Mina (Murray) Harker (
starandhope) wrote in
unfinishednetwork2025-11-05 10:55 am
Bulletin Post #1
[ Pinned to the bulletin board in the lobby is a neatly handwritten note on a page from the logbook provided to them by the library. ]
To Whom It May Concern,
Greetings. For those whom I have not yet been introduced to, my name is Mrs. Mina Harker. I understand that we have all been brought here recently, from many different places, times, and worlds. Speaking for myself, this has been a distressing series of events, and I have no doubt it has been for others as well.
That said, I believe that the best way to overcome such hardship is to find useful means of employment. I keep a diary, in which I have recorded many of my experiences and observations since arriving here. Perhaps there are others here who have done similarly. I plan to type up some of my relevant notes into a readable manuscript, and I would be very willing to do the same for others. If we can compile our findings into one document, I believe this could assist all of us in discovering more about why we are here, the nature of this place, how we may accomplish a return to our homes, &tc. Perhaps together we can learn what individually we would not be able to.
If there is already such an endeavour underway, please consider this my offer of assistance.
Thank you for your time.
Sincerely,
Mrs. Mina Harker
To Whom It May Concern,
Greetings. For those whom I have not yet been introduced to, my name is Mrs. Mina Harker. I understand that we have all been brought here recently, from many different places, times, and worlds. Speaking for myself, this has been a distressing series of events, and I have no doubt it has been for others as well.
That said, I believe that the best way to overcome such hardship is to find useful means of employment. I keep a diary, in which I have recorded many of my experiences and observations since arriving here. Perhaps there are others here who have done similarly. I plan to type up some of my relevant notes into a readable manuscript, and I would be very willing to do the same for others. If we can compile our findings into one document, I believe this could assist all of us in discovering more about why we are here, the nature of this place, how we may accomplish a return to our homes, &tc. Perhaps together we can learn what individually we would not be able to.
If there is already such an endeavour underway, please consider this my offer of assistance.
Thank you for your time.
Sincerely,
Mrs. Mina Harker

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Mrs. Harker,
Excellent idea. I will be keeping notes and sharing them with you for use in your guide to perplexed Editors.
My first contribution will be guides on using the various unfamiliar machines here; the gas stove, telephones, sewing machine, 3d printer, and so on.
Sincerely,
Hikaru Aozora
光 青空
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That sounds reasonable. I would like to add that if you wish, I can make copies of anything you wish to share so that there will be multiple sources in case of fire or theft. Also, I think that there should be a main binder with plenty of loose paper for others to add information as time progresses. That way, in case of incapacitation or other factors, we won't have too many gaps.
Also I can offer help in gathering people for a community meeting or if they wish to see the media room. I can stabilize the rotating room to some extent so long as there a call for it. Mind, I have to remain in the room as well to keep it stable, but I'm sure that no one is going to use it to build bombs or something. Just let me know if you would like any of my ideas.
X
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If you should have need of any kind with this project, I am at your disposal. I am certain you already know my qualifications.
-Jonathan Harker
[ He would have just signed Jonathan, but he was uncertain who else may read it. Still, he would be happy to put those clerical skills to use. ]
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Multiple people have attempted to map other areas of library, and all of us have found it impossible. It appears to change with no particular rhyme or reason.]
[There is not a signature.]
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But they also seem to be getting frustrated, because they keep crossing their attempts to write out.]
I
I have
I HAVE
[At this point, the writer clearly gives up, and just makes one big furious scrawl]
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-Mrs. Harker
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I very much appreciate your suggestions. I was planning on making a triplicate copy, but I would not be averse to more. I also agree that it should be a living document, one which we can all add to as we learn more and glean more evidence.
Perhaps a community meeting would be a good idea - I would suggest putting together an initial document, allowing everyone to read it, and then meeting to discuss?
- Mrs. Harker
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I would, indeed, welcome your assistance.
[ She does know his qualifications. And if this exchange looks awkward to anyone, well - yeah. It is. ]
Thank you for the offer.
- Mrs. Harker
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As for having a concise document at the start, I agree there. Otherwise I'm sure that the discussions will lead to no where and a majority of information will devolve into angry people being stubborn.
Oh, I'm sorry since we haven't met yet, my name ends up being edited to X, so you can call me Mr. X if you're okay with that.
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- Mrs. Harker
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If you would rather share your findings in person, I am easily found, in the dormitories or the kitchen most often.
- Mrs. Harker
[ She is not fazed by someone who apparently can't write. ]
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- Mrs. Harker
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If I find anything worth writing down, I'll add it. No editing out the cussing. Let me know if anybody finds some damned alcohol worth drinking, this place is dry as prohibition so far.
-Bride
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Nope.
No reason at all.
It will admit to fucking nothing.]These communication devices are stupid and slow and fucking archaic. I hate them.
I'll find you to give you my data. I can't send it through this.
- Rin
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I mean, I understand the value of habit and norms, but is it really employment if unpaid? For me, it was just kinda part of life at a monastic library.
But I'm certainly up for sharing what notes I've worked out! Which uh isn't much, admittedly. Other than 'try to look up films before I watch them', lest I discover entirely new kinds of trauma buttons for myself.
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But some people, she knows, have trouble with that. ]
Thank you, Rin, for your contribution.
- Mrs. Harker
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Employment, occupation, purpose. Some work to do.
Anyone is welcome to contribute any useful notes or data they have accumulated. Thank you.
