Archie Kennedy (
simplestgift) wrote2011-03-14 05:25 pm
Seven Bells: [ACTION/WRITTEN] Hat Day.
[Citizens of Luceti may see Archie Kennedy wandering around with a new hat today. It looks a little like something a magician would pull a rabbit out of, but he seems to be enjoying it. He'll be around town today--the library and grocery store during the day, and Good Spirits in the evening. In the afternoon, he'll sit at the fountain to pen a few words.]
I believe morale might improve if we had some sort of goodbye ceremony for those who were returned home. Not a funeral, mind you, just an occasion to remember them, celebrate their return, and hope to join them soon. Perhaps once a month or so, for everyone who left during the month. It's the little things that help one cope, sometimes.
Also, who left a note under my door? I'm afraid I can't read it, or indeed tell if it was even meant for me. I live in Building One, in the first flat on the first floor.
I believe morale might improve if we had some sort of goodbye ceremony for those who were returned home. Not a funeral, mind you, just an occasion to remember them, celebrate their return, and hope to join them soon. Perhaps once a month or so, for everyone who left during the month. It's the little things that help one cope, sometimes.
Also, who left a note under my door? I'm afraid I can't read it, or indeed tell if it was even meant for me. I live in Building One, in the first flat on the first floor.

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I...I'm a sailor, Jilly.
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[its' why she'd picked the song in the first place...the way she'd picked the fiddle music from their discussions and the way the third tape, settled off to the side, was opera. Because she'd wanted him to enjoy it, at least a little. But maybe it was the way his melancholy was such a contrast to the face he usually presented to everyone. She didn't want to add to it]
You asked me to paint a ship on your wall, remember. [it's light, almost teasing, but her eyes are still worried]
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Promise?
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Reinserting the cassette in the slot, she'll start the music again at the point where she'd left off. There are a few stops and starts as she finds the right place, and then Dust in the Wind begins to play]
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There's just one more...a last note she needs to end on before switching to something new. There's silence as she does her best to gauge how long to fastforward before playing new. Something a little more hopeful]
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Stop it. Please.
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...I'm sorry.
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[Something he used to want to tell Horatio, even though back then, he sort of had been.
But instead of Horatio, he has this tiny, dark-haired woman sitting beside him, trying to bring him joy through music even though he hadn't known her three months ago. Three months ago, when none of Luceti had existed and he had. The time between January and now speeds up to a pace he can't even fathom, and suddenly he has no idea where the time has gone. He's trying very, very hard to love the life he's been given as a gift when he wants to have the old one back more than anything, and waiting until a friend who may never come arrives to cry instead of trusting anyone else with his tears. Even now, he's holding back, turning away in shame at his display when Jilly has been nothing but kind and understanding.]
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I never thought you were. I still don't.
[He'd faced so much. Death. The cost of his reputation among the men he'd valued so highly. The loss of his best friend. She couldn't think less of him for crying at that]
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When he speaks, his voice is so low that it's almost a grunt.]
Most would. Most have.
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I can't do this, Jilly. [It's not a plea, just a statement.]
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[softly] Would you like me to go?
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[It's spoken quietly but firmly, and he briefly meets her eyes. It finally strikes him--as a man unaccustomed to being alone, the days spent in his apartment are dreadfully quiet.]
No. Stay, please. I meant...I don't know what I meant. [He rubs his eyes, wishing he had a handkerchief now that the tears had abated.] I've tried to accept this. A new life. Tried not to ruin it, tried to make the best of it, but...I don't want it. I want to go back, and I'll never go back. And I don't understand why--I have everything here I should want. Aside from the infrequent experiment, everything here is perfect.
...It just isn't home.
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And, really, she's not sure that she can offer anything else, besides an ear and a shoulder. She doesn't have the answers, either]
It's not perfect. Because it is perfect. We made lives for ourselves, back home. We worked and earned and built relationships. Here...we can only do the last one.
[shaking her head] It's valuable. Everything we do here...it still means something. [she didn't care if they would forget it later or not. It still mattered] But it's not....right.
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You Americans. You're like the French Republicans, with your liberty and equality. I was eleven when I first began serving in the navy after hearing how badly I wanted to from my grandfather, and after that...
[He shakes his head softly.] After that, the rest of my life was set in stone. Once I was a midshipman, I could never leave, no matter the tyrant I served under, unless I deserted and risked being caught and hanged. Sometimes I believe my entire life was nothing more than the wish fulfillment of an old man who wanted one boy in his family who could understand him. I wasn't pressed, I wasn't forced, but I don't think I quite made it for myself, either.
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