#OH OH NEPTUNE FROM THE PLANETS SUITE ITS SO CREEPY I LOVE IT
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I think everyone deserves to be just a little bit obsessed with a random specific piece of classical music
#Nutcracker pas de deux and rhapsody of a theme of Paganini make me want to BITE SOMETHING AND SCREAM AND WAIL AND GO INSANE#And Hungarian Rhapsody no. 2 cause haha funny animation reference#Danse macabre is also a good one fuckin love that one#OH OH NEPTUNE FROM THE PLANETS SUITE ITS SO CREEPY I LOVE IT#I know I'm saying a lot of very famous ones but sue me they're good pieces#Its not really c l a s s i c a l but Olympia's aria from tales of Hoffman is awesome if you haven't seen Rachel Gilmore's performance of it#Go watch it now#I could keep going honestly cndnskkfjfjs
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Ibytm - T minus 7 seconds
Masterpost - Previous Chapter - Next Chapter - ao3
Words: 3,964
Logan cracks his knuckles, his elbows propped on the arms of a chair near the middle of the presentation room. Across the table from him, Joy doodles absently in the margins of her notebook. Logan is pretty sure that if Cassidy werenât there to subtly turn the page for her, the flowers and floating eyes would crawl off the pages and etch themselves into the surface of the table. Director Gazebo paces at the head of the room, smacking a remote against his palm and muttering under his breath. Itâs been something like five minutes since he last successfully switched slides, and all delusions of focus and interest have completely melted away. Even Miss Katie-Lee, who was helping hand out papers and fill in pieces of information for the director, is playing something on her phone with vague disinterest. Logan wonders whether she might just fall asleep right where she stands.
Logan, on the other hand, absolutely cannot force himself to look disinterested in anything the director does, ever. Not with that meeting from a couple weeks ago still weighing on his mind. Instead, he does his best to look like heâs taking detailed notes in his pocket notebook, glancing around the room as if deep in thought. He takes careful stock every few seconds of the impossibly high number of important people in here. The absolutely quintessential âwhoâs whoâ of this branchâJoy and Miss Katie-Lee, of course, but also Mx. Oatmeal, Cassidy and her independent focus advisor, the directors of the individual satellite branches floating nearby, those inexplicable people in nice suits that follow Director Gazebo everywhere, even the notoriously good-looking folks that are always sweeping in and out of Miss Katie-Leeâs office. Oh, and who could forget Roman?
Logan could.
Logan would love to do that, in fact.
Heâs taken multiple steps to prove to the director just how much he wants this, despite how wrong it feels to be slacking off to improveâtalking about non-work things with Cassidy and Alex, getting to know the fifth floor interns (even though they arenât technically on the fifth floor anymore), helping those same interns with their work and genuinely enjoying it rather than it being revision out of obligation, even trying to be more open with Virgil about whatâs going on inside his head. He hasnât quite gotten the hang of that last one yet, but itâs not like the director ever sees him do itâor not do it, as the case usually tends to be. He tries, though. They both do.
The biggest riskâtalking to Romanâis one he really isnât looking forward to. He hasnât even tried yet, actually. Probably explains why Roman is in the far back corner of the room, whispering with Alex.
Logan isnât doing very well at pretending to be taking notes, in case that wasnât obvious.
Finally, the remote in the directorâs hand buzzes to life, shuffling the presentation to the last slide. Miss Katie-Lee moves next to him and peers over his shoulder, pointing at one of the buttons and nodding. A sigh of relief (or maybe itâs annoyanceâLogan isnât great at gauging that sort of thing) ripples through the room when the slideshow cycles back to the top, displaying a picture of a rocket preparing to launch.
The director gives Miss Katie-Lee a smile and nod before turning to address the room. âWhat craft was this?â
Logan doesnât bother raising his hand, merely calling out the name in unison with the rest of the room. âVanguard TV3.â
âAnd on what historic date did this craft fail two seconds after launch?â
âDecember sixth, nineteen fifty-seven.â Itâs more of an automatic response on Loganâs part than a concentrated effort to access the trivia from its overflowing file tucked away in a secure corner of his mind. The director nods his approval and moves on to the next slide, and Logan is pretty sure the better part of his room-sweeping gaze centers on him. He sits up straighter.
