soulsrob: (Que sera-sera)
Winnifred Prismall ([personal profile] soulsrob) wrote2014-04-29 01:46 am
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sequestrated: (sad)

[personal profile] sequestrated 2014-06-28 03:31 pm (UTC)(link)
[His fingers twist gently in the scarf, spoiling all her painstaking arrangements, and she smiles up at him, and he sighs a little—thoughtful, not sad. So strange to have anyone fuss around him like this—not just Winnie, but the mysterious giftgiver, and everyone else who's quietly watching his back. He's not used to it at all.

And she seems so much happier about the gift than he feels. Maybe because it's her nature to bubble, the way it used to be his. He wonders how long she'll stay that way; how long it will be before all this gets the better of her. He knows she worries, after all; she's not quite oblivious. But he doesn't comment.]


I'm not so sure. But thank you, Winnie. [Turning away from her, he picks up the socks and goes to fold them in his locker.]

Do you, uh, really think this colour works on me? [It's not so unlike the grey of the uniforms—and yes, he's changing the subject.]
Edited 2014-06-28 15:32 (UTC)
sequestrated: (orz)

[personal profile] sequestrated 2014-06-28 10:01 pm (UTC)(link)
[Closing the locker up, he gives her another thoughtful look; he's got the words by now, but his heart isn't in them.] Come on, now. I could be a canary. The best canary.

[Caged birds, after all, don't do anything; they don't endanger anyone. They just sit and sing and curl their clawed feet around their perch. He comes back and sits at the table.]

I'm not sure yellow would work for you. Your hair.
sequestrated: (this is all my fault)

[personal profile] sequestrated 2014-06-29 10:00 am (UTC)(link)
[He's still pulling gently at the scarf, but his hand freezes at the suggestion that he should sing; he stares at her.] All right. Perhaps I'll give up on the—canary ambition.

White I can see you in. Or black, for that matter. [And either would mean she wasn't here, pretty much, which would be A++ in his book.] Maybe a bit depressing, that.
sequestrated: (sad)

[personal profile] sequestrated 2014-06-30 10:10 am (UTC)(link)
I'm not so sure. I think we're better lost. I wouldn't, uh. [Yuki, of course. Simon bows his head and coughs a little, composing himself.] Uh. Sorry. Not knowing is bad, of course, but being at home, and knowing about all of this—no, I'm not so sure.

[He's repeating himself. He's surprised, though, by her mention of her father. He'd read about her mother, and remembered because they had it in common. But he'd imagined something more like his own situation.]

Why don't you sit down? [And he nods across the table, at the bench opposite.]
sequestrated: (orz)

[personal profile] sequestrated 2014-07-02 05:15 am (UTC)(link)
[He notices the sweep of her hand, but doesn't quite realise what she's doing, never having worn a heavy skirt himself. But he does that thing that passes for smiling again, the tiniest twitch of his eyebrows and twist of his mouth.]

I know what you mean, I think. I liked letters, even if they were the most perfunctory bloody things. [Language, Simon.] I used to write so many. Just tradition. [He still wrote to his father regularly right until he was taken—short little updates, vague and in brief, as good as lies. He's sure they all wound up in the paper shredder, since all he is to his father is a bloodline. Probably.]

You get on well with him, your father? [Juuust a little envious.]
sequestrated: (this is all my fault)

[personal profile] sequestrated 2014-07-02 10:15 pm (UTC)(link)
[As she tells her story, Simon listens with his face resting on one hand. It's like hearing two complex musical pieces played together, not quite similar—there's harmony, when she talks about her mother, and strangely about Agnes. And there's violent discord, when she talks about her father and his stories, and what they'd meant to her.

He's not quite expressionless, if you know how to look; everything has been turned down almost to nothing, but a lot is still there, a subtle engraving of emotion and thought instead of his old bright brush strokes. He ends up blinking slowly across the table, folding his hands back in his lap.]


We have—a surprising amount in common, you and I. Don't you think so? [What an admission, after he'd as good as lied to her the first time they spoke. He wonders if she's read his file by now, when she wouldn't before.]

My mother. She, ah, died, the same way yours did. [He has the most awful misgiving about mentioning this at all. But Gliese had known, had mentioned it to him, and he wants to cleanse the fact of it.] I was the youngest. The last.

[Which is to say, he killed her. But if it was the same for Winnie, who hasn't mentioned brothers or sisters, she doesn't seem to think so. The fact is vertiginous.]
sequestrated: (sad)

[personal profile] sequestrated 2014-07-03 12:34 pm (UTC)(link)
We've never been close. I suppose that's for the best, now. [And it's a question of how much he wants to reveal, isn't it? How much of what he's hidden for so long he's prepared to share?

It turns out it isn't very much. He knows there's more to what she's saying; he's got an unfair advantage, in that he is prepared to poke through everyone's records—he had a few misgivings at first, but he's quickly come to see it as just part of surviving.]
It was just my sister and my father, for the most part. But they weren't, ah, family. Just people I lived with. Angry, or—or spiteful. Sad.

[The scarf is tugging again; down in his lap, his hands are twisting. It's not something he can ever change.] Are you really happy with your life? As it is now? You should give lessons, if you are.
sequestrated: (space oddity)

[personal profile] sequestrated 2014-07-03 09:07 pm (UTC)(link)
[The first thing she says catches him by surprise, and he responds in just the way that's got him into so much trouble. He reacts first, tucking his head down, comforted out of proportion to what she's said. Then reason catches up with him, and reminds him of the downsides of her nature, that she'd likely say the same thing to almost anyone.

But that first emotional impression lingers; he's still touched by it. It still counts. When he looks back up, though, listening, his lips have pinched together; she's missed the point he was trying to make.]


I have good memories. Of course I do. [He does; he knows he does. He just ... can't quite remember them, placed on the spot and asked to recall them. Or they're seen through a dark lens, leached of all their colour and warmth. Or they're tainted beyond repair, and can't count any longer. He doesn't know how she does it, and yet the last thing he wants is for her to stop so obsessively seeing the bright side of everything. But it's inevitable.] I just—

For all that your life before was good, on the whole, you are here now. Do you understand me? I—how do you do it?
sequestrated: (orz)

[personal profile] sequestrated 2014-07-06 05:44 pm (UTC)(link)
Of course you did. I remember you saying. [It's not quite that he'd forgotten; he knows most did volunteer. It's just so hard to picture.

Closing his hands on the scarf again, he counts backwards, and goes over snatches of songs and poetry to calm himself. One of them's the poem she gave him, back before the library. By now, he knows it by heart, every word and rhyme and rhythm.]


"I have not winced nor cried aloud". Do you remember? It's the same thing, I think.
sequestrated: (sad)

[personal profile] sequestrated 2014-07-06 07:31 pm (UTC)(link)
[And he glances down at her hand on his arm, and back up to her. He's not going to crack and confess himself, all the things that are swirling inside him and eating him up. Even if he'd been raised that way, he doesn't believe it falls within his contract; he doesn't want to put ideas into anyone else's head.

Memories, they'd been talking about. Memories of home. His head spins when he tries to think about it, images of closer family than his own and school and work and friends all mixed together, so he just thanks her.]
You're a ridiculously good person, despite everything. And if I ever need to talk about it all—I will come to you. But not today.

Are you sure I can't get you something? A glass of water, maybe? I wish we had tea. [He's changing the subject, with a nervous patter of hospitality.]