Time Warp: Road Trip (Clement)
Jul 13, 2013 20:56:46 GMT -5
Post by Wayne Dietrich on Jul 13, 2013 20:56:46 GMT -5
After three days of driving, Wayne Dietrich was more than happy to see the hospital he'd been given directions to. Pulling up to the curb in his worn but well-loved 1967 Ford Galaxie LTD, the old man turned off the engine and stepped out of the old vehicle, squinting in the bright sunlight of the California afternoon. A navy jacket (which was too warm to wear now) was slung over his right shoulder, the hand holding it temporarily shielded from view, and the first two buttons of his white dress shirt were unfastened because of the heat. After a moment, he stepped forward, the doors of his vehicle locking noisily as he moved from the parking lot to the hospital doors.
He could best be described as an old man, and in his opinion it was true; he was eighty-six with no other relatives coming even close to his age. His hair was grey and white with a receding line along his forehead, his skin weathered and lined with the deep crags of time. He even walked slowly, though it seemed more as if it was because he was in no hurry than because moving quickly pained him.
The air conditioning of the entry bit through the cotton shirt with ease, similarly to how the heat had oozed through each fiber just moments ago. Blinking a few times to adjust to the lower lighting, Wayne walked forward to the help desk and tapped on it to get the attention of the moderately pretty nurse across from him. She looked up, but before she could speak he spoke up.
"Looking to find Clement Evans," he stated calmly, his voice just as gruff as he appeared. Despite that, his tone was not aggressive - just the facts, ma'am. "Need to have a word with him."
The look on her face showed that she'd either seen or met the boy already, and she waved him by, stating the room number in a rather bored fashion as she flicked a hand in the general direction of it. He nodded once, signed his name in the visitor's registrar, then kept walking, the slight hitch in his step punctuated by a soft hiss occasionally.
The social worker was outside. That wasn't really unusual in these sort of cases, and especially not in this one. Walking up to the man cool as you please, the older of the two swapped his jacket to his other arm and held out his right to shake hands, the mechanical limb glinting in the sterile light.
"Wayne Dietrich, representing the Hammel Institute. I heard you've got a boy for me to talk to."
The man started to reach for his hand and hesitated, then shook anyway. The metal limb was warm from the heat of the car, but it didn't crush his hand in the grip or anything. The two spoke for a moment before Wayne gestured inside. "The boy, I'm guessing?"
There was an affirmation, and Wayne entered the room brusquely, eyes firmly on the youngling in the room rather than the doctor charting notes until the professional addressed him. "Just need to talk to the kid, Doc," he answered, not tearing his gaze away. "Won't be a minute, I swear, but we need some space to chat."
The doctor glanced between the two, then replaced the chart and left the room. When the door clicked shut, the old man glanced over at the door, then settled his stormy eyes back on Clement. The kid was thinner than he'd hoped, and restrained. There was no note that his power was violent, but he supposed there could be all sorts of ways to make placid powers aggressive.
Tossing the jacket into a nearby chair, Wayne leaned against the bed with both hands - one flesh and blood, the other seeming to be made with gears and pistons behind bronze sheeting and glass. "How you holding up, son? Heard you took quite the wallop."
He could best be described as an old man, and in his opinion it was true; he was eighty-six with no other relatives coming even close to his age. His hair was grey and white with a receding line along his forehead, his skin weathered and lined with the deep crags of time. He even walked slowly, though it seemed more as if it was because he was in no hurry than because moving quickly pained him.
The air conditioning of the entry bit through the cotton shirt with ease, similarly to how the heat had oozed through each fiber just moments ago. Blinking a few times to adjust to the lower lighting, Wayne walked forward to the help desk and tapped on it to get the attention of the moderately pretty nurse across from him. She looked up, but before she could speak he spoke up.
"Looking to find Clement Evans," he stated calmly, his voice just as gruff as he appeared. Despite that, his tone was not aggressive - just the facts, ma'am. "Need to have a word with him."
The look on her face showed that she'd either seen or met the boy already, and she waved him by, stating the room number in a rather bored fashion as she flicked a hand in the general direction of it. He nodded once, signed his name in the visitor's registrar, then kept walking, the slight hitch in his step punctuated by a soft hiss occasionally.
The social worker was outside. That wasn't really unusual in these sort of cases, and especially not in this one. Walking up to the man cool as you please, the older of the two swapped his jacket to his other arm and held out his right to shake hands, the mechanical limb glinting in the sterile light.
"Wayne Dietrich, representing the Hammel Institute. I heard you've got a boy for me to talk to."
The man started to reach for his hand and hesitated, then shook anyway. The metal limb was warm from the heat of the car, but it didn't crush his hand in the grip or anything. The two spoke for a moment before Wayne gestured inside. "The boy, I'm guessing?"
There was an affirmation, and Wayne entered the room brusquely, eyes firmly on the youngling in the room rather than the doctor charting notes until the professional addressed him. "Just need to talk to the kid, Doc," he answered, not tearing his gaze away. "Won't be a minute, I swear, but we need some space to chat."
The doctor glanced between the two, then replaced the chart and left the room. When the door clicked shut, the old man glanced over at the door, then settled his stormy eyes back on Clement. The kid was thinner than he'd hoped, and restrained. There was no note that his power was violent, but he supposed there could be all sorts of ways to make placid powers aggressive.
Tossing the jacket into a nearby chair, Wayne leaned against the bed with both hands - one flesh and blood, the other seeming to be made with gears and pistons behind bronze sheeting and glass. "How you holding up, son? Heard you took quite the wallop."