dead_black_eyes: "This Night" (There are rules I had to break)
dead_black_eyes ([personal profile] dead_black_eyes) wrote in [community profile] thecapitol2014-11-12 04:37 pm

Well I've Got Thick Skin and an Elastic Heart [Closed]

Who Linden Lockhearst and Stephen Reagan
What| Two long-time District 6 veterans finally get a chance to catch up after not seeing each other for awhile.
Where| District 6's tower suite
When| After the mini-arena, today
Warnings/Notes| Likely talk of drug use, drinking, bidding, killing kids, murder, etc, and the PTSD of a couple people who've had to witness the Games from up close every year. Will update with certainties as they expose themselves!



With a District 6 victory courtesy of Punchy, Linden's been congratulated a few times. Technically, it is a triumph, a pretty good thing to come back to from such a long stint in rehab, but he's uncomfortably aware of the fact that he had relatively little to do with the kid's win. He's still getting the hang of these new Games anyway, because he was gone for such a long time.

It was necessary, of course. He can't dispute that. The series of events that had led up to his longest forced rehabilitation is a scattered and confusing one, but the important parts stand out.

"Snow? What about Snow? I'll need another champagne before I can talk at length about that..."

Uncomfortable laughter. A cautious suggestion that maybe he'd already had enough. The bracing, resentful defiance that came with such a suggestion, until his tantrum prevailed and another flute was slipped into his hand. Just a sip and the world was spinning, and it was starting to be all right again, strong stuff, all the rage in the Capitol...

"Like I was saying..." words slurring, vision dimming, very strange even for the strong stuff. Was it just champagne? The person who had given it to him was gone, slipped away through the cluster of fascinated, horrified listeners. "President Snow crossed a line at the Winter Bidding. People like that didn't even used to be eligible to bid, there USED to be a screening process, and YES I'm angry about it. So, to make up for it, President Snow can get down on his knees and suck a..."

The floor had rushed up at that point, and his memory was a blank void until he'd woken under bright lights with his chest in crushing pain.

(I'm so sorry, Mr. Lockhearst. You won't be feeling yourself for some time, we had to break some ribs to restart your heart. Let's talk about your substance abuse... obviously, you'll need to remain here until you are well enough to face the public again...)


Now, after months of therapy, coloring books, withdrawal and preparation, he is back in the public eye and back to his old duties, to the best of his ability, anyway. There's no longer the shared background with the District 6 Tributes, and while he's glad that he's not sending off children he knows personally to be slaughtered by Careers, he's also off-kilter, out of his element, and already relapsing. The familiarity of the Tower and some of the other Mentors helps nothing; if anything, the juxtaposition with the unfamiliar Tributes, the sheer number of them flooding through, the oddness of it all, just makes the familiar elements seem bizarre.

Linden has never been good at making new friends, making the ones who already know him that much more precious. They're few and far between, though, scattered at parties and helping their respective Tributes (because of course, most of what counts as "friends" to Linden are other Victors.) Midday, in District 6's suite, Linden is alone with the symbols of his vices and his own troubled thoughts, and it's one of the rare occasions where he wishes he wasn't.

capitolprivilege: (would you be upset)

[personal profile] capitolprivilege 2014-11-13 07:40 pm (UTC)(link)
For the past few days, Stephen has barely even seen Linden. Maybe glimpsed him once or twice, across the room, on his way from busy to busier, but there has never been time even to say hello.

And honestly? There is a part of him, a guilty part that he'd never actually admit out loud to anyone (besides a close friend or two) that felt a surge of apprehension when he'd heard Linden was out of rehab and in his hands again. Linden has always been a handful; there is no denying that, and Stephen's hands have been full indeed what with rebellious Tributes staging jailbreaks and committing vandalism during blackouts and being Kevin, oh god Kevin, is Kevin not enough?

But Linden is more than just a headache. Linden is an old coworker, an old partner, an odd duck who could be sharp as a tack when he wanted to and downright endearing when he didn't. Linden and his string of messes had been part of District 6 since Stephen got the job, and he has a pretty good idea of how to work around Linden, how to tolerate the minor neuroses and avoid triggering the big ones, when to use a firm hand and when to cover for him.

