Adam loved to hear about his father’s stories from
work. From Sergeant Amari’s
descriptions, Adam had put together a pretty good idea of what he thought
police work was like. This was a
protective surveillance detail; Concord and Otto were out as a visible deterrent
to make sure no one made any moves against the principal—in this case, Jason
Quill. The danger was Rosa Rook and her assorted robotic minions (and probably some lawyers from what Jason had told him about the meeting on the ride over). Adam was was ready for danger. But danger refused to come. What Adam’s father hadn’t explained to him was how boring
this sort of surveillance was. After the
tension when the three arrived at the meeting and Jason going alone into the
meeting, they just sort of sat around for a while. Adam was tracking Jason’s aura as he moved
through the building but after he reached the other auras Adam could see, Jason
just sort of stayed calm (at least as calm as Jason ever is) and nothing
interesting seemed to happen.
Adam’s mind wandered in the backseat (it felt weird
sitting in the driver seat with Otto controlling himself and Jason had taken
the passenger seat on the ride there).
It was hard to remember that he wasn’t alone in the car—in Otto. He could tell there was someone nearby, he
sensed the aura, but it wasn’t as encompassing as it was with others. Or maybe it was just different because he was
inside of Otto. This was kind of the
only time Adam had tried to read anyone from inside of them before. He likely wouldn’t need to worry about it too
much though; this seemed like a corner case rather than something he’d need to
worry about recognizing a lot.
After a quick check on Jason to make sure nothing bad was
happening—it looked like they were talking about something and Jason was a
little curious—Adam decided he needed something to distract himself from his
boredom.
“Hey Otto, are you like a car all the time except when
you need hands, or do you shift back and forth whenever?” The torrent of questions flows out in that inquisitive manner of children; not waiting for
one to be answered before the next one is asked, because all the questions combine
to form a larger question. “Like does being
a car feel more natural than being
humanoid, or is there even a difference for you? Because I used to just be Concord when I
needed to be Concord because it didn’t feel
like me, but now it’s kind of interchangeable. Like now I feel like Concord is me when I’m
Concord but not when I’m not. You’re
like the only person I know that transforms, so I feel like you’re the only one
who might get that.”