Mohinder Suresh (
seekevolution) wrote2014-02-12 01:01 pm
The Storm
"Mohinder! Mohinder! It's too much!" the little girl protested from her bedroom after one of her adoptive fathers (paper work having gone through thanks to Matt's singular talent) nearly tackled her to rub sunscreen into her fair skin. "I can't breathe! It's in my nose!"
Mohinder more or less ignored her cries, rubbing more of the white cream into the areas behind her ears. "You'll thank me when you're not a lobster tomorrow."
"But we're wasting time! Matt's already pulled up the car and packed it!" She might be young, but that didn't mean she wasn't already imagining herself like the girls on the Disney Channel with tanned skin and sun-bleached hair. It'd started with lipstick and red nail polish and a two piece bathing suit he'd given into only because he's force her to wear a little jacket when not in the water. And a hat.
"He'll wait for us," Mohinder said as he clucked his tongue, dressed in white shorts and an orange collared shirt with the sleeves rolled up, though left open with his chest bare beneath. He had on a pair of sandals too, certainly looking ready for the beach. If only Molly would cooperate!
"And if he doesn't?"
"We'll think of a proper punishment. All right, there you are, bring a change of shoes in case the car gets too cold on the drive."
Mohinder more or less ignored her cries, rubbing more of the white cream into the areas behind her ears. "You'll thank me when you're not a lobster tomorrow."
"But we're wasting time! Matt's already pulled up the car and packed it!" She might be young, but that didn't mean she wasn't already imagining herself like the girls on the Disney Channel with tanned skin and sun-bleached hair. It'd started with lipstick and red nail polish and a two piece bathing suit he'd given into only because he's force her to wear a little jacket when not in the water. And a hat.
"He'll wait for us," Mohinder said as he clucked his tongue, dressed in white shorts and an orange collared shirt with the sleeves rolled up, though left open with his chest bare beneath. He had on a pair of sandals too, certainly looking ready for the beach. If only Molly would cooperate!
"And if he doesn't?"
"We'll think of a proper punishment. All right, there you are, bring a change of shoes in case the car gets too cold on the drive."
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It took almost half a minute of talk for Matt to confirm their girl was all right before Mohinder could bring himself to breathe again. He sighed against the receiver and carried on with the walk. At least, of course, until Matt said that all bridges and tunnels had been closed, all mass transit had stopped.
And that there was nothing on the radio about any of it.
Mohinder cursed in Hindi and turned back towards Bennet. "I want to tell you to come here but... Matt, I don't know Molly's immunity levels. I don't even know if this is the same strain yet. I'll call you in an hour. I need a sample of her blood. Can you bring it to me? There should be a blood kit under the sink-- Don't ask. Old habits."
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Molly looked at him uncertainly and she didn't look calmed when he told her they were going back home. "We need to figure out how safe you're gonna be, sweetheart", Matt told her in a somewhat tense voice. "Mohinder needs a blood sample."
"What about you?" she asked and Matt nodded, made a mental note to ask that when Mohinder called (he was keeping an eye on the time, if an hour passed and there'd been nothing you bet he'd be calling himself). Ask about the possibility of a new strain. Maybe they all needed to re-test.
Yet another reason to leave. Damn it.
At the same time, he was relieved that they were all together right now. That was the most important thing after staying alive. Sticking together.
The drive home was fast and Matt found the blood kit where Mohinder had said. He wasn't sure how to handle it exactly but from her time with the Company Molly had had her blood drawn plenty of times and they figured it out together.
He kissed her hair when the phone did ring before he stood to answer, and the first words out of his mouth were, "I've got the blood. Are we sure this is the same virus?"
If the task was to bring her blood into the hospital - yeah. (And how little he wanted to leave her, even if he knew he might have to. That was something else to potentially bring up.) Mohinder had hopefully managed to check by now.
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Panic. Panic was palpable. Mohinder, however, was much too tired to panic.
"Bring me Molly's samples and my glasses will you? And... And when this is over, I demand you rip off all of my clothes as soon as we can find a sitter for Molly."
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... and then came that entirely unexpected comment that had Matt's mind blanking for a short moment. He licked his lips.
"Sure", he said, trying to sound casual since he knew Molly was watching him despite the fact that he was turned away from her. He wished telepathy worked over distances. Send back an appropriate response. "Yeah, I can do that."
He hung up shortly after that, then turned to embrace Molly. For a long while. She needed to know that they wouldn't let anything happen to her or to each other and he hated that he had to leave her, even if only for a while.
He had her search for the requested glasses while he had a quick change of clothes. He'd have to mind control a lot less if he was Detective Parkman rather than just Matt, and in case anything broke out he wanted to be armed.
