It is not quite the time of year to be wearing a coat, but Grace has one on anyway -- a sharp red number with black plastic strips along the seams. She expects to be here when the sun has set for real and things get more than just a little chilly.
She is also lying down in the grass, her feet dangling into the pool that is the Node, her shoes and socks a safe distance away, so they can't tip into the water and ruin her day.
As usual, any approaching person will find her with her head squarely in her phone. Even here, she needs her internet like she needs her caffeine. And she's even wearing her special coffee-bean stud earrings today, to drive home her love of the latter.
Mr. Evian
Caleb has acquired a dog.
He put the dog in his pocket one day, namely because he had no idea what to do with aforementioned dog when he picked it up and didn’t quite want to put it down. People were talking and migrating. He wasn’t sure of the social protocol to keep going or engaging so he just… yeah. Caleb has a Chihuahua now.
It’s a tiny thing. Tiny, tiny thing and that is the first herald of Caleb’s approach. It is a small ball of fluff bounding over to the node at what would be a pretty reasonable speed were it not for the fact that the dog is so. Damn. Small. It has tiny legs and tiny paws and tiny everything (except a giant head because it’s a Chihuahua and they have huge heads in proportion to the rest of them). He decided that he didn’t want to wear shoes.
Where he walks, the world seems more alive. Grass seems more robust, healthier, happier.
The Chihuahua decides to attack Grace’s elbow, as soon as it gets there. Or if it wasn’t so far away.
Grace
There are the tiniest of barks. That's what initially draws Grace's attention away from her phone -- the yips of an excited chihuahua. And when she sees it -- it? Him? Her? her eyes alight with happiness.
This happiness is not abated in the slightest by the fact that it begins to gnaw her elbow.
"Oh. My God. You are so cute, I don't even mind the fact that you're attempting to eat me," Grace says, in her talking-to-cute-animals voice.
Mr. Evian
He hungers! Oh, how he hungers. And tries to get at Grace’s elbow and only succeeding in flipping over on his back and sticking his tiny, tiny legs up in the air. I’m so vicious. Look at me, arrrrr
Wiggle wiggle wiggle.
“Ahhh, dog, why? Why are you trying to eat her?”
Hi Grace, this is the random awakened guy you met at the book store.
Grace
"I have a flavor, apparently," Grace says, reaching out with a finger to boop the dog on the nose. It'll probably be a bitten finger. She doesn't much care. "And that flavor is delicious! It's delicious, oh yes..."
There is a saying that states that the closer one is to a cute animal, the more inane the average human's statements become. Grace isn't average, but at least she's somewhat human.
Well, somewhat. She is also almost entirely ignoring Caleb in her complete focus on cute dog.
Mr. Evian
It wouls appear, however, that Grace is in the presence of non-humans. Which, of course, consists of the dog (who did try to eat her finger) and Caleb, who plopped down somewhere between the dog and the house, and is content to watch the Chihuahua try to play with Grace.
And he tries, he has his little mouth around her finger and has forgotten that he is trying to eat her and, instead, decides he is going to start licking the finger. His little eyes try to focus on her, and by the time he forgets what he’s doing his tongue is hanging out. The term, Caleb had learned, wasblep.
The dog looks between Grace and Claeb, trying to figure out very clearly what it was that he was doing here and what he was supposed to be doing.
Grace
And so, Grace wiles away a little time being utterly enchanted with all things pertaining to the cute dog -- its adorable ears, its stubby tail, the way it shows its tiny affection.
It takes her a while longer for that attention to shift to the dog's bipedal companion.
"You're ah... Caleb, yeah? This dog is unbelievable. So tiny! Does he have a name?"
Mr. Evian
“I don’t know how to ask him his name,” he says with a sigh, “he must have one, but I’ve just been calling him dog. I have been waiting to ask Annie to ask him, but she must have better things to do than ask her houseguests’ dog companion what his name is.”
“You’re Grace?”
Grace
"Hmm," Grace says, with an upturned mouth. "You know, if he has a name he calls himself, it's probably unpronounceable by people. Some combination of yips we'd never be able to imitate. If you chose a human name for him, it wouldn't be the first time someone didn't get to pick their own."
She puts her phone down at last, stuffing it into one of her shoes.
"I'm sure he'd love whatever name you came up with."
Mr. Evian
A phone!
Grace’s hand moves and the dog bounds over to try and catch the phone, because it will be his phone. Yes, yes it will be his phone and then he will be living with it and it will be his and then? And then?! Oh, damn, the hand is there again, time to try and eat the hand again.
