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Spike Spiegel ([info]lunkhead) wrote in [info]indarkness_logs,
@ 2010-08-04 06:34:00

Previous Entry  Add to memories!  Tell a Friend!  Next Entry
Entry tags:!complete, 2032 08, jaime davies, spike spiegel

RP: The Private Video
Characters: Spike, Jaime (originally open)
Time/Date: Early morning, August 4th
Location: Room 213/lobby/kitchen
Warnings/Rating: character death, language/narrative cursing, angst, Spike in a bad mood
Summary: A mysterious video forces Spike to face the inevitable.
Status: Complete
Note: Sorry it's so long, but my muse is still overactive.


Spike hadn't intended to be awake so early in the morning. In fact, the plan was to be going to sleep around sunrise and eating 'breakfast' somewhere around noon. Unfortunately, he'd left the blinds open after a late-night surveillance of what proved to be absolutely nothing; and while that may have been little more than a slight inconvenience otherwise, he'd also fallen asleep in the chair by the window. The result, of course, was one very-awake cowboy once the first few rays of sunlight filtered into the room.

After a quick shower, some strange-tasting bacon (never trust shelf-safe meat cooked in a microwave), a quick cleaning of his Jericho, and the realization that nothing on the television was worth the effort of watching, he decided to check the network. Ed was supposed to send him something the moment she gained a lead on... anything, really; and he had nothing better to do at such an early hour, anyway. So he turned on the computer, leaned over the desk, and found his way to the newest posts. There were no messages from the quirky, little hacker - which really didn't surprise him, given the complexity of the task she'd undertaken - and no signs of worthwhile conversation to read.

There was, however, a locked post 'addressed' to him. No sender was named, no message attached... Just a video. Somehow, he doubted it was some form of correspondence from Ed; her trademark smilies were nowhere to be found. But who, then, would want to bother him? He really hadn't been a very sociable type, on the network or in person. Who could possibly think he cared about their home movies - or whatever the video was?

Curiosity compelled Spike to click the play button, but curiosity also killed the cat. Being the tiger-striped cat that he often denied he was, he'd have done well to remember such a lesson...

He knew the location well: a small shop where magazines and comics lined the public shelves and crates of guns and ammunition rested in the back. It was a place from his past, a place which he had visited some months ago while tracking down a man who may as well have been his brother. He was but a ghost when there in person, at least by laws of the underworld, and seeing it on the screen made him feel much the same. Though the familiarity tugged at his subconscious self, Spike felt out of place.

Annie was leaning against the counter as she usually did, pretending to be distracted though he knew better than to believe such a ruse. Her demeanor, however, showed a level of tension she only rarely displayed: the same tension which had overtaken her during their last meeting. Something was just... wrong. Off. Not at all how it should be. Anyone else may have assumed such behavior from their maternal figure to be related to a sudden and unexplained disappearance to the confines of a small island, but Spike knew better. He knew there was no reason for word of his disappearance (for he couldn't fathom the concept of placeholders implemented by the Heads) to reach her; and she wouldn't have actively sought to find him. Hard as it was at times, they kept distance. He was a dead man, she an arms dealer... That was how it worked. Plain, simple... So what could have possibly upset her so much?

Spike saw the flicker of a shadow at the very edge of the image, and he knew what it meant. Somewhere deep within, he could feel what was coming - or, at the very least, he knew that nothing good came from shadows which moved in such a manner. And, sure enough, the camera angle changed to reveal faces which were at once familiar and unknown. He didn't care enough to remember the names or faces, but the clothing said it all. Syndicate thugs with guns at the ready were never a good sign, especially not if they were willing to walk around like deranged serial killers in the middle of the day.

He found himself drawn closer to the screen, unable to look away yet uncertain that he wanted to know the ending. It seemed so inevitable; she was out-gunned by three and didn't even seem to notice their approach. Was she... Did she not care? The feeling was something like falling from a roller coaster into cold water: sharp, uncomfortable, and threaded with enough adrenaline to kill a small animal. Spike barely even remembered to breathe; and when he did, his breaths were shallow and strained.

