Grantaire (
permets_tu) wrote in
thecapitol2014-11-19 07:08 pm
it's a divine comedy! [open]
Who| Grantaire & OPEN.
What| Grantaire tries to adjust to not being dead, and probably more importantly, being alive in a place that certainly is not 1832 Paris.
Where| Tribute Center; Central Commons.
When| Some point shortly after his arrival.
Warnings/Notes| Will update as needed.
Initially Grantaire mistook it for a hallucination, elaborate and strange, yes, but surely a product of his own drink addled mind. He was asleep at that table still, drowning in the drunken miasma of his wild dreams, and soon he would wake and this would be forgotten, as dreams always are. However, the longer it persisted, the clearer his mind became, and the painful clarity in which this reality assaulted his senses eventually forced him to reconsider his earlier assumption and accept a new truth.
This was real.
If he accepted that then he must also accept that he had died, just as he remembered, standing beside Enjolras and showing himself capable of not only dying but dying as well as he knew how.
Yet apparently it hadn't took, which was troubling for a number of reasons he'd rather not dwell upon.
Instead set out to gain some bearing on his situation, which was how he had come to this point, standing in a great open lobby. He did not know precisely how he had done so; he had followed people, there had been a strange static journey within a box that closed on one place and opened at another, and now he stood here, feeling at once both awed and cruelly cheated. He reacted initially with unnatural silence, so struck was he by the outlandishness of his situation.
"A drink!" he cried abruptly, as suddenly as enlightenment strikes the puzzled intellectual, and he looked around wildly for any place that might provide him one.
What| Grantaire tries to adjust to not being dead, and probably more importantly, being alive in a place that certainly is not 1832 Paris.
Where| Tribute Center; Central Commons.
When| Some point shortly after his arrival.
Warnings/Notes| Will update as needed.
Initially Grantaire mistook it for a hallucination, elaborate and strange, yes, but surely a product of his own drink addled mind. He was asleep at that table still, drowning in the drunken miasma of his wild dreams, and soon he would wake and this would be forgotten, as dreams always are. However, the longer it persisted, the clearer his mind became, and the painful clarity in which this reality assaulted his senses eventually forced him to reconsider his earlier assumption and accept a new truth.
This was real.
If he accepted that then he must also accept that he had died, just as he remembered, standing beside Enjolras and showing himself capable of not only dying but dying as well as he knew how.
Yet apparently it hadn't took, which was troubling for a number of reasons he'd rather not dwell upon.
Instead set out to gain some bearing on his situation, which was how he had come to this point, standing in a great open lobby. He did not know precisely how he had done so; he had followed people, there had been a strange static journey within a box that closed on one place and opened at another, and now he stood here, feeling at once both awed and cruelly cheated. He reacted initially with unnatural silence, so struck was he by the outlandishness of his situation.
"A drink!" he cried abruptly, as suddenly as enlightenment strikes the puzzled intellectual, and he looked around wildly for any place that might provide him one.

Tribute Commons Bar
Molotov, who's been his constant companion in the Capitol lately, is out at a photoshoot, and that leaves Tom a bit listless. It's atypical for him to be so reluctant to engage in solitary behavior, but he supposes it might just be the general restlessness of captivity. As the days in the city have passed, he's become increasingly bored with what the Capitol has to offer, and as he sees no immediate method of escape he's started to worry that this burgeoning tedium will only amplify.
The answer, of course, is alcohol. Tom hopes that the lens of sepia liquids will lend a certain sharpness to what he is to do in this situations. It's certainly not as bad as prison, but Tom's never enjoyed staying in one place for long. It probably says things about him that he's looking forward to the next Arena with the closest thing to bated breath as someone with his demeanor ever manages.
Awful, awful things.
He settles a seat away from Grantaire and orders whiskey, trusting the bartending Avox will recognize the brand that Tom's been shilling as an official spokesperson for (the Capitol seems all too happy to trade on the novelty of a thick Irish accent). His cane, which he's been carrying more than using despite his limp, gets leaned against the underside of the bar.
"I'm going to hazard a guess and say that you're new here."
