Abigail Hobbs (
versusnurture) wrote2014-05-21 11:07 pm
Entry tags:
- [ ben ],
- [ ceres ],
- [ derek powers / blight ],
- [ hannibal ],
- [ harvey dent / two-face ],
- [ mindy ],
- ] or did you hunt,
- always the possibility of murder later,
- ben & the blue lady,
- capable of greatness,
- ceres is mercifulish,
- collecting dads like they're pokemon,
- collecting gothamites like they're pokem,
- couldn't protect me in this life,
- derek powers knows power,
- explain the logistics of space prison,
- gathering data,
- granted eternal bliss,
- i have seen sights & been scared,
- i will speak the truth,
- i'm worried about nightmares,
- it's people,
- some die young,
- survey says,
- there are no rosehips,
- very smart girls grow up,
- what am i now?,
- who cares i'm dead
sixteen ♢ spam & voice
infirmary spam } after mirror barge
[Dying the second time . . . honestly, it wasn't as bad. This feels like a strange thing to think, but it's most of what she thinks in those days of the death toll that feel like death isn't quite over yet.]
[The difference is, her first death, her real one, was intimate. This was a mercy, sort of, and she doesn't totally regret it, but it wasn't. It wasn't.]
[The same.]
[It wasn't family.]
[She lies back in the infirmary bed and stares at the ceiling with a soft smile. It's very impersonal here, but that's a relief in its own way, too. She's not the only person who died, not by a long shot. She's not the person most choose to focus their attentions on.]
[She can just rest.]
spam } blight
[It's a few days after everything clicks back into shape that Abigail works up the energy needed for speech. She doesn't go back to her cabin, although she sort of wants to. There are pros and cons to everything, she thinks, and the pros of staying in the infirmary outweigh the cons by far.]
[Blight is here, for example. She can see him from across the room. His presence makes her feel safe, in a backwards way, simply because she knows he isn't what he was. He will not protect her, but he will be reeling as much as anyone else. Maybe more. He doesn't seem like a man who likes to lose control.]
[One more day, and she hoists herself up out of the bed and makes her way over to his. A soft, quick smile - an exhausted one.]
Who got you?
spam } hannibal
[She knows he isn't welcome in the infirmary. That's part of the reason she stayed. But halfway through her stay, she did begin to regret it. Because . . .]
[This death lacked intimacy. That's one reason. No one sang her songs. No one told her everything was going to be all right. No one apologized. There was no sense of closure.]
[And because he frightens her at the same time he comforts her. Because the uncertainty and insecurity of her relationship with Hannibal Lecter is secured with a love that doesn't seem to die.]
[When she is well enough to walk, she walks to his cabin, and she knocks on his door.]
inmate filter } minus hannibal
I know a lot of people who are here being - punished, or whatever - they've killed people.
How many of you hunted them?
private } ceres
I'm interested in your answer especially.
[Dying the second time . . . honestly, it wasn't as bad. This feels like a strange thing to think, but it's most of what she thinks in those days of the death toll that feel like death isn't quite over yet.]
[The difference is, her first death, her real one, was intimate. This was a mercy, sort of, and she doesn't totally regret it, but it wasn't. It wasn't.]
[The same.]
[It wasn't family.]
[She lies back in the infirmary bed and stares at the ceiling with a soft smile. It's very impersonal here, but that's a relief in its own way, too. She's not the only person who died, not by a long shot. She's not the person most choose to focus their attentions on.]
[She can just rest.]
spam } blight
[It's a few days after everything clicks back into shape that Abigail works up the energy needed for speech. She doesn't go back to her cabin, although she sort of wants to. There are pros and cons to everything, she thinks, and the pros of staying in the infirmary outweigh the cons by far.]
[Blight is here, for example. She can see him from across the room. His presence makes her feel safe, in a backwards way, simply because she knows he isn't what he was. He will not protect her, but he will be reeling as much as anyone else. Maybe more. He doesn't seem like a man who likes to lose control.]
[One more day, and she hoists herself up out of the bed and makes her way over to his. A soft, quick smile - an exhausted one.]
