Esther Coleman (
beingdifferent) wrote2014-05-30 07:55 pm
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Seventeenth little lie ♰ I got no one left to mourn for me
[Open spam]
[These last few weeks have been grey and listless for Esther, and today is no different. Still debilitatingly self-conscious, she saves her showers for the strangest possible hours, waking at three A.M. to bathe; she keeps her head down during the dinner shift and follows orders directly; she haunts the art room, both painting pieces (these are skilled, furious, sexual, distinctly adult, with nothing childish at all about them) and playing the piano (she has been perfecting her Rachmaninoff obsessively); and wandering through the gardens or hanging around the door to the CES hoping for access.
She hopes for solitude, but many hopes don't pan out.]
[Private to Lydia]
[After the pairing is announced Esther briefly reviews Lydia's posts to the network and steels herself, slipping back into, if not a childlike role, at least a gentle one. There isn't a real point to denying her age with Lydia, though she still presents herself with an infantile appearance; she knows or she doesn't know, and Esther is not worried about either option. When she contacts her new temporary warden, she's sure to be demure and agreeable, making a neutral observation.]
Your name is Lydia? That's very pretty. I'm Esther; pleased to meet you.
[These last few weeks have been grey and listless for Esther, and today is no different. Still debilitatingly self-conscious, she saves her showers for the strangest possible hours, waking at three A.M. to bathe; she keeps her head down during the dinner shift and follows orders directly; she haunts the art room, both painting pieces (these are skilled, furious, sexual, distinctly adult, with nothing childish at all about them) and playing the piano (she has been perfecting her Rachmaninoff obsessively); and wandering through the gardens or hanging around the door to the CES hoping for access.
She hopes for solitude, but many hopes don't pan out.]
[Private to Lydia]
[After the pairing is announced Esther briefly reviews Lydia's posts to the network and steels herself, slipping back into, if not a childlike role, at least a gentle one. There isn't a real point to denying her age with Lydia, though she still presents herself with an infantile appearance; she knows or she doesn't know, and Esther is not worried about either option. When she contacts her new temporary warden, she's sure to be demure and agreeable, making a neutral observation.]
Your name is Lydia? That's very pretty. I'm Esther; pleased to meet you.
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Why do you say it like that? [She turns her head sharply toward Esther, looking away from the painting entirely.]
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Not anymore. [Is her flat, frank answer to Esther's question.]
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I think you live on my floor. [Actually, in the room right next to hers. But it sounds slightly less creepy if she pretends she isn't completely sure.]
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Do I? [She's kept note of who comes and goes on her floor, and which doors change, but she hadn't confirmed Needy's residence.] Level three?
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[She looks around at the art room, and considers some of the other things to the barge that right now she doesn't see.]
And some of it, anything but.
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What do you mean?
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[She bites her lip, thinking, before she looks back at Esther.] I was used to the idea of weird stuff happening before I got here, but enough of it's so regular here that it's almost too unreal. New people showing up out of nowhere. No one being able to really die. The fact that we're on a magic ship piloted by a man that nobody ever sees, in space. Things like that.
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[No one has ever stated it quite this plainly to Esther, and she nods in agreement.] It's unfair, isn't it.
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'Unfair' almost seems like too simple a word.
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It's not descriptive enough.
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Yeah. Exactly. [At least that gets a faint smile out of her.] It doesn't do enough of it justice.
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Excruciating. Is that a better word?
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Excruciating. As in, tedious, agonizing, acute. Yeah; I'd say that's better.
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Torturous, harrying, vexing. It seems to fit.
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So, it kind of sounds like I'm not the only person who used to read pages out of the dictionary as a vocabulary builder.
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No. Reviewing reference books is important when learning a new language.
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Right. [She did notice the accent. She just didn't want to jump on it right away. She slides her hands in her jean pockets, simultaneously raising her shoulders in a kind of shrug.] So, where were you from originally?
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Russia. [Estonia, really; she's still telling this lie out of habit.]
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Did you come straight here from there, or where you like, adopted into America or something first? [Because she knows Russian adoptions are totally a thing. It was on Sixty Minutes.]
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