oneblackcat: (dead end roads)
Omi Tsukiyono ([personal profile] oneblackcat) wrote in [community profile] synergetic2014-12-20 12:41 am

[KBF] Waking

It didn't work.

This was Omi's first realization as he opened his eyes to a sterile, bright room. He was awake, and that meant he was alive, and that meant he'd failed.

It was his only thought for several minutes. He was confused and tired, and kept thinking about going back to sleep. A couple of times, he did.

When he finally did come to more fully, his mind was blurry except for that one thought: he was supposed to be dead. He wasn't.

It seemed like a horrible irony. Of all people to fail a suicide attempt-- a boy in the business of making things die? Of course, he'd known going into it that there was only a chance of the drug being strong enough. He missed the obvious implication that to be in a medical room and not an interrogation one, it had been a close enough call for intervention.

He thought he was going to vomit. He curled his arm around his stomach, not registering until a good half a minute later that he'd been able to move it. His hands and feet weren't tied.

He almost tried to fumble out of the bed, to find a scalpel, a pair of scissors, a syringe, anything sharp. But when one's vision was a dizzying spin, leaping out of bed was just not in the cards. It was maddening: here he was with no restraints and apparently no guards, and neither one was needed to keep him planted right there on the bed.

He blearily tried to take in more of his surroundings. A bed with white sheets. Wires and beeps from equipment monitoring his vital signs. An IV taped to the top of his hand. And, unsurprisingly, an incredibly tender sore on his tongue. As his vision cleared, Omi tried, shakily, to push himself to sitting upright. His muscles didn't seem to want to cooperate, though, and after a couple of seconds they gave out, putting him right back against the mattress.

He lay alone, watching the nothing, and wondering, vaguely, where he was. And what the heck time it was.
staystraught: (i'll try)

[personal profile] staystraught 2014-12-22 07:29 am (UTC)(link)
Dick filed that away in his brain to tell Batman later. That was something, that he recognized the value of nurture against nature. There was hope for rehabilitation there.

"I'm surprised you feel it, though," Dick pressed. "I mean, I saw-- Batman was strict, he never accepts good when he knows I can do better -- I have to get straight As or I hang up the cape, for one thing -- but he never... did anything to hurt me. Mentally or physically. He wanted me to leave all the work to him, he's never asked me to do anything horrific like-- like with the dog."

Dick's never had a pet before, mainly because he doesn't have the time for one, but he grew up around elephants and lions and there's always been an animal lover deep in his heart.

"Look, I hurt people sometimes, I'm sure I've fractured some bones, and maybe some people deserve it, but an innocent dog..."
staystraught: (practicing batglares)

[personal profile] staystraught 2014-12-22 08:26 am (UTC)(link)
Robin bit back the instinctive rejoinder -- because idiots like you do them -- because that wasn't fair, he'd been a child with no alternatives and aside from the dog, they probably weren't all that innocent, no.

"The human condition isn't always optimum," he said briskly. "I've learned to deal. But you have to have realized by now, him making you do it? Old Yeller is historical fiction, they veterinarians and shelters who... they call it putting them to sleep, it's supposed to be a quick, painless death performed by, uh, trained professionals who are psychologically equipped to have that on their consciences and know how to sleep at night. Why would a grown man make a child do it?"

He paused to breathe, but barreled on before Omi could get a word in.

"It's brainwashing. Textbook, actually. Take a vulnerable individual, make sure they're entirely dependent you for survival, and they'll believe anything you tell them. You have nowhere else, no one else to turn to, not believing everything he tells you is going to be literally impossible to do because what's he gonna do if you don't? Turn you out? I mean, I suppose you knew he wouldn't kill you, at least-- he had you to do that."
staystraught: (orphans and snow just go together)

[personal profile] staystraught 2014-12-23 05:00 am (UTC)(link)
So his world was rocked.

Watching someone go through a mental breakdown is never pleasant. Nor is watching someone's life crumble before their very eyes. When everything you thought you knew about yourself is a lie... he thought of Roy again.

No one would ever accuse Dick of being delicate. Tact was something he was hoping to learn as he grew up, but it didn't happen today.

Pressing him further just seemed cruel, now, but so did waiting patiently for a response. Kind of a dilemma.
staystraught: (STAY AWAY FROM MY BATMAN)

[personal profile] staystraught 2014-12-25 08:48 pm (UTC)(link)
"Within reason and my power," said Robin. Cautiously. Generally, he felt knowledge was a reasonable request, but he reserved the right to plead ignorance if it suited him.
staystraught: (wait is that rocket?)

[personal profile] staystraught 2014-12-25 09:04 pm (UTC)(link)
Robin wanted to be sanctimonious. He did. The 'don't-kill-people-you-idiot' urge was strong.

"Uh, reserving the right to change my mind later?" he muttered. "Well."

It was hard to say. Very few things have only one answer.

"That depends on your final goal," he said, after a long moment. "Do you want to go back to what you were doing? Do you want to live a quiet life like a normal person? I'm not equipped to advise in either of those directions."
staystraught: (this is not to my liking)

[personal profile] staystraught 2014-12-25 09:39 pm (UTC)(link)
"Run away and join the circus is always an option," he said, wanting to say something light. His hands clasped in front of him.

He shrugged. "Obviously, I only have my own experiences to draw from," he said, slowly. "But... you know, I know killing people isn't satisfying. You're, you've got to be, disappointed by the waste of life. I'm not saying everyone can be rehabilitated, or do better if given a chance, but I am saying cutting off that chance is wasteful."

But that doesn't really answer the question, does it?
staystraught: (the pentagon needs bigger vents)

[personal profile] staystraught 2014-12-31 04:56 am (UTC)(link)
"Remorse might be a good start," Robin said delicately. He didn't want to promise more than he could deliver, but there was-- well, mitigating circumstances, Stockholm Syndrome, et cetera and so forth.

"Beyond that, I don't know. I do know," and here he leveled his best Batman glare, which was usually diminished by his smaller stature, but still got the job done, "that giving you what you want is not a priority. Right now, I don't trust you to do the right thing under pressure, and that means you're not getting thrown into any situation that would require you to make that right decision until you prove otherwise."

He held a hand up.

"And don't go playing the 'I've changed!' game with me. You have not. We've barely talked and while I am extremely persuasive, you're brainwashed and I'm not dumb. You haven't come around to my way of thinking just because of one heart-to-heart."
staystraught: (duck and crouch)

[personal profile] staystraught 2015-01-04 07:40 am (UTC)(link)
There was a brief, a very brief, prick of alarm at that, because that was not the assignment, shutting him down further, and perhaps a little more skill or finesse could have been applied, but... well, Robin fought not to cross his arms, because that was visibly petulant, but otherwise...

With the very glaring exception of what Batman might say about it, he stood with the basic intent behind the words. Maybe Omi could use a second chance, but would he be using it to escape punishment or to do right?

Really, only the fact he was already going to be explaining himself to Batman kept Robin from the comeback that was forming as he stood to leave, shaking the wrinkles from his cape.