Bariyan Kozar (
stonefaith) wrote in
exsiliumlogs2012-03-28 09:39 pm
[closed]
Date & Time: Noon of 3/28
Location: Abandoned school parking lot out in the city!!
Characters: Bariyan (
stonefaith), Martin Darkov (
theguideless)
Summary: More driving shenanigans! More driving shenanigans gone WRONG.
Warnings: watch out there's a darkov behind the wheel
Bariyan was beginning to feel just a little bit hopeful about Martin's driving lessons. The kid was doing all right now. He could sort of navigate his way around the parking lot, at least. Bariyan still wouldn't trust him to, say, try and maneuver his way up a mountain road while being chased by overpowered masked freaks. But Bariyan didn't exactly trust himself to do that sort of thing either.
After their last lesson, he'd told Martin to meet him at the parking lot again, today, at noon. Bariyan had arrived much earlier than that, mostly on account of having little else to do. He'd spent the last fifteen minutes or so lounging against the hood of the sedan watching the clouds make their slow roll across the sky and thinking idle thoughts.
He liked having the lessons. He was just trying to decide what it was that he liked about them: the teaching, the car, the way that time suddenly passed much faster, or maybe even Martin's company. Or all of them? In any case, it was a rather odd feeling. In all the time since his resurrection, this was the first time he'd ever felt anything but hollow misery.
Location: Abandoned school parking lot out in the city!!
Characters: Bariyan (
Summary: More driving shenanigans! More driving shenanigans gone WRONG.
Warnings: watch out there's a darkov behind the wheel
Bariyan was beginning to feel just a little bit hopeful about Martin's driving lessons. The kid was doing all right now. He could sort of navigate his way around the parking lot, at least. Bariyan still wouldn't trust him to, say, try and maneuver his way up a mountain road while being chased by overpowered masked freaks. But Bariyan didn't exactly trust himself to do that sort of thing either.
After their last lesson, he'd told Martin to meet him at the parking lot again, today, at noon. Bariyan had arrived much earlier than that, mostly on account of having little else to do. He'd spent the last fifteen minutes or so lounging against the hood of the sedan watching the clouds make their slow roll across the sky and thinking idle thoughts.
He liked having the lessons. He was just trying to decide what it was that he liked about them: the teaching, the car, the way that time suddenly passed much faster, or maybe even Martin's company. Or all of them? In any case, it was a rather odd feeling. In all the time since his resurrection, this was the first time he'd ever felt anything but hollow misery.

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Bariyan let go of the wheel with one hand to switch into neutral himself. But there was one thing that he had to get Martin to do.
"Martin. Step down on the brakes. Now." Deadpan, and loud to boot. It was the voice he used to talk to his partners back home. The ones who sometimes wouldn't start listening until you smashed them in the face with a brick.
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He stared straight ahead without blinking. If anything admirable came out of frozen horror, it was at least being able to watch his own doom transpire.
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One more try, then. Bariyan's voice was loud before: but this was an actual shout. He used to have a battlefield voice. His ruined throat had taken that away from him, but for a brief moment the tone of unquestionable command comes back to him.
"Darkov! Get the brakes!"
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The seat belts locked as he slammed the brake at last, yelping and recoiling at the heavy force of the stop. His foot hit the brake three more times as he caught himself not doing as told.
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Bariyan snapped back to attention. "Hold them." He wasn't yelling anymore, at least.
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Dead, he was thinking, despairing. I'm dead. Something's dead again.
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Since he now had a hand free, and since Darkov apparently wasn't listening again, Bariyan also went ahead and made an attempt to hold the boy's foot against the pedal by pressing his hand down on Martin's knee.
"I said hold." Eyes still on the road. Watching the world start to slow and still waiting for something even worse to happen.
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"I ca--I can't--"
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But that appeared to be the worst of it. No more. Brakes down and cut from the engine, the car finally came to a halt. Bariyan killed the ignition immediately.
And paused. And let the horror catch up to him.
He let go of the wheel to pull away from Martin.
"Come on, Darkov. Out of the car." Bariyan threw his own door open. He wasn't sure why his first instinct was to get Martin out of there, other than the fact that it gave him a couple more seconds to try and come to terms with what had just happened. But that seemed unlikely to happen at all.
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He held his breath for as long as he could, lips curling into a toothy grimace, fighting sound and sadness to keep still. I can't. With one loud gasp (he couldn't hold his breath forever), he drew his leg back to him, curling up as much as he could against the shaking that overtook and made him feel ready to hurl.
The worst word: can't. I cannot. It was always true, even when he fought tooth and nail against it. No matter how hard he tried, nothing would change. Nothing. Couldn't go home, couldn't find Regina, couldn't seal a contract, couldn't fight for Father, couldn't...couldn't drive a car, which was probably not something to get very worked up about at all, but it was just one more little drop in a pool of negatives he was drowning in. Doing things was supposed to keep the truth at bay, maybe even change it.
You're supposed to get better if you try...
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But when he was done looking the vehicle over and Martin still hadn't moved, Bariyan walked over to the other side of the car. He looked at Martin for the first time since the car had spun out of control and felt -- whatever he felt, Bariyan swallowed it down.
