Part 13: Epilogue (Path to Cookies, redux)
Merle Corey
Mostly Harmless
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Eidolon – Sunday, January 9 – 10:30 AM
I blink in surprise as I enter the conference room. "Contessa, welcome back! We've barely seen you since September!" After months of absence, walking in to find her sitting there expectantly is a bit startling. She's clutching a plain, white box, but there's no indication as to how it's significant.
And it is significant. I don't believe this woman has ever done anything that didn't advance multiple plots.
She nods and replies in that strangely perfect accent, "Thank you. I've been following a Path, an especially promising one based on my work with you."
Her work with… "Modeling? Interesting. Any results you can share?"
"Yes. You're aware that the restrictions on my agent were a last minute effort? A desperation move?"
I agree, "Yes, of course. The source of the blind spots."
"You also understand that my agent is designed to find the most efficient way to achieve a given objective? A problem solver, in simplest terms?"
I raise an eyebrow. It's… unlike her to be theatrical in her revelations. Not unless she's leading… "You were able to model a path to bypass your own restrictions?"
She smiles brightly. "Exactly. We have long known that the restrictions on my agent are not comprehensive. Like many of the agents in our formulae, my agent does not seem to have been intended for distribution and certain mechanisms were not fully implemented."
I frown as I consider the idea. "Are you talking about second triggers?"
"Broadly, yes. I was able to find a vulnerability in that process as it applies to my agent. The simplified version is that exploiting that flaw required the activation of a second connection. That, of course, meant I had to become close – physically and emotionally – to a prospective host long enough for the connection to be established. Once established, previous experience has shown waiting for the trigger to occur naturally to be significantly more effective than inducing it."
By reflex, I begin to nod my agreement when a thought occurs to me. "Wait. Why would the second host require a strong connection?"
With a shrug, she clarifies, "I'm not sure that it did; the model wasn't accurate enough to indicate how much that would influence the overall process, so I erred on the side of caution."
"So you waited."
"So I waited." She gathers her thoughts for a moment before resuming. "I knew that I wouldn't be able to linger afterwards, so I prepared her as best I could beforehand. I spent the time teaching her, guiding her. Making sure, regardless of how the agent manifested through her, she would have everything she needed to make the most of it." She pauses again, smiling wistfully. "She was a delight to teach. I look forward to seeing what she'll accomplish."
"That's… nice?" I'm not sure what to make of Contessa the mentor. Regardless, it's not relevant right now.
She shrugs, finally returning to the point. "When she was close to triggering, the model guided me to a location within range of the effect. Once it began, it created a feedback loop of sorts, essentially allowing for a combination of the alterations that occur when other hosts are in the vicinity during the initial trigger and those that occur during a secondary event. My connection altered her connection even as her connection altered mine." Frowning, she adds, "Repeatedly. It was rather unpleasant."
"Recursion. You're describing… You found a way to make the Path recursively modify itself until the restrictions were gone."
She considers the idea briefly and nods again. "Yes, that sounds about right."
Hope. "You think this method might be viable for unlocking other agents?" I pause, considering the idea. "I've always focused on my legacy as a hero being in the acts I perform. I… I've never considered taking on an apprentice, someone to follow in my footsteps…"
She shakes her head, dashing my hopes once again. "It might be viable for certain agents under specific circumstances. Resolving the issues with your power is a far simpler matter."
It takes me a moment to realize what she's saying. "You mean…?"
"Path to resolving Eidolon's issues. Step one: Explain the removal of the restriction parameters. Complete."
My head spins with the possibilities. "The Endbringers? The Enemy?"
She just nods. "All within reach of the Path now. Once we address your problems, we will call the others and begin preparations. The Endbringers will be…" She trails off for a moment, gives me a considering look. "They will be dealt with almost incidentally. The Enemy will require careful planning and coordination with a number of people not currently aware of our efforts; some will be brought in fully, others will remain aware of only the most peripheral elements. We will still need to proceed with caution. Even so, we should be ready before spring."
All these years, so much sacrifice, and the endgame is finally here. It's now only a matter of months. ...wait a moment. "What happened to the second host? Does that mean there's someone else running around with unrestricted access to the Path?"
