ʙᴀɴᴀɢʜᴇʀ ʟɪɴᴋs (
argents) wrote in
savetheearth2013-04-03 06:37 pm
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001 — handwritten [scrap] & action.
( HANDWRITTEN )
[ Banagher's found himself a little bit of free time at the library on Pierre-Simon, meaning he's taking a break from sorting through the insanity of the return bin to card through a few old books in search of some kind of meaning to assign to the words he can't seem to keep quiet in his head.
On the back of a forgotten, yellowing library punch card he finds tucked away in a book, he starts copying down things in no order, just to remember—first up is the sequence of numbers that's equally persistent. He'd never thought to put them down physically before, here or otherwise, by the virtue of the fact that he doesn't feel like he'll forget them anytime soon. Thusly: ]

[ Sorry, network denizens, for the nonsensical scraps of texts, notes, and printings you may receive as a result. Also the disconcerting doodles. ]
( ACTION )
[ It's early evening, the time when all the streetlamps begin to wink to life outside and natural sunlight is exchanged for halogen. He's currently seated in the lower level of the library at one of the broad cherry wood tables, chin in hand, mindlessly scribbling on the punch card. There's an assortment of papers spread across the table's corner, dotted with books and pens, suggesting he's been at this for a bit. While usually a diligent worker, he seems pretty distracted.
Don't happen to need a book or the use of a computer, do you? ]
(ooc. this is his first use of the network, but if you're going for action and your character is a frequent visitor to the library or a high school/uni student, you're welcome to assume cr!)
[ Banagher's found himself a little bit of free time at the library on Pierre-Simon, meaning he's taking a break from sorting through the insanity of the return bin to card through a few old books in search of some kind of meaning to assign to the words he can't seem to keep quiet in his head.
On the back of a forgotten, yellowing library punch card he finds tucked away in a book, he starts copying down things in no order, just to remember—first up is the sequence of numbers that's equally persistent. He'd never thought to put them down physically before, here or otherwise, by the virtue of the fact that he doesn't feel like he'll forget them anytime soon. Thusly: ]

[ Sorry, network denizens, for the nonsensical scraps of texts, notes, and printings you may receive as a result. Also the disconcerting doodles. ]
( ACTION )
[ It's early evening, the time when all the streetlamps begin to wink to life outside and natural sunlight is exchanged for halogen. He's currently seated in the lower level of the library at one of the broad cherry wood tables, chin in hand, mindlessly scribbling on the punch card. There's an assortment of papers spread across the table's corner, dotted with books and pens, suggesting he's been at this for a bit. While usually a diligent worker, he seems pretty distracted.
Don't happen to need a book or the use of a computer, do you? ]
(ooc. this is his first use of the network, but if you're going for action and your character is a frequent visitor to the library or a high school/uni student, you're welcome to assume cr!)
no subject
I don't mind. [ His smile, much like the now dormant piano in front of him, is worn at its edges. ] I can only hope you appreciated the performance.
[ Not that he was putting on a show for show's sake, but an old soldier still had his pride. Leaning against the piano's surface, Casval looks Banagher up and down. ]
Were you part of the staff here? I'm afraid I didn't notice you when I came in.
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I help out sometimes, in between classes. It might depend on when you came in, but I was...
[ Copying down things that made no sense? No, Banagher, let's not. Absently, he lays a hand on top of the piano and smudges some of the dust away. ]
...kind of distracted, in a sense.
no subject
Casval continues to watch him, rather like someone watching a bird perched at their windowsill: faintly interested, but keeping still so as not to scare it off. ]
Daydreaming?
[ About gadgets and girls and other mindless things, Casval supposes. As most boys did. ]
no subject
No, nothing like that. [ Friendly as he may be, he doesn't seem exactly forthcoming, either. ] Anyway, once I heard the piano, I wanted to see who was finally visiting it. You must have learned how to play it a long time ago, right?
