John Tillman (
slayer_not_player) wrote in
ataraxionlogs2012-01-18 02:26 pm
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Entry tags:
(no subject)
CHARACTERS: John Tillman, Robert Capa, Chase Kilgannon, Simon Silverton and possibly more.
LOCATION: Hallway of the passenger's quarters.
WARNINGS: Violence. Death threats.
SUMMARY: In which a new arrival takes a man hostage, gets attacked by a little girl, and is then forced to defend himself by a wise-cracking teenager.
Tillman's awakening was somewhat violent. One minute he was preparing for the final match-- he could practically taste freedom- and feeling more anxious and hopeful than he had in a long time. Without warning, there was a tube in his throat and he was naked and spilling out onto the floor.
He breathed through his nose, the sound harsh and angry in the silence of the room. His legs refused to hold his weight, so he remained on his knees on the cold tile. Drugs, he assumed. Castle did so love his theatrics-- a point made even more clear when Tillman bothered to look around. Strange. Foreign. It looked like he was on the set of some kind of science fiction flick.
It stood to reason that the administrators would not warn the cons before changing the scenery, but why now? Because it was the thirtieth match? Had Castle decided to switch it up to make it all fresh and exciting?
Turn me loose, kid. You want to win? Turn me loose. Find a way. His words echoed back at him. He debated the probability of Castle overhearing that and introducing this new hell as some kind of punishment. Or maybe the kid had ratted him out.
The attempt to reason out the why of his situation ended the moment he could stand, albeit unsteadily, on his own two feet. He was alive and he was loose, and therefore the motives of his captors did not matter quite as much as getting somewhere safe.
His right wrist was tender, the only fresh injury besides his throat that he could feel. He examined it briefly and his guts tightened with cold rage. A fresh tattoo penned beside his existing one. 'I am right here with you' was part of a mantra that kept him sane. Any time he could feel himself slipping into despair, he could look at the ink on his arm and remember what was waiting for him outside. Now he couldn't even do that without a further reminder that he was, in fact, in prison.
030. There was no way that that was an accident. More games, then. Always more games. He exhaled a calming breath. There was no point on dwelling on it. It was done.
Tillman crossed the room on unsteady legs. The rest of the pods, which he assumed contained the rest of his team, remained sealed and silent. If the intent was to make the room as creepy as possible, it had the desired effect. He was relieved to come across the rows of lockers. Different though they were, lockers were lockers. It was nice to see something familiar. He tried his old number and found it quite locked. He tried the next one. And the next. With an expectant frown, he made his way over to locker 030 and of course that one opened. Theatrics and games.
In place of his standard fatigues, there was some kind of... space suit. He didn't think too hard about it before pulling it on. His body armor fitted over it neatly. His weapons were stacked in an orderly fashion: hunting knife, SMG, pistol. He strapped them on. The firing pins on both guns were still inactive, so he drew the knife.
Everything about this was so strange. So surreal. It didn't make sense. Why give him his weapons if they didn't work? Why let him out but keep his squad locked down? Why the shift in setting?
Breathe, Tillman. There were no guards in sight which meant he was free to move around. At the request of the disembodied voice (which nearly scared him out of his skin) he took the lift up and cautiously made his way down the hallway it led to. He had walked for just under fifteen minutes before he came across another human being.
Thin, mousy, dark haired, unarmed. He didn't move like a prisoner and certainly not like an I-Con. He wasn't looking over his shoulder and almost seemed unaware of his surroundings. He must have felt safe.
Tillman theorized that maybe, just maybe, some computer error had resulted in his pod opening earlier than it should have, which made this man some kind of tech in charge of setting up the arena... It was an opportunity too good to pass up.
Tillman stalked forward silently, grip shifting on his knife. He grabbed the young man by the hair and wrenched his head back to expose his throat and keep his face angled upward. In the same motion, he brought his right arm around to rest the sharp edge along the left border of the techie's neck lightly.