She blushes; faintly, but it's there. "I'm… ah… not certain? Probably?"
I stare at her blankly.
Shrugging, she explains, "I can no longer see her; I suspect that I am the same to her – mutual blind spots."
I facepalm.
She continues cheerfully, "I believe I should be able to develop a sufficiently accurate model in time. Regardless, any risk was worth what I achieved through this gambit."
I honestly can't bring myself to disagree. Still… "We should at least put her under surveillance. By your own admission, she likely has full access to the Path and is a potential liability. We need to be ready to silence her if necessary. Who is she? Where is she?"
Something in her expression goes cold and I've taken a step back before I realize it. For the first time, I truly understand what it means to have Contessa able to see me.
Cooly, she declares, "That will not be necessary. I will monitor the situation personally."
"Ok," I squeak. I pause, clear my throat, and try again, "Alright, if you think that best."
The silence drags on for a moment. Finally, I can't resist asking, "So, what's in the box?"
She frowns thoughtfully. "I've been having odd food cravings recently; last night was cookies. I finally went out and bought some from a bake sale this morning."
"You… used your newly unrestricted agent to find cookies."
She nods happily. "The best cookies available from anywhere Doormaker could reach," she exclaims with an odd note of pride. Offering the box to me, she continues, "Want one? They're fantastic."
Taylor Hebert – Tuesday, March 15 – 4:00 PM
There's a subtle change in the air pressure. Even without looking, I know she has arrived. "When you started talking about data modeling, I thought you were just trying to give me a leg up in my programming class," I note as I pour the tea.
"I wasn't sure whether you would need it, but I knew that you would eventually understand it if you did. For what it's worth, I didn't realize we wouldn't be able to see each other." Though it's been almost three months, her accent is still comforting. A promise of safety, sanctuary.
Although… «You don't need to speak English,» I tell her in her native tongue. «I'll understand you.» Some derivative of Latin, I think. Sort of like Italian, but not quite. I'm not concerned enough to query my power for specifics.
"I suppose you would," she answers in English as she sits across the table from me. "It has been some time since I've heard it spoken," she observes wistfully. After a moment, she frowns and adds, "I think I understand now why people say my accent is a bit strange."
We sit in silence for a moment, sipping at the tea.
"You know," I observe idly, "when I woke up this morning, I had the strangest urge to drag Scion into a dark alley and show him pictures of his dead wife until he wanted to kill himself."
She goes stiff.
"Only it wasn't actually an alley," I continue. "More of a cavern, really. And it wasn't really Scion as much as it was this multidimensional space whale that had been playing Scion. And the pictures were actually… Uh, kind of gross, really."
"You've been getting feedback through our agent," she states accusingly.
"So it seems. Before today I only had the most general idea of how you were going to do it. I still can't see the plan itself, I just have these... impressions of what it was." I hum thoughtfully. "I wonder if you've been getting feedback as well. Cookie?"
She stares at the platter with a look of betrayal, then looks back at me. "All the cravings the last few months…? What, it connected itself to you through an association with food? I thought it was just misdirection, keeping your opponents off balance!"
I shrug. "It is what it is."
She's silent for a moment, considering. Finally, she frowns at me. "You skipped breakfast again that morning, didn't you. I told you, you should stop doing that. It's not good for you," she scolds.
Shaking my head, I concede, "It's possible, but I honestly don't remember much about that morning. It was rather eventful."
She flinches. "I apologize for that. I was working with limited information, I hadn't realized… What we experienced wasn't… The process itself isn't normally so… physically damaging." There's more to it than that, I think, but I won't press for now.
We observe each other in silence. She seems… smaller, somehow. Tired. Worn down in a way I've never seen her before. This silence isn't comfortable. There's so much that needs to be said, so much that still hasn't been explained. I don't want to use my power… our power for this, but it's so hard to put it all into words. Finally, I try Dad's advice and ask her the first thing that comes to mind. "Was it worth it?"