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[ His eyes flicker away to the floor, drawn back to that memory. Sunlight beside the windowsill and soft notes and laughter and earnest pleas of can't you stay just a little bit longer, always met with the same response.
Someday, maybe.
But someday never came. ]
That's a shame.
[ Casval's hand drifts back to the keys, idly playing chords with a lazy set of fingers. ]
My mother taught me. Just the basics, really; I mostly played on my own. It was something to do, I suppose.
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[ Despite the fact that the answer he receives seems loaded, somehow, nostalgic and yet very close in presence, Banagher chooses instead to focus on the softness of the notes. Sweet without dipping into indulgence.
A good supplement to things that go unsaid. ]
My mom tried everything to teach me, but it didn't work. Something just didn't stick.
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The chords join into a slow, ambling form of Air, two or three keys at a time. Sweet. Nonindulgent. A sluggish afternoon beneath the shade of a tree, a morning slumbering in the meadows. ]
Perhaps it simply wasn't meant to be. [ Humming in thought. ] The piano is a demanding creature. If you don't give it your full attention, it will turn away from you.
[ Ironic, given that he's barely paying attention at the moment. Drifting. The dozy notes of Bach had that sort of effect on a person. ]
no subject
[ Though he doesn't remember ever not trying. He knew the lay of the keys, from the time he was old enough to see over the towering tops of the ivories. Even the progression of notes was familiar, the way elegant pianist fingers could draw well-worn paths across them, over and over. Repetitive, comforting, timeless as he knows it insofar.
A story with letters but no words. ]
Maybe you just have to show it once.
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[ Not that he could speak much on the pessimistic front. Yet some optimism did remain, deep down, inexplicably, that people could do better, live better, work better. Push themselves beyond what was possible and light a path to a brighter future.
Show the world just once that, in spite of its vices and its dangers, it was still a place worth living in after all. ]
Yes... wild horses to be broken. To be tamed. [ The corner of his mouth lifts into a wry sort of half-smile. ] The very nature of music itself, one could argue.
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[ Frequently called "trust", but you know. Banagher realizes he hadn't really meant it literally, but he can't help but think of how awful a broken piano would look. Or sound. It's actually a little hard to imagine, which might color him with a more subdued shade of optimism, if not some kind of faith. ]
no subject
You still haven't introduced yourself to me, young man.
[ It's said teasingly enough, absent its usual sternness. Casval could be obstinate, sure, but it's hard to dole out any fire when you're receiving nothing of the sort in turn. ]
no subject
Blinking it away, his gaze darts up apologetically. Strange. ]
Sorry... I'm Banagher. Banagher Links.
[ A pause at the piano's side eventually gives way to the offer of a handshake. He's not really used to it, but it seemed the most appropriate option. ]
no subject
My name is...
[ Well, most people seemed to know his name already. Less of a name and more of a garbled address all run together by the media, Captain Casval Mass, former pilot of the RAF, renowned British politician and foreign dignitary. The stripping away of identities in favor of titles that no longer held meaning, only old comforts. Hints of what he once was.
Maybe this time, it could be different. ]
...Casval.
[ Maybe this time, someone would understand. Even if they were only just a boy. ]
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[ Banagher repeats, not quite having anticipated the weight of his grasp. It'd be easy to feel insignificant in light of it, like well-crafted iron, but instead he takes away some kind of regard.
And he could ask about it. Or the uniform. Or why he'd come into the library in the first place—looking for books, presumably, and when people were looking for books they were either looking for enjoyment or for answers. What he'd found was a piano.
So all he comes up with is: ]
You play really well.
no subject
To shed his skin, if only in this moment, if only briefly, is far more liberating than it has any right to be. ]
You speak too highly of me.
[ His fingers are reluctant to retreat. He doesn't like being cold, truth be told.
But he pulls them back anyway, for his own good. ]
I simply play.
