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trans_92011-09-04 11:24 pm
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An Unexploded Shell Inside a Cell [Open]
She thought her life would be different by now, but she's a prisoner again. Voluntary, she guesses, which makes it a little bit different than the first time. At least she can blink on her own this time. Not that she's using her body to do much good.
Ironically, she almost always looked better when she was a more total prisoner. Without her makeup and hair clips and changes of clothes to arrange herself into some approximation of health, without even a mirror to confirm her suspicions, she looks a wreck. Dark circles line her reddened eyes; her hair is unbrushed and falls in tangled clumps over her face; chapped, bloodied lips and fingernails bitten down to the flesh speak to her uneasy transition back into captivity.
Eva's given up all attempts to look 'okay'. She ripped a man's face open with her bare fingers. She's been a long road away from 'okay' for a while now, but she spent too long mistaking her anger and stubbornness for strength and resilience to recognize it. She's wised up now.
She really wants a drink right now. Instead she has some books - selected poems by Pablo Neruda and an anthology of poetry by women poets in the Andes - and a pillow and blanket. She's curled up on the cot with the former book in her hand, but drifting in and out of sleep. Her breath comes lazy and heavy as she alternately reads, dreams, and watches the door to the brig with heavy-lidded eyes, looking for nothing.
Ironically, she almost always looked better when she was a more total prisoner. Without her makeup and hair clips and changes of clothes to arrange herself into some approximation of health, without even a mirror to confirm her suspicions, she looks a wreck. Dark circles line her reddened eyes; her hair is unbrushed and falls in tangled clumps over her face; chapped, bloodied lips and fingernails bitten down to the flesh speak to her uneasy transition back into captivity.
Eva's given up all attempts to look 'okay'. She ripped a man's face open with her bare fingers. She's been a long road away from 'okay' for a while now, but she spent too long mistaking her anger and stubbornness for strength and resilience to recognize it. She's wised up now.
She really wants a drink right now. Instead she has some books - selected poems by Pablo Neruda and an anthology of poetry by women poets in the Andes - and a pillow and blanket. She's curled up on the cot with the former book in her hand, but drifting in and out of sleep. Her breath comes lazy and heavy as she alternately reads, dreams, and watches the door to the brig with heavy-lidded eyes, looking for nothing.
no subject
And as much as she knows her son will be scared and ashamed of what she did, she also knows he'll know the strength it took to take responsibility and surrender herself to captivity. And he'll know that she's a little better than she was five years ago, when she was first freed, when even being caught in traffic felt like such a trap she'd lash out and break windows. Right now, this is the last good example she feels she can set.
"This is a temporary stay in the brig. Two weeks, maximum, depending on how we figure time works here." She bites her lip until blood pools at her teeth. "And I don't know what happens after that."
She can plan to take herself out of combat situations, but despite her trigger temper she knows she's generally more of an asset than a liability. Staying away would be hard for her. She can give herself a goal, like coordinating and protecting younger members. Maybe she'll do that.
But she doesn't appreciate Daniel's attempts to rehabilitate her, as if she's a project to be worked on. A delicate excavation of damaged debris to find that good that must lurk beneath the surface. She knows she's good. She also knows, now in crystal clarity, that she's twisted and violent and unwell. It occurs to her that maybe Daniel needs to hold onto her good more for his sake than just for hers. Maybe he needs to convince himself his first impressions of her weren't all wrong, or that if she, the brutal basketcase shell of a host can be recovered, his wife can. Or maybe none of that matters.
no subject
Daniel winced as she bit her lip. Even from here, he could see blood staining her teeth.
"Stop." Daniel added belatedly, changing it from a demand: "Please."
The last time he'd told her that, and he'd been more polite about it then, she'd whirled at him, but things were different from that shore leave. They weren't exactly strangers anymore. Daniel was past the point where he was going to shut up if she told him to anyway.