The men entered, and his jaw clenched tightly. He wanted to yell at her, scream for her to grab a gun or run - something other than just standing there as if it were all inevitable. But his teeth were too tightly pressed together, and the most he could say was a sound more like the growl of a guard dog. He was seething on the inside, unwilling to accept what was plainly visible on the computer. It really was inevitable. He knew that, had been an enforcer himself. This was no simple business call...

The tallest of the men asked - in the way only an agitated killer can inquire - where Spike was, and something inside of him snapped. He knew what she would say, and he knew that it wasn't the answer they wanted. His fingers grabbed at the surface of the table, as if trying to claw through it, and his arms shook with visible rage. Seething. Spike was absolutely seething. Annie had nothing to do with him - not as far as they had any right to know. How dare they drag her into this? He'd run off on his own, left her behind to protect her, and now...

"He's dead," she lied, stony-faced resolve somehow in tact. "You're wasting your time, looking for a ghost." He wanted to kill them. He could see the twitch of a trigger finger, the anger in their eyes, and he wanted to kill them for it. He wanted to stop them, to protect her, to reach through the screen and slaughter everyone involved. Every. Single. Person. But he couldn't. He was helpless but to watch, frozen with suspense and frustration and every other emotion associated with seeing the woman who may as well have been his mother putting herself at risk to save him. He wanted to yell at her to just lead them somewhere, anywhere, even to the damn Bebop. He wanted to tell her not to lie for him, not to die for him. He didn't even care about his own life enough; she had no reason to protect what was worthless.

"Do you think we're stupid?" the shortest man asked. Spike couldn't hear the rest over the sound of his own pulse pounding in his head, but he didn't need to know. He didn't care whether they'd known from the beginning that he was something less than dead. Mao had likely protected him, just as Annie now tried... But Mao was a capo. She was... The only word that came to mind was 'mother,' as he watched the way she vehemently protected his life. She was many things, but of them all, that was the most important. The most meaningful. The one that would get her hurt - or worse - if she didn't let go and accept that he was responsible for his own actions. He'd left the syndicate; it was his problem to deal with.

"Vicious has assassinated the Elders..."

Someone had spoken it, but the words alone tore away at Spike's focus. That word-turned-name made his blood boil, his nostrils flare... Vicious was behind this. The fucking fool of a 'brother' and once-best friend was responsible for all of this. It wasn't enough to slaughter a man to whom they both owed their lives or lead a loyal ally to death. Now Annie had to be involved?!

Spike's fingers curled into tight fists, whitened knuckles pressing against the desk as if willing it to break in half. On the screen, Annie tried to fight them off. She tried... but she failed. The shop was quickly wrecked, magazines strewn across the floor with stains of blood on their pages, as she tried to keep them at bay with a mere handgun. Maybe if she wasn't so upset, maybe if she was more used to fighting... But she wasn't, and it showed. Glass shattered, displays were soiled, and then... silence.

They left her on the floor, gasping for air and bleeding from a series of wounds. Each seemed placed with precision, chosen for the sake of making her suffer. As the shadowed figures faded away outside the shop, Annie dragged herself onto the bench. Tears welled in her eyes, but even in her final moments she fought them away. She was a strong woman, a loyal ally... And she had chosen death over putting him in further danger. All for nothing. Here he was, stuck on some god-forsaken island where they couldn't get to him even if they tried.

What had once snapped now dissolved; anger mixed with loss then with realization as the video came to an end. Though Spike's arms still remained unsteady, a knot rose to his throat and what had been an adrenaline rush became a feeling with which he was all too familiar. He'd felt much the same when Julia never showed up those three, long years ago. Loneliness, crushing disappointment, and the all-too-familiar desire to kill the man he still, in some convoluted way, considered a brother.

Annie was gone, and some sick fuck had decided to show him... She was the only family he had left - at least that he didn't wish to slaughter mercilessly. Or she had been. Now she was just a memory. She was gone. Dead... He lowered his head, unintentionally touching his forehead to the computer's lid, and caught the breath which he'd once again forgotten to take. How had this happened? Why had it happened? How did video from Mars get to the island? So many questions, so few answers...

After a long while, Spike regained his posture and returned his attention to the computer with the intentions of having Ed trace the source. But it was gone. The video, the post it was in... It was as if the horrid thing had never existed, except in his mind; but he knew better. There was no logical way to counterfeit something so... He didn't know what to describe it as, and was just as quick to forget the idea of describing it at all. The world could have crashed in on him, and he'd not have noticed right away. He was distracted, devastated, angry, and perplexed all at once.

