Commander Spock (schn_tgai) wrote in indarkness_logs, @ 2010-06-21 08:34:00 |
|
|||
Entry tags: | !complete, 2032 06, jaime davies, spock |
RP: Fascinating
Characters: Spock and Open
Time/Date: 20 June, mid-afternoon
Location: Room 307 then the streets of the town
Warnings/Rating: None
Summary: Spock finds all of this... fascinating.
Status: Complete
To say Spock was intrigued, indeed even fascinated, would be something of an understatement. He felt no sense of alarm when he'd woken from what could only have been a drugged sleep to find himself in what seemed to be a very human hotel room. The note beside his bed had engaged the half-Vulcan's very active sense of curiosity as had the rather primitive key and equally primitive communication device. All in all, he felt there must be a logical reason why he was here and that logic would therefore dictate how he could remove himself from this place and back to the Enterprise.
An exploration of his room had revealed nothing of interest other than a collection of primitive devices, including what he come to conclude was a rather ancient computer complete with an archaic but still usable keyboard. An examination of the communications device revealed both a form of keyboard as well as the ability for voice activation which rendered it more easily usable than he'd initially expected.
He might have continued with the exploration of his room and then the building but for the incessant and rather irritating music that was issuing from hidden speakers in the room. He had little doubt that the music was human. It had a similar tempo and the sort of childish lyrics that his human colleagues were prone to indulging in when they had consumed entirely too much alcohol. Indeed the songs about the 'bottles of beer' and the 'wheels on the bus' were all too familiar thanks to the shore leave efforts of Captain Kirk and Dr McCoy.
He quickly escaped from the hotel and into the streets of the deserted town with the tricorder he'd found in the room. A quick scan once he was outside showed him that some but not all of its functions were working and as he walked along the street, he began to determine which functions were not working.