will graham (
scaleshavefallen) wrote in
all_inclusive2013-08-08 05:01 pm
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my mind's not right.
The guards snicker behind me. It's a nervous titter, because these men have seen the worst offenders, but they have not seen the likes of me before, and now they are scared. I want to turn to confront them, provoke them, with my newfound sense of confidence, but they both wear tasers at their hips and while I am braver now, I am also not stupid.
They know what a catch they have in me. They think the other inmates here are going to chew me up and spit me back out, and they can't wait to see it. They don't realize that this is the last thing the others here should do. They don't realize that I have been pushed to the brink, shoved into darkness, had my very sense of self corrupted, but even the darkness was afraid of what I knew.
Nothing any of these criminals has to say to me would mean anything. They can't break me. They think they want to get into my head, screw with the new guy? Shout their lewd jabs, try to pry open my healed wounds? They're welcome to try. They might not like what they see.
I should be in a panic, but I am calm, and that scares the guards just as much as the crimes they know I'm accused of. I should be dragged, kicking and screaming, to what will possibly be the home for the rest of my life, natural or otherwise (there is dissent over whether you should execute the mentally ill, which seems to be my only hope at dying a natural death rather than a state sponsored one). Instead, I go peacefully. I have made one attempt at escape and while it led to some particularly useful revelations, it also led me right back here, to the Baltimore State Hospital for the Criminally Insane.
The guards, despite their fascination to see what happens, are more than eager to see me into my cell and wipe their hands of me. I follow orders -- step into the cell, back up to the bars, no sudden moves. I am docile, tamed, cowed. I am what they want me to be, because that way, they will leave me alone.
I try not to shudder when I hear the ominous sound of industrial locks clicking shut behind me. I try not to feel anything; I am numb and triumphant both, and cannot spare a thought for this. Behind my back, the guards undo the chains at my wrists and ankles, freeing me from one set of bondage right into another.
"Your suite, Agent Graham," says one of the guards, and I don't even need to see his face to know that there is a mocking sneer plastered across it. He is probably the oldest child in his family, grew up poor, bullied others to get his way, and had it reinforced by some rather undistinguished military service. If I had to guess. But what do I know; as far as everyone is concerned, I'm a murderer. I'm insane. I'm a toy, to be played with and destroyed and discarded.
I turn to face front, half a mind to correct the inaccurate title he's given me, but for some reason, the scene has changed. Instead of damp brick and two overgrown oafs, I see a nondescript hotel room. A double bed with an ugly floral patterned duvet, peeling wallpaper, a painting of a windmill. I turn in quick circles, taking it in, and now the panic rises and bubbles in my chest.
I was cured, I had thought. They pumped me full of steroids and antibiotics. I have a clean bill of health. I haven't had a hallucination since they woke me up, and besides, this scene has no meaning to me. There's no reason for it. It doesn't fit the pattern.
Haltingly, I take a step forward, reach out with one hand, and run my fingers across the bedspread, the cheap wooden bedframe, the grimy nightstand. Everything feels real, but I know it can't be. Testing the limits of my freedom, I step towards the door, place my hand on the doorknob, twist and pull. The door swings open easily and my feet are carrying me, on automatic pilot, out the hallway. It's a slightly more lavish hallway than the room I just left, but something feels wrong, sterile, otherworldly.
I don't know where I am or how I got here or if this is even real. I wonder if I'm sick again, and then realize that I don't care. Not right now. Not after everything else. I turn back to the door I just stepped through, but the handle won't turn, and I have no key. Whatever is happening to me, it appears that I must go forward, not back. I can't help it. I swipe a hand across my brow, sweat slicking my skin; my lips pull back in a parody of a smile, and I laugh. It sounds haunted and sick to my ears, and I suppose I am, after all.
[ hover for an ooc note regarding will's clothing which is a mild spoiler for 1x13.]
They know what a catch they have in me. They think the other inmates here are going to chew me up and spit me back out, and they can't wait to see it. They don't realize that this is the last thing the others here should do. They don't realize that I have been pushed to the brink, shoved into darkness, had my very sense of self corrupted, but even the darkness was afraid of what I knew.
Nothing any of these criminals has to say to me would mean anything. They can't break me. They think they want to get into my head, screw with the new guy? Shout their lewd jabs, try to pry open my healed wounds? They're welcome to try. They might not like what they see.
I should be in a panic, but I am calm, and that scares the guards just as much as the crimes they know I'm accused of. I should be dragged, kicking and screaming, to what will possibly be the home for the rest of my life, natural or otherwise (there is dissent over whether you should execute the mentally ill, which seems to be my only hope at dying a natural death rather than a state sponsored one). Instead, I go peacefully. I have made one attempt at escape and while it led to some particularly useful revelations, it also led me right back here, to the Baltimore State Hospital for the Criminally Insane.