"Annie," was the first and only word Spike spoke - a hoarse whisper at best. No swears, no promises of vengeance, no mutterings of denial or disbelief. Just her name. But so much could be determined just by the manner in which he said it.

Pushing away from the table slowly, he didn't even bother to turn off or close the laptop. He moved like a zombie: purposeful but lifeless all the same. He grabbed his gun, a pack of cigarettes, his lighter, and the phone then haphazardly shoved them all where they belonged: the gun into the holster at the small of his back, a cigarette into his mouth, and the phone into the nearest pocket. He wasn't sure where he was going or why, but he had to move. He had to do something before he either exploded or broke down. (The latter was his true worry, as avoiding such weakness was all but hard-wired into his psyche.)

He took the stairs down to the lobby, moving more like a predator than his usual, laid-back self; but there was something about his gaze which looked more broken than deadly. He didn't know where he was going or who he might run into on the way; and, in all honesty, he didn't care. He just had to go... somewhere. Anywhere. Far away from that damn computer. He needed to find a way to stop thinking. Not to forget, because she deserved so much better than that, but to... get lost along the way.



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[info]finder
2010-08-05 05:35 am UTC (link)
Jaime was unnerved by the effect the video had had on Lily. She understood, of course; anyone would be freaked the hell out after seeing what Lily had described. But it was weird to see the strong, usually cheerful witch so ... completely dazed and ... damaged. Not broken, because Jaime refused to ascribe the word 'broken' to Lily (or anyone).

Since she sucked at making breakfast (for the most part), Jaime had taken over Lily's cooking role in her own way. That involved raiding the gas station for breakfast things - pastries, PopTarts, donuts, and canned fruit. Not that she did the fruit thing for breakfast, but some people did.

She was carrying a bag of things in when someone came the other direction. He had kind of the same look to him that Lily had had (at least, as far as she could see, but he looked more pissed than sad). "Hey," she greeted reflexively, though if he hadn't heard (or chose to ignore), she wouldn't be surprised or upset.

Jaime did sort of want to ask him if he'd seen a video, too, but she didn't know him and she didn't think he'd exactly appreciate her curiosity. "I ... um. Have ... breakfast," she offered, feeling sort of lame as she did. She wondered then if whatever was going around hadn't hurt her confidence or something. If Lily could be affected like that, what chance did she have? "If you wanted," she tacked on if he was still there.

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[info]lunkhead
2010-08-05 06:03 am UTC (link)
Spike heard the girl, but at first he regarded her as if she were an alien intruder in hostile lands. His hand moved an inch or two toward his back as he focused on her, ready to shoot if he saw any semblance of a reason. She was just a young woman, though - perhaps even still a teenager - with a bag of what he assumed to be groceries. Even when angry, Spike wasn't enough of an animal to target someone who seemed completely innocent. Yet. He could admit, if only to himself, that he was one step away from the loony bin and two away from homicidal rage.

Good for you, he thought at first, and it likely showed in his eyes. He moved to walk past her, but stopped when she made the invitation more obvious. Spike wasn't very hungry, all things considered. Something about the girl, however, made him consider for a moment. Maybe it was her general innocence, the way she sounded either shy or upset. Or maybe it was just the part of him which wanted to latch onto any new thought to drown out what he'd just seen.

"If you're offering," he said finally, not sounding the least bit enthusiastic, "...sure."

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[info]finder
2010-08-05 02:21 pm UTC (link)
So, not so much with the cheerful. Jaime didn't miss the expression, but she wasn't sure what to make of it. Still, she was starting to think he'd undergone something like what Lily had ... but hey, she knew what they said about assumptions. She wasn't going to go around assuming that. Maybe he was just a cranky, weird bastard.

"I don't ... cook, or anything," she said as she set the bag on the table. "Usually Lily does, but ..." Jaime bit her lip and shrugged before she started to unload the contents of the bag. "She's having ... issues. I guess the assholes that kidnapped us ... showed her something about ... um. Her death. How she and her husband die. So she's not ... taking it very well." She did feel sort of bad spilling that out to a stranger, but she and Tyler had already beaten it to death and she thought it was time to spill it onto new ears.

