Tim W█████ (
postictal) wrote in
entrancelogs2017-09-22 07:50 am
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Entry tags:
knocked the wind out of my soul [open]
Who: Tim Wright and oh god not another event log
Where: Anywhere
When: September 18th - 22nd
Rating: PG-13
Summary: Between a trip to the Mirrorside and a visit to the Core, Wonderland was playing havoc.
The Story:
[ deeper and deeper we go ]
[ where there is no light ]
Where: Anywhere
When: September 18th - 22nd
Rating: PG-13
Summary: Between a trip to the Mirrorside and a visit to the Core, Wonderland was playing havoc.
The Story:
[ where there is no light ]
[ you are d̷͚̪̱i̶͔̙̭s̵̼̻̘t̴̰̩͜ọ̴̩̼ŗ̴͉̞t̷̜̳̼ḙ̴̦̤d̴͖͙ͅ ]
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Jay's never been a fantastic liar. Even when he was shuttling away the denial as to his mental state, he had to shovel it beneath layers of prickling barbs and underhanded jabs in Tim's direction. That won't work on doctors. Not even fabricated ones.
"He was talking to me," says Tim, a little desperately. Pull the shroud of the blame onto himself. He can take it - he knows he can. Whatever Wonderland has drummed up in this hellhole of an environment - it doesn't matter. It doesn't matter. He's lived through worse.
He knows he has.
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"And why would he be talking to you, I wonder?"
Jay flattens his back against the wall, putting as much space between himself and the doctor as possible. Finally, he speaks up, in the hopes that he'll be able to drag the doctor's attention away from Tim.
"We were talking about a--" Wait, when is this? Is there TV now? Are there movies? Jay decides not to risk it. "A book we both...we both read. 'S a good book."
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It'd be eyeroll-worthy, if his heart wasn't thumping in his chest on Jay's behalf.
If he didn't know that he's just as repulsive by default.
"It was my fault," he says swiftly. "I...I'm the one who brought it up."
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Jay's eyes dart over to Tim, looking for a prompt. He doesn't look long enough to get one, though, before he opens his mouth.
"No."
He says it like it's obvious. Rather, he says it like he's trying to make it sound like it's obvious, but not quite succeeding.
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Not to mention the fact that Jay is either chronically unable to read into the muted, pointed glares Tim is shooting in his direction, or he can't discern their deeper meaning.
"I just figured...it'd be nice to make friends. Like my doctor's always telling me."
That one's a gamble, he knows for certain. There's no knowing if he's got a history of being in the isolation wards in this place.
Knowing his history, it's likely.
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Jay feels like he's nearly vibrating out of his skin.
"Strange coincidence that you'd try making friends with this one. Do you know why that might be, Timothy?"
How much does he know?
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He's guessing. He's vaulting into the ether, predicting based off what he knows and what he thinks they might know, and he's hoping to god it isn't obvious - that it won't get Jay hurt or worse. They can pin Tim down, put him through every mental hospital cliché there is; they can do whatever they want, as far as he's concerned. It won't be worse than anything else he's endured.
Just don't catch Jay in that crossfire.
Please.
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The doctor's attention twitches back toward Jay. "Funny, because my notes here say you both came to us with very similar stories, down to the very detail. Folie à deux, you could call it." And he does, affecting a grating French accent that somehow manages to be worse than Alex trying to say mise-en-scène. "If we just let you two interact like this, you could undo all the work we've done. You want to get better, don't you?"
Jay's shaking, though whether it's from anger or fear he's not sure. Either way, there's nothing to do but keep his mouth shut and pray Tim doesn't make this worse.
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The look Jay receives in turn is nothing short of furious, just for a split second. Is he just - incapable of swallowing his pride and stowing things away for discussion later, even in the face of the risk of whatever kind of consequences they might face for daring to put one toe out of line.
"Fine," he says, biting the word out desperately. "We'll - we won't talk to each other anymore. Okay?"
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The doctor rests a hand on Jay's shoulder.
Jay stiffens. Of course not.
"Excuse me if I'm not inclined to trust your word." The doctor's eyes are on Tim, though his grip tightens on Jay's shoulder. "I'll be escorting this one back to his room."