The guards, despite their fascination to see what happens, are more than eager to see me into my cell and wipe their hands of me. I follow orders -- step into the cell, back up to the bars, no sudden moves. I am docile, tamed, cowed. I am what they want me to be, because that way, they will leave me alone.
I try not to shudder when I hear the ominous sound of industrial locks clicking shut behind me. I try not to feel anything; I am numb and triumphant both, and cannot spare a thought for this. Behind my back, the guards undo the chains at my wrists and ankles, freeing me from one set of bondage right into another.
"Your suite, Agent Graham," says one of the guards, and I don't even need to see his face to know that there is a mocking sneer plastered across it. He is probably the oldest child in his family, grew up poor, bullied others to get his way, and had it reinforced by some rather undistinguished military service. If I had to guess. But what do I know; as far as everyone is concerned, I'm a murderer. I'm insane. I'm a toy, to be played with and destroyed and discarded.
I turn to face front, half a mind to correct the inaccurate title he's given me, but for some reason, the scene has changed. Instead of damp brick and two overgrown oafs, I see a nondescript hotel room. A double bed with an ugly floral patterned duvet, peeling wallpaper, a painting of a windmill. I turn in quick circles, taking it in, and now the panic rises and bubbles in my chest.
I was cured, I had thought. They pumped me full of steroids and antibiotics. I have a clean bill of health. I haven't had a hallucination since they woke me up, and besides, this scene has no meaning to me. There's no reason for it. It doesn't fit the pattern.
Haltingly, I take a step forward, reach out with one hand, and run my fingers across the bedspread, the cheap wooden bedframe, the grimy nightstand. Everything feels real, but I know it can't be. Testing the limits of my freedom, I step towards the door, place my hand on the doorknob, twist and pull. The door swings open easily and my feet are carrying me, on automatic pilot, out the hallway. It's a slightly more lavish hallway than the room I just left, but something feels wrong, sterile, otherworldly.
I don't know where I am or how I got here or if this is even real. I wonder if I'm sick again, and then realize that I don't care. Not right now. Not after everything else. I turn back to the door I just stepped through, but the handle won't turn, and I have no key. Whatever is happening to me, it appears that I must go forward, not back. I can't help it. I swipe a hand across my brow, sweat slicking my skin; my lips pull back in a parody of a smile, and I laugh. It sounds haunted and sick to my ears, and I suppose I am, after all.
[ hover for an ooc note regarding will's clothing which is a mild spoiler for 1x13.]
no subject
We don't go far, but as we walk, it occurs to me that I'm still shuffling my feet like I'm in chains. Even my freedom isn't entirely free.
The room is plain, sterile, normal, and utterly different from the room I just left. I wonder if this is a conscious choice by the hotel, to make every room a different style, or if there's something else going on. I don't know what that something else would be, though, so I ignore it for the time being once I realize that Nick is waiting for me to sit.
I lower myself down onto the desk chair, posture straight and rigid; I am tense, my body whipcord tight as I perch on the edge of the chair. My hands are wrapped tight around the edges of the seat, knuckles white. It keeps my hands from shaking, keeps me grounded in place, so I don't care that I can feel the rough underside of the wood chafing against my fingers. It makes this real.
"Water would be nice, thank you," I say after reading Nick's note. "I'm still a little concerned that this is all -- well, I wasn't exactly, per se, well for a long while, and I'm just thinking -- this isn't real. It can't be real."
All signs point to that being a false statement. It must mean something that I am hoping more that this is another hallucination, perhaps a psychotic break, than something real. At least the former makes sense, given prior history. The latter -- there's no explanation, and that makes me uncomfortable.
no subject
What happened to Nick was quick and painless. He was here before he knew enough to feel anything. So he showed up mostly startled, not afraid. It wasn't like this. He didn't realize he should have felt lucky until now.
He's never had a reason to doubt his own mind, but being unable to trust the senses he does have is a horror like being blind. It's an idea that immediately opens up a new well of sympathy for Will, and there's a careful gentleness in how he hands Will the untwisted bottle of water--the cap is still on, just broken, because Nick has a feeling that if Will was left to crack the seal on it himself his shaking hands wouldn't be able to hold on. Nick knows that if he was the one breaking apart he wouldn't want to feel any more embarrassed by not being able to open a damn bottle.
I thought I was dead. Nick leans forward on his knees, keeping his head down but eyes up. I could be. Don't know if this is real. Do we know enough to say it's not?
