fallaces_sunt: ([dog] IMMA GONNA BITE YOU)
Natasha Romanoff ([personal profile] fallaces_sunt) wrote2015-02-12 02:29 pm
Entry tags:

PL: Finnick Odair

Spike Velikan had planned things carefully, with all the cunningness contained within him. He'd watched his new Person and her Roommate, observed their movements, and plotted his escape. Seizing his chance, he'd grabbed his favourite squeaky toy and made a DARING ESCAPE!!!!

Which is why there is currently a small dog running around the hallways on Deck 7. A small dog boasting long golden hair, scales down his spine, a long hairless tail (currently wagging in excitement), a pair of red-and-white stripped antennae and an elegant horn. And, most important of all, a purple dinosaur in his mouth, which currently squeaks in time to his footfalls.

Spike Velikan thinks this is the best idea ever.









Natasha, meanwhile, is also out in the hallways, calling for him. She is far less impressed with her dog's cleverness than he is.
fishermansweater: (Good thing we're allies)

[personal profile] fishermansweater 2015-04-18 02:35 pm (UTC)(link)
Finnick's a good enough reader of people to know the way her face shifts, ever so subtly, but shifts nevertheless. It's the sort of expression of anger he's used to seeing. Stating anger at the Capitol out loud can get you killed. So people's eyes harden, their jaws tighten, their lips thin.

Even if they say nothing, their fury is there. People who'd known children who'd died in the Games. People at the tributes' funerals he's attended, who knew the children who'd died, who saw him as an agent of the Games because he'd been their dead child's mentor and he'd failed.

"It's a reminder from the Capitol to the districts of the cost of rebellion."

If they can take your children and do that to them, you mean nothing. You are powerless. Hopeless. Broken. That's the message, as much as the hope the victors embody.
fishermansweater: (Marilyn Monroe)

[personal profile] fishermansweater 2015-04-19 09:31 am (UTC)(link)
It's the Capitol's line, and it's meticulously sold: this is your punishment, this is your fault, it is only the good grace of the Capitol that means 23 of you die each year instead of all of you. Be grateful it's just your children and remember it could be all of you instead.

He knows the line. And it's a very good weapon of fear.

Natasha's voice is heated, though her expression has a smile, a hard one, not unlike the one he sometimes wears himself.

He won't say anything to her about agreeing or not agreeing with her, but she at least gives him that much. He takes the chance she gives him to bend down and pick up the thing the dog is whining after. Its head follows him, its whimpering gets higher pitched.

Finnick holds the thing for a long couple of moments after he straightens up, then offers it, gingerly, to the little creature.

His expression is perfectly controlled.

"Katniss." He only knows one person here matching that description. "Yeah. We were in the Games together."
fishermansweater: (I can be who you want me to be)

[personal profile] fishermansweater 2015-04-19 11:45 am (UTC)(link)
Finnick doesn't show the moment of fear as he holds out his hand into the dog's reach. His hand is steady, but he's watching the dog, green eyes fixed on it. It doesn't lunge out: it leans, carefully, and closes its jaws around it. Just the toy. Just like a dog begging for food or a stick to play with out on the docks.

There's a loud squeaking sound.

Maybe it really is just a dog. An alien dog, not a mutt, just like those people with the strange color and texture to their skin are, apparently, not Capitol-enhanced, but people from other worlds.

"Panem."

He still remembers, even after the fog had lifted, somewhat, from his mind, the conversation he'd had with the girl who gave him the ribbon. About Panem. About what that means.

"What sort of things?" he asks, something slow and suggestive in the corner of his smile.
fishermansweater: (So common as money)

[personal profile] fishermansweater 2015-04-19 01:18 pm (UTC)(link)
"I can't blame her," he says, his voice light, that smile lingering over his lips.

He'd had to be talked down when he arrived here himself. Katniss hadn't been pulled here straight from the arena like Finnick, but she'd survived two Hunger Games and the revolution, and Finnick knows victors.

He still doesn't know just what the Quarter Quell has done to him, but he knows his constant edginess, his wariness, his sharply honed reactions are all more sensitive than they were. It had taken a lot for Doctor Bashir to persuade him to stand down enough to lower his weapon.

"Victors of the Hunger Games tend not to react well to sudden changes."
Edited 2015-04-19 13:24 (UTC)
fishermansweater: (Wish you looked this good)

[personal profile] fishermansweater 2015-04-23 11:07 am (UTC)(link)
"I arrived here out of the arena. I was just about ready to kill the first person I saw."

It was lucky for Doctor Bashir that Finnick, while he has sharp, practiced reflexes, also knows how to assess a threat in an instant, and act on it, and Doctor Bashir had been assessed as not an immediate threat to his life.

Still, there's no abashment in Finnick's words: Natasha has given away something about herself, and that honestly, at least, deserves the frankness of his reply.

"I only know victors," he says, shoving his hands into his pockets. "But I do know victors. None of us would have taken being here well."

Even aside from the constant fear of the Capitol and their spies, that shock would unsettle any of them with the wits left to be unsettled.
fishermansweater: (What do you think?)

[personal profile] fishermansweater 2015-05-24 06:12 pm (UTC)(link)
"So far, the evidence would support that. There are more people here from my world, too."

Not all victors, but almost all. And they'd been reaped, all of them who are here: Finnick, Annie, Katniss, Peeta, Prim, Haymitch. Finnick, Katniss, and Peeta had been reaped once and volunteered once. Annie and Haymitch had been reaped twice. Prim, the once. All three of them saved, once, by someone volunteering for them.

In truth, he's already done precisely what she's asking about, when Annie arrived. He'd soothed her, talked to her, assured her that it was going to be all right, though Annie hadn't been about to offer violence.

She had been frightened and confused and high on morphling, though.

"I'd know them," he says. "I've known the rest of them for years." Except Katniss and Peeta, but they're already here.

"Whether I'd be able to talk them down or not..." He shrugs, and for an excuse not to look at her a moment, looks down at the dog in her arms, apparently entirely contented now it has the toy back.

"Most of them don't like me enough to trust my word."
fishermansweater: (Watching you)

[personal profile] fishermansweater 2015-06-21 04:34 am (UTC)(link)
"I'll do what I can."

He says it quietly, but he's sincere and that's there, in his voice, for someone who's listening. He knows victors. They've been most of the people he's known and socialized with for years. He knows how dangerous they are when they're frightened or threatened. They didn't all survive by killing, but most of them did, and even those who didn't ... they're still uneasy.

"That includes the victors."

Whatever people might think of them, there aren't many victors who won because they enjoy killing. Not even Finnick, though he'll kill when it's needed, kill for his own protection.

He nods, giving her a slyly teasing smile.

"I guess having to wake him up to put him to bed would be counterproductive."
Edited 2015-06-21 04:37 (UTC)
fishermansweater: (Standing)

[personal profile] fishermansweater 2015-06-21 05:14 am (UTC)(link)
The public in Panem tend not to see the victors' damage. They see Finnick's beauty and popularity without what it does to him ever time he goes to the Capitol. They see the drugs, the drink, the things the victors turn to so they can chase some of the nightmares and fears and memories away, but they don't see why.

They don't hear the screams in the night the way he and Annie do.

And here, in this situation, they'd see the violence without thinking of the reason for the snap reactions.

Natasha, he thinks, gets it. So he nods, and he looks at the dog again, letting his smile grow a little in response to Natasha's.

"Kind of hard to avoid someone in a place like this," he points out easily.

Avoiding each other isn't the point, and if he sees Natasha again, he won't avoid her. Or her dog.