Kenji Who? Part 3 - Feb 20, 2014
Posted: Sat Feb 15, 2014 7:38 pm
I fell asleep in the middle of watching old reruns earlier, and when I awoke I had a strange thought. That thought went straight to the page, and is here presented as a quick, largely unedited opening to a potential crossover fiction.
Part 1 (on this post)|Part 2|Part 3
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Kenji Who? Part 1
Dawn filters through my curtain, and I fight its beckoning light for a short while, but I have obligations to fulfill. The haze of sleep still blurs my vision as I throw on a bathrobe and head downstairs to make my morning coffee. Over the past months – or maybe it has only been weeks, perhaps years – the drudgery of everyday life has been creeping into my mind, making me forgetful, and perhaps a bit mad. Every moment of every day feels like a repeat of the last; like the same day happening over and over.
Nobody else seems aware of the monotony, or they're just better at hiding it. They couldn't be aware, of course, nor should they. That's the way of things. None of them can know the secret or our plan would fail, and all my toils would be for naught. Everything has to happen according to the way he described. If we're discovered too soon, dire consequences await us just over the horizon, and it's all up to me. It's my turn to save the world, or so he said only moments before pulling that fateful switch, and I'm determined not to let my boredom result in the annihilation of all humanity. It would have been nice if he'd picked a nicer location to wait out this small eternity, though.
With my background in quantum mechanics, string theory, earth and life sciences, and too many other doctorates and professorships to count, it wasn't at all difficult finding employment – especially using psychically forged credentials. Unfortunately, the only position available was in the Library at this remote Japanese institution that caters to the physically disabled, Yamaku Academy. Thus I've had to slog through my days organizing magazines and fetching books for students, which I guess is just as well; I'd probably end up telling them too much had I found a teaching position.
The students here are... quaint. None of them really suspect anything is amiss, but I'm constantly assaulted by a myriad of questions that I barely understand. It's probably normal for youths their age to have so many stray questions, but I never really experienced my peers when I was their age. I suppose it's enlightening to observe their behavior like this, and maybe I'll write a paper on their awkward social interactions upon my return home, but it's little more than an oddity. It became so depressingly boring after only the first day that I took a second job at a nearby cafe, just to pass the time.
My primary objective while I'm here is to keep a low profile and ensure the safety and ignorance of everyone here, especially my charge himself. Now disguised as a teenage boy – or, not disguised so much as that's how he looks now – he still doesn't know who he really is, and part of my mission is making sure it stays that way. For whatever reason, he used a perception filter on his eyes so as to imitate partial blindness, which I suppose has helped him fit in at the school. I'm not sure whether it's a side-effect thereof, but it seems his partial blindness has resulted in hyper-awareness.
Luckily that hyper-awareness hasn't resulted in his noticing the false lens in his thick glasses, in which his memories are contained. According to the hastily scrawled instructions he left on the console, that isn't supposed to happen for at least a few weeks, at least. In the meantime, I get to mess around with the Dewey decimal system, listen to teenage chatter, and hope nobody figures out that I don't quite belong here. With any luck at all, my associate's strange behavior won't result in anything drastic happening, though I'm starting to think that's an inevitability. If there's one thing I've learned from traveling with him, it's that trouble is never far behind when one follows The Doctor.
_____________________________________________________________
Part 2
EDIT: made a few changes for clarity's sake.
Part 1 (on this post)|Part 2|Part 3
___________________________________________________________________
Kenji Who? Part 1
Dawn filters through my curtain, and I fight its beckoning light for a short while, but I have obligations to fulfill. The haze of sleep still blurs my vision as I throw on a bathrobe and head downstairs to make my morning coffee. Over the past months – or maybe it has only been weeks, perhaps years – the drudgery of everyday life has been creeping into my mind, making me forgetful, and perhaps a bit mad. Every moment of every day feels like a repeat of the last; like the same day happening over and over.
Nobody else seems aware of the monotony, or they're just better at hiding it. They couldn't be aware, of course, nor should they. That's the way of things. None of them can know the secret or our plan would fail, and all my toils would be for naught. Everything has to happen according to the way he described. If we're discovered too soon, dire consequences await us just over the horizon, and it's all up to me. It's my turn to save the world, or so he said only moments before pulling that fateful switch, and I'm determined not to let my boredom result in the annihilation of all humanity. It would have been nice if he'd picked a nicer location to wait out this small eternity, though.
With my background in quantum mechanics, string theory, earth and life sciences, and too many other doctorates and professorships to count, it wasn't at all difficult finding employment – especially using psychically forged credentials. Unfortunately, the only position available was in the Library at this remote Japanese institution that caters to the physically disabled, Yamaku Academy. Thus I've had to slog through my days organizing magazines and fetching books for students, which I guess is just as well; I'd probably end up telling them too much had I found a teaching position.
The students here are... quaint. None of them really suspect anything is amiss, but I'm constantly assaulted by a myriad of questions that I barely understand. It's probably normal for youths their age to have so many stray questions, but I never really experienced my peers when I was their age. I suppose it's enlightening to observe their behavior like this, and maybe I'll write a paper on their awkward social interactions upon my return home, but it's little more than an oddity. It became so depressingly boring after only the first day that I took a second job at a nearby cafe, just to pass the time.
My primary objective while I'm here is to keep a low profile and ensure the safety and ignorance of everyone here, especially my charge himself. Now disguised as a teenage boy – or, not disguised so much as that's how he looks now – he still doesn't know who he really is, and part of my mission is making sure it stays that way. For whatever reason, he used a perception filter on his eyes so as to imitate partial blindness, which I suppose has helped him fit in at the school. I'm not sure whether it's a side-effect thereof, but it seems his partial blindness has resulted in hyper-awareness.
Luckily that hyper-awareness hasn't resulted in his noticing the false lens in his thick glasses, in which his memories are contained. According to the hastily scrawled instructions he left on the console, that isn't supposed to happen for at least a few weeks, at least. In the meantime, I get to mess around with the Dewey decimal system, listen to teenage chatter, and hope nobody figures out that I don't quite belong here. With any luck at all, my associate's strange behavior won't result in anything drastic happening, though I'm starting to think that's an inevitability. If there's one thing I've learned from traveling with him, it's that trouble is never far behind when one follows The Doctor.
_____________________________________________________________
Part 2
EDIT: made a few changes for clarity's sake.