Jason Compson IV (
whatisay) wrote in
thecapitol2015-03-10 09:48 pm
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Flecks of the Heavens' Spat Out Spit [OPEN]
WHO| Jason Compson and Open; Jason and Swann; Jason, Rick and Daryl
WHAT| Jason gets a migraine and is helpless; Jason beats an Avox; Jason gives Swann a gift; Rick and Daryl get the shotguns.
WHEN| Week 6
WHERE| D7 Suites; Swann's place
WARNINGS/NOTES| Avox abuse, migraines, general Jason awfulness. If you're going to tag the second prompt, please PP or PM me first so we can figure out where it's going and how far to take it, because Jason won't hesitate to put someone in jail.
I. Open
He knew he was going to have one of his headaches from the beginning of the morning, when every light seemed to have a ring radiating off of it and everything seemed to smell like rainwater. The one upside to the curse of these migraines is that he usually gets a few hours head start on them, with the feeling of deadly premonition, and so he spends most of the day trying to finish up everything as quickly as he can and clock out early. The calls to Sponsors and thank you cards to donors becomes a race against time, one which he sees himself losing too late to actually prevent disaster.
First he can't see, and then he can't move. Even breathing seems to put too much strain on him, and the throbbing, tightening hammering in his head gets worse with every exhale. The inside of his body feels like a live wire, sparking away inside his skull at camera-shutter speed. Nausea roils inside his throat and stomach, furling and unfurling like the tide.
When he opens his eyes the light is too bright, speckled with floating spots and halos, and he feels like the universe itself is trying to cram itself through his eyesockets and that his bones have made the opening too small to fit. So he keeps them shut and rolls over on the District Seven couch until he's facedown in a pillow, sweating slightly, trying not to whimper.
He has no hope of driving himself home, and even the idea of getting up seems a cruel joke. He tries twice, and both times a surge of nausea and a thunderclap of pain force him back down. So he lies there, hoping to whatever powers that be that his Tributes stick to their schedules and don't come bother him.
II. Open (please read note)
What started off as a strong Arena quickly loses those good odds as the District Seven Tributes die in the field and the District Suite gets repopulated. The worse it looks, the worse Jason's temper gets, until he's liable to throw something at the slightest provocation, which the Games video updates seem eager to supply him with. At least twice this week he's broken a glass, and yesterday smacked a table so hard that he has a ring of bruising around his finger like a wedding band.
With only Nick left in the Arena, Jason and Emily's chances are getting desperate, and the worst blow comes to Jason's ego when he realizes that no amount of fawning and flattery and networking seems to be enough to get Nick more supplies in the Arena. It stings to feel powerlessness, and to make it worse the only person willing to spot Nick a fire-starting kit's funds will only do it on condition that Jason go drinking with him - no sobriety allowed. Jason turns it down, but doesn't leave with his head held high so much as rankled and humiliated, and every ungrateful glance from his Tributes reminds him of how his family used to practically own this damn country and yet here he is, exposing his belly to anyone with money, helpless and inept and so, so frustrated with his life. Dressed in a suit he got from someone else's charity and supporting a home full of ingrates and lonely and with a fury as endless as the sky.
Whatever it is that set Jason off this time, it isn't sated just by smashing a piece of kitchenware. This time he backhands the Avox who rushes in to try and clean up the coffee mug he throws against the floor, sending them into the couch.
III. Swann
For someone who usually agonizes over every half-assi that goes to a necessary cause, Jason doesn't seem to mind spending money on Swann. He complains about it, at times, but it's more to go through the motions of complaining than because it actually bothers him. He buys her coffee when he can and tells her to save her money when they get lunch, getting sulky and defensive when she insists on splitting the tab. Sometimes he buys her a pastry on his way to pick her up for carpooling, although he doesn't let her eat it in the vehicle, and he has yet to ask her to help pay for fuel.
Today he shows up at her place with a large carrier in the back of his car, covered by a blanket, with a towel underneath it to protect the seats. Something inside is making scratching sounds. Jason looks a little frazzled, and shows up a few minutes late from a different route than he usually takes. He presses a button inside the car and the door opens for Swann.
"You coming, Honeymead?"
IV. Daryl and Rick
The rumors spread quickly after the Crowning, and all of them rub Jason the wrong way. A few photographs of him and Beth at the Crowning, him whispering into her ear, have made the rounds on tabloids, some of them even frontpage for the publications hungry enough to fabricate a scandal for readership. Jason's certain that he wouldn't ever touch a Tribute like that, but the fact that people are so eager to believe it of him leaves his pride feeling excoriated.
