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settling in (open)
What: being frustrated and falling into things
When: November, some time very soon after the newest batch of characters arrived
Where: the community hall at the center of town
Content Warnings: will add if anything comes up
i. Raju hates being cold and misses his diary
It's the cold. That must be why he doesn't have anything figured out about this place. It creeps into the mind, finding all the cracks in his composure and his attention and trying to freeze and grow and pry all of them open. He can't get warm. Not really. The only way to get moving enough to try to warm up is to go outside. Going out is supposed to be the way out of feeling this way, not the cause of it. Each time he tries to figure out whether or not he's died he just ends up back at the same place, thinking about how damned cold he is again.
He paces back and forth in front of the fireplace at the community hall, too much wanting to move and do and go sparking inside of him to make it worth chaining all that movement inside and slowing down, sitting down, and trying to look sensible. He's frowning, jaw tight, and his elbows are starting to ache from how much time his arms have spent wrapped around his chest, fists and forearms trying to hide as far as possible between his upper arms and sides beneath.
Raju paces, and tells himself he's too close to a fire to still be cold, and tries to make himself think.
If he'd died he would know, surely he would know, but the kind of hit to the head that might have lost him the memory of what time it would have taken to travel from Delhi to some place this freezing would have left injuries behind. If he could only write any of this down, maybe some part of it would become clear.
"Is there paper anywhere here?" he bursts out at the nearest passerby, finally, needing to know something. "A pen, ink, anything that I can use?"
ii. Something - or someone - is tripped over in the night
Raju sits up, habit swinging his legs off the side of the little bed before he regrets losing himself the cover of the blankets. It's cold now, colder, because the fire's gone out. It had seemed natural to sleep here tonight, still in the community hall where there'll be more people in the middle of all this bewildering emptiness, and he knew he wouldn't be dreaming deeply enough to worry about sleeping vulnerable surrounded by strangers, anyway. Not staying inside like this, not without being able to go out and spend the day doing enough to earn a night with a quiet mind.
The problem, anyway, here and now: the dark fireplace, and the creeping cold of the pitch-dark night. It isn't a surprise, that there's no electricity to light the place; this is hardly a city, after all. Hardly large enough to be worth the trouble of modernising. What's surprising is that he expects it, that he wakes expecting to stand in his familiar rooms, to walk the familiar paths around his books, to turn the familiar knobs beside the kitchen on the wall. It was never supposed to be familiar, those rooms in Delhi, it was never supposed to be—
All of that hardly matters now. He hadn't been able to sleep deeply enough for his mind to wander far. It's dark, is the actual problem, too dark to see, and no candle, and no lantern, and no way to light them if they were in his hands. The hall is simple, though, and he's spent too much time pacing inside it already and he's certain he knows the place, so if he walks just this direction he should be able—
Habit has Raju's throat tightening and jaw clenching over the sound he'd make otherwise but his body makes a heavy noise when it hits the floor and he rolls out of the way, in case whatever — or whoever — it is he'd walked right into in the dark is about to fall too and come down on top of where he'd been. Or maybe where he is now, depending on which direction whatever it is might fall. There's no way to tell when he can't actually see, but instinctively he tries moving, anyway.
Rolling away makes it even more difficult to tell where in the room he is now, he realises, grimacing and trying to push himself up on an elbow, squinting into the darkness as if that will let him see what he's fallen into. Damn. He'll have to feel in front of him until he finds something familiar. More time out of the blankets in the cold. Which doesn't matter, but he hates it, all the same.
I
"I know there are a lot of diaries and some have blank paper, you can make one of them." Erich did something like that, he thinks. "Or maybe a store has them left? I don't know how many people would take things like that."
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He turns back to the boy with a sigh, the tense line of his shoulders falling. “A store. Is there one close by?”
Turning, Raju eyes the beds nearby. “I could take a blanket,” he mutters to himself. “That would be enough, wouldn’t it?”
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Raju’s been impatient, he’s been distracted, but he manages a friendly smile here, so he won’t look so much like someone who’s been trying to decide whether it’s worth it to do just that. He won’t get anywhere at all if the only people who might know a little bit about this place start thinking he’s going to be threatening them.
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Life will teach those lessons eventually. Only talking isn’t going to show anyone just how far a desperate man will go, and there’s no reason to try. Raju tries to look a little friendlier.
“And if there are none to spare after all? All the generosity in the world won’t help.” He shakes his head, one hand creeping out from under the warmth of his arm to tap its fingers quick and thoughtful against his side. “No. I’ll have to think of something else.”
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"You could make one? I know there's needle and thread...I wouldn't know how to make a coat but there might be books. Or someone who'll do it for you. Or trade it for something." He shrugs.
"I know this place is horrible, but I've been here as long as anyone else but that old guy and we've gotten along so far." Over all, at least, people likely had disagreements in private.