"So, there's donuts, and fruit, and fruit pie things, and cinnamon rolls, and ..." Jaime peered into the bag. "PopTarts," she concluded. Once she'd emptied out the bag, she folded it up and stuck it into a cabinet to reuse later, at least until it wore out.

"I'm Jaime," she offered, doubting he was horribly interested in her name, but she was at something of a loss with the whole situation just then.

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[info]lunkhead
2010-08-06 04:22 am UTC (link)
"Neither do I," he muttered. Spike usually depended on cold food or Jet's cooking to get by, and certainly wasn't proving to be competent with even a microwave. Not that he really cared lately, so long as the food was good enough to choke down with a soda. There were more pressing matters at hand, especially right now.

He may have tried (half-heartedly as the effort would have been) to keep the pseudo-conversation going, but the girl spoke first. Someone had been shown their own death? How was that even possible? But even more pressing: he wasn't the only one to be shown something better left unseen. One person wasn't enough, apparently. Sadistic bastards...

"They're just asking to die, now." The tense, feigned indifference was still ever-present in his demeanor, but Spike tried to play it off as nothing. He claimed one of the 'fruit pie things,' which smelled unsurprisingly like artificial flavors and cardboard crust, and tasted it. Not too bad, not too good... at least it tasted better than it looked or smelled. He scoffed at the thought without bothering to explain and gave a slight nod toward her introduction.

"Name's Spike," he replied. And at least this time he didn't seem completely unwilling to acknowledge her existence.

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[info]finder
2010-08-06 04:37 am UTC (link)
"You ... probably aren't the only one that ... thinks that." Jaime would be content with an escape over seeking vengeance, but she knew some of the more ... well, high-strung people she'd met wanted them to die. Or at least suffer.

She just wanted Lily to pull out of her depression and ... well, be normal again.

She also wondered if Spike was simply sympathetic to Lily's plight, or if he'd had an experience of his own. It seemed safer not to ask though. So instead, she set about putting away the breakfast things; by now, most people knew where to look for them when they were hungry.

"There's ... milk and Cokes and stuff in the fridge, if you wanted ... I could get you something." While she wasn't often so very helpful, she was sort of trying to fill in for Lily. Lily wouldn't mind serving him if he wanted anything.

It was just ... weird. The more she thought about it, the more she realized it shouldn't be weird. Sure, she'd been spending a lot of time with Lily and Tyler, but before she'd come here, she hadn't been part of a trio. She'd just been ... Jaime. Shaking her head, she hopped up on the counter to put the boxes of PopTarts on the higher shelf.

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[info]lunkhead
2010-08-06 04:56 am UTC (link)
"I can manage." Spike half-shrugged and laid down the rest of the fruit pie. A drink would have been nice, but he didn't like the idea of being hand-fed (in a not-so-literal sense) by a young woman. It wasn't something he was used to; he took care of himself, with the exception of the cooking. And the housing. And maybe the bounty hunting, when it came down to the small fries... But that didn't make the idea feel any more comfortable.

He leaned against the counter, watching (perhaps to make sure she didn't fall, though he would never admit such consideration) as Jaime put away the PopTarts. Maybe he hadn't said much, but there was more than enough on his mind. Questions, thoughts, questioning thoughts... Everything and then some, really.

"So, Lily... saw herself die?" It was the most obvious question, albeit with the 'how' left implied rather than spoken.

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[info]finder
2010-08-06 05:11 am UTC (link)
Jaime nodded when he said he could take care of himself, and she hopped down from the counter once she was done putting things away for the tall people. "Well." Her brow furrowed as she tried to recall exactly what Lily had said.

"Not exactly. She didn't see herself on the video, but she heard herself, and I guess it took place in the house she was supposed to move into after she got married. She did see ...um." Jaime hesitated, wondering how best to explain. Dropping the name of the wizard who killed her would probably mean jack-all to Spike. "See, where she's from, right now, there's ... a war going on? A magical war, kind of isolated from the normal people. Anyway, the big bad guy leading the army of the other side, he broke into her house, and killed her husband, and ... that was on the video. She heard herself upstairs and saw ... saw this green flash, from a spell, that meant she was dead, too. Then the video stopped, and ... disappeared so she couldn't show us.

