Donquixote Rosinante (
callada) wrote in
ximilialog2022-09-26 07:57 pm
The night comes, your stars are missing
CHARACTERS: Rosinante, open
LOCATION: Around the Ximilia
DATE: Late September after Law's disappearance
CONTENT: Losing one's best friend in the face of an uncertain future is hard
WARNINGS: brooding
It's not that unusual to wake up and find Law already out of the room rather than curled up under blankets. He's an even earlier riser than Rosinante is, and Rosinante's habit of cocooning them both in a sound barrier on the station when sleeping means Law can get up, rummage around in the closet, make coffee, and whatever else he wants to do without the noise being a problem.
It's only later he realizes he didn't smell any coffee that morning, when thinking back on it. After swinging by the infirmary to find Law never came in. After checking the common room, the sunshine room, and then, reluctantly, with a sinking feeling in his stomach, the contacts list on the Ximilia network.
Unlisted. Gone.
He keeps to himself and their room most of that first day. Smokes more cigarettes than he really needs to, but he's not really hungry enough to leave. He organizes their things. Punches the wall hard enough to split a knuckle. Cries like he's eight years old again, until he gets his head under control and lights another cigarette. Hopes nobody heard that thunk from the punch out in the hallway, as he gets a bandage from the bathroom.
But as good as he is at being a complete hermit, he doesn't want to be, not around this group. It would stand out too obvious as different from how he's been for months and invite too many questions. So the next day, he drags himself to the mess hall right after showering, digs around in the kitchen until he finds someone's open-to-all leftover rice, and dumps some disparate ingredients on top of it just for general nutrition before sitting down with his bowl to eat breakfast.
His elbow knocks his water glass off the table, and it shatters. He flinches, but doesn't get up right away to do anything about it.
Eventually, he winds up in the simulation room. The simulation runs all day, unless someone stops him and insists they need some time in there too. Inside, a lavish study full of books, portraits, and velvet-covered chairs awaits - though a more careful inspection will notice that the portraits cover cracks in the walls, the wood floor is stained and stressed, and the furniture doesn't quite match, as if assembled piecemeal rather than acquired as a set. A large window behind a table looks out onto a trash heap that stretches all the way to the shoreline.
Bizarrely, an open door on one end of the study connects to what must be the interior of a ship, for it rocks in the waves visible outside the windows. In here, between upended treasure chests and scattered sheets of paper, amidst a cloud of his own smoke, Rosinante paces with his hands in his pockets.
"Where the hell would he have it," he mutters under his breath - and a quick glance toward anyone entering shows he's clearly not oblivious that he has wound up with a visitor.
LOCATION: Around the Ximilia
DATE: Late September after Law's disappearance
CONTENT: Losing one's best friend in the face of an uncertain future is hard
WARNINGS: brooding
It's not that unusual to wake up and find Law already out of the room rather than curled up under blankets. He's an even earlier riser than Rosinante is, and Rosinante's habit of cocooning them both in a sound barrier on the station when sleeping means Law can get up, rummage around in the closet, make coffee, and whatever else he wants to do without the noise being a problem.
It's only later he realizes he didn't smell any coffee that morning, when thinking back on it. After swinging by the infirmary to find Law never came in. After checking the common room, the sunshine room, and then, reluctantly, with a sinking feeling in his stomach, the contacts list on the Ximilia network.
Unlisted. Gone.
He keeps to himself and their room most of that first day. Smokes more cigarettes than he really needs to, but he's not really hungry enough to leave. He organizes their things. Punches the wall hard enough to split a knuckle. Cries like he's eight years old again, until he gets his head under control and lights another cigarette. Hopes nobody heard that thunk from the punch out in the hallway, as he gets a bandage from the bathroom.
But as good as he is at being a complete hermit, he doesn't want to be, not around this group. It would stand out too obvious as different from how he's been for months and invite too many questions. So the next day, he drags himself to the mess hall right after showering, digs around in the kitchen until he finds someone's open-to-all leftover rice, and dumps some disparate ingredients on top of it just for general nutrition before sitting down with his bowl to eat breakfast.
His elbow knocks his water glass off the table, and it shatters. He flinches, but doesn't get up right away to do anything about it.
Eventually, he winds up in the simulation room. The simulation runs all day, unless someone stops him and insists they need some time in there too. Inside, a lavish study full of books, portraits, and velvet-covered chairs awaits - though a more careful inspection will notice that the portraits cover cracks in the walls, the wood floor is stained and stressed, and the furniture doesn't quite match, as if assembled piecemeal rather than acquired as a set. A large window behind a table looks out onto a trash heap that stretches all the way to the shoreline.
Bizarrely, an open door on one end of the study connects to what must be the interior of a ship, for it rocks in the waves visible outside the windows. In here, between upended treasure chests and scattered sheets of paper, amidst a cloud of his own smoke, Rosinante paces with his hands in his pockets.
"Where the hell would he have it," he mutters under his breath - and a quick glance toward anyone entering shows he's clearly not oblivious that he has wound up with a visitor.

