Jason Compson IV (
whatisay) wrote in
thecapitol2015-08-03 09:50 am
Entry tags:
Shame Can't Be the Home Where You Live [Open]
WHO| Jason and semi-open
WHAT| Caroline Compson dies and Jason exists in the aftermath.
WHEN| At least a week prior to reaping for the mini-Arena.
WHERE| Compson Manor
WARNINGS| Death, grief, emotional repression.
Jason stops coming to work on Monday, with no more warning than a text to Swann saying can't drive you today and a text to Peggy home from work. After that he lets his phone battery run down, and the few messages that get in before it dies pile up in his voicemail or inbox. He doesn't contact his coworkers, nor does he cancel the meetings with Sponsors he was supposed to be present for.
The servants are all fired. Jason tells them to vacate the premises but they don't, for two main reasons: the first being that they doubt, validly, that Jason would keep Benjamin and the horses fed and cared for, even for a few days, and the second being that Jason doesn't even seem to notice that they're there. He grabs a whole pack of caps for his vaporizer and takes up a sort of vigil on the couch in the moldy, once-beautiful living room, and smokes, at first with a kind of furious intensity and then out of a mechanical inertia, as if it's easier to just keep refilling the cap and staying where he is than to get up and perform any of the many tasks that have laid themselves out at his feet.
When night falls he doesn't even get up to turn on the light, just sitting there on the couch until sleep ambushes him and then retreats in the morning. Freedom is a ball and chain that keeps him stuck here. A few times he feels something like a fist twisting in his gut and he gets up, paces, runs his hands through his hair (which has gotten greasy and lank), and actually putting his body in motion helps to release that tension. His eyes sting and so he smokes more and tries to sleep again, passing between waking and resting with little acknowledgment for when he crosses each border.
Outside the gate stays closed, accessible only by fingerprint or intercomming to the house. The potholes and rotten belongings in the yard stay where they are, leaving patches of brown, muddy, dead grass underneath them if removed. The whole building sags a bit, as if it were sighing.
Jason's out of work for five days.
-/-
In the news, there's an obituary with ebullient recitations of the virtues no one who knew Caroline would ever say she had. It goes on to say that she's survived by her one son, Jason, as if Benjamin were shuffled out of reality when he was corralled up on the property, excised from the collective memory of the public.
WHAT| Caroline Compson dies and Jason exists in the aftermath.
WHEN| At least a week prior to reaping for the mini-Arena.
WHERE| Compson Manor
WARNINGS| Death, grief, emotional repression.
Jason stops coming to work on Monday, with no more warning than a text to Swann saying can't drive you today and a text to Peggy home from work. After that he lets his phone battery run down, and the few messages that get in before it dies pile up in his voicemail or inbox. He doesn't contact his coworkers, nor does he cancel the meetings with Sponsors he was supposed to be present for.
The servants are all fired. Jason tells them to vacate the premises but they don't, for two main reasons: the first being that they doubt, validly, that Jason would keep Benjamin and the horses fed and cared for, even for a few days, and the second being that Jason doesn't even seem to notice that they're there. He grabs a whole pack of caps for his vaporizer and takes up a sort of vigil on the couch in the moldy, once-beautiful living room, and smokes, at first with a kind of furious intensity and then out of a mechanical inertia, as if it's easier to just keep refilling the cap and staying where he is than to get up and perform any of the many tasks that have laid themselves out at his feet.
When night falls he doesn't even get up to turn on the light, just sitting there on the couch until sleep ambushes him and then retreats in the morning. Freedom is a ball and chain that keeps him stuck here. A few times he feels something like a fist twisting in his gut and he gets up, paces, runs his hands through his hair (which has gotten greasy and lank), and actually putting his body in motion helps to release that tension. His eyes sting and so he smokes more and tries to sleep again, passing between waking and resting with little acknowledgment for when he crosses each border.
Outside the gate stays closed, accessible only by fingerprint or intercomming to the house. The potholes and rotten belongings in the yard stay where they are, leaving patches of brown, muddy, dead grass underneath them if removed. The whole building sags a bit, as if it were sighing.
Jason's out of work for five days.
-/-
In the news, there's an obituary with ebullient recitations of the virtues no one who knew Caroline would ever say she had. It goes on to say that she's survived by her one son, Jason, as if Benjamin were shuffled out of reality when he was corralled up on the property, excised from the collective memory of the public.

no subject
Her phone buzzes and startles her just a little, jolting her out of her focus on venues, since the funeral obviously can't be held at the house. She reads it and rubs her head, pleased but still worried. glad you're feeling better. good that you ate. you're welcome. do you still want me to come over?
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That'll give him a few hours to steel his energy for the possibility of running into other human beings, doormen, security guards, other drivers on the street. He feels as if he'll need every moment of that.
He goes back to sleep on the couch before she replies, not because he needs the rest but because it's an alternative to the dreary cloud that's hanging over him, the fog he can't seem to even try to banish.
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The message is waiting for him whenever he rouses. Swann works at the funeral plans for a bit more, then lies down in bed for a while, not sleeping, but just resting, trying to let her head empty even when it does the exact opposite and just swirls with more thoughts.
She goes home precisely at five, not bothering with any overtime or even finishing what she's currently working on, because she can't focus on any of it. Eta cares for her again and gets her changed into lounge clothes, trying to make her relax. Swann's plied with sleep-aid tea until she naps for a few hours, waking late for dinner and looking at her phone for any word from Jason.
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It's just that even if the outside body looks alright, the way he carries himself and the hollows of his eyes make it clear that he's not back to baseline or anywhere near it.
He rings her intercom and turns off his cigarette. He rode with the window down and so his hair's in some kind of wind-whipped tangle.