For his part, Jason doesn't treat Beth any differently, except for being a bit more stiff and cranky with her than he might have been before. But whispers swarm around them like a plague of mosquitoes, making a to-do out of something as simple as him Escorting her to a photoshoot with horses (A PONY FOR A PRICE?, a headline questions; another goes even more outrageous and wonders if Beth will say 'neigh' to marriage). He can only imagine the explanations she's making to the passel of Southerners who seem so eager to protect her.
Right now he's in the District Seven kitchen, glasses parked precariously on the tip of his nose as he writes by hand some math for the District budget. He's taken to putting most of his notes on his phone lately; he used to be able to leave writing around, but that was when most Tributes were entirely illiterate. His suit jacket hangs over the back of a chair and his shirt sleeves are pushed up to his elbows. A cup of coffee, long-cooled, sits beside him, and he occasionally asks his phone to answer some percentages questions for him.
WHAT| Jason gets a migraine and is helpless; Jason beats an Avox; Jason gives Swann a gift; Rick and Daryl get the shotguns.
WHEN| Week 6
WHERE| D7 Suites; Swann's place
WARNINGS/NOTES| Avox abuse, migraines, general Jason awfulness. If you're going to tag the second prompt, please PP or PM me first so we can figure out where it's going and how far to take it, because Jason won't hesitate to put someone in jail.
I. Open
He knew he was going to have one of his headaches from the beginning of the morning, when every light seemed to have a ring radiating off of it and everything seemed to smell like rainwater. The one upside to the curse of these migraines is that he usually gets a few hours head start on them, with the feeling of deadly premonition, and so he spends most of the day trying to finish up everything as quickly as he can and clock out early. The calls to Sponsors and thank you cards to donors becomes a race against time, one which he sees himself losing too late to actually prevent disaster.
First he can't see, and then he can't move. Even breathing seems to put too much strain on him, and the throbbing, tightening hammering in his head gets worse with every exhale. The inside of his body feels like a live wire, sparking away inside his skull at camera-shutter speed. Nausea roils inside his throat and stomach, furling and unfurling like the tide.
When he opens his eyes the light is too bright, speckled with floating spots and halos, and he feels like the universe itself is trying to cram itself through his eyesockets and that his bones have made the opening too small to fit. So he keeps them shut and rolls over on the District Seven couch until he's facedown in a pillow, sweating slightly, trying not to whimper.
He has no hope of driving himself home, and even the idea of getting up seems a cruel joke. He tries twice, and both times a surge of nausea and a thunderclap of pain force him back down. So he lies there, hoping to whatever powers that be that his Tributes stick to their schedules and don't come bother him.
II. Open (please read note)
What started off as a strong Arena quickly loses those good odds as the District Seven Tributes die in the field and the District Suite gets repopulated. The worse it looks, the worse Jason's temper gets, until he's liable to throw something at the slightest provocation, which the Games video updates seem eager to supply him with. At least twice this week he's broken a glass, and yesterday smacked a table so hard that he has a ring of bruising around his finger like a wedding band.
With only Nick left in the Arena, Jason and Emily's chances are getting desperate, and the worst blow comes to Jason's ego when he realizes that no amount of fawning and flattery and networking seems to be enough to get Nick more supplies in the Arena. It stings to feel powerlessness, and to make it worse the only person willing to spot Nick a fire-starting kit's funds will only do it on condition that Jason go drinking with him - no sobriety allowed. Jason turns it down, but doesn't leave with his head held high so much as rankled and humiliated, and every ungrateful glance from his Tributes reminds him of how his family used to practically own this damn country and yet here he is, exposing his belly to anyone with money, helpless and inept and so, so frustrated with his life. Dressed in a suit he got from someone else's charity and supporting a home full of ingrates and lonely and with a fury as endless as the sky.
Whatever it is that set Jason off this time, it isn't sated just by smashing a piece of kitchenware. This time he backhands the Avox who rushes in to try and clean up the coffee mug he throws against the floor, sending them into the couch.