âGood start, folks. Now, back to basicsâroughly how long would it take for a spacecraft to reach the moon?â Wow, really back to basics. He wasnât kidding.
âThree days.â Even Logan has to admit, it does sound just the slightest bit creepy, everyone answering in monotonous unison like this.
The director clicks over to the next slide, which proudly declares the words âspeed roundâ in times new roman. The font yanks Loganâs thoughts toward Roman without his consent, and he again thinks about how unjustly cold heâs been to the guy lately. Hardly a word between them, aside from the usual obligatory greetings. Maybe that ought to be his next risk, resolving that whole situation. Certainly one of the more unnerving ideas heâs entertained.
âAlright, everyone, speed round time. How many miles to the moon?â
â240,000.â
âIn kilometers?â
The briefest of pauses. â386,400.â
âLargest crew aboard a spacecraft to date?â
âEight.â
âWhy do we want to minimize travel time for human astronauts?â
âSpace has harmful radiation.â Okay, so that one wasnât quite so perfectly in unison, and various other answers tried to break through, but the general idea does manage to echo around the room.
âOf the nearly two hundred planet-orbiting moons in our solar system, in which place is our moon with regards to size?â
âFifth largest.â
âLatin word for its highlands?â
âMaria.â
âMeaning?â
âSeas.â
âHow many nations have landed on the moon?â
âThree.â The word five also bounces around, but Logan is in the former party.
âOkay, who did it first?â
âThe United States.â This, too, has a second answer making a valiant effortâNeil Armstrong, obviously. Again, Logan is in the former group.
âWhen?â
This one, interestingly enough, prompts two very distinct answers. One sizeable group, to which Logan is party, gives the predictable answer of July twentieth, nineteen sixty-nine, but one (much smaller) group says something incredibly different.
âWow, I didnât realize this very important meeting was just gonna be a history lesson.â
Not a valid nor correct answer, in case that wasnât clear.
Logan, along with pretty much every other superior in the room, swivels in his seat to stare at Roman, who still leans against the wall at the far back of the room. Beside him, Alex looks like theyâre doing everything they can to feign not having heard him.
Roman shrugs and raises his eyebrows, tilting his head toward the director. âItâs a valid question. Nobody in this roomâs an idiot, we all passed our college courses, gen eds and otherwise, we all took the entrance exams, weâve all done the work to get here. Not to step out of line or anything, but this is all grade school stuff. Seems kinda dumb to be quizzing us on stuff anyone with a working internet connection could figure out.â
Logan debates whether this would be a good time to work on one of those risks heâs been dealing with by striding to the back of the room and smacking Roman across the face. The director stiffens, but Logan canât tell whether itâs agitation or impressed satisfaction.
âDoes anyone else agree with Romanâs perspective?â
Thereâs a few quiet mumbles and the odd cough or sniffle, but no one speaks up. Logan flinches when the directorâs eyes land on him, but again, thereâs something behind those eyes he canât trace. When the director doesnât look away, the idea of screaming crosses Loganâs mind. Risk. Risk. You are not special simply for doing your job. You need to go above and beyond if you want to achieve the dream you claim you have, despite all evidence pointing to the contrary.
Logan clears his throat and raises his hand, and honest to god, the room falls silent. Even Joyâs scribbling pen halts. The director nods at him to speak, at the same moment that Logan finds his heart standing at the edge of a bottomless pit. It jumps over.
âHe makes a good point.â The director lifts his chin, but says nothing. âWe already know all of this information, given how easily we can answer it on a dime, and youâve gathered up most of the higher profile people in this branch, not to mention the ones around it. It seems counterintuitive to waste their time with the basics when they could be working toward something more concrete, rather than an eighth grade science test review.â Logan literally bites his tongue when he closes his mouth, belatedly realizing he just told the literal head of his career that his meeting is a waste of Loganâs time. Too big of a risk, perhaps, but thereâs certainly no taking it back now. He also belatedly realizes his arm is still in the air, so he yanks it down with his other hand.