"Not that I disbelieve, or anything. I mean, the people here have to be at least a little sadistic to be kidnapping us in the first place, and I don't doubt they planted the video. But whether or not it's real ... I mean, we don't know, right? It could've been something they set up, somehow, and ... everything's really fine, but she doesn't think that's the case."

Jaime moved to the table, sliding into one of the chairs. She toyed with a packet of donuts, but didn't open it. "So, yeah. I ... I don't know. I haven't seen any videos or anything, so ..." She shrugged and shook her head slightly.

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[info]lunkhead
2010-08-06 05:30 am UTC (link)
The story of Lily's video was an all too similar tale: a war of sorts, the murder of a loved one, something no doubt chosen to hit as close to home as possible. It really wouldn't take much to convince him to risk everything to find their captors and kill them before the night was over. (Not that he could actually do such a thing, but he believed he could if he tried hard enough.) Maybe he'd even find this Lily girl and let her in on the action... Or so the faux plan played out in his mind. The sadistic lot of abductors might have been a little too undeserving of mucking up the freshly-cleaned gun, though. Waste of ammunition, more fit for intense suffering and a slow, painful death. The kind they'd so lovingly showed him...

"It's real," Spike decided, though he wasn't quite sure how they could have video which involved Lily if she were here. He just knew from what he'd seen himself, knew that something so damn precise couldn't possibly have been forged. He'd seen the details, he'd tried to find an excuse to consider it a fake, but the truth was much less of a fairy tale ending. "She should know her own husband well enough to spot discrepancies."

His left eye twitched; when he felt it, he looked away from Jaime and toward nothing in particular. "There are none."

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[info]finder
2010-08-06 05:38 am UTC (link)
Jaime wondered how it could be real, but she supposed she'd never doubted it was. Not really. She'd like it to have been, for Lily's sake ... but would it matter if it was fake so long as she thought it was real? But how could Lily be there - with a kid - if she was here? Unless they did send her back at some point, or if it wasn't really her on the tape. She did say she hadn't seen herself, only heard herself, and voices could be forged easily enough.

But then, how did they do half the shit they accomplished here?

She attempted to follow his gaze, but she couldn't see what, if anything, he was looking at. So she chalked it up to staring into space, or shock, or any number of things.

"Did. Um. Did they hit you with ... with something like that, too? I mean, not that I know you from Adam or anything, and maybe you're always like this, but you just ... looked upset." Something of an understatement, but she really didn't want to pry. She also tried to think of some topics to shift to if it looked like the question about the video was likely to kill the conversation or drive him off.

If that was what was going around though - traumatic videos about loved ones - Jaime figured she was safe. She didn't have any attachments at all back home. People she'd be sad to see die, yes, but no one that would rip her heart up like it apparently had done to Lily.

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[info]lunkhead
2010-08-06 06:36 am UTC (link)
"Something like that." Spike attempted to force a laugh, but it sounded more like a scoff than anything even remotely based on humor. His gaze returned to Jaime, but he felt more as if he were looking through her than at her; he didn't pay attention to how she looked or what she was doing. "I should have seen it coming."

Except he hadn't expected Vicious to succeed, nor had he expected to be stuck on some island while would-be assassins hunted him down like a dog. And he really hadn't expected for the psychopath to be spared an execution after he sabotaged the drug deal on Callisto and got Lin killed. But apparently the elders were as naive as they were dead. Or Vicious had finally proven that he really was as deadly as a serpent...

"Risks of the life I lead, the inevitable..." Spike smirked darkly and without much of a reason, giving himself quite the unhinged expression; it was a reaction to unspoken ideas of revenge rather than what he'd said. "That's why people like me shouldn't have families. It's easier that way."

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[info]finder
2010-08-06 06:59 am UTC (link)
She wanted to offer some phrase or another of comfort, but she really had no idea how to. She was curious how he thought he should've seen it coming - wasn't that something everyone said after some shocking event that they had no way of predicting?

But maybe he meant it.

She shrugged a little, but she knew a few people with that same sort of mentality. What they did was dangerous, or they were dangerous, or they were high risk for something or another. She had her own relationship hang-ups, but hers weren't nearly for the same reasons.

