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capeandcowl20202013-03-03 12:42 pm
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Open Post 002

• Step one: start a thread in this post!
• Step two: specify who the thread is for (or open) in this post!
• Step three: make people reply to this post!
• AND THAT'S THE WAY YOU DO IT.
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musebox • rules • character list
no subject
He takes one, two steps towards her -- and hesitates before taking one back. He'd planned out what he'd say, when they finally confronted one another, he'd gone over it again and again as he'd shadowed her throughout the day, but here and now it all sounds pointless, contrived. Worthless in the scope of a two year disappearance with no word, no hint as to what could have happened to him.
"Look." He swallows, wishing he had some water to soothe his dry throat, the way his voice keeps cracking. "I know this probably seems ludicrous, me breaking in like nothing happened and the past two years were all just some awful hoax and surprise, none of that ever actually happened, but you're not dead and you're not asleep, and neither am I, so I'd really, really appreciate it if you held off on the knife wounds. You'd be doing me a major solid if you could just take my word on that one."
He wavers then, lapses into silence. It's been so long since he could speak freely; it takes some readjusting. He clears his throat before going on, rocking back on his heels a little.
"I don't like, expect everything to go back to the way it was a sweep ago. That would be outrageous. For all you knew I was dead, and honestly I'm not sure how I managed to avoid that particular outcome, and -- wow, this is way more awkward than I ever expected it to be, and I expected it to be pretty fucking awkward. This is critical mass levels of awkward. This is rapidly approaching a massive supernova in -- and now I'm just going to start rambling about nonsense, fuck, I'm sorry, I haven't had a real conversation with someone in two years, not that I was ever the greatest conversational partner, but I'm pretty out of practice. Talking to people."
Another pause. He takes a deep breath.
"I just... wanted to see you. I missed you."
no subject
"Impossible."
The word is quiet, and her voice rough, but it's not unexpected. How could it be? Denial, denial of caring, denial of feeling, of connection, of responsibility, of anything wrong, it's always her defense. I missed you, how could that be true? He left, the same as everyone leaves, and the long seasons passed by, the same as between all others. The danger of everything feels so abstract to her; there are so few imPorts she cares about, so few she cares for, and she knows those feelings aren't mutual.
Her heart has long since cannibalized feelings of faith, or trust, and she gave up relying on hope a long time ago. Missed her? Impossible. There's nothing worth missing. He must want something, instead. A place to stay. Medical help. Information. That's all.
(Because the people who love Ruka and leave either don't come back, or they stop caring, or they're different people all together. That's it. That's all.)
Age has made her masks and her walls stronger, but what use are walls and doors to someone who breaks in through windows? So when she moves, crossing near the wall to check the locks on his entryway, and her voice is practically casual, her calm airs mean nothing compared to the storm.
"So what really brought you all the way out here at this time of night, anyway?"
no subject
He moves without thinking, when she walks away from him, tugged forward by the ever-increasing ache in his chest, radiating outwards, corroding away his other organs like acid; he's left raw and hollow but for the traitorous vascular pump intent on battering its way past the bars of his ribcage. He follows her across the room.
"Don't," he hisses, stepping almost close, he hovers just outside a reasonable personal bubble. It's as close as he can manage, really. Despite wanting to embrace her, it's been so long since anyone touched him -- since he was close to anyone -- without excruciating pain to follow. "Don't you impossible me. I'll tell you what brought me here. The fact that I just broke out of a high security government prison less than two weeks ago is what brought me here. I'm here for the same reason I ever come here. Because you're here."
no subject
"Oh, of course," she says, all disbelief, "the ones that have never been able to hold you for more than two weeks before, those ones?"
Brilliant red eyes, glowering at her from so close. Part of her wonders if his eyes have always been this vivid, or if she's forgotten over the years.