Thereâs a beat of silence, where not even Joy dares look at Logan. Logan swallows and turns his eyes toward the ground, feeling Romanâs gaze burning daggers into his back. Does this count toward resolving the little spat he never bothered explaining to Roman? Hell, Roman might not even know Logan was madâfor all heâs been told, Logan just decided out of nowhere to start talking to the interns. Logan shouldâve just kept with the mediocrity, shouldâve stayed within armâs reach of his safety net, shouldâve learned to grit his teeth and bear it while Roman prattled on, completely oblivious to how much better he was than Logan.
âRoman and Logan,â the director finally says. âYou two stay. Everyone else, youâre excused.â
The remaining people cannot possibly get out of the room fast enough. Itâs concentrated chaos as they scramble to gather their respective belongings and rush the door, a bunch of space enthusiasts who would probably rather be on literal Neptune right now than in this room. Come to think of it, Neptune doesnât sound too bad to Logan, either. He sinks back into his chair and wills himself to be smaller, wills Roman to ignore him and just stayâ
Roman takes the seat directly beside Logan. âThanks for the assist,â he says under his breath, elbowing Logan gently. Logan smiles weakly at his own fists, clenched tightly in his lap, and wonders if this is the last time these hands will be employed by NASA. Wondering if this is finally it, if the director has had enough of Loganâs pathetic attempts to take risks, has finally decided to do away with Logan entirely, to let him fade into obscurity as some guy who coded a coffee delivery app with a gimmicky name.
Director Gazebo stares long and hard at the both of them, and probably has been for a while nowânot that Logan would know the difference, having only just looked up from his hands. Thereâs something behind the mask of calm in the directorâs face, just like there always is, and just like always, itâs something Logan canât quite comprehend, something he isnât sure he wants to comprehend. When he opens his mouth, Loganâs heart finally finds itself at the bottom of that bottomless pit.
âAre either of you aware of how long it would take mankind to reach Neptune?â
An unexpected starting point, to be sure, but at least itâs something Logan is prepared for. âIt took Voyager 2 about twelve years in the eighties.â
âVoyager 2 was unmanned,â Roman adds. âNone of that extra weight for people or provisions, so that probably maybe definitely influenced that time.â
âWhy?â Logan asks. Itâs always been one of his favorite questions, to tell the truth. He wonders whether the director feels the same. Then he wonders whether the director realizes he means âwhy ask about Neptune,â not âwhy would weight influence travel time.â Then he wonders whether the director knows he wonders this.
âAs only Voyager 2 has managed to make it that farâand beyond, in factâthere is still a good deal of things weâve yet to learn from Neptune, like why it has such high winds, or why its magnetic field is offset, not to mention that thereâs been another Great Dark Spot since the one in eighty-nine.â Okay, so at least it was clear what Logan was asking.
âIâm still not totally clear on why this matters,â Roman admits. Logan sighs quietly, relieved that someone in this room had the nerve to voice the general fears floating lazily through the air. âI mean, itâs got nothing to do with the moon, which is supposedly why you called the meeting, right?â
âItâs got everything to do with the moon,â the director corrects. He steps away from the projection screen and begins pacing the room, waving his hands about like frantic hummingbirds to emphasize his pointsâprovided he actually makes any. âThe moon is the closest celestial body to our planet, so everything with a greater distance than that can be expanded upon based on its relative distance and size compared to the moon. If we learned to walk with the moon, we can run with Mars, and we could fly with Neptune.â
âIâm not sure I follow,â Logan says, feeling like itâs been a little too long since heâs spoken up. Regardless, his words seem to roll off the directorâs hunched shoulders as he continues pacing, unperturbed.
