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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Arthur understood how people worked. When they needed something, they came calling, some more humble than others. It was exactly what was needed in this scenario. That little group was tantamount to the next phase of his plan, after all.
"They have a daughter," Arthur continued. "Raised together. She's eleven years old and her name is Molly. I suppose that makes you a grandfather," he said, snidely, not watching Mohinder climb on top of Matt to just burrow in against him. A click of the remote and the image changed to the elevator from that morning. "And they've been in a sexual relationship for some time." A lie, but Arthur was the master of lies. He gave no outward sign of it at all.
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But for now, Arthur wanted his talents and gave him something in return. It suited them both to be there.
That didn't make Maury any less disgusted at what he was being shown, though. His upper lip lifted as he watched his son receive head.
"I know her", he said gruffly. He did. The girl who could see things. To put it simply, he wouldn't mind the opportunity to get his revenge on the both of them. "Just tell me when and I'll tear them apart."
If Arthur had any special requests, that could be arranged, but Maury was already seeing the million possibilities.
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"Give them time. Let them think themselves out of harm. And then hurt the girl. Hurt her just enough to send them back to us." Of course, Maury had tried that before, but he'd been unknowing of the dangers. He'd been afraid of being found. He'd been over zealous. It wouldn't happen again, not when he knew his son's potential.
Matt was strong but Maury was still stronger. Arthur believed that. He assumed Maury did too.
Flicking off the screen, Arthur offered the older Parkman a drink. "Until that time, just watch. I need you to go to California first. Follow the innoculation. Be sure people are cured and if riots start, stop them." It would be impossible for Pinehearst to get good press if their drug was a flop, right?
Arthur needed press.
Downstairs, Mohinder sighed against Matt's neck. "Let's sleep for a week."
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It wouldn't be a problem.
He accepted the drink and swirled it around the glass for a moment before he downed half of it. "Yes, sir." Not a title he threw around with a lot of sincerity, but you tried to keep in good graces with Arthur Petrelli. He could throw in some manipulations on the press too, make sure everything was just peachy. "Consider it done."
Matt laughed faintly and dug his fingers a little further into Mohinder's hair. He really would be able to sleep that long if he allowed himself to fall asleep, it felt like. Curled up with Mohinder like this with the words shared between them and Molly asleep just a wall away, he finally felt like he'd really, truly landed. He knew it was likely to be a fleeting feeling in many ways, but he knew where to look for that touchstone now when New York came back to him.
It had been a lot more haunting than he'd really dealt with, but he wasn't thinking about that now.
"Tempting", he said. There was a yawn hiding somewhere there. "But I dunno. Someone's got to keep an eye on the kid."
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Oh. Oh, how little did they know.
When Mohinder did finally wake, several hours later, it was to Molly in the other room, knocking something over and cursing (in Hindi of all things!) loudly about it. Mohinder frowned and scooted out from under Matt's arm to find their daughter hard at work trying to prepare some sort of meal from items she'd taken from the cafeteria all on her little lonesome.
He stood there for a moment, watching her cleaning up the mess before he cleared his throat. "Your pronunciation is a bit too good," he said quietly, finger to his lips to quiet her from speaking too loudly.
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"People said it all the time at the markets. Grandma Suresh didn't think I heard."
Of course she had, though. She was observant and curses were easy to understand in any language.
There was a package of pasta on the table, the kind that was butterfly-shaped, and some broccoli.
"Do you want to help? We can surprise Matt."
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Mohinder reached a large bowl on the top of a shelf filled with their clothing and placed it on the tiny table. Of course he would help.
Pasta, vegetables, a cheesy sort of sauce. Bacon bits? Well, he'd put that aside from now. Matt could sprinkle it on after. "I don't think we have a large enough spoon, so wash your hands very well."
What? Kids liked to get messy!
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Getting to the bathroom to fetch the liquid soap they had there, she washed her hands by the kitchen sink. Although the one or two doors there were in this small apartment were usually open, she didn't much like not being able to see the men.
