Mohinder Suresh (
seekevolution) wrote2014-01-15 06:13 pm
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Quarantine
News had a way of spreading a little too quickly. The moment Nathan had fallen at the press conference, media began having it's field day. Mohinder paid little attention.
He arrived at Odessa fourteen hours after the incident, severely jet-lagged and with a computer pre-loaded with all of the information that the Company thought he'd need. Mohinder had been down this road before, though never with such dire circumstances. The Shanti Virus was a subject near and dear to his heart, though it was far less stressful when all he needed to cure it was a bit of blood. Even though it was his own blood, at least he felt as if he was doing something.
Knowing from experience that not everything was black and white anymore, Mohinder kept his laptop and medical kit close at hand and made his way to the quarantine line with a grim look in his redrimmed black eyes. "Mohinder Suresh," he said, forgetting his title again for just a moment. "Doctor. You need to let me through."
The National Guard service man looked wary before radioing it in through the barricade. It was tense. Mohinder's shoulder bag slipped twice and he nearly dropped his sample kit. "All right, cleared to go in. Good luck, doctor."
Mohinder nodded, rubbing the back of his neck. He'd gone from New York to India and back again in two days, bringing Molly to stay with his mother. After what Sylar did to her, again, he could not risk leaving her in anyone else's care. Not with Matt gone.
Seeing the man, however, after he'd just gone off on this quest to find his father at the expense of helping him with a child they both sort of promised to look out for, did not make Mohinder smile. If anything, it only made the lines on his face etch in more deeply. He stood in front of him, looking as tired as Mohinder felt, ill fitting clothing a bit more rumpled than usual. Never mind, of course, that Mohinder had done his fair share of leaving too on his attempts to bait the Company through lectures across the globe. "Do I have a lab yet?" Mohinder asked. No greetings. No necessities. That's what happens when you abandon people, Matt.
He arrived at Odessa fourteen hours after the incident, severely jet-lagged and with a computer pre-loaded with all of the information that the Company thought he'd need. Mohinder had been down this road before, though never with such dire circumstances. The Shanti Virus was a subject near and dear to his heart, though it was far less stressful when all he needed to cure it was a bit of blood. Even though it was his own blood, at least he felt as if he was doing something.
Knowing from experience that not everything was black and white anymore, Mohinder kept his laptop and medical kit close at hand and made his way to the quarantine line with a grim look in his redrimmed black eyes. "Mohinder Suresh," he said, forgetting his title again for just a moment. "Doctor. You need to let me through."
The National Guard service man looked wary before radioing it in through the barricade. It was tense. Mohinder's shoulder bag slipped twice and he nearly dropped his sample kit. "All right, cleared to go in. Good luck, doctor."
Mohinder nodded, rubbing the back of his neck. He'd gone from New York to India and back again in two days, bringing Molly to stay with his mother. After what Sylar did to her, again, he could not risk leaving her in anyone else's care. Not with Matt gone.
Seeing the man, however, after he'd just gone off on this quest to find his father at the expense of helping him with a child they both sort of promised to look out for, did not make Mohinder smile. If anything, it only made the lines on his face etch in more deeply. He stood in front of him, looking as tired as Mohinder felt, ill fitting clothing a bit more rumpled than usual. Never mind, of course, that Mohinder had done his fair share of leaving too on his attempts to bait the Company through lectures across the globe. "Do I have a lab yet?" Mohinder asked. No greetings. No necessities. That's what happens when you abandon people, Matt.
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Not that he was picturing Matt in tights-- Well now he was. And that just made him laugh even harder. Perhaps that wasn't the attitude to have when walking into the site of the demise of a portion of a city.
Alas. Mohinder Suresh had a bit of a penchant for mood switching.
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And that was probably the height of ridiculousness.
Matt hadn't been too much of a comic book kid, although he might have been if he'd had easier access to them. It wasn't as much effort to read a comic book as a novel. His superhero knowledge usually came from the morning cartoons. He'd spent way too much time in front of the TV, as a kid. Yet another bad habit that had stuck.
It was fortunate that the bottom floor of Primatech seemed completely empty, or else Matt would've felt bad for being in a good mood on entering a dead zone. It was possible they'd moved all or most of the dead already since Primatech was where it had all started.
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He was more or less quieted by the lack of anything on the lowest level of facility. "It... It looks like a prison," Mohinder said of the row of cells along one side of the corridor. Empty cots. Less than private toilets. A sobering thought, the most dangerous people in the world might have once been housed here. Were they dead? Was no one down here anyway? Could it have just been a precaution?
