Abigail Hobbs (
versusnurture) wrote2013-07-22 05:46 pm
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first ♢ voice
[Abigail's voice quavers, as though she's uncertain of the connection, like someone making their first long-distance call. She starts out firm and then peters out into uncertainty, the tail end of her first sentence almost a question.]
My name is Abigail . . . Hobbs.
I'm not sure how I got here, but I'm here now. [A pause; who to ask for?] I'm looking for Dr. Alana Bloom. She's tall with dark hair. She was supposed to check in with me this morning, but instead I'm here.
Are there - [And here she inserts a little more tremor than necessary into her voice, because she doesn't know what else to do right now - ] Are there letters home? That kind of thing? How does this work? Because I need to talk to my dad.
My name is Abigail . . . Hobbs.
I'm not sure how I got here, but I'm here now. [A pause; who to ask for?] I'm looking for Dr. Alana Bloom. She's tall with dark hair. She was supposed to check in with me this morning, but instead I'm here.
Are there - [And here she inserts a little more tremor than necessary into her voice, because she doesn't know what else to do right now - ] Are there letters home? That kind of thing? How does this work? Because I need to talk to my dad.
[ Spam ]
[Ben doesn't know what legal terms are, at least not in practice. He would find it odd that such definitions were paramount in any sense of the word, when they don't actually alter the state of one's disposition. It's not fairness that concerns him. It's reality.]
That happens, too. [He'd been hesitant to ask about it, not wanting to upset her again, not wanting her to look at him or raise her voice like that again. But if it was only surprising...] How so?
[ Spam ]
[She's heard this term, too. It sounds kind of beautiful, in a way, like stained glass windows.]
[Her smile at his question is shy; she ducks her head so her hair falls in a curtain over her face.]
Well, he was a friend. I wasn't expecting him to kill me.
[ Spam ]
[Ben reaches for the stairwell door, distracted from her for a moment while he scans the deck as he leads the way out onto it, hesitating just before stepping through the threshold. It's such a small hesitation, a mere slowing before he's stepping forward again, sidling out of her way so she can join him.]
Unless you needed it as a mercy in some way, he does not sound like much of a friend.
[ Spam ]
[One has not overtaken the other as of yet. All potential. Except for in those brief moments when one or the other part of her slips out, all talons and sharp beak, and rips into the world before receding.]
[She glances at him. He's looking out. He's protecting her. But is that just a ploy before betrayal?]
He was my friend. [He was more.] Now he's something else.
[ Spam ]
He looks back to her.]
Unless your death served some greater purpose or, as I said, was some manner of necessary mercy, he was never your friend.
[ Spam ]
[But she has begun to resign herself to the fact that she will never understand Hannibal's design. She doesn't like it, but that's just how it is. He's smarter than she is.]
[He has a grand purpose, and her role in it was over.]
[She turns her head up to look at the stars.]
It's nice out here. [A pause.] . . . Big.
[The word, perhaps, is vast.]
[ Spam ]
[Ben knows what friends are, or at least he's learning. Rhade, Alex, Aya, Anya - they would never hurt him, not unless he made them, not unless he asked them. He's not sure what all else it means, perhaps, but he does know that much. On this, he is certain.
Then she's looking out at the sky and he does, too, after a moment. It is big. He remembers thinking the same thing, remembers that it would have been intimidating had he not already been well accustomed to being intimidated by the world around him. To not understanding.
He is silent for several long moments, letting the door fall shut behind them, before he begins moving forward again.]
This is the deck. The upper levels are off limits to inmates unless accompanied by a warden. There is also the CES - the Closed Ecological System, which a warden must open for you, and can replicate several landscapes from the planets of the passengers on board.
[ Spam ]
[She falls into step next to him again easily.]
What's yours like? Your landscape.
[Ben is abruptly more interesting than this ship.]
[ Spam ]
He's not, exactly, thinking about that as he crosses the deck. He's not not thinking about it either, though, keeping watch around them until she asks the question. Glancing sidelong at her, he clears his throat.]
Forests, mostly. Occasionally a river. I doubt it is anything you'd find spectacular.
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What did you find spectacular?
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In the CES, or on the Barge?
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[She tilts her head, dark hair falling in a smooth, straight curtain, and looks at him quizzically.]
Where you're from. What do you think is spectacular where you're from?
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He isn't, exactly, certain what to make of it. So he waits and watches, and above all, answers because he has no reason not to.]
All of it was, for a time. Some in good ways, some in bad ways, but all of it was strange and new.
There was a waterfall in one of the forests outside of a city that used to be called Kent. It's loud, and wide, and falls down a series of rock steps, at some points wider than several vehicles, and in others narrow enough for a baseline human to jump without much difficulty. It is... ideal for hiding amongst, between the noise and the complication of its makeup. But it is also beautiful.
Amongst the human accomplishments, I appreciate... churches.
[ Spam ]
[Her eyes shift, studying his body language, and then return to his face.]