I love you, he thought with all the warmth and certainty he could muster, hugging her close again after she gave him Mohinder's glasses and he handed her the spare phone. "If there's anything at all", he said, letting it hang clearly in the air.
She nodded and lowered her head.
The TV was dead by now. She went to find her Atlas and was holding it close to her chest when Matt left.
The roads were still not that busy but he was anticipating them to fill up by morning. It wasn't that late yet, so they had several hours to try to handle the situation. Hopefully they'd manage.
There was almost nowhere to park by the hospital. Big surprise there. He walked the last bit, jogged really, and made his way through the crowd inside with the kind of decisiveness that's helped something immensely by looking harsh and wearing a suit (sans tie, because who cared?) and the moment he spotted someone official looking, grabbed a hold of them.
"Where's Doctor Suresh?"
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The fourth floor looked exactly as the hospital in Odessa had looked, covered in plastic, manned by armed guards in bio-hazard suits and filled with a parade of people that looked like they were coming out of a science fiction film.
It took a little bit of Matt's particular talents, honestly, to get at the frazzled professor. Mohinder looked up as Matt entered and smiled, relieved. He waved the others away and went to his...boyfriend? "Matt. Thank God you made it. I don't understand how this happened. It's the exact same strain."
Mohinder couldn't exactly launch himself at the other man, but he could take his hand...even if it was just to take the vial of Molly's blood.
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"Where's Bennet?" he asked in a voice that was a lot sharper than he'd intended. "What's he saying?"
It stood to reason that he'd know something, since he'd been so damn quick to call Mohinder to the scene. Matt didn't like it. There were about a million things about this situation he didn't like, but he felt relieved to see Mohinder this close again.
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And that's very, very bad.
"We'll find him together, I just--" He needed the vial. Mohinder had already guaranteed fifteen people on his team, the vast network of men and women running around on this floor getting samples and running easy testing, were immune, or at least possessed the gene to give them a better chance at not contracting the virus.
That was not, however, good news. The percentage might be a little better than in Odessa but with at least a ninety-two percent mortality rate-- He was afraid.
Running Molly's blood through the testing left him even more drained than before, however, dropping his face into his hands with his shoulders hunched. He looked upset but in reality, he was relieved.
Her markers are the exact same as mine. And as yours... I have no idea what-- But then it dawned on him and he blinked up at Matt, mouth opening. "Blood transfusions. Prior to this strain! That's it!" It would help no one that hadn't gotten his, or another immune person's blood, before contracting the virus, however. "It doesn't just stop the virus from lingering, it outright kills it. That's remarkable!"
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But then there was the glorious relief in his thoughts, buzzing with stunned excitement and Matt latched onto that, breathed out, moved his hand down Mohinder's back.
Blood transfusions-? He knew Molly had gotten one, but he himself-
except way back. Way back only not at all long ago when he'd taken four bullets and Mohinder had been one of the only people there.
"So- so what does that mean?" He asked it with a certain urgency now, trying to keep even pace with Mohinder's mind. "What now?"
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"It means I have something to synthesis. It means I not only have a potential cure isolated but a delivery system too!" Of course, those sorts of things took years to perfect and administering drugs required trials and... It's interesting but they don't have time. People here were going to die.
Mohinder couldn't reverse that. He couldn't even make them medically more comfortable unless he induced coma. That was not his call, however. He was a geneticists. A virologist. Medicine was beyond him.
"It's going to get very bad. Very quickly. Molly-- she should come here. And... I know this is ridiculous to say but we might do well with some supplies."
He'd been watching too many dooms day scenario programs while Molly was at school and Matt at work.
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It was a halfway joke, but unfortunately everything had a serious undertone. When they'd shut down Odessa, they'd had most things still. They couldn't count on that this time even if it was unlikely they'd shut the entire island down unless they planned to kill everybody on it.
But 'supplies' was a general word, especially when you were talking to someone who had a tendency to think in terms you didn't quite understand. If Mohinder needed something particular, he'd do well to say it upfront.
Although at that thought Matt withdrew to take out the other man's glasses from his pocket, holding them out.
"I'll get Molly. Just tell me what else we need, I'm on it."
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Mohinder's hand was steady, however, as he listed items for Matt to go and get. It was nearly nine. That meant stores would be closing very shortly. "Flashlights. Batteries. A lot of batteries." He also wrote down sleeping bags and other assorted gear like chemical stoves and matches, lighters...knives. Good multi-tools. "You'll want to look for light food items. Things in plastic or pouches, not cans. Things with large shelf lives. Tuna pouches, peanut butter, crackers. No soups. And headache medicines..."
Mohinder handed over the list with a somewhat desperate sigh.
