methuselah (
singmod) wrote in
singillatim2023-11-09 04:18 pm
Entry tags:
- *event,
- alluri rama raju: xil,
- bigby wolf: jelle,
- cornelius hickey: kates,
- dean winchester: verna,
- edward little: jhey,
- harry goodsir: karin,
- jack kline: jean,
- jason mcconnell: balsam,
- kate marsh: cheryl,
- kieren walker: cheryl,
- knives: lassie,
- la'an noonien-singh: amy,
- levi jordan: cirape,
- louis de pointe du lac: tea,
- max mayfield: jean,
- rei ayanami (ii): floral,
- rorschach: shade,
- thomas jopson: kota,
- tim drake: fox,
- vash the stampede: fen,
- vash the stampede: fyn,
- wynonna earp: lorna
nature offers a violence
NOVEMBER 2023 EVENT
PROMPT ONE — WHITEOUT: Methuselah makes an unexpected early return to Milton to warn Interlopers of an impending monster storm, and boy does it surely come.
PROMPT TWO — A CHOICE: Following the storm, sightings of a mysterious stag prompts a hunt down in the Basin and out in the Outskirts.
PROMPT THREE — REST MY WEARY BONES: While the storm causes a great deal of mess, it also uncovers some far more pleasant surprises. Hot springs.
WHITEOUT
WHEN: Early to mid-month.
WHERE: Milton.
CONTENT WARNINGS: extreme weather; storms; blizzards; themes of survival; possible character cold-related injuries; possible themes of peril.
In the times that he is no longer occupying the Community Hall in the center of town to help tend to the newcomers, Methuselah is out in the wilds. Despite his growing age, he is a hardened survivor, and has been more than accustomed to life living as a nomad, out in the thickest, deepest parts of nature. Sometimes he can be encountered, sheltered in a cave or out in the woods, huddled by a warm campfire, or busying himself with his latest game catch. He seems to be always on the move, never staying for too long, and never coming into town — unless it’s to begin preparations for the latest batch of new arrivals.
To see him returning to Milton outside of these times is a curious sight, and the grim expression he carries is enough to make anyone wary. Even his voice is grave. The warmth and kindness usually found in his expression is gone, replaced with a deathly seriousness. He doesn’t speak in jest.
"I am long used to this world and its weather, even with the changing times to more bitter nights." he will say. "I have seen the years rise and fall, too many to count. Please, I beg that you hear me with this— a storm is coming. Greater than some of you may have ever known. It is in the air, and we must prepare to see it through. We do not have much time. Three days, perhaps. But no more."
He will tell anyone and everyone; encouraging the word to be spread around. He will instruct on what needs to be done, what needs to be gathered. The storm will be long and hard, and will last for some time. With that, Methuselah will begin to prepare the Community Hall as a place of refuge with a stock of food, fuel and water to get through the storm. Interlopers will be free to join Methuselah and bunker down together, or can choose to bunker down on their own in their own homes, or with others.
You have only three days.
And sure enough, the storm comes. Maybe you can notice the signs too: the sudden updraft, the slow gathering of clouds, the drop in temperature, the changes of pressure in the air.
Halfway through the third day, the storm rolls in: a ferocious snow-storm unlike anything you’ve seen before. Even with the fading amount of daylight as mid-winter approaches, the sky turns as dark as night as will stay like night for the duration. Strong howling winds batter the town, and even the sturdiest of buildings creak and groan under the weight. Trees will be felled, some buildings might not fare the storm.
Relentless snow that falls so hard it’s a complete whiteout, and will be impossible to navigate if one were to step outside. Even then, it isn’t advisable. The temperature is bitter, with a frigid windchill. Going out in this kind of storm would be a death sentence. Staying out in it for longer than a half-hour will certainly kill you.
It would be best to wait it out, to huddle around warm fires in the darkness. It may certainly be a test of patience, depending on your choice of place to stay. The storm will last a full week, a stark reminder of what you are, the words you have heard in your arrival: thrown to Mother Nature’s mercy, the Interloper in her design.
But will you persist?
A CHOICE
WHEN: Mid-month, onwards to end of month.
WHERE: Milton Basin, Milton Outskirts.
CONTENT WARNINGS: survival themes; themes of hunting; possible animal death.
