Dick Grayson (
usedacrobatics) wrote2013-03-19 09:31 pm
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ROBIN √ 001 √ 3-19-13
[The gear snaps on after falling out of the bag. Heard in the background is the sound of a Pokeball releasing its occupant, and wings flapping. The Pokemon, a Taillow, nudges the Pokegear towards the edge of—yes, it’s a roof. The bag was tossed up on to the roof of Mom’s house, the gear and Pokeball were jostled by the impact, and they are now both looking over the edge at a boy dressed in a red and black bodysuit, with a yellow and black cape. He’s climbing out of the bedroom window. The Taillow focuses the camera on the “R” logo on the kid’s chest. It looks important!]
Ooookay. Definitely not in Kansas anymore. Kansas would be so good right about now.
[He edges a little further out, seating himself on the windowsill, back towards the outside, and sizing up the roof. He catches sight of the bird holding the camera and grins, the eye lenses of his domino mask widening to reflect slight surprise. He doesn’t realize that it’s recording yet.]
Me not being in Kansas anymore must make you Toto, huh? Or Dinah. Birds holding cameras seem a bit more Wonderland than Oz, but I’m not the expert. So long as you’re not Cheshire, I think we can work with it, though.
[He looks back up at the roof, still grinning. He grips the edge with both hands, and pulls himself up with a grunt, and mutters:]
Since when does this require effort?
[Another grunt of exertion, and Robin forces his body upwards into a handstand, trying to balance on the edge of a sloped roof, before turning a quick tumble into a crouch.
It… doesn’t work that way. His legs are wobbling slightly, and when he tries to swing into the tumble, his balance shifts and he topples over with a brief yell of shock.
In the opposite direction.
Off the roof.
Shocked yell out of the way, Robin begins trying to grip something, anything on the wall while the Taillow squawks in distress and drops the camera. The Pokegear rights itself on the ground just in time to see the bird grasp the Boy Wonder’s cape.
It slows his descent, but the weight is too much for a small, level 5 Taillow and the two crash into the ground, Robin groaning as his knees absorb the impact. He gives the bird a pained, but grateful look.]
Well, you have Superman’s color scheme down. We can work on the rescuing thing.
[He flops over, lying on his side. Taillow uses his wings to shade his eyes from the sun, and Robin gently strokes the bird’s breast. Annoyed:]
I cannot believe I just fell off a roof. Nobody saw that, right? I just fell off a roof.
Batman would kill me if he knew I actually fell off a roof. I mean, there goes my reputation. Say nothing of the mystique. A roof. Not even a big roof. It’s only two stories—and—
[He notices the Pokegear Taillow dropped. It’s lit up.]
Why is that thing—
[Click!]
Ooookay. Definitely not in Kansas anymore. Kansas would be so good right about now.
[He edges a little further out, seating himself on the windowsill, back towards the outside, and sizing up the roof. He catches sight of the bird holding the camera and grins, the eye lenses of his domino mask widening to reflect slight surprise. He doesn’t realize that it’s recording yet.]
Me not being in Kansas anymore must make you Toto, huh? Or Dinah. Birds holding cameras seem a bit more Wonderland than Oz, but I’m not the expert. So long as you’re not Cheshire, I think we can work with it, though.
[He looks back up at the roof, still grinning. He grips the edge with both hands, and pulls himself up with a grunt, and mutters:]
Since when does this require effort?
[Another grunt of exertion, and Robin forces his body upwards into a handstand, trying to balance on the edge of a sloped roof, before turning a quick tumble into a crouch.
It… doesn’t work that way. His legs are wobbling slightly, and when he tries to swing into the tumble, his balance shifts and he topples over with a brief yell of shock.
In the opposite direction.
Off the roof.
Shocked yell out of the way, Robin begins trying to grip something, anything on the wall while the Taillow squawks in distress and drops the camera. The Pokegear rights itself on the ground just in time to see the bird grasp the Boy Wonder’s cape.
It slows his descent, but the weight is too much for a small, level 5 Taillow and the two crash into the ground, Robin groaning as his knees absorb the impact. He gives the bird a pained, but grateful look.]
Well, you have Superman’s color scheme down. We can work on the rescuing thing.
[He flops over, lying on his side. Taillow uses his wings to shade his eyes from the sun, and Robin gently strokes the bird’s breast. Annoyed:]
I cannot believe I just fell off a roof. Nobody saw that, right? I just fell off a roof.
Batman would kill me if he knew I actually fell off a roof. I mean, there goes my reputation. Say nothing of the mystique. A roof. Not even a big roof. It’s only two stories—and—
[He notices the Pokegear Taillow dropped. It’s lit up.]
Why is that thing—
[Click!]
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I'll make it up on the uneven bars.
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[He shakes some grass out of his cape.]
I was kinda hoping someone else would hear me. Just not a bunch of strangers.
