Liam McNally (
inequal) wrote in
caveofsapphires2012-04-10 08:17 pm
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People are crazy and times are strange [ open ]
WHO: Liam (Owen) [
inequal] and ANYONE.
WHAT: Somebody else got struck by the memory rehab bug, thinks his name is something else. Now Liam's trying to deal with the idea that he might have his head screwed on wrong without being able to tell.
WHERE: All around the Cave, notably: the Bar; the Supply Depot; near the Living Quarters; a secluded corner.
WHEN: April 10th (Tuesday) through April 12th (Thursday).
NOTES: What the hell is consistent narrative name, do not even get me started on trying to figure out which one to use. IT'S JUST "HE" AND "HIM" OKAY.
His Tuesday started out simply enough, some murky memory (or was it a dream?) floating up to remind him of a white room and then... nothing, really. Probably just made it up. No, his day really started with a buzz in his head and a request for his husband to turn off the bloody overhead light, if you please, George.
That was his first sign that something was wrong. It didn't feel wrong, but the sheer comfort with which he identified as Owen Bates (not... Liam McNally or whatever name it was that George—Ken?—said it should be) gave him a shudder if he stopped to think about it for too long. Exactly why he immediately sought out Arthur Stieber at the Supply Depot and was told to swing by later that night after work.
Fine, whatever. He could wait another few hours. So he went with his spouse to the Bar and spent the next few hours ignoring the twitch in his foot and fingers. Scaring off the customers would not do, even if the only exchange he cared about tended to be the conversational sort and nothing to do with money.
He was out like a bolt by closing time and off to retrieve the pack of cigarettes as Arthur had promised. Horrible habit to get back into when he was still not physically addicted, but the psychological effects were already ingrained deeply enough. It wasn't until Wednesday that he had the chance to secret himself into an underdeveloped crevice on the west side of the Cave and finally light up. Hopefully the smoke would dissipate before anyone else caught wind of it, because despite popular belief, he did not try to bury himself in as much trouble as possible at all times.George Ken George would likely be worried and that kept him from lighting a second despite the urge.
The rest of Wednesday proceeded as normal... what accounted for normal in this place, anyway. Some exploration in the day and work in the afternoon, all the way to After Hours. Thursday found him escaping to the crevice once again, lighter and cigarette clutched in hand, then off to the Depot again with George to retrieve more rations.
It was perhaps the least exciting lifestyle he had indulged in for nearly sixty years. Nevertheless, Owen could not stop the dread coiling in his gut that the other shoe was primed just perfectly to drop any day now.
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WHAT: Somebody else got struck by the memory rehab bug, thinks his name is something else. Now Liam's trying to deal with the idea that he might have his head screwed on wrong without being able to tell.
WHERE: All around the Cave, notably: the Bar; the Supply Depot; near the Living Quarters; a secluded corner.
WHEN: April 10th (Tuesday) through April 12th (Thursday).
NOTES: What the hell is consistent narrative name, do not even get me started on trying to figure out which one to use. IT'S JUST "HE" AND "HIM" OKAY.
His Tuesday started out simply enough, some murky memory (or was it a dream?) floating up to remind him of a white room and then... nothing, really. Probably just made it up. No, his day really started with a buzz in his head and a request for his husband to turn off the bloody overhead light, if you please, George.
That was his first sign that something was wrong. It didn't feel wrong, but the sheer comfort with which he identified as Owen Bates (not... Liam McNally or whatever name it was that George—Ken?—said it should be) gave him a shudder if he stopped to think about it for too long. Exactly why he immediately sought out Arthur Stieber at the Supply Depot and was told to swing by later that night after work.
Fine, whatever. He could wait another few hours. So he went with his spouse to the Bar and spent the next few hours ignoring the twitch in his foot and fingers. Scaring off the customers would not do, even if the only exchange he cared about tended to be the conversational sort and nothing to do with money.
He was out like a bolt by closing time and off to retrieve the pack of cigarettes as Arthur had promised. Horrible habit to get back into when he was still not physically addicted, but the psychological effects were already ingrained deeply enough. It wasn't until Wednesday that he had the chance to secret himself into an underdeveloped crevice on the west side of the Cave and finally light up. Hopefully the smoke would dissipate before anyone else caught wind of it, because despite popular belief, he did not try to bury himself in as much trouble as possible at all times.
The rest of Wednesday proceeded as normal... what accounted for normal in this place, anyway. Some exploration in the day and work in the afternoon, all the way to After Hours. Thursday found him escaping to the crevice once again, lighter and cigarette clutched in hand, then off to the Depot again with George to retrieve more rations.
It was perhaps the least exciting lifestyle he had indulged in for nearly sixty years. Nevertheless, Owen could not stop the dread coiling in his gut that the other shoe was primed just perfectly to drop any day now.
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"It'll pass," he replied after a moment. "See? Right as rain." His cigarette was dwindling down, burning without giving him any of the benefit, and so he drew it back to his lips while carefully taking a drag. The need for comfort temporarily overrode his usual attempt at manners.