After the storm passes, there’s a certain kind of hush that falls upon Milton and its surrounding areas as Interlopers are left to pick through the wake. While the temperature certainly doesn’t get that much warmer, there’s days and nights of clear, calm weather — short afternoons of weak sunshine and nights of chilly peace, the moon hung high in the starry skies. Winter is drawing ever-closer, but it’s still for a little while.
In the early evenings, before the sun sets, there’s strange sightings of a particular white stag that can be found roaming the area — particularly down in the Milton Basin. It seems quite elusive, but there’s plenty of Interlopers that have been able to capture a glimpse over the coming days. Even Methuselah himself has seen this beast before, remarking there has long been tall tales of a ghostly stag that roams the Northern Territories and is said to bring good fortune to those who manage to hunt it down.
Perhaps you’re a little low on luck. Perhaps you’re feeling lucky. You’re going to find that stag.
Hunting down the stag, however, will take a great deal of patience and time. You might find yourself waiting several hours to wait for it to appear. Building a snow shelter, or hunkering down in some old shack might be needed in order to keep warm. But if you’re patient enough, and able to withstand the cold for long enough — the beast will soon make an appearance.
In the dying light of the day, it is there. It’s unlike any deer you’ve seen before: tall and majestic, with thick, soft fur of brilliant white. It almost looks ghost-like in some angles, it’s an incredibly beautiful creature. But it seems to have also noticed you, just as you have noticed it. It doesn’t dart away, however. Instead it stands before you, waiting for you to act.
You have a choice: slay the creature, or let it go.
It will not move until you make your decision, holding your gaze until you raise your weapon or until you lower it and give up your hunt. But there is a consequence to either action: if you choose to kill the stag, you will be rewarded with a sizeable bounty of venison. Eating said meat will help you feel fuller for longer, and the meat will keep for far longer than any other deer slain.
However, if you choose to spare the stag, the creature will lower its head, as if bowing to you. Then, it will disappear with a swirling of powdered snow. When you return home for the evening and go to sleep, the next morning you will find a gift at the foot of your bed: a pair of deerskin boots, or a deerskin blanket. These boots are supple, tough and waterproof — allowing for a great balance of mobility and warmth. The blanket is incredibly toasty, and will provide a great deal of comfort in the long nights ahead.
REST MY WEARY BONES
WHEN: Mid-month, onwards indefinitely.
WHERE: Milton Outskirts.
CONTENT WARNINGS: n/a.
The storm has blown in plenty of snow to make traversing the area much more difficult, but there’s something else of note that comes with its passing. While the storm has brought much devastation, and some places have been buried in snow drifts, plenty of snow in areas has been blown away, uncovering otherwise lost secrets within Milton. Clouds of what looks like steam can be noted not too far from town, towards the mountains of the north.
If Interlopers head to explore the clouds, they will find old trails leading up towards the mountains. It isn’t a particularly difficult journey, for once, and they will soon discover that the storm has blown away the previously blocked access to a cave. It appears that this is the right place.
The air is warm here, pleasantly so. Warm enough that hats and mittens and coats seem a little unnecessary. One might wonder if someone lives within, and that a great fire is stoked to keep the place warm. But there’s no one in sight, no sounds of life: human, animal or otherwise. If they press on, they will discover that the cave floor is well worn with footfall: plenty of people have come here before, and the reason why is soon revealed.
The air grows even warmer, and more humid. The space opening to reveal small pools of slow-flowing water, warm water. The stone houses a natural hot spring, and following the cave out the other side will lead to another space in the rock open to the air, where there are even larger pools of warm water, perfectly sized and deep enough to bathe in. It seems that this place was frequently used by the people of Milton, where their life of hardship could be forgotten for an hour or two.
The water is pleasantly hot, and incredibly inviting. After so long in the freezing cold without modern appliances and utilities, a natural hot spring sounds like an absolute luxury.
FAQs
1. Characters are free to play around with this prompt how they want. Maybe they're dumb enough to go into the cold and get injured or sick. Maybe they're stuck in the Community Hall for the week. Fights might break out as tensions run high whilst everyone's stuck together, or maybe you're actually having a nice time.
2. For those stuck in the Community Hall: there are board games and old school textbooks stored in cupboards. There is also a piano.
3. A floorplan of the Community Hall can be found here.
1. .... Yes, you can pet the ghost stag.
2. Characters will get one choice only with the ghost stag, meaning they can't keep going back to find it to get extra gifts.