- Mrs. Harker
[and now for a transition to in-person!]
She'll notice, as it slinks in, that it's still not looking her in the eyes; instead it keeps looking just to the side of her face, somewhere close enough that it can get away with it. One of its drones is flying just above its head, and it is certainly directed at Mina.
It's holding a small stack of papers, which it plonks down on the counter (at a safe distance from any disgusting food, of course.) When she looks at it closer, she'll see that it's a fully detailed report.
There's computer-drawn maps of the static areas - the lobby, the dorms. There's a list of how often the stacks have changed, with timestamps and charts detailing the statistical frequency of changes. There's similar levels of detail on the rotating room.
There's also an entire section dedicated entirely to the 'STAFF ONLY' doors behind the circulation desk. Although so far no staff have been witnessed emerging from the doors, so that section's not as interesting. (It does seem to indicate, somehow, that SecUnit is running around-the-clock surveillance on it, though.)
And lastly, there's a small table. The heading column includes rows for Hostiles and Kidnapped. Hostiles are numbered at 3, and Kidnapped at 29.
"I had to leave off the section on the bowls and paper decorations and things that have been showing up," it says. It looks rather annoyed about that. "Stupid thing kept disappearing otherwise."
no subject
A very strange person, despite their relatively normal outward appearance.
"This is -" It's a lot, but she is not daunted by the document's length, or by the various statistics that Rin has collected in their short time here. "This could be very useful. Thank you. May I ask -"
She points at the column for Hostiles - "Who are you considering hostile? The Librarian, perhaps?"
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"Yes," it says. "And two known Library Assistants."
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I'll get with you as time allows.
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The small machine that seems to follow Rin everywhere is seemingly interested in her paperwork, and she tries to brush it out of the way as she sorts through her notes.
“And - what is that?” she asks. Why is it doing this????
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(It does not realise that it is speaking to someone who only knows physical media.)
"That's my drone," it says, as said drone shifts to hover in a space just outside of swatting range. It still keeps its 'eye' on her paperwork though.
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“May I ask what your - drone - is doing?” she asks instead.
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(SecUnit might still be avoiding eye contact, but it doesn't have any issue with directly looking at people through a drone.)
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She resists the urge to try and shoo it off again, like an insect buzzing around her head.
“Did you make it yourself?” she asks. “What is it for?”
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The drone stays where it is, watching Mina. The way it hovers is probably closest to an insect, but it's also clear that this is an inorganic object, not an organic creature. There's none of the subtle movements and shifts you'd get with an animal; it just hovers exactly in one point in space, and doesn't budge from it.
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“Is it securing me?” she asks. She certainly doesn’t feel any more secure with it floating ominously nearby.
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It was weird, how so many of the people didn't know what drones were. Or were confused by what they were doing. Even on Preservation, where the humans didn't like to have cameras everywhere - they kept going on about 'privacy', or whatever - they still knew what security cameras were.
"I'm a Security Consultant," it says. "The drones help."
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So no, she has no idea what Rin is talking about.
“Monitoring what?”
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"Just the general area," it says. It shrugs; a human gesture it's learned to employ on occasion. "It's an extra set of eyes."
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But she is far too polite to say that aloud, merely glancing rather obviously between the drone and Rin's face - as always, turned slightly away from her to avoid eye contact.
"For security," she says instead. "In the prison that we've all been brought to."
Just, you know. Making sure she understands all this.
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She's just a human. One from somewhere without proper security, apparently. She clearly thinks that all of this is unnecessary. And it supposes it can understand; prisoners don't get to run their own security.
But...it needs its drones. It's a SecUnit; it was designed to have multiple inputs. Without them it would feel near-blind. But she thinks its human, so it can't explain that to her.
"...I'm used to using them," it says quietly. "I don't like not having one."
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"I see," she says. "Well, so long as you don't use it to spy on us in hidden corners, I don't suppose it can do any real harm."
But no spying. Please.
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It certainly didn't want to watch her doing any disgusting human things. Mina would never see any drones in the bathrooms, ever. And if she wasn't presenting any kind of security threat, it didn't give one damn about what she did.
"...But I am going to spy on the Hostiles." They were an active security threat. They were fair game.
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"Have you been able to find the Assistants to spy on them?" she asks. She's never seen Mr. Durand in person, that she knows of.
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It had cycles and cycles of experience pretending be human at this point; surely it should be better at it by now.)
"They're probably behind the STAFF ONLY door," it says. "I have a drone watching it."
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So, for the moment, she chooses to accept that answer.
"Very well," she says. "Has the door opened at all since we've been here? I don't think I've ever seen it open."
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...But it tries not to think too much about ART. Or how much it wishes it were here.)
"No," it says. "Not since I started monitoring it."
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Certainly most Corporate Executives did; you never saw them personally descending down to the workers' floors.
"But something must use the door. Otherwise, they wouldn't have it."
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"I almost fear to think what will happen if that door ever does open," she murmurs, almost to herself. "But perhaps kept behind that door is the means of our escape?"
Not that it matters - as long as the door remains impregnable, whatever is behind it might as well be in another universe.
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Then it falls into an awkward silence. (It's given her its data. She's asked questions about it. That's all that she needed it for, right? Ugh, this would be so much easier if it could have just sent all of this to her normally...)
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So she offers them a smile. "Thank you, Rin, for contributing to my little project. I think this will be very helpful, for all of us."
They can leave, now, if they want.
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And then it says, "Bye," and flees - the drone fleeing with it.