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I've been here as long as anyone else but that old guy, the boy says and Raju’s head and attention snaps back toward him, expression focused, fingers briefly going still. “You were one of the first. How long have you been here? How did you arrive?”
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“You woke up here.” His hand slides the rest of the way out from against his side and begins tapping two fingers quick against his forearm. “And where were you before? How far would you have travelled to be in this place?”
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"I was under Perhevil," not that he expects anyone to know that town, "and that's nowhere near here. I'd never even heard of 'Canada' before this place."
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The pacing stranger is intimidating, but the cold is worse, so Huaisang tries mostly to ignore him as he hangs up his cloak to dry.
Blinking at the sudden explosive question, Huaisang shies a little, looking wide-eyed up at him. "Yes. There's so much paper. Excellent quality, too."
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The first moment after... after arriving here, that shock of ice inside his skin, his lungs, his bones, it was nothing compared to the long walk that way after, the cold a million knives inside him that wouldn't melt or leave him, walking and walking that way and thinking... But he can't be dead. He can't be thinking that way. He knows better than to think that way. If only he could lay it all out in front of him, see all these thoughts written there in order, then he can start figuring this out properly, put all the nonsense behind him. "Where? Out there, or inside here some place?"
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"A moment," he says, finishing hanging up his wet things before leading this intense new stranger over to where there is a collection of what is labeled as 'craft supplies' but what Huaisang thinks of as 'nice paper and trash'. He points to it, showing the paper and the pens. "Those are the things that make marks."
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Then Raju follows. He gives a quick, baffled smile at the phrasing and then looks over at what’s on display himself. Paper, sitting out ready to be used. Paper clips. Bits of string, small, odd scissors and a lone, broken crayon sitting near the edge of the old table, and a small bundle of something else.
“You mean pens?“ Raju asks, picking up one of the odd things and frowning at it. His hand is cold now, leaving the warmth under his arm, but that doesn’t matter. What matters is one more strange thing, something else he can’t explain in this unexplainable place. Another detail which seems unimportant and small, which should be, but something in the strangeness itches at him—
“What is this supposed to be?” he asks and bends a little, tilting his head to peer underneath the table as if the fountain pens and ink he needs will be underneath it hiding from him.
i
He considered the question for a long moment. It looked like he wasn't going to answer as the silence grew until it was awkward. Finally, without warning, he answered. "How much?" His voice was deep, raspy, and growling, like nails being ground down by a piece of machinery. It somehow seemed to fit him perfectly.
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There's certainly nothing more than natural, mechanical about it. Certainly. Probably something working on magnets or chemicals. They can do amazing things with technology these days.
"As much as there is," he says once the reply comes, eager enough for an answer that not seeing anything like a face to rest his gaze on, in this moment, almost doesn't bother him. "It doesn't matter. Anything, so long as I can write."
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Rorschach came back over to Raju. From the inside of his trenchcoat, he pulled out a simple, spiral-bound notebook with a bright red cover like the type that had been used by students for generations. He also pulled out two pens. "Will this work?" He asked.
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—then pausing once he's got them in his hands, rubbing a thumb curiously over the metal along the notebook's back, holding the... the probably-a-pen up to the light and squinting at it. "I... think."
He shifts his focus to what he can't really call the nib of one, and then to the other. Identical, so maybe they're meant to look that way. "Someone here made these?" he tries, not wanting to sound like he's insulting a gift the stranger was under no obligation to give him, but wanting to know, too. He can see the ink already inside, so he won't have to fill up either for a while so long as they can write at all, but they look so strange.
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The question too threw him off a little bit. Had someone made them? "Found them in a home. Assume they got them from the store." What a strange individual Raju was. (Said the pot calling the kettle black.)
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"Well, thank you. This will be very useful, Mr...?"
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He didn't ask for the man's name in return, preferring to keep the people here at a distance as long as he could. Either Raju would introduce himself or he wouldn't.
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The thought is an absent one. As the moment stretches without anything more forthcoming than the name Raju's eyes flicker down toward the pens in his hand, eager to use them, then back up toward that mask. He'll have to ask how it works at some point, just what it is that makes those shapes move that way, but... later. And the rest of the niceties, too, those can come later. Raju has thanked him, the man doesn't seem interested in anything else, and the sooner Raju is able to write some of this down maybe he'll be able to make sense of this place. Or remember more about how he got here, if he gets very lucky.
"It was nice to meet you. Thank you again for these."
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Hence why he'd decided to help Raju in the first place. Anyone who kept a journal couldn't be all bad in Rorschach's book. Then he put the journal back from where he's gotten it from.
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"It helps to sort things out, doesn't it. I left mine..." Back home? It feels like an odd betrayal to call the city that way, no matter how much closer Delhi is to it than he is to either of them, right now. "Before I came here. But this place is so strange. I'm sure writing all of it down will help."
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