âTwelve years is a long time, not to mention the additional weight for the food and crew, and the emotional and mental tolls on the passengers and their families, as it would be a minimum twenty-five year round tripâthatâs a quarter of what a layman considers his life span. But if we could cut that down, shave off a few years from either end, move from here to there as if we were taking but a single stepâŚâ The director trails off with his hands frozen in front of his face, fingers not quite touching, so stiff they almost tremble. âImagine how much we could gain from that. Justâjust imagine it.â
âDo you mean in terms of Einsteinâs and Rosenâs theory of general relativity?â Loganâs voice is laced with disbelief. Einstein-Rosen bridges, wormholes, whatever you want to call them, itâs all theoretical, and all just the slightest bit terrifying. Two mouths at either end of an imaginary throat, from point A to point B in moments, microscopic and unstable. Just imagine it? Sure, just imagine the likelihood of the wormhole destabilising under the effect of exotic matters and spitting out the passengers to who knows where.
Logan, if you couldnât tell, is not particularly fond of the idea of wormholes, much less black holes. His concerns are usually (to his relief) unfounded, since whoever is crazy enough to look for wormholes hasnât been successful in their endeavours. Not yet.
âBut thatâs only assuming you actually can fold the space,â Roman protests, yanking Logan out of his own mind. Apparently they didnât care to wait for Logan to process the absurdity of it all before continuing the conversation.
âBut who says we canât? â Director Gazebo shoots back.
âWho said anything about we?â Romanâs voice is incredulous and maybe, just maybe, a little bit excited. Good excited or bad excited, though, Logan has no idea.
âWell, me, just now, for one.â The director starts pacing again, ticking off numbers on his fingers as he goes. âKatie-Lee also vouched for the idea, as well as some of the directors at the floater branchesâmost of them report to Kennedy, anyway, so Iâm sitting pretty high and dry here, and they all went for the idea. Logan, any valuable input here?â
Logan blinks, not prepared to be included. Not yet. âI, um, no?â Then he wonders whether the director heard âI, um, no,â or âI, um, know.â
âWell, you can hardly fault me for asking. I mean, after that presentation you gave, not to mention the increasing quality of your work lately, I assumed youâd be desperate to make your case for this mission.â
âWhat mission?â
Roman shoots Logan a look, and Logan wonders just how long he was tuned out of the conversation. Too long, apparently.
âWhy, Mission Neptune, of course.â At that, Logan is viscerally reminded of the conductor from that time Virgil forced him to watch The Polar Express. The director, at least, doesnât seem put off in the slightest by Loganâs mental absence. He whips out a pen and scrawls something on his forearm, mumbling under his breath, âWe really need to come up with a better name for that.â
âIâyouâre planning a mission to Neptune?â Itâs not even worth it for Logan to try to keep the shock out of his voice.
Roman, miracle of miracles, recovers much quicker than Logan. Probably because heâs been paying attention. âOkay, cool, but why did you still say we? Why did you only keep me and Logan behind?â
âLogan and me,â Logan murmurs. At least if his basic conversational skills continue to fail him, heâll always have ironclad grammar to fall back on. On which to fall back, whatever.
âYou want to go into space, do you not?â
âAbsolutely.â In sharp contrast with Loganâs immediacy and certainty is Romanâs loud silence. Logan gives him a quizzical look.
âIâm not saying I donât,â Roman finally huffs, âbut Iâm not saying I do, either. Thereâs way too many things that could go wrong for this to be a spur of the moment hell yes type response, yâknow?â
Logan tries very hard (by which he means a normal amount) not to look smug as the director stares at Roman in shock. So much for a guy whoâs great because he broadens his horizons. As soon as the prideful thought crosses Loganâs mind, he shakes his head to get rid of itâtearing down his friend wonât do anything for his own career, much less his own humanity. Another, much scarier thought crosses Loganâs mind next: He just internally referred to Roman as his friend.
Logan really ought to start paying better attention when conversations are happening around him between very smart people who donât think to wait for him to catch up.
âJust keep an eye on your inboxes, alright?â The director stops pacing at the door and tugs it open, gesturing for the two to take their leave.
âGive us a minute,â Roman says, remaining firmly in his seat. The director purses his lips and wrinkles his nose, but he does go, leaving the room blissfully empty in the absence of his commanding presence.