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[ Skill could be learned, fine-tuned. Brought into place. Talent was natural. ]
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Casval really doesn't know what to do with the truth, other than avoid confronting it. Avert his eyes from it and hope it didn't notice his true colors bleeding through. ]
...thank you. [ The fingers that were so elegant before twitch now, both a nervous habit and a dead giveaway to a darker addiction. ] You attend school nearby, then? You seem a bit young for a university student.
no subject
Locke High. I'm a senior. [ Absently, he swirls shapes in the patches of dust still undisturbed on the piano's lid with an index finger. ] I take a few entry level classes at the university, though.
[ Out of the dim shapes, numbers begin to appear. About three or four in, Banagher realizes what he's doing and thinks better of continuing. ]
What about you? I can't remember seeing you around before.
[ Not that he knows everyone in the city, of course, but having spent his whole life in the area, he's pretty sure he'd remember someone with such a... unique appearance. ]
no subject
But the numbers. The numbers grab his attention and don't let it go. They couldn't possibly be related to... and yet.
And yet.
Slowly, cautiously, Casval reaches over to begin etching his own number into the dust. The number that connected them all to that strange new world, a number very much like Banagher's. ]
Maybe you have, and just didn't realize it.
[ Done. Now broadcasting live, from this piano. Though there's not much dust to left to write in, it gets his point across. ]
Maybe you even saw me a long time ago, in your memories.
[ At this point, nothing would surprise him. ]
no subject
All it takes is a set of numbers to make him realize the world is much smaller than he thinks.
Banagher recoils from the complete sequence like he'd been burned by it, stepping away from the piano and the power he knows it now possesses. Brows knit, he passes a disconcerted glance between it and Casval. ]
...I know this.
no subject
[ And Casval rises, to full height, coat sweeping to the floor. Eyes losing their distant luster and gaining a focused intensity, trained upon Banagher, upon this newest addition to the mystery that daunted him so. Yes, this was only to be expected. It was only right that they'd be connected, somehow. It fits, from that initial, tentative draw to the absolute moment of now. ]
Char Aznable. That is the name that was given to me, along with this number, and that is the name I seek out. The answers to this riddle that have drawn us together. The solution. The final piece in the puzzle.
[ Their differences in size, in stature, in presence, come to the forefront. This man exudes power and drive and all the will necessary to obtain his one sole desire. ]
I will find my answers. I will stop at nothing. That is who I am... the Red Comet. A shooting star to pursue whatever and whomever is foolish enough to elude me.
no subject
Frowning, Banagher tries to settle on what to say. What can he even say? From that little tirade alone, he can tell this was an impenetrable wall to tear down, not a distant flicker to reach for. ]
You've felt it too. That heartbeat. The things that rush in to take its place.
[ Words. Words that aren't in his own voice. Static on a forgotten radio. ]
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Now more than ever, he knows it will lead him to the truth. Perhaps the only truth he won't shy away from. ]
The name that isn't and the things that shouldn't be. The empty space where someone once was.
I will find it and I will fill it. By any means necessary.
no subject
Maybe it's not really empty.
[ Of course he felt it, despite his answer. The kind of literal emptiness that rippled through him: that, for a brief moment, had made him privy to what seemed like the sound of someone else's heart rooted deep in his chest. In its place rose knowledge without origin, and from there, something like a tree with so many branches. Convoluted, difficult to navigate, and undeniably linked at some kind of center. ]
no subject
[ Another reply fired off resoundingly, unflinchingly. If Banagher wished to simply pay the situation no mind, so be it. But it wasn't the same for him. It couldn't be the same for him. He felt too much of a connection to a name he should never have known and that's exactly what compels him to know. It's a beacon for someone hopelessly adrift at sea and he would be a foolish man indeed to choose drowning over rescue.
He's not through on this planet yet. And until he was, until that day when the responsible were made to answer for their crimes... he'd keep on living.
The undying, unyielding Red Comet, blazing a trail endlessly through the skies. That is the being that stands before Banagher Links now. ]
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