A. Rama Raju (
load_aim_shoot) wrote in
singillatim2024-03-03 01:06 pm
Entry tags:
(closed)
Who: A. Rama Raju, Edward Little, Francis Crozier, William Gibson
What: experiencing/dealing with the horrors
When: after the recent Darkwalker attack, around the time of the town meeting, and after one of the aurora nights
Where: one outside the Community Hall, the other on the outskirts
Content Warnings: Ned's fire trauma, little mention of Raju's trauma that I'll CW for on the comment title. If anything else comes up I'll add!
What: experiencing/dealing with the horrors
When: after the recent Darkwalker attack, around the time of the town meeting, and after one of the aurora nights
Where: one outside the Community Hall, the other on the outskirts
Content Warnings: Ned's fire trauma, little mention of Raju's trauma that I'll CW for on the comment title. If anything else comes up I'll add!

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Maybe Raju could have read about it when he was young, if he’d ever decided knowing about the English navy would have been useful. Maybe he could have when he’d been older, in that apartment in Delhi, if he’d ever found more time. Maybe something about the man in front of him had been there, buried in one of the piles of books spread out around the place and over the floor.
Anything that had been clearly isn’t something Francis is as excited about. Not the heroic side of it, anyway. Raju thinks that he can work with that.
“So they weren’t real then, the stories?” He grins. “Were you more of a twat then too?”
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"The stories were real," he relents, finally smiling quite genuinely. "It was all real. Wilder, in fact, that what had been initially reported. We brought penguins aboard the ships and had dances in the ice. I sailed Terror blind through a wall of icebergs, and stayed on my feet for an entire week to see us through storms."
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And he never bragged, of course, not once. It used to drive Ross mad, his reasons being if Crozier talked himself up more he’d win his bride and command and accolades.
He finds himself smiling across the ice at Raju, feeling just a little bashful and hot around the ears. He still doesn’t like to boast, but the way his friend is staring makes him want to tell him all about the marvelous sights he’s been fortunate to see.
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Half of him’s still thinking about that set of rooms that, for a while, he’d been foolish enough to think of as his. How he might collect it if he was there or once he goes back, evidence, something he can read and hold in his hands. The rest of him is wondering at the idea that service to the crown could ever look that way, discovery and adventure and celebration over all you’ve accomplished once you make it back.
It’s a strange thought, the side of that service Raju was never going to see. But Francis looks so pleased and the tips of his ears are red, and it’s charming and impossible to mind.
“I’m not surprised they were impressed.” Raju watches him, looking a little pleased himself, and means it, wanting to see Francis excited about those past journeys again.
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Once upon a time he'd been so eager to meet those children. Uncle Frank. He would have loved to have been Uncle Frank to James Clark Ross' myriad of children, but it's best not to think about it for too long. He can't break his own heart if he chose not to go back with Ross when he'd finally come for them all.
"Scientific publications before that," he adds, deciding to keep going. Raju seems interested, so he's happy enough to keep talking about it all. "Plenty of news in the papers about our discoveries. It was difficult avoid us for a number of years after we'd returned."
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He shoves the pole underneath his thigh absently, reaching into his pocket for the mittens. Much as the fire helps in the small space it's still cold, and being without them is starting to hurt his fingers. He watches Francis as he talks, thinking out loud and trying to rub his fingers against his palms inside the mittens for a little friction. "It must be a while, or Ross wouldn't have had time to marry. But it can't be years."
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Time in between expeditions always passed achingly slow. He’s a typical sailor, always longing for the sea and looking towards the horizon. Yes, he’d missed land when he was away, but he knew where he belonged.
“I had a few years between that expedition and the last one.”
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“Not too long usually,” he starts, pulling the pole out from under him and handing it over, “but a few years that time? Were you thinking about retiring too?”
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“No,” he answers, but that isn’t necessarily true. If Sophia had agreed to his proposal sooner he might have left the sea for the altar, but he hadn’t been good enough for her then. Or ever. “No, I was waiting. Expeditions of that magnitude take some years to put together. I traveled to the continent in the meantime, tried to rest my weary bones some.”
He frowns softly. “Do you have a sweetheart at home, Raju?”
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As precious a gift as the mittens still are, he's never quite gotten used to not being able to use his hands. He's resisting the urge to try and touch it. But the cord sits against the mitten's edge, pendant sitting over the fur.
"A very patient one," he murmurs, watching it sitting there. Then he looks back up at Francis and tries to figure out where the seeming subject change came from. Marriage and retirement, marriage and time away from home. Maybe Francis is still thinking about Ross. "Did your friend want to retire because he planned to marry? Or did he want to marry only after he retired? A navy man's intended must wait for him a long time if he asks her and then goes to sea."
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A very patient one. Did he have a wife at home? Is it possible he’s married? When it comes down to he he knows so little about Raju, his secretive friend with an obvious past.
