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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.
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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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"Need information on anything else, might be able to help. Arrived here with the first group." It had only been a few months ago but sometimes it felt much longer. Surviving in the cold made the days lengthen out or so it seemed.
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The boy, Levi, had said months, and Canada, and that no one remembered any kind of journey before simply waking up here. It will be good to confirm any of that, or even get information from someone who isn't — hopefully — going to start going on about translation spells. Odd mask and manner or not, this Rorschach seems more sensible than that. There are explanations here which have nothing to do with magic. Raju only has to dig them out.
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He'd been gathering clues since day one and was still leaning towards this being a snowy Hell. Or perhaps Purgatory if they were meant to be learning something from the experience.
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Of course they're not. It's an understandable fear. But of course, they're not. If Raju is ever going to get back to his work and the people waiting for him to finish it, it's important to be rational.
"Why do you think so? Were you injured at the time, when you heard the voice?" Raju had been injured, before he woke here. Maybe that could be a connecting thread. It hadn't occurred to him to ask about that before.
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Not that he'd want any kids exposed to what they were going through in the struggle for survival there in Milton but he couldn't help but notice such an obvious exclusion compared to those who had somehow ended up in the cold and snow.
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He isn't dead. That his own... his own actions would have sent him some place like this isn't worth arguing. That everyone here has or hasn't committed some kind of evil isn't worth arguing. Both could easily be true, if— If. But he would know it if he was dead.
"The ones who lived here left. Everyone left. It happens sometimes. Would you want to keep living here, if you had a choice?"
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He didn't even need to consider the answer to the question. "No. Have something important to do back home." Saving the (his?) world was still more important than anything he was doing here. Of course, that was assuming there even was a way to get back.
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But Raju moves on right after saying it, to the more important part. Not the ghosts. "What did the bodies look like? How did they die?"
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"Some killed by each other. Some by suicide. Some by the elements. Some just dropped dead. No cause. All just looking the same direction." Rorschach had taken careful note of those, for they had seemed the most interesting to him.
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What Rorschach goes on with is too fascinating to bother with nonsense, anyway. Wrong conclusions or not, what brought Rorschach to those conclusions is more than worth hearing. "What direction?" he demands, eager now. "Did you go to see what's there?
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He shook his head at the second question. "Not enough equipment or supplies to travel for long." Besides, he wasn't sure that he wanted to discover whatever it was there if it had been powerful enough to completely eradicate an entire town. He'd seen the ghosts reenacting the chaos that had enveloped Milton in those final moments. Perhaps whatever had done that had also brought them to this place.
As for himself, Rorschach would leave such exploration to others who wanted to. He'd stay in Milton and look after those who were in constant danger from their surroundings.
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The pen starts to write and then stops, and he frowns at it. His hand is used to a longer nib, pressing differently on the paper— but this will work. So long as it writes at all. He only has to get used to it. He sighs and starts to write again, brief little grimace fading as his concentration grows.
"Would you go," Raju asks, a little distractedly, "if someone could? Once someone can?"
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At the question, Rorschach hesitated for a moment. Would he go? There was always the chance he'd be of use if he went along. But who would be left here to protect those left behind? It really depended on if he felt confident leaving people in the hands of others. "Perhaps." That was all he said evasively.
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And a second after that makes it clear that there's nothing happening to wait for. Perhaps, and that's going to be all. That's how this man is, Raju's realising. He shows as much of himself with his words as he does his face. It's strange. The mask certainly isn't worn to blend in, not looking the way it does, so why?
One mystery at a time. Raju's always been very good at prioritising. The 'plan' to head east with as much supplies as he can carry isn't a plan at all, only an idea, and set down on paper it will be an option to come back to. Now that he has the paper to put it down on, maybe everything else twisting itself around in knots inside him will start to untangle, too. Force it all to marching in ruthlessly organized lines back and forth over the page and it won't run rampant against his ribs any more, nor in the churning of his stomach, nor in the tingling at the tips of his fingers, needing to move, needing to solve the problem instead of sitting ignorant inside it.
None of that relief will come if he allows himself to get too distracted.
"Hm," he says, acknowledgement of the word and acknowledgement of the reticence there, Raju's thoughtful tone marking out Rorschach's reserve, his polite words afterward putting it away. "I'll keep it in mind. Thank you again, you've been very helpful."
He taps the end of one of the odd pens meaningfully against the notebook, and smiles. "And if you have a little favour to ask in the future, let me know about it. I owe you one now."
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There was an odd shift on Rorschach's face just then, the black blots creating a pattern that remained a little more static than before, lasting a number of seconds before they dispersed. They conglomerated around his mouth and eye areas, with two parallel dots on his cheeks. It looked almost as if there was a smile on the mask. But it had to just be mere coincidence...couldn't it?
"Will keep that in mind." With that he went off to wander into other parts of the Community Hall, leaving Raju to get settled in.