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"We should open a bakery and put Kae behind the counter." Tony grinned, waving a cookie around as he spoke.
"Tony, shut up," Kae groaned, hiding her face in her hands. |
"I've suggested that before," Elaine piped up, going to grab a cookie. "But I'm always shot down."
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"That's it, someone's seconded it, this is happening," Tony said with a grin. He was tempted to start looking for a place himself, but he had Jarvis do it instead.
He could experiment with what Extremis had done to him later. |
Elaine snickered. She wanted to point out that opening a bakery was, at the moment, Not A Good Idea, but she didn't want to ruin Tony's seemingly-good mood.
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Tony knew it probably wouldn't happen, and definitely wasn't a good idea at the moment, but it was fun to plan anyway.
And really fun to watch Kae turn red. |
Elaine just grinned a bit and tucked herself against Steve, much more relaxed now.
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Tony stayed out there for a while before claiming he wanted to get back to work, and then he made his way down to his lab.
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Bruce waited until the others filtered out before following Tony down to the lab. Time to see how Tony really felt.
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Tony was sitting at a desk, not touching anything, while information flashed in front of him. Even Jarvis was quiet.
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"Tony?" Bruce asked quietly. Tony seemed to be staring at nothing, but Bruce knew better. Tony's brain was a supercomputer, now, there could be any number of things he was seeing.
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"Yeah?" Tony spoke quietly, since he didn't feel the need to keep as much of the charade around Bruce.
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Bruce sat down next to Tony.
"How are you really feeling?" he asked. |
Tony blinked. "Fine," he lied. "No aches or pains, nothing unexpected." He paused for a moment. "I don't need to get Jarvis to do these things for me anymore."
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"Tony," Bruce chided. "I think I know you a bit better than that by now. How are you really feeling?" Because at this point, he knew when Tony was hiding things.
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Tony was quiet for a minute. "I'm still working through it," he admitted. "It's... odd. It doesn't hurt, per se, but there's always information all the time and if I'm not careful it will overwhelm me."
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"Overstimulation," Bruce said, nodding. He was quiet for a moment, thinking. "Do you know of any protocols you could run to cut down on the flow of information?" he asked. It made sense, to him: Tony was a programmer, and his brain was now a computer. Ergo, he could program his brain how he wanted.
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"I'm... still working on it." Tony grimaced. "It stopped when I passed out, but..." He shrugged. "I'm working on it."
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Bruce nodded.
"Take your time," he said. "I'll see about getting everyone to give you space." |
"That's... dammit, this shouldn't be necessary," Tony growled, getting up and starting to pace. "I'm a genius, I should be able to make this do what I want."
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"Genius or not, humans weren't designed to be computers," Bruce pointed out. "There's bound to be a learning curve."
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"And I should have the highest learning curve in the building," Tony pointed out. "I should be doing fine by now."
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"You've been asleep for the last several hours," Bruce said. "You should go a little easier on yourself on this one, Tony. You've already achieved one miracle, after all. Save the next for when you need it."
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Tony snorted. "We may need the next miracle if I can't program myself soon." Because now there was a rather increased chance of him causing damage on accident.
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"Tony, you're the world's best programmer," Bruce said frankly. "I'm fairly sure you have a half-finished program written already just from the last half an hour."
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"More like a quarter finished," Tony groused. Because clearly he wasn't going to be satisfied with his own progress until it was done and he was safe-ish to be around.
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