Too many questions, and thankfully, not about Matt in a superhero costume. A phone on the wall by an elevator that no longer worked didn't give Mohinder a dial tone, but that was all right. There might be offices higher up with a sat phone he could try to use. As long as he could contact Noah--
And if it got out-- The whole world could--
"I have to find a phone. Now."
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"This way", Matt said with a definite bitter edge to his tone and turned around, not quite waiting to make sure Mohinder was following. He wasn't a hundred percent sure where he was going and a lot of the hallways looked the same, but by retracing their steps halfway to the exit he could turn towards the corridor with the cells that had once belonged to him, Bennet and Ted, among others.
He stopped there for a moment, looking up at the ceiling like it might help him wih directions, and then kept going past that door which was open for some reason. ... that was probably a bad sign, one way or the other.
"I think it's over here", he said, offering no real explanation as to why he'd know. "There's some sort of office section a few floors up. Third, I think." Gesturing at a pair of elevators nearby, he finally looked over his shoulder at his friend.
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The offices on the third level were clean, Spartan. There were no nameplates on the doors, there were no photographs on the desks. In a way, Mohinder understood why. Secrets needed to be kept and families ought to not interfere with those things...or become reason for concern later.
Mohinder paused at what looked like a central secretary's desk, but there was no dial tone when he picked up the handset and sighed. Landlines wouldn't work but there had to be a cell phone somewhere around here. Someone had to have left in a hurry--
And jackpot! Mohinder found one as he poked through an unlocked office, still on the charger. "Matt!" he called out, though his jubulant thoughts likely reached the telepath first. Bending to detach it from the wall, Mohinder ended up knocking over a box of files, evidently ones that had been in the process of being entered into computer databanks rather than be kept on hardcopy.
He recognized the face looking back at him from the mug shot attached to a folder. "Eden--" He was crouched there, flipping through the file with one hand, the fingers of the other over his mouth.
He'd seen this picture before. An FBI agent had shown him. He just had no idea-- No idea who Sarah Ellis truly was. Or what she could do...
Or...what she may have made him do.
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"Mohinder-?"
He paused. He recognised files when he saw them - they all looked the same. He didn't recognise the woman in the picture, however, or at least he didn't think so. He frowned but didn't even try to read the name at this angle.
"... do you know her?"
It wouldn't be surprising. Mohinder had spent quite a bit of time trying to track people with powers down, and so had the Company. The Company just tended to do it better, faster, and more ruthlessly. Of course they'd have files on hand.
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He was trying not to be angry or upset, handing Matt a small packet of papers with diagrams, with biological read outs and brain scans.
"Vocal persuasion," he muttered. "Of course."
He let the rest of the papers in Eden's file go and instead, likely out of habit or a need to shove things around, began to put the files back in their box.
At least, until he found a very familiar name on one. Parkman, Matthew.
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He'd proably hung out a bit too much with Mohinder. But honestly, it was something that was happening to him. He wanted to know at least some things about it. Especially if it was going to ... grow. What was it his dad had said? It becomes so much more?
When Mohinder voiced her power Matt felt a little sick. He looked at the papers for a while longer but then he handed them back, not wanting to think too much about it. It could be a good thing, he reminded himself, but really, with that tone in Mohinder's voice, he couldn't convince himself all the way.
"Come on", he started, leaning down a bit to touch his friend's shoulder - only to have have his gaze fall on his own face.
Of course they had a file on him. Of course. They'd tagged him, he still had the scars, but there was something incredibly insulting and alarming in seeing his own file.
"Funny, I can't remember anyone taking that picture", he said in a harsh voice, just about restraining himself from snatching the photo. It stood out to him in particular. They could have been stalking him for ages. "What's it say?"
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At least that afforded him a smile. Rather far from the truth, but all right, he thought to himself.
"Ah, it mentions that you worked with the-- Really? The FBI? Impressive." And yes, Mohinder was really very impressed. "'Parkman's surveillance and unsuccessful raid on Primatech Paper Company resulted in a six-month suspension from the LAPD and ruined his credibility with the FBI. He is currently divorced and working at the NYPD at detective rank.' I'm not sure I congratulated you on that, by the way. The job."
Not the divorce, obviously!
He cleared his throat to continue. "'Since his wife was pregnant by another man, his offspring no longer--'" Mohinder almost choked, having to stop himself. Dark eyes lifted towards the larger man, lips parting.
He had no idea.
"I'm-- Here." He handed the file over. "No one ought to have this much information on another person."