Who got you?
spam } hannibal
[She knows he isn't welcome in the infirmary. That's part of the reason she stayed. But halfway through her stay, she did begin to regret it. Because . . .]
[This death lacked intimacy. That's one reason. No one sang her songs. No one told her everything was going to be all right. No one apologized. There was no sense of closure.]
[And because he frightens her at the same time he comforts her. Because the uncertainty and insecurity of her relationship with Hannibal Lecter is secured with a love that doesn't seem to die.]
[When she is well enough to walk, she walks to his cabin, and she knocks on his door.]
inmate filter } minus hannibal
I know a lot of people who are here being - punished, or whatever - they've killed people.
How many of you hunted them?
private } ceres
I'm interested in your answer especially.

[spam]
[She doesn't look at him. But she still fidgets. She tries not to do that anymore, but here she is, toes tapping on the edge of the bed, fingers twisting in each other's grip.]
[You would think. But you'd be wrong.]
Family can't be trusted.
[This she says quietly, almost a sigh. It's just a statement; he can take it, or he can dismiss it. He can use it, or he can discard it.]
[But she knows. Children are as wicked and deceitful and vile as parents can be.]
[spam]
If it wasn't exactly on purpose that he's said what he has, though, it wasn't precisely an accident either. On his first most conscious level he would deny wanting to talk about this at all...a bit deeper than that, he's already well aware that Abigail is someone that can be trusted. For his purposes at least.
She won't use this against him. She won't give this away.
Or she wouldn't, not without a very good reason.]
No. Evidently not. [He doesn't move; save where his right hand clenches tight as it possibly can into a fist.] Somehow, there seems to be something...tragic, about that.
[spam]
[But those aren't the reasons she isn't going to share what he's told her, or implied to her, or skirted around the truth of for her benefit. She isn't going to tell because she might be loose with her own secrets - she might use them to shock and frighten and manipulate - but she knows that if someone else told them, she would be hurt.]
[She doesn't want to hurt him. It's not a clever reason, but it's a reason nonetheless.]
[She inspects her nails.]
It's tragic because of genetic imperative. We're designed to protect our children - unless something goes awfully wrong, anyway. Unless we go crazy. So when they turn on us, we're betrayed on - on a chromosomal level. In our bones. Same with parents.
And it's shocking because it means they're flawed. The children or the parents.
[She frowns.] I don't know. I don't want it to be tragic. I want it to be factual. But I can't reason all of it, or even most of it, away.
[spam]
By all means, let the discussion turn to the abstract, the intellectual. Or at least pretend that it has.]
What's more pressing and important a form of survival: one's genetic make-up, or the identity that makes up one's own self?
[He's twisting the focus of her words around, on purpose, changing them to something that has no sting. Maybe she'll thank him for it.]
Certainly a subject that could keep the intellectuals debating for weeks.
[spam]
[She thinks she's getting a headache. Maybe it's the lights in here, almost violent in their fluorescence. She squeezes her eyes shut.]
I'm not okay.
[A step in the wrong direction - or right, she doesn't know. Now she looks at him and wrenches them both away from the abstract, and even as she does so, doesn't know if it's the right thing or not. She's following instinct - what her nature tells her, or what her nurture has taught her. Even now, she doesn't know.]
Are you okay?
[spam]
Instinct.
He keeps stressing that no matter what people are still instinctive creatures, thus self-preservation will always be key. But it's an instinct too to defend one's own family, one's own genetic make-up. To try and help those they are related to survive. What happens when those two instincts go head-to-head?
Well, it looks like both he and Miss Abigail Hobbs know. Or rather, don't. Because here they are, and still it seems they haven't found any answers.]
No.
[In a move quick enough it comes across for what it is - an impulsive decision he's not giving himself time to rethink - he turns his head and glances up enough to meet her eyes.]
But I will be. Eventually. I have no other choice.
[spam]
[But then, Abigail isn't challenging him. And to her surprise, he isn't challenging her either; nor is he retreating. He is simply meeting her eyes, acknowledging, allowing her to know rather than concealing the truth.]