“I don't want to hurt you,” he whispered in a voice that was hoarse from disuse. “I know you're only doing your job, but don't think for one second that me not wanting to hurt you means that I won't. This knife is over six inches long. I can slice through your carotid, your jugular, and your trachea in one motion. I just want some questions answered. Don't fight me. Don't test me,” he paused. “Put your hands out. Palms up.” This was not his first rodeo.
LOCATION: Hallway of the passenger's quarters.
WARNINGS: Violence. Death threats.
SUMMARY: In which a new arrival takes a man hostage, gets attacked by a little girl, and is then forced to defend himself by a wise-cracking teenager.
Tillman's awakening was somewhat violent. One minute he was preparing for the final match-- he could practically taste freedom- and feeling more anxious and hopeful than he had in a long time. Without warning, there was a tube in his throat and he was naked and spilling out onto the floor.
He breathed through his nose, the sound harsh and angry in the silence of the room. His legs refused to hold his weight, so he remained on his knees on the cold tile. Drugs, he assumed. Castle did so love his theatrics-- a point made even more clear when Tillman bothered to look around. Strange. Foreign. It looked like he was on the set of some kind of science fiction flick.
It stood to reason that the administrators would not warn the cons before changing the scenery, but why now? Because it was the thirtieth match? Had Castle decided to switch it up to make it all fresh and exciting?
Turn me loose, kid. You want to win? Turn me loose. Find a way. His words echoed back at him. He debated the probability of Castle overhearing that and introducing this new hell as some kind of punishment. Or maybe the kid had ratted him out.
The attempt to reason out the why of his situation ended the moment he could stand, albeit unsteadily, on his own two feet. He was alive and he was loose, and therefore the motives of his captors did not matter quite as much as getting somewhere safe.
His right wrist was tender, the only fresh injury besides his throat that he could feel. He examined it briefly and his guts tightened with cold rage. A fresh tattoo penned beside his existing one. 'I am right here with you' was part of a mantra that kept him sane. Any time he could feel himself slipping into despair, he could look at the ink on his arm and remember what was waiting for him outside. Now he couldn't even do that without a further reminder that he was, in fact, in prison.
030. There was no way that that was an accident. More games, then. Always more games. He exhaled a calming breath. There was no point on dwelling on it. It was done.
Tillman crossed the room on unsteady legs. The rest of the pods, which he assumed contained the rest of his team, remained sealed and silent. If the intent was to make the room as creepy as possible, it had the desired effect. He was relieved to come across the rows of lockers. Different though they were, lockers were lockers. It was nice to see something familiar. He tried his old number and found it quite locked. He tried the next one. And the next. With an expectant frown, he made his way over to locker 030 and of course that one opened. Theatrics and games.
In place of his standard fatigues, there was some kind of... space suit. He didn't think too hard about it before pulling it on. His body armor fitted over it neatly. His weapons were stacked in an orderly fashion: hunting knife, SMG, pistol. He strapped them on. The firing pins on both guns were still inactive, so he drew the knife.
Everything about this was so strange. So surreal. It didn't make sense. Why give him his weapons if they didn't work? Why let him out but keep his squad locked down? Why the shift in setting?
Breathe, Tillman. There were no guards in sight which meant he was free to move around. At the request of the disembodied voice (which nearly scared him out of his skin) he took the lift up and cautiously made his way down the hallway it led to. He had walked for just under fifteen minutes before he came across another human being.
Thin, mousy, dark haired, unarmed. He didn't move like a prisoner and certainly not like an I-Con. He wasn't looking over his shoulder and almost seemed unaware of his surroundings. He must have felt safe.
Tillman theorized that maybe, just maybe, some computer error had resulted in his pod opening earlier than it should have, which made this man some kind of tech in charge of setting up the arena... It was an opportunity too good to pass up.
Tillman stalked forward silently, grip shifting on his knife. He grabbed the young man by the hair and wrenched his head back to expose his throat and keep his face angled upward. In the same motion, he brought his right arm around to rest the sharp edge along the left border of the techie's neck lightly.
