Murphy Pendleton (
yardbird) wrote in
ataraxionlogs2012-08-12 06:19 pm
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
![[community profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/community.png)
letting the days go by, into silent water [open]
CHARACTERS: Murphy Pendleton and you.
LOCATION: Anywhere. This is pretty much a free-for-all of CR.
WARNINGS: Insert the usual Silent Hill disclaimer here.
SUMMARY: Insomnia hits. Friendly neighborhood convict takes a little stroll.
He couldn't sleep.
Granted, this was nothing new and exciting. If nothing else, it was fucking tedious. His brief spell of excessive sleeping habits died real fast after the jump wired Murphy up all over again.
It wasn't always this bad. In fact, he used to sleep a fair bit. There wasn't much else to do during his alone time in prison, so it had been the only resort next to going stir-crazy with boredom.
Even with Anne in the same room these days, Murphy still felt the nagging urge to escape the closing walls of hiscell bedroom. Unlike Ryall, he could at least work off his restlessness by stretching his legs. There were still places that he hadn't yet seen, grounds that he hadn't yet covered. He could scratch this itch. He could.
So he just wandered for awhile. Aimlessly, as usual. He almost felt dazed. But it was good to be out. Not free, not safe, though close enough to settle on the fact that his present situation proved to be more favorable than where he had been coming from, in ways.
That was just sad.
Murphy, this is your life right now. Take a good long look at it.
LOCATION: Anywhere. This is pretty much a free-for-all of CR.
WARNINGS: Insert the usual Silent Hill disclaimer here.
SUMMARY: Insomnia hits. Friendly neighborhood convict takes a little stroll.
He couldn't sleep.
Granted, this was nothing new and exciting. If nothing else, it was fucking tedious. His brief spell of excessive sleeping habits died real fast after the jump wired Murphy up all over again.
It wasn't always this bad. In fact, he used to sleep a fair bit. There wasn't much else to do during his alone time in prison, so it had been the only resort next to going stir-crazy with boredom.
Even with Anne in the same room these days, Murphy still felt the nagging urge to escape the closing walls of his
So he just wandered for awhile. Aimlessly, as usual. He almost felt dazed. But it was good to be out. Not free, not safe, though close enough to settle on the fact that his present situation proved to be more favorable than where he had been coming from, in ways.
That was just sad.
Murphy, this is your life right now. Take a good long look at it.
no subject
But he'd given her a straight answer; she owed him one in return.
"Place'll do that to you, huh? Of course, some days I think going without is better than the nightmares."
no subject
He was totally the kind of idiot that would stick his hand over the stove to check if it was on, get burned, and keep repeating the same mistake long afterward.
"Mn... You, too, huh? Guess I shouldn't be surprised." Even though Murphy felt regrettably sympathetic that Heather would share a similar shadow that often plagued in sleep. He couldn't even remember the last time he had a decent night's rest.
no subject
Well, there it was. And if he ate up her stash... well, she was getting better with medbay anyway.
no subject
Not bad. It didn't sound bad. Though actually getting to sleep was never so much an issue, as it was what he dealt with during and after waking up. It didn't help with the paranoia that he might not wake up in the same place where he went to sleep, or that there might be a slim chances that things might -- change. Surely he wasn't the only one.
Eventually, he just gesticulated dismissively with his hand. "Thanks, uh. I appreciate the offer, but... I've got other ways to help when it gets bad." Even if the aforementioned options involved copious amounts of alcohol until he managed to pass out... It was better than nothing.
no subject
Fair enough. She hadn't exactly given them the hard sell. Heather huffed, tugging at her wristbands.
"Is it weird that's the thing that makes me miss Kitten the most? I guess I just got so used to her that just having her in the room made it easier to sleep."
Well, that and the fact that when she had a nightmare, Kitten would climb into bed with her all hush now lovey in that accent until Heather fell back to sleep, but there wasn't really a way to bring that up that didn't sound weird.
no subject
Though Murphy was starting to get a little bit unnerved by people getting on his case about that kind of thing. More specifically, Anne, but still.
