Nancy Drew aint got nuttin on me.

Alex Monroe

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Mar 25, 2009
257
Alex couldn’t believe she was doing this. She had powers that let her read the minds of any man, woman, or child she ever met. Yet she was here in the computer lab doing the most mundane internet searching of one little crippled boy she just met a few days before. Just a few seconds of poking around in his mind would be all it takes to confirm her fears about him, but that would require her to be near him. And while she could poke through people’s minds with little or no adverse effects to them she is still not perfect and he might know she was probing him, and he might try and kill her too.

Se there she was sitting in front of a computer for the last four or five hours searching the internet for a news paper clipping, or police report, obituary for any kid who around four to six years old that was crushed to death. All she had found out so far was that there is there are a scarily large number of kids that age dropping dead. Letting out an annoyed sigh she slumped back in here chair and rubbed her face. This is so ridiculous it was like finding a needle in a hay stack, in a big pile of other hay. Leaning forward she rested her forehead in one hand and rubbed her eyes with another. Her eyes were beginning to ach from this; maybe she should take a break.
 

birdie

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Jul 9, 2005
5,558
It was just a paper. Just a little research, a little typing, and then he’d print off what he needed or copy places he could find it so that he could work on it in his dorm room. At least in his room he was away from ridicule and didn’t have to bother with the rest of the student body here. Book in his left hand, he twisted the door handle with his right and opened it just enough for him to slip inside. It didn’t take much, since he had a small, lithe, perhaps even malnourished body.

As he walked, Sabriel kept his golden eyes glued to the floor. There weren’t many other people in here, which he was glad of, but there were some. Sabriel was about to sit down at a computer in the corner when his hip knocked into something. There was a soft thud as a textbook fell to the ground and Sabriel froze, panicking for a moment. Oh no. His perfect plan to avoid everyone had gone totally, utterly wrong. Oh no. Oh no. Oh crap!

“Uh…” Sabriel stuttered, leaning down to pick up her book. He didn’t make eye contact with her and instead placed the book where it had been before. “Sorry. I didn’t mean to.”
 

Alex Monroe

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Mar 25, 2009
257
Alex was so absorbed in her own sulking at the unsuccessful hunt for information about Cole that she didn’t even hear another person enter the room. Why couldn’t she find anything on this incident was it even out there or was it just the overactive imagination of wheelchair bound boy’s mind? Her pondering were interrupted by a loud thud that caused her to jolt up and sit up straight in the chair blinking like an idiot who just stared into a very bright flash. When did this boy get here? His thoughts seemed rather panicky, acting like he just killed her cat rather than knocking over her book over on the floor.

“It’s fine, it’s fine.” Alex said, “Don’t worry about it. No harm done.”
 

birdie

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Jul 9, 2005
5,558
It… it was fine? But, but he’d disturbed her work! Sabriel was confused, although in a moment that washed away to make his heart feel fuzzy. He had learned a long time ago not to get his hopes up in any social situation, regardless of circumstances, but she was at least being nice. That was all he could ask for – and hell, Sabriel never did.

“Oh, okay,” he agreed, not going to persist his opinion when it might make matters worse. For a moment he mustered the courage to lift his gaze to meet her own, his golden eyes, which were as panicked as his thoughts but far more lucid, meeting her brown ones. It lasted for only an instant, however, and the small connection was over before Sabriel registered it had really even happened.

He was stuck for a moment, unsure what was called for. He had apologized and she had forgiven him, but it seemed wrong to just leave it at that. Shifting his stance a little, he asked in a quiet, uncertain tone, “Is it okay if I sit near you?”

Sabriel was incapable of making friends. But he could at least try, right?
 

Alex Monroe

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Mar 25, 2009
257
Alex tilted her head in bemusement at this kid’s behavior; he was just so socially awkward. Yes, she had to admit ninety-percent of the time she was barley comfortable in her own skin but this kid seemed like he wanted to find the nearest crack in the wall and hide in it forever. It was rather sad and it took all the will power she had not to show that on her face. The kid she had to admit looked kind of off to her, he looked younger than her and was almost the same height and he looked rather sickly and pale looking; she couldn’t help but wonder if he was sick or something. It never crossed her mind at that moment is the fact he had strange cat like ears and a tail, her life had become that surreal. But she did find herself transfixed by his golden color eyes; she couldn’t help but stare at them. Oh god! She thought I’m gazing into another man’s eyes! With that thought she now was beginning to feel about as awkward as that kid. She was become way to girly, she lamented, she had to do something to reassert her masculinity, like putting up drywall, or building something with power tools.