She jerks as if slapped. "Yes," she declares firmly. She looks at her hands, clenches her fists for a moment. "No," she continues in a softer voice. She slumps. "I don't know. I can't… I can't judge that. I'm too close. I've made so many mistakes, spent too long fumbling blindly. So many lives saved, but far too many wasted. Many at my own hands, at my direction…" She trails off again, the silence threatening to return.
I reach across the table, taking her hand. "Can you tell me about it?"
She looks in surprise at our joined hands, then examines me carefully. Finally, she nods decisively. "Yes, that would be… fitting. Let me tell you of the path I've walked for these last thirty years. Then you can make your judgement. I will give you my pistol and will abide by your…"
She trails off as I stand and walk around the table until I'm next to her. She looks up at me curiously. Finally, I pull her onto her feet and into a hug. "For having access to the most ridiculously powerful Thinker ability anyone has ever heard of, you're a real idiot sometimes."
She's stiff for a moment, then relaxes and hugs me back. "Yes. Yes, that seems an adequate enough summary for now."
I blink in surprise as I enter the conference room. "Contessa, welcome back! We've barely seen you since September!" After months of absence, walking in to find her sitting there expectantly is a bit startling. She's clutching a plain, white box, but there's no indication as to how it's significant.
And it is significant. I don't believe this woman has ever done anything that didn't advance multiple plots.
She nods and replies in that strangely perfect accent, "Thank you. I've been following a Path, an especially promising one based on my work with you."
Her work with… "Modeling? Interesting. Any results you can share?"
"Yes. You're aware that the restrictions on my agent were a last minute effort? A desperation move?"
I agree, "Yes, of course. The source of the blind spots."
"You also understand that my agent is designed to find the most efficient way to achieve a given objective? A problem solver, in simplest terms?"
I raise an eyebrow. It's… unlike her to be theatrical in her revelations. Not unless she's leading… "You were able to model a path to bypass your own restrictions?"
She smiles brightly. "Exactly. We have long known that the restrictions on my agent are not comprehensive. Like many of the agents in our formulae, my agent does not seem to have been intended for distribution and certain mechanisms were not fully implemented."
I frown as I consider the idea. "Are you talking about second triggers?"
"Broadly, yes. I was able to find a vulnerability in that process as it applies to my agent. The simplified version is that exploiting that flaw required the activation of a second connection. That, of course, meant I had to become close – physically and emotionally – to a prospective host long enough for the connection to be established. Once established, previous experience has shown waiting for the trigger to occur naturally to be significantly more effective than inducing it."
By reflex, I begin to nod my agreement when a thought occurs to me. "Wait. Why would the second host require a strong connection?"
With a shrug, she clarifies, "I'm not sure that it did; the model wasn't accurate enough to indicate how much that would influence the overall process, so I erred on the side of caution."
"So you waited."
"So I waited." She gathers her thoughts for a moment before resuming. "I knew that I wouldn't be able to linger afterwards, so I prepared her as best I could beforehand. I spent the time teaching her, guiding her. Making sure, regardless of how the agent manifested through her, she would have everything she needed to make the most of it." She pauses again, smiling wistfully. "She was a delight to teach. I look forward to seeing what she'll accomplish."
"That's… nice?" I'm not sure what to make of Contessa the mentor. Regardless, it's not relevant right now.
She shrugs, finally returning to the point. "When she was close to triggering, the model guided me to a location within range of the effect. Once it began, it created a feedback loop of sorts, essentially allowing for a combination of the alterations that occur when other hosts are in the vicinity during the initial trigger and those that occur during a secondary event. My connection altered her connection even as her connection altered mine." Frowning, she adds, "Repeatedly. It was rather unpleasant."
"Recursion. You're describing… You found a way to make the Path recursively modify itself until the restrictions were gone."
She considers the idea briefly and nods again. "Yes, that sounds about right."
Hope. "You think this method might be viable for unlocking other agents?" I pause, considering the idea. "I've always focused on my legacy as a hero being in the acts I perform. I… I've never considered taking on an apprentice, someone to follow in my footsteps…"
She shakes her head, dashing my hopes once again. "It might be viable for certain agents under specific circumstances. Resolving the issues with your power is a far simpler matter."