When she was done she handed the soap to Mohinder, because if she had to wash her hands then he should too.
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Who talked like a Mumbai market trader! Oh dear.
Accepting the soap, Mohinder washed up a well, half way to his elbows, and then followed Molly back to their living space-slash-kitchen with his hands up like a surgeon.
"Are you prepared, Doctor Walker?" he asked, giving her a solemn look. He certainly was the more strict of the two, but that was fine. Matt was intimidating but far more huggable. Mohinder thought so too.
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If she started school again. She wanted to, but things kept changing all the time and it left her kind of doubtful. But at least they were all together again.
She fought not to giggle when Mohinder looked at her that way, succeeded pretty well in that, and put the package of pasta in his hand with great care like she'd seen on TV. "Super prepared." Then she grinned. "The broccoli aren't feeling too well. They need an operation."
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Filling a bowl with water and dumping the ice in, Mohinder 'shocked' the broccoli so Molly could see and the limp vegetable regained some colour and even a bit of crunch.
"Go one then, be careful, they're still quite hot. Blot off the water and mix them in quite well with the pasta." He'd give Molly the messier jobs. He'd rather spend the time with the miniature microwave warming up whatever sauce she'd stolen. It tasted a bit salty, so likely, it was some sort of cheese product. Not the best, but it would be tasty for the Americans no doubt.
When the ingredients were hand mixed, Mohinder watched the girl for a few minutes and tried to open her up a bit.
"We won't be staying here too much longer, Molly. When it's safe, would you like to find a new home somewhere else?"
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Molly quite enjoyed the messier tasks, so it worked out well, even if she looked skeptical at some of the things he suggested. Vegetables in ice? That didn't make much sense to her, but she knew Mohinder was a good cook, so she followed the instructions. Not without poking some fun at it, though.
She also made a show of threatening him with her messy fingers once she'd mixed the ingredients together but had sense enough to not actually grab any clothing. They both washed their hands again after that, though.
She was grabbing some forks to start setting the table when he asked her that, and she put the cutlery down after glancing at him. She knew what that meant. It was an issue to her even if it couldn't be helped.
"I know we have to", she said. What she wanted or what any of them wanted didn't seem to matter in the end and she was aware of this. "When will it be safe?"
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Well. Sold for a nominal charge to cover manufacturing and covered by all American insurance types which amounted to roughly five dollars a dose. Mohinder thought that reasonable for everyone, especially because Pinehearst could not function without capital investments.
And it wasn't as if they were making a profit on Mohinder's hard work.
Yet.
"We can't go back to New York. Or Atlanta. But there are safe places for us. You can return to school. Matt and I will find new work."
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But still.
"It's unfair", she said somewhat dejectedly. And it really was, but they all knew that. She looked up at him. "Do we have to keep hiding?"
Because if there really was a place that was safe, really safe, then they shouldn't have to. Right?
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This felt like a virginity advocacy talk. Mohinder found it quite uncomfortable.
"When and if that time comes, it will be up to you to decide if you share yourself with them or not. No matter where we go, however, you are legally Matt's daughter. And legally mine. We don't have to worry about the Company any more, not like we did. We don't have to hide our family. But if you'd rather not discuss it with your friends at your new school, that's all right too."
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"And the Bogeyman is dead", she added, a not-really-question because she needed the confirmation. She watched for it in Mohinder's face. "And the Nightmare man won't wake up. So we don't have to be scared of them."
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He tucked that ornery strand of light brown behind her ear again since it hardly seemed capable of staying put.
"We don't have to hide any more, though." And it might be difficult to. Matt was famous. Mohinder, in name at least, would be too. "But we might stay out of big cities and stay someplace a little more quiet."
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She was thinking along the same lines as Mohinder, too. "Because you're famous now", she said easily enough. She'd seen that on TV a lot. Famous people had to hide from the news crew if they wanted to be left alone. It was one of the reason she didn't want to be, either. "If we move to the country, can we have animals?"