“Hmm?” She said as he asked her a question. That seemed to be a bad habit she was picking up every time someone asked her something. “Yeah sure have a seat.” With that she telekinetically pulled the chair out at the computer next to her for him.
 

birdie

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Jul 9, 2005
5,558
She hesitated when he asked the question. Sabriel froze at this and reprimanded himself immediately. Who did he think he was, to ask something like that? To even dare to think that she might allow his company?! He was beneath them all – they had the right to turn him away, even if it did hurt him sometimes.

It was then that the sound of the chair legs scraping against the tile floor yanked him out of his thoughts. Sabriel’s heart rate sped up for a few moments and he looked at her, absolutely shocked when she said it was okay. It… it was okay? He hadn’t even asked to sit next to her, just near her!

Oh, yay! Maybe it was a mistake – but Sabriel allowed himself to feel happy. He smiled and sat down, fixing his book so that it was propped up in his lap and on the edge of the table. “I’m Sabriel,” he said, looking at her. “Sabe.” He tried not to get too excited and reminded himself that she could have just been being nice. Being nice didn’t mean they were friends or anything of the sort. It could have just been pity, or something.
 

Alex Monroe

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Inactive
Mar 25, 2009
257
After sliding the chair out for the boy Alex went back to doing her research on the computer. She thought that was the end of it and the kid would go do whatever it is he came in here to do. But as she tried to read she kept getting interrupted by the kid’s thoughts. It was like trying to sleep under an underpass at rush hour. But his mind was just so loud with thoughts, and these were only the surface thoughts. What is his mind really like, she couldn’t help but wonder. With that she sighed and stopped reading the old newspaper article about some child’s grizzly murder and dismemberment, she was sure this wasn’t what she was looking for.

“Alex,” She said flatly as she glanced at him absently before she went back to searching. Then stopped reading again, he was just so nervous it was beginning to distract her. “Sabe.” She said looking at him with the warmest smile she could muster. “It’s okay you can calm down. I’m not going to bite.”
 

birdie

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Inactive
Jul 9, 2005
5,558
Her tone surprised him enough that he whirled his head around to look at her. Sabriel wondered if he had thought too soon; with the way things seemed to change so quickly he figured it was possible. More than possible, actually. He looked away from her and began to do his research, glued to what was written in his notebook. Find what you need and get the hell out of here, he urged himself.

Sabriel’s attention returned to her however when she said her next piece. He was left confused for a moment until his face went a little pale. “But I am calm,” he lied. “What would make you think otherwise?” Sabriel knew he was a nervous, fidgety kid, and that he couldn’t hide it – but was it that obvious? Bah, of course. Nothing ever worked in his favor. “I know you’re not going to bite,” he muttered, shifting in the chair a little. “Unless you’re a cannibal or something… but I highly doubt that you are.” Something of a smile tried to pull onto his face and for a moment, for a split second in time, he relaxed.
 

Alex Monroe

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Inactive
Mar 25, 2009
257
Alex laughed inwardly as the boy denied being squirmy. It was always adorably refreshing when people tried to lie to her, a psychic, but of course this kid didn’t know that so he could be forgiven for trying to deny something. Of course it was probably for the best that he doesn’t know she could read his mind. He would probably have a panic attack or aneurism. And she really wasn’t up to explaining to anyone why she made a kids brain explode from anxiety.

“Oh, I know.” Alex said with a coy smile. “I’m very good at reading people.” She added, and it wasn’t a lie, but it was the whole truth either. She kind of felt bad for lying to him, there was something about this poor kid that made her not want to wrong him, lest he curls up into a ball somewhere and never comes out for the rest of his life.

Alex smiled as the boy cracked a joke. “See that’s better.” Alex said with a small laugh. “Telling jokes is the perfect way to diffuse a situation you’re unsure about.”
 
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