kieren walker (
burying) wrote in
singillatim2023-10-16 01:49 am
closed | an empty crisis lonely and last
Who: Kieren Walker & Eddie Munson, Holland March, Cornelius Hickey.
What: Kieren finds himself a victim of Guilty Party along with Eddie Munson. Later, there's discussions, more confessions to both Holland and Hickey over Kieren's situation.
When: Over the month of October.
Where: Various, Milton.
Content Warnings: forced imprisonment; forced honesty; supernatural beings; confessional themes; threat of death; possible themes of suicide; themes of zombie-related horror; possible discussion of zombie-related cannibalism

What: Kieren finds himself a victim of Guilty Party along with Eddie Munson. Later, there's discussions, more confessions to both Holland and Hickey over Kieren's situation.
When: Over the month of October.
Where: Various, Milton.
Content Warnings: forced imprisonment; forced honesty; supernatural beings; confessional themes; threat of death; possible themes of suicide; themes of zombie-related horror; possible discussion of zombie-related cannibalism


no subject
[ And he still has his pinkie out. Just. Waiting for him. He doesn't get it. He tries again: okay, now you, March. ]
Why are you trying to do a pinkie promise?!
[ He's certainly not doing it until he explains. ]
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[ March's voice is rising both in volume and pitch, nearly cracking. This is ridiculous. But a part of him is glad that Kieren is yelling because he's confused, not because he's angry. Progress. Who cares if it's at his expense? It's whatever. ]
no subject
He sighs, deflating a little. Alright, fine. This might as well happen, he guesses.
He closes his fist, sticking out his pinkie and moving to curl it around Holland's. There. Done. Yes, his skin isn't warm — it's roughly about room temperature. ]
I've got a right to refuse any.... weird questions, by the way.
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You think I'm gonna ask you a weird question?
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I'm a real-life walking and talking corpse and you're a private investigator. [ There's a pause as he shakes his head a little: what do you think? ] Considering you were talking about getting frostbite on your dick when we first met, I think it doesn't sound... all that far out there.
[ Please do not ask him about his dick. ]
no subject
None of that stuff's in my world. Weirdest thing that's happened to me was I saw the President when I almost died, alright? That was less an actual thing and more of a hallucination.
no subject
[ A gift, he told Bill Macy. Rick was a gift. It's not a point of view that Kieren shares in relation to his own existence. He isn't a gift. ]
... You really hallucinated the president?
[ Shit, which one is that gonna even be, in the 1970s? Kieren doesn't know. ]
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[ But this is not about him. It's about Kieren. March regroups. ]
Your thing... Does it hurt? You still feel pain? I mean, mentally, you're obviously alright.
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I— [ Christ, how does he even say it? Even if he has the words, how does he come out with it? He swallows, his chest feels hollow. ] I don't really— feel anything any more. I can remember how things are supposed to feel, but—
[ He inhales, as is to steady himself, eyelashes flutter. ]
I don't eat, or drink. I sleep and dream— [ God, does he dream. ] but it's like nothing works like I remember how it did.
[ Like he's living inside an alien thing, his body is a foreign land. ]
It's a drug— that's how I'm like— [ He gestures vaguely at his head. ] Stimulates neurogensis, helps my brain function, something I can't do on my own anymore.
no subject
But it's hard. He's got a million questions. A million and one, even, and he decides to ask the first one that comes to mind. ]
What do you dream about?
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[ He doesn't dare go into details, he can't. Not about Lisa, about the others he hunted and killed. ]
Sometimes it's... back when I woke up, in my coffin. And I think I've been buried alive— I mean I wasn't. I was actually dead. [ There's no doubts about that. ] I'd been dead for about... three weeks, maybe? It wasn't that hard to dig out.
[ It's horrific, and Kieren knows it is. But he speaks it with a surprising calm, an odd kind of frankness. A grim run down of events, with the same recollection of someone recounting facts from a school textbooks. ]
no subject
That's something March can relate to. Not the horrific memory, no, but the ability to shut down the moment you start explaining something to someone. He acts the same way when someone asks about his wife.
