Diana was doing anything and everything she could to distract herself from a few pressing issues she was dealing with. First and foremost, the obvious issue of the hotel, which was a bit of a stickier widget than Diana might have liked. There were people here that had nowhere else to go if the hotel caved in around them, or if this space ceased to exist. So too much poking and prodding was ill advised, or Diana might ruin someone’s life while she fixed her own. Nor was she entirely sure she would be “fixing” it. She had been told by a trusted friend that some very few people had left and returned here, and they had returned exactly to when they’d left. So, no harm done.
They’d also had no memories of this place, which irritated Diana, but she supposed it was a bit of a good news, bad news sort of situation. Diana had found that she liked this roller rink, too, decked out with flashing lights and music playing from the DJ station in the corner. Diana didn’t know who had set the music, but it was accessible if it needed to be changed. She had been selecting a pair of skates as Kal approached, and so she took a seat and wriggled out of her sneakers so that she could lace up the skates instead.
“I likely would not have, but I have shown a few of the newer residents around, and so I found it,” she said, and she merely sounded grateful that she’d had the opportunity to offer help and found something worth finding. “I haven’t been roller skating in a very long time, but I think it will be fun. And here, you needn’t worry that someone realizes you are not human.”
Diana grinned, because she knew how worrisome that could be, and she stood. The area she was in was carpeted, but she waited for Kal so that they could skate onto the floor together. It’d be just Diana’s luck to fall down, but she was pretty sure she could handle this.