III. Swann
For someone who usually agonizes over every half-assi that goes to a necessary cause, Jason doesn't seem to mind spending money on Swann. He complains about it, at times, but it's more to go through the motions of complaining than because it actually bothers him. He buys her coffee when he can and tells her to save her money when they get lunch, getting sulky and defensive when she insists on splitting the tab. Sometimes he buys her a pastry on his way to pick her up for carpooling, although he doesn't let her eat it in the vehicle, and he has yet to ask her to help pay for fuel.
Today he shows up at her place with a large carrier in the back of his car, covered by a blanket, with a towel underneath it to protect the seats. Something inside is making scratching sounds. Jason looks a little frazzled, and shows up a few minutes late from a different route than he usually takes. He presses a button inside the car and the door opens for Swann.
"You coming, Honeymead?"
IV. Daryl and Rick
The rumors spread quickly after the Crowning, and all of them rub Jason the wrong way. A few photographs of him and Beth at the Crowning, him whispering into her ear, have made the rounds on tabloids, some of them even frontpage for the publications hungry enough to fabricate a scandal for readership. Jason's certain that he wouldn't ever touch a Tribute like that, but the fact that people are so eager to believe it of him leaves his pride feeling excoriated.
For his part, Jason doesn't treat Beth any differently, except for being a bit more stiff and cranky with her than he might have been before. But whispers swarm around them like a plague of mosquitoes, making a to-do out of something as simple as him Escorting her to a photoshoot with horses (A PONY FOR A PRICE?, a headline questions; another goes even more outrageous and wonders if Beth will say 'neigh' to marriage). He can only imagine the explanations she's making to the passel of Southerners who seem so eager to protect her.
Right now he's in the District Seven kitchen, glasses parked precariously on the tip of his nose as he writes by hand some math for the District budget. He's taken to putting most of his notes on his phone lately; he used to be able to leave writing around, but that was when most Tributes were entirely illiterate. His suit jacket hangs over the back of a chair and his shirt sleeves are pushed up to his elbows. A cup of coffee, long-cooled, sits beside him, and he occasionally asks his phone to answer some percentages questions for him.
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"I don't want to pull you away from work." He swallows down some nausea. "This might take a few hours."
In his teen years he occasionally had some that lasted for days, but thankfully those don't hit him as often anymore. Usually they'll just last a day at most, leaving him exhausted and spent but out of the worst of it for a few days afterwards.
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She only has two left in the Arena herself, which means her work has slowed substantially. She's gotten all the returning Tributes as comfy as she can get them, and besides, it's not really like she can or will leave without him anyway.
Swann lets her hand move rhythmically over his hair, a calm, slow pattern of stroke-lift-stroke, familiar to her from years of being lulled to sleep with it. She doesn't have anything else to offer.
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"If I get up," he says quietly, almost in a whimper rather than a whisper, "can you get us home?"
He doesn't want to be here, at the mercy of his Tributes, embarrassed and sick, and it doesn't quite occur to him in his current state that Swann's place is not 'home'.
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"Of course," she says, rubbing his back again for a minute. "Don't rush, though. We can stay here until you're ready."
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It takes nearly half an hour, and someone walking in might think Jason were sleeping from how still he is, how his only motion is the rise and fall of his chest, except for the fretting, pained expression on his face and Swann's quiet concern. But eventually, he swallows, steels himself, and sits up. No sooner is he vertical than he slouches forward resting his face in his hands, his elbows on his knees.
The idea of the elevator, with its bright lights and knife-like dings, fills him with fear, and even his usual sanctuary of the car is going to be agony, but it's better than here. And then at the end he might be able to climb into that dark, cool bed in that room where he wanted time to slow down.
He opens his eyes ever so slightly and a dagger of light comes through the slit in his vision, so he closes them again. "My glasses are on the kitchen counter. Can you grab them and set the setting on the side to darkest?"
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"I'm going to go upstairs and get my things, then we'll go, okay?"
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With his glasses on, he can bear to open his eyes just enough to see. He doesn't move without Swann, though, simultaneously cursing and blessing each moment she's gone - cursing because she's a comfort, blessing because the sooner she returns the sooner he has to face the elevator and the ride to her place.
Sometime during this shallow rumination, he realizes he hasn't clocked out yet, and fumbles with his phone to do so. Looking at the screen at all makes his head hurt more, and by the time he's managed the relatively simple process he's almost given up on getting up and moving. He leans against the backrest of the couch, waiting for her return.
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"Are you ready?" she asks gently, reaching for his hands, ready to take him to the elevator.
