reassures: (cut ☙ she's so still; she's dead)
nill ([personal profile] reassures) wrote in [community profile] thearena2014-12-30 03:12 am
Entry tags:

don't be afraid

Who| Nill and Karkat
What| A couple different things. Mostly meeting up and then dying, oops.
Where| Throughout the station.
When| End of week 2.
Warnings/Notes| Character death, gore, crying, and obligatory Karkat Warning™. There'll probably be another prompt for that stuff, or it'll just be one huge long thread.


To say that the Arena had been unkind up to this point would be an understatement. The first day hadn't been all that bad, generally speaking. For a few minutes she thought she might even survive long enough to make sure that someone she loved made it out of the Arena alive, to never enter one again. It was a goal. It was something to keep her going in an experience that she would rather have never lived again, even if it was better than sitting back with cigarettes and the Giant Wall of Child Death. She had found people she cared about. She kept them alive.

Even now, nearing the end of week 2, Nill would still maintain that being in the Arena was better than watching it. While close to a comforting thought, it could only do so much in the wake of all the deaths that occurred during Week 0, or the ones that followed it. It did little to help with the images in her own mind.

Being in Beth's head as she died, managing her pain so it was just a little bit less awful as she faded away. Watching Kurloz be cut in half in an instant. Seeing the face of a dark-haired boy in the stars. Kankri, Clementine, Davesprite, Gary; those were just the faces she'd seen when she had the willpower to look for them.

Despite all of that, Nill was holding her own well enough for a little while. She ate almost nothing, stuck to mostly water when she could find it. Once or twice she'd tried the dehydrated food, but she hadn't trusted it to do more than have it when she really needed it. She began to look gaunt and dehydrated, but it could have been worse. It remained that way until she found the Orb with the Initiate's voice, and it was all downhill after that. She'd cried out most of the moisture left in her system, couldn't bring herself to eat much of anything after it, didn't make a point of looking for water so much as just taking advantage of it if she came across it. Before the Mirth Core Nill still moved with purpose. She still looked like she might accomplish something if she tried. Now she mostly just looks miserable.

But hey, having to deal with an outbreak of Xenomorphs can do a lot to keep a person on their toes. They're not too hard to avoid right now, but it's tricky when they notice you, and Nill has had a few too many close calls this week. She leans her back against a wall, ignoring her wings entirely, so that she can actually catch her breath while keeping an eye on the halls around her, knife held tightly in her hand. The place was going to hell so much sooner than she expected from what she'd seen of other Arenas. How was it already this difficult? How had any of the kids she knew survived in other Arenas?

There was no way this could keep going for much longer.
crabmunicator: (084)

[personal profile] crabmunicator 2015-01-05 07:38 pm (UTC)(link)
Karkat lets her take her hand back and watches the slow process of her sinking down to sit. He has to wonder how uncomfortable it is for her feathers to drag like that; he winces a little in watching, but doesn't stop her.

"Life shits on everyone," he says quietly, after a moment has passed. "I've been through a lot of awful things, and seen it happen to others, but all I've dealt with isn't like what you must have been through. We still had goals to work for. We..."

A thought catches him. Every place he'd been to had some link to another, apart from this one, and that connection gave meaning. Being dragged around from world to world is harder to imagine. Has anyone been brought with her before? Was it just her, alone, having to deal with it each time?

"... What do you want, now?" He looks at her directly, finding her eye. "What would make you happy?"
crabmunicator: (001)

[personal profile] crabmunicator 2015-01-06 03:00 am (UTC)(link)
Her surprise is easy to read, and it's probably the first time he's seen her this shocked. He didn't think it would be quite as big a question as it is. Still, he doesn't take it back; hard or not, it's important, and he cares enough to want to know.

Some part of him hurts for her again when she can't stay looking at him, and when she has no real answer. He knows what he might like even if he doubts he can have it, and that's more than not knowing. Before now seems to speak to a broken hope, or a giving up - an abandonment of that course of thought.

It takes a moment before he can even issues the non-answer of a sighed out, "Fuck."

He glances to her again, and this time his impulse wins out. "Come here," he murmurs, and he goes to drape his arm across her shoulders in a loose hug. It's easy enough to pull away from should she not want it, and with any hope light enough to not be too harsh for their sore bodies. He's not one for gestures like this, usually, but the harshness of the circumstances weighs out.

