Aleksei Volkov ♠♠ (
thepupthatmatters) wrote in
houseofcards_rp2014-03-10 10:40 am
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[ota] aggressive normalcy
There's still a lot to learn.
But that's okay. He's starting to feel properly that it's okay. It's okay that he's still getting used to walking with a knife in his boot. It's okay that he's adjusting to which Fives to call by their name and which will all but slap him if he doesn't say 'sir.' It's okay that his greatest visible skill is an incredibly efficient knack for getting paperwork filed and delivered, and that the skill he's been progressing best at is classical piano.
Yes, the man he came here to find is an overwhelming force of nature. Yes, watching his father Challenge to Ten had absolutely sent him, briefly, through half a crisis. But that's okay too.
Because he's here. He's here, and here is the right place to be.
It's the right place to be while he works at filing cabinets. It's the right place to be while he steals mouthfuls in the kitchen and whispers in more comfortable languages than English with other former Outsiders. It's the right place to be while he gets his ass handed to him in the training fields and forces himself back up onto his feet.
And it's the right place to be while he steals out on an afternoon off to just skip rocks over the newly thawed lake. Because it's really nice to know that skipping rocks and throwing knives are both starting to feel equally normal.
But that's okay. He's starting to feel properly that it's okay. It's okay that he's still getting used to walking with a knife in his boot. It's okay that he's adjusting to which Fives to call by their name and which will all but slap him if he doesn't say 'sir.' It's okay that his greatest visible skill is an incredibly efficient knack for getting paperwork filed and delivered, and that the skill he's been progressing best at is classical piano.
Yes, the man he came here to find is an overwhelming force of nature. Yes, watching his father Challenge to Ten had absolutely sent him, briefly, through half a crisis. But that's okay too.
Because he's here. He's here, and here is the right place to be.
It's the right place to be while he works at filing cabinets. It's the right place to be while he steals mouthfuls in the kitchen and whispers in more comfortable languages than English with other former Outsiders. It's the right place to be while he gets his ass handed to him in the training fields and forces himself back up onto his feet.
And it's the right place to be while he steals out on an afternoon off to just skip rocks over the newly thawed lake. Because it's really nice to know that skipping rocks and throwing knives are both starting to feel equally normal.
no subject
"If it's-- not so different, why do people find it-- surprising that I'd want to come here?"
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"Maybe they think you're a little young to be out on your own."
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"How am I on my own?"
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"Mind you, the young men that drift in here alone tend to be trouble," he teased with a wink.
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His brow furrowed slightly, attention downcast as he turned back toward the older man.
"It just feels, if I died here? Someone would find me. And bury me. You know that feeling?"
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"Yes." He knew the feeling. That feeling was precisely why, for many years, he'd entertain fantasies of dying Outside and nobody would give a damn or even know that he'd lived and and cried and laughed and loved and died, all in what felt like a span of a breath.
"We'll take care of you. Dead or alive."
no subject
But it also was, apparently, the best thing to hear at a moment like this. The smile was brief, but briefly genuine.
"It's-- important. To know that." He moved to steal another ball of dough from the box rather than dropping to the stones again. "To know where-- people are. Yes?"
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"Speaking of knowing where people are, I think I should head back to work," he said with a sigh as he stood. Unfortunately he wasn't lazy enough to completely give up on doing any work for the rest of the day.
"I'll see you next week?"
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His nod was sharp, his own smile chipper enough.
"And every week after that."