Didn't know what happens next or didn't want to think that far ahead? They couldn't possibly account for every single situation that might come up. Eva had no problems turning someone into a living punching bag, and Daniel was almost certain this wasn't going to be the last of it if they just left it. He had to get her to understand it. "Ignoring this isn't going to make this all go away. You know that, right?"
no subject
For once, she does exactly what Daniel tells her, with no argument or reluctance. She dabs the blood off her chin with the corner of her blanket.
"What would you have me do? I'm already seeing Dr. Samson on a regular basis - do you think if I bump it to twice a week that's actually going to change anything? Do you think I would stay this way if I knew some way out of it? I have a child to take care of, I have a husband who'll come back any moment, I have duties on this ship. I have plenty of reason to need to have my head on right, so it's not for lack of effort that I'm like this!"
no subject
"I'm not saying it's lack of effort," Daniel corrected. "I'm saying you're trying to avoid the issue. It's like treating all the symptoms but not going after the problem," He winced, realizing it wasn't the greatest analogy because he wasn't that kind of doctor. "What I'm trying to say is that the problem's still there. It's going to be there when you get out of this cell. Maybe it's time for a new approach or something."
Eva acted like quantity, not quality, was enough to do the trick. Like she was filling a quota. Daniel didn't know how Dr. Samson did things, but if things weren't working, why keep hammering at it the same way? Maybe it was time for a new approach, a new angle. The problem was Daniel didn't know what that angle was, and he certainly wasn't qualified to have control of someone's mental health.
no subject
She doesn't think Daniel knows. Why would he? He's an archaeologist. It's so easy to stand at the outside and say that there's a problem, but to actually fix it? It's like a Gordian knot you can't take a knife to.
So why would she look to him now to tell her what to do, except that she doesn't know what to tell herself? The last time she took charge of a situation, she made bad calls, bloody calls, and now she's here. That was part of why she was so easily incensed by the cultist. She'd wanted to assert that she was in total control of the situation and he kept denying her that one thing, and she lost control of it all.
"You don't know what to do with me, Daniel. No one does. No one ever did back home, either. We shuffled the hosts off into asylums and therapy groups and special schools for the children and cut their funding as soon as we thought they'd be fine. Set time tables for them to get jobs and have psychological evaluations. But never once did anyone know what to do with us."
no subject
He watched her wordlessly. His fingers restlessly drummed out a two-beat rhythm in fours against the bar as his brain raced, trying to see some way to help. She was right. He didn't know what to do with her. Daniel wasn't sure what to do with most of the people he worked with, and that was on a good day.
"No, I don't," Daniel had to admit. He was more at home in his office or some ruin or tomb, dirty, arms deep in bones, artifacts, tagging and cataloging, surrounding himself with dead civilizations or trying to form relations with newly discovered ones.
He didn't know if he could call her a friend anymore. Not that friendships came easy to him in the first place. Acquaintances, those were a piece of cake. People you might say "hi" to, discuss a new theory about Tlaxcallan warfare or this Badari figurine that just got unearthed. People you didn't talk to outside of the hallway or work. Friends were harder. Daniel was never much of a social butterfly.
Whatever Eva was, or had been, to him, Daniel didn't know if he'd ever fully feel at ease around her again. Even if she was troubled, she still tortured someone and enjoyed it, even used him to get to the guy. But she did need help. Daniel didn't need to be friends with someone to want to help. "But that doesn't mean I'm going to give up on you."
Even if Eva sounded like she didn't see the point after the cell.
no subject
She would have called him a friend. She liked to think that she was worthy of such friends, normal people from the real world, or at least, as normal as anyone who speaks at least ten dead languages is. Like she didn't have to surround herself with warriors and survivors and the deeply-damaged to find an easy balance.
But if anything, now she can only see the gulf between her and Daniel. Between his idealism and belief in human good, and her history of violence so extensive that torture and imprisonment feel more normal to her than the alternative. And she knows she can never get to the other side again.
He should have been her friend. She doesn't know what he is now. What she's made of their relationship.