It takes me a moment to realize what she's saying. "You mean…?"
"Path to resolving Eidolon's issues. Step one: Explain the removal of the restriction parameters. Complete."
My head spins with the possibilities. "The Endbringers? The Enemy?"
She just nods. "All within reach of the Path now. Once we address your problems, we will call the others and begin preparations. The Endbringers will be…" She trails off for a moment, gives me a considering look. "They will be dealt with almost incidentally. The Enemy will require careful planning and coordination with a number of people not currently aware of our efforts; some will be brought in fully, others will remain aware of only the most peripheral elements. We will still need to proceed with caution. Even so, we should be ready before spring."
All these years, so much sacrifice, and the endgame is finally here. It's now only a matter of months. ...wait a moment. "What happened to the second host? Does that mean there's someone else running around with unrestricted access to the Path?"
She blushes; faintly, but it's there. "I'm… ah… not certain? Probably?"
I stare at her blankly.
Shrugging, she explains, "I can no longer see her; I suspect that I am the same to her – mutual blind spots."
I facepalm.
She continues cheerfully, "I believe I should be able to develop a sufficiently accurate model in time. Regardless, any risk was worth what I achieved through this gambit."
I honestly can't bring myself to disagree. Still… "We should at least put her under surveillance. By your own admission, she likely has full access to the Path and is a potential liability. We need to be ready to silence her if necessary. Who is she? Where is she?"
Something in her expression goes cold and I've taken a step back before I realize it. For the first time, I truly understand what it means to have Contessa able to see me.
Cooly, she declares, "That will not be necessary. I will monitor the situation personally."
"Ok," I squeak. I pause, clear my throat, and try again, "Alright, if you think that best."
The silence drags on for a moment. Finally, I can't resist asking, "So, what's in the box?"
She frowns thoughtfully. "I've been having odd food cravings recently; last night was cookies. I finally went out and bought some from a bake sale this morning."
"You… used your newly unrestricted agent to find cookies."
She nods happily. "The best cookies available from anywhere Doormaker could reach," she exclaims with an odd note of pride. Offering the box to me, she continues, "Want one? They're fantastic."
--------
Taylor Hebert – Tuesday, March 15 – 4:00 PM
There's a subtle change in the air pressure. Even without looking, I know she has arrived. "When you started talking about data modeling, I thought you were just trying to give me a leg up in my programming class," I note as I pour the tea.
"I wasn't sure whether you would need it, but I knew that you would eventually understand it if you did. For what it's worth, I didn't realize we wouldn't be able to see each other." Though it's been almost three months, her accent is still comforting. A promise of safety, sanctuary.
Although… «You don't need to speak English,» I tell her in her native tongue. «I'll understand you.» Some derivative of Latin, I think. Sort of like Italian, but not quite. I'm not concerned enough to query my power for specifics.
"I suppose you would," she answers in English as she sits across the table from me. "It has been some time since I've heard it spoken," she observes wistfully. After a moment, she frowns and adds, "I think I understand now why people say my accent is a bit strange."
We sit in silence for a moment, sipping at the tea.
"You know," I observe idly, "when I woke up this morning, I had the strangest urge to drag Scion into a dark alley and show him pictures of his dead wife until he wanted to kill himself."
She goes stiff.
"Only it wasn't actually an alley," I continue. "More of a cavern, really. And it wasn't really Scion as much as it was this multidimensional space whale that had been playing Scion. And the pictures were actually… Uh, kind of gross, really."
"You've been getting feedback through our agent," she states accusingly.
"So it seems. Before today I only had the most general idea of how you were going to do it. I still can't see the plan itself, I just have these... impressions of what it was." I hum thoughtfully. "I wonder if you've been getting feedback as well. Cookie?"
She stares at the platter with a look of betrayal, then looks back at me. "All the cravings the last few months…? What, it connected itself to you through an association with food? I thought it was just misdirection, keeping your opponents off balance!"
I shrug. "It is what it is."
She's silent for a moment, considering. Finally, she frowns at me. "You skipped breakfast again that morning, didn't you. I told you, you should stop doing that. It's not good for you," she scolds.
