Michael Scofield (
prisonking) wrote in
riverviewlogs2017-03-28 12:36 pm
catch-all; cross my heart then I hope to die with a peace of mind
who: Michael Scofield + Various
what: Catch-all
when: March, pre and post underground mission
where: City planning, communal Housing, et al.
warnings: Possible mentions of self-harm, drug use, child abuse, and mental illness. Potential acts of violence.
Starters in comments. PM if you'd like to start something.
what: Catch-all
when: March, pre and post underground mission
where: City planning, communal Housing, et al.
warnings: Possible mentions of self-harm, drug use, child abuse, and mental illness. Potential acts of violence.
Starters in comments. PM if you'd like to start something.

no subject
He's spreading butter and pouring syrup when the next comment comes, and he snorts quietly.] Me neither, considering who else lives here. Loki must be out.
[He still doesn't quite trust the trickster but trust or not, it's hard to deny that he - she, lately? - is a definite presence. Bucky cuts off a bite of his breakfast and pops it into his mouth. He can't quite help the pleased little sound he makes.] This is probably the best pancake I've had since this diner next to the Army base where I grew up.
no subject
[ Michael almost exhales with relief when Bucky takes a bite and doesn't spit it back out again. He moves back into the kitchen to pour another pancake, keeping himself busy. Keeping the air casual.
It really has been ages since he's cooked, and even longer since he's cooked for anyone but himself. The past three years have been wholly devoted to his brother, the means of their escape and survival.
At some point, Michael had changed. Become a different man, so he could survive in a different world. Michael's spent so long thinking like a convict, being a convict, that he's not sure he knows how to stop. The life he lived before Fox River feels closer to fantasy than reality.
Michael hasn't told anyone who he is, only who he used to be. The man he wishes he still was. Moments like these blur the line. Maybe it's foolish, even a little dangerous, but it feels too good to stop. He needs this to stay sane. ]
Tell me about yourself. Anything. You were a military brat?
It's funny. We're all living together, but we don't really know each other. Like we skipped from A to C, or even D.
no subject
He eats slowly, taking the time to enjoy the flavors of warm vanilla and the sweet bursts of blueberry, the sticky sweetness of syrup. This isn't the kind of breakfast you just shovel into your face so you can leave the house faster, like his own slightly overdone fried eggs. He smiles a little at the comment about living together and not really knowing each other.] I guess they figure we'll get to know each other soon enough, since we're all in the same boat as far as being on a strange moon. I don't mind it much, reminds me of the barracks.
Yeah, my old man was Army. Fought in the Great War. [The outdated term slips out easily, casually.] We moved around a lot until I was twelve. What about you, where'd you grow up?
no subject
[ Michael leans back against the kitchen counter, drinking his coffee. An oversized pancake bubbles and turns golden on the griddle, surrounded by a fleet of miniature pancakes. Michael's favourite. He likes them small and crispy.
Bucky's earlier comment about the Great War hasn't gone unnoticed. Michael's been thinking about it, rolling the information around in his brain before speaking.]
I'm not sure I'd consider Vietnam a great war. No offense.
no subject
[But then he pauses, looking up at Michael with a mouthful of food. He chews, swallows, has to remember that this isn't his home world and kids in other worlds don't grow up reading about Captain America and Bucky in their history books.] No, uh. [An awkward pause.] I meant World War One. I was born in 1925.
no subject
[ He steals a miniature pancake out of pan with his fingers and catches it quickly with his teeth, munching while it's still hot enough to burn the insides of his cheeks. Just like when he was ten, except his brother isn't here to scold him. Some things never change. Some do. ]
I never thought we were close, to tell you the truth. He was strong, I was smart. He was big, I was small. We were so different. Still are. The only thing we really have in common is that we're both stubborn.
We kind of drifted apart when we got older, but-
[ It hits him all at once. His brother's face, his laugh, the sound of his voice. The smell and taste of the pancakes on a Sunday morning, when they hadn't had much, but they'd still had each other.
Now he has nothing.
