Day 20: Dr. Wilson's Office [Doctor's Office 6]

It was silly, but Wilson was nervous.

Mental health was by no means his specialty. It was true that he more or less had to act as a counselor for his patients. Most of them had terminal cancer. The dates were never any good. Two years, one year, six months, three months. He could speak to people about dying well enough, but this was different.

Hopefully he would get the hang of it. He took solace in the fact that he had a bit more experience than some of the other doctors. Such as, oh, House? He wasn't sure what the chief of staff had been thinking when he hired him. It made him wonder if the administrators were as insane as the patients.

Even though therapy didn't start first thing in the morning, Wilson had made sure to be there extra early anyway. (He had to make up for House, who would undoubtedly be late.) His office was also cleaner than it would normally be - first impressions were important, after all, and that was probably even more true with mental patients. He heard the intercom, which meant his first patient would be heading in soon. He straightened in his chair, though his nervousness caused him to grab a random doodad off of his desk and start fiddling with it.

[ ooc: For Adelheid, Cliff, Dias, Eric, Hikaru, Riza, Scar, and Seimei. ]

[identity profile] heavens-too-far.livejournal.com 2006-12-02 03:10 am (UTC)(link)
Dias considered, briefly, refusing, but after a moment decided it would be an empty gesture. It wouldn't mean anything and would only serve to make him uncomfortable, given how sore his side still was.

He sat down across from the man. Gingerly. He still didn't speak; he didn't have anything he particularly wanted to say, especially to a doctor. Unless the man actually demanded he talk - and then enforced that demand - perhaps Dias would get some time to simply sit and be quiet.

[identity profile] heavens-too-far.livejournal.com 2006-12-02 02:23 pm (UTC)(link)
The man really didn't seem to have any confidence to speak of. Dias wasn't sure what, exactly, he had expected out of this, but it wasn't a doctor who seemed to be as uncomfortable as Dias should have been. Being a head taller than anyone else in the room and fully capable of killing people tended to put one at ease in most situations.

Still - he'd been dragged here for this? The question was inane even for small talk. "I didn't eat it," he said simply. It was the barest minimum of cooperative behavior.

[identity profile] heavens-too-far.livejournal.com 2006-12-03 01:10 am (UTC)(link)
"I lost my appetite," Dias replied, obviously not the least bit interested in loosening up no matter how hard it made Dr. Wilson's job. He was...nevertheless faintly taken aback by the implication that the doctor would have given him his own lunch if he hadn't already given it to someone else. They were trapped in a perpetual hellhole and being lied to and assaulted in the night and one of the doctors actually gave a damn whether or not they were fed?

Definitely not the doctor from the night before, then, although his voice hadn't sounded similar in any case.

After another uncomfortable silence, Dias actually broke it of his own accord. "What was I brought here for, anyway?"

[identity profile] heavens-too-far.livejournal.com 2006-12-03 06:50 pm (UTC)(link)
"It's not important," Dias said flatly in regards to the first question, ignoring the fact that it wasn't entirely true. It had been important to him, but he doubted it would mean much to anyone else. And he knew exactly what he would be told if he tried to explain it to the doctor, or anyone else - he had unresolved issues with the death of his family, particularly Cecille's, and trying to take up his old and now defunct role as an older brother to anyone else would just result in more pain when it was inevitably demonstrated that he was not, in fact, an older brother to anyone still living. He needed to resolve his issues and move on with his life or he'd simply wallow in his grief for the rest of his life.

Not only did Dias know all this himself, but other people had already told him so. Several times, in some instances. He didn't need to hear it again and it wouldn't make any difference if he did, and the less he dwelled on it the better.

"Yes, specifically." Dias' crimson stare was intense enough that Wilson might want to check that he wasn't pinned to the wall. "The doctors have told me that my name is David Shaw, when I know it isn't. They tell me I'm crazy when I know I'm not, and I have the scars to prove it. They say I have family in the world outside - " Family who didn't like Dias much, if he was any judge, since they'd sent him a dress to wear the other day... " - when I saw my family die in the world they say doesn't exist, as if that were something I'd want to be true. This place attacks us during the night, and I have the wound to prove that, and you act like you give a damn about our well-being during the day and call us the crazy ones. According to your fellow doctors, I'm incurably insane and I'm going to be held here whether I like it or not. So what, exactly, could one of you possibly want to talk to me about? 'Sanity is nice, you should try it sometime'? If I am insane, you couldn't talk me well, and you certainly won't believe anything I say to you, so why talk to me at all?"