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Eta leads Jason to her, and Swann startles back into wakefulness, looking around and then smiling sleepily at him. "Hi," she murmurs. "You feel any better?"
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He strides over to Swann's sofa and takes a seat next to her, then seems to go limp like his tendons have been cut, and he rests his head on her lap.
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"No you don't," she tells him gently. "You want anything to eat or drink?"
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He tries to find that happiness, that place that seems to exist as a bubble in tangent to the rest of his life, that he knows he can have in those fleeting moments just resting with Swann. If he has to feel something, it can at least be that, he hopes.
"How was work?"
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"It was fine, nothing really special. I worked on some contracts, for the most part." She's not lying -- the actual work she did do was contract fine-tuning. "Cassian and Emily are holding the fort downstairs, and anything they need help with is being routed to me, so it's all under control."
So far, Swann's mostly been taking Sponsor phone calls and arranging meetings, the bigger money names, the ones who expect to (or will only) deal with a Capitolite. One who actually knows things, which would, of course, toss Cassian out of the running.
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Jason's just not thinking about it at all. Ben continued existence and care exists to him as a phenomenon not worth exploring, at this point, the same way you don't wonder which direction a storm front's come in from when it's already raining. In a few days he'll come to and have some opinions about it, surely.
"Good. I was afraid I'd be coming back tomorrow to a charred husk covered in pastels."
They both know that's an optimistic dream at best, a lie at worst.
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Eta comes in with tea and toast, under the belief that Jason's presence will entice Swann to actually eat instead of being so preoccupied that she won't shift any focus to her own maintenance. She does, indeed, take one of the triangles of toast, delicately spread with jam, and eat one of the corners as she keeps petting Jason's head.
"You'll just have to keep your job instead of being a bum," she teases with a snort. "The Mentors have all been acting like pouty children, though. From those TV specials they're doing. So don't be surprised if Emily's in a huff."
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"I've always wanted to be a worthless layabout. I'm finally living the dream." Some of his humor's back, and not at his family's expense, which is something, at least. "God, that's just what I need, though. It's bad enough that she has bidders hounding her and throwing her off her game. Now I'll need to play wetnurse to her guilt about killing her competitor."
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"You'll be joining a prestigious group of assholes we know from high school, then." She takes a sip of tea and shifts slightly underneath him. "You should put in a petition for a moratorium on bidders for her, especially with how much she's been hurt lately. She's been back in the Capitol for a while, she needs a break or she's going to lose her mind."
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"Believe me, I have. I do my best to keep that kind of fetish out of the workplace." Because, you see, Jason's coworkers' trauma is really inconvenient for him. "The last moratorium just ended, so there's another fourteen days before they review the new petition."
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"Is there anything you can attach her to that would take precedence?" Swann asks but she already sounds a bit defeated, sorry for Emily; the list of things that rank higher than bidding is short indeed. "I'm so glad that Temple married Gowan. She's already bad enough, I don't know how I'd ever handle it if bidding got thrown into that crazy mess too."
Bidders will disregard a Districter spouse in a heartbeat, but not a Capitolite one.
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The odd bidder will occasionally test their largesse with Temple, less because of her than to flex their muscles, usually as retaliation for Gowan's company encroaching on their own, but Capitolites just call that the cost of business.
"I'd probably smother Temple Drake with a pillow." Jason refuses to use her married name. That's for Capitolites. "I'm already close to throttling Cassian. I can see it now."
Jason gestures with his hand like a marquee. "Sorry for your loss in glittery balloon letters and candy coffins."
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"She's sweet," Swann sighs, "but about as bright as cardboard. The drinking I can handle, I just want her to stop trying to screw everything that moves. What's Cassian doing now? I thought you'd build up a tolerance after a while."
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Bitching about work is good. It's easy; Jason has enough material for weeks. But actually thinking creatively drives him back into that awful morass, and he sighs and dims, unable to come up with anything even though he's normally pretty good at figuring an angle.
"She can barely help that, I guess. All Districters are the same, like dogs in heat without a half-pound of brains between them. Tell her you'll rat her out to her husband. If she can't have any respect for herself maybe she will for him." He notices there are some toast crumbs on his shirt, but he doesn't have the will to brush them off. "I don't know if I'm building up a tolerance or being worn down by Cassian. Every day it's loud music, bright colors, and stupid ideas."
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"I'm not sure she'd care if he knew. Hell, for all I know, he already does, everyone knows he's always too sloshed to remember what you told him fifteen minutes ago." Swann finishes her tea and sets her cup back down with another sigh. "Well, his work isn't too bad. I mean, he's really into trends, the whole floral thing, but your Tributes look pretty good. Maybe tell him that you'll half his budget if he doesn't stop with the music?"
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It's been nearly twenty years and that bitterness just seems to get more potent with age. It was bad enough that Quentin decided life wasn't worth it, but Father had had obligations, and he's absconded from them entirely. He'd left them for Jason to pick up.
"I just might. He already needs my approval for any expenditure over five assi, and thank God for that."
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She hadn't kept up with his reputation until Temple came back.
Scratching gently at Jason's scalp, she smirks. "At least he hasn't put neon lighting on any of your Tributes yet. Can you imagine if he'd been around for Tony's Crowning?"
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"Oh, god. We all would have gone blind." He rests his hand on her knee. "First time in my life I'm ever grateful for Stig."
He sighs again, less relaxed than preoccupied.
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With her free hand, she rubs his shoulder a little. "And he loves you sooooo much, he might sneak into your house and redecorate there too," she teases. "Dress Ben up in painted leaves."
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Jason laughs a little bit, quiet, half-hearted, trying to find that happy banter they usually have and cling onto it and feeling so exhausted with the effort.
"Maybe he could take inspiration from the mold and sell a brand new perfume scent."
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OUR POOR CAPITOL BABIES ;A;
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