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Mostly, though, Matt found that he was too angry to care much, right then. Angry but not in ... it was a different way than normal. Like he was a bit antsy, maybe anxious. He just plain didn't like it, felt even more like an animal now than when he'd been told what it was the Company did when they abducted people. Tracking them. Caging them. And keeping files on them and their offspring -- these people were sick.
To Mohinder's remarks he didn't react much, mostly with a shrug, noncommitical. He'd probably tell a more complete story at some point but right then he wasn't interested in the things he already knew, even if they were news to Mohinder. He guessed what he wanted to see was if there was anything about what he could do now. And why he could.
When none of that made it past Mohinder's lips and the file was given to him, he shook his head and flipped through the file himself, staring darkly at the charts and pictures and several of the headlines.
"Yeah, if we're even people to them", he muttered. After a moment he looked up at Mohinder and sighed. "It's fine. Really." Neither of them had known what it was going to say. He didn't want Mohinder to feel bad about it.
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No, he had no idea that Matt's strain was because of the other things his ability had unlocked. He had no idea how Matt had saved Molly from the Nightmare Man. He had no idea what Matt's father could actually do.
Or what Matt very well might be able to do too.
Other than a few early readings, a lot of the Company's findings were in progress. However, there was a photocopied set of another file tucked in with Matt's. One meant to be used as cross reference. One that, if Matt took the time to look through it, might discover an even darker side to his abilities.
Mohinder didn't wait for an answer. He just finished boxing up the rest of the files. Sylar's wasn't in there. Perhaps a good thing. Mohinder didn't need to throw taunts to the serial killer about his childhood when they next met.
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There was an avoidant quality to that last sentence, yeah. Again, it wasn't really what he was interested in, even if he could see how it would be helpful figures to know. But he really just ... yeah.
It didn't strike him that it was unfair of him to keep such a thing from Mohinder, to open for more arguments and misunderstandings between them like this. His silence was reflexive. Self-preservation, in a way. He felt uneasy about it, like too many things could go wrong if he made it known what he could do.
He fingered the file until Mohinder had put the box away and then reminded him, wanting to get away from the topic and the silence, "How about that phone call?"
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"Noah? Thank God, it's Mohinder Suresh and--"
"How-- Never mind, we don't have a lot of time. Odessa is under complete quarantine. By the time I got here, there were three cases of the virus, but each was isolated. Claire's blood didn't work." Mohinder didn't bother to ask how Bennet managed to sneak blood into the CDC's testing and drug supplies because there simply wasn't time, as he'd said. "How bad is it at ground zero?"
Mohinder's lips pressed together for a moment. "Almost complete fatality rate. There were some uninfected people that were taken away two days ago. Matt and Peter and I are likely all that's left--"
"You're kidding me!"
Mohinder scowled but didn't retort that he would never joke about something so serious. "We're going to wait another day or so, until we can be sure that we aren't bringing the contamination with us, but if you could set a decontamination area for us--"
"Mohinder--" A pause and a sigh followed. "I'll see what I can do. Stay on this number, all right? I'll call tomorrow." The moment he hung up, Mohinder felt a sort of relief he hadn't expected and leaned against the desk before keying in his mother's number in India. It would be very late there, but he handed the phone over to Matt any way.
"She speaks English," he said with a smirk. Go on Matt. Talk to Molly first.
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He was going to ask something except then Mohinder dialled another number, and Matt gave him a questioning look. Until he head Molly's name. His eyes widened just slightly and he accepted the phone gratefully, pressed it to his ear and mouth his thanks to his friend over the dial tone.
When it connected and what sounded like a poised elder woman answered, he was both relieved and a little intimidated.
"Yes- hello, ma'am? I'm ... sorry to bother you, my name's Matt Parkman and I'm-"
She seemed to know who he was. She would, of course, because Mohinder would hardly have put Molly on a plane without knowing at least giving the woman a run-down of what was happening.
He didn't trade many words with Mohinder's mother and that was just as well, because he didn't know how to answer any questions she might have and honestly, didn't have even half a mind for pleasantries right then. There was some crackling and distant sounds before the phone was eventually handed over to their precious little girl and she answered it with excitement battling the tiredness in her voice. "Matt?"
"Molly, sweetheart ..." He sat down at the nearest desk, one hand over his eyes. He could almost have sobbed with relief, honestly. He didn't, but he hadn't heard her voice for days, and it smacked him in the face now when he was talking to one of the few things he really had to lose - Sylar, the virus, everything. Everything that could have taken her away from them. "Are you okay?"