“I don't want to hurt you,” he whispered in a voice that was hoarse from disuse. “I know you're only doing your job, but don't think for one second that me not wanting to hurt you means that I won't. This knife is over six inches long. I can slice through your carotid, your jugular, and your trachea in one motion. I just want some questions answered. Don't fight me. Don't test me,” he paused. “Put your hands out. Palms up.” This was not his first rodeo.
no subject
The space program had been all but abandoned decades ago aside from the occasional shuttle into orbit for the rich and the bored, but right now, anything was possible. Anything made more sense than the reality he was being told by the others he'd met.
The sudden jerkiness caught him by surprise and his hands wavered, stumbling in his command to keep moving forward for a few seconds before he made the signal again, his hand steadying itself as his free hand brough Kable into a semi-crouch, knife at the ready.
"Its the only way I know to where, uh, to where I am."
He wasn't quite ready to believe that this was where he'd be living for now, but it was a room, and secure enough for the moment.
"You think I don't know how to avoid hostiles? Dude. Seriously"
He'd kept you alive this long, Kable, Have a little faith.
no subject
"I don't want to be where you are. Turn me loose, kid. You said you would."
no subject
Simon had no interest in engaging anyone without knowing the rules of whatever this was they were in, whether it was a game or something else entirely. And killing unarmed civilians was just cheating, no matter if they were hostiles or not. But as Kable's steps kept on that same robotic march and his voice grew more strained, Simon finally changed his signal to hold, just so his I-Con could actually breathe a moment.
He'd heard stories of avatars who'd resisted to the point of losing consciousness, straining every muscle in their body, injuring themselves in an attempt to defy the commands of their players. Not that it broke the link at all, but those kinds never lasted long in Slayers. Automatons didn't have good reflexes. Simon remembered that first match he'd every played with Kable, and how jerky the controls had been, how frustrating, and this felt like deja vu all over again.
"Dude, chill."
Turn him loose? Simon had turned him loose, right at the beginning of that fateful thirtieth match, the reason the number 029 on his forearm taunted him like a teabagging spawncamper, and look where that had landed him. Arrested and investigated by the FBI. Humiliated in the eyes of the world as a supposed cheater.
But then again, he'd also gotten to fix all that in one fell swoop, or rather, one fell stab.
"I did turn you loose, man. You went and stuck your dick in a truck and made me look like an idiot. But it all worked out."
no subject
Priority: safety. Standing in a straight hallway with no cover was asinine. Rushing off where an unknown quantity of potential hostiles waited was unwise. Therefore: he looped back to Simon's original suggestion. Offer. Order.
Simon was somewhere quiet enough and where he felt safe enough that he could take time to control him.
Reluctantly, he opened his eyes and grumbled: "Take me to where you are."
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"Shouldn't take long."
And once they started moving again, it was still in that wary half-crouch, every corner being checked before turning them, every doorway given a thorough glance-over. He might have been a teenager, but he wasn't stupid when it came to hostile territory, and how to navigate through it without getting his...Kable's ass shot off.
"This should be it, man."
He didn't have Kable reach for the doorpad, instead he shut off the link and got up to open it himself.
no subject
Without preamble, he pushed inside, closed the door, and threw the lock. He took in the room with a few quick, silent assessments, then went about checking the bits he couldn't readily see from the door systematically. He knew that if it had been a trap, Simon probably wouldn't have released him from the Nanex, but he just couldn't help himself. Old habits.
When everything was suitably secure, he turned his gaze on Simon himself.
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Okay. Okay, Silverton, Calm it the fuck down. The last thing he wanted was to make an idiot of himself in front of his I-Con, especially with the shit that was going down around them.
When that gaze finally turned on him, Simon met it, looking his I-Con over for signs of that trauma he'd read on his viewscreen before his eyes snapped back up to Kable's own.
"...Sup, Kable."