Jaime bit down lightly on her lower lip, fixing her gaze briefly on the table. "It sucks. I mean, all of this sucks, and it's one thing when they torment us with ... incessant music or repetitive children's programing but this is a completely different ball of wax. I mean, there're some things you just ... shouldn't mess with."

She snorted. "Not that I guess they really care about ... anything like that." It was kind of lame, and she knew it was kind of lame, but comforting strangers was not really her strong suit - especially not when they didn't seem the sort to appreciate sympathy.

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[info]lunkhead
2010-08-06 07:50 am UTC (link)
"Morals are a rare find among demons..." Spike shook his head and drew a deep breath. "Nothing's off limits when you're playing God; and that's exactly what they're doing. If you can't buy 'em, break 'em... Something like that, I'm sure."

He prodded at the remaining bit of fruit pie he'd left, but didn't pick it up or show much more than passing interest in it. "Of course it sucks. Being a lab rat usually does. But..." He shrugged, not knowing fully how to explain the thought, and paused to think over the wording. "Would it be any different if we weren't here? Lily's husband may still have died. Annie..." He allowed the sentence to die there, because finishing it would have been both an unpleasant thought and a redundant way to end the statement.

"Insult to injury." Such was exactly what the twisted videos seemed to be. Then again... "Or maybe injury to insult," he added lowly.

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[info]finder
2010-08-06 08:12 am UTC (link)
She definitely agreed with the 'playing God' part. Gods giveth and taketh away and apparently plague them with random bouts of extreme weather and who knew what else.

"I'm not saying being here would change it. Maybe it happens regardless of our presence here. But they didn't have to ... flash it around," she said. "Maybe the events take place no matter what, whether we're here or there, whether we try to stop it or change it or not. Or maybe they did something to cause it and are ... I don't know. Gloating about it. Just flexing their muscles, showing us what they're capable of.

"I mean, if they can swipe us from any point in time, willy-nilly, why can't they go in and tweak with things? You'd think they'd want to be more careful about fucking up timelines and whatever, but ... in the end, what's it going to matter to them? It's not their life. All things considered, probably not even their worlds that they're screwing around with."

It pissed her off, but there was nothing to do about that, either. What was she going to do, have a tantrum? Rage at them?

Jaime exhaled a soft sigh and shrugged her shoulders slightly. Because ultimately, what could they do. Right now, they were trapped and helpless, and until people worked out some sort of plan of attack - or escape - it was what it was.

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[info]lunkhead
2010-08-06 08:51 am UTC (link)
Spike hadn't really considered the possibility of interference beyond the obvious task of ripping him away from his... world. The idea that they may have aided in Vicious' takeover or otherwise caused Annie's death directly made him somehow both angry and sick. His jaw clenched when she discussed the possibility, and for a second he considered if perhaps this could be worse than the last time he'd played lab rat to twisted souls. He wasn't sure, though... about anything.

"And who cares if someone gets caught in the crossfire?" Spike spoke the mostly-rhetorical question as if he believed it; and in many ways, he did. It was practically his personal motto, though he wasn't so keen on accepting or believing that he had anything in common with his captors. He leaned his head back and looked at the ceiling for a moment, wondering if perhaps this place was purgatory or Hell or some other form of holding grounds for the dead. It would certainly explain why there was such a vast range of timelines and origins... and how Lily could be truly dead. Then again, nobody seemed to remember dying. That was the sort of thing he imagined a spirit would recall after passing into whatever afterlife might exist.

After shaking away the thoughts, Spike returned his gaze to Jaime. He wasn't really sure what to say to or ask of her, but a part of him wondered why she wasn't targeted with a video. She looked young enough to have family of some sort, and it didn't make sense to only go after a few people. Then again, nothing made sense in this place...

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[info]finder
2010-08-06 09:01 am UTC (link)
"Not them," she said with a faint shrug. She wondered what he was thinking, even if it wasn't any of her business and probably wouldn't make sense to her. Then she wondered why he was looking at her, and she shifted a little before shrugging again to whatever unasked questions that look held.

She supposed they'd reached the awkward place in random encounter conversations. There was nothing else to say on the topic of the videos and their imprisonment (or rather, there was too much to say and it would just end up pissing them both off), and she didn't want to shift the topic to mundane or inane things. Like, the weather or settling in, or - ha-ha - how do you like it here so far?