[It's a strange and rare gift. One she doesn't take for granted. Like the truth - she doesn't take that for granted anymore, either.]
[That's why she looks away after those few moments have passed, giving him - and herself - some reprieve. She stares at her shoes now.]
Sure. We both will be. That's what we do, isn't it? Survive?
[spam]
Not just survive; endure. Persevere.
[It's a subtle, minute difference. One is mostly luck. But he prefers to think victory goes to the lucky and the smart and the strong. You need all of them to do more than live; you need them if you want to win. He doesn't mind placing Abigail up on that plateau along with him.]
[spam]
[Not yet.]
Thrive.
We are . . . highly adaptable.
[People like us.]
[spam]
[Touching back on 'the Red Queen', again.
He prefers to think it's not that the barge is changing him. It's that he's adapting to better survive it. Learning what better tactics to use, as he goes.]
Life, or death. Suppose that's the one benefit here: everything gets to be a lesson. Even the ones that should prove otherwise fatal.
[spam]
But then Darwinian law fails here, I guess. The most powerful rule of life and death, and someone like the Admiral just - makes it moot, just like that.
As long as we're learning. As long as we're adapting. As long as we change, we won't be stuck here forever.
[She has felt herself changing like the movements of mountains into each other over thousands of years, only all sped up, so there are growing pains in her mind. She doesn't know what to make of it, only knows that it's happening - and even being cognizant of that much is a big step.]
[spam]
[And he's quieter again, drawing back into himself, because this is the part that truly makes him uncomfortable. The one thing about this place that is so impossible for him to swallow.
He doesn't want to change; doesn't think of himself as flawed, in need of fixing.
But even as tired and incapable of processing something through as fully as he is right now, he still even knows. What he's just been through, what he saw and felt and knew on that other barge? That's not something you just walk away from. That's not something you get to ignore.
There's no getting off unscathed, from this - from that.]
But there's more than one way to adjust.
[spam]
[As for herself, she knows change is required. She just doesn't know which way. Not yet. She's trying lots of different ways, though she's beginning to think she isn't reaching far enough, committing strongly enough to any of her paths. Her experiments are not committed enough. It makes her disappointed in herself, yet even more determined to push herself harder.]
We can adjust in all sorts of dimensions.
Or, I can anyway. I can regress or progress, or stay the same goodness and just move side to side. There's no exact goal to reach for, so it's all just adjusting in the dark.
[spam]
[Some of the tension abates again; strange as it is for him in general, it is still undeniably easier to talk about her than it is to talk about him.]
Or having someone else set a goal for you. [He tries not to emphasize that too much, and isn't entirely certain he succeeds - he's gathered it's been a problem for her, in the past.] Oh yes; distinctly better than that.
[spam]
That's what I love best about Ben, you know. He doesn't set goals for me. He let me - [let? she questions her word choice, then decides it's correct] - let me kill someone when he could have stopped me, so that I could see for myself what I'd done, why it wasn't right. For me, not for them. Not based on some - abstract moral system that doesn't apply to me.
I think I would've tried to kill anyone else the Admiral gave me. Nobody holds my hand anymore.
[In this moment she's fierce and crisp and eternal - but it doesn't escape her that she is talking about what she is not, rather than what she is. There is an absence rather than a presence in her, and that's precisely what she needs to work on. She doesn't want to be nothingness forever.]
I'll think about it. Goals, I mean. I think right now I just - I want to understand people better. Why they do what they do and why they're cruel to each other, besides for ambition. But I could be wondering about that forever. There's no end goal there.
[spam]
If that's really what you're interested in, then this could be a good place to learn. If you observe and watch carefully. [It's said slowly, musingly, almost begrudging. He doesn't want to think of anything about this place as a positive but he is...learning things, here. There are enough things so far that can still surprise him.]
[spam]
[Being trapped in close quarters with Hannibal is not an opportunity. It's a sentence. The rest of it, though . . . there are good things.]
And there are a lot of people to learn from. [Blight, of course, being one of them.]