3. If characters can't agree on a course of action, whoever acts first will get their gift. The second character will have a chance to try again another time.
4. If both characters agree on sparing the stag, but players want different gifts (ie. one player wants the boots and one wants the blanket), characters will get the gift the player wants their character to receive.
1. The hot springs will now be a permanent fixture in the Milton Area, enjoy!

no subject
"Not with rationing," he shakes his head. "Not that kind, anyway."
He hesitates. It's strange; he'd gone to live in the city proper dressing a certain way, looking a certain way, to seem anything but an officer and for months there's been no reason to talk about his life as one, not to anyone but Uncle on those rare days he's able to come and help. Every reason never to talk about it. Wearing these clothes, with his beard grown out this way, it feels strange even to vaguely refer to it at all. Unnatural to speak on it out loud. It wants to stay buried in his thoughts.
Ridiculous to feel that way. Akhtar isn't here to find out, and an Englishman won't mind. The idea that the man he's looking to might be familiar with some kind of organizing force might even help with that careful, composed anxiety Raju can see if he looks closely. Not that the officers back home can face an angry crowd any less frightened for their own safety than this man must be, but something like the Imperial Police carries at least a reputation for discipline.
"The cook back at the barracks liked handing out punishments for any man who took more than his share too often, but that was for the budget's sake." Or so the man had said. "But I know how to deal with a mob."
Odd, again, to hear himself saying it. The only way to do it is matter of factly, with no emotion in particular outside something meant to sound politely reassuring. He doesn't need emotion to state a fact.
"You'll be alright, if it comes to that." Raju keeps the blanket around himself as he twists around to get another look at the place, looking over at the stairs. "Especially if you're down here when it starts. There's only the one entrance, there; that always helps. Contained quarters aren't so bad if they're defensible. If things start going that way I'll come down here to help, though it would be easier with a weapon. Find something with a fair reach, even just a sturdy length of wood, and you should be able to beat a crowd back from those stairs entirely on your own if you need to."
no subject
It's too familiar, perhaps. Too fresh. The way things went.... wrong, after the order to abandon ship. So much dread and discord, suspicion. A growing thing, creeping and crawling until everything fell apart all at once. Men torn apart by a monster, but perhaps even more horrifying were the men who tore each other apart. The mutiny, and what came after—
And he remembers standing on the edge of so many thresholds, forced to make decision and act and not knowing what to do. Here, he knows even less. If the people should become.... unruly, he is mostly on his own. And Edward flinches from things like physical violence and bloodshed. 'you should be able to beat a crowd back' the man across from him says, and for a moment Edward can only stare at the wall, eyes unfocused, re-living something within himself.
His eyelids flutter as he finds proper words again, drags his gaze back to the other man.
"I have a gun here," he says, and it feels like someone else is saying it. Edward has never shot a human being. He has had many opportunities to — and perhaps he should have, back then on the cold beach. Perhaps many things could have been stopped if he had.
"...But I don't want to have to... use it. Use any weapon against these people. If we can.... keep agitation from happening to begin with.... that's what we should do."
He nods, as though coaxing himself through it. What would the captain do? He'd try to stop a problem before it could become one. (But it's good, he thinks, to have a plan just in case. He won't ignore what the man has told him. It's... there; he'll remember it if it comes to that.)
"If we can keep them feeling safe, taken care of.... we can keep their minds at ease." Is it a fool's hope? Edward seems to believe it no matter the case, and gives a firm nod, shoulders easing some of their tension as he looks across to the other man.
"You're a solider?"
no subject
This isn't a man who will hold himself together, if it does come to that kind of fight. Raju finds a thought inside his mind on the heels of that one, a question: wondering how well the man guards his gun.
It doesn't matter. Better to avoid the fight in the first place. Keep him feeling safe. Taken care of. If he can keep the other man's mind steady then his hands will follow, and it will be better to have a man with a gun watching his back than one who's just seen Raju try to steal his only weapon. It's more practical, to keep it from coming to that.
That last thought makes it easier to slip into a friendly, polite smile as he holds out his hand, hairs on his forearm rising with the cold as he slips it out from underneath the thin shelter of the blanket. "Raju. Imperial Police. Don't worry, we're trained to the standard of any of the Crown's armies; I can more than back you up if you need. That gun, have you learned how to shoot it?"
no subject
Ah — police. There's an immediate relief to hear that word. A man of the law. Someone with experience..... 'I can more than back you up if you need.' He's extremely glad to hear that, and is finally able to offer a smile in return, even giving a soft exhale as though a sigh of relief.
