
The carers had told him he needed to go out and meet new people. Isaiah had no idea how to do that. Back in his home world he had been confined to a hospital bed for years on end, and his only way of socialising had been through a VR game. Interacting without a persona, face-to-actual-face was something he was inept at.
They had bought him a bus ticket into town, and given him the phone number of a nearby staff member who would be available if anything went particularly wrong. It had been a bad idea to withhold the reminder of his frequent seizures but there was nothing he could do now.
Armed with a decent chunk of cash and thankful for the rather flat terrain of downtown – and the semi-electric wheelchair they'd been given – he made a stop at a small, frilly-windowed cafe tucked away in a quaint alley. He was wrapped up in a sweater and a scarf, some fluffy gloves hiding almost everything that screamed 'non-organic', except his eyes.
With a cup of hot chocolate and a slice of lemon cake – that he was regretting already -, Isaiah to not get lost in his thoughts, wondering if he should call the number he'd been given and go back to Yarrow.