Murphy Pendleton (
yardbird) wrote in
ataraxionlogs2012-08-12 06:19 pm
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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
"You don't get where we've been without having a shitty story to tell." She wanted to say I'm listening. If you need to talk, I'm here, but it's so Very Special Episode, and what came out wasn't so tactful.
"Takes a lot to scare me these days."
no subject
He had kept to himself for a long time, it came like a second nature to him. Maybe because Anne was right, and he really was "programmed" this way. After some time had passed, it felt a bit too much. So maybe this was what he needed now, more than ever. To talk. To have some kind of outside party to sit with, who he knew wouldn't condescend him with textbook psychology bullshit. Just maybe he could finally sort his head through this mess he'd been in...
"We should probably keep walkin'." His glanced around briefly down the hallway. While it was easy enough to wander here for a long time without worrying about other people listening in, talking openly about this kind of stuff demanded privacy.
Plus, he figured it might be a good thing to sit down after wandering around for so long. Maybe rest in one of the rec rooms or something for awhile.
no subject
"In here?" It wasn't really a question. She was already headed inside. Too eager, probably. And while a good portion of that was due to her need to be there, to listen and help and pay forward some of the assistance people she barely knew had given her on Strela when she hadn't been able to help herself, she couldn't deny a selfish tint to it as well. The need for someone else to open up, to show her they were just as fucked up as she was.
Still, if it helped it helped, right?
no subject
He waited until the door was closed behind him before Murphy found a chair to kick up and plop himself down in. Normally, he could handle running for long periods of time without feeling too exerted. It didn't help that he was also running on low energy.
"Ugh..." Murphy sighed, leaning back into the chair with a weary sigh. "That's better."
He just needed a moment to get over the fact that he probably felt and sounded a lot older than he actually was.
no subject
"Gotta take better care of yourself, old man." It wasn't particularly appropriate, but at least she wasn't offering to get him his slippers. "What're we gonna do if you wear yourself out, huh?"
Smartassed, maybe, but she meant it. Odd as it may have been given how quiet he was, how withdrawn he could be, Murphy seemed to be an emotional rock for a lot of people. And Heather, for one, certainly couldn't stand to lose anybody else.
no subject
He also didn't get a whole lot of exercise in there, either. With the exception of sleeping, constructing coping mechanisms to deal with the boredom, and the constant pacing -- he didn't have much to do with his time. And it wasn't something he spoke of lightly, but at least Heather is starting to get where he was coming from. Murphy always did keep to himself. That changed after the loneliness had taken its toll on him.
no subject
"Yeah, that's... that's a pretty good excuse. I'll lay off the lecture. For now." She tipped her head to nest it on her folded arms, blinked at him. "Is that why you're so... busy?" It wasn't quite the word she was looking for, and she made a face. "I mean, you're always around, doing something."
She was trying to keep her curiosity on a leash, and not making a very good job of it. Hoping the way she slouched over her chair kept her gentle interrogation from seeming too much like a job interview. Or worse, a psychiatrist.
no subject
Except that she probably didn't. Not that many people around here did. Incarceration was one thing. Being thrown away and forgotten was another. Some days, it was better that way. Murphy was at least used to being forgotten, and that meant he didn't have to deal with as much of the abuse that he normally put up with.
His mouth twitched, thinking about it. "It's funny... In there, you think you've seen the worse in people... but it's not from the guys you sit and eat with every day. No. Most of the time... it's from the guards who get their kicks by takin' advantage of that power."
Corruption charges. Murphy remembered reading about that. He leaned forward, elbows over his knees and hands pressed together. He could feel his palms clam up; his stomach churned.
"I didn't really wanna think about it, 'cause I needed help, and I couldn't do anything about it. My son was gone -- I was locked up with his killer, and I couldn't even touch the bastard." Murphy barked a joyless laugh. "I mean, can you believe that they actually protect guys like that in prison?"
And with good reason, if Murphy's course of actions hadn't been any indicator.
no subject
It was an effort to keep her voice even. All sorts of alarm bells clamored in her head, telling her that even if she didn't exactly know where this was going, she knew it was nowhere good. She dropped one hand to her locket, turning the ball over in her fingers, twisting the chain.
"You know you don't have to tell me any of this, right? I mean, I'm not gonna lie and say I'm not curious, but you don't owe me anything." He really, really didn't. None of them did.
no subject
Murphy wrung his hands. Part of him agreed with Heather somewhat, that he didn't really owe her an answer. The other part, however, had him shaking his head.
"I told you, there's a lot to it. My son's killer, why I was stuck in prison, why my situation here is so... tch, why it's weird to me, and sometimes I still can't wrap my head around it. I try, but... I dunno. I've tried to sort it out in my head long enough. It's not like I can walk up to just anyone and..." He was starting to feel selfish, taking up Heather's time with all of this. Murphy rubbed the back of his neck, still feeling the phantom pangs of being electrocuted there not too long ago.
