Roland Deschain (
ka_sera_sera) wrote in
thecapitol2015-07-01 06:07 pm
Entry tags:
(no subject)
Who| Roland and Sigma
What| chatting
Where| tribute center bar
When| maybe late week five of the arena, early week six? ish?
Warnings/Notes| none, will add if anything comes up
He's spent a good part of his life sitting in this same spot of many different bars. Near a wall, not next to the door but not too far from it, either. Easy line of sight from him to the exit. Easy line of sight from the exit to him, too. As he's finding out.
"And then that wolf just-" The girl moves her hand through the air and curls it into a fist, as if catching something. "Right on you! I had my bet on the castle roof and lost like, twenty assi. That asshole Bachman was so smug when he got it right. I mean, we all knew you'd fall off something. Do you think the gamemakers do it on purpose, you dying like that?"
With the full glass in front of him, Roland can not leave on the excuse of having to meet someone. He spends a moment peering over the girl's shoulder anyway, hoping that exit he has such a good view of will give him a sight of something useful. It's an indulgent moment, he knows that, but he does it anyway. After it's done he does, of course, mean to answer the girl promptly. He knows how important people like this are. In spite of the questions.
What| chatting
Where| tribute center bar
When| maybe late week five of the arena, early week six? ish?
Warnings/Notes| none, will add if anything comes up
He's spent a good part of his life sitting in this same spot of many different bars. Near a wall, not next to the door but not too far from it, either. Easy line of sight from him to the exit. Easy line of sight from the exit to him, too. As he's finding out.
"And then that wolf just-" The girl moves her hand through the air and curls it into a fist, as if catching something. "Right on you! I had my bet on the castle roof and lost like, twenty assi. That asshole Bachman was so smug when he got it right. I mean, we all knew you'd fall off something. Do you think the gamemakers do it on purpose, you dying like that?"
With the full glass in front of him, Roland can not leave on the excuse of having to meet someone. He spends a moment peering over the girl's shoulder anyway, hoping that exit he has such a good view of will give him a sight of something useful. It's an indulgent moment, he knows that, but he does it anyway. After it's done he does, of course, mean to answer the girl promptly. He knows how important people like this are. In spite of the questions.

no subject
He takes a drink from his glass, then raises his eyebrows at Klim's. "Would you be off, then? Or shall we finish our drinks?"
Timeskip, let me know if I need to change anything!
--
Far from the Tribute Tower by design, the luxury penthouse Sigma called home is astoundingly sterile. The entrance even resembles an airlock: a two-door system joined by a hallway, the first of which unlocked with a metal key that security had a copy of, the second requiring a passcode only Sigma knew. Boxes of food are waiting, still piping hot, at the foot of the second door. As a Gamemaker his paranoia is, perhaps, warranted, but he'll ask even Roland to wait outside as he collects their meal and inputs the code (a password requiring all digits on a keypad save for "zero").
"Alright, Mr. Deschain. You can come in." He wonders if he can at least permit himself to call an old ally by his first name in 'private', but he decides to wait for Roland to make that call.
Sigma's home is composed primarily of colourless, empty space and hidden cameras. The main room is freakishly clean, not because Sigma was a tidy man but because the furniture has never been sat on, the curtains have never been opened, the tables have never been used. His bedroom door - which has been left open, as he never had the company to require privacy - frames the only signs of life. Doubling as a study, it is a mess, books spilling over beside tables or rearranged sloppily on the shelves that were supposed to organize them. A homemade cat tower has been crammed in the space between his desk and bookshelf, and on it sleeps the only other inhabitant of his grand, expensive home: his cat, Nye.
Nervous, Sigma's composure is stiff, unable to turn his back to Roland as he adjusted to having a guest. He wished he could assure him that it was nothing personal. "Well... make yourself comfortable. Sit wherever you like." Even at home he'd been a lonely man unused to entertaining.
that works, thanks!
His path takes him past Klim, has Roland turning his back to him to get there, and according to Roland's own posture, almost as relaxed as Klim's is stiff, he does not worry about doing so for a second.
"Thank you for having me, s- sir." Not ideal, that stammer, but better than not catching himself at all, than really trying to say sai for the millionth time and embarrassing himself when it feels like he needs to do anything but. "Did you ever use my given name? I don't recall. Maybe in that last arena together. After the birds." He tries to get neither the food nor the man any closer to him. Roland would rather watch him instead, see how long it takes that stress in Klim's posture to start to fade.
no subject
Sigma nods to say you're welcome, the etiquette of the situation eluding him, having not entertained in fifty years (if you could even call a college frat party 'entertaining'). Forcing himself to tear his eyes away from Roland, he begins to lay out their food: expensive Italian cuisine served family-style, too much for two people. He realizes too late it is an embarrassment of riches.