Shaking my head, I concede, "It's possible, but I honestly don't remember much about that morning. It was rather eventful."
She flinches. "I apologize for that. I was working with limited information, I hadn't realized… What we experienced wasn't… The process itself isn't normally so… physically damaging." There's more to it than that, I think, but I won't press for now.
We observe each other in silence. She seems… smaller, somehow. Tired. Worn down in a way I've never seen her before. This silence isn't comfortable. There's so much that needs to be said, so much that still hasn't been explained. I don't want to use my power… our power for this, but it's so hard to put it all into words. Finally, I try Dad's advice and ask her the first thing that comes to mind. "Was it worth it?"
She jerks as if slapped. "Yes," she declares firmly. She looks at her hands, clenches her fists for a moment. "No," she continues in a softer voice. She slumps. "I don't know. I can't… I can't judge that. I'm too close. I've made so many mistakes, spent too long fumbling blindly. So many lives saved, but far too many wasted. Many at my own hands, at my direction…" She trails off again, the silence threatening to return.
I reach across the table, taking her hand. "Can you tell me about it?"
She looks in surprise at our joined hands, then examines me carefully. Finally, she nods decisively. "Yes, that would be… fitting. Let me tell you of the path I've walked for these last thirty years. Then you can make your judgement. I will give you my pistol and will abide by your…"
She trails off as I stand and walk around the table until I'm next to her. She looks up at me curiously. Finally, I pull her onto her feet and into a hug. "For having access to the most ridiculously powerful Thinker ability anyone has ever heard of, you're a real idiot sometimes."
She's stiff for a moment, then relaxes and hugs me back. "Yes. Yes, that seems an adequate enough summary for now."
"You killed Scion on March 15th."
"So?"
"You picked Leet up weeks early, you've been ready for days. You deliberately waited for the Ides of March."
"You can't prove that, and you're the one that practically stuck a bow on him."
"You're such a geek, and I was just setting him aside for safekeeping."
"A geek, says the fifteen year old girl who recognized the significance of the date."
"Shush, we're having a moment."
"I don't remember you being this assertive."
"I don't remember you being the puppet master and primary enforcer for an extrauniversal conspiracy of dubious morality."
"Touché."
"So?"
"You picked Leet up weeks early, you've been ready for days. You deliberately waited for the Ides of March."
"You can't prove that, and you're the one that practically stuck a bow on him."
"You're such a geek, and I was just setting him aside for safekeeping."
"A geek, says the fifteen year old girl who recognized the significance of the date."
"Shush, we're having a moment."
"I don't remember you being this assertive."
"I don't remember you being the puppet master and primary enforcer for an extrauniversal conspiracy of dubious morality."
"Touché."
--------
And thus ends Fortuna's journey. Taylor's, on the other hand, has barely begun.
After posting the original PtM, one of the most frequent questions I got (besides "Will there be more?") was how Taylor ended up with the power. Fortuna pretty much has to be around, or at least had to be around at some point, because otherwise the circumstances on Bet would be significantly more dire. So that means that, for whatever reason, she had to spend enough time chilling in Brockton Bay, enough time around Taylor, felt strongly enough about Taylor, for PtV to bud.
Why? What's her motivation? The idea of her hanging out with some random 15 year old girl seemed pretty weird. Mom!Fortuna has been done before, it wasn't something I wanted to retread. (Path to Cuddles subsequently came out and I felt relieved that I had decided against it.)
The question I asked myself that finally prompted this rewrite/reimagining of PtM was simply this: What happens when you run a hobbled process optimizer against itself? What if Fortuna figured out an exploit to get past Eden's desperate limiting of her agent?
When do powers change? During triggers, when they first activate and there's another agent in the activation radius - in other words, when agents get pinged. During second triggers, when restrictions are reduced or redefined.
What happens when you have an agent with two connections and both are trying to initiate restriction redefinitions at the same time, querying each other about the same? Especially when that agent is only barely paying lip service to the very few restrictions that had been applied to it?
Fortuna isn't a woman who opens herself to others easily, she's far too focused on her mission. But what if her mission actually required it? A four month vacation from everything Cauldron, where she can finally reconnect with humanity a bit.