"First Lieutenant Edward Little of Her Majesty's Royal Navy. A pleasure to make your acquaintance — is it 'Officer'?" He makes sure to ask, not wanting to assume. He's not quite familiar with the Imperial Polite, and wants to be respectful.
As to the question, Edward's smile turns a bit grim at the corners. Even to speak of the weapon seems to make him slightly uneasy. "Yes, I've been well-trained in the use of firearms, so there is no concern of my accidentally shooting it off." It's the closest thing to being playful that Edward gets.... but that grimness deepens after a moment.
"...I have never used it against a person, however."
no subject
"'Officer', no. Not unless you're trying to convince me not to arrest you." Raju's smile tightens, minutely. It's the kind of joke he would make to any Englishman who asked him that and comes out without thinking, even though Little couldn't seem more different from the smug, untouchable, confident men who would hear the idea of Raju arresting them as a great joke, impossible and bizarre. First Lieutenant or not, the man in front of him seems too frightened to be thinking about any of that.
"Or if you prefer Lieutenant," he goes on, shoving his hand underneath his other arm, back inside the warmth of the blanket. Strange to have a title offered to him by anyone, and respectfully. Raju may as well offer the same, especially if he's about to go back to a topic Little seems to like so much less. "I suppose you've never had to shoot anyone, in the Navy."
It's more a question than a statement. Whatever expedition sheltering here has Little thinking of, it'd obviously gotten ugly. It seems strange, to be in a position like that and have a weapon and not use it. Maybe he hadn't had it then.
no subject
The next sentence has his brow knit for a moment, that nod turning into a full tilt downwards of his chin, eyes lingering on his own hands upon the tabletop. Ah.
"No, there was.... little need for such things, fortunately." Though trained in the use of guns and whatnot, Edward's own naval service involved less of the wartime affairs and more stationary or exploratory. None of his stations were on the battlefield, so to speak.
.....Until the men of the Franklin Expedition created their own battlefield. Until he was forced to aim his gun at one of the crew. Once, then twice. Neither time had he fired.
"....I can't imagine what it would be like. To shoot a man. I suppose it might... change a person."
no subject
Some minute change shifts Raju's expression. Eyes a little wider, mouth and jaw held a little more tightly. His chest is tight. He can hear his heart beating loudly in his ears. For a moment—
"It—"
—only for a moment. Then Raju breathes out again quietly, making his expression settle. He should have expected this line of questioning would make him think of it. He hadn't expected the... the honest curiosity in the answer. He'd expected events, a simple recitation. This happened, and this, and then this. I did this, but I never did that. How would it feel is different. More thoughtful.
Worry, and now a tendency toward philosophy. Little is odd, for an officer. Maybe you see more of that in the navy.
"It's why we join, isn't it?" Raju's voice isn't sharp or abrupt as it had been in that one syllable, now perfectly composed and casual. The blanket is tighter around him than it was, reassuringly restrictive around his shoulders and his upper arms. "Because we can change. So others don't have to."
That's the official line too, or said so often it may as well be official. Something like it, anyway. The foreign officers believe it, or tell themselves they do, but he doesn't know how the rest of them say it with a straight face. Raju has always believed it. The truth of it is settled deep down inside his bones, since long before he and Uncle had even decided Raju would become an officer.
"If the need had been there, could you? If you're worrying about it, it might be for the best you never did. Hesitation and fear will ruin your aim."
Apologies for the delay! No worries if this is too late!!
Immediately, he feels a regret for what he's just said. Clearly it's snagged against something in the other man, and he doesn't mean to upset him. Even if Raju regains his composure in the next moment, continuing on, Edward's painfully aware that all of this may be territory he's not meant to breach.
But he's continuing to listen, attentively, even if all of it is a particular discomfort. It isn't often he has the opportunity to sit and... speak to someone else about such matters.
'It's why we join, isn't it? Because we can change. So others don't have to.'
Edward sits there, absorbing those words, that discomfort swelling within him. The idea of changing... it's the opposite of that concept, for him. That he's clung onto for all of this time, that he still clings to even now. To do whatever it takes so that he doesn't change. So that he stays who he was before. (A good man. A decent one.)