Jane Foster. He hands that scrap of paper torn from his book to Will, and writes on a fresh sheet. She's trying to figure this out. Knows more than me. Just a gardener.
no subject
I have to focus to hold onto the bottle of water. I could go for an aspirin or seven right about now, but of course they take all of those things away whenever you're booked into a mental institute-slash-penal institution to await trial for hideous murders.
But I'm not there anymore.
I take a deep swallow from the bottle, then read the notes.
"Dead?" I ask, eyebrows raised with the question. "That's, well, pretty final, I think. More final than where I was, before."
There's no way that happened to me, it's impossible. The only culprit would be the guards, and even though Chilton's incapacitated right now, he'd still have their heads if he knew that one of his men took out Chilton's newest prized possession.
I take Nick's note with Jane Foster's name on it and slip it into the pocket of my shirt. "Could it be some sort of shared delusion, a collective unconscious?" I'm thinking more out loud to myself than I am asking Nick, trying to work out what's happening. "No, that's too theoretical, too -- not actually the way the theory works. Delusion, yes, but let's not get into theory, that's not helpful. There's no -- no -- there's no context for something like this, no plan or design to it, nothing that would make sense."
I am desperate for this to make sense.
no subject
Nick wishes he could answer Will's clear distress with something concrete. He can see, all too easily, wrapping him in blankets and telling him that everything will work out--but he couldn't even do that to Tom, could he? Nick can tell when someone is talking to themselves and not him. It's something that seems to come up more often when people think you can't tell what they're saying.
There was a bomb. Nick writes, hesitantly, the tip of his pen lighter on his notepaper. But I've dreamed things like this before. I just don't know.
Nick taps his paper and holds up five fingers on his left hand: this is going to be a bit of an explanation.
Jane thinks that this place is where dimensions rub up against each other. I come from a world where almost everyone was dead. Most people here aren't from where I'm from. I met someone with my face but not my past. He can hear. Nick hands that over, and continues writing.
I dreamed of a place that was real, but I'd never seen it before. It's not impossible. If someone had told me that could happen before, I wouldn't have believed them. I'm not sure I believe. But I know how hard this is for
He pauses there, running a hand through his hair.
This is hard. He writes instead. I know. It doesn't make sense.
I know that if I can help you, I will. That's a fact.
Nick gives Will that sheet of paper with a slight hesitation, but the thing is that he can't not. It wouldn't be right to walk away, even if it'd be easier; and a low, shameful fact is that Nick feels better when he's the one providing help, not the other way around. Will's character is untested, but he's done nothing to set Nick on edge yet. That's good enough, for the moment.
no subject
"Thank you," I say, leaning up slightly to turn my face towards Nick so that he has a view of my lips. "I appreciate it, I do." It feels so foreign to have anyone else show even the slightest interest in my well-being, with no mailce or manipulation or disbelief, that I don't entirely know what to do about it.
"This is all a little more supernatural than what I'm used to, where I'm from. Suddenly finding yourself in a completely different dimension is the domain of science fiction movies, or, alternatively, people in dissociative states. This... if this is real... is the realm of the former, then. I don't know how I feel about that."
There seems to be a lot about this place that I'm going to have to accept on faith, and I am a man of very little faith. I suddenly understand how the forensics team must feel when I can say unequivocally how a murder has taken place, and I don't like this feeling of uncertainty.
no subject
I don't believe it either. He smiles, with a wry twist. God might exist. I'm dead and I'm thinking. I'm still an agnostic, at best.
Real gods don't need instant belief. Neither does real magic. It just is, I think.
All of this touches on Mother Abigail in ways that are too sharp--but there was nothing about her that was sharp, was there? There was just soft, uncompromising belief. After what Larry told him, how much can Nick disbelieve? Or what can he believe?
Whatever it is, that's not Nick's choice for Will.
Maybe it is sci-fi, though. Like Isaac Asimov. That would be neat.
no subject
"Aspirin, or whatever you have on hand would be nice, thank you, if it's not too much trouble." I can't turn down the offer of something, anything, to dull the ache in my head. I'm sincerely hoping that it's just the stress of being here. That's what I'm going to count on -- everything else can be ignored until I've fully wrapped my mind around this place.
"My life has been a little more, ah, horror movie rather than sci-fi lately," I say, a little bitter laugh escaping me. "If this is what I get instead -- a mysterious hotel, spontaneous travel to an unknown location, well.." I let my words trail off as my fingers run overtop the letters that Nick has written. "In all honesty, I think I'll take the sci-fi story."
I think I just have to choose to believe that this -- whatever this is, exactly -- is all real. I've already been crazy once, far too recently for my liking. Accepting anything other than that this is reality means that I am probably crazy again, and that is the last thing I need right now.