Why Taylor? Narrative convenience.
So here's Fortuna getting close to this beat down girl. As time passes, both growing truly fond of her and feeling ever increasing self-loathing for what she would be subjecting her to. By the time Taylor was ready to trigger, she was feeling genuine desperation, panic, and self-hatred. It's probably just as well that she was on autopilot for the kidnapping setup, because otherwise she'd have crawled into Emma's class and tried to beat her to death with a chair.
She absolutely never guessed that the actual process would be so completely unlike a normal trigger event, that it would result in seizures until PtV finally slammed its own barrier in place to keep them from being locked in that loop indefinitely.
Important safety tip: When you start hacking the extradimensional alien supercomputer that connected itself to your brain meats, you can get some unexpected side effects.
So yeah, Sophia's vicious assault on Taylor? Not quite as vicious as everyone thought. I originally had a scene in the April Fool's omake where Lisa and Amy compare notes and realize that something way more bizarre had happened. Amy obviously didn't heal Taylor in PtM canon, that was just part of the setup from the Brownie Pan omake.
Fortuna was never sure, going in, how the power would manifest in Taylor. After all, she wasn't pathing the trigger, she was following a vague model with vague instructions that she couldn't examine too closely without running into her restrictions. The end result, obviously, was close enough to her PtV to be mostly indistinguishable – Taylor's is more visually oriented and behaves a bit less like a checklist. Yes, Fortuna had strong suspicions by that Sunday and was simultaneously a proud momma and laughing riotously at Taylor having used PtV for a bake sale.
She also gained 10 pounds between January and March and kept making Doctor Mother do pregnancy tests.
Taylor still doesn't know why everything suddenly kicked into high gear in January, doesn't know that PtV used to have a whole assortment of blind spots. I've been considering writing out that conversation, but it keeps turning into even more of an infodump than the first half of this epilogue. If I can find a way to do it that flows well, I will; if not, you can still safely assume that it occurred off camera.
Once again, we had a great moment of two people not communicating while talking to each other. Only this time, one of them picked up on the disconnect.
And finally, since the subject came up, here's a screenshot of the first Google docs draft of this epilogue, dating back to November 9. While a lot has obviously changed since then, I think it's very recognizable, especially the core element of the feedback loop.
Yes, I cropped out my name and the URL to the doc. Everything else is intact.
I've always known where this story was going, but some of the details changed a lot over time.
Overall, this has been an experiment in creative writing. I'm happy with the experiment itself, but have mixed feelings about the story. There are a lot of flaws that I'd want to smooth out before labeling it as good, but I won't hesitate to call it entertaining.
Regardless of your feelings on the conclusion, I hope you've at least enjoyed much of the journey. Thanks for reading, and bon appétit!
After posting the original PtM, one of the most frequent questions I got (besides "Will there be more?") was how Taylor ended up with the power. Fortuna pretty much has to be around, or at least had to be around at some point, because otherwise the circumstances on Bet would be significantly more dire. So that means that, for whatever reason, she had to spend enough time chilling in Brockton Bay, enough time around Taylor, felt strongly enough about Taylor, for PtV to bud.
Why? What's her motivation? The idea of her hanging out with some random 15 year old girl seemed pretty weird. Mom!Fortuna has been done before, it wasn't something I wanted to retread. (Path to Cuddles subsequently came out and I felt relieved that I had decided against it.)
The question I asked myself that finally prompted this rewrite/reimagining of PtM was simply this: What happens when you run a hobbled process optimizer against itself? What if Fortuna figured out an exploit to get past Eden's desperate limiting of her agent?
When do powers change? During triggers, when they first activate and there's another agent in the activation radius - in other words, when agents get pinged. During second triggers, when restrictions are reduced or redefined.
What happens when you have an agent with two connections and both are trying to initiate restriction redefinitions at the same time, querying each other about the same? Especially when that agent is only barely paying lip service to the very few restrictions that had been applied to it?
Fortuna isn't a woman who opens herself to others easily, she's far too focused on her mission. But what if her mission actually required it? A four month vacation from everything Cauldron, where she can finally reconnect with humanity a bit.