He could almost hear her shrug. "I'm okay. Mama Suresh is nice to me. I don't want to stay, Matt", she added in that carefully pleading way children had. "When are you coming to get me?"
"Not yet, and I'm so sorry, Molly. We're working on it." He rubbed his hand over his face, tired and sad. They'd both promised the girl so many times they wouldn't leave her and they kept having to disappear on uncertain little missions, and now ... "I promise. I love you. We can't wait to see you again, but I can't ... just hang in a little while more, honey, okay?"
"Okay", she answered. Sad but resigned. She'd grown up way too fast. Still, Matt managed to get a little bit of small talk out of her after that by asking her about India, and she couldn't help but describe one or two things she'd seen. He smiled as he listened but it was a bittersweet thing.
He would have listened to her forever but he knew neither of them could. If the phone was on credit it could well be running out by now and Mohinder needed to speak to her, too.
"Hang on, I'll let you talk to Mohinder. He misses you too." He smiled a little at her answer, glancing up at his friend for a moment before he added, "I love you so much, Molly." He wouldn't let her doubt that.
He handed the cell phone over with a hand to the shoulder before he went to lean against a wall, head tilted back against it as he breathed in and blinked against the sting in his eyes.
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"I'm not five, Mohinder! But the one with the painted red ears is my favorite," came the response, followed by a yawn. It was hard to readjust, he understood, and he hung up with a sense of relief.
Mohinder tucked the phone into his back pocket and lightly touched Matt's back before he rounded the corner. Matt could use a moment. The American likely needed the time to recompose himself, though Mohinder would have been open for another hug had Matt seemed to wish for it.
Armed with Matt's file and hope in a few days that they could leave here and track Sylar down again, Mohinder didn't mind returning to the household they'd commandeered and even wondered, out loud, what sorts of foods Peter didn't care for. He was a fairly good short order cook.
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Mohinder had picked up his file though, something Matt observed with mixed feelings, but ultimately he did want to keep it, at least for now. Either way he gently bumped Mohinder's shoulder with his own when he caught up with him in a gesture of ... companionship, he supposed. He didn't have a lot to say and kept his hands in his pockets, only humming slightly to show that he was listening to what Mohinder was thinking out loud about.
But when they rounded a corner past the cells and eventually made it outside, Matt seemed to pick himself up some, and looked up at Mohinder's profile with an amused light in his somewhat-shiny eyes.
"Do you seriously have elephants?"
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Dirt settled, truck still waiting for them, Mohinder paused in stride at Matt's comment and smirked. "They're teddies," he responded, and then clarified: "stuffed. Statues. My mother bought me one Indian elephant every birthday. You can imagine that I've amassed quite a few."
The look he gave to his friend turned into laughter and Mohinder took a turn lightly nudging Matt's elbow too.
"Be prepared for a new addition to the house if Molly gets attached to the one I believe she was speaking of. It's large enough for her to ride. Might save your back, though. I bet when we see her next, she'll be two inches taller!"
They'd never spoken so much in their four months together. Mohinder would never say he appreciated this situation...but he did enjoy the benefits of feeling close to someone.
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He remembered back when that had been fairly simple - and also uneventful. What really mattered most to him though was getting to make a difference, to help people. Now he was finally in a position where he could. He hoped he'd still have that job after all this was cleared up.
Unlocking the truck, he got in the driver's seat this time, not really thinking about it. It had been closer to him. After Mohinder had seated himself and Matt looked over his shoulder by reflex to see the road, only to have his vision naturally blocked by the fact that it was a truck he was driving, he rolled his eyes and leaned out the window to help see where he was backing up on the road and deadpanned,
"We'll definitely need a yard if we're keeping elephants."
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There was a strange smell and Mohinder tilted his head slightly to the side, Peter standing at the door to the kitchen and smoke billowing along the ceiling and over his head.
It still didn't quite occur to Mohinder what was happening until the fire detector went off just a moment later. The Indian rushed to the oven and yanked the door open, eyes instantly watering as the heated smoke hit him right in the face. Gagging and choking, he shut the door again and turned the oven off.
"What--"
"Just frozen pizza!" Peter grunted, looking defensive.
"Did you take it out of the plastic and cardboard packaging?!" Mohinder questioned and...judging by the look on Peter's face--
"Uh... Oh. Whoops."
"H-How did either of you survive on your own!?"
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His reflexes were pretty slow, Matt noted idly. How long had him and Mohinder been at Primatech? It couldn't have been more than three hours, probably not even that. If Peter had caught any sleep it all it wouldn't have been much. No wonder he was making such mistakes.