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He glanced out of the crevice at the Cave. Somehow it seemed worse out there than in here, suddenly, despite this man and his cigarette and his sadness. He wanted to stay and ask questions and above all else wanted to say his own name aloud. But that would be tremendously stupid, and besides, he had intruded.
He pressed clasped hands to his lips for just a moment, as if praying, although he generally didn't, anymore.
"Sorry again," he said. "I'll just be going. Ah - if you do end up needing - anything - " Aziraphale hesitated for a long moment, weighing his options. "John Gates. At the Library. Or, well, I'll be around."
Pausing at the mouth of the crevice, he turned. "Oh, and you are?"
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John Gates. The hesitation there earned a sardonic smile from Owen (Liam, whatever) and he held out a hand as if to shake. "Owen Bates, work at the Bar. Supposedly, anyway." His chest fluttered, leftover nerves mixing themselves with uncertainty. His name wasn't his name and apparently names were a big deal here, so using the one he knew naturally inspired a fair deal of nervousness.
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His eyes lit up a bit when Owen mentioned the Bar. "Pleasure - is it any good? The Bar, I mean." He laughed self-deprecatingly at his own eagerness. "It's been a while since I've had anything decent, and I've needed it lately." His handshake was a bit lackluster - he still hadn't gotten used to body language entirely - but tightened halfway through. He was still smiling, as well.
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"As for quality, I must say it's not the cheap stuff. Tell you what, though, John: why don't you come down later today, see what you think?" It was impossible to begrudge a man needing some good alcohol in their current situation.
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"I don't suppose you have anything along the lines of a Châteauneuf-du-Pape," he continued, before quickly correcting, "or a dry red, I suppose there's not really such a thing as the Rhône here. I dreamt all that wine!" he muttered under his breath, tapping his lip.
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He turned to give the other man a grin. "Probably do have something close enough. I'll take a quick peek just for you when we open up." Another drag, another thoughtful exhalation. "Don't buy it, personally." Quietly, as if musing to himself more than Aziraphale — maybe he was. He didn't buy it... but he had no other explanation to give for how he was somehow alive again.
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"Don't trouble yourself, I'm sure you'll have something wonderful. I trust you." Although he did cast a brief side-eye at the 'don't buy it' statement. Nor did he, of course, but it seemed a bit reckless. "Well, I know who I am," he said carefully. "I should think everyone does, ultimately. In their souls."
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There was the rub. "You would think," he huffed with an irritated roll of his wrist. He wasn't exactly sure on that at the moment, though everything outside of the name thing seemed to line up with what his husband recalled. Maybe there was something else that neither of them thought to check yet. Wasn't that a lovely thought?
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His head tilted in teasing consideration of the man in front of him. "You don't seem to be doing too badly yourself, either."
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"Well," Aziraphale added, straightening his collar under the sudden scrutiny, "I have the benefit of age to keep me certain of who I am. Enough years make for very stubborn . . . dreams."
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"You don't look that old," he observed instead, a teasing remark. Of all people, he knew that appearance meant very little when it came to one's age. Here he was, eighty-one years old and looking not even yet to thirty if he was a day.
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Owen chuckled. "That makes two of us. Not sure age is going to be enough on its own, though," he mused after a moment. He took another inhale of the smoke, then sighed and dropped the spent cigarette in order to grind it out.
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Sighing, he glanced out of the crevice into the Cave. "What I wouldn't give for some good, honest weather right now," he muttered. "Snow. Rain. Hail, even, I'd take hail." It just didn't feel quite real as it was.
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Not saying that it wasn't true, though certainly skirting the very edges. He just wasn't satisfied that they were supposed to take what they were told with nothing to truly help support it. The picture and video... Well, he was trying not to lean too far, either way.
His head tilted to the side, and he continued, "Open-mindedness, if you'd like."
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Smiling, not at anything in particular, he added, "Yes, let's say open-mindedness and allow for the unpredictability of human nature, and I'm sure everything will turn out as it should. Or if not, then interestingly." He mimicked Owen's posture, head tapping back onto the stone.
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He returned the smile with a grin of his own. "Glass half full kinda guy, eh? I like that." Speaking of unpredictability, that was another thing... "They say herding cats is impossible, but I have to wonder if they don't realize herding people can be even worse."
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Aziraphale shook his head. "Can't be done. That's the beauty of free will. Everyone goes off in an entirely different direction and soon it's not a herd, it's a diaspora. Always been difficult to manage, you - us."
He bit the inside corner of his mouth. He'd met Dr. Freud briefly. Not quite a Freudian slip, but not entirely unintentional. How he did hate being guarded - but hopefully Owen wouldn't notice.
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"Bit of a God-complex there?" For all that it was an innocent joke, Owen had run into several supernatural creatures back home who had tried elevating themselves above the human condition. It never really worked out.
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He was so bad at this.
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