http://terranities.livejournal.com/ (
terranities.livejournal.com) wrote in
towerofanimus2011-09-27 10:52 pm
Sinking In
Who: Cain Knightlord and YOU
Where: Cafeteria
Format: Either is fine with me
Warnings: None
Cain was struggling.
They had been here for days now, eight now to be precise, and still they had come no closer to discovering a mission objective. His stomach had grown more knotted each day they awoke in those beds in that room, a rising sensation of undeniable truth - however insane it seemed. The logic that he had used to prove this was a simulation at the start, seemingly so incontrovertible, was slowly dissolving as time passed without change.
Firstly, their superiors would never have left them inside a simulation for eight days if they were making no headway. They would have been pulled free and reprimanded, perhaps even properly punished (though that was unlikely now they were adults), and sent back to their duties. A week was a long time on the colony, and there was no way that they both could have been spared for this long. Secondly, he had never seen such a variety of programs with such diverse and full personalities; they were well-rounded and independent in a way that simulated people never could be, and each time he met someone new it made the doubt grow.
Of course, he was sure that Abel would be having none of it. That if he told his brother that he was starting to consider the possibility of other worlds and a kidnapping tower, then Abel would have him restrained to the bed until psychiatric help could be brought. Either that, or he'd punch him and be done with it. And he wouldn't blame Abel if he did, this was absolutely ludicrous as a situation, and every time he thought about it logically, then his mind wanted to strangle itself for even contemplating that it could be true.
Torn, lost, confused; Cain had become more withdrawn as the days had gone on. Until it had culminated in a rather dejected blond man sat in the cafeteria, pushing food around on his plate without any interest in actually eating it. When he spoke, it was to nobody in particular, just exhaling his frustration to himself.
"...this can't be real. How can it be? How can--?"
[ooc: Open as an open thing, everyone welcome!]
Where: Cafeteria
Format: Either is fine with me
Warnings: None
Cain was struggling.
They had been here for days now, eight now to be precise, and still they had come no closer to discovering a mission objective. His stomach had grown more knotted each day they awoke in those beds in that room, a rising sensation of undeniable truth - however insane it seemed. The logic that he had used to prove this was a simulation at the start, seemingly so incontrovertible, was slowly dissolving as time passed without change.
Firstly, their superiors would never have left them inside a simulation for eight days if they were making no headway. They would have been pulled free and reprimanded, perhaps even properly punished (though that was unlikely now they were adults), and sent back to their duties. A week was a long time on the colony, and there was no way that they both could have been spared for this long. Secondly, he had never seen such a variety of programs with such diverse and full personalities; they were well-rounded and independent in a way that simulated people never could be, and each time he met someone new it made the doubt grow.
Of course, he was sure that Abel would be having none of it. That if he told his brother that he was starting to consider the possibility of other worlds and a kidnapping tower, then Abel would have him restrained to the bed until psychiatric help could be brought. Either that, or he'd punch him and be done with it. And he wouldn't blame Abel if he did, this was absolutely ludicrous as a situation, and every time he thought about it logically, then his mind wanted to strangle itself for even contemplating that it could be true.
Torn, lost, confused; Cain had become more withdrawn as the days had gone on. Until it had culminated in a rather dejected blond man sat in the cafeteria, pushing food around on his plate without any interest in actually eating it. When he spoke, it was to nobody in particular, just exhaling his frustration to himself.
"...this can't be real. How can it be? How can--?"
[ooc: Open as an open thing, everyone welcome!]

no subject
He doesn't seem moved by his brother's explanation. According to what he'd read between one of the other supposed 'survivors' and their brief discussion with an 'official' of sorts, people were pulled on the cusp of their world's destruction -- sometimes sooner, if they could manage it. If Cain and Abel were the only ones from their Mars, then the explanation could be that they had been stolen moments before that Mars had been destroyed. There would be no time to plant them or anyone else safely on Earth.
Did he buy it?
...He wasn't sure. His knee-jerk reaction was an immediate and thorough denial -- but the truth was, he had no idea what was real or not. The prospect that it could be... that he could believe any of this were real... meant he had to accept that all parts of it might be, as well.
And that scared the fucking shit out of him.
He rubs a hand over his face, annoyed, before waving him off. "This place is insane." From disembodied arms to the things they'd witnessed on various floors of the Tower, the entirety was just... beyond comprehension. The surreality of it all made it harder to stomach as reality.
no subject
But which parts were true was something he hadn't managed to figure out yet. He believed that they had been taken somehow here, but he didn't buy the multiple worlds or the apocalypse. Yet he couldn't figure out why the other prisoners were playing along, pretending to be from all different realities... it made no sense.
Heaving an irritated sigh, he scrubbed a hand through his hair before finally abandoning the tray of ice cream completely. "Insanity doesn't mean it's not reality."
no subject
His annoyance, his anger and irritation covering his fear, make the bleed of displeasure into blue eyes all the more obvious despite the mask of apathy he had hoped to adopt and upkeep. Abel stares at his brother, the chill almost tangible as his mood took a further downward turn through the tubes.
"What are we supposed to do?"
no subject
He thinks the most likely explanation is a rival scientific company, one that wasn't part of the UNASF and had no access to the advanced cloning technology. The ruined world and other participants (likely actors), were probably a mind game to demoralise and deter them from attempting escape.
"Until then, keep ourselves out of trouble."
no subject
It seemed there were no easy answers... and no easy out, by default. Had he expected Cain to have something? He'd certainly hoped.
no subject
"Don't look at me like that." He sighed, flicking a bit of ice cream at Abel to try and pull the mood back from where it had settled in rock bottom.
no subject
"I'm not content to sit around and wait for something to happen."
no subject
He rubbed a finger under the collar at his throat, feeling uncomfortable still with the statement that it made - lesser, inferior, animal.
"We've worked on enough different technologies that, pooling our skills and with enough research, we should be able to get these off."
no subject
"...we should explore some more of the tower. Maybe we can find tools or the area they're built in."
no subject
He would prefer Abel to work on the collars, his brother had always been more technologically minded and security systems were his expert area.
"You focus on the collars, I want these off us."
no subject
"Then I'll see what I can find."
no subject
"I know you'll figure it out."
Lifting to his feet, he gathered up several dinner plates and turned for the door.
"I'm going map-making, I'll see you later."
no subject
Abel's eyes follow his brother as Cain lifts to his feet, something perplexed in his expression before it's buried under the familiarity of an apathetic mask, and he gives a dismissive wave.
"Yeah..."
A hesitant pause, before the Commander is drawing upright, as well.
"...be careful, Cain."
no subject
"You know me, I'm always careful."
So he says, almost dropping his pile of plates. It was an act, of course, he wasn't genuinely that clumsy, but the charade was designed to make Abel feel better.
no subject
...Or even simply his older brother.
He turns for the opposite exit of the cafeteria, giving a wave of farewell over his shoulder as he retreats to begin his search for clues to the collar's operation in earnest.