Liz Parker (
st_hotflashes) wrote in
strangetrip2018-06-23 10:08 pm
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"No One Told Me Why I'm In Berlin" - Tag Peter and Alec
When Liz found out that the new world was actually Earth and Europe, she couldn't quite hold back her excitement. The fact that the year was, according to the people at the desk, 2018 meant she was going to be closer to Peter's time than her own. She would finally be able to experience what his world was like, even just a little bit, and learn more about the internet and scientific advancement and maybe watch a few of Peter's favourite films they couldn't get at the inn.
"I still don't know why I'm here." Alec sat across from the two teenagers on the train heading to Berlin looking appropriately put-out despite not actually feeling that way. The truth was, he had never been to Europe and he had seen that semi-embarrassing video that Peter had of his trip to Germany and maybe, just maybe, he wanted to see it. Though he told himself he was actually just chaperoning because the world could be dangerous and both Liz and Peter were naive and believed the best in people, even when they shouldn't.
Liz was dialing another phone number on the smartphone she had been given. Thankfully she had enough practice with Peter's to be able to use the one she had and not look entirely inept. So far there had been no answer with Maria's house and the number for the Crashdown was out of service. Her home got a busy signal. She also knew it was a possibility everyone had moved or something. Then suddenly her face lit up - the Roswell police department was on the other end.
"Hi, um. Yes. I was wondering if I could speak to Sheriff Valenti please?" A pause. "Sheriff Valenti. Valenti." Another pause as her excitement lessened. "Okay, well, um. Can you at least tell me if there was a record of a Sheriff Valenti on the force?... How can you not know that." She caught herself as the words came out more tense and annoyed. Liz took a breath. "Yes, I'll hold." And hold she did. The more she waited, the more her expression dampened. Finally, there was a voice again. "Oh.. okay. Yes. Thank you. Goodbye."
She hung up. "They, um. They have no record of him working there. So I guess.. this isn't my world."
Alec shrugged, still looking out the window. "This isn't mine either. We can be twinsies, if you want."
"I still don't know why I'm here." Alec sat across from the two teenagers on the train heading to Berlin looking appropriately put-out despite not actually feeling that way. The truth was, he had never been to Europe and he had seen that semi-embarrassing video that Peter had of his trip to Germany and maybe, just maybe, he wanted to see it. Though he told himself he was actually just chaperoning because the world could be dangerous and both Liz and Peter were naive and believed the best in people, even when they shouldn't.
Liz was dialing another phone number on the smartphone she had been given. Thankfully she had enough practice with Peter's to be able to use the one she had and not look entirely inept. So far there had been no answer with Maria's house and the number for the Crashdown was out of service. Her home got a busy signal. She also knew it was a possibility everyone had moved or something. Then suddenly her face lit up - the Roswell police department was on the other end.
"Hi, um. Yes. I was wondering if I could speak to Sheriff Valenti please?" A pause. "Sheriff Valenti. Valenti." Another pause as her excitement lessened. "Okay, well, um. Can you at least tell me if there was a record of a Sheriff Valenti on the force?... How can you not know that." She caught herself as the words came out more tense and annoyed. Liz took a breath. "Yes, I'll hold." And hold she did. The more she waited, the more her expression dampened. Finally, there was a voice again. "Oh.. okay. Yes. Thank you. Goodbye."
She hung up. "They, um. They have no record of him working there. So I guess.. this isn't my world."
Alec shrugged, still looking out the window. "This isn't mine either. We can be twinsies, if you want."
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He paused just subtly before he opened his mouth to begin talking.
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"Look, I'll go with you, but only if you actually promise to do what we say and not complain about it tomorrow. I'm serious. No complaining."
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Once that was settled, he looked at the group in front of them. He spoke again and they seemed delighted. There was a series of directions and instructions, to which Alec nodded as he took it in. Then one of the girls pointed to Peter and Liz with an excited expression and Alec grinned despite himself. He looked at them.