"Forgive me. There are rules in place regarding Tributes and those in power, as you know..." He doesn't speak until he's approached the table again, lowering plates of expensive china onto glass. "...But I believe I can allow myself to be informal in my own home... Roland."
He diverts his gaze as though he is ashamed to act so familiar. After all, it was not too long ago that the other man made a veiled threat against his life. And yet... "I am glad that you are here." As differently as he wishes things could have gone between them, he is forever grateful for a second chance. "How is your health?"
no subject
"Though I've heard that wasn't always the case here." Roland does not move to help Sigma set up the food. The rules of being a guest in someone else's home can be broken when things are informal enough, but regardless of what Sigma's just said their arrangement here does not feel so informal as all that. "When I felt that malady in the arena I assumed it was a purposeful trick, but I've learned otherwise. Lucky thing it didn't last. And your own? Settling in to a new home can be hard on a body, or so I've heard. Even without all this other business to worry on."
no subject
"I have discovered that even Gamemaking is something of a young man's sport, here. The hours are very demanding. I will be seventy years old in two weeks time," he remarks, "and yet I could not consider retiring from such an illustrious position so soon. I suppose none of us will live forever." It was a crude thing to say in front of a Tribute who may die by his hand, but as it stood, Sigma was speaking to Roland as a friend. He was growing very tired. "The truth is that I was hospitalized during the malady. I was away from my panel that day, and failed to catch up on the health of my Tributes, so forgive me for my ignorance. It was not a plot of my design - I know almost nothing about what transpired on that day, though I have my theories." His heart was in rather poor condition, it turned out, and the sudden illness did him no favours - but this was a secret to everyone, now, except Roland. There were vultures that waited to eat an ailing Gamemaker alive.
no subject
He doesn't eat yet, either, regardless of the nod he's been given to do so. More of those guest-host rituals embedded in Roland, as well as the product of long habit. Waiting to eat after the men who've hosted him has saved Roland's life more than once, and whether he thinks consciously on doing it or not, when he hasn't seen the meal prepared himself he rarely does otherwise. "You hardly seem seventy - at least not by the standards of my world. But mine, for all its glories, might not have known too much about keeping men alive. Maybe not so much as yours, or this one. I hope you weren't in hospital for anything serious? Nothing the machines of this place can't solve?"
no subject
The fact that he was allowing their food to grow cold whining about his life embarrassed him. He'd like to stop talking. Specifically, he'd like for Roland to talk, but is unsure of how to ask him. He twirls his fork gracefully around the center of his pasta, wondering how he can get through to his friend. How he can inspire the sort of honesty between them that they once felt in the Games. "Roland..." His fork freezes on the way to his mouth as he wonders how to word himself. "You say that seventy is quite old for your world's standard. I know so little about your world other than the glimpse you allowed me, a lifetime ago. But I would like to. We had so little. It comforts me to know that there were people better off than mine - Panem included." It's not a lie. He takes a small bite of his food anxiously, wondering how Roland will receive that.
no subject
"Your world must have been poor indeed," he says, and takes a slow bite of the food in front of him. A great deal of the things eaten in this city are new to him and so he chews carefully, almost as if he's studying the process. "Mine was dying, when I left it."
Had it been? That last period in his life is still safest unexplored, wherever he'd gone and whatever that place had done to his mind, and the- the spells that come on Roland when he makes the mistake of thinking on it too closely are the last things he wants to experience now, especially in front of someone he does not at all trust. Whether or not his was a dying world ties in to that somehow, there's some nagging connection there, but Roland gives his head a quick, sharp shake, makes an effort to lighten his frown. Best keep things simple, and guide his thoughts here down a very careful path. Think of the world as it was before all that.
"Had been for quite a while. Places weren't where they used to be, time moved less and less steadily. Seventy was a rarer age in my day, but after those sorts of numbers didn't always mean much." He shrugs. "This may not sound clear to someone who hasn't lived in it. Suffice it to say the forces which tied my world together were falling apart, and we knew that long before the civilizing forces holding my world in the light crumbled, too. I'd go on, but I don't think that's what you wanted to hear. It's what I have."
"I know very little about your world too, you know. I know your world had its version of the Games, and that those who played in them might become their masters, as I think you did." As you did here, he doesn't say, because there's dangerous ground, there. "I know a little about your own life, but not so much. Was your life as a gamemaker there very different from your life as one here?"
That question is purposely a vague one. If it's vague enough to give Klim room to avoid the topics he wants to, it doesn't look so much like Roland is digging. He isn't digging, really, because forming a relationship with this man is the purpose of this visit, rather than gaining any particular information. But if he can learn about the gamemakers a little, well, Roland isn't going to pass that chance up.