Alexander Seidelmann (
bilocate) wrote in
nexus_crossings2018-12-07 01:54 am
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+1 small, superpowered boy
Today is a day Alex is especially glad he brought his pocket notebook with him, as it means he can take notes on the weird PSA. He doesn't seem scared, or even particularly surprised, as he jots down some quick things to remember to ask his dad about later - interdimensional stuff sounds like something out of his dad's sci-fi movie collection - and makes a note to himself to look for the door home after no more than an hour. That's probably enough time to look around around without also being so long his parents will notice and get worried.
Once he's got his notebook stashed away again, he starts off towards the direction he's fairly sure he came from, just to make sure the door is there. After a few moments, he winces and clutches his head. Apparently, headaches could travel across dimensions, too. Biting his lip, he carefully looks around, trying to gauge which adult looks the least likely to be annoyed by a kid. Eventually, when the headache throbs especially badly, he gives up that endeavor to approach the nearest person who doesn't look clueless and asks, as politely as he can manage, "Do you know where I can get some aspirin? My head is killing me and it's been long enough since I took some I can have some more. I think."
If time worked the same across dimensions it would have been easier to tell, but alas.
Once he's got his notebook stashed away again, he starts off towards the direction he's fairly sure he came from, just to make sure the door is there. After a few moments, he winces and clutches his head. Apparently, headaches could travel across dimensions, too. Biting his lip, he carefully looks around, trying to gauge which adult looks the least likely to be annoyed by a kid. Eventually, when the headache throbs especially badly, he gives up that endeavor to approach the nearest person who doesn't look clueless and asks, as politely as he can manage, "Do you know where I can get some aspirin? My head is killing me and it's been long enough since I took some I can have some more. I think."
If time worked the same across dimensions it would have been easier to tell, but alas.
no subject
"Space? It's--" Everything Jim has ever wanted. The unknown, the freedom, the thrill of an adventure and the hunger for knowledge all sated by this big open void. He misses it so much it's a sickness. Jim's smile is brighter than it's been before. "It's the only place I ever want to be, these days. You get used to the artificial gravity and most of your food and drink being replicated rather than fresh. Small price to pay to get to work out in the Black. Have you ever been on a plane before?"
Impossible to tell just by Alex's clothes, but Jim's guessing shuttles and transport stations aren't the way folks get around in Alex's world just yet.
no subject
Space is a good distraction from his currently remaining headache. There's little that can top space in his mind; it's the last real unknown in life. Sometimes he looks up documentaries on it online when he can't sleep. To talk to somebody who's been there is the coolest thing ever. "It sounds amazing. I think I'd miss my mom's challah bread in space, but other than that, it'd be totally worth it, yeah." He's a momma's boy, through and through. "I've been on a couple of planes. That's the only way to go visit my grandparents and my Uncle Leo and his family. They live up in the Arctic Circle. It's kind of boring, but you can see all the stars really clearly there, and that far up, they're not in the same positions anymore they were in Maine."
He's not a space expert, but even he can tell when the North Star is in a different place. Besides, he wants Jim to think he's cool, and not a lot of people have been up that far north. It's not as cool as space, but it's something, anyway. Sadly, he hadn't gotten to see a polar bear, last time, despite trying to bait a trap for one with his cousin. Now, that would've been cool.
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"You do miss fresh food and drink. Anytime I get planetside the first thing I do is get a fresh cup of coffee and a burger. Doesn't matter from where, could be the worst dive bar food on the planet and it'd still be better than the replicated stuff." Not that replicated food is Wrong in any sense. It's just rather bland compared to the real thing. "Being on a ship is kind of like being on a plane all the time, just outside the atmosphere. Takes some folks a while to get used to the artificial gravity or the constant thrum of the engines."
Though captain Kirk trails off when Alex starts talking about the Arctic.
"Now that's got to be one pretty place. What do your Uncles' family do up there? Are they just that fond of the outdoors or are they geologists maybe?"
no subject
"I've never had replicated food. Is it really different from normal food? Also, coffee is kind of gross. I like it when my mom makes it, but she puts stuff in it to fix the taste." As opposed to his dad's black coffee, which is truly horrific. How anyone can stomach it, he doesn't know. Maybe it's something he'll get when he gets older. "I sleep better when there's a background noise. The engines on a spaceship probably wouldn't bother me."
Oh, cool, Captain Kirk thinks he's interesting! Best day ever. He perks up, too, at the thought of his cool Uncle Leo, who is both mildly crazy and deeply awesome. "He's an archaeologist. So's his wife, my Aunt Timmiaq. They met at work and she's from there, so they decided to live there. It's really beautiful. You can see the Northern Lights, and the houses are all painted bright colors so they stand out in the snow. The sky looks really big, too, without any trees. I don't know if it's as cool as space, but I like it."
no subject
There's a chuckle then from captain Kirk and he gives Alex's shoulder the most gentle of nudges to go along with his laugh but he doesn't want to jostle the head achey child too much. He'd feel awful if he made the kid worse.
