heroslayer: (came to rape me of my intellect)
For the last half an hour, Sylar and Claire had been standing atop a building near the site of the demon's latest attack, waiting for it to show up. It was, perhaps, not the best of ideas, considering the fact that Baileigh's Watcher had mentioned the thing had broadened its horizons and its hunting grounds, but he had no better plan. There were no real leads other than what Ethan had told them, after all, and he hadn't managed to catch a scent, back down at street level. So, there they were and, quite frankly, he was getting impatient.

Sighing, he cast Claire a glance, lips pressed into an unhappy line, and then turned his attentions further, over her shoulder, to frown in the direction of Baileigh and Sark's apartment. Claire had suggested that maybe they return there, see if Sark couldn't provide the clothes his fiancee had been wearing the night she'd stumbled home, sans her memory, just so he could hopefully get something to track the damn thing with. And while when she'd mentioned it, he'd dismissed it relatively easily, now he was having second thoughts. Anything would be better than--

--screaming. He could hear screaming somewhere, not too far off. Maybe it was nothing, maybe he was jumping the gun yet again--he was learning he had a knack for that sort of thing, when the people he cared about were in danger--but it couldn't be ignored.

Uncertain as to whether or not Claire could hear it, and not really having the time to check, he closed the distance she had put between them by wandering the ledge in two wide steps. "I've got something," he told her, and then just like that, he was putting an arm around her, poising himself to spring to a ledge on the next building, confident that he could make the jump, even with his niece in tow.
heroslayer: (hate every fucker that's in your way)
It's like standing next to a sinkhole, or at least that's the first thought he has, as he eases into Baileigh's mind, weaving between the spaces in her thought process, gently. There's conscious thought process all around him, solid and fluid, as she wonders what the hell he's doing, staring at her like that, but that's it. That's all there is, before there's empty black, reaching up for him, hungrily, as he peers into it, as if it's trying to pull him down, too. He nearly twitches, the motion reflexive like that feeling of falling right before falling asleep, and takes a mental step backwards, canting his head to one side, studying her. This is not what he expected at all.

He'd expected a knot of memory, so tangled it was impossible to pull it apart, to see what had been there originally. It would have taken time to undo, like working the kinks out of a ball of yarn, but he was sure it was possible. Now, though, with that space in her head, he's not sure. He can't do anything if there's nothing to work with in the first place.

He frowns, casting a glance back at Sark, who hasn't moved from the door frame where he's been leaning since he came in, and then returns his attentions to Baileigh. His eyes search her face for a moment, trying to find a new approach, not wanting to give up so easily, and it hits him like flash. The proverbial light bulb going on in a dark room.

"They say that memory has strong ties to scent," he says, not sure who, exactly, he's addressing, if he's speaking to either of them, specifically, at all. "It's why, when some people smell cookies baking, they think of their mothers. Or their grandmothers."

Baileigh nods slowly, frowning. "... Ok."

"Just bear with me."

It's meant to be a reassurance, and while he's not sure how well it works, it doesn't stop him.

Taking a deep breath, he sifts through the gaps in her mind again, stepping up to that blank space where memory once was. He doesn't bother staring into it this time, though, instead immediately conjuring to mind memories of Christmas. They're his own, but they're full of emotion, picked up through a power he still hasn't gotten a handle on. Full of light, happier moments for all of them, and the smell of Claire's cooking, the latter of which he takes care to emphasize, hoping the whole scent-memory relation is more than a myth. Then, slowly, he weaves them into the dark spaces in her mind, trying to bring recognition back into her eyes.

And, for an instant, there's a spark of something. For an instant, and then it all crumbles away, whatever he managed to kindle falling into the black hole her mind has become.

His frown deepens and he tries again, this time with a less cluttered setting--their meeting for drinks when they talked about their respective histories. It's a little harder to pin a certain scent on this one, his senses not as sharp as they were come Christmas, but he finally manages, focusing on the smell of alcohol. This time, however, there's no change in the way she looks, whatever did this to her snuffing it out before it can help.