On top of that, his head started to hurt. Not a good combination.
He lifted his head at Heather, with an apologetic look. "...Is this okay?"
no subject
"Guess you don't know me so well yet," she supplied, still slouched over the back of her chair, everything in her posture indicating that she was headed nowhere in a hurry. "If it wasn't okay I wouldn't still be here."
Anyone else and she'd probably crack a show me yours and I'll show you mine joke, try to break the tension, but Murphy looked close enough to fleeing as it was. Somehow she didn't think he'd appreciate it.
no subject
"Well, uh... alright, then." Murphy rubbed his forehead, trying to think...
Where was he again?
Oh, right. Corruption, and then some.
"Anyway, I was approached by one of the COs one day. A guy named Sewell. Said he had a deal for me -- free reign to my son's murderer. The only catch in it all was... I had to owe him somethin' in return, but he was pretty vague about it.
"I was warned about him, though. I just didn't care. I already knew he wasn't the most trustworthy, but he knew what I wanted and how to give me access to it. This was my only shot, and I just figured... y'know, maybe it was because he'd been just as enthused to be lookin' after child killers as the inmates were to be sharin' a table with 'em, that's all." Not to mention Murphy -- he had a clear motive to want Napier dead. He didn't know how Sewell managed to put it together when no one else did. All the more reason why he seemed to be the right person to confide in at the time.
Bitterness began to rise up from the pit of his stomach. He didn't want to continue. Had a feeling that Heather was smart enough to fill in the blanks.
"He stuck by his word, though. Christ, it was such a mess... but it wasn't over yet." Murphy felt his jaw tighten; his throat hitched. "Afterwards, I was set for an early release. That was when Sewell came around with that favor I still owed him. All he said that was he had another 'monster' for me to kill. I do that, then we were square, and I could move on with my life. If I don't, he blows the lid on it all. I lose my probation, and I'd probably never see the light of day again." Murphy sighed, his gaze fell to the ground. "I mean, what the hell, right? I've already damned myself... So I agreed.
"A few days later, this riot broke out. All the guards were busy... takin' care of things. I was told to go to the showers, where I'd find the guy that I was supposed kill waitin' for me down there."
He hard swallowed then, his head dropping.
"The man was another officer. His name was Frank Coleridge. He was Anne's father."
no subject
When Murphy continued, though, Heather's mood shifted. Anne's father. Her grip on the back of the chair tightened and she clenched her jaw, hard enough to make her teeth hurt. She took a slow breath, and when she spoke again the tension in her voice was probably enough to let him know just how much her opinion of both of them depended on his answer.
"You do it?"
no subject
"No, of... of course not. Frank was a good man. He never gave up on me, even when everyone else had... and I just..." He pinched the brim of his nose, feeling the very familiar hammering in his skull. "I refused. The next thing I knew, Sewell had struck us both. I couldn't do anything then. Could hardly move. All I could do was watch him die..."
But he didn't really die.
He closed his eyes, and he saw Frank's twisted face -- his withered limbs and pathetic body clinging hopelessly to life. Dying slow and in agony for years.
"Christ, it just didn't seem real. It felt like some kind of nightmare, and I was paralyzed.
"I didn't do it, but all the evidence pointed to me, anyway. The shiv he used, and my fingerprints..." Murphy shook his head. He didn't do it, but the guilt weighed heavily in his tones. "It was over. My chance for parole, my way out... Might as well have locked me up and thrown away the key, 'cause I was gonna die in there. Cop killers never last long, and it was just a matter of time before someone would come around to finish the job."
no subject
No wonder he had issues. To have been set up like that, manipulated into a position where he had to either do what this Sewell wanted from him or take the fall for it anyway -- having to watch his friend die -- Jesus, it was a wonder the guy wasn't more of a mess. She shook her head, bit back another useless I'm sorry.
"How'd you end up... you know." A pause, while she made a face. The town wasn't some sort of monster that came when called. She was being childish. "In Silent Hill? If you were locked up, I mean."
no subject
In retrospect, Murphy didn't know how Anne had intended for it to play out, had there been no "divine" intervention back then. He didn't know if she was going to make it look like an accident, like Sewell did. If she was just going to kick him down and put a bullet in his brain, execution style. Hell, he didn't know if he was ever supposed to make it to that prison at all. Call it fate or whatever, but he'd taken it.
"If I went back, I would just be walkin' right into a death sentence, anyway. There was no way I'd survive Wayside, so this was my only chance to escape. But the town wouldn't let me go... It wouldn't let either of us leave."
He reached up and scratched the back of his head, remembering the sharp bang that rang out when Anne had supposedly shot him. How many times had he supposedly died, or should have died, but didn't? The thought alone, on top of everything else, was disconcerting.