whatisay: (Basic - Smolder)
Jason Compson IV ([personal profile] whatisay) wrote in [community profile] thecapitol2015-08-03 09:50 am

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.
impaledqueen: ("It's like you're my best friend.")

[personal profile] impaledqueen 2015-10-21 04:52 am (UTC)(link)
"Death isn't peace, Jason. There is no escape in it." Her voice is hard, far harder than it normally is because there's a moment where the mask slips. She has seen death from every angle possible while remaining alive. She has slaughtered animals, watching their eyes roll in fear, as if they know their end is coming even when she blindfolds them. She has watched children die on the street, their stomachs distended and flies gathering on their skin. She has come dangerously close to starving herself. She's watched the life go out of a human's eyes as she crushed their neck, the opening mouths of melting bodies, the wild struggle to survive when there is no survival to be had. She has sat in the dirt, bleeding out slowly while a boy died against her back and a sword pinned them together, and she has listened to her own EKG flatlining as she threatened to sink into that final sleep during surgery.

She's even seen the slow death of the will to live. She's had to cup her own in her hands, blowing on it gently to keep it burning, feeding it with her own anger and need for revenge until it blazed again, belching toxic smoke to clog her lungs but fueling her nonetheless.

Peggy stands, brushing herself off and trails after Jason without bothering to reattach the fridge door. He may be running off to sleep again, in which case she'll leave him alone. After talking like this, though, she wants to make sure he doesn't hurt himself.
impaledqueen: (She's a rusty dagger)

[personal profile] impaledqueen 2015-11-02 11:15 pm (UTC)(link)
Peggy follows because there's nothing else to do after he says things like what he did. She listens to him destroy the room, not quite daring to go inside lest he start throwing things at her. She's not afraid of him hurting her with brute force, but she is afraid of him getting a hold of something that can shatter and throwing that.

Before she has a chance to worry about him hurting himself in the fray, it's over. She would find it funny how quickly he burned himself out if it weren't so sad.

"I'm still here." She opens the door. It doesn't feel like she belongs in the dilapidated, ruined room. Caroline had loathed her, and it feels like her spirit is still there, yowling like the presence of a Districter burns her. Peggy pushes through the feeling, immediately sorting through the debris on the ground to gather up Caroline's medicine. After Jason talking like that, she's going to be flushing all the pills.
impaledqueen: (And she'll puncture you)

[personal profile] impaledqueen 2015-11-12 09:00 am (UTC)(link)
Keep the bottles. She could do that. Flush the medication and give the bottles to Ben. Maybe she could find some marbles to fill them up with so he could use them as rattles or take them out to play. Ben would like that, especially if she found shiny marbles.

She's concentrating on making sure she has all the prescription bottles when Jason makes that noise. The question surprises her. Maybe it shouldn't. It's too much to hope that Jason might actually think that Districters have some practices that are of value, but he might be recognizing that other people didn't have the childhood he did.

She feels him softening. He could turn again on a dime, but she hopes he's worn himself out. She makes sure all the bottles are in her pockets before approaching him slowly, trying to get a sense of what he needs from her. Maybe what he needs, she can't give.

"I can't speak for all Districts. My parents raised me with a lot of love. There was tough love there, but it all came from the same place. They made sure I learned at school and did my chores, and they would give up half of their food so I could eat more. Then they would bundle me up and sing me to sleep." She settles next to him, still keeping an eye on his reactions. "That's how most of my friends' parents raised them. Sometimes they would be stern, but it was always about love."
impaledqueen: (Is try and take advantage of others' kin)

[personal profile] impaledqueen 2015-11-22 02:48 am (UTC)(link)
"She was your mother."

To Peggy, it's just that simple. The Capitol hardly has a monopoly on bad parents; she's seen plenty of them in District 10 as well. Even if parents are bad, it still affects their children when they die. Maybe not everyone will cry over their parents' graves, but everyone is affected.

Peggy wraps her arms around his shoulders and leans her head on his, like she can bundle him up herself. She can't do much for him, but she can be there in a way no one else was when she faced this grief.

"She hurt you, but she was still your mother."
impaledqueen: (I promise.)

[personal profile] impaledqueen 2015-12-21 10:32 pm (UTC)(link)
"You're Jason Compson. You're stubborn and judgmental and proud and good at what you do. You're my friend."

And he feels so small in her arms right now. She smooths his hair like she does when he has a migraine, and for a moment, it feels a little like she's holding a child rather than a grown man. Is that so awful, though? She became a child again after her mother died, crying in an empty house and not sure what to do next.

"Beyond that? I know you'll figure it out." Caroline Compson may have defined Jason's life up until now. Maybe she will continue to define his life posthumously. That said, she thinks he's too stubborn to not keep going and eventually fashion an identity for himself.

The apology--that's an apology, even if there's no 'sorry'--is the most shocking part of all. Has he ever apologized to her? About anything? (Of course, his gruff gifts or gestures when he knows he's done wrong don't really count. They never come with words.) She squeezes his shoulder gently. "It's okay." She can put up with the yelling.