Stephen has never been a particularly prescient person, and Linden is the picture of unpredictable. Just about the only thing Stephen can predict is that things would be definitely interesting with Linden around.

But again, between the Mini-Arena and his newly regained right to attend Capitol parties, Stephen has been unforgivably busy since Linden's arrival, and it is only when he walks into the D6 rooms after a long conversation with their stylist, harried and tired, running a hand through his hair and shrugging out of his glittering violet suit jacket, that he finds both Linden and the time to speak with him.

He flashes Linden a tired grin. "Well, well. Look what the cat dragged in," he says by way of greeting. "It's been a while."

With the suit jacket off, the ugly metal cuff around his wrist is impossible to miss: he has the sleeve of his shirt rolled up just enough to display it, accepting the punishment rather than trying to hide it. It clashes horribly with the shimmering eyeliner, the actual diamonds on his other shirt cuff and his ears, and the perfectly tailored suit. It clashes with everything.
capitolprivilege: (all the time we're spending)

[personal profile] capitolprivilege 2014-11-14 04:42 am (UTC)(link)
Forget how uncomfortable it is: nothing could possibly be worse than the hugs Kevin gives. Stephen wraps his arms around Linden's spindly shoulders and returns the hug warmly, and just like that the apprehension melts away -- at least for now. When Linden pulls away, the smile on Stephen's face is easier, relaxed.

He lets Linden manhandle his arm; he's used to Linden's complete disregard for personal space, and honestly it doesn't surprise him that the first thing Linden picks up on is the cuff.

"Yeah, I heard," he says brightly. "That must have been one hell of a party." Stephen knows it wasn't, knows that the past few months must have been extremely hard, but pretending for the sake of politeness and not dragging up bad memories is easier. "What, this?" he asks -- as though Linden could have meant anything else -- looking from him to the cuff. "Actually, it's kind of embarrassing," Stephen admits with a half-laugh. "There was this whole kerfuffle with the Tributes and the Peacekeepers, and the short version is, one of the Tributes tricked me into doing something that looked really bad." His tone is bemused, longsuffering, like why would they do that to me, I don't get it.

It is a complete fabrication.

"So I got saddled with this, which is bad, and three months of being blacklisted from official Games parties, which was worse." He's clearly expecting sympathy, or at least for Linden to acknowledge how hard it is to be banned from parties. "Three months!"

This is also an act.

Well, being banned from the parties had been terrible. And it had made his job as an Escort much, much harder. But Stephen is deliberately playing up the petty distress over his slap on the wrist, drawing attention away from the actual offense, and making himself look like every other Capitol airhead with absolutely no Tribute sympathies and no ability to see past the end of his nose. It's a pretty convincing act. After all, he has a lot of experience being that person.
capitolprivilege: (now you're upset because you finally)

[personal profile] capitolprivilege 2014-11-19 03:25 am (UTC)(link)
It wasn't all that out of character. Stephen Reagan, while he can be very perceptive about people who he considers his responsibility, and is not technically stupid, is a man who has spent the majority of his life with his critical thinking skills switched firmly off. His older brother can be blamed for this: Cyrus Reagan, five years Stephen's senior, stifled any urge Stephen might have had to question the Capitol's doings and fostered unhealthy, codependent trust -- in both himself and the wisdom of the Capitol. The depth of that codependency, Stephen still has not realized, even if he's grown aware of the fact that Cyrus sheltered him in a very dishonest way.

"That's because you've never faked a Peacekeeper communication," replies Stephen briskly, still easily tolerating the examination of his wrist. "Look, here's what happened. A few months ago, Hsiang Jiao was assassinated." The name would be familiar to Linden: Hsiang was a head Peacekeeper, second in command to Cruentus herself, in charge of interrogations and torture. She was not held to any kind of accountability, because one, she got results, and two, her subordinates were too terrified by her actual literal insane sadism to do anything about it. "The Peacekeepers rounded up the suspects in the middle of the night and dragged them off to prison. Over half of them were Tributes, which upset a bunch of the other Tributes," he says with an eyeroll, "and they put together a harebrained, half-baked scheme to try to break out their friends." His tone here is over-casual, like he's talking about an ill-advised but harmless prank. "They were all caught, of course--" of course, the Capitol is omnipotent -- "but some of them were out of custody for a few days."