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"Kid. I need you to tell me everything you've learned since you woke up. Who said what? Have you been able to confirm anything?" His voice was hard, words quick. He finally sheathed the knife as a sign of good faith. He wasn't going to threaten the kid for information. Unless it wasn't given freely.
no subject
It took a moment for Simon to respond, still taking in the face that Kable was here, as he was. He shook himself a little, moving over to sprawl in the chair he'd been controlling Kable from, which wasn't nearly as comfortable as his room back home but hey, he could deal. His communicator and phone sat nearby, not that he'd need them, because the only person he wanted to talk to right now was right here< and--
Oh yeah, he was supposed to be talking.
"I only woke up maybe a few hours before you did, and talked to some people on the network they have. Sort of a local intranet link as far as I can tell. This link..there's no outside and everyone's insisting we're in space, man. Space. And not orbiting space either. Fuckin'...deep space, dude."
no subject
"Details, kid. Details. Who did you talk to? Who is in charge. Is Castle here? How big is this 'ship'?" he insisted, just a touch impatient.
no subject
"One dude I spoke to in vidchat, didn't get his name but he said he's a neuroscientist. Sounded right but Castle's alley but he'd never heard of the guy. Then there was some weird kid who typed like a twelve year old named Mouse, some voice that spoke like a robot, all factual and shit, and another fucked up text going on about space shit."
Wasn't he such a helpful information source, Kable?
"Dunno who's in charge yet, but no one I've talked to's heard of Castle or Slayers. Or you, dude.
And from what I've seen the place looks pretty epic in size, if its real."
no subject
So they were in space with a bunch of strangers who didn't know anything about them. That would take some processing. For the moment, he moved on to more immediate issues that he could actually do something about.
He crossed to the bed and laid his guns out carefully. He removed the magazines and counted his ammunition. With that done, he began looking the pistol over, trying to determine what was keeping it from firing. He could feel Simon's eyes on his back as he worked.
"So you're the one. I thought you'd be..." Taller. Older. More professional. Less innocent looking. "Not you."
Eloquence, thy name is Tillman.
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All over the news from interviews and podcasts over his and Kable's victories. Nine months, man. Nine months they'd been running together and suddenly they're here, and even though it was a fucked up situation, it was a fucked up place they were in, the screen seperating them and their interaction was gone.
"This...this is awesome, man. I mean just...awesome."
Kable's eloquence was obviously catching.
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His mind was still spinning. It was hard to focus. He started to sit down on the bed, then sprang back up when he started to sink into it. Sitting on a spongy bed was not tactically sound. He had forgotten that beds could be spongy.
He scanned the room and settled on a table holding a lamp. Without preamble, he yanked the cord from the wall, and sat in the spot he had vacated. He counted down from ten.
And then something occurred to him. His gaze snapped back to Simon. "Earlier. You mentioned-- cutting me loose. A truck. Explain."
no subject
He had spent a lot of time idly wondering what made the weapons power on and off at the start and end of their matches, and that was the most likely way of doing it that he could think of, aside from some other way of disabling the firing mechanism that he hadn't thought of. But Kable probably knew as much if not more about guns than Simon did, and certainly had more hands-on expertise.
Kable was acting strance, but he could forgive that for now, considering how fucked up he'd been when Simon had first logged into him to bring him here. He had his own questions, which he'd asked before but Kable had completely ignored him, but since Kable had asked something really fucking obvious...
"You don't remember the last match, man? Were you seriously that fucking drunk or something that you'd forget it? You told me, you and the Humanz brotha, to let you go to kick some ass. Instead, you come stumbling out balls out drunk, puke and stick your dick in a truck, fill it will pissgas, and then drive off in it like some Vegas drivethrough shag'n'snag just happened.
Ringing any bells, man?"
no subject
He stared at Simon, his lips thinning as he listened to the explanation. "You're talking about match thirty," he stated. He was glaring, but it was unclear whether he was trying to destroy Simon with his mind or if he was just perturbed about the situation in general. "Kid. I planned on drinking a bottle that could liquefy your insides and using that as fuel to steal a truck to get out of the arena, but I never got to because I woke up here. So how did you know that?" Out of everything that had happened thus far, this was the most disturbing. "Your little-- connection. You can't read my mind with that." Please god, confirm that.
