Yesterday's journey from California to Washington, for all that most of it was spent in a cramped metal tube sitting still, was still a dickens of an experience. Between one thing and another, Ellen was all but exhausted by the time they'd checked in. She scarcely noticed the condition of the hotel around her on the way up to the room.
This morning is another story. Ellen sits up, blinking, as the light begins to stream into the room. That much light in her house in Megaton would mean something had gone disastrously wrong with one of the walls, after all. It takes her several minutes to cudgel her brain into accepting the room before her as real, and not an extension of some dream or other. Cautiously, she braces both hands on the mattress (there is nothing this soft in her experience!), swings her legs over the side (there were carpets in the Vault but they were little area rugs, threadbare from hundreds of years of use), and pads across the floor to peek out through the gap in the curtains.
She's going to be standing there, staring, for a good little while. The sky beyond is blue, dotted here and there with cloud. The buildings, all of them as far as the eye can see, are whole and entire. Green patches of ground and tufts of high vegetation she can't identify dot the spaces between the buildings in the places where cars aren't puttering through the streets. A virtually pristine, marble-clad Washington Monument rises to the sky startlingly close at hand. And the-
It may be a while before it really sinks in that she's looking at blossoming cherry trees far below. The only blooming plants she's seen before this have all been farmed vegetation, pea plants and tomatoes grown under indoor lighting and the like. Certainly nothing that big, or that massively effusive in the amount of flowers put forth- and it's a dead certainty that she's never even seen a cherry tree, anyway, so there you are.
Like we said, she'll be staring for a while.
This morning is another story. Ellen sits up, blinking, as the light begins to stream into the room. That much light in her house in Megaton would mean something had gone disastrously wrong with one of the walls, after all. It takes her several minutes to cudgel her brain into accepting the room before her as real, and not an extension of some dream or other. Cautiously, she braces both hands on the mattress (there is nothing this soft in her experience!), swings her legs over the side (there were carpets in the Vault but they were little area rugs, threadbare from hundreds of years of use), and pads across the floor to peek out through the gap in the curtains.
She's going to be standing there, staring, for a good little while. The sky beyond is blue, dotted here and there with cloud. The buildings, all of them as far as the eye can see, are whole and entire. Green patches of ground and tufts of high vegetation she can't identify dot the spaces between the buildings in the places where cars aren't puttering through the streets. A virtually pristine, marble-clad Washington Monument rises to the sky startlingly close at hand. And the-
It may be a while before it really sinks in that she's looking at blossoming cherry trees far below. The only blooming plants she's seen before this have all been farmed vegetation, pea plants and tomatoes grown under indoor lighting and the like. Certainly nothing that big, or that massively effusive in the amount of flowers put forth- and it's a dead certainty that she's never even seen a cherry tree, anyway, so there you are.
Like we said, she'll be staring for a while.
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Date: 2009-04-20 09:58 pm (UTC)But it's 8am and time to get a move on, if they want to see everything and still have time for dinner.
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Date: 2009-04-20 09:59 pm (UTC)She's going to have to get clean and dressed quickly, she realizes. She's wasted a good bit of time staring.
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Date: 2009-04-20 10:01 pm (UTC)And that's where she'll find him, sipping on a cup of his beloved black coffee, nose in a newspaper.
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Date: 2009-04-20 10:03 pm (UTC)"I'm sorry that took so long," she says when she arrives, although she really wasn't all that slow to begin with. "I'll be faster next time."
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Date: 2009-04-20 10:05 pm (UTC)"Come on, you must be starving."
Cue mother hen Mills.
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Date: 2009-04-20 10:07 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-04-20 10:08 pm (UTC)"Protein? Or carbs? They have an excellent bakery."
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Date: 2009-04-20 10:11 pm (UTC)She's used to the rolls and breads of the Vault, and to the concept of cake or sweet rolls on special occasions. The meat-heavy diet of Megaton's people hasn't entirely sat well with her.
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Date: 2009-04-20 10:17 pm (UTC)"Mmm," Mills peers through the glass. "I'm going to have one of those." He points to a croissant. "And whatever the lady likes."
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Date: 2009-04-20 10:19 pm (UTC)Rolls, Ellen knows. These other things? No freakin' clue whatsoever.
She eventually points to something at random (it's a cheese Danish, not that she knows that). "One of those, please. And some juice, if you have it?"
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Date: 2009-04-20 10:23 pm (UTC)Mills pays at the counter and gets them a seat near the window, where they can watch the Plaza coming to life. There are men and women in business suits and tourists in tshirts and jeans, as well as the odd dignitary in foreign garb and street people in ragged clothes that are muddy from head to toe.
Mills takes out the tour guide and a little map. "We should be able to see everything we want to see on foot, or by cab if necessary."
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Date: 2009-04-20 10:26 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-04-20 10:28 pm (UTC)He ducks his head a little, trying to catch her gaze. "So? Are you enjoying it so far?"
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Date: 2009-04-20 10:30 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-04-20 10:32 pm (UTC)"It's not going to make it too difficult to go home again, is it?"
He'd anticipated some culture shock, but he hoped in the long run it would be better for her to understand.
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Date: 2009-04-20 10:35 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-04-20 10:47 pm (UTC)"Now, we're right here by the monuments, so I thought we'd start there. Besides, the cherry trees are in bloom and they're -- wow. You'll see when we get there."
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Date: 2009-04-20 10:58 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-04-20 11:03 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-04-20 11:13 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-04-20 11:15 pm (UTC)He flips the phone open and peers at it. "Yes, see this little icon?" It's a tiny image of an old fashioned camera. "This is the lens here." He indicates the tiny window in the back of the phone.
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Date: 2009-04-20 11:17 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-04-20 11:19 pm (UTC)He holds it up a few feet away from her and says, "Smile." And then there's a little click like a shutter closing and opening.
He turns the phone back around to show her the image.
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Date: 2009-04-20 11:27 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-04-21 01:26 am (UTC)He remembers an era when cameras like these were considered classified equipment. It's still kind of astonishing to him too.