Here, he pauses for breath.
capitolprivilege: (would you be impressed if I said)

[personal profile] capitolprivilege 2014-11-20 03:17 am (UTC)(link)
"I'm not supposed to help them break the law," complains Stephen, following Linden to the couches and dropping into an armchair. "And the bracelet doesn't go with anything."

It's a good act. It deflects attention from Linden's nearly treasonous statement about the cuff, and it is just shallow enough to echo Stephen in earlier years: he is the picture of a tricked, insulted, and completely obtuse Capitol citizen. The difference is, Stephen doesn't believe what he's saying. It's a subtle difference, difficult to detect, but it is there.

"But you're right about the new Tributes," he says, seizing the opportunity to change the subject -- and recognizing that this will be a useful thing to discuss with Linden. "In a lot of ways, they're harder to work with. They have old lives, whole histories, and they're used to places that are very different from this. They're used to being citizens." They're used to being free, is what he means -- but of course, he can't say that. Participating in the Hunger Games was an honor, wasn't it? That was the party line? Stephen had believed it for a long time, even as it got harder and harder each year to send children into the Arena. "But I can give you a rundown of everyone in Six right now."
capitolprivilege: (would you be upset)

[personal profile] capitolprivilege 2014-11-25 05:16 am (UTC)(link)
Stephen tolerates it. Alcohol is the least of Linden's addictions; it's fine as long as the Mentor behaves himself. Linden can drink until he gets unruly. Then, he's getting cut off. But luckily, it looks like Linden is taking it fairly slow.

"Who do you know about so far?" he asks. "And what do you think of them?"

Stephen decides to ask this while Linden is still sober. Because when Linden is sober, he's got really, really good thoughts.
capitolprivilege: (would you be impressed if I said)

[personal profile] capitolprivilege 2014-12-02 09:24 pm (UTC)(link)
Stephen winces in sympathy, but it's more than half a smile. "Punchy's very lively," he agrees. "But he's also brilliant at getting into computers. He's gotten himself into more than a little trouble trying to get into Capitol systems. Look out for that."

It's not the full story. Punchy had gotten into systems, and then been temporarily Avoxed for it. But Punchy didn't like to talk about his time as an Avox, and Stephen respected that -- he wouldn't bring it up unless he had to. But he will let Linden know that Punchy is a troublemaker. It's a good thing to know.

"Probably the first person you need to be aware of is Kevin. He's the only other Victor in Dee-Six right now, so I'm sure you'll meet eventually. He's..." Here, Stephen trails off, and the wince is sincere. He didn't like talking badly about Kevin. It was like talking badly about a dog. A dog that had been trained to tear human beings to shreds and then eat their meat. It was exactly like that, actually. "He's from a place that is very different from here. It's called Desert Bluffs, and from what I've figured out, it was run like a very religious corporation, with a side helping of microchip brainwashing."

He runs a hand through his hair. "Sorry -- I'm probably not making any sense. Let me try again: Kevin has a microchip in the back of his neck that keeps him manically happy. It also makes him think about absolutely everything in terms of business. He thinks of being a Victor as a promotion. That's how his mind works."
capitolprivilege: (oh do you mean it?)

[personal profile] capitolprivilege 2014-12-28 04:32 am (UTC)(link)
"But I mean much more literally." Stephen shifts, leaning forward in his chair. "Everything he says is framed in terms of business. His Crowning speech sounded like someone who'd just been made a board member. When he won, he said he was excited to be in a management position. He's insane."

Stephen shakes his head and wrings his hands for a moment.

"Be polite to him and he'll be polite to you. He knows no one here really likes him, but the chip keeps him from being too upset about that. He's starting to shake off its control, though, so I have no idea how well that will end. It is what it is."
capitolprivilege: (and every cure they gave us)

[personal profile] capitolprivilege 2015-01-05 08:15 pm (UTC)(link)
A beat of silence, of did you seriously just say that silence.