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He takes her hands (his palms are sweating but he feels cold) and gets up, holding tight to her and letting her lead. He'd be keeping his eyes closed as much as possible, but he's well aware that he's not on the more graceful side of the spectrum. He flinches when the elevator dings for their floor, and puts his face in his hands once they're in.
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They make it to the garage and she guides him out with her arm around his back. "Where's your keys?" she asks quietly, thumb rubbing at the small of his back.
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He hates letting other people drive his car. He can count the people who have on one hand. It's a show of trust that he's going to let Swann, even by necessity.
He adjusts the seat all the way back so he's reclined, but reaches his hand over the center console so she can hold it, so he can keep that touch going.
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Holding his hand a little tighter than she means to, she waits for the Avox to load up their things, then pulls out and starts to drive them to her building, slow both for his head and for her own innate sense of impending doom, spurred by driving and made worse by an unfamiliar car.
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For a while he feels as if he's floating in a sort of limbo, that time and space around him are aqueous, that the only thing that really exists is the feeling of her hand and the barbed wire constricting around his brain.
They're nearly to her place when he gives her hand a sharp squeeze. "Pull over. I'm going to be sick."
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"Okay, just hold on."
She pulls into the parking lot of a restaurant, empty due to the fact that it's before dinner hours. It's the best she can do on short notice, and besides, she doesn't particularly like this place's food to begin with.
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He's shivering and swaying by the time he's done, spitting, coughing, sniffling. Tears that sorrow could never bring to his face run down the side of his nose. He leans back and tries to catch himself on the car.
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"It's okay," she repeats for what feels like the millionth time tonight, still in that same sweet, tender voice, content to stand there for however long he needs.
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But rather than shy away from the unknown, he lurches into it, greedily lapping up the affection, the tenderness, the care. It snaps something inside him, something brittle and small. He rests his face in her shoulder and more tears follow, from pain or anger or shame or sadness or just because it seems to siphon off pressure from his head. He sobs, ragged and quiet, a disused sound.
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She holds Jason tightly, whispering every little comfort she can give him, if only because there's nothing else she can do. Resting back against the car, she pulls him to her, to crush her skirts to her legs while he soaks her neck.
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Soon Jason seems to drift off, not sleeping but forgetting that he was crying, his thoughts in achey kaleidoscope in his head. He feels the water against her neck and doesn't realize that it's tears, or him. He breathes deep and the pain lances through his head like a javelin, and he pulls away from her and fumbles with the car door.
"Now we're even," he whispers, quiet and with eyes rheumy from tears, trying to smile and finding that moving his face at all hurts. He only then notices that his glasses must have fallen off onto the asphalt while he was sick. "Let's get me to a dark room and a bed."
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"We're only a few blocks away," she says, then crosses back around the car to get back in and turn it on again, letting him settle down before she actually pulls out of the parking lot. The final leg of the journey is calmer, less choked with traffic, and Swann parks them in her spot before reaching to gently run her thumb over his cheek. "We're here."
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He moves like an old man does, or as if he's trying to avoid some sort of motion sensor, every step deliberate and slow and light. It's a far difference from his usual purposeful, full-bodied strides. He keeps a tight grip on her hand.
"It's not quite as bad as it was. Think it's peaked."
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She leaves their bags for now, taking only Marcel and Jason's hand, and walks slowly with him, into the elevator that takes them to her apartment. The lights are dimmed, an order she sent to Eta before they even left the Tower, and she gives the dog over to her waiting Avox before guiding Jason toward the bedroom.
It's dark in there, only ambient light from outside illuminating the room enough to get him to the bed. She's wordless except for a small hum of happiness to be useful; once he's sitting down, she sets about undressing him, taking his jacket and tie first, then kneeling for his shoes, every move delicate to not disturb him.
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"Stay with me," he murmurs, deciding that he'll trade the silence of solitude for her quiet, gentle care.
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It's the only sign he gives that things are improving, but if she reads the language of his body then she'll find encouraging signs. His breathing becomes more relaxed, since he's no longer afraid to hear the sound of air filling and leaving his lungs. His heartbeat slows to a normal thump instead of the racing of pressure, of the fear that this time his head might actually explode or an aneurysm might come and kill him where he lies.
Eventually he lowers his head to kiss the top of her head slowly, half-heartedly.
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I HAVE TO SLEEP, I DON'T WANT TO
I WILL BE HERE FOR YOU TOMORROW MY SWEET
siiiiiiiigh good night then
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[cw: things gonna get raunchy]
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