“The former,” he answers. “He proposed before leaving for the expedition. It was going to solidify his career - and it did. It’s no easy life for the family of a navy man. We’re gone for years at a time, and there are inherent dangers to exploration, even if most come back perfectly safe and sound. Anne was anxious for Ross to return, bless her. He put her through hell with all that waiting.”
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Probably not. He knew what he was coming back to, didn't he?
"And you said he earned a knighthood, after? Is that always what he wanted when you were sailing together?"
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“He didn’t care about any of that,” he says quietly, looking down at the fishing hole and adjusting his grip. “He wanted the adventure above all else. ‘Frank, old boy, what’s the point of simply looking at an iceberg? Let’s climb the damned thing!’ And then off he’d cart me, hauling my sorry arse behind him to follow in whatever daring scheme he had in mind.”
God, did he ever love that man. He tries to keep the truer feelings of sentiment out of his voice; let it all be nostalgia and bemusement.
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Raju focuses on Francis, his nostalgia and happier memories. That’ll make it easier to shed the momentary mood, whatever it is that Francis’ innocent question had invited in. “And you sailed together before that expedition, too? I think you said you met when you were both young.“
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His and Ross' lives had been quite different. Ross had every available opportunity, the family connections, the good education and upbringing, the right steps in his career, the handsome face. And Crozier had...enough to get by. But he could never be angry with Ross, his dearest and truest friend, so generous with everything in life.
"We sailed together constantly." They lived together. "I can say without zero hesitation that he was my better half, and I'm sure his wife would agree."
Crozier manages a chuckle, which is interrupted when there's a slight tug on the pole. He exclaims softly and then holds the pole out for Raju. "Here, here! Reel it in!"
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—and then the damn thing jams. Raju looks, disgusted, at the line all tangled inside the reel, then sets the pole aside altogether and starts pulling on the line itself. He has to hook the line around the mittens to make up for the lack of purchase on the fur, and the damn fish is probably going to get away at this rate. He never paid enough attention to the fishermen at home, did he? He doesn't remember how much of a hurry there ought to be.
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He doesn’t expect the fish to give much of a fight, so at the first sign of struggle he looks surprised. It’s a technical issue though, figures, so Crozier leans forward and spins his hand to gesture for Raju to keep going - fish or no fish they need to get the line out of the hole anyway to try and reset the pole.
“Do you still feel something on the end of the line?”
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"Do I just..." He pulls the end of one mitten off with his teeth and raises his eyebrows at Francis, holding his bare hand out toward the fish but not touching it yet, not sure if there's a wrong way to pick it up off of the hook.
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The fish may not be large, but it is a char, and therefore delicious, even if in this very ugly state.
“Pull it off the hook,” he nods, “and give it a bash on the ice to kill it. Quickly now. Don’t let it suffocate.”
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"Is that usual?" he asks, watching it to make sure it's gone still before holding it out to Francis. "Killing it that way? I think I have seen fishermen doing that before, but... I wasn't thinking about it."
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It wasn’t how it was done in the navy when they did fish for their suppers. They let them drown in the air, gills flapping and mouth gasping for water. He couldn’t say if it was how the fishermen on the river or out by the sea did it; he’d never paid all that much attention to it.
He knows how the Netsilik did it.
“I’m not certain,” he says, blinking softly as Raju puts the poor thing out of its misery. Crozier silently admires his efficiency and sheer strength - and marvels in his trust in him. “It’s how I’ve done it.”
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His hand feels cold already, of course, but not quite in the way it had been before, and he doesn't really want the residue from the fish on his hand getting into the inside of the leather or on the fur of the mitten he's taken off. He curls his fingers against his palm instead and sets it on his lap, tucking it into the folds of the blanket wrapped around him. Taking the other mitten off to untangle the fishing line won't be that bad thanks to the fire, but for a moment it can wait. "Did you learn to do it that way?"
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He nods softy. He doesn’t usually mind talking about the Netsilik and all they’ve taught him, but this gets uncomfortably close to their death rituals. The cycle of souls and living things, the respect one must give to every life, no matter how small.
“Can we save the line?”
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Raju doesn’t hide the attention and the curious look in his eyes, but after the one moment he drops it easily, reaching out with his mittened hand to pick the pole up and look more closely at its line. He’s already committed himself to going easy today, not pushing, and it feels good to do it. There probably would have been every reason to push back in Delhi, for any number of reasons. Being able to let any question go unanswered feels good, like he’s sparing Francis from something.
“Damn strange, this thing,” he mutters, turning his attention to the fishing pole. “I wish everything here wasn’t so damned strange.” Still, it’s easy to figure out how to get the reel off the line and open. A clip holding it on and screws over the place the rest of the line must be spooled, oddly easy to loosen by hand. He peers inside, trying to hand the pole itself off to Francis.
“Can you hold this? Make sure it isn’t tangled on the pole anywhere. Do you think I was doing something wrong? Or is the fault somewhere in this thing?”
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cw descriptions of animal butchery
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cw fish death :(
Continued cw for more fish death
fish preparation time now
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