Murphy shook his head, glancing at Heather in earnest. "Doesn't sound weird to me at all, no. Think it's been better at least... bein' able to wake up knowin' that there's someone nearby." He kind of laughed pathetically. "Only thing I worry about is if I still snore..."
Room sharing sure didn't change the nightmares, or his sleep patterns. But it was different. He hadn't shared space with anyone since he'd been married, and it wasn't like he'd ever had a cellmate at Ryall. Which was for the best, probably.
no subject
Whatever, this news was way too important for her to be embarrassed.
"Murphy," she said, narrowly managing to avoid adding you sly dog. "You got a roomie?"
no subject
Clueless as usual.
"Er, yeah. I do. Just recently." What of it? "Like you said, it's, uh... easier."
no subject
Hopefully that credit would be provided in the form of Murphy not getting all awkward and refusing to answer.
"Is it Anne, by any chance?"
Please please please let it be Anne. Murphy seemed so sad so much of the time, and Heather had barely met Anne but she'd liked her. And more importantly, she'd gotten the impression that Anne was not a woman who'd put up with a lot of shit. It could work!
no subject
"Er, yeah. Why...?" He had only to think about it for a second before he shook his head, and added: "We're just friends."
Try to stumble less on the F-word there, Murph. It totally didn't help that his relationship, or whatever you wanted to call it, with Anne was far from a simple one. But he trusted her more than he trusted most people, so their rooming situation just made sense. That was all, nothing more.
Except not really.
no subject
"Hey, I'm just glad, is all. When someone's important to you it's nice to have them close. I remember you being kind of --" she's not going to say hurr durr what are friends no matter how much she might want to -- "iffy about the whole deal when we first talked. So it's nice that got sorted."
And it's super cute the way you just stuttered there. You're not even fooling yourself.
no subject
Right.
Heather was just about as innocent-looking as a grinning hyena at the moment, but Murphy wasn't about to say anything, at the risk of adding fuel to the fire. He couldn't even bring himself to say It's not what you think, when not even Murphy knew what he thought. And that was just sad.
"Well, it was a... a weird situation back then." It's a weird situation now. "...She's the daughter of my correction's officer. Only I, uh. I didn't really know that, 'till after we crashed, and then... that town happened..."
There, he said it. It wasn't like he had any reason to act discreet about it, not with Heather, and not here.
no subject
She wasn't even faking her lack of concern over why Murphy might have had a corrections officer. Best man she knew on the ship had been on death row. Hell, her own father technically sort of kidnapped her. For all that she tended to come down hard on one side or the other of any given situation, she was way past believing anything was ever black and white.
"You're good now though, right? I mean, I'm guessing she's not just trying to pick up where her dad left off."
no subject
"We're good. I mean, I think we're good, since she's stopped puttin' a gun to my head." Despite the subject matter, he smirked slightly, like it was some kind of lame joke. Oh, the good old days. "Her father was a good person. So is she. I don't wanna fuck things up any more than I have for her."
Not after everything she had to deal with. Back then, he was so confused why she hated him so much. Death threats wasn't anything new and exciting for him, but this was different. Her hate was personal. He should have known.
Being on the Tranquility, in a way, seemed like a chance to try and pick up some of the broken pieces he had left scattered. He was afraid of slipping. Making it worse than it already was, like he always seemed to do.
no subject
"Murphy." Deadpan. Serious business. "She's been abducted onto a spaceship filled with endless corridors, labyrinths, killer dog-things and a smileyface with a hitlist. What could you possibly do to fuck her life up even more?"
And it really wasn't her place to comment, but... Heather had never really been great at knowing her place.
"Listen, I'm not saying you guys are into each other or whatever -" yeah she is -"but if you were, it would so not be the worst thing either of you had to deal with."
no subject
Heather, though... it felt safe. She got it, at a messed up expense.
