at what you’re doing for me, Hank. [See, no “Lieutenant”.] You can’t possibly say that’s true.
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The guy I was- He's not exactly someone you should be counting on, either. I mean, you know how he ended up. Just, don't thank me for doing anything for you yet, okay? Not until you're safe. Not until you've actually got something to thank me for.
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(They won’t know what the next day will bring them. Connor might not survive it, his freedom cut short by CyberLife’s sudden wrath. Or a failed revolution where androids were already beginning to be recalled, destroyed. There’s nothing to say that won’t be him sooner rather than later. Surely Hank knows that.)]
No. I want to thank you. You deserve it. And if for some reason I can’t be free, or I don’t make it out of this, I don’t want you to think that you were wrong for trying. That you’re not doing good right now by aiding me.
I’d rather die than be under CyberLife’s thumb again. Than to be a mindless machine. No matter what happens, you’re doing me a favor.
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You're not gonna die. We'll figure something out. That'll really be something worth thanking me for, won't it, and then we won't even have to have this argument. You're gonna be just, just fine. Okay?
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[Of course Connor wants to believe it. Of course Connor will try his damnedest to survive, to be free, to keep them both safe. But there are no guarantees. They’ve both worked enough deviant cases to know that things aren’t so easy for those trying to hide from authority. They've been on that other side.
There’s definitely a reaction from Hank, now. If he were not trying so hard to impress a point upon the man, he’d stop and analyze it — maybe even lift his foot off of the proverbial gas a little. But a reaction is better than a dismissal, and so Connor continues.]
I just want you to know, without a doubt, that you have my gratitude.
[This part, however, is worthy of a pause before he pushes the words out:]
I don’t want you to drown yourself in guilt all over again if something does happen to me, Hank.
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I don't make promises I can't keep, Connor. Not any more. Sorry.
[And he knows it's a possibility - hell, a probability. Hank knows things probably aren't going to go well for them here. He's been thinking it, admitting it to himself, and he could handle it okay, thinking that. But now, hearing Connor say it, hearing him say it because he wants Hank to know it was worth something- There's just something about it. He can admit it to himself, sure, how things could go. But he won't say it out loud. And he won't lie to Connor, either. Not right now.]
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I appreciate the sentiment. And I don’t want you to think that I’m not going to try my best to see this through to the end, either. But that’s not a promise you can keep. That either of us can keep.
[He shakes his head.]
You’re impossibly stubborn. I wish you’d just accept what I’m telling you.
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Takes one to know one.
[His voice comes out strangled and cracking and Hank takes a second, swallowing, to try and straighten it out.]
I just- I can't, okay? I'm not- I can't see things like you do, I... I can't handle things like you can.
What you're seeing is what you get, Connor. Sorry.
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But his friend needs to know that he’s doing something good, because he’s inclined to be a good person. Because Connor might not always be around to tell him that.]
You think I’m processing any of this better than you? I’m afraid of what might happen, too. But that's all the more reason to tell you this.
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[Hank breathes, and wipes his hand in a sudden jerking movement across his eyes, and tilts his head back, breathing and staring up at the ceiling of the car.]
Just- Don't make it about that, okay? Don't.
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[Trying to make it about that. Trying to pry an acceptance out of Hank based on the fear of Connor’s death, or something similar. He’s not that manipulative, not with Hank.]
That wasn’t an image I was trying to put in your head.
[He watches him closely. The way Hank wipes at his eyes — that threatens to send guilt careening through his insides with its sharp edges scraping across every surface.]
Sorry, Lieutenant.
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[Hank takes slow breaths and blinks up at the ceiling, watching it blur.]
You just really want me to... to just say 'you're welcome' or something like that, right?
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