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"Yeah, bro. The match you made me look like a total loser in."
His killcount had been a whopping goddamn one for that whole match, before Kable had shot out his shoulder cam and killed his only connection, which had left him completely in the dark about Kable's escape until the FBI had shown up at his door.
"How did I-- I was kinda right there, Kable. I watched you do that shit, which had been pretty gross man, and then next thing I know I'm being brought in by the FBI as an accomplice to your escape. It was kinda awesome, though they had no idea how to make a fucking pistachio butter sandwich."
Man, if he'd been able to read Kable's mind...Slayers would have become no challenge whatever. It would have been cool for about five minutes but, Simon liked to think they worked well enough together without such a brain mod, even if it were possible.
"You think if I could read your mind that I'd need to ask you so many questions? Which you haven't answered, I'll have you know."
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When you come across something unfathomable, something fucked up beyond all reason-- don't stop to sort it out. Don't try to make sense of it. Move past it. Focus.
That piece of advice, idle chatter though it may have been, had served him well during the war, for Scotch, for prison, for Slayers. This place--whatever it was-- it wasn't anything compared to that. He had to move past it.
"What questions were those?" He grated out, finally allowing his spinning mind to come to a rest. He met Simon's eyes again with a gaze that was focused, but no longer aggressive.
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But that could wait for when the shit going on right now made more sense.
"Those questions were, and I quote, 'What the hell are you doing here, man', which I believe has been sufficiently answered, and 'What the fuck happened to you', which has not."
Brat, thy name is Simon.
"So what happened when you got here, anyways?"
no subject
He cocked an eyebrow at Simon's response. "I..." he considered his answer for a long moment. At this point Simon was his only ally. It would be good for someone to have his half of the story. He responded in a voice that was made for rattling off quick details.
"I woke up, disoriented. Thought this was a trap set by Castle. New arena. Assumed... that I had woken up on a computer error. The first person that I found looked like a lab technician. I grabbed him, demanded to know where the exit was. I had the knife out to speed things along, but he still wasn't telling me anything. And then," he hesitated, a strange expression crossing his face for a second before he continued. "Then a little girl showed up. His daughter. I think she had a taser or something. She hit me once, I disengaged and fled." His tone remained smooth and matter of fact throughout. It almost made the encounter sound mundane. He wasn't much of a story teller to be sure.
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Trust him to zero in on that first, of all the details Kable had just told him. He actually preferred the unembellished facts over a long winded story, partially because it was not something he could see Kable doing any other way, and also because it didn't have any dramatics.
Adding dramatics was his job.
"I thought this might have been Castle too, or some fanboy trying to impress me into selling you in a new and fucked up way."
Implying shit like this had happened before. Which...it hadn't on this kind of scale, but man, your fans were all kinds of crazy, Kable. Just so you know.
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"Sell me?" Just. Incredulous.
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He was so used to seeing Kable as not only his I-Con, but as a group of stats, health, functionality and as the executor of his commands, and extension of his will, that it would take a while for him to move beyond it entirely.
"Yeah, dude. You wouldn't believe the offers I've gotten for you. There was this one set of twins with these amazing tits, who tried to lowball me for a hundred million euros, not that I'd have sold you anyways..."
Kable was priceless to him, dude.
no subject
"A hundred million--" And that was lowballing? He couldn't help but stare.
"Why would you turn down that much money?" A morbid question, maybe, but he was curious. That much money or more... the kid could be set for life. Instead he had chosen Tillm- Kable, and apparently even released him for their final match. It didn't make sense.
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If he'd wanted to, he could probably have made half a bil off of Kable easy, by the 26th match. But he had never even seriously considered it, because Kable was his, and therefore no one else could possibly offer him something else he'd want more. Money was predictable, tits could be faked, pussy came and went, and fame he'd earned on his own.
"It wasn't about the money. You weren't for sale dude. Period. Besides, all they wanted to do was fuck around with you and likely get you killed."
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