somesoulsearching (
somesoulsearching) wrote in
damned_institute2012-06-09 10:27 pm
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
![[community profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/community.png)
Day 64: Waiting Room/Lobby 2 (Third Shift)
Though Brook had been led the way towards the waiting rooms before, he hadn't been expecting to have another visit so soon. Not everyone seemed to get one after all, and with how upset Yorki's grandson had seemed to be after their last meeting, he'd thought the young man wouldn't have wanted anything more to do with him. Despite all that, he did think seeing Yohan again might be a nice change of pace. He liked making new friends even in places like this.
After entering the room, he looked around for anyone familiar before taking a seat to himself. Like last time he was ready to see what would come but wouldn't be so jumpy as to think his visitor was a ghost. That had been a shock before! But he should have known better. No ghost would have been floating around during the day time.
After entering the room, he looked around for anyone familiar before taking a seat to himself. Like last time he was ready to see what would come but wouldn't be so jumpy as to think his visitor was a ghost. That had been a shock before! But he should have known better. No ghost would have been floating around during the day time.
no subject
It was a perfectly bloomed camellia, and if not for the faint scent, one could have been forgiven for assuming it was silk. He held it out to her, then asked the least of what was churning within his mind. "How are you?"
no subject
There were too many things she hadn’t predicted, things about reuniting with a brother who was supposed to be gone that had the potential to stir old memories.
The camellia was another of those things.
Once he’d brought his hand out from behind his back and exposed it, Tsubaki couldn’t tear her eyes away. There it was, the flower that had, through contention and bitterness, slowly caused their family to fall apart, much like the slow wilting of a camellia. Her namesake. Her flower. And he was holding it out as if expecting her to accept it.
A part of her was sure someone was playing a joke on her, while another part expected Masamune’s mocking disdain to wash over her at any second as it had for most of her life.
It has a nice scent…
Silly how a mere flower could make her feel sick to her stomach.
This time Tsubaki thought for sure she would be rooted to the spot forever, stuck in place while this person who had the face of her brother looked on, still with the flower in his hand. Her lips moved, soundlessly. It seemed like camellias had been at the heart of everything, alongside hurt feelings and unspoken thoughts. What had Miyu’s family been through that tied them to camellias? A similar sad past? Or was their story better?
Whatever she might have been able to will herself to say, it all seemed to dissipate like smoke at the sight of the flower, leaving her staring.
no subject
The flower was carefully laid on the table next to the set of chairs, and his hands returned to laying delicately on his knees. Michio watched her--watched and saw all the similarities that said this was the sister he had been close with since her birth, but also saw. Also noticed the differences. This look was... foreign. "Tell me," he spoke, quiet and intent. "Tell me what I can do to help you through this."
no subject
Masamune was gone, and yet here was someone so like him. Camellias had been a part of her stormy relationship with him, and yet here Miyu’s brother had brought one carefully tended flower for her.
What kind of power could have made this… all of this… possible? It was too much to imagine.
Out of the well of her surprise and turmoil, silence erupted like a geyser. Silence had always been her first impulse when she didn‘t know what to say. Tsubaki supposed she had never been very good at saying aloud what needed to be said--it had been her silent hesitation that had disturbed Masamune so much in the past. He’d valued words, and she had never been able to give him the right ones before he’d left on his quest for self-identity.
The longer she said nothing, the more guilt stung at her. Masamune’s past anger and hurt was absent in the way he looked at her, but Tsubaki couldn’t help but wonder if she was doing it again. What she had done for years. Hurting an older brother with her lack of words.
But perhaps Miyu and her brother were different. Maybe they had had longer to understand one another.
Tell me what I can do.
She looked down for a moment, halting in the face of his intensity. How much of his sister did this brother see? The reverse was also true. How much did she understand about Masamune, the brother she’d barely known?
“You don’t… have to do anything,” she said at last. “I’m sorry. It’s not your fault. Thank you for the… for the flower.”
no subject
"I don't have to do anything," he repeated simply. "And what happened is no one's fault. But Mother and Father and I... We want to support you. We want to be there for you. Maybe it's because we weren't that everything--" He groped for the right words. "...Became so muddled."
He watched her, an edge of pain around his eyes. "It's not a weakness to ask for help." To grasp the hands of those reaching out for you.
He just wanted everything to be okay again. To redefine normal in a way that once again included his beloved little sister.
no subject
But she was right at the center of it, exactly where she wished she wasn’t.
She didn’t know how to the subtle accusation that he and his family might not have supported her in the way that she needed because she didn’t remember. Her memories told a very different story, and no matter what she did Tsubaki didn’t think they would ever line up. But she and Miyu… they couldn’t be so different, could they? Neither of them could see a brother in pain and not feel hurt on his behalf, right? If they were versions of each other, there was no way, no way that they could.
And yet Tsubaki was still a piece that didn’t fit quite right. She couldn’t tell him what he needed to hear any more than she could read minds. Even so, to sooth his pain… that was a desire she and her counterpart had to share. Maybe that harmony would help.
“No, I don’t think it’s that…” she tried to say. “I don’t think you need to blame yourselves for not being there. That’s not something you should ever think.” Not in her case, anyway. Tsubaki had always known her family would be there when she needed them--even if ‘family’ had only meant her mother and father.
Asking for help, though… He was talking about pride, but the problem was that Tsubaki, the girl known as Tsubaki, didn’t need help. Pride and compassion weren’t the issues.
“I…”
With her eyes on her slippers, she could see Masamune’s shoes where they extended out past his chair. Shiny and neat. He’d always had a certain air of neatness about him, probably from years of lectures on fastidiousness or so she’d thought. “I…”
Maybe it was about time to time to answer his earlier question.
“I’m doing okay.” This was the truth at the heart of things--why she didn’t need the kind of help the day staff were offering. She did okay until her family was brought into the picture. That’s when everything started to turn in confusing circles.