Clearly furious as Tim is, Jay still tries to catch his eye, silently asking, Should I play along?
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Separation. Escorting him back to his room - the spaces aren't co-ed, but that won't be a problem. Is he in solitary? He doesn't fucking know. Has Jay raised enough trouble to be pinned in solitary, with all the trappings that entails? Jay's look is plainly searching, and Tim doesn't have an answer.
He'll have to find him - later. He'll have to try and follow. Make sure he can find him again, so they can both get out.
For now?
For now, he has to grit his teeth and bow his head, borrowing that trembling, reluctant obedience that was, for years, instinct knotted deep into his heart and soul.
"Yes, sir."
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But he's just playing along. 'You tell them what they wanna hear,' he said. Another lie, but this time Jay's finally on the right side of it.
He shoots Tim one last look as he lets the doctor lead him away, trying for you'd better have a plan but probably landing closer to the vicinity of please god don't let this end the way I think it will.
Strapped down to a table, electricity arcing through his head until he forgets, again. Maybe it's already happened.
What happened to his camera?
He keeps his head down, just like Tim showed him. Doesn't push the hand away. Does as he's told, and--
The light changes. There's a weight in his hand, and none on his shoulder.
Fifteen feet.
He looks back. No Tim, not visibly.
...He's gonna have to turn around, isn't he?
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He starts prowling the perimeter of the common areas, trying to time it so he can slip into the halls for the individual rooms when someone isn't looking. But after the third failure, all he gets is confinement to his room.
His room. Alone. The bolt locking firmly into place behind him, a familiar, sick feeling curling up tight in his throat.
With no doctor, and no Jay.
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Jay steps back into the radius of the event.
He's barefoot again, wearing what amounts to white pajamas again, and he's at the end of the hallway. Quickly, he ducks behind a storage cabinet a few feet away from the edge of the event until he's convinced the way is clear.
Once the sound of footsteps finally clears, he peeks through the nearest doorway, peering into the common area. Nobody he recognizes.
A nurse rounds the corner, and Jay scrambles back behind the cabinet.
The way clears again, and Jay has a terrible idea. The closet's unlocked. There are bottles, some labeled by hand and some by machine, but what's on the upper shelves are what's important. Jay sneaks a clean, white coat off the top of the stack.
The legs of his scrubs are still visible--the coat's far from floor-length--but maybe it won't be quite as obvious he's not supposed to be here. He should be good unless somebody either recognizes his face or looks closely enough to spot the scrubs underneath. Both of which aren't exactly unlikely. Great.
Still, while the hallway's clear, Jay peers into each room. There's a window in every door, though many are covered by a sliding hatch with a hole for a padlock. Thankfully, nobody's locked any of them shut.
Nobody Jay knows, nobody, nobody, a few people but none he knows, another stranger, somebody who doesn't even look like he's breathing, nobody, Tim.
It looks like the window's one-way, so it's not going to do him any good. He raps on the door several times in quick succession, sounding like an impatient woodpecker. "Hey. Hey, Tim," he whispers, watching the end of the hallway out of the corner of his eye.
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Right.
He curls in the corner. It's an easy instinct to resurrect. Where else is he going to go? Where else could he go? Head ducking, burying his face into the peaks of his knees drawn up to his chest. Just wait it out. Wait it out. It'll be over. It can't last forever. It can't last forever.
He doesn't have his prescription in here. How long is it going to last.
When there's the quiet tin-rattle of knuckles tapping against the door, the breathy whisper of someone calling his name, a spurt of adrenaline bolts into his system. Shit. He's already started hearing things, hasn't he? Already started bending beneath the weight of this kind of environment, needling away at his brain, peeling away what remains of his sanity. Jay can't have gotten out of the clutches of that doctor - not with how determined the latter was to get him away from Tim. There's no other possibility. Even if he did escape -
If he did escape, what would he be doing here?
He clamps both hands over his head and squeezes his eyes shut.
It isn't real. Don't let it be real.
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Either Tim doesn't hear Jay, or he's ignoring him.