Dias was not having a good day. He saw no reason not to evenly distribute the aggravation.

[identity profile] heavens-too-far.livejournal.com 2006-12-04 12:42 am (UTC)(link)
Dias gave the man a flat look that communicated, far more eloquently than words, that he had very little interest in talking about anything with doctors in general and Dr. Wilson in particular. The line about the doctors caring for their patients was enough all by itself to convince Dias that the man had to be insincere, despite all the evidence to the contrary.

Either that, or so woefully underinformed that he was useless anyway.

Nevertheless, he wanted to hear the doctor explain away a stab wound from a red-hot object, because there was very little ambiguity in the wound to allow explaining away. So, with a glower in Dr. Wilson's direction that more or less suggested that Dias was doing this entirely for his benefit and he should be properly grateful, the mercenary got to his feet and - using his right hand exclusively - tugged his shirt up to his collarbone in one smooth movement.

There was certainly a lot that needed explaining beneath Dias' shirt, unless he struck Wilson as the masochistic type of mental patient. The patch of gauze on his left side covered the wound itself, but that was almost an afterthought in the face of the scars. There were dozens of them, all of them looking to have been from serious wounds at one point or another, but the one that took center stage was the one right in the middle of Dias' abdomen. The size of it was such that surviving receiving it had to have been impressive.

There were more on his back, but those could wait.

[identity profile] heavens-too-far.livejournal.com 2006-12-04 01:13 am (UTC)(link)
"Go on," Dias said simply, expression betraying nothing(except, possibly, a dislike for doctors). He couldn't hold up his shirt and get the gauze off with only one hand, and he had no desire to move the left hand any more than was necessary. The most he did to assist Wilson was to pull his left arm out of the way, with a slight wince.

[identity profile] heavens-too-far.livejournal.com 2006-12-04 01:32 am (UTC)(link)
"A red-hot poker," Dias said, watching Wilson closely. "I suppose you think I happened to find one lying around and fell onto it to do this to myself?"

[identity profile] heavens-too-far.livejournal.com 2006-12-04 01:49 am (UTC)(link)
"The nurses couldn't think of a convenient lie, either," Dias muttered. "They just acted like they couldn't tell anything was wrong with me so they wouldn't have to come up with an explanation for how it happened..." He held still after a suspicious examination of the ointment Wilson was holding, choosing instead to look over his head at the medical kit he'd pulled out.

It looked - advanced. There weren't any herbs that Dias could see, but it looked like something beyond his comprehension. Maybe he could take a closer look at it...

[identity profile] heavens-too-far.livejournal.com 2006-12-04 02:02 am (UTC)(link)
"Then who is in the building with us at night?" Dias demanded, looking down at Wilson. "I assume you go home. Is there anyone here besides the patients who knows what happens to us?"

[identity profile] heavens-too-far.livejournal.com 2006-12-04 02:56 am (UTC)(link)
"You don't even know," Dias murmured. "So the doctors here only care about their patients while they're on the clock - what happens to us after they go home isn't something anyone concerns themselves with much."

[identity profile] heavens-too-far.livejournal.com 2006-12-04 04:31 pm (UTC)(link)
Dias let his shirt fall once Wilson pulled away, sitting down again carefully. "Perhaps because the patients say it isn't happening?" He eyed Wilson. "I know many of us talk about strange things that sound like they couldn't be true, but I've seen strange things that are true enough to think that doesn't necessarily make us crazy. I've met a number of patients here, and considering that we're in an asylum a disturbing number of us are being told we're insane when we're not."

[identity profile] heavens-too-far.livejournal.com 2006-12-04 09:06 pm (UTC)(link)
(OOC: Actually, what Dias meant is that the patients are saying their sleeping peacefully through the night isn't happening, but oh well. XD )

"I've met insane people," Dias said flatly. "Even a few here. So I can tell the difference when I talk to someone who has a grip on reality, even if what they're saying doesn't make sense." He raised an eyebrow at Wilson. "Can't you? You're the doctor."