Another part wonders if he'll push her through the glass.
no subject
His eyes are reflective, like those of a nocturnal animal; they gleam when the moonlight falls on them at a certain angle. His lip curls in a snarl, his shoulders rise, his presence growing tense and angry -- because anger has always been the safest reaction, the easiest defense, even more so where he just came from. Floundering and hurt as he is, it's almost unconscious of him to fall back on it.
"Yes, those ones. I really hate to be the one to tell you this, but I'm not fucking invincible, Ruka! Much as I would like to laud myself as the pinnacle of all survival and evasion, I make mistakes. I screw up. And it just so happened that I screwed up about as thoroughly as one can screw up. I screwed up harder than you screw up a snot drenched Kleenex before tossing it out. You know they have these things called depowering rays? You know what a trap is, don't you? Do I have to remind you my powers only work on twelve people at a time, and entire SWAT teams tend to consist of a little more personnel than that? That I'm only one person?" The words are ground out through his teeth; there's a desperate edge to them along with the aggravation, though. Please believe him. "I'm sorry, okay? I'm sorry. We knew this might happen. We knew it was a risk! I'm not lying to you about this, look--"
And from his sylladex he pulls a device, cracked and broken -- a collar? A power nullifier, in fact.
"Where do you think this came from?"
no subject
He's different. That's what his anger tells her, the way he forms his words, the predatory snarl across his mouth. Words dry up in her throat, fear in her fingertips; her head is pounding from noise and fatigue and stress and fear. Her mind is still trying to wrap around the fact that this is Karkat before her now (but what if it isn't, what if this is a decoy, or a trap like he said, what if she's having another nightmare, what if—), it's hard to follow the imagery he's trying to paint.
When he reaches into his sylladex, she tenses, but when she sees what he pulls out, when she sees the broken device in his hand, she's moving before her conscious mind registers what's going on. With the speed of a knife's slash, Ruka snatches the collar from his unsuspecting grip, her hand wrapping tight around it, palm against the interior curve.
The place that spent so long pressed against Karkat's neck.
no subject
At Ruka's sudden move, another change in him presents itself: he flinches, tensing as though bracing for a physical blow -- or worse. The recoil is involuntary, and only lasts a split second, but it's enough to allow her to snatch away the collar before Karkat can even realize what she's done, and then--
"Ahhh," he moans, freezing in place.
What she picks up through haptic empathy is everything Karkat Vantas felt for the past six months of his imprisonment. Blanketed over everything, at the root of everything, the most prominent emotion in the overwhelming cocktail of feeling is a terrible, gnawing fear. Fear of your captors, fear of yourself; your own weakness, fear of pain, fear of solitude, fear of death, fear of continued life, fear that paralyzes and fear that drives. The kind of terror that brings you to wake up screaming in the middle of the night and the kind that makes you hesitate. Woven through all of this -- almost as strong, and even more constant is loneliness. An endless, aching sense of isolation, the kind where you would take anything -- a word, a shift in expression, even leap at the prospect of torture if it meant your existence would be recognized, if it meant you would be allowed to interact with someone. The kind of loneliness that would drive someone to talk to themselves for hours. The desperate, hollow longing to see those you love coupled with the despair of the impossibility of that ever coming to fruition. Pain of varying intensity and type is splattered across the emotional tapestry like blood: from a backhand blow across your face to "accidental" failure to properly anesthetize you before a surgical procedure. Despair and defiance wage a furious war against one another, hate and anger fighting to overcome sorrow and futility, neither quite coming out on top. All of this is a mere glimpse of the emotions trapped in that collar.
But -- threading throughout it all, like delicate gold embroidery, thin and easily lost in the storm of emotion, is something else. Something brighter, something that -- while sometimes unacknowledged, or abandoned -- is never quite lost.
Hope. Hope for escape. Hope for death, in his lower moments. But always hope -- always there, and strengthening, the fresher the emotions are, the closer to the present, intensifying and solidifying until it comes to a head, the thrill of escape, the exhilaration of success, and then nothing.