He doesn't reply to that sentiment, finds that he can't. Not just yet. It's still too... raw for him. (In the end, he was the only one still holding onto the idea of staying the same, and look what had happened. It had meant nothing. It had saved no one. Only further damned them.)
But the next question... Ah. Edward shifts uncomfortably, gloved hands tightening against themselves. The need was there, and he hadn't been able to do it. He doesn't know how to convey that, how to... cope with it.
"I... do not know. Even if I could, I... I do not think I would. I do understand that for some... roles, it may be a necessity, to keep order." For he means no offense if this man before him has had to take such measures in his own position.
"....But for my own role.... I am not meant to shoot men. I would only apprehend them so that they could be tried, court martialed."
...And how well had that worked out? Edward swallows, offers a soft exhale.
"I realise some may consider that weakness, but... I believe we must still try to hold onto decency, even if our situation may be less than ideal."
I'm happy to keep going, you're good!
"Is it decency?" Raju might sound matter of fact, to anyone who wasn't looking for the anger running underneath his tone. The anger is kept faint, distant; there are certain boundaries it doesn't pay to cross when speaking to a superior officer, even one in a completely different chain of command, even one who seems soft-spoken and kind. But even saying it is enough. He'd never say something like this to a man like that back home, in the middle of civilization and duty and everything else. Here in a quiet basement in the middle of no place Raju doesn't have to control himself into complete friendly politeness, and so he can't. "To betray what others need, just to keep clinging to what we want? Or is it..."
Selfishness? Even angry it's difficult to say it to a man who seems to want so badly, so genuinely not to fight him. Even if Raju doesn't say it, does he believe it, still clinging to the blanket Little himself gave him when he didn't have to give Raju anything at all? But kind isn't the same thing as not selfish. Is it? There's the anger, and the bitter smoke twisting itself around it, and it's impossible to see through the dense cloud of all of that clearly enough to say for sure.
But, little need for such things, Little had said. Maybe he's never had to choose at all.
Raju realises he's started to lean forward and leans back again, straightening up, taking a slow breath, letting it out as he gives Little a small smile, maybe polite enough to serve as apologetic. "Luck. Maybe it's only luck. Your time in the royal navy must have been very lucky, lieutenant, so you can keep a gun that's never needed to find its mark."
no subject
'To betray what others need, just to keep clinging to what we want? Or is it...'
But what others need is decency, isn't it...? That's what he's fought so hard to hold onto, to protect. To keep men decent, to remind them of who they are, not who they have to become in order to survive. There is still a choice, there— there must be a choice. That is what must be held onto.... right?
He's silent, a little stricken, even as he tries still to maintain his composure. But it... strikes against a very, very specific place within him, and he only realises the other man was leaning forwards closer when he straightens back up; Little blinks widely, looking up at him, swallowing. It's very clear that this matter strikes against some particular place within his new companion, as well.
His mouth tips open a little, stays like that for a beat or two, and then he's trying to breathe out the tension from his own shoulders, though his stomach stays uncomfortably tight.
Luck. It's certainly not a word he would use in association with his time — at least, not in recent events. Although, he'd been serving in the Royal Navy for most of his adult life, and nothing so harrowing as the Expedition had ever happened to him before, so perhaps one could say he had been lucky up until then....
...But it was never supposed to happen. They had prepared against such horrors. The ships were strong, and fortified, advanced at the height of scientific discovery. Luck was never meant to be a consideration at all. He pauses, considering. He'd mentioned to the other man that he'd been trapped out on the ice, that food became scarce, but.... that hardly touched on the true horror of everything.
He doesn't know how. How to... talk about it. Once again, he finds himself wanting to flinch away from this conversation, but it's a rare opportunity to... ask a man a question that perhaps has been living inside of him for all of this time, along with all of the ghosts whose deaths he feels some responsibility for.
"If someone.... did have to make such a choice, then how would one.... know? Whether it is the right call to make? To shoot a man in order to spare others... How does one know if a life is meant to be taken or not?"
He swallows, and meets Raju's eyes.
"How does one know what 'the greater good' truly is?"
no subject
Or the how. For Raju, there was never any how. There was only ever going to be one greater good for him, and either he will reach it and then he will rest, or death will take it away. Only one of the two. That's the way it has to be. But that has nothing to do with this other man, does it, living another life. What for him? Without that greater purpose driving all the smaller ones, how on earth does Raju explain?