"I'm going to get a space set up for us here." He ought to be working on this issue, on the virus, but it was absolutely clear that he himself thought it was a lost cause. "Bring anything Molly might need. And hurry."
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And if Mohinder didn't think there was anything to do about it ... well, there probably wasn't, was there?
Matt took the list. "Yeah. Call if anything changes." And then he left, wasting no time on goodbyes because he knew he'd be back.
The streets were still mostly empty and Matt was quick to go home. Molly had her eyes on the door when he opened it, anxious but relieved, and he knew she'd kept an eye on him the entire time. He was relieved, so very, suddenly struck again by how she was a target, how she'd been targeted before, and even if Sylar was dead (his dad wasn't, though) -- he never wanted to leave her. He hated having to do it.
Now he gathered her into his arms and murmured, "You're fine, you're okay, we're gonna go see Mohinder" into her hair and she nodded into his neck and they both felt a lot better.
But first there was a bit of a treasure hunt. They went through quite a few stores, opted for all the cheap and light options, stocked up the car. It was something that felt incredibly grim. It had a finality to it that Matt didn't like and that worried Molly.
It was nearing eleven when they made their way back to the hospital. It was dark out and the streetlights painted the building in a pale, sickly yellow that was entirely too appropriate.
Molly hadn't brought much. The elephant was in the car because it had become a symbol, but she only carried her Atlas, an art pad with some pencils and a book in her backpack. Although the worry kept her more than a little awake she was incredibly tired and didn't say much when she held onto Matt's hand and he made people look the other way when they went through the corridors and up the elevators. Even if she gave him a slightly mixed look at the way he used his power.
"Don't look", he urged her quietly, meaning the sick and the dying. He was consciously blocking out their thoughts. He didn't want to hear the despair.
She looked, some. She understood a lot more than he'd ever want her to.
And back at the lab-slash-office they'd set up for Mohinder, she went up to him with slightly frightened, unsure eyes. "Will we stay together now?"
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Lifting her up, and realising he'd not be able to do that for much longer, Mohinder leads the way into the connecting office where he'd set up a cot and a desk for her to use. There wasn't much space at all and most of the things Matt had gotten were left in the car, hidden under seats, in case anyone decided to get overly excited for candles or canteens.
Mohinder stayed only very briefly with her as she got settled and Matt brought her quilt from home in to cover her with.
I would very much like to stop this rash of desperately needing my services when all I'd like to do is sleep, he commented towards Matt and touched his hand in passing. You should sleep as best you can. I-- I am almost positive that we're going to need you sooner rather than later.
Mohinder had to work for now. He had to get everyone up to speed on his methods, had to get the entire hospital tested. At least he could leave the details of the quarantine up to people that understood best how to deal with people.
He couldn't help but think that Odessa had been a test run, however.
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He opened his mouth to answer, then glanced towards where he could just make out Molly, and returned the look as he answered mentally instead. A focus. Edged with tension that looked kind of bitter.
What's the situation? How many dead?
He'd seen the people in the hallways, some lying down, others coughing, one particularly haunting glance of a teenager who looked like she'd fallen asleep sitting up except her chest hadn't been moving and she hadn't been thinking.
An oversight, maybe. They must've gotten to her by now.
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Mohinder looked up from the last sample he'd been working through before Matt came in with Molly and took the glasses from his face to pinch the bridge of his nose.
If this is like Odessa, by tomorrow half of the people in this hospital will be dead. In three days, ninety-six percent will be dead.
And what would they do then?
"Is anyone thinking about what happened? How this one started? We were all cleared, Matt, we--" He was blaming himself. Hadn't they been to Coney Island last weekend, until Molly threw up on the Tilt-A-Whirl?
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"Stop it. Don't do that", he said. "If it was our fault, New York wouldn't still be here. And Peter would've spread it to god knows where. Right?"
He didn't ask because he was uncertain. That's how it worked. If Mohinder thought about it, he'd see it too.
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And what then? What happens when the head of the CDC declares this a lost cause? When they abandon this part of the city, and the people in it, everything was lost.
His only hope was that they'd at least be saved when the teams pulled out. He could prove that they weren't infected. That their blood might be used to eventually synthesis a cure. They just had to hold on.
"I'm so sorry, Matt. I don't know how I've managed to be so useless."
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He broke away from Mohinder just by leaning to the side, one arm crossed over his chest and the other hand rubbing tiredly at his temples.
"Okay. Great. So you're saying this might be even more of a mess to clean up. Where the hell is Bennet?"
He needed some answers, but he'd already tried that one and sighed before Mohinder had a chance to answer. He'd asked him a question earlier, after all.
"Nevermind. I could ... take a walk. See if I catch anything."
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Not that either would really care to speak to each other, but some things were important enough to set everything aside for.