Michael's throat closes up. He has to turn around, and busy himself flipping the pancake. It's too soon, the batter splatters everywhere. Some days it feels like everything he touches falls apart. He sucks in a deep breath, tries not to cry for a second time in front of Bucky Barnes. ]
Wow. You look good for your age.
no subject
Michael turns around, and Bucky still watches his back, feeling something in that brief flash he saw flit across his face. Brothers. It takes him back, a little. He and Steve were like that, years and years ago, big and small, strong and street-smart. Stubborn. It seems strange almost, that Michael and his brother didn't have the same kind of relationship, but it's not strange at the same time.] Did I bring up some bad memories? I'm sorry. I kind of put my foot in my mouth a lot. [A slightly lighter way to say that he doesn't have to talk about it. That Bucky won't pry if it isn't wanted. He might not understand his feelings, but he understands finding conversational minefields, things that are hard to talk about.] I'm still not used to... any of this. Being back in the world.
[He prods at a blueberry with his fork, until it leaks juice across his plate. He drags a bite of pancake through it meticulously, scoffs low and quiet.] Thank cryogenics.
no subject
[ Michael takes a deep breath, grounding himself. Navigating his emotions requires all the control and concentration of walking a tight-rope. Sometimes all it takes is the wrong word, or the right one, to throw him off-balance.
Michael flips the remaining pancakes onto a large plate and carries them back over to the table. He sets up his own plate, a stack of a mini-pancakes drowned in syrup with a thick slab of butter on top. He prods it with his fork noncommittally, chin in his palm.
So much for a casual breakfast.
He rubs a hand over his face, easing the tension out of his forehead with his fingers. ]
Can I tell you something? You don't have to care, I just need to say it.
no subject
He just hopes he's not upsetting Michael. The man is nice, easy to work with. He buckles down and gets his job done. Bucky likes him.
His lips quirk up a little more at the sight of all the little mini pancakes on Michael's plate. It's a terribly small factoid, but he files it away anyway.]
Yeah. Go ahead. What happens at pancake breakfast stays at pancake breakfast.
no subject
[ Michael prods at his pancakes with the tines of his fork, playing with the tower. He pushes one dollar-sized round to one left, and and then the next round to the right. Until they're all precariously balancing on one edge, with space in-between.
He swallows hard. It's not easy for him to be honest. Not even with himself. He's had to push so much down, and hold it there. All the guilt, the hurt, and the regret sits in his belly, slowly, but surely, burning away at him like acid. Unspoken, and unacknowledged.
So much has happened, and there just hasn't been time to talk about it. Face it. He's been too busy running, fighting and surviving. ]
My father died. The same day they brought me here. I didn't get time to do anything, and I don't know what I would've done if I'd had time. Because he was gone my whole life, and then he came back just to leave again.
And I haven't- I can't think about it, or I-
[ He sets his fork down, putting his hands over his face. ]
no subject
But ultimately, he's not making Michael tell him anything. He's volunteering the information. And the least Bucky can do is listen, so he does, resting his fork on his plate and watching his expression as much as he can.
Oh. To be brought here so soon after something like that... Losing your father is hard. He remembers that much from his own childhood.] I'm sorry. [Two words are hardly sufficient to carry the gravity of sympathy, but there they are. He isn't sure what else he can offer.]
If you need to get it out, I can listen. I don't- know what else I can offer, but I can listen.
no subject
[ Michael shakes his head, burying his face in his arms. Bucky has done nothing wrong. Michael's the one with a problem. He always is.
He doesn't want Bucky to see his face, or his weakness, but it's already too late. Michael can't convince himself of his own strength, never mind anyone else.
It's all a facade.
At his core, he's just a selfish, scared little boy who doesn't know when, or how, to let go. ]
I'm sorry.
no subject
That's okay. Believe me, I get that. Not wanting to talk about it. [He lets the acknowledgement out there, and looks back down at his plate, letting things lapse into silence. He only hopes it isn't a lonely silence; he doesn't leave, doesn't judge, he just eats his pancakes and tries to be there.]