“Names are so important, though. I got to choose my name, or at least most of it, I suppose it would be more like a nickname. I’m sure he has something he calls me.”
Mouth curls up at the corners, “what about Bill? What do you think about a name?”
Grace
"Bill's cool," she says, laughs when the dog goes after her hand again. Man, she must have dog magnets in her fingertips. "Bitey Bill."
"You got to choose the name Caleb? Why Caleb? I mean... what drew you to that name?"
She swishes her feet around in the Node's waters, a calming kind of noise.
Mr. Evian
"I read a lot of Christian mythology and I thought the idea of being one of the few people who was able to see the promised land after a long, long journey seemed really appealing. I found him interesting as a character, and it means bold. Or dog. Dogs are known for being loyal so... why not be known for being bold and loyal?"
Bill, as he has been dubbed, concludes that he needs to eat her fingers. Makes his vicious, vicious little sound and tries to pounce on her with his little, little paws. Bitey Bill is not a bright dog by any stretch for the imagination.
"Why did you pick Grace?"
Grace
"I didn't pick Grace. My mom did," she says, with perhaps a little more venom than is really warranted.
"But hey, that's not a bad reason for a name there. A bit of the Cynic about you? I don't mean that in a bad way. I have a lot of appreciation for Diogenes."
Mr. Evian
"Humans have complicated every simple gift from the gods," he says with a smile, a nod to the fact that he understood, "and I can appreciate the need and desire for independence. I wish I knew more about Diogenes, but my knowledge is lacking. Most of my education in the subject was directed entirely around history."
A moment, then he smiled, bright and pleased, "I like the name Grace. It has a lot of meaning. It flows off the pen."
Grace
Grace rolls her eyes. "It also doesn't describe me in the slightest. But then, how are you supposed to accurately describe a person before they're born, like, you know, when most names are given?"
She kicks at the water, then, raising a foot that's starting to go all pruned.
"I've had nicknames," she says, smiles then at a memory. Blackberries and rain. "One guy I know always calls me Kit, like a fox cub? It fits me better."
Mr. Evian
“Then stop being called Grace and start being called Kit,” as though it was that simple. For Caleb, it seems to be that simple- if you don’t like your name, change it. Simple enough.
He looks at her again.
“Why do you think that Grace doesn’t fit?”
Grace
"'Cause I'm about as graceful as a newborn giraffe, both with words and on my feet? I don't know. It just doesn't."
She attempts to pet the newly-monikered Bill. It'll probably result in another play-bite, but that's just so adorable anyway.
"I guess somebody showed you where the Chantry is, eh? I mean, obviously. Or you wouldn't be here..."
Mr. Evian
And it does. This is Bill. Bill’s response to anyone trying to love him is to try to eat them, then realize that he likes pettings, which ends in him licking and nuzzling and bouncing like a popcorning guinea pig.
“Margot brought me here,” he replied, “and Annie said I could stay. I’ve started on the westmost shelves in the library and I’ve been working around. If I keep at my usual pace I should be done with it in… eight months? She has a lot of books.”
Grace
"Aww. Margot and Annie are nice people," she says, "And you... you are just precious. Precious!"
A beat.
"The dog. I mean the dog."
She sighs contentedly at Bill's little bouncing antics. This is, well, just what she needed, really.
"I've been meaning to set up a place like this near the city. No Node, of course. I don't know how to make them, or if that's even possible. But Annie's said she'll donate the library in digital form, and I'll have space for people. I just haven't gotten around to it, because..."
Mr. Evian
"Because..?"
Grace
She paused there because perhaps the next words will break the spell of calm on this place. It's hard to talk about.
"Well, because I'm busy. There's been murders and disappearances I'm investigating. I'm really glad you ended up here, to be honest. It's safer."
Mr. Evian
He thinks about this. It's an odd thing, because the way that he looks is at once distant and a little like one would expect a toddler to look when they're processing a very complicated thought.
"I don't understand why someone would actively want to kill another person," he says, "there's a sacredness in living, in how much effort and energy it takes to become alive. It seems like you'd be destroying art."
Grace
She frowns a bit, as if trying to figure Caleb out -- a mirror of his own toddleresque quality.
"There's many reasons. The noblest of which is to end someone's great suffering. But I don't think these deaths were so noble. For one, if they were, we'd already know why the people died."