no subject
she finds him in his room, poking around the bathroom. she'd knocked lightly and peeked her head in, easily spotting the large man as he withdraws from the smaller room. the lights on the station can be so unforgiving, highlighting red, puffy eyes all too easily.
the smile she gives him is small, understanding. ]
May I?
[ she gestures towards his bleeding hand. normally, she wouldn't insist... but the lack of a certain presence in the room feels overbearing, even to her. ]
no subject
Yeah. Thanks. You'll do a better job of it.
[Which may or may not actually be true, given the sheer number of times he's had to wrap his own injuries. As long as nothing is broken, it's not hard. But part of him does appreciate someone checking in on him, even if the rest wants nothing to do with anyone right now. The former part is the one that knows he needs people, even if he's very good at acting like he doesn't.]
no subject
her hold on his hand is gentle as she looks it over, begins the first few steps of cleaning the wound. ]
...Is this about Law?
no subject
I don't understand. He was right here.
[He glances at the weird frankenstein of a bed, multiple mattresses fused together by Law's power to form something big enough for both of them to share. Even now they continued to sleep like they had while traveling, when Law was small enough to fit under his arm.]
no subject
I know you two were close.
[ but she also knows she's only barely aware of how close. ]
If you... If you ever feel lonely. I hope you know you can reach out to me.
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
sorry for the late!!
He'd huffed in frustration when he'd realized. Time can be so. Agonizingly. S l o w.
Still. It meant that the only real answer to wasting time was the simulation room. And when he steps in and has a fascinated glance around, he doesn't have any complaints about poking about in someone else's simulation, because it's new. Because that newness is even better than whatever he might have loaded back into the room's programming.
(He doesn't think he wants familiarity right now.)
Well. He'll poke about with their permission, anyway. He clears his throat and sort of waves to get Rosinante's attention. ]
Ooh, well, this is nice. Hello. I hope it's all right that I'm here.
nbd you're just trying to match 11's username!!
I don't mind. Maybe you can help. If you had a land-based office as well as a private quarters on a ship, where would you keep documents so sensitive that even I haven't found them?
[He gestures with a bandaged hand to one room first, through the door, then the second, the room around him. Rooms he's thought up based on the best of his knowledge, which clearly must be missing some crucial element, and yet he's torn through them like a tall, leggy hurricane.
It's quite possible that the help he actually needs is not the sort involving the finding of potentially nonexistent documents.]
lmao weeps it's too real
[ With renewed confidence in his place aboard this ship, the Doctor steps forward and considers. ]
If we're in a simulation you've thought of yourself, suppose the documents ought to be wherever you want them to? Or where you know you've seen them last?
[ Unfortunately his general approach to looking for lost things would sadly look a little too reminiscent of the present situation anyway, with papers and boxes and jars and those little metal clips strewn all over the place. It's unfortunate. ]
Something about 'hidden in plain sight'?
no subject
[Right? Or maybe he really did just overlook things. Tapping his chin, he paces past the Doctor and back into the first office. He already thought of false bottoms in the drawers, of secret compartments in the seats of the slightly tatty-at-the-edges chairs. Those things are obvious to him in that they're so standard. The insides of books, with pages replaced, encrypted notes tucked away - that's also standard, but a real pain to dig through, and perhaps that's one thing he can check once home.]
These places belong to my brother. I'm missing something. I'm - I probably won't even remember trying to work this out once I get back, but maybe if a pattern sinks in deeply enough, it'll stick.
[Shaking his head, he plants his hands on the desk in front of him, tapping at its surface, then looks over at the Doctor, small among all the furniture sized for someone just a little taller than even himself.]
no subject
[ The Doctor stands where he is, back straight, hands behind him, linked at the fingers. He sees this magnificent simulation Rosinante has created otherwise painstakingly, and he couldn't really say one way or another how this particular simulation works. It's all a matter of the mind, and while his method might be the one that works on the TARDIS (Well. Sometimes. Depending on the TARDIS' mood, he supposes) the rules have proven themselves to be quite tossable ever since he arrived here.
Exciting for someone who hasn't experienced so much newness in his 2,100 years ... but also a bit frustrating for someone with an ego the size of his own.
Still. None of that seems to be the point of it all when he studies his friend, all colourful and oftentimes jubilant and serious all at once, just one wonderful piece of the puzzle out of place amongst the image surrounding him. ]
You all right, Rosinante?
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
no subject
Now, Sam's not so much a neat freak that he thinks any minor mishap in the kitchen or mess hall needs to be immediately rectified. Glass might be somewhat of the exception there. But even then, his worry shifts away from the shards and onto the fact that Rosinante isn't moving pretty damn fast.
So after just standing and watching for a moment or two, Sam grabs a dustpan moves closer. Keeps his movements quiet and deliberate - nothing hectic, because he doesn't know Rosinante is just spacing out, or if this is something worse. Clears his throat.
"On your left."