Unfortunately for Karkat, that brightness is inaccessible to him. The feedback loop he gets from Ruka is limited to the darkness alone, and he is entirely unprepared for it. He'd grown used to being without his powers, and he shudders, entire body rigid, swaying in place, letting his past self wash over him.
no subject
Ruka doesn't think it, or fear that sort of fall. Not now. Not anymore. The remnants of the imprisoned Karkat Vantas has her now, like electricity running up her arm and through her chest, pain and misery jolting around inside her. Her breath stutters and chokes off in her throat.
Her legs tremble and give way beneath her. She skids against the window, the wall, into a half-seated slumped pile of limbs on the floor. The jazzy music in the background is lost to hearing, reflected moonlight lost to her vision. The world around her blurs into darkness, into nothingness, despair and loneliness and longing, day after night after day after week after month after night, pain and misery. The long-drawn heart of seasons is compressed down into seconds; the electric black fries her nerves and senses. Her grip on the collar is tight, like jaws on the throat of hapless prey, and the tortured heart of Karkat Vantas bleeds out over her fingers like they were claws puncturing organ.
She doesn't think to let go—she doesn't think, she can't think, not under hatred and fury and sorrow and misery. Whatever anger she felt before is decimated, whatever fear she felt obliterated in the wake of feelings too great to contain. She doesn't ask herself what she thought would happen, grabbing that collar, doesn't berate herself for the mistake, doesn't let go—she can't.
Her body trembles on the cold floor, arms slack at her sides and her legs bent out at uncomfortable angles. Her face is tense and red, with tears running uneven down her cheeks. Her hand clings tight to the collar.
In the black flood of feeling, Ruka is paralyzed. Her body is reduced, nothing more than a vessel for the fractured heart of Karkat Vantas.
no subject
"Fuck," he gasps, and drops to his knees in front of her, grasping at the collar, trying to pry her fingers off of it, pull it from her grip. "Ruka, let go!"
no subject
Gold flickers in the darkness. Warm, distant. A wildfire, growing on the horizon.
A name?
She can't even feel his hands on hers, even as he pries her fingers loose from the broken device.
no subject
He's denied the gold on the horizon she experiences: the impending dawn is hidden from him, as he continues to work at pulling her fingers away from the collar, one by one. It's difficult, what with the way his own hands shake, and he thinks he might be hurting her, but bruised and sore fingers are better than allowing her to continue to absorb his past.
no subject
Fear has her by the throat, but still she breathes in the warmth of that golden fire, growing ever brighter, burning through the darkness.
A strange figure kneels before her, his eyes reflecting so much light that they seem more like mirrors. A voice. A hand, touching hers.
He is going to destroy her.
no subject
The hand that still rests on hers curls around it, fingers linking with hers -- the other one he'd used to stash the collar away moves to her shoulder as he scoots forward to kneel beside her.
"Ruka. Listen, it's not you. That's not yours. Ruka. Ruka. That's not you." He repeats her name, trying to call her back out of him, his heart. The longer he does, the more panicked the edge to his voice grows, the more pleading it sounds. "Ruka."
no subject
Fire burns through the darkness, bright and powerful like the sun, somehow more blinding than blindness; the ghost before her seems to grow more solid, light defining more features. It's so hard to recognize anything familiar under fear, but gradually it burns away in the wake of something bigger, something brighter. Less of Karkat Vantas filters back through the loop, draining down. Light overtakes darkness, and in that illumination, everything snaps into place. Her vision focuses on the world outside her.
Hope.
