diemwnt: (you know it's kinda hard)
Cadogan Thomas | Jack of Diamonds ([personal profile] diemwnt) wrote in [community profile] houseofcards_rp2013-11-29 06:40 pm

[ota] join jack and the boys; be in a band

The world gets small. That's the worst part.

The period of probation is good, really. Being away from work, sitting in the solitude of house arrest, makes the loss of interest in the rest of the world less damaging. Lets him work his way around to a normal sleep schedule again; get through the sharper periods of nightmares and into the dull sort of sleep he lives with generally. Gives him time to work on the shakiness in his hands and the way he jumps at tiny noises, to refocus on what's immediately before him rather than letting his mind skitter everywhere.

But the world gets small. The world stays small even when, with a firm slap on the wrist, he's let back into his office. The future sits on the end of his desk, barely extending to the end of the week.

He barely notices he's gone out to the gardens. Barely realizes he's bummed an actual cigarette off one of the kitchen Threes and settled in for a proper smoke.

Fifteen months was a good run. And the world is so small. And yes, the smoke entering his lungs spikes the pain of each breath at first, but the nicotine hit--real, proper, after all these months--is more than worth it, in a world that surely isn't going to last more than through the rounding of the next few days.

He'll drop the cigarette if approached, of course. He'll even pretend it was on purpose, and not the shock of tension at the sudden sound of another human being.
heartsandminds: (eyes right here)

[personal profile] heartsandminds 2013-12-05 03:05 am (UTC)(link)
"Eventually," Jo tells him. "You have to give it time." You had to give yourself time which was something, she'd often thought, that Diamonds in general and Cadogan in particular had never excelled at. It made her wonder what sort of woman she'd be if the Trents had raised her instead of the O'Neills.

"You have to focus on something else besides everything that hurts," she adds, "or it isn't ever going to ease. It just hurts more."
heartsandminds: (charms galore)

[personal profile] heartsandminds 2013-12-05 03:16 pm (UTC)(link)
She's seen first hand the sort of mess that can leave a person in. She'd had, in her hospital days, the responsibility of working with more than one soldier who'd returned from Iraq or Bosnia or Somalia having never processed the horrors...

And thus, had to try to process them all, on top of each other, and never really be able to.

Her smile is slight and her sigh is quiet before she tips her head at him.

"Because your mother would stop bringing me cookies," she says, "and I can't go without my weekly supply of butter and sugar. I'm a selfish woman sometimes, Cadogan Thomas."
heartsandminds: (worries and wonders)

[personal profile] heartsandminds 2013-12-05 07:36 pm (UTC)(link)
Others - many others, probably - wouldn't understand where those words come from. Most lucky people having so many things that they don't want their loved ones to worry over. So many compartments.

She and Cadogan have had very different lives - Jo would never describe hers as difficult - but they both have learned to slot things into areas. Things that are just theirs to shoulder; things that they can let other people in on. It's a reasonable enough thought.

The problem is when other people care about you.

"She loves you," Jo says. "She worries about you. She wants you to live a long, happy life. You'll always be her business, no matter how old you get. So will the things you do," she adds. "Especially the things you do that she thinks might hurt more than they help."
heartsandminds: (bit of a mess)

[personal profile] heartsandminds 2013-12-06 10:16 pm (UTC)(link)
She understands in the theoretical sense. She's been told that the men who don't care for themselves the way others do also happen to be the men who make the best soldiers, because there's little they won't do for the people they've thrown their loyalty to.

It takes her a moment to switch back to hands. She's done her best, and her best is very good, but there's no denying that BSL is a language she learned as an adult.

/No./

And that's all she says for a moment, just that simple sign.

/Will the cigarette give you what you need?/

That comes after a moment, the words as carefully chosen as if she spoke them out loud.
heartsandminds: (well that's interesting)

[personal profile] heartsandminds 2013-12-08 02:45 am (UTC)(link)
She makes a considering sound, almost like she's weighing and measuring him. But she's not looking at him while she does it.

/Are you going to try other things, after the cigarette helps some?/

Because it won't fix all that ails him. He knows that, doesn't he?
heartsandminds: (dark days ahead)

[personal profile] heartsandminds 2013-12-08 03:54 pm (UTC)(link)
She knows Cadogan will keep going. That doesn't worry her, at least not the way you'd think. What worries her is the idea that he won't stop, that he'll keeping until he can't any longer.

And by then, there may not be much left.

/I'll only ask you to consider making time./

As a friend.
heartsandminds: (fuck i'm adorable)

[personal profile] heartsandminds 2013-12-09 06:07 pm (UTC)(link)
It's helped, really, that they became friends over basic alcoholic drinks and a preference for sitting quietly with them. It's easier for her to turn off the professional opinion when she has a dark Belgian beer in her hand.

She doesn't, right now. And she's not wearing the dark jeans that signify off-duty, but instead the gray slacks that indicate she's stopped here on her way back from a client.

/Maybe just a little bit. But as your friend, too, if that helps./
heartsandminds: (dark days ahead)

[personal profile] heartsandminds 2013-12-13 04:52 pm (UTC)(link)
Knowing the value of silence is part of why she's good at her job. Not needing to speak to fill the air has always been part of who she is.

One could construe her hand touching his shoulder as her bracing herself to stand. It isn't, of course. It's the only gesture of comfort she can offer right now to a man who feels the walls closing in even out of doors.

She'll see him in one of their bars. Next time, she'll be the one to buy the first round.

Right now, she'll go distract his mother.