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"And I shall hazard that you are not. Do you see? I too am able to make obvious presumptions, a skill that I frequently demonstrate but often find derided, as my opinions are generally worthless and few welcome my grim honesty. I dislike this air of depressing compliance you have about you, it does not bode well for my future and I have too many questions about this place to put into good order, so I seek to drown my confusion. This is the best answer I have for them presently." He took a long drink and then frowned deeply, as if the taste had offended him. It had not, and he had instead been distracted by a more troubling realization.
"Am I speaking English?"
He was, he could feel the shape, different and clumsier than his native French and he took another drink, longer, his expression darkening.
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"'Depressing compliance'? Just because I'm not burning up the streets in some ill-conceived bid for expression doesn't mean I'm compliant." He's near grousing. He thinks of the girl in his District, Korra, and how she assumed that anything other than immediate action was weakness. Tom raises his eyebrows and takes a drink.
"You are. Everyone here is." It didn't strike Tom as terribly awkward when he arrived here, but that's because it's his mother tongue. He's slowly come to find it more and more grating as he can't rely on his many other languages to impress. It's a small peeve, but Tom's always had an affection for showiness and flaunting his education, and having one fewer tool in his verbal kit doesn't please him. A villain needs his flair.
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He sighed deeply, an exhalation of useless wind, for it seemed wind was all he was capable of blowing. "My death has been robbed from me, and now my language too, this is a fine joke! As for your lack of revolutionary fervor, I find it depressing only because I once warmed myself often around the embers of such pointless conviction, and to find it absent is more painful than anticipated." Or perhaps it came as no surprise at all, if one were to reflect upon the reason for his death.
"I myself am too well acquainted with that softer side of rebellion, the weak underbelly that avoids any great show of true dedication; the one who notes that what has come before will come again and so on, why not enjoy some nice thing in the meantime? Until, of course, you reach that moment where you may stand and die for something or remain sitting and die just the same, from worthlessness. When I first awoke I had hoped this was some fever dream, but as the vision has yet to fade I am chastising myself for not having seen something like it coming." He trailed off, bitterness evident in the twist of his mouth. His eyes roamed over the people who milled about them and he appeared for a moment as if very lost, before the openness of his expression shuttered and he focused more plainly upon his companion.
"You may call me Grantaire, if you wish to call me anything at all. I sign it with the French R, an amusing little pun in my language that falls tediously flat in English."
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Grantaire doesn't mean to stir resentment in Tom's chest, but the metaphors of fire and embers can only keenly remind him of how his powers are suppressed. How once he could snap his fingers and bring fire to his hand, and how the Capitol doesn't trust him with even that. He doesn't blame them - certainly the other Tributes have done nothing to engender trust - but it still chafes that a part of him so integral has been stripped from him without his consent.
Still, Tom laughs, because he does understand the joke in the name. He once spoke French, in addition to plenty of other tongues. "Tom Cassidy."
He holds out his hand to shake. Despite debonair affectations, he has callouses on his palms; he isn't the type to do paperwork. He spends time in the field, with gunpowder and wires and fire.
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i hope this is ok c:
He had contemplated this prospect for several days, since his release from jail. A weekend spent in confinement could easily turn any man into a contemplator. In fact, he resolved that he would contemplate this further while strolling in the crisp, autumn air. There would be only a few more pleasant days in the season before snowfall. One might as well enjoy the cold before it became bitter.
He was just exiting the elevator, intending to walk directly to the front doors of the center when an familiar figure grabbed hold of his full attention.
"Grantaire?"
Surely his eyes were deceiving him. There was no other explanation for the vision before him, wandering through the lobby just ahead. He found himself tempted to rub his eyes, to pinch himself to see if he was dreaming. But he wasn't, so he didn't. Instead, he galloped toward the man at close to full speed. Never before had he been so glad to see him.
"My God, it is you! My eyes do not deceive me! Grantaire, what poor luck this is! And yet, I find that I am so happy, I might burst from joy!"
this is perfect ;w;
"You look terrible!" His exclamation was deafening. "I am turned to stone, you gorgon, if not in body than in mind! What has happened to you? Do not take offense, I am happy to see you, I am, though suspicious that my presence would affect you similarly, and troubled more so by the look of you. None of it bodes well for me and I am suitably disturbed."