"I don't know how to fix this," he admits. "I'm not even close. This is too much for anyone; it's unfair, and it's crazy, and I hate that it has to be happening like this. But if there's a way, I'm going to fucking find it." His voice is solid there, certain and determined and unwilling to give in. "You deserve to have a life you want."
Edited (notices a small typo hours later) 2015-01-06 07:00 (UTC)
crabmunicator: (145)

[personal profile] crabmunicator 2015-01-07 11:20 pm (UTC)(link)
Nill's gesture isn't anywhere near as dramatic as hugging him back, but for the circumstances they're in, it works. It's kind, a clear return. It doesn't hurt them, and perhaps that's all the more suiting for how things are. They have enough hurts in their hearts without adding on physically.

He nods to her first. As much as he wants her to be happy, he has no delusions of being a singular, solitary hero to earn all the glory. He's a leader, and her skills are as worthwhile as anyone else's.

It's the question that stops him up.

Nill gets no surprised look like she gave him. Instead Karkat's gaze draws down, brow furrowing just so as he thinks it over. The goals he had in mind before this place come to mind immediately, but the conflict of what's happened since draws into question whether he can have it. So if that's the case, then what? If he is doomed, he can't just wish it away.

His lips press together as he mulls it over. That fear isn't one he's admitted to anyone yet. And while he could brush it over, what would be the point when Nill has opened up to him as much as she has?

Slowly he draws in a breath then lets it back out. "I had things I wanted to do before I came here," he admits, words slow. "But if I went back somehow, I don't think I'd be able to do them. You see, time is complicated there. If even one thing goes wrong, even something small, that timeline is doomed. And the thing is, I had no clue about that other me who was here before I showed up. No memory, no hint, no sign. Nothing warned me or gave any clue that I was going to get sent somewhere else when they brought me here. It's... I can't shake the feeling that this is all unrelated to everything back there, just this big anomaly, not part of the plan at all. If even dumb, incidental stuff can doom a timeline, then something this big..."

He shakes his head. Calm though his voice is, this is hard. It's one of the fears that came up when he ran into the Initiate before: irrelevance. The thought that he doesn't matter to the main timeline at all. Back on the meteor he had a big moment about this, about how arbitrary everything is, and how unfair that even doing something right could mean dooming everyone if it wasn't what Paradox Space needed to happen.

Here the thought that he might be doomed was only a nagging idea at the back of his mind, but how can he write it off when he lays it out logically? Even if he'd never know until he went back and saw the results for himself, the chance of it being anything else seems vanishingly small.

It takes a moment before he can continue.

"Part of me still wants to know if we'll ever fix things back there, and I don't know if I'll be completely happy until I do. But if I can't go back and do it myself, then... I have friends and teammates here." He looks to her again, holding her eyes, because he means her as much as the people he already knew. And even after what he's already said, it's too important not to emphasize even now. "I want the chance for us to live. To have something good, you know? This isn't where I wanted my life to go, but it's what I'm stuck with regardless, and I'm not going to give up just because I'm not the alpha Karkat. My own shame would dislocate itself from my body to disown me entirely from any conceptual existence of a Karkat worth recognizing if I did."
Edited 2015-01-07 23:24 (UTC)
crabmunicator: (107)

[personal profile] crabmunicator 2015-01-23 01:14 pm (UTC)(link)
Karkat's heart sinks hard at that thought, and it's obvious from the tensing of his muscles to the fearful look on his face. He's glad Nill can't speak it aloud, because god, what if the Gamemakers heard that? They would drag them right in and fuck them over, too. His voice is emphatic as he tells her, "Don't even think that."

He slips his arm away from her as he thinks over the rest. Making Panem better is all well and good, and that's what he hopes to be able to do so long as he's here. But his world isn't something he can imagine fixing like that, and he shakes his head. "No. If I'm doomed, then there's absolutely no way that trying to fix Paradox Space would help anything. Even if you try to do something that would be good and productive, if it's not the thing that's 'supposed' to happen then everything is doomed. That's just how it works, no matter how unintuitive and infuriating it might be."
crabmunicator: (063)

[personal profile] crabmunicator 2015-02-26 03:04 am (UTC)(link)
Karkat calms progressively, though his frown is still set, and his mind still worried. Even without prompting, there's always the possibility that the Gamemakers could bring in yet more of his friends--and people besides, from his world or others, who probably deserve this no more than anyone else. It's cruel and it's unfair, and it bugs him, and he has a feeling it will continue to do so.

For now, though, he leans back against the wall and sighs. "That's the worst thing about it. Even if you try your best and save what you can and do what the timeline is 'supposed' to contain, there's still going to be people who couldn't be saved. And it's so arbitrary--a person has to die this way, at this time, in this place. Not this other person, not some other way. It has to go just so, and it's stupid."