He'd never expected the question. He'd never expected the source. But Little's desperation is real. His fear is real.
"Most men in your position would say it's dictated by the will of the man giving the orders." It's impossible not to speak quietly, in this moment. The corners of Raju's lips twitch up in grim and quick-dying humour; asking this question to an Englishman. "You don't agree, Lieutenant?"
no subject
....But he was never meant to truly lead, was he. He's the captain's right arm, an extension of leadership, but not its source. A proxy. He was safe like that, comfortable; he enjoyed his role. It suited him, and he was good at it, being that sort of middle management.
Until he wasn't, because his role changed, because everything changed, and he was no longer just Crozier's second, but the person left in charge here and there and in ways he never anticipated. And he did what he thought was right, but in the end, none of it was.
"That... is true, yes. The man giving the orders.... what he has been trained towards, studied and prepared for.... it is his will. He is the one responsible for it."
But he's wounded by his own words, eyes softening.
"....Forgive me for such... severe inquiries. Things became very dire out on the ice, before here. I found that much of my training was... challenged." His mouth twists into a discomforted frown. Guilt gnaws at him, again and again.
"I know it is my responsibility to do better, here... I appreciate your wisdom on such matters."
no subject
Something twists at Raju's stomach. It doesn't matter what it is. It pulls his lips into a crooked twist, too, that's mostly flattened out by the time that he looks back up.
"Dire?"
There are consequences for holding on that way. There are. To the wrong thing. They matter. If Little remembers that, really remembers it, then the both of them will.
"You said food became scarce, and... 'agitated', I think, was the word you used." His voice and gaze are steady as he says it. Less curious, and more intent. "What happened? When you didn't fire your gun?"
no subject
How ashamed.
He sits there for a moment, staring at the table, uneasy. Then....
"....As things were falling apart, some of our number... committed horrendous acts. There was murder. And... that same murderer staged a mutiny against our captain." A sharp sigh, gloved hands folding in front of his mouth for a moment before he lowers them again. He hasn't processed any of it, not fully. The horrific murder against his fellow lieutenant, and the Inuit... the six-year-old child. The unspeakable brutality of it all.
"One of his number was the sergeant of the Marines... I found myself face to face with that sergeant in the midst of it all. He wanted me to join them — I, of course, refused."
There's so much to it. How does he convey any of it? That the... creature was attacking? That men were being torn apart all around him? That he could barely think or do anything? It all felt dreamlike, as though happening to somebody else.
".....I had my gun aimed to him. I knew I needed to stop him." He swallows against the lump in his throat. "But I hesitated. And then one of the others struck me, instead. They got away. I let them get away. And they— ....they did terrible things, after that. Things I cannot even speak of."
He closes his eyes, agonised by the memory. By the knowledge that his inaction very well played a part in what came after. If he'd shot Tozer... what could he have prevented?
"But he was... a crewman. I knew him for years, I had responsibility for him, I—.... How could I take his life?"
no subject
Lucky, still, to only have to start doing away with it so late. But it's harder to look at the man and see luck just now, because Raju knows what he is going to say, and is sure the words are going to hurt. But he needs them said. One of them needs the words said. Little knows them. It's clear a part of Little knows. But he needs it said out loud.
"Was it decency?" Raju begins leaning forward. The tight grip of his arms around himself loosens. Maybe the words should be gentle. They come out flat, the way it feels when Raju holds a weapon in his hand. His gaze drifts down, weighted, and he watches his hands drifting toward his thighs as the cold air creeps in. "Letting your crewman live, to do what he did after. If his victims were in front of you when you had your gun aimed, would you see the greater good then?"
no subject
No, this is no confession, no hope for mercy or appeasement. He shares it with this man because he is an officer himself, and has offered words relevant to Little's own experience, even if some of them have not been easy to hear. He shares it because some part of him is so desperate simply to have someone else hear and know and understand. He is so lonesome with this burden; there is no one here he can reveal it to. Not even his fellow crewmen from the ships who have wandered to this place; his captain is no longer acting as a captain. His companions have given up their roles. He is the only one still clinging to his own.
What comes from Raju are questions, and they might as well have been conjured up from Edward's own soul. Things he's asked himself, agonised over, and he's lowering his head again as though ashamed, wounded.
'Was it decency?'