Roman turns to Logan and cocks his head to the side. âAlright, my dude, Iâve known you for basically a lifetime now.â
âFive years, max.â
âSame difference. Anyway, Iâve known you a while, yeah? So I know what your face looks like when youâre zoning out, âcause youâve got way too much going on up in that head of yours. How much do I need to fill you in on, so you arenât totally out of your depth when Gazebo brings it up again?â
âA basic rundown would be stellar. I heard that heâs aiming for Neptune, and heâs trying to employ some Wrinkle in Time mechanics to do it. We havenât even spotted a wormhole yet, Roman. Those things are so small, too, what is he thinking?â
âProbably that he shouldâve had Katie-Lee give that promotion to someone who knows how to listen.â Roman laughs as he ducks to avoid Logan swatting at his head. âHey, hey, this is neutral territory! Anyway, he said he was stuck on the moon stuff with his presentation âcause he doesnât want to go talking to the whole building and company and all about it, but he thinks he found a way to straight up manufacture a wormhole, and he wants to test that with an outwardly routine trip to the moon. Manufacture his demon wormhole or whatever, and if it works, great, and if not, well, itâs just the moon, so we wonât be too far, anyway. Doesnât really add up that heâd call it Mission Neptune if heâs trying to hide it, but whatever.â
âAnd he told us this why?â
âBecause Iâm such a motor mouth that most people have learned to just tune me out by now, or assume Iâm spouting total nonsense. You, on the other hand, he knows youâve got your whole deal with that lifelong dream of getting off the planet or whatever, so obviously you wouldnât go spreading the details, not at the risk of someone else taking your spot on the ship.â
âHe told you all that?â
âContext clues. Iâm very smart.â
Logan blows a puff of air through his nose and stares at his hands again, picturing them at the helm of a literal console in a literal rocketship on its way to literal Neptune. âBe pretty hard to cover up supplies for a mission to Neptune when you want it to look like a routine trip to the moon.â
âWhy else would he hint at sending follow-up emails? Not to mention, if the wormhole situation shortens the trip, we wouldnât need much more than a normal moon mission, anyway.â Roman scoots his chair closer and pushes his face right up into Loganâs. âYouâre really off your game today, yâknow that? Is it âcause you suddenly decided to start talking to me again?â
âSomething like that.â Logan checks his watch, weighing the merits of continuing to talk here versus returning to their desks. If nothing else, the director hasnât returned to yell at them yet, so thatâs something. Logan inhales a couple seconds longer than he needs to, blows it all out in one big breath, and explains to Roman the situation regarding his new risk-taking self. He even adds how, all along, Roman has been the true superior, much as it shreds Loganâs heart to say it. At least now Roman has proof that heâs as good as he thinks he is. What use is pride if left uncorroborated, right?
âOkay, well thatâs dumb, so weâre not gonna talk about that nonsense garbage ever again,â Roman says, shaking his head. âI mean, really? Me better than you? Obviously Iâm just socializing, and that definitely shows in the few papers where Iâve actually tried. He probably just wanted to push you over the edge so you would be more involved and engaged, more likely to help with his whole Neptune shebang.â
âThatâs a good mission name,â Logan mumbles. He expertly ignores everything else Roman said. âNeptune Shebang.â
âNo, it really isnât. Do you even want to do it?â
âI mean, obviously I do, itâs all Iâve ever wanted, ever , but thereâs stillâŚâ Logan lets his voice trail off, picturing Virgilâs face. Picturing Virgil sat on the couch in front of the television, watching Logan blast off the planet in a storm of fire and gasoline, leaving Virgil over two billion miles behind him, in the plain old Earth dust. âI donât know. I used to know, but I think what I knew changed somewhere along the way.â
âMakes sense.â Roman pushes his hands against his knees and bounces to his feet, then crooks his elbow to the side. Logan accepts the gesture, rising with Romanâs assistance and following him to the door. âI mean, itâs not like you have to know if youâre going right this second. You donât even know if youâll get chosen for it. Maybe they switch around the requirements or knock down the capacity or something, and they just bump you out of the running because youâre needed on Earth or theyâre afraid you have the measles or something. Hell, they could deny the mission request altogether. Whatever happens, you definitely donât have to make any major decisions about it just yet.â
Logan nods to himself as the door clicks shut behind them. Eventually, he very well have to make that choice. But not yet.
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