Good for hiding, but also beautiful?
[This resonates. And she smiles, soft and shy, pushing her hair behind her ears.]
Are you . . . religious?
[ Spam ]
He's quiet for several moments, as though he's considering not answering at all, as though he doesn't have the answer or maybe it's taboo. It is, in a way, this subject in particular has been unfit for acknowledgement ever since they left Manticore. Even here, where so much else came back within his reach and understanding, where he has so much more, he knows he's not supposed to touch this.
He always wants to, but he's not supposed to. He's deciding, in the private, shining mirror closet of his mind, if he can indulge in it this once. She's new. And no one's ever asked him directly.
Ben clears his throat gently, something in his expression softening.]
Sometimes.
[ Spam ]
[After a moment's pause to marvel at him (either the false love he presents, or the true reverence that shines from within him), she nods. Reaches a hand out, as though she's considering touching his arm in commiseration, then draws it back.]
[She has no intention to tell him. But she does want to see how he'll respond - to that, and to this:]
Wanna talk about it?
[ Spam ]
But he loved Her best of all of them, and at a time in his life where nothing else seemed right, where nothing else was warm, he'd taken comfort in that at least. It's very difficult to leave that behind for a world without Her.
He's broken out of it by her hand reaching toward him, preternaturally aware of his personal space in the way only someone who has had it routinely and casually violated can be, and some of the gentility goes out of him in its own silent, reflexive warning. He doesn't quite lean away, not the least because she takes her hand back. In its wake he looks up at her face, meets her eyes with his own bright brown gaze, and says,] Are you?
[ Spam ]
I - a little bit. We always went to church on Sunday until I was twelve or so, and then kind of stopped. But it was nice. It was . . . quiet. I could just think.
I don't know if I believe in God, but it would be nice to believe in something.
[Something other than the wicked wrongness of people. Something good. But she never will.]
[ Spam ]
Ben has never been to church, although he's lingered in the side streets and the alleys outside of them sometimes, listening to the creak of wooden pews and the shuffle of feet and the muffled strain of untrained, untried voices raised in song; he never understood the words, not as applicable to anything, but he didn't need to. Faith rang out in each syllable, lived in the faces of those that shuffled down the steps at the end of the service, and glowed from behind the stained glass windows he'd come to admire as something he would never be able to touch.
He doesn't believe in God, either. But he does believe in something.]
I don't know if that qualifies as religious, but. I agree. Everyone needs to believe in something.
[ Spam ]
[And so she smiles at him, bright and wide, and there are tears at the corners of her eyes that she's not entirely sure about - where did they come from? What's their purpose? And are they real, or are they false?]
It qualifies.
Tell me? Please? I want to know. It feels - important.
[ Spam ]
It makes him hesitate but, glancing around, he adjusts course. Instead of heading for the CES, now they're walking across the deck towards the chapel. Ben has never gone in, of course, it's not safe, but he is fully capable of standing at the opposite end of the deck and studying it anyway if left to his own devices. It's safe for Abigail, probably.]
She. She is important. She was the most important thing I ever talked about, before. The Blue Lady.
[ Spam ]
[Even the way he says it is reverent.]
[Using every part of someone.]
[Closed eyes, tears bright on her lashes, and then she opens her eyes and they're gone, gone, gone, along with the feel of a knife in a gut, gone. Ben. Ben is here.]
[Take her to the chapel, to safety. Her hands clasp together in front of her, fingers laced, an anchor for the fear that's only now starting to come to her in force - the fear, the memory.]
She sounds beautiful.
[ Spam ]
He clears his throat.]
She is. Beautiful and fierce, and capable of compassion for those who are faithful and strong. She is not a kind benefactor, but She is protective of those who honor Her.
She... [Nomlies, Ben knows now, are not real. Not as he'd outlined them in hushed tones in the indigo air of the barracks at lights out, the nightmare creatures compounded of every terror Manticore held for its test subjects. There were horrors, alright, and transgenics that had lost what little minds they'd had and were violent for it, and he still fears them for what they are. They are him, one step to the right or the left, one link up or down the DNA strand. He closes his eyes then opens them again to clear his thoughts, the space of a long blink, nothing more.] protects those who believe in Her, and at the end of their lives, She guides them to the Good Place.
[ Spam ]
[Almost.]
[The difference is that Ben isn't telling her that what's happening is her fault. Not that it logically could be, but - her father killed because of her. Hannibal said . . . but Ben is just here. He's just here next to her, talking about his god.]
[She takes a shuddering breath.]
The Good Place. [Maybe she should have believed in something like this.] Do you -
Did you honor her? [Honor every part of her?]
[ Spam ]
He doesn't smile. What he did wasn't good, either, but it had felt like it at the time. He had done it for the right reasons. He just can't talk about that anymore, either.]
Yes. I was the one who made Her real to the others, and in every way I knew how, I honored Her.
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