"I do too. It's always hard to sleep now when I'm off-ship. It just doesn't sound right." The thrum of the warp engines has become one of the sounds of Home to Jim and it's a pretty difficult thing to replace with anything else.
"Archaeology! I've always had a passing interest but I have to admit my science department probably loathes my input more than welcomes it. I know just enough to be in the way and lack the knowledge to really be helpful past a shallow overview. And well, my view's always been turned upward instead of down." The sky is so big, Alex says, and Jim can't help but want to see that. It must look magical.
"Someday you can study space as much as you'd like. NASA's a thing in your time right?"
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He smiles up at Kirk, not bothered by the nudge. It's prolonged physical contact that sounds like a bad idea right now. This is fine. Actually, this is pretty cool, all things considered. Sure, he has a headache, but he's getting to talk to a guy who works in space!
"I sleep better in winter when the heater in my room is rumbling. It's harder to get to sleep when I visit the rest of my family, although my mom says that's because people get attached to their own beds." Which was a valid point. His bed has the cool comforter with the blue and white star pattern on it; it's pretty dope, as his cousin would say.
Alex chuckles, ducking his head. "Sorry, I'm not laughing at you. But that's kind of how I am about languages. I know some stuff, since my relatives speak different ones and I always ask my mom for books on them. When I talk to grown ups, though, I don't know enough to keep up and I guess it's kind of annoying to them." A portion of his time in Nunavut had been spent pestering his Aunt Timmiaq to teach him Inuktitut, something she'd indulged him in more than most. She was pretty nice about it, but a lot of adults have no patience for a kid's random questions.
"Yeah, NASA's a thing. I don't know if I'm smart enough to study space, but I'd like to try, someday."
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Jim squats down so he's at Alex's level then. This is kind of important so he definitely doesn't want to talk down to the kid to say so.
"You might have to work harder than someone else who picks it up easier. But if you like it and you want to do it? You just keep at it. They let me into Starfleet and when I went in the only thing I was known for was being a repeat offender. I was in jail before I started at the Academy."
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He sniffles, dangerously close to crying, which is super embarrassing because he's not a little kid anymore and he doesn't want Jim to think he's uncool. "My dad says with my condition I can't really do... most things I wanna do when I get older, actually. And I try and try and nothing's ever good enough because even when I work my hardest it's not as fast or as good as other kids. It's really never as good or fast as my dad at my age."
And then there was Jim, telling him that it was still worth it to try, telling him that you could screw up, end up in jail and still pull it together and go do great things. If he were older he might verbalize all the things that made him feel.
But he's not good at that, so he just clings onto Jim tightly.
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There's a child in Jim's arms, small fingers digging in to the fabric of his uniform and a sniffle in his ear and suddenly all the panic, fear, and reasoning flies somewhere out the window as Jim Kirk pulls Alex into a hug to hold the kid steady. Everyone's families are different but all Jim can think of is how he never had anyone to do this for him growing up and how if he could help it this kid wasn't going to feel the way he did all those years ago.
"Well, your dad might know a lot more than I do about you and your conditions. But I don't....really...believe in no-win scenarios. There's got to be something you can do that's still in your field of interest when you're my age." His chest aches for the emotions he can hear in Alex's voice. Kids, man.
Jim really does like them.
"It's a bad habit of mine. Too stubborn to be told no or that something's impossible."
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"I have migraines all the time, I get tired really easily, and I'm not very strong. I can't be normal. I try, but I just can't. And I dunno if somebody with my problems can really do anything cool as a grown up." What is he supposed to do, when he's plagued by headaches, gets photosensitive so regularly, is exhausted midway through every day? Nobody he knows who's an adult with an actual job is like this. They're not weak like he is. "The only thing I'm stubborn about is languages. I taught myself a bunch, with some help from my family and books. I can talk even when I'm tired. But - they don't really have jobs just for that, do they?"
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Maybe it was the pain getting to him, or maybe this whole situation finally got to be too much. But Jim Kirk's the only adult here right now so he's just going to have to do his best to help Alex through this.
"Not every job makes someone be up on their feet all day, you know? I bet if you looked around there might be some way to do school at a pace you could handle. Like on...line?" Is that what they called it back then? Jim honestly struggles a whole lot with what a majority of the humans in the Nexus call 'modern' Earth. It's so ancient for him. "And sure, linguists are useful in all kinds of fields. If you want to do that for a job, you just keep studying and then find a field you can apply it to and slowly start studying that, too."