Mr. Evian
"But... if it's noble then it's not murder. Murder is harmful- ending someone's suffering isn't harmful."
A second, a beat as he pieces through what is going on, and what he knows.
"How did they die?"
Grace
"In one case, hypothermia. In two others, gunshots to the head and chest. In three others, we have no clue, and can only guess that they might be dead. They just never came back home."
She pets Bill again, Bill the oblivious. Bill the bitey. It makes things easier, somehow, when there's something that simple around. Bite and bounce and lick, in that order.
"It's all gone down in Colorado Springs, but yeah. From all accounts, they were all fresh Awakened Mages. That has everybody understandably worried that it might spread to here."
Mr. Evian
"Maybe people didn't want them anymore," he says. Doesn't insist, but offers as though this was a very real possibility. That life can be sacred on one hand but so easily tossed aside the next.
He nods, "I think things are okay here. Everyone seems to be really nice and Annie has a nice house and people are welcome here. There is a lot of support."
Grace
Maybe people didn't want them anymore. There's a sad statement. It has her petting arm going limp, to Bill's dismay. "I don't think that was it. They were missed."
It's possible to not be missed. The concept isn't really lost on Grace. On the contrary, she knows it too well.
"And, I'm glad to hear that you have the support you need here."
Mr. Evian
A second passes, and he sits with the idea that someone missed these people- did he know if he was missed? Did he know if his creator really cared for him, if he was more than just lab equipment? Why would he have been given away so easily, he wasn't ready to go and yet... the longer he moves on the more he wonders if he should have feelings about his state.
"What's a Mormon?"
Grace
"Er..."
Bit of a non sequitur, that. It has the train of Grace's mind a bit derailed for a second, as she tries to come up with an answer that makes sense.
"It's um... an offshoot of Protestant Christianity? Started by Joseph Smith, I think? They believe in angels a lot, and abstain from coffee, which is like," she huffs out a laugh. "A holy sacrament to me, so I'm obviously not Mormon. Why do you ask?"
Mr. Evian
"I tell people I'm from Utah and they keep asking if I'm a Mormon and at first I thought it was like being an alien? And then I wondered if it was an ethnicity? And I don't know what my ethnicity is, so I thought maybe I'm a Mormon?" he shrugged, "I figured you would know."
Grace
"Caleb, where are you from? I mean, besides just Utah..."
She sighs, sits up from her awkward lying-down-and-petting-chihuahua position.
"Eh. I guess you don't need to tell me if you don't want to, I just... I don't know anyone from Utah who wouldn't know what Mormonism is. Sometimes the question of where you come from doesn't just mean a location."
Mr. Evian
"I've been with a member of the Society of Ether for the entirety of my existence up until now," he says, shrugs and says this as though this is normal. As though spending time with awakened society was just how people lived their lives.
"We spent all our time in Eden, and then I left and came here," he said, "it's a lot more lively than being there."
Grace
"So... Isolated, like? Your whole life? They obviously didn't teach you everything you needed to know, did they? Like, well. For instance. What's a Mormon."
There's better ways of putting all this. Grace winces at herself for it, and resumes petting the bouncing ball of fluff, although she can't help but plaster her worry over Caleb all over her face.
He's just so... sheltered.
Mr. Evian
"Mormons never really came up. I have a basic introduction to numerous subjects, though. History, theoretical physics, the American legal system, superstitionist theories, gardening," he could go on and on, "and I know how to disassemble and reassemble most conventional electronic equipment to cannibalize for parts."
"Science doesn't need to be completely expensive."
He pauses.
"Are Mormons going to come up a lot?"
Grace
"Maybe. That and murders. There's stuff you can't easily just... learn out of a book. And as such, you're about to learn a lot. Not all of it good. Most of it, completely bizarre."
She swings around, and grabs her pruny, wet feet, so that she can more easily look him eye-to-eye, even if she rarely actually manages to do so.
"But... Someone told me once, that your eyes get opened to the beauty of the world along with the ugliness. There will be good things to learn, too."
Mr. Evian
"I'm finding that... the people you interact with and see... they're a lot more interesting than the magick of it all. This... maybe we're drawn to what's new."
Grace
"I did mean the people you interact with and see. There's not a whole lot of difference between that and the magick of it all, when you get down to it. I mean..."
She stares up into the sky, the stars starting to come out -- and from a place this remote, you can see them so clear.
"What Margot and Annie did for you, the support you have, that's beautiful. The ones who hate and kill, not so much. But they don't get to dull the brightness of experience."