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Sep. 12th, 2007 09:35 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
When Ray rolled back into the Firehouse from Milliways, Ecto wasn't in the garage. That was probably a good thing. If nothing else, it meant that she was at least getting out and about, even if it was only upstairs or down into the basement. "Janine?" the car called. "Janine, are you there?"
"In the bathroom, Dr. Stantz!" came the muffled answer.
"Oops! Sorry-"
"Not a problem!"
The total lack of biology made it impossible to feel properly embarrassed, since such a hefty component of the emotion was feedback from the physiological components of the response, but Ray still sort of wanted to duck his head and hunch his shoulders all the same. Instead he allowed himself the illusion of a sigh (forcing anything in or out of the radiator just didn't cut it) and sent out a series of pings.
"WHURF," came the answer from the electric kennel. Francis snapped into waking mode, came to his feet, and trotted over to the car's side.
"Good dog," said Ray. "Francis? Initiate find and retrieve behavior sequence. Scent identity to follow." It was easier to refer directly to his own entry in Francis' stored scent data in a stream of ones and zeroes than it was to explain names or appearances; he'd found the link to the Hound's data storage within a few minutes of returning to the Firehouse from the Empire State debacle. Working at a lower, more direct level of interface than the symbolic concatenations of language was simultaneously seriously funky and vaguely unnerving. Part of being human was not working with things directly, after all. That was what language and image were for.
"WHURF," the Hound answered, and dashed off up the stairs in search of Ecto. "WHURF WHURFWHURF WHURF whurf."
"Coming, Daddy!" Ecto called, and there were footsteps. Ray settled back on his rear suspension a little more and waited. He sort of wished Ecto could come to the garage via the pole, just so she'd know what it was like, but she was still getting used to bipedal locomotion and ordinary balancing. The variables involved in sliding down the poles without damaging the body were way more than she wanted to risk, or so she'd said. Privately, Ray wondered if she were afraid of heights. It wasn't like Ecto had ever been up so much as a flight of stairs before, after all. Looking down from the top of the pole was probably kind of unnerving to somebody for whom semicircular canals were a novelty.
Ecto arrived a moment later, somewhat awkwardly coming to a stop at the bottom of the stairs without tripping over Ray's- her own- feet. "What is it, Daddy?" she asked, swaying a little back and forth.
"Unlock the knees first," Ray suggested. "It'll be easier that way."
"Oh- right." A moment later she'd bent at the knees just a touch and had achieved a somewhat better balance. "Sorry, Daddy."
"Nothing to apologize for, kiddo. You're doing really well for someone who's only had legs for a few days." Ecto beamed. "I wanted to tell you, though- I got you some limbs."
Ecto blinked a few times, opening and closing Ray's mouth without actually saying anything. He almost laughed. He knew what having an empty speech queue could be like. "Waldoes?" she asked at last. "Like Dr. Octopus?"
"You've been reading my comic books," Ray said, a little surprised.
"Well, yeah," Ecto admitted. "I can turn the pages now. Will I still be able to? With the waldoes?"
"They're not waldoes exactly," Ray said. "They're arms. Real arms. Have a look."
One of the retractable arms slid out of its housing underneath the passenger side of the car and unfolded itself. It was jointed in several places, more so than a human arm, but it had to be; the body that it might have to reach around wasn't anywhere near as flexible or maneuverable as a human one. The mechanisms involved in the arm were infinitely more complicated than the simple musculature and bones and nerves of the human arm, too, since they had to fuel the same levels of strength along every centimeter of the limb- and, according to Ratchet, maintain the sort of fine motor control that would allow the user to catch an egg thrown at them without so much as scratching the shell. Ray was especially pleased with that, since it meant the five-fingered hand could turn paper pages as easily as a flesh hand might do.
"Wow," Ecto breathed. Her expression was one of pure fascination. "Where did you get that? Did Bonnie do that?"
"Nope," said Ray, with what would've been a grin if he'd had a face to grin with. "These babies aren't even Earth technology. They're Cybertronian work-"
It took him a moment to recognize the high-pitched sound that he was suddenly hearing. The eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee! noise was coming from Ecto, who was grinning furiously as she reached out to touch the alien hand with one of Ray's own.
