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Well, what do you know, they updated the Pearly Gates. I always thought, you know, if we got to an afterlife it wouldn't be brimstone. Probably wouldn't be a crocodile and a set of scales either.
[The Motorcycle Boy has to pause to light a cigarette]
I didn't figure the Gatekeeper would be so much more fair than the Man in the Book. You can never get a square deal in life, maybe it’s about time we got one in death.
[There’s another pause, this one more lengthy. His eyes don’t focus on the camera anymore, but on something just above it.]
How many souls are we ferrying?
[The Motorcycle Boy has to pause to light a cigarette]
I didn't figure the Gatekeeper would be so much more fair than the Man in the Book. You can never get a square deal in life, maybe it’s about time we got one in death.
[There’s another pause, this one more lengthy. His eyes don’t focus on the camera anymore, but on something just above it.]
How many souls are we ferrying?
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Were they as voracious as the Egyptians?
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Well, societies are only as civilized as their end goals. You can't fault them for always wanting more.
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Take it on a case by case basis, usually. Same like people, come to that.
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But then again...who's to say you have to find all genocide immoral. The same creatures aren't being killed, not for the same reasons. Murder's up there with calculus for all its complexities. Or so I'd like to think.
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You've spent a lot of time thinkin' on this. I'm not sayin' you're wrong - it's people that are complex, all sides of their lives and deaths and loves. I don't think too 'ard about relative morality meself, it gives me an 'eadache. I find I usually know what I need to put a stop to when I walk into it.
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What about you, lovey? What decided you to come 'ere?
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I came, because I had a hunch. And I got shot in the head. Seemed like a good idea to try life one more time, see if it'd be different away from the same old streets.
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[She smiles back; she'd have a hard time articulating reasons just yet, but her approval's genuine.]
Good a reason as any. Maybe better'n most. A hunch - in my experience those are usually a future echo. The multiverse leaving you a clue.
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[He says it smoothly, almost cheerfully.]
You're the first person in a long time who's talked about the multiverse. The last girl, she ended up doing horse, I guess she couldn't handle a life knowing there's more and never being able to touch it.
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...I've been lucky. I'd shrivel inside if I couldn't keep explorin' too. I take people with me a lot.
[She stops short of her almost-spoken offer to go find that girl right now. This is what Iris does, and the thought of someone scrabbling fruitlessly at a barrier Iris is privileged to move through easily hurts horribly. But the beauty of time travel is that no matter how urgently painful, most things can still wait without waiting. But she won't forget.]
It's a diamond mine. It's worth it. I... it doesn't sit easy on me, workin' in a place 'alf the passengers didn't choose to be. We do right by 'em though, we're 'ere to set 'em free. More free than most of 'em've ever got to be before.
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Yes. That's it, sweetheart, that's it exactly. That's what we're 'ere for. Break 'em out of the bars in their 'eads. It's bloody 'ard work. But you see why I love it 'ere, now.
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