"... Karkat?"
no subject
"You idiot," he forces out past the verbal roadblock. "Why would you do something like that?"
no subject
"I thought you were dead." Quiet and shaking, honest, in the way she so rarely is or was. "How could I believe it was you?"
no subject
"I'm sorry," he breathes, dazed. He's really here. He really made it. He has this back. For a moment, he has trouble believing it himself. His hold on her is likely too tight -- one arm wrapped crushingly around her ribs, the other flung across her shoulders, the back of her neck. He'd forgotten this, this desperation, the way his heart seemed to want to pick up a new career as a battering ram, the way she felt and smelled and sounded like this, in his arms. Or perhaps they'd both simply changed in the interim of separation. He struggles to press closer to her, despite their uncomfortable position on the floor. "I'm sorry."
no subject
"I'm sorry," she echoes, muffled words into his clothing. "I didn't believe you." Didn't believe in him, didn't trust him, didn't put any stock into his promises.
no subject
Some things never change; Karkat wishes the fact that he only sees clearly in hindsight wasn't one of them. He'd come here wanting a movie-script reunion and expecting a flat rejection -- of course both of those scenarios were impossible, he would have known that if he'd thought about the people involved. That's not Ruka. That's not Karkat. Things are never, will never be so simple as that. He threads strands of dark hair through his fingers, thinks about the bright color it masks.
"I was stupid, waltzing in here out of nowhere and acting like you should be able to just take it in right then and there."
no subject
"You're always stupid."
She pretends she isn't crying.
no subject
He shifts over the carpet, shuffling so he is less off to the side, repositioning himself so she is in the fork of his knees, making it easier to hold her. He clings to her, needy and fumbling, unable to decide where his hands should rest, unsure as to how he fits together with her anymore -- inexperienced and hampered by nerves all over again, as if he'd reverted to being a stupid teenager in the span of a few minutes. He wants to say something meaningful, but the words stick at the back of his throat, refusing to be articulated. He doesn't know what to say. He doesn't know what to do. He's messed this up so thoroughly already.
In the end, what comes out of his mouth is very simple, after a few minutes of struggle; he doesn't think about how it never ended well to say it before, doesn't even really decide that it is what he should say. It slips out, thoughtless as an exhale.
"I love you," is muttered into the side of her neck, against her pulse.
no subject
It isn't fair, how much she needs him, and how much he needs to be everywhere that isn't with her. It makes her hate him almost as much as she loves him, and she can't say a word for either. She couldn't even admit to them until she'd already lost him, and had known he wouldn't be back.
If she says it now, she's afraid he'll disappear again. Her arms shake and her heart races, and she's going to feel so cold when he finally goes again.
She's going to rip holes in that shirt for how tight she's holding on. Anxiety and fear coil in her arms. "I miss you so much," comes out in a rush, and she doesn't even notice it's still in the present tense.
no subject
He never wanted to love her the way he does, never intended to, sometimes wonders if he was never meant to in the first place. He does, though, whether either of them like it or not, and it's not fair that she won't ever say it back, that she won't ever acknowledge it -- he hates her for that, too, sometimes.
They were better off when they were children. Better off when they took each other and their place in the world for granted, before they could even recognize the value of being able to see one another every day. Better off when they cared less, needed less.
"I don't know how to fix this," he tells her helplessly, not even bothering to keep his voice from cracking. He doesn't know how to fix her, fix himself, fix the world. It's not fair.
no subject
This time it's her hand combing through his hair, sweat-damp and stiff with grime, split-ends, but who cares about something like that? She lifts her head, her hands smoothing into flat palms against his back. She shifts in his arms. "You're here," she murmurs, quiet into the shell of his ear, calmer now. "You're here now. That's enough."
no subject
He doesn't say any of this, though. Merely shivers at the sensation of her fingers brushing against his scalp, her breath against his ear. Deprived of physical contact that wasn't pain for so long as he has been, the reaction he has to the simple touch and affection is almost overwhelming. He doesn't know how to react to it.
He lets out a sigh and pulls back from their embrace -- not by much, mind. Just enough that he is able to look her in the face again, take in the pallor of her face, the tears that cling to her lashes and glisten in streaks down her face, the pull of her brows and curve of her mouth, the shift in expressions. Refreshing everything he'd missed, recoloring his memory. For a while, that's all he does; look at her.
It's gentle and almost hesitant, when he finally leans in to press his lips to hers.
(no subject)