It turned out that Bennet wasn't even in New York, but in Boulder Colorado. He'd answered on the third ring and sounded just so very tired. "Suresh. Good news?"
Mohinder paused to look through the long supply closet towards where the lump that was Molly happened to become while she slept. "None. They've cut us off."
"I know. Not my order. There's four other outbreak sites, doctor. There are fifty people working on this. But you--"
"But me what? You're counting on me knowing how to stop an illness because it killed my sister?" He turned and shut the door so Molly wouldn't be disturbed. "This is the third time you've had me risk my family--"
"Family? You're living with a divorcee and a girl you don't really know and after what? Eight months? You're suddenly family?"
Mohinder very nearly hung up the phone right there, though he knew it was true. Noah had been risking his life for decades, family in tow. "We're suddenly a family," he said instead. "What's going to happen to us?"
There was silence for such a long time after that. "Now's the time to pray, doctor."
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And outside of the hospital it was more of the same. Make sure nobody exits or leaves. Stay behind the scenes, for now. Matt found this out after grabbing someone by the collar and snapping at them to spill, but whoever that person was didn't know who was running the operation beyond the CDC.
And the military.
It wasn't good enough, he was thinking as he rounded another corner and made his way down a flight of stairs. Not good enough. Whoever were pulling the strings had to be part of the Company or something else, because there was no other reason for the blackout. People who knew what the virus was. What it did.
But as he'd expected a scan of the lower floors didn't give anything but more despair and pleas for help. He didn't try to soothe them, like he had in Odessa. Didn't have the time.
He was tempted to leave and grab someone guarding the bridges, because he knew they were there now, there and anywhere else you might attempt to leave. Positioned there quietly. Ready for the morning. But he wasn't reckless enough and returned to Mohinder's lab before long.
"Military's here", he said immediately when he entered, shutting the door behind him and shooting a dirty look out the glass windows that let the CDC people look right in. To make sure Mohinder was doing his work, no doubt. "Or they will be."
They had orders for the hospital too, of course. Not many, but they'd be there to prevent people scrambling for their loved ones. Protests, riots, you name it. This place was a hot spot.
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"There are outbreaks in Boulder, Santa Monica California, Boston and Detroit Michigan," Mohinder told Matt. "They're quarentined the cities and the outlying suburbs. At six o'clock this morning, they're going to black out the city. Turn off the whole grid. Only people with generators are going to have any power at all..."
Mohinder's fear was palpable.
"I don't know what to do about it except pray I find the impossible."
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He checked his watch. Just after one. They had five hours.
"Okay. Right, that means we can expect the chaos to start the moment people realize. They'll try to get out of here- and uh, get gunned down if they overstep. They're authorized to shoot to kill, these guys", he said in a low tone, indicating the people in gear outside. "Fucking idiots. This is going to snowball faster than ..." Not finding a good simile, he shook his head. "More than half the people out there are thinking about Odessa."
It'd be total chaos. Total. He took another step towards Mohinder.
"Hospital will still have power, right? I don't care if you find the cure or not, work's a good excuse to stay here. I don't want either of you outside after this starts."
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The hospital could never...
"You won't leave will you?" Mohinder asked, standing from a work station where little work could possibly be done to save them. "Please...don't go out there, Matt," he begged. Yes, begged. He was clearly emotional and tired and neither made a good man any better. He didn't want to live through another Odessa.
And this would be so much worse.
"I know you can help, or try to, but if you run into danger, it might be ready for you and we need you."
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"Yeah. I ... I need you too. But that'd just it, okay? I can keep the situation under control, buy some time ... maybe stop it together. Every minute I win out there? That's another minute nobody else has to die."
He fully believed that. He was a cop, he was a good guy, he was a man who wanted to protect his family - all of that backed him up when he looked back up at Mohinder. He was driven by duty and altruism and instinct and would absolutely risk himself for the people he cared about.
But it was more than that. He was also confident, knew he was capable both with a gun, with people and with his power. He was aware of the risks but he felt he could handle them. He wasn't afraid for his own sake, nowhere near as scared as he was losing Molly or Mohinder.
"I have to do something", he added. "I can't just hide and let these things happen."
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Mohinder wished, in this case, that he could be selfish, that he could call up Peter and have him teleport them all somewhere that this wasn't happening. A little island home, perhaps, where they could surf all day and grown coconuts and avacados. Mohinder wants and easier life than he has, he wants to go back to being a screw up on a smaller scale.
"If you need something to do, protect Molly. Keep the military out of this hospital or off of this floor. Be sure we have supplies. Be sure that when our world ends again, she's safe. You need to sleep in order to be any good to anyone."
Do you remember how it went last time, Matt?
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Well fuck me. This reply must have been eaten!
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