However, this could not stop Grantaire from reaching out, gripping Coureyrac's arm and thus reassured by the solidity of his presence. If he was trapped here than he could at least he was not alone, however unexpected a pair they made. "What is this place, Courfeyrac?"
huzzah!!! :3
"This is Panem and it is hell on Earth." He steadied himself on Grantaire's arms, grateful that the man didn't vanish into thin air as he reached out to him. "Or perhaps it is not Earth at all. It is a savage place and we've all been cursed to live and die here, again and again for the amusement of our new rulers. That is the plainest way I might explain it. But before I go on, you must first tell me when you arrived! It's been almost a year for me since I died at the barricade and I do not recall that you were there with us."
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He waved his free hand grandly, and then lowered his voice as his posture relaxed into one of affected indifference, a front for any shame he felt for sleeping through the death of his friends.
"You have fine timing, I have just arrived and you missed me at the barricade because I was not there, but fear not! I followed soon enough, though a year has not passed for me since last I laid eyes on you. My memories tell me I saw you just last night, you were full of fervor then, such excitement had seized hold of you all and look at the result. I awoke and you were dead, and then I died and awoke again and here you are! How things change, and yet I fail to feel any surprise!" He paused, and looked around them briefly.
"No, I will amend that claim, this is surprising. Where are the rest of our friends?"
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orz am so late
aaaahahahahhaaaa, right back atcha! ;;;;
\o/
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He starts just a bit when the cry comes abruptly, but his surprise is soon replaced with amusement and he smiles. He veers off his course toward him, as if summoned to him by the siren song of booze.
"You aren't far off." He points out with a friendly tone to his voice. "Look no further than the corner onward. Surely they will provide you with what you desire." He gestures vaguely toward the direction of the lobby bar, he knows it's location all too well.
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He found himself bitterly satisfied with that little truth.
Of course, this man did not look like he meant to kill him now, and naturally such possibilities were tempered by the kindness the other man had just done him. He looked to where he'd been directed before returning his attention to the stranger. "Join me!" he declared. "Drinking alone encourages melancholy and there will be time for that later. Have you been here long? How did you overcome the shock? I seek to drown mine."
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The declaration upgrades Thor smile into a grin and he does nothing to hide his eagerness at the idea of new company and drinking. "Gladly." He complies, taking a step toward the bar whilst gesturing for the stranger to follow. "A most ingenious plan, my friend, but you will find that drink is far and few between once we enter the Arena." He figures he might as well warn him about that much. "Me? Oh, months." There's a bitter sort of humor in his tone. "Five months, at least, but you speak as if one ever overcomes shock here."
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"As I have no great expectations towards my sustained presence within any Arena I play in I am happily free of any great dread," he said, though he had honestly given it little thought. Being a stranger to the Arena also left him hopelessly ignorant to the true horror of it, and he functioned in the state where the nothing could be worse than what he had already endured.
"But you," he said with a sharp twist of his wrist, gesturing to the sight this man presented. "You do not look to suffer the same prospects as I, mountain that you are," he observed dryly and then made a face. "Pah! What shock you may have suffered five long months ago has faded and you do not look around yourself with the same witless wonder. Unless this was your same reaction, in which case, I am impressed."
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hey man sorry I'm so slow but this thread is A+
:D
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"I suppose there ought to be somewhere they can be found, if you had meant to be looking for one."
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A dragon, European in look, speaking to him as if it was a perfectly natural thing to do. And why not? What was normal here, after all? How could he possibly know, he was only a poor ignorant prisoner, uneducated in what was natural or commonplace. Perhaps dragons were native, and next he would find satyrs running past, followed by any other manner of mythological oddity.
"A relief, I fear I have an increasing need," he murmured, distraction lending a weak quality to his voice, eyes fixed on the creature before him. He pressed his hands to his face abruptly, rubbing at his eyes and willing any illusory visions to dissipate. When he refocused the dragon was still there.
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(There aren't likely to be any dryads as far as she knows, but things might well have changed if they're bringing people in again.)
"We could look together, perhaps. If it's as pressing as all that; I have little else that needs to be done, at any rate."
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"What? How will you drink it, by the barrel?!" The question was baldly spoken and debatably rude. Ordinarily this would trouble him little but he was unsettled in the presence of a creature he had thought entirely mythological and reconsidered his tone.
"On account of your size, of course," he added. "Being so magnificent and impressive I doubt any glass that I can swallow down would bring you any joy."
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And yet... yet, there weren't so many men with French accents here, and certainly not that hateful Enjolras, nor Joly or Marius or Courfeyrac. Not Marius, no. Nor the others, but...