So she continued to pluck absently at the wrapper of the donuts before she made a vague gesture with her free hand. "I should probably ... go make sure Lily's all right." That wasn't even an excuse; she was worried about her and if they had to drag her out of bed again ... well, best to get an early start on it.

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[info]lunkhead
2010-08-06 09:23 am UTC (link)
The awkward lull of random conversations... Spike felt both at home in and uneasy with the silence. He wasn't much of a talker when he was in a rancid mood, and usually didn't bother talking to women who looked young enough to possibly still be kids. Except Ed, who was the exception to every rule ever written, spoken, or thought. And some not yet foreseen.

He picked up the fruit pie and took another bite, though it wasn't particularly appetizing in his current state of mind, for the sake of having something to do. "Yeah. That might be a good idea..." Spike knew all too well what it felt like to lose a lover, someone to whom he'd given his heart. It had killed him in nearly all ways but the most literal when Julia chose to stay. And Lily... Well, even if her world was at war, there was the possibility that she wasn't accustomed to death and loss which hit so close to home. Plus, he'd never seen Julia die. For all he knew, she could still be alive... somewhere...

Spike cleared his throat and gestured with a slight tilt of his head in the same general direction as Jaime had. "If you think it might help..." So maybe it was a vague offer and awkward for him to do something that showed concern - and maybe he felt far from his comfort zone in doing it - but he didn't want to consider what might happen to the poor girl (or woman; he'd never actually met Lily) if she fell too deep into depression. "Maybe she could use someone who understands."

Of course, he wouldn't even know where to begin with the horribly-awkward task of being nice or comforting someone, and he didn't even know Lily or just how much Jaime might actually be able to sympathize. But... Well, a small part of him fell into the 'misery loves company' category... and he certainly didn't want to let their abductors have the satisfaction of breaking the girl. Yeah, that... Somehow, Spike was more comfortable with the prospect of selfish motives. And he'd left his offer unspecific so that he could make it seem as if Jaime had volunteered him if she understood just what he meant.

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[info]finder
2010-08-06 09:31 am UTC (link)
Jaime nodded slightly to his offer. Or half-offer, or whatever it was. "I'll let her know," she said quietly. She wasn't sure whether or not Lily was up for random conversations herself, but it wasn't like she or Tyler had ever exactly lost a spouse. Neither of them had even been in a serious relationship, let alone anywhere near married.

Jaime simply didn't think she had it in her to love anyone like that, but she didn't know what Tyler's hangup was.

"She probably ... won't," Jaime offered as she pushed back from the table to stand. But what did she know? Maybe Lily would jump at the chance to commiserate with someone who'd seen a video too. "But ... who knows? Maybe it's just what she needs." She offered him a genuine if somewhat awkward smile of gratitude before she took herself and her pack of donuts toward the stairs. She still didn't trust the elevators, even if the random power-outs had stopped.

So, awkward morning had been kind of awkward, but she thought she'd done okay. She just had to make sure Lily was still alive and try to talk her out of her doom and gloom for the morning, and then ... she wasn't real sure what she was going to do with her day.

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[info]lunkhead
2010-08-06 09:46 am UTC (link)
Spike shrugged, not sure that it really mattered if Lily wanted to talk to him. Whatever happened, happened... or something like that. He mirrored the awkward-yet-genuine smile Jaime offered and finished the last bite or two of what was, admittedly, better tasting than the microwave-bacon which had been his first breakfast. By then, he doubted she was still in hearing range and didn't feel like shouting, so her generosity and the encounter in general went unthanked. Not a big deal, really; he was bound to run into Jaime again at some point. Maybe he'd bring up the 'fruit pie thing' then... But it was doubtful.

Spike wasn't really sure where to go or what to do next, but that was fairly common in his new... cage. Maybe he'd go find something to shoot, look again in the hopes of finding ammo, or... whatever happened along the way. All he was certain of was that he wasn't in the mood to go back to his room or look at that computer again just yet. So he shoved his hands into his pockets and made his way for the hotel's exit... If nothing else, he could stock up on the not-quite-cardboard fruit pies and look for some beef jerky.

Or run into one of the Heads and take out his frustrations one bullet at a time. (But that was just a silly and nearly-impossible musing he used to make himself feel a little less unstable.)

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