"Hey, with my track record, you never know." He waved a hand, and the smile faded into something a bit more sincere now. "In any case, it's not... really dealin' with what's on the ship that worries me. It's what's gonna happen to us if we ever make it back. It's messed up, but sometimes I think it'd be better if we could just... I dunno, stay where we're at."
Whether the end involved some time distortion or whatever technobabble logic that Murphy only ever saw in sci-fi flicks, he had no idea what was going to happen. Or if they were ever going to make it back home, or somewhere else entirely. Or if there were even going to make it at all.
That realization brought a pang. "Is it selfish that I'd... that I'd rather risk the dangers of bein' here than to have to run anymore?" He almost visibly winced. "I mean, I think I've felt like I could do more here than I ever did when I was tryin' to catch a few hours of sleep under an overpass."
Wow, Murphy, when you put it that way...
no subject
She wanted to hug him, really. But she was sweaty and gross, he was frequently awkward, and if there had been a moment there it had passed. She reached out and nudged his shoulder instead.
"At least here we know here we stand. Even if where we stand is somewhere crappy."
no subject
Coming back from that place they all knew, it was hard to think of what a normal life was supposed to be like. Hell, he was still trying to get the hang of dealing with anyone who wasn't an inmate or a prison guard. Hence the slight reaction when Heather pushed him, but only slight. It was progress.
"Mn, think I'd take my chances dealin' with the unknown here than the life I already know that's waitin' for me. You have any idea how nice it was to actually sleep in a bed again, or bein' able to pick what I eat, or just...?"
It was obvious that there were plenty of simple things in life that Murphy appreciated.
Like being able to reach out to someone and ruffle his hand over someone's hair. Which he was doing right now.
"I dunno. Beats fuckin' therapy somehow, that's for sure."
Progress.
no subject
"I think so," she said, making an essentially useless effort at settling her hair into some kind of order. God, she needed to do something about it soon. "Sometimes it doesn't really matter how bad your options are, the important thing's that you can choose. Not that I've ever had to deal with that the same way you have, but..." she shrugged. "Well, I don't think the psychiatric help around here is too fancy, anyways."
no subject
Between Heather and Alex and Anne, it didn't seem like Murphy needed anything else in the psyche department. Like some kind of bizarro kinship that he had with these people that made it oddly easier.
Birds of a feather.
"That kinda help never did me much good before, either. Just... wound up stealin' a police cruiser." What the hell, right? Might as well go all the way with Honesty Hour or something.
no subject
"That's so cool. What happened? Oh my god, did you use the siren? Did you steal a uniform?"
no subject
No, really, why should he even be taken aback by this? It wasn't like he was surrounded by a bunch of well-behaved, law-abiding citizens, either. Not as bad as prison, at least.
"Er..." Words got stuck in his throat. Murphy paused, rubbing his forehead. "No, nothin' like that. I... wasn't really plannin' on doin' it when it all went down. I just... saw it, broke into it -- gave 'em hell tryin' to chase me for ten hours. I don't really remember much of it. I did cross the state line and, uh... I got arrested in Ashfield. Broke enough yellow tapes to get me a pretty high sentence on top of just car theft."
There was, of course, more to it than that. But there was no reason when it came to the mental health of a grieving father, who couldn't help but blame the useless police department for not being able to find his son in time. He could've stolen any car, really, but there was something more poetic about it in hindsight.
no subject
"Murphy, you're a badass. And just on the spur of the moment? Why in the hell would you do that?"
no subject
Which was why he ducked his head, reluctant to remove his hand from that nervous spot in his forehead. Heather's disposition practically brimmed out from his peripheral vision.
"Couldn't afford a vacation. Thought I'd go to prison instead." Eventually, he moved his hand away from his face. "No, I was goin' through a rough patch, and... I guess I got pretty angry."
Getting angry was bitching out some jackass who cut you off in line at the grocery store. Stealing a cop car and joyriding until maximum sentence could be achieved took going apeshit to a whole other level.
no subject
"So you made 'em chase you around until they were all out of coffee and doughnuts, and then what? They shoot out your tyres? Use one of those spiky stinger things?"
(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)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)