Again and again, he tries, failing each time, frustration rising in his heart with each useless attempt, until finally he pushes away from the table, a snarl on his lips. He's sure he hears Baileigh jump, unable to remember that he's prone to violent outbursts when things don't go his way, but he ignores it, stalking over to Sark. He's silent for a moment, practically bristling like a cat, and then finally, he deflates, sighing.

"No luck?" Sark asks, one eyebrow raised, coolly.

He shakes his head. "Show me the books you mentioned."


Muse: Gabriel Gray (Sylar)
Fandom: Heroes
Word Count: 647
Note: Sark is [livejournal.com profile] elementof_risk, Baileigh is [livejournal.com profile] baileigh_solis, and both are used with permission.
heroslayer: (find redemption in suffering)
The first time he had been at JFK airport, it had been an experience. Getting checked in. Going through security, never once stopping to worry that his falsified papers would be a problem, because Sark was that damn good. Mohinder's murmured quips about how the airport staff addressed him as Brian or Mister Russo, as per his passport. It had been fun.

Now, however, standing in the baggage claim area of the airport, it felt like a cage, and he paced it as such, shoulders rolling with each step in such a way that made him seem more animal than man, and he didn't care who saw. He'd do what he damn well pleased, heedless of the small, disapproving looks he was getting from his partner, because this? This was the biggest waste of time he had ever encountered--he had to go find Sark and Bailiegh--and it, quite possibly, an act of God that he'd managed to stop himself from climbing up on the stationary belt, and up into the ceiling to find the damn bags himself.

Mohinder, who had dealt with his impatience well enough, caught that thought, and reached out to grab his wrist on the last pass, spinning him to face him. "That's not helping anyone, you realize."

"It's helping me, Suresh," he hissed, trying to tug his arm away; the geneticist only tightened his grip.

"No, it's not," he pointed out, frowning. "Baileigh and Sark aren't going anywhere, anytime soon, and your trying to pace a rut in the floor isn't going to make the bags come any faster. All it's serving is to draw unwanted attention to us."

Sylar was silent for a moment, tense, watching him from under his eyebrows. For as patient as he seemed on the surface, the killer could tell he was anything but, from his thoughts to the way he felt. Whether it was concern for Baileigh that was making the other man just as impatient as he was, want to get back to his family after being away for days, or simple bleed over from his racing thoughts, he didn't know, but under other circumstances, it would have been amazing. How controlled Mohinder was, despite evidence to the contrary.

It was also a small miracle that he, himself, wasn't having a telekinetic temper tantrum right here in the middle of the airport, but that was neither here nor there.

He sighed, relenting, and took his hand back from Mohinder--this time more gently--before lacing his fingers with his. He figured it was still safe territory, after all, since it wasn't as though they were going to see anyone they knew here, and well. Even if they were going to, it was just another thing to add to the ever-growing list of things he didn't care about, right now. Clearly, he thought he was a fairy from popular culture--he only had room for one care in his head at any given moment.

"I'm sorry," he muttered, closing his eyes, briefly, before reopening them to watch him. "This is why I don't have friends. I can't--" He didn't know what he couldn't, but it didn't matter, because first, Mohinder was shaking his head, and then the alarm signaling the release of their baggage was blaring.

Sylar sucked in a sharp breath through his teeth, fairly sure that Mohinder had done the same for how loud it was, and then let his eyes jump to the belt as it sprang to life, with a sigh of relief. Soon, they would have their luggage, and they--or maybe just he, if Mohinder didn't particularly feel like playing tag-along--would be at Sark's apartment, on the East Side. Soon, this nightmare would be over for all of them.

Or so he hoped, in spite of Sark telling him they were all likely helpless.


Muse: Gabriel Gray (Sylar)
Fandom: Heroes
Word Count: 630
Note: Mohinder is [livejournal.com profile] witnessof_fate and is used with permission.
heroslayer: (and i want to talk to you)
You alright? Claire said she texted you earlier, and you didn't answer.

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