"Please don't," he quips, meaning the trying-insanity bit rather than the talking-to-Kevin. "My job is difficult enough as it is."

One Kevin and one Linden are tricky enough the way they are.

"You're right. Victors aren't supposed to be insane or cannibals. But Kevin is both, and that's what we have to deal with. If you have any trouble with his behavior, tell him he's acting unprofessional, and he'll cooperate."
capitolprivilege: (we wine)

I don't remember who'd dropped at this point or who hadn't, so I'm going to list everyone he's met

[personal profile] capitolprivilege 2015-01-12 12:30 am (UTC)(link)
Stephen closes his eyes and leans back with a resigned sigh.

"I'm sure he'd be delighted to tell you." He opens his eyes and props himself up on an elbow. "Anyway, about the other Tributes. Be careful of Molotov Cocktease. She's incredibly willful and a little bit scary, and doesn't seem afraid of anything. But she plays to win and has taken control of her own marketing contracts, so she's the one I'd bet on to be our next winner. Skye is another hacking genius. Sarcastic, guarded, pretty. I like her. Belle is sweet. She's a very kind person -- a dream to work with." Unsaid is, I'm really sorry she's here. "Bro Strider is..."

Here, Stephen breaks off.

"Bro Strider does puppet pornography. If you've seen those long-nosed, naked puppets around the Capitol, they're his. The story we have going for him is that he did it to help support his little brother, who is the only one he has a soft spot for."
capitolprivilege: (would you be impressed if I said)

[personal profile] capitolprivilege 2015-01-12 08:13 pm (UTC)(link)
"Dave Strider's in 9," says Stephen matter-of-factly. "So not technically our problem." His manner is brisk and breezy. "But the story's worked well, and smuppet sales have taken off -- they're selling faster than Bro can make them."

A beat.

"I don't understand the appeal."

He doesn't mention the time Bro pranked him by burying him in a pile of smuppets, or the time he'd had an ill-advised one night stand with both Bro Strider and Tres Jolie and had looked up at one point to find one looking at him. Better not to overshare. But it's clear Stephen finds them at least a little creepy.
capitolprivilege: (and who will take the credit?)

[personal profile] capitolprivilege 2015-01-13 07:43 pm (UTC)(link)
Oh yes, Stephen knows the signs. Internally, he braces himself: this is not a part of the job he missed, but it is one he is capable of doing.

"Honestly, I don't think any of them thought about it quite that hard," says Stephen lightly. "Certainly not as hard as you."
capitolprivilege: (and everything is fine)

[personal profile] capitolprivilege 2015-01-20 01:17 am (UTC)(link)
"I'm sure," says Stephen brightly, pretending he doesn't understand what Linden is saying. He's smiling and nodding because smiling and nodding and playing dumb is the safest thing to do here. With any luck, Linden will give up on getting through to him, sigh heavily, and not say anything else.

Meanwhile, he's gauging what his chances of getting that bottle away from Linden are. They're at point A, and point B is bed. Stephen just has to figure out how to get there.
capitolprivilege: (we wine)

[personal profile] capitolprivilege 2015-01-27 12:47 am (UTC)(link)
Stephen feels a twinge of nervousness behind the easy smile. Linden's good at reading people. Has Linden figured out, yet, that what Stephen is saying is an act?

So here, he does something a little out of character: instead of denying it, confused and clueless, he changes the subject.

"What're you drinking tonight?" he asks.
capitolprivilege: (all the time we're spending)

[personal profile] capitolprivilege 2015-01-29 08:44 pm (UTC)(link)
Hell no, he's not going to admit it. Actually, Stephen laughs -- like Linden's just told a really funny joke.

"Oh, please," he says, "I bet it's practically milk. I bet," he says, toying with the metal cuff around his wrist, "I bet I could drink it without flinching."
capitolprivilege: (would you be upset)

[personal profile] capitolprivilege 2015-02-01 09:22 pm (UTC)(link)
They both know it's a game, they both know what's really happening here, so Stephen doesn't feel bad about the half-laugh that escapes him when Linden yanks the bottle away.

He goes and gets the glass, and sits back down, and then looks like he's hesitating.