She twisted in her seat, craning her neck to see who this man was, and like the voice, the figure was one that she dimly recognised from those foggy times in Paris. One of the companions, perhaps? One of the students she had watched so often without taking the slightest bit of notice of? She had no name for him, yet she knew it must be one of them.
She got up carefully, straightening her oversized hoodie, pulling it tight down of the leggings that seem to have replaced actual pants in her wardrobe. She probably looked different to Paris as well, with her skin scrubbed clean, her hair somewhat tamed, her left cheek marred by a huge, raw-looking brand of the Capitol insignia, which started just below her eye and just caught the edges of her lips.
"Sir?" She came towards him, eyebrows raised in a questioning manner. "Would brandy do? I know the good stuff, nasty as piss but good to make you sleep, Sir."
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He did not recognize her as any acquaintance of his but that hardly made any difference. Besides, she had not called him by name and so he assumed she must know him as well as he knew her. The way she spoke was familiar to the Paris he knew however, and he snorted on surprised laughter at her crude shape of her words.
"It will do well enough if I can forget the flavor by the third swallow. If it is good, as you say, then that shouldn't be too hard a task. But I don't know if I want to sleep, I reject it as it has so cruelly rejected me, what say you to that?"
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"Oh, I believe I tried as hard as a man may possibly do, on account of referring to that peaceful sleep of death. And yet here I am! So, having failed so spectacularly I need a drink to comfort me. Suggest me something that will keep us awake and merry and I shall love you for it. I warn you, though, it shall be a fickle love and dependent upon that madness only Bacchus inspires."
He crossed his arms, looking down at her. "Are you still willing to help with this caveat set before you?"
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laaaaate
His ugly-senses were tingling.
He cast wildly around, looking for the offending creature in the sea of beautiful people. The Tributes were generally attractive, and their prep teams all had the altered look of those made better by modern chemistry, sometimes multiple times a day. Finally, Calendius' dark eyes landed on Grantaire, as if drawn by some unknown force (and not at all his cry for liquor). What an awful looking man. There had to be something they could do about it.
"If I looked like that," Cal declared loudly to the Avox, which stared vacantly at nothing in response. "I'd try to drown myself in booze, too. Poor thing."
fashionably
"Oh, is this where I can do that?" he asks loudly instead and strides over, throwing his arms open in wild exaggeration. "I'm eager to get started, maybe I can be dead before evening. Give me the chance and I will drink, call me Silenus and I will do the best thing any man can! Join me and do the same, your friend here would probably thank me for it! Or don't, company like yours, I'll be sleeping into my first cup."
Grantaire snorts, looking the man up and down before turning away. He focuses on the person behind the bar instead, their face a mask of affected stoicism. "Your strongest spirit, my friend! I am eager to forget my circumstances and have faith in whatever you choose."
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Oh well, all the more reason to indulge the stranger and get him embarrassingly drunk. Plus, he's a Tribute Cal hasn't heard of yet. That's unusual. This is business. Research, even. There's nothing petty about it.
"The lounge serves cocktails, but it's really for social drinkers. There's a bar around the block that is, apparently, popular with some of the Tributes. And that Avox isn't my friend. They're incapable of friendship, I think." He sneers in the general direction of the said Avox. The expression might be cruel if it weren't so vacant.
"Calendius Rey, Escort for District Two. I don't know you. That's a problem."
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When he looks back at Calendius it is with a placid expression in place, which is spoiled marginally when his lips quirk in amusement. So he has managed to offend him, though he notes it seems more so due to a suspicious nature than any clear understanding of what Grantaire had actually suggested. Sliding into one of the seats at the bar and resting his chin in his palm, studying Calendius' polished appearance with a discerning eye, he snorts rudely at the completion of the introduction.
"That means nothing to me. But lo, fortune favors me, I claim complete indifference to enlightenment!" A drink was set before him, contents a daring mystery. He drank deeply and coughed, favoring his supplier with an approving grimace.
"As for this problem you cite," he said, wiping at his mouth, "I would like to know to whom it belongs. To you? Good. To me? I am presently in possession of too many, and this one fails to impress any great worth. Now away with you Calesius, I am going to prove what a fine social drinker I am and fear your presence may smudge it."
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