ext_229451 ([identity profile] enigmaestro.livejournal.com) wrote in [community profile] capeandcowllogs2011-08-11 04:00 am

A story high above the low, recorded by few, disputed by later.

WHO: EDWARD NYGMA and POSSIBLY YOU.
WHERE: NOHoPE.
WHEN: August 8th - August 14th.
WARNINGS: Sweep you all up on a corner and pay for my bread.
SUMMARY: You know that I cannot believe my own truth.
FORMAT: To show what a truth, it's got nothing to lose.



They had taken away his pens. After the fourteenth riddle he had marked over the once-pristine walls, they had informed him that he was acting destructively and could not do with this privilege any longer. Eddie hadn't humored this exceptionally well. If you hadn't intended for me to express myself, he had argued, you wouldn't have encouraged such easily attained access. Whose idea was it to give me the tools anyway? His words were stonewalled, met with incomprehension or disdain. And shortly soon, punishment. Edward Nygma found himself alone, without release, staring at his blackly inked words driven over his walls. A room riddled.

He kept thinking of Norman. How that man was meandering through his life, undisturbed, when he had so abruptly ruined Eddie's own. How unfair it was, how cruel. How much he direly wanted to snip out Norman's vocal chords with a charming pair of symbolically rusty scissors and --

Oh. But that was rather frowned upon, wasn't it?

"Hardly a resonating concern anymore, is it?" Eddie muttered to himself. He had been in the habit of drifting in and out of speech in his solitude. Robbed of an audience and introduced to all kinds of new anti-psychotics (how the market had changed, since his Arkham days), he found himself prone to halfway-audible discussions with his own ears. It was grand company thus far, he wouldn't argue that. His eyes focused on the wall to his left, idly reading his own desperate scrawls.

PARTIAL OBLIGATION
FOLLOWING 01000111
ENDING WITH THE PENULTIMATE IN BEGINNING

Work that had yet been erased by his self-appointed caretakers. He rather liked that one particular riddle, it was rather pivotal. The act itself was soothing, something delving deeper into his past habits. A sort of solace granted in the dark, quiet places of his mind. An old friend. A resolve, an endurance. Truth screaming behind art. Truth. Obsession. Compulsion. This was better, he reasoned, this is how it should be. And that thought was perhaps the thing that Eddie hated the most, the one idea that he couldn't suffer; knowing how Norman Osborn made this realization first.

We may as well talk on equal terms, was what Norman had said to him as they both wore their respective costumes, both soaked in darkness. Equal terms. It was a phrase that stung, as surely Norman knew. When Eddie orchestrated his rival's convoluted downfall, he had done so with the superiority of his moral action. Eddie was right, and if he had to sacrifice a few dozen innocent lives to prove how right he was, so be it. If he had to pay with minimal blood in order to rescue thousands -- maybe even millions -- then it was a price well paid. His method was unconventional, yes, but effective. He was an agent of the greater good, a visionary of the Bigger Picture. He was the hero who had humbled a monster. Equal terms dismantled the idea, mocked it. Weaponized it.

SLAIN WITHOUT THE LEAD
VILE IN CONJUNCTION
WHAT IS THE HERO?

Locked within the painfully pale rooms of the Norman Osborn Hospital of Psychological Evaluation, Edward Nygma then decided that he was done playing games.
dragony: (but I didn't order a candygram)

[personal profile] dragony 2011-08-13 07:02 am (UTC)(link)
"I'll be okay," she said, a falsehood as easily spoken as the movement of footsteps coming further into the room. The bed was the largest flat surface in the room (other than the floor, or the walls, scarred and bloodied with more than ink), so it was to there that she crossed to set down her gifts. Her arms moved with weariness, even for a simple task. "Some very important people were ExPorted, so it's nothing unusual." Understatement, dodge, confession and dismissal in the same breath. A suffering kept in opaque glass.

The papers rustled and lay silent, and no further announcement to their presence. Normally she walked like Eddie stood now, with hands behind her back, but today they remained at her sides; she moved to the offered chair, but did not yet sit down.