Why Taylor? Narrative convenience.
So here's Fortuna getting close to this beat down girl. As time passes, both growing truly fond of her and feeling ever increasing self-loathing for what she would be subjecting her to. By the time Taylor was ready to trigger, she was feeling genuine desperation, panic, and self-hatred. It's probably just as well that she was on autopilot for the kidnapping setup, because otherwise she'd have crawled into Emma's class and tried to beat her to death with a chair.
She absolutely never guessed that the actual process would be so completely unlike a normal trigger event, that it would result in seizures until PtV finally slammed its own barrier in place to keep them from being locked in that loop indefinitely.
Important safety tip: When you start hacking the extradimensional alien supercomputer that connected itself to your brain meats, you can get some unexpected side effects.
So yeah, Sophia's vicious assault on Taylor? Not quite as vicious as everyone thought. I originally had a scene in the April Fool's omake where Lisa and Amy compare notes and realize that something way more bizarre had happened. Amy obviously didn't heal Taylor in PtM canon, that was just part of the setup from the Brownie Pan omake.
She tilts her head quizzically. She nods after a moment, "Sorry, thought you'd realized. When you healed her? That was the last of the injuries she got during her trigger. She's only had her power since early January."
I shake my head. "No way. She…"
Interrupting me, she clarifies, "Short term memory loss. She's got nothing but secondhand knowledge of the entire time leading into it." She snorts, adding, "None of the normal baggage of a trigger event."
I shake my head, "No. I know injuries, even if I don't do brains…" Oh shit.
Her eyes go wide. After a moment, she mimes zipping her lips, turning a key, and tossing it out the window.
I smile bitterly. "Yeah, thanks for that. Anyway, I know injuries. She had some residual bruising of her scalp, but no sign of the kind of cranial trauma that would result in memory loss."
She frowns, looking at Taylor speculatively. "What about seizures?"
I look at her in confusion. "Uh… No? I mean, don't get me wrong, she'd have been dazed, but…" She's got a weird look on her face. "What?"
"She can spoof my power, so I can't prove the memory loss. But there are witnesses to the seizures. Hell, I've seen the police file and the recovered security video. You saw the injuries, the dislocation was from her seizures."
I frown. While already well on its way to healing, it had been a severe dislocation; that brace hadn't been for show. "That's… I don't…" I finally shrug. "I don't know what to tell you. But that doesn't sound like any trigger event I've ever heard of."
Still staring at Taylor, she murmurs, "It really doesn't."
I shake my head. "No way. She…"
Interrupting me, she clarifies, "Short term memory loss. She's got nothing but secondhand knowledge of the entire time leading into it." She snorts, adding, "None of the normal baggage of a trigger event."
I shake my head, "No. I know injuries, even if I don't do brains…" Oh shit.
Her eyes go wide. After a moment, she mimes zipping her lips, turning a key, and tossing it out the window.
I smile bitterly. "Yeah, thanks for that. Anyway, I know injuries. She had some residual bruising of her scalp, but no sign of the kind of cranial trauma that would result in memory loss."
She frowns, looking at Taylor speculatively. "What about seizures?"
I look at her in confusion. "Uh… No? I mean, don't get me wrong, she'd have been dazed, but…" She's got a weird look on her face. "What?"
"She can spoof my power, so I can't prove the memory loss. But there are witnesses to the seizures. Hell, I've seen the police file and the recovered security video. You saw the injuries, the dislocation was from her seizures."
I frown. While already well on its way to healing, it had been a severe dislocation; that brace hadn't been for show. "That's… I don't…" I finally shrug. "I don't know what to tell you. But that doesn't sound like any trigger event I've ever heard of."
Still staring at Taylor, she murmurs, "It really doesn't."
Fortuna was never sure, going in, how the power would manifest in Taylor. After all, she wasn't pathing the trigger, she was following a vague model with vague instructions that she couldn't examine too closely without running into her restrictions. The end result, obviously, was close enough to her PtV to be mostly indistinguishable – Taylor's is more visually oriented and behaves a bit less like a checklist. Yes, Fortuna had strong suspicions by that Sunday and was simultaneously a proud momma and laughing riotously at Taylor having used PtV for a bake sale.
