itsananimalthing (
itsananimalthing) wrote in
thecapitol2012-12-18 08:46 pm
Entry tags:
Lessons, Capitol Style
WHO| Riddick and OPEN
WHAT| Riddick is "learning".
WHERE| Tessurae (the "Hunger Games" style restaurant!)
WHEN| Three days after the arena is out
WARNINGS| Riddick's mouth and bad attitude
Having one of the Tributes themselves visiting had originally been exciting at Tessurae, but when he proved to be the opposite of friendly, the charm quickly wore off. It'd been three nights now, and Riddick kept coming back, ordering the least sugar- and sauce-intensive meal on the menu and a stiff drink, and then promptly shunning anyone who tried to approach him for an autograph or a question or a breathless compliment.
For anyone who happened to really pay attention, it seemed like he was watching Hunger Games reruns and pulling up statistics in the bar's records. There were only so many places to learn about this stuff, after all, and he'd already exhausted what he could find in the library since his return to life. Now it was time to find some raw data and learn what he could about the mania surrounding the things first-hand, in the most Games-themed place he could find.
Of course, the whole place made him sick, but he could deal with it.
WHAT| Riddick is "learning".
WHERE| Tessurae (the "Hunger Games" style restaurant!)
WHEN| Three days after the arena is out
WARNINGS| Riddick's mouth and bad attitude
Having one of the Tributes themselves visiting had originally been exciting at Tessurae, but when he proved to be the opposite of friendly, the charm quickly wore off. It'd been three nights now, and Riddick kept coming back, ordering the least sugar- and sauce-intensive meal on the menu and a stiff drink, and then promptly shunning anyone who tried to approach him for an autograph or a question or a breathless compliment.
For anyone who happened to really pay attention, it seemed like he was watching Hunger Games reruns and pulling up statistics in the bar's records. There were only so many places to learn about this stuff, after all, and he'd already exhausted what he could find in the library since his return to life. Now it was time to find some raw data and learn what he could about the mania surrounding the things first-hand, in the most Games-themed place he could find.
Of course, the whole place made him sick, but he could deal with it.

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That means he's trying to learn from the other Tributes. Not all of them seem as happy as he is to be here - where death is temporary if it's in the arena, and otherwise you're treated as some kind of b-list celebrity - and as such he suspects there's something more afoot. Besides, he'll want to know if there are any weaknesses he can exploit in the next arena.
So if Riddick's paying attention, he might notice that the kid who's apparently attempting to eat the bar out of business is watching him. Even if he isn't, Howard self-consciously figures that a guy who looks so rugged must be at least a little aware of his surroundings, and decides to cut things off early by introducing himself.
"Whatcha looking at?"
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When he's addressed, though, he turns his head a little, so it looks like he's looking at him out of the corner of his eye-- or like he would be, if there weren't the round, tinted lenses in the way, curving around his head. It wasn't particularly bright in here, but there were random flashes from the dance floor that bothered him if he wasn't protected.
Without a word, he tilted the little menu-like flip-book he was looking through to show the current laminated page to Howard. It has a list of Tributes in former Games, not winners, but ones who died in particularly memorable fashions. There's even a little tiny picture for each one.
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"It doesn't matter though, does it?" He sounds more casual about it than he looks. His index fingers and thumb are trembling. "I mean. They bring us back each time."
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Then he finally spoke, to explain. "Didn't use to. All these guys?" He tapped the page, before turning it to a new one. "Dead for good."
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"What changed?"
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He isn't shocked or sickened, really. He's seen children die before in droves. He's seen them torture and be tortured, start lynch mobs and murder those younger than them. Kids are just a slightly more immature version of the rest of the world, nothing worth protecting.
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He didn't usually people watch here, not finding the Capitol citizens terribly fascinating, but the Tribute who kept coming back night after night caught his attention, and finally he wandered over, curious and not a little bored. "You know they go to every effort not to repeat themselves," he said casually, peering over the other man's shoulder.
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He finally stumbled to the bar, ordering something strong before he got bombarded with questions again, all but oblivious to Riddick's presence just a seat or two down. His observational skills had slid considerably as long as he was around the Capitol.
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It was his best guess, anyway. He was still trying to piece things together.
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"Seems like," he agreed dryly. "You'd think they'd run out of places to have these things, by th'time they got this far along."
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"Scoot over a chair, kid," he offered. "That'll keep them off your back for a while."
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He set the booklet down, and answered the actual question shortly and succinctly: "What I'm doing? I'm learning."
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He bites his lip. "Learning to win?"
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"Why? That what you wanna do?"
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Not that that means he won't. He also doesn't want to die.
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"I'm tryin' to learn about why they do this, and how they do this." And if there was a way to bring it all down, but he didn't say that out loud.
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"You mean why they do it asides from shits and giggles?" Howard bites the edge of his glass. "I got theories but I haven't been here too long."
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"When did you get here?" He asked, realising immediately that the question was stupid, and Riddick had probably been there from even before he got there. Another, slightly longer pause, a glance over his shoulder, and then Draco did as he was told, scooting over a chair with limited effort, dragging both his drink and the plate along with him.
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He isn't really interested in bandying them in public, though, especially not with a kid he knows nothing about besides his potential desire to win.
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He looked over his shoulder once, and the customer who'd been eying Draco wilted and slouched off.
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"I'm going to avoid you in the arena, if you don't mind," he says matter-of-factly, and leaves. Riddick's distrust is clear and, well, Howard can't blame him. It's just hard to make allies here.
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Then he does back to flipping through the list of trivia. It doesn't bother him to be distrusted and disliked. It's just another day, after all.
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Catching the tail end of Riddick's glance out of the corner of his eye, he frowned, turning to look back at the customer that seemed to have been scared off. "Did you ju-" He cut himself off, pausing. "You're bloody terrifying, you know that?"
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This one didn't, though: "That supposed to be a compliment or an insult?"
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"A little of both. Leaning towards the former." And he wasn't even lying through his teeth. In a way, Draco admired it. As long as he was on this side of it.
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Did they build over them? Could they find the remains of previous Arenas below the newest? Or did they simply find a new place on the planet, was the country called Panem (and Alpha loved a pun but really) the only part of the world with a surviving patch of humanity on it? Seemingly basic questions, surprisingly difficult to find the answers to.
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