And the question "Really. How long did you sleep?" was met with a sheepish kind of expression. Nightmares, maybe? Or just still the restlessness, unwillingness to stop, to not be doing anything.
Matt glanced over his shoulder at Mohinder (and he would go help, really, in a sec) and lowered his voice when he directed it to Peter again, one hand to his shoulder. "Get some sleep", he suggested gently. And finally it seemed like he'd gotten through. Maybe beacause Peter was exhausted, more suspectible to being pushed, but the younger man nodded, apologised to Mohinder and slowly went up the stairs.
After he was out of sight, Matt shook his head and went to open the living room windows to help the circulation in the air. Mohinder had already gotten to the kitchen ones.
"Look, say what you want", he called to him as he went past a sofa, "but I've never set off the alarm."
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"Do I need to fact check with Molly?" he asked, setting the phone down on the mantle where any of them could see or hear it go off. "Better yet, I'd rather not know about it. What I'm not told can't hurt me, right?"
Of course, that just wasn't true at all. Most of what Mohinder didn't know came back to bite him over and over again. The poor man didn't even realise it. No wonder he was so easily duped time and time again?
"I was thinking of making vegetarian chili for dinner," he said, watching Matt stretch over a lamp to shove a window up. Should the larger man glance over his shoulder now, it would look as if the Indian was checking him out.
Then again... The drift of his eyes suggested that perhaps he was any way, hip to the wall and arms folded across his chest aside.
"There's a package of hot dogs in there too so you don't have to worry that I'm making anything too healthy."
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"Aah. Nah, you don't have to do that. I'll cook them later if I want them." He turned around just in time to see part of that look on Mohinder, actually, and he paused for a moment. Again, that feeling of self consciousness. He frowned. "What? ... I won't burn the house down."
A half hearted joke. Man, he felt like he was missing something here.
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Back to the chili. It would take a few hours to simmer, but he was happier doing this sort of labour after what he had endured at the high school. No more lab work, no more blood. He and Matt and Peter just had to hold out for another day or two and then they could get on with their lives.
He sang as he chopped up the remainder of the tomatoes from the refrigerator and hunted around the cabinet for some spices. Mohinder didn't have a bad voice at all, and the melodic trelling of most Indian songs lent itself well to Mohinder's vocal range. Broken only by the occasional whir of an electric can opener on carrots and beans, he might well be singing Molly to sleep.
Even if the song itself had a sad undertone to it.
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He checked if Mohinder wanted any help but after the smoke was cleared out he seemed to have it under control, and so Matt took the liberty of taking a quick walk around the block. He didn't expect to find anything but he still wanted to keep an eye out for any kind of changes.
He found pets, in the end. Sort of. Thinking back on it Matt wouldn't be sure why he hadn't considered it, but there'd just been so much else to think about that when a cat crossed the road he wrote it off as a stray until the cat's nametag reflected the sun.
"Hi, buddy, c'mere", he cooed at it gently until he was allowed to pet it. Her. Mittens. He scratched her around the neck and ears for a while but she moved on soon enough, probably hunting if she knew how. Either way, Mittens proved to be yet another reminder of all the lives lost, and he was a bit more thoughtful when he re-entered their adopted house. He lit up some though at the familiar low singing that greeted him.
"Smells good", he complimented Mohinder, taking his jacket off and glancing at the time. It was moving slow. He'd never had this little to do, but he considered it calm before the storm and tried to ... well, enjoy it, he supposed. As much as he could.
He hung around the kitchen after that to watch Mohinder cook and help out where he was needed, telling him a bit about the cat and the somewhat troubling notion of how many pets were likely fending for themselves now. Small talk was scattered, but not uncomfortable in its silences.
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They had a few hours before dinner would be ready, before it grew dark outside, before Peter would even think about waking and now there was nothing more to do in the kitchen.
"Perhaps we could put on a DVD? We don't have to worry about the rating for once." Molly had seen people die, had been subjected to almost dying herself, but Mohinder insisted on under PG-13 ratings for whatever they watched at home.
That generally meant cartoons or the Disney channel.
Really, he just wanted something mindless to ignore and perhaps doze a bit to, something to pass the time. It wasn't that Matt was poor company, Mohinder's nerves and emotions were simply fried.
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Sorry about being MIA this weekend. I was dragged out.
hey, it's what weekends are for!
Phew! Back to regularly scheduled tagging!
welcome back!!
Thanks!
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