The first thing you notice is she's done something with her hair. Her tousled dyed blonde look had been cut shorter to its dark brown roots and there were highlights. Maurie, and her new haircut, had plowed through the Edinburgh airport with the determinations of a seasoned business traveler. While keeping up with the slender FBI agent was a challenge, you were grateful to at least follow in her wake. When she walked, she left a trail of bodies; hapless baggage handlers, drowsy tourists who happened to be lingering too close to the coffee stand and beleaguered taxi driver, who, after some fiercely combative words, delivered the two of you to a cheap motel in a hamlet two hours into the countryside.
You had hoped to catch a glimpse of Scotland from the air but the plane ride which had started unconscionably late in Seattle had finally delivered you into the rapidly dimming grey of twilight. There was a glimpse of stone and a lovely glittering of yellow street lights next to the green and the sea before the smothering rain swept in with the rolling darkness.
Maybe the highlights were her actual hair color. You are beginning to doubt yourself now - clearly there was a cut but the way the color blended where it framed her sharp eyes. Maurie had hardly said one word the entire time. Well, that's not fair. You both had tried some awkward chitchat near the beginning but she was clearly wound too tight, her voice clipped, her gaze always darting away. She had clearly transmuted her inner turmoil into rage at anyone unlucky enough to be vaguely underfoot so you had resigned yourself to analysing her new haircut.
Maybe the highlights were her natural color, the shorter bits had a different shade, an almost chestnut compared to her longer deep brown. The spluttering 1980s honda lurched to a stop outside the diminutive motor inn. The driver muttered something that sounded vaguely like, but clearly wasn't, "There-ya-go" as Maurie jumped out into the pouring rain to retrieve her bags from the trunk.
You squint at the accommodations - the neon sign for the lobby, the dull off-white paint on the numbered doors. If it hadn't been for old stone sidewalks and the decidedly British looking light pole on the corner, it could have been right out of Forks or Centralia.
"Not terribly hobbit-y." you grumble, pulling yourself out of the car and into the deluge. Maurie is already putting in a code into a little box next to room number six, for probably the third time judging by the velocity with which she is punching the numbers.
There's a click and the two of you tumble into the room with its 90s wallpaper only slightly redeemed by it's '70s furniture choices. Two queen beds, a decent sized tv and a bathroom that looked way smaller than you had hoped.
"Well - at least it's going to be quiet." She rolls her suitcase over to the bed nearest the door.
"Oh! Did you . . . did the FBI do something . . ." you ask. Maurie barks off a little laugh.
"Hah! No, we're barely on a per diem here." There had been some talk initially about some sort of pay for your assistance. Ryan was thrilled, a little extra cash could always be put to good use, although you suspected that he just wanted to invest more money in Jared and Sarah's Llama Hat business. The venture was surprisingly successful although not quite enough to warrant buying a larger share, but no matter. When Pitts and Maurie arrived, there was no discussion of money, simply free tickets to Scotland with your name on it and flexible dates.
If nothing else, I get to see Scotland. I could scout out that perfect follow up trip with the family. It was good reasoning but you knew in your heart of hearts, it wasn't why you were here.
"Hey." Maurie throws her suit jacket haphazardly over a chair, the light silhouettes her slender frame. "You hungry?"
You shake your head. The meals on the flight had been terrible but filling.
"Me neither." Maurie glances away, mouth pressed tight. "I'm going to take a shower."
"Okay." The door closes and the fan whirs to life.
You had dressed comfortably but you take the opportunity to check your suitcase and take off your bra. Maurie had said to bring professional clothes - she has credentials as a mining inspector and that was your cover story for . . . for what exactly?
Maurie had said the goal was to locate how they were using the pocket dimension to get the Rhodium. Pure information gathering, no arrests, she had said, but this felt different. At the airport, you were surrounded by people but here - if something went wrong, you were in another country and at the Talverton estate, everyone would be on their payroll.
You smoothed out your skirt and nice blouse and refolded them into the suitcase. Maurie had assured you they would have backup and people would be monitoring the situation but you were skeptical. Aside from Agent Pitts seeing you off at the Bellingham airport, Maurie had not interacted with anyone else - no check in with Scottish authorities, nothing but tense quiet and anxiousness.
You absent-mindedly flip through the channels, trying to ease your frazzled thoughts. The fan clicked off and Maurie came out, a white towel wrapped around her body and hair. She marches over and plops down on the bed directly across from you.
"Okay. Look. I've been trying to . . . we need to talk." You click off the tv and look her right in her clear blue eyes. She stutters for a moment, her cheeks blushing. She takes a big breath.
"Um . . . I'm sorry. I know I've been a terror and I just . . . I really appreciate you coming out here with me." She gets up and starts pacing back and forth.
"Your welcome?" You say, confused.
"It's just . . . ever since Marquis' island, I can't stop thinking about . . . " she looks over at you guiltily. ". . . about being in that world. It felt more real, you know?"
"I know the feeling." You close your eyes, feeling the soft kisses of snowflakes on your cheeks from London, the smokey lingering notes of the saxophone from Sea Breeze club, the sweet juice from a melon running down your cheek as Michael feeds you pieces next to the hot springs. You smile, so many treasures tucked away inside of you.
Maurie is still pacing, her hand firmly clamped on the towel, holding it in place.
"I thought it was something with the world itself - it alters our perception or drugs us or something but they did tests on me after the trip and there was nothing in my body so why!" Her voice suddenly snaps. "Why can't I stop thinking about you!"
She freezes, her face turning white at the sudden outburst.
"Thinking about me?" You ask, startled. Maurie gives a sound somewhere between a groan and curse and covers her face with both hands, letting the towel flutter precariously. She flops down on the bed and pulls a pillow over her face.
"I'm the worst fucking FBI agent in the world." She mutters. You crawl onto her bed, peeling back the pillow.