"I'm sorry. For all of it." The library, the pancakes, the sound of cartilage collapsing under her fingers. "They attacked us in our home and I wanted to...I'm sorry."
no subject
He could accept the apology but he also didn't see what good it did. It didn't make things right between them. At the end of the day, Eva had flipped out and tortured a man, and the man was dead. There were underlying issues, things Daniel had seen or figured out since XaXing, but he'd honestly believed she started to move forward. Not that it would ever come to this.
Some part of Daniel wanted to try again, the part that took knocks and kept on going, and he was willing to give it a shot until she continued. At least she didn't finish her sentence. Daniel knew where it was going even if she stopped herself. She might be saying she was sorry, but she still tried to justify why it was perfectly okay to go after the man the way she did. Some part of her didn't think she was in the wrong.
There was only so far Daniel could get pushed and Eva quickly found it. Disappointed and frustrated, he only shook his head at the aborted excuse. He didn't take the peace offering. "I meant what I said. Two weeks. Think about it?"
no subject
Not that her word must be much good to him now, she realizes. She may not have lied to him but she certainly misled him when getting the cultist alone. It's that misdirection she regrets more than the act of violence. Using people to accomplish her goals. She should be better than that. That's Yeerk behavior.
She realizes something.
"You think I'm here to martyr myself, don't you?" There's something icy and hurt in her voice. If being called crazy (in lighter terms) made her feel slapped than this is something else entirely, some awful miscalculation of her character that suddenly makes her feel so much more separated from Daniel than by just cell bars or experience.
She's here because there's no way to make amends with a dead man. She's here because she knew it was inevitable and wanted to go in on her own terms - even if that only meant ending up in a cell faster. And she's here because she knows that owning your actions is not only the example you set for your child, but the single greatest obstacle to recovery for hosts. But to punish herself and put her suffering on display, like it's a badge of honor to be admired by the public?
No. Never.
no subject
Removing his glasses for a moment, Daniel rubbed at his eyes. He wished he had some answers for her. He really did. But he didn't even begin to know how to approach the urge to lash out or inflict pain on someone like she did, not when the concept was so foreign to him that he had a hard time imagining it from anyone else. Naive, maybe. Probably. It wasn't like the universe was always a friendly place. The Goa'uld and some Jaffa got their kicks out of doing what Eva did. So did some humans back on Earth.
More than ever, Daniel wished Jack was here. Not that he thought Jack would exactly open up per say, but he'd been in a very dark place before, back when he'd been ready to take his one way ticket to Abydos with a nuclear bomb under an arm. That and he had those years in Black Ops that he refused to talk about. He must have seen so many things, so many people. Jack would know what to say. The Colonel might not be entirely sensitive or comfortable spilling his guts, but the man had a talent for not letting anyone have the space or peace and quiet to drag themselves down.
Daniel put his glasses back on. He blinked at her, baffled. "No. That's not what I'm thinking at all." What was the point? It wasn't like you wanted to broadcast you tortured someone, especially if you had a son. Daniel couldn't imagine her spilling it all over the omnicomms, and Daniel certainly hadn't. Who else knew she was in here?
no subject
She's looking at him the same way she did that day in the library. She's looking for him to direct her, make a decision for her, because the decisions she's made can't possibly hold up to scrutiny. How is she supposed to make choices in her life when the past has proven that they're the wrong ones? They got her infested and reinfested, and it was bad enough that that was happening to her, but her choices have inflicted pain on others too.
And it occurs to her that Daniel was much different than her even before Stacy, even before the war. There's something about him that's inherently sweet-natured, while she knows that somehow, there's something in her that has always been sadistic. Something that was spiteful, that liked power even in small scenarios. The ability to make a threat and back it up. She was like that even as a child. Maybe it's been in her all along.
Then again, she can't see herself ripping someone's face off fifteen years ago. But she can't really see herself that far back anyway. Her life as it is now started twelve years ago, and everything before that is a dim tale with other people who share her same name.
"Good. Because I'm not. I've spent the last five years of my life avoiding that."