"Martin," he said, surprising himself with how level his voice was. "It's all right. It's over."
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Those were almost practical things for him, but they weren't on his mind, either. Bariyan's smell...it wasn't a happy scent, and it certainly didn't pin his frame of mind to the present. The car's rumbling had ceased, but Martin heard beasts in his ears and his name – not the reasonable tone of the now, but the alarm from the worst moment ever.
Tick-tock. Less than three months. Then she's dead, and it'll be my fault. He squeezed his eyes shut, trying to pull his knees up from under the wheel.
I hate this I hate this I hate this so much. I'm so tired. I can't do anything. I'm trying but I hate everything.
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He didn't know what to do. What would he have done? Before he died. Before any of that happened.
He couldn't recall.
Bariyan reached in through the open window to make sure Martin's door was unlocked, then went ahead and opened it for him. But he could not think beyond those few motions, let alone think of anything to say. Even if he did say anything, it didn't seem as if Martin was listening.
In the end, all he said was, "Take your time."
He walked away, off the road, onto the curb. Wondering at himself.
What would he have done?
He would have done better than that.
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But she's going to get killed thanks to me. He gulped, burying his head against his knees, stifling his breath.
The sun was in a different place in the sky when he uncurled himself and grimaced into the light. It was too warm, even with the door open, with the sun glaring through the windshield. Definitely nowhere near Olvoski; the sun was much too big.
He dragged the back of his hand across his eyes and under his stuffed-up nose, rediscovering where he was. It made him nervous; he ought to get out. Sluggishly, he fumbled to unbuckle and slide out, legs quavering unreliably enough to cause him to sit back down and let them dangle. He made an unhappy, nasally sound as he sat and stared at the shadows on the concrete for minutes before lifting his eyes, now as adjusted as they were going to get, upward.
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He forced himself to think, instead. Not about what could have caused the malfunction but about what he could have done about it. Too many should-haves and what-ifs, too many and too late. They chewed away at him for a while and when he heard Martin finally make some sort of movement, Bariyan gladly took the opportunity to get away from his own thoughts.
"Hey." Bariyan moved over, stopping a couple feet away. "Talk to me." Say something, please.
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"M'sorry," he croaked at last. That was all he ever seemed to say, but it was really the truest thing, wasn't it? Saying much more seemed too much of a hazard right then and there.
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He said it anyway. "I am too." Which was hollow, trivial, and wrong -- in the sense that Martin shouldn't have had anything to apologize for. But Bariyan let that slip.
Bariyan scratched his head and his gaze shifted away again. "I don't... know what happened back there. That's not normal. I should have moved faster--" --I'm sorry, he nearly said, which would have been redundant. So instead he simply cut himself off and stared off to the right, awkwardly.
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Let alone dead ones.
"I'm sorry."
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He didn't understand the implications, obviously, or even guess at them, only taking Martin's words at surface value. He felt guilty enough for that. He'd promised to help Martin find a way out of here and -- what had he done so far? A little. Not much. He wasn't even close to anything resembling a solution.
No, he could beat himself up over that later. That was a different matter.
Bariyan found it awkward to remain standing as Martin was sitting, so he stepped forwards and crouched down in front of Martin, resting his arms over his knees, looking away from the car and down the street again.
"That is really nothing you should apologize for, though," he said. And still struggling for words, he tacked on a vague, unrelated statement: "I haven't been... very good at this."
Gods, listening to himself was painful.
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He's making excuses for me, he thought blandly. It made his brow furrow a little. Why?
Guilt and more guilt. He was so tired of...of feeling so much. Martin's grimace broke the smooth blankness of his face.
"You don't...have to be," he worked out slowly, having to stop and swallow again. "I'm not supposed to be around people anyway."
He tried drawing in a slower breath.
"I'll...stop."
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But now that the conversation had moved at least a little away from recent events, Bariyan found that he had a lot more to say. There were suddenly a lot of things he could point out: that Martin was quite literally surrounded by people, that secluding himself wasn't going to do anyone an ounce of good, that there was no reason why he shouldn't be around people. Not when he seemed and acted just as human as anyone else here.
Bariyan switched all that out for one question.
"Are you running away?"
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"I'm sorry I...I wasted your time." He stopped again, feeling his voice waver. "I won't. Anymore."
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"Absolutely not."
He wasn't even sure which part of Martin's answer he was refusing. It was a very general sort of refusal. In fact, if it had been possible for Bariyan to refuse every negative thing Martin had said from the moment they met to now, it would have been best characterized in those two words. In that moment.
He'd whipped his head back around to look at Martin but no further explanation seemed to be forthcoming. Not because there was none, but because Bariyan could hardly even sort his own thoughts out in his moment of panic.
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"I'm sorry," he blurted out quickly, shrinking as Bariyan turned around. He wanted to crawl away and hide. "I--I'm sorry, I don't--"
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That wasn't what he had wanted to do at all.
He started to rise out of his crouch before realizing that the height difference would probably just make things even worse, so he settled for catching his balance by placing a hand against the side of the car, bent at the knees, stuck in an awkward half-standing stance.
"I-- damn." Bariyan swore some more under his breath, and started to reach a hand out towards Martin. "I didn't mean to scare you."
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