"In the bathroom, Dr. Stantz!" came the muffled answer.
"Oops! Sorry-"
"Not a problem!"
The total lack of biology made it impossible to feel properly embarrassed, since such a hefty component of the emotion was feedback from the physiological components of the response, but Ray still sort of wanted to duck his head and hunch his shoulders all the same. Instead he allowed himself the illusion of a sigh (forcing anything in or out of the radiator just didn't cut it) and sent out a series of pings.
"WHURF," came the answer from the electric kennel. Francis snapped into waking mode, came to his feet, and trotted over to the car's side.
"Good dog," said Ray. "Francis? Initiate find and retrieve behavior sequence. Scent identity to follow." It was easier to refer directly to his own entry in Francis' stored scent data in a stream of ones and zeroes than it was to explain names or appearances; he'd found the link to the Hound's data storage within a few minutes of returning to the Firehouse from the Empire State debacle. Working at a lower, more direct level of interface than the symbolic concatenations of language was simultaneously seriously funky and vaguely unnerving. Part of being human was not working with things directly, after all. That was what language and image were for.
"WHURF," the Hound answered, and dashed off up the stairs in search of Ecto. "WHURF WHURFWHURF WHURF whurf."
"Coming, Daddy!" Ecto called, and there were footsteps. Ray settled back on his rear suspension a little more and waited. He sort of wished Ecto could come to the garage via the pole, just so she'd know what it was like, but she was still getting used to bipedal locomotion and ordinary balancing. The variables involved in sliding down the poles without damaging the body were way more than she wanted to risk, or so she'd said. Privately, Ray wondered if she were afraid of heights. It wasn't like Ecto had ever been up so much as a flight of stairs before, after all. Looking down from the top of the pole was probably kind of unnerving to somebody for whom semicircular canals were a novelty.
Ecto arrived a moment later, somewhat awkwardly coming to a stop at the bottom of the stairs without tripping over Ray's- her own- feet. "What is it, Daddy?" she asked, swaying a little back and forth.
"Unlock the knees first," Ray suggested. "It'll be easier that way."
"Oh- right." A moment later she'd bent at the knees just a touch and had achieved a somewhat better balance. "Sorry, Daddy."
"Nothing to apologize for, kiddo. You're doing really well for someone who's only had legs for a few days." Ecto beamed. "I wanted to tell you, though- I got you some limbs."
Ecto blinked a few times, opening and closing Ray's mouth without actually saying anything. He almost laughed. He knew what having an empty speech queue could be like. "Waldoes?" she asked at last. "Like Dr. Octopus?"
"You've been reading my comic books," Ray said, a little surprised.
"Well, yeah," Ecto admitted. "I can turn the pages now. Will I still be able to? With the waldoes?"
"They're not waldoes exactly," Ray said. "They're arms. Real arms. Have a look."
One of the retractable arms slid out of its housing underneath the passenger side of the car and unfolded itself. It was jointed in several places, more so than a human arm, but it had to be; the body that it might have to reach around wasn't anywhere near as flexible or maneuverable as a human one. The mechanisms involved in the arm were infinitely more complicated than the simple musculature and bones and nerves of the human arm, too, since they had to fuel the same levels of strength along every centimeter of the limb- and, according to Ratchet, maintain the sort of fine motor control that would allow the user to catch an egg thrown at them without so much as scratching the shell. Ray was especially pleased with that, since it meant the five-fingered hand could turn paper pages as easily as a flesh hand might do.
"Wow," Ecto breathed. Her expression was one of pure fascination. "Where did you get that? Did Bonnie do that?"
"Nope," said Ray, with what would've been a grin if he'd had a face to grin with. "These babies aren't even Earth technology. They're Cybertronian work-"
It took him a moment to recognize the high-pitched sound that he was suddenly hearing. The eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee! noise was coming from Ecto, who was grinning furiously as she reached out to touch the alien hand with one of Ray's own.