"What about you?" she asked, bouncing back concern. Her eyes moved back and forth from the man to the words; the markings on the light-colored walls were like bruises on skin.
dragony: (oh right i'm 11 lol)

[personal profile] dragony 2011-08-13 08:37 pm (UTC)(link)
She accepted the comfort as it was: truth, but not the most immediate or load-bearing of them. It received the slight bow of her head for acknowledgment, no words, but the question soon to follow set an uneven smile on her face.

"You said you missed some days, and didn't know what's been going on," she said, opting to cross to one of the smaller bruises on the wall instead of uneasy rest, "so I thought those would help. They even let me leave in the crosswords for you." She was a willful girl, even at her most vulnerable, and very often got her way.

After all, if even Rex Godwin could not deny her, what hope did servants to the front desk have?

Closer now to the wall, the etched words became clearer. The vandalism was obviously not the work of some prior tenant, but could only have been created by the man in the room with her. Otherwise, she thought, it was a terrible coincidence that they'd lock a man who would craft riddles in distress in a room already wounded with them.
dragony: (but I didn't order a candygram)

[personal profile] dragony 2011-08-13 09:27 pm (UTC)(link)
While his attention was diverted to the printed word, hers was devoted to the inked. There was the likelihood they were merely the craft of boredom, but it wasn't a conclusion she was willing to draw prematurely.

The sound of his voice in an overheard conversation -- did no one think to ask this sooner? -- moved her feet from one riddle to the next. She knew the likelihood of her solving them all would be low, as she hadn't even managed breaking all the simple riddles locking Eridan's communicator, but if even a few of these pieces held some greater meaning, it'd be worth the pursuit.

If nothing else, it'd give her something to do when she went back to the quiet with Sirius.

"Summers are usually pretty violent around here, aren't they?" she asked, turning her head to speak the words over her shoulder rather than face him directly. Her eyes were too caught on a new riddle; the writing of this one looked stranger than the last. The ink wasn't the same dark black, was it? "I suppose every season has some new pattern here."
dragony: (somebody get this thing outta me)

[personal profile] dragony 2011-08-16 11:14 pm (UTC)(link)
"What, like bears?" she asked, a little distracted by the wall. While he watched her, examining the new puzzle of more than simple words, Ruka slipped the right glove off with a practiced ease. Her hand was pale, her fingers thin; no longer a child's hand, but not yet finalized into its adult shape. Even at this age, it was easy to tell she would have long, delicate-seeming fingers and narrow palms. "Well, not survive like bears, I mean," she clarified, bare fingers reaching up to touch the letters.

If she meant to say anything after that, it was cut off with a pained cry. Her fingers barely touched those letters, the subtle dark brown of dried blood before the sound erupted from her, startled and overwhelmed. Ruka recoiled from the wall as though it were electrified completely, jerking back with such force as to lose her balance. The rubber of her shoes screeched against the floor; the girl barely seemed to notice she was falling.
dragony: (just another day of getting kidnapped)

[personal profile] dragony 2011-08-18 05:09 am (UTC)(link)
The girl made no protest to being moved or guided, and even upon sitting she didn't seem to be listening. Her brow was furrowed and bent for concentration, but there seemed a silent fury at the corners of her eyes, a seething at the crests of her cheeks. They were subtle twists of the face, not quite boiled to the surface, but her gaze was without focus for several silent seconds. Within, the emotions she captured were stronger, and harder to fight down; it was a screaming fury, tearing at self and at the walls that contained it, like waves smashing against the cliff it so wished to destroy.

There was only a touch of brown to the very tips of her fingers, and Ruka stared down at those spots while her hand seemed to convulse and seize up, minute movements easily missed if not watched. She curled that hand into a fist, hiding the stain and willing the tremble to cease; her pulse and breath had both gone sprinting without her. When she looked up to meet Eddie's eyes, curiosity and fear fueled her gaze; the seeking of knowledge, and the desire to flee from it.

"Are you always so angry?" she murmured, her voice so much lower for how close they were, for how likely they were to be spied upon. "How can you contain it?"