Eyes darting back to the ends of the hallway (nobody yet), Jay grits his teeth and knocks directly on the window.
"Tim."
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He's supposed to have left. He's supposed to have left. That's what he does. Isn't it?
Tim scrambles upright. The worst that happens is the disappointment at having been proven right - and disappointment he's well used to. The breath hitches in his lungs a heartbeat before he can say it aloud -
"Jay?"
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He draws closer to the window, still trying to keep his voice low. "Look, the door's padlocked from the outside." He grabs the lock, knocking it against the door for emphasis. "I'm gonna try and get it--wait."
He hears footsteps. After a moment, they fade into the distance.
"I'm gonna try and get the door open." He grimaces. "And if I screw up, this thing should be over in...forty minutes, about."
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What part of Tim needs saving - and since when did Jay start giving a damn?
Why should he?
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A lot can happen in forty minutes, though. Sure, Wonderland brings you back if you die, but things seem fuzzier when it comes to, y'know, permanent neurological damage. This place is happy enough to fix a gunshot wound in the side, but what about a hole in the head?
And he's not abandoning Tim a second time.So, what's he doing?
"Finding the key and getting you out," Jay hisses back. "This whole thing cuts out ten feet down the hall, so we just need to get down there, and--"
Footsteps again, closer this time.
Jay ducks away from the window, snapping the latch shut before sprinting back toward his old hiding spot behind the storage cabinet. The echoing footfalls from earlier solidify into the click-tap of high-heeled shoes, and there's a squeaking, clattering sound that might be a rolling cart.
From his hiding spot, Jay can hear a woman's voice. It's not one he recognizes. "Dinner, Timothy."
Jay's pulse speeds up. Is that all she brought him?
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Withdrawal from his own prescription combined with an introduction of something as foreign as that into his system is bound to go over well for just about everyone. He could try spitting them out, but that might not work - not if they've wised up to him being a little troublemaker, huh?
He's not Timothy, not just some scared little boy huddled in the corner of the room anymore.
Running right up to the door would be the sort of thing that might be frowned upon. Maybe get him a look of disapproval, and - five minutes, while the nurse makes rounds to other rooms, while she leaves him alone so he can have a think about what he's done.
It has to be enough. He just needs her gone.
Tim bolts forward, knuckles slamming into the metal of the latch. Is it common for their patients (victims) to act this way, when it's time for dinner?
He has no idea. But it's a risk he's willing to take if it gets Jay out.
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The nurse must have recoiled from the noise, because as Jay catches sight of her, she trips backwards into the cart, sending it skittering back against the wall. The food (or whatever passes for food here) looks mostly intact, but Jay watches as a couple of small bottles shatter against the tile floor, leaving puddles of liquid and broken glass.
"Timothy!" she scolds, catching her balance.
After a moment, she moves to face the far end of the hall, and Jay flattens himself once more behind the cabinet.
There's a squeal, a rattle, and more footsteps. She's got the cart, and she's heading in Jay's direction.
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She's heading off. No food for people who misbehave and take the hardworking personnel off guard, huh? Good. Good. Tim rocks back, breathing hard, flexing his hand with a bracing pull of fingertips inward and out again. It aches, but it's nothing he can't handle. He's had worse.
He's always had worse.
He just has to hope that Jay had the presence of mind to fucking leave instead of sticking around and risking being caught, but since when has Jay had the presence of mind to do anything remotely strategic?
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Or he can get the keys.
As she steps in front of the cabinet, Jay lunges forward, wrapping one hand around her mouth and another around her wrist and tugging her back toward the wall. She tries to scream, tries to yank herself away, but for once, Jay's actually stronger.
This might be undermined by the fact that Jay just realized he's been repeating, "Sorry, sorry, sorry..." under his breath since he grabbed her.
"Look, just..." This is only barely working, and Jay knows it. "Just give me the keys, and you'll be fine."
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"Jay?" The word is hissed, whispered between clenched teeth. "Jay!"
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*locks hospital keys in car*
HE WOULD dONT EVEN LIE
"guess you can't get your...guess i can't get your...oh."
JAY'S SINGLE MOMENT OF COMPETENCE: RUINED FOREVER
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