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[There's a brief shuffle offscreen, and then abruptly she's got a fortune cookie in her mouth, which she proceeds to bite in half and pull apart, sliding the paper free of the cookie halves.]
Were you on your way to one of those big comic book geek convention things?
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As you pointed out, comic books are for geeks.
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Says the guy in the Robin costume.
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Point.
[Seeing as how he's basically describing Hardison here...]
You're probably all of the above, right?
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Would a geek of any non-athletic caliber really try to attempt what I was attempting?
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[A beat passes as something seems to click.]
Wait. You're mad because you think being a geek is a bad thing, aren't you.
[OH MAN, SHE JUST FIGURED OUT SOMETHING IMPLICIT IN A SOCIAL INTERACTION. This is a triumph of the highest order.]
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[Legit curious, before he gets back on track.]
I'm perturbed because I think you intended it as an insult, basically. I'm neither mad nor do I consider it necessarily a bad thing.
[He's got mathlete trophies okay.]
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[She shrugs, popping the other half of her cookie into her mouth — but then kind of blinks at the explanation because on one hand, wow, stuff like this is way easier when people actually say what they mean like that, and on the other hand...]
Why would I mean that? It's the age of the geek.
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[He tilts his head a bit.]
In my circle, yeah, but not everyone's. I just like making sure I'm on the same page as everyone else.
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[She remarks, in the tone of voice one might use when discussing the weather or something equally standard.]
So are you a comic-book-video-game-action-figure geek? Enthusiast, whatever. I like your costume.
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[He shrugs.]
My actual life is much more interesting than any of those mere hobbies.
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Someone just stole a priceless work of art from a museum. Security system is still intact, none of the guards saw anything. The safe is a Glen-Reider model 680X and the clearance diagonal of the ventilation shafts is four inches too short to get the artwork through. What do you do?
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But is there a skylight.
Good thinking that it didn't really leave the museum, though.
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[But he sounds a little annoyed with himself, because duh. Batman would murder him in his sleep if realized his sidekick had made such an amateurish mistake.
Never mind that he just spent most of the night drowning, burning, running, and trying to keep Artemis from panicking.]
Ask me another one. Let me get warmed up.
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After all, the guy is dressed like Robin and talking about knowing Batman.]
It also kind of depends on what the artwork is. You say artwork and most people think painting, right? But it could be the statue of David. That's where you'd need the skylight, for lowering the cables from the helicopter. And if it was the David then the clearance diagonal doesn't really matter because you couldn't take a six-ton statue out through the shafts anyway, but it would indicate some pretty sloppy building planning because it's like seventeen feet tall, which means you'd have a sixteen foot eight inch ventilation duct. You could drive a truck through that. If it was a little truck. Context.
[She emphasizes this with jazz hands, and proceeds to look proud of herself for actually even knowing what jazz hands are.]
Okay, ummm...oh! Okay. There's a bomb submerged in a vase of flowers activated by a motion sensor. C-4. Someone's holding the vase and it'd be really good if they didn't get blown up. But they can't set down the vase because shaky hands, too risky, water motion, all that stuff. Also you're in a kitchen. What do you do?
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But probability indicates that it would be a painting. So, while context is definitely important, you can't always wait for every piece to fall in before you start pursuing leads. The longer you wait, the less chance you have of solving the crime.
[...she's either thought way too much about this or else she is highly eccentric.
Then again, the two are not mutually exclusive.]
Hmm. The vase would make it too difficult to hack the motion sensors. I wouldn't be able to plug my USB in without jostling the vase, especially if someone was holding it.
First thing would be to call for an evacuation of the building. The bomb would have to be disarmed somehow.
[Mentally reviewing everything he knows about C-4... He smacks himself in the forehead. What did you do just an hour ago, boy blunder?]
EMP emitter. If nothing else, it'd shut down the motion sensor, allowing the person holding it to get away and me to disarm it normally.
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And speaking of eccentric, she lights up like a kid on Christmas at that deduction.]
Oooh! We didn't even think of that! We just put gelatin in the water to solidify it enough that it could be moved without going off right away. But an EMP would've totally worked. ...I think. Maybe it would've fried all the computers and stuff, too. But I guess those all kind of got wrecked anyway when the bomb went off...
[Parker, you're talking to yourself again. AND STILL ON THE COMM.]
That's really cool, though, do you just carry one of those around?
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[He shrugs.]
I do know how to disarm a bomb without a computer. The computer's just faster.
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[She grins, like this amuses her somehow, though it's hard to pinpoint why.]
What's your record for disarming a security system?
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[Hey, if you're amused, he's... well, he'll try and pinpoint it, and smile in kind.]
A whole security system? I can hack the Justice League's in about seven minutes.
[Because it's identical to the one in the Batcave that he learned on, but details, details.]
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