Softly, and with a small smile to himself, 'cause that's a gentle callback right there, to another tall, strong, tortured blonde Sam cares for. That one is beyond his reach. he hopes Rosinante isn't.
And with the shards carefully gotten rid of, Sam lowers himself into the seat opposite Rosinante without asking. Looks him up and down, then reaches out a hand and tugs on the edge of the bandage on Rosinante's hand.
"Marta's work?"
no subject
He doesn't get much eaten between then and when Sam joins him, and he lets his hand drift slightly to the side at that tug.
"Yeah," he gives the short reply. It isn't Sam's work, obviously, and well... Not too many people in the infirmary at this point other than him and Marta, are there? The table continues to receive his bitter gaze.
"Punched a wall," he offers, just so Sam doesn't have to ask.
no subject
So it might not be the same. But he'd like to understand he gets it at least somewhat.
"It can help, putting the hurt somewhere physical." He moves his hand a little, places it over Rosinante's after a moment, warm and solid. Careful not to put pressure on what's under the bandage, though. "Did it?"
no subject
That moment of blind anger had to be taken out on something, and pillows can't take enough of a beating to make it worthwhile. The sting afterward reminded him of how stupid an idea it was, but his life has seen its share of dumber decisions.
"He was here last night. If he meant for the orbs to send him home, he would've told me first," he says, temporarily having forgotten he didn't actually mention Law at all. His thoughts are so centered around him that he's skipped the middle part, where you actually say what you're thinking about first before carrying on with the rest of it.
He realizes a second later, though, but decides Sam will work it out, or ask if he has to.
no subject
His thumb tracks lightly over Rosinante's knuckles. Slowly, not at all erratic. It's meant to be grounding.
"Tell me." About Law. About Law and Rosinante. About what this feels like. About what he needs. About anything and everything really. "I got you."
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
Mess hall
Rosinante hasn't moved to pick up the glass, and his expression is listless and lost.
Something has happened.
Immediately scrapping the idea of food, Wei Wuxian makes his way over to his friend and kneels to take care of the glass.]
I was already up, I've got this. [He offers Rosinante a brief smile and then picks up the rest of the glass. He should probably take a broom to it later to make sure he gets all the small pieces, but for now he just tosses what he can and then slides into a seat across from Rosinante.]
Do you want to talk about it? [He doesn't mean the glass. He might not know what "it" is, but he knows that there is an "it."]
Or I can tell you some more about my world. [If he would prefer a distraction to talking about his feelings. Wei Wuxian certainly wouldn't blame him.]
no subject
Does he want a distraction? Yes, but there's not much that would succeed in actually distracting him much, he can tell. Any words will go in one ear and out the other, and if he's going to hear something he ought to find interesting to remember, he should probably wait until he's capable of focusing on it.
Does he want to talk about it, though?
He rubs at the bridge of his nose, then lets his hand flop back down onto the tabletop.]
Law's gone. Just this morning. Trying to... figure out what to do next.
no subject
I'm sorry, Rosinante. I know he's very important to you. [And despite how drunk he was that night, he remembers their conversation about birthdays. Remembers what they both let slip. Rosinante won't be seeing his friend again unless he somehow returns to the Ximilia.]
Would you like to talk about him?
no subject
[There's a certain firmness to his jaw, a determination in his eyes, that suggests he's actually thought about doing exactly that. This isn't quite the same as an empty threat made out of despair.
But his fist, unconsciously clenched, relaxes as soon as he's said it, and he shakes his head.]
I just want to know he's all right.
no subject
With what you told me about him—all the things he became, his strength and his bravery. His determination and how he became exactly what he wanted to be, I'm sure he is alright. You gave him everything he needed to be alright.
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
no subject
What happened? Some kind of mass glitch? He can't really dwell too long, because there's no answer he'll get out of obsessing. Instead he moves to find Rosi, and eventually finds him in the simulation room. Biting his cheek, he considers how to warn the other he's got a visitor. Ultimately, he settles on:
"If you're looking for a pack of cigarettes, you've already got one lit up."
Pretty lame joke. It's all he's got.
no subject
To which Rosinante snorts, and exhales a plume of smoke. Yes, he does have one lit up, doesn't he? Probably his tenth already today. Or twentieth. He doesn't keep count.
"You have keen observation skills," he replies, deadpan, then retrieves the cigarette from his mouth to hold between his fingers. "No, I'm looking for something I probably won't find. Today has a pattern, I guess."
no subject
"... What're you looking for?" He reaches up to adjust his glasses, frowning. "I've got four eyes, so six is better than two, or whatever."
no subject
He gestures to both rooms, one with each hand.
"Looking for something that isn't here. That's the hard part. If you had notes you didn't want anyone to find, where would you put them? Land or sea?"
Start there, he figures. Keep them in an office where they can't be sunk, but could be stolen when away? Or risk keeping them on the ship, knowing fewer people would potentially have access?
no subject
He imagines he's probably not gonna be much good, but like hell is he gonna just give in without trying to offer his aid. He's way too bullheaded, anyway.
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)