He thinks of the men Tozer helped kidnap. The men who ended up in that devil Hickey's camp. Hodgson... Mr. Diggle. The captain himself. Gibson and Goodsir, whose fates were...... a particular nightmare. His gloved hands tighten against themselves, mouth tugged back in a pained grimace. It hurts; all of it hurts. All of those men haunt him.
"I thought it was decency, I— I tried." Doesn't that count for something? Anything...? Or does it matter at all, in a situation such as that? None of it mattered. (If he'd known what was going to happen after that, would he have made a different choice?)
'No one can see you now. You're invisible,' Tozer had said to him.
"You... would have shot him. The mutineer. Wouldn't you?" He's not deflecting, but genuinely asking — miserably, slowly lifting his head to look up at Raju again, eyes aching.
no subject
"Yes," Raju says, voice deepening over the one word, tone flat. Then it lightens a little, his pitch lifting with it into something more casual. "If I couldn't deliver them to justice." A polite smile flickers into existence over his face and disappears just as quickly. He looks down again.
Confirmation, then. What he'd wanted to hear. The regret that comes in pain. The agreement implied in it almost, almost there. Had Raju wanted to hear it?
He watches his fingers flexing over his thighs. The air is colder over his hands and forearms than he wants it to be. He had needed to hear it. Little can't go on not knowing. Not carrying a gun the way he still does.
"You said you knew him for years," Raju says, voice still casual, not knowing whether he's saying it to try to get away from the heart bleeding in front of him here or to drive deeper into it. "Did you care for him?"
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(....But even beneath that concept, his heart itself.... shudders so deeply at the thought of taking a life. At times, his nightmares take the form of shooting Tozer, of feeling his weapon jolt in his arms, watching the body violently snap and then crumple, bleeding, and those dreams give him just as much terror as any other.)
So when the other man does mention that shooting would have come if they couldn't be delivered to justice first, it is a small flicker of relief in Little, and he nods, certainly agreeing, even if the discomfort lingers over the question he'd just asked and the answer the other man had given.
He hesitates again at the question asked of him, this time. But still, he remains honest, earnest, speaking slowly as he thinks it through.
"It was my duty to know all of the men — their backgrounds, their dispositions. I cannot say I knew him well. The Marines were something of their own entity. But... we were together for a very long time. I did see him often."
But that isn't what Raju asked. Little pauses again, trying to draw the right words up from himself. They weren't... friends, certainly. Companions by virtue of working together, being in positions of leadership, but little more than that. Tozer barely knew a thing about him. And yet...
"...I did care for him. I cared for them all."
He swallows again. Much has been said, tonight.
"He was not a bad man. One of his fellows — the Marines — became... injured. He could no longer move, or speak. He seemed almost dead." Something quietly disturbed hardens his features for a moment; Private Heather's condition was...... like something from a nightmare.
"Sergeant Tozer cared for him. He stayed right by his side, making it his personal responsibility. ...He was gentle with him, attentive." Little had noticed, of course. They all had. It was almost unnerving at times, seeing Tozer treating Heather as though he were still... lucid, but it showed much to his character.
"He was not a bad man," he repeats, more softly this time. "Not before everything went wrong."
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It's genuine. What follows from Little is genuine, and when Raju hears that he finds himself looking up into Little's face, in spite of himself. There's plenty to see there, while Little's baring himself. More the longer they talk it's clear Raju's life and the life of Edward Little couldn't have been more different. That he's able to bare himself like this in the first place is something strange, and that he's able to care this way for a man who, it seems, wasn't even a personal friend is something even stranger. It hurts to see even as it must hurt to speak. They each lived different lives but the lessons they taught themselves from there, what Little is trying to teach himself even now, with those last words—
But it doesn't do Little any favours. That's clear, Raju can hear it in his voice. Raju can see it in his face. And it didn't do the men around Little any good, either. The spaces around Little's tale of inaction contain horrors. It's important to remember that.
Raju looks down at his hands again. "What does that," he has to say, very quietly, flatly, "have to do with need?"
What Little learned. And what he was taught. The grip of Raju's is hands tighten. He takes a slow breath. He holds the breath, and then he lets it out though barely parted lips, and then his grip relaxes again. His voice isn't pressed so flat, it's more matter-of-fact now, still quiet. "Whoever put that gun in your hand did you a disservice, Lieutenant. They didn't teach you what it was for. Maybe that isn't your fault."