She also gained 10 pounds between January and March and kept making Doctor Mother do pregnancy tests.
"You haven't had sex."
"Not in the relevant timeframe, no."
"Then why do you want me to test you again?"
She frowns, looking away. "I keep having cravings. You know I've always had simple tastes, but recently I keep feeling the urge to eat all these rich foods. I know it's unlikely, but…"
I sigh. "Fine. Here," I tell her, handing her a cup. "We might as well do a full work-up as well. It's possible that you're suffering some kind of deficiency or that these cravings are a manifestation of a deeper problem. Have you been getting enough sunlight? Any feelings of lethargy?"
"Not in the relevant timeframe, no."
"Then why do you want me to test you again?"
She frowns, looking away. "I keep having cravings. You know I've always had simple tastes, but recently I keep feeling the urge to eat all these rich foods. I know it's unlikely, but…"
I sigh. "Fine. Here," I tell her, handing her a cup. "We might as well do a full work-up as well. It's possible that you're suffering some kind of deficiency or that these cravings are a manifestation of a deeper problem. Have you been getting enough sunlight? Any feelings of lethargy?"
Taylor still doesn't know why everything suddenly kicked into high gear in January, doesn't know that PtV used to have a whole assortment of blind spots. I've been considering writing out that conversation, but it keeps turning into even more of an infodump than the first half of this epilogue. If I can find a way to do it that flows well, I will; if not, you can still safely assume that it occurred off camera.
Once again, we had a great moment of two people not communicating while talking to each other. Only this time, one of them picked up on the disconnect.
Taylor: Do you want to get that off your chest?
Fortuna: Yes. Yes, I think it would be fitting for my apprentice to hear my confession; to serve as my judge, jury, and, if need be, executioner. More than anyone else, you are well suited to the task. I'll even give you my handgun because, really, this is a foregone conclusion.
Taylor: Not what I meant, dumbass. *hugs*
Fortuna: …oh. Ok, this works too.
Fortuna: Yes. Yes, I think it would be fitting for my apprentice to hear my confession; to serve as my judge, jury, and, if need be, executioner. More than anyone else, you are well suited to the task. I'll even give you my handgun because, really, this is a foregone conclusion.
Taylor: Not what I meant, dumbass. *hugs*
Fortuna: …oh. Ok, this works too.
I knew from early on that while I didn't want Fortuna to be the focus, I wanted her story to be taking place in the background. Wacky hijinx in the foreground with Taylor, secret conspiracy running in the background. Give Ahab her golden space whale. Good times, right?
I wanted people to be able to read the story from front to back and focus on Taylor. I wanted to post the last parts and trigger an avalanche of "Wait, what?!" Finally, I wanted everyone to scurry back through the whole story and realize that yes, I really had been seeding clues throughout.
I may have rewatched The Usual Suspects just before putting together the plot outline. I don't think I did it justice, but, yeah. Take that for what you will.
I wanted people to be able to read the story from front to back and focus on Taylor. I wanted to post the last parts and trigger an avalanche of "Wait, what?!" Finally, I wanted everyone to scurry back through the whole story and realize that yes, I really had been seeding clues throughout.
I may have rewatched The Usual Suspects just before putting together the plot outline. I don't think I did it justice, but, yeah. Take that for what you will.
And finally, since the subject came up, here's a screenshot of the first Google docs draft of this epilogue, dating back to November 9. While a lot has obviously changed since then, I think it's very recognizable, especially the core element of the feedback loop.
Yes, I cropped out my name and the URL to the doc. Everything else is intact.
I've always known where this story was going, but some of the details changed a lot over time.
Overall, this has been an experiment in creative writing. I'm happy with the experiment itself, but have mixed feelings about the story. There are a lot of flaws that I'd want to smooth out before labeling it as good, but I won't hesitate to call it entertaining.
Regardless of your feelings on the conclusion, I hope you've at least enjoyed much of the journey. Thanks for reading, and bon appétit!