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He heard the microwave ding and he stood up to fetch the bowl. Matt should be woken in a few minutes or he'd be even more screwed up in his sleep schedule.
Mohinder thought about unleashing Molly on him when the question came.
"Before I say yes or no, what sort of animals are you imagining?"
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She stood when Mohinder did and pulled the chair over to the cabinets so she could stand on it and reach for glasses, because she'd been distracted by the talking from getting them the last time around. It was from that position she shot Mohinder one of her entirely too charming smiles.
"Bunnies. They're soft. And quiet. Please?"
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Or beg him. Mohinder knew how Molly operated when it came to the older man. He was a softy, she was his little princess. And Mohinder... Well, Mohinder wasn't always the enforcer, even if he did tend to lean that way. Often.
He didn't think much about interviews or photos right now. None of that was important. He'd rather write a paper or two. Publish a book. The rest was inconsequential.
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Not necessarily to ask about bunnies, but because his name served as a reminder that he was still asleep. Still, maybe the prospect of bunnies had something to do with it. Less because of a bunny itself but because ... well, families had pets. And it was another little promise that they'd stay together.
She never doubted that they wanted to, but it was always nice when it was confirmed.
When Mohinder gave his agreement she finished setting the table before she went off into his and Matt's room and pounced gently on the man asleep there. There was an art to it that all children had.
"Matt, wake up! We made food!"
Matt, who in all honesty would be content to stay asleep for five more hours, nonetheless cracked open an eye to look at her smile. "Five more minutes, mom", he teased her with a yawn, and she laughed and pulled on his hand.
He got up. Of course he did, but it was in that half-asleep state that was all about stretching and scrubbing your hand across your face to wake up properly. In Matt's case, it was his first uninterrupted sleep in a month - if he had difficulty pulling himself from it, it was probably understandable. He felt so much better though and even if he still looked kind of hollowed out, it was easy to forget when he smiled.
"Hey, pasta!"
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"Better do it, he'll nag."
"Nag!" Mohinder clucked his tongue. "I do not nag. Nagging is for old women and I'm neither. And don't you say I am old, Miss Walker, because you'll be thirty one day yourself and have a whole new definition of old." There was nothing terrible being planned for the evening. All around them, the world was slowly healing itself.
After dinner and washing up, they -- the three of them, the first time they could say that in awhile -- went to the employee lounge and witnesses the new reports of the first batch of inoculations being manufactured on a larger scale intermeshed with responses and relief from the rest of the country.
Even the former Mayor of New York had something to say about the military returning to the city to help survivors out.
Mohinder just relaxed on one of the large sofas, leaning against Matt, Molly on the other man's lap. Finally. A win.
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Breakfast-dinner was nice, and although the three of them wouldn't function on normal hours for a while, it didn't seem to matter. It was getting dark out but the building was all lit up as people kept working and it was quite lively in the lounge.
There were cheers and some applause amid the mostly-serious atmosphere and that was really nice. People congratulating and smiling at each other - a whole room-full of them - it was more than nice.
Then again, they'd really earned it. They'd managed something really big.
Matt had his arms wrapped around Molly's stomach and his chin leaning near Mohinder's temple, thinking back at him.
You made it happen, you know.
Matt believed that. Mohinder didn't always seem to. But nodding towards that cute assistant of his, Tabitha something as she came up to them, smiling widely, Matt added, You better shake some hands, man.
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What good will shaking hands do? Mohinder did want the best for everyone, including himself. That had little to do with photo ops and handshaking. He wanted leave to have a bunny farm with Matt and Molly somewhere quiet where he could continue his research, write a few books...and maybe save the day a few more times.
He didn't need to be thanked. Though, he'd not argue if they decided to pay him a little better.
College was expensive. Even if Molly ended up not going and went into a trade instead, he wanted to be able to leave her something.
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Well fuck me. This reply must have been eaten!
seems that way!
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