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"Our guns were never meant to be used against one another. That is not... how we served Her Majesty. The men who did choose to turn them on one another.... it was heinous. Monstrous."
He knew his job, his role. He knew what his weapon was for. His weapon, his responsibility. Others were shoved at him — even the captain handed Little his personal pistol, and the weight of it was almost unbearable; he had set it down as quickly as he could. It was not meant for him.
"I do believe it matters. That he was a good man before. If somewhere were to turn their gun on me and debate whether to pull the trigger or not... I should hope they might consider my character, first. I should hope that... it would matter."
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Raju's eyebrows twitch and draw together, corners of his lips twisting. He watches his hands sitting on his thighs, still.
It's different. Whatever Little is talking about is different. And the bonds he's talking about are the bonds of empire, anyway: not how we served Her Majesty. Still an Englishman, despite everything else. Enough of an Englishman to still be loyal to the old queen, even after all this time.
But— Raju thinks it as he listens, as Little pushes back in a way he hasn't for the last few minutes of their conversation, insists on the logic of morality —But maybe it was monstrous. Maybe it was monstrous, and the distinction is Little's problem.
"Why does it matter?" Raju asks, voice quiet control with an edge of something hard in it. "More than why the gun is on you? Is your death going to help, or hurt? If you die, are others going to live who wouldn't have before? If you were the most saintly man in all creation, that could still be true. Why does the weight of your soul matter, compared to that?"
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But none of it was meant for him. He sits there in the face of such questions, and although still rattled by this unpleasant conversation, continues to find a bit of a foothold now. No matter what he may be uncertain of, no matter the guilts that gnaw away at his insides along with the poison that lives within him now, no matter the challenge this fellow officer provides, there are truths he does know, does hold fast to.
"It has to matter. If it does not.... then we are no better than animals, are we? If the goodness of a man's character and soul means nothing.... then what is the value of living at all? What is there to... strive for? To hold onto? We cannot know whose deaths may be prevented, what one life taken might spare or save afterwards. We cannot predict it. So... we must choose what we feel to be right in that moment, mustn't we?"
He gives a sad sigh, deep and heavy and one that moves through his entire body. He thinks of Commander Fitzjames, a proud man reduced to such agonies. But until the very end he was noble. He remained a great man. They were all proud to know him, and his leadership.
"Even after our deaths.... I believe it is important what we are remembered for. How we held to our duties, our roles. How we did not falter from them. Whether we remained decent men or became like animals."
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So he can...
There's a trembling in his lips. He presses them tightly together, clenching his jaw.
There's no point in imagining it. He is what he is now. He is what he will be. His stomach churns.
"And if an animal still knows its duty?," he demands, at the space above his knees. "That has to matter. That you act as it was right to act, unselfishly. As you were needed to. You would put goodness over that? For whose sake? Your own?"
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This conversation has been an ebb and flow of emotions peeking through, of challenges, and none of it has been comfortable, but it has been manageable. Now, though... that alarm rings in Little again, and he realises that he may have touched something too sharp. Perhaps it was inevitable, when speaking of such things, so personal. The nature of a man, the greater good, the decisions made in the spur of a moment. He looks up again, eyes widening at Raju's questions.
"I—" A hand lifts, and he feels a guilt pooling in, deep and unpleasant. "No, I— Please, forgive me. I did not mean to cause upset. I know that this matter is complicated, and I... I do not disagree with you so much as it may seem."
'What is the value of living, for a man who's abandoned his duty?'
The irony is that holding on so strongly to the concept of "decency" is how he thought he was maintaining his duty. Perhaps at the core, they speak from a similar place. It's on the surface that the differences are damning, upsetting to the other, unable to be related to. Little does look deeply remorseful, genuinely distressed and desperate to diffuse the situation.
"I deeply apologise. I have spoken too much."
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"I— no." Something shaped like a smile tries to put itself on Raju's face. "You were only answering my questions. I don't know why I pressed that way."
His hands lift from his thighs, fingers curling slowly and thumbs rubbing hard against them. I do not disagree with you so much as it may seem— Politeness only. Of course he does. A decent man, sitting down here in hopes of keeping the horrors of his past from happening in the here and now, and what is Raju down here for? Sitting with the blanket this man gave him around his shoulders and doing what for him?
"I apologise. I came down here to help you. You didn't need an interrogation."
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