"She says you both will need different outfits." He nodded to the girl. "She says they have clothes you can borrow if you want."
Before Peter could object, Alec nodded in the affirmative and agreed back in German. They looked incredibly excited and said one last thing before leaving the table. He looked at the teens. "I told them where we're staying. They're going to leave a package for you guys."
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"We said nothing about an outfit change," Peter argues. "You don't have any idea what they're going to drop off for us. What if it's something weird?"
And not cool-weird, but weird-weird.
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Liz smiled mostly because watching the two of the was kind of cute. "...Maybe it'll be fun?"
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Liz reached under the table and lightly placed her hand on Peter's knee. "And since this isn't dinner, you still get to decide what we do for the rest of the day."
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Peter sets his hand on top of Liz's.
"You had anything you wanted to do?" he asks her. They've done a lot of what he wanted to do already.
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"It's about 15 minutes away by bus, or we can walk it," he pronounces. "It's 3.5 km away."
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When they were finished their food, they decided to take the bus. The wall itself was rather busy with tourists, though not to much as to make it annoying. There was a street performer who was playing guitar - a slow, relaxing sort of melody that neither Alec nor Liz recognized.
The wall itself was just a wall, except for the historical context and the graffiti, but Liz found it incredible to be standing where actual history happened.
Once there was an opening, Liz looked at Peter. "We should take a picture. All three of us."
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The Fall of the Berlin Wall happened a long time before he was born, but he learned all about it in Freshman European History. It fees weird, somehow, to be standing at a landmark of such historical significance. Especially when it wasn't something that happened hundreds of years ago, but just a few decades.
"Yeah," Peter agrees, fishing out his phone. "Alec, you're going to join us, too. No complaints."
Even though technically no complaints day started tomorrow.
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"I will take a picture with you in front of a wall, don't worry." As much as Alec understood the significance of the wall, the history of the world always seemed so far removed from his life. He knew all about the strategies and failures of the major wars, but Manticore didn't really discuss things like social impact and the like.
True to his word, Alec stands up near the wall, taking the position behind Liz and Peter - he's the tallest after all - and when Peter took the selfie, he even put his hand around Peter's shoulder and smiled. The smile was genuine, though like always, looked like he was flirting into the phone.
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That was weird. Not bad-weird, but... definitely weird.
"Thanks," Peter says, appreciatively as he smiles down at the photo. His attention doesn't stay there for long; Peter pops the camera back into his camera and looks back over at it.
"It's just weird, seeing this place and knowing everything that happened here happened when May was in junior high."
May wasn't that old, either.
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Liz felt a little embarrassed, but tried to re-direct. "I always thought it would be really neat to see places like the pyramids or Machu Picchu, too. One day, maybe people will visit places like New York or Roswell and think the same thing." It seemed really weird, but it was possible.
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Alec, on the other hand, was less subtle. "Oh yeah, those two things neither of us remember." He shrugged "Alright, Professors Parker and Parker, lead the way to our new and exciting learning experience of history and culture."
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A beat.
"That's a lot of museums," Peter observes. "We might want to save that for tomorrow."
Especially since Alec promised not to complain tomorrow. He made no promises about today.
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Liz giggled softly, then leaned a bit into Peter. "Maybe you can help me choose some new cds of bands you like." Because CDs were still a thing, right?
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"Yeah," he says. "But we should find some CDs of bands you like, too."
There's a decade and a half of music that Liz hasn't gotten to experience yet. There's probably a lot she'll like that hasn't Peter yet listened to.
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---
After dinner, they found their way back to the hostel where, true to their words, there were two big packages waiting for Peter and Liz. Alec waited in the lobby while the teens went to open the package and try whatever was on inside. Liz didn't think her outfit looked too bad, though. She turned to look at Peter. "This looks okay, right?"
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More than really nice. She looked really pretty. Peter feels he should say more, so...
"I like the little bead things," he says, gesturing to them on the shirt. Why do I have to be so awkward?
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