"You'd better let me pour it," he says. "After all, I'm the sober one. If you try, it's going to end up all over the floor."

Your move.
capitolprivilege: (oh they mean it)

[personal profile] capitolprivilege 2015-02-03 01:29 am (UTC)(link)
"That," Stephen says, referring to Linden's admission of seeing two glasses, "does absolutely nothing to help your case." The longer Linden talks, the less alcohol is being drunk. He dangles the glass between thumb and forefinger, idly. "And it's also bullshit. It's just that if you're drunk enough to spill, you're also too drunk to remember," he challenges.
capitolprivilege: (would you be upset)

[personal profile] capitolprivilege 2015-02-05 02:11 am (UTC)(link)
"That right there is exactly what I'm talking about," Stephen says with gravity, easily holding the cup out of Linden's reach. "You're too drunk to even remember how long I've been working here. Linden, friends don't let friends spill booze all over the floor because they're too drunk to pour it themselves."
capitolprivilege: (now you're upset because you finally)

[personal profile] capitolprivilege 2015-02-10 02:14 am (UTC)(link)
Oh no you don't.

Enough is enough. When Linden starts to tip the bottle back, Stephen lunges forward, counting on Linden to be too drunk to dodge. He reaches out, intending to deftly snap the bottle up and out of Linden's grasp.
capitolprivilege: (would you be impressed if I said)

[personal profile] capitolprivilege 2015-02-12 07:29 pm (UTC)(link)
Ouch. Well, if anyone has the right to joke about that kind of thing, it's Linden.

"I promise you," he says, in a tone that is patient but also very dry, "you are completely safe from me."

There are few enough in the Capitol that Stephen wouldn't at least be amiable to sleeping with, especially after a few drinks, but Linden is one of them. Stephen is far too conscious of the power-dynamics and of the traumas Linden has in that particular area to fool himself into thinking that it would be anything but cruel. Linden isn't tempting.

He'll leave Linden staring at the ceiling for a moment -- he's going to put that bottle away and come back with a tall glass of water.
capitolprivilege: (every single moment)

[personal profile] capitolprivilege 2015-02-19 08:03 pm (UTC)(link)
"Good God." He's appropriately disgusted. "Are you sure you want to be telling me about this? Don't tell me anything you wouldn't sober, Linden -- here, drink this."

He pushes the (plastic, unbreakable, not full enough to risk spilling) cup into Linden's hands.
capitolprivilege: (would you be impressed if I said)

[personal profile] capitolprivilege 2015-02-24 05:26 pm (UTC)(link)
"You were for a while there," Stephen says, dropping to the couch next to Linden, keeping an eye on him -- making sure all that water went where it was supposed to. "You're fresh out of rehab. You can't tell me there's nothing you wouldn't want me to know sober."
capitolprivilege: (would you be upset)

[personal profile] capitolprivilege 2015-03-08 07:08 pm (UTC)(link)
"That's only got so much to do with it," Stephen argues back, picking the glass up and putting it back in Linden's hand. "I've also known you forever. If I know everything about you, it's because you get drunk and tell me."
capitolprivilege: (would you be impressed if I said)

[personal profile] capitolprivilege 2015-03-10 06:30 pm (UTC)(link)
Yep, he knows the signs. The worst is over, and Linden will go to bed, and if he's lucky, sleep until the afternoon.

Stephen puts an arm around Linden's shoulder. "Of course I listen," he says, gently. "Come on, that's enough for tonight. Let's get you to bed."

He does listen. He's good at listening, and if he didn't listen, he'd be less well-equipped to handle the day-to-day crises of living with Linden Lockhearst.
capitolprivilege: (Default)

[personal profile] capitolprivilege 2015-03-11 11:52 pm (UTC)(link)
With one of Linden's arms around his shoulder and his hand gripping Linden's belt, the nerd-waif can be maneuvered easily enough. Stephen's not particularly strong -- any working out he's ever done has been for completely cosmetic reasons -- but Linden's lost weight.

That's not good.

But now isn't the time to pick a fight over it. Stephen will get Linden to his room, get him out on the bed, make sure his shoes are off, move a trash bin to the side of the bed because who knew if the worst was actually over, and get a blanket over him.