That's where the similarities end, though. March presses his lips into a thin line. ]
Can I ask how you died? Before, I mean.
cw: self-harm/wrist injuries, references to suicide
(God, he misses Amy.)
He can't say it out loud. He can't. In the heat of the moment, he'd screamed it in front of Eddie and that awful fucking Jackal-thing. But in the here and now, he can't say it. None of the words seem right. They form in his mouth and he chews them, but they don't make it past his teeth. He can't say it. Not like this.
Mute, he removes his other glove — much like the other, this one too is pale and greyed: a body no longer with a beating heart and warm, fresh blood to flood it. Resigned, he tugs the sleeves of his hoodie and jumper up his arms — peeling back to reveal the hidden secret beneath. Deep, black, jagged scars line down his wrists, expertly stitched (the coroner, the undertaker?). Wounds that will never heal: a permanent tear in the skin — the reminder of what he'd done, how Kieren Walker croaked.
He turns his arms, wrists upwards, rests them on his knees. He can't look at Holland, he can only stare numbly into the mid-distance. He doesn't even know what to say. ]
no subject
He's also not the right guy to navigate this. He's the furthest from the right guy. One of the nice boat guys, maybe. Barbie, even. March isn't nice and hasn't been particularly interested in trying to fix that, and this? This needs a delicate touch.
He'd been expecting the answer to be 'car accident' or something. Not... ]
Jesus, Kid.
[ He needs another smoke. He needs an entire bottle of booze he doesn't have. He brings a hand up to rub at his face, trying not to think of how Kieren must have felt, ending his life only to wake up again--in his own coffin, no less. ]
cw more suicide talk
And he gets it, he really does. He remembers Amy had asked him why — he couldn't put the words to it. Only Rick knew. He could talk to Rick about anything.
Very quietly, he pushes his sleeves back down — obscuring the wounds from view. ]
I get it, if you don't know what to say. [ He says finally. ] I... I couldn't even talk about it to my own family, not at first. Like it was just... this— elephant in the room. Like— I was the elephant in the room.
We talk a bit about it now, but... it took a while. [ He inhales to steady himself. ] So... yeah. I get it.
cw more suicide talk
March takes a split second to look at Kieren, horrified. Not at the sight of the other but the fact that he's making himself so damn small. The way he pushes his sleeves down, how he curls into himself like he's avoiding the world. He couldn't talk about it to his own fucking dad.
Flask forgotten, cigarette forgotten, the older man's jaw is tight as he rises, crossing to Kieren in four long, purposeful strides. ]
Screw that.
[ Holland March is a fuck up, an asshole, and he really isn't a nice guy, but he's still a dad. He takes Kieren's upper arm, pulls him closer, and wraps his arms around him in the tightest hug he can. ]
no subject
There's movement, though. March getting up, and he quickly looks back up again in silent alarm. His eyes wide and watchful, not quite sure what he means to do. He freezes as he's pulled up by his arm and there's a brief moment of panic— what's happening, what's he doing—
Only— oh.
He remembers what they feel like. He remembers what it is they're supposed to feel like, when Amy reached for him in heartbreak. When his dad stood, weeping, with his arms outstretched — some horrible reenactment of how he desperately carried the body of his only son to help. He couldn't be helped. It was too late. Kieren had gone to hug him, held him. There's so many things he can't do anymore, but his dad could still feel. His dad could still hold him.
He remembers the shape of it, as reference. March hugs onto him, and he's frozen for the longest of moments just trying to let the memory of it sink in. Back when he was alive, when he hugged people and he could feel it properly. More. At all. Not what he is now.
Finally, he shudders. Something cracks in him a little. Something through the numbness. He wishes he could be more, right now. He hugs back, reeling.
He wishes he didn't have to rely on the memory of it. ]