http://ecirpnellehada.livejournal.com/ (
ecirpnellehada.livejournal.com) wrote in
fandomhigh2007-10-03 01:37 am
Entry tags:
Library; Wednesday [ 10/02 ]
Adah limped into the library this Wednesday, October the Second, supposedly the Year of Their Lord Two Thousand Seven without the usual armful of books; it was a sad moment for her, really, as she instead had to clutch to a thermos of hot tea to aid in soothing her throat, which was inexplicably sore these past few days. She felt unbalanced without the books. And she let out a soft sigh when she saw the stack of books that needed to be put away on the desk, waiting for her, as though her usual stack was displaced, leaning tower of literature.
She dropped into the chair, looking at them idly, and decided that she'd just read them instead of putting them away.
She dropped into the chair, looking at them idly, and decided that she'd just read them instead of putting them away.

Re: Second Period -- 10/02
Any interruption would have been welcome; as movement caught her eyes and this particular interruption approached, it was certainly above welcome, even if Adah had to duck her head for the odd remembering of those REM functions, a faint hint, a REM ember...remember. Unless River was having a particularly off day, Adah knew that it was too late to try to shield those thoughts from coming; they were there, so, already, the other girl would have a head full of what was filling Adah's, of lawn, and poetry, Snikcidy Limes and the Ohppas Keerg, folded legs with open books like blankets of words across their knees, conspiracies, tendencies, brushed back hair and parted lips...
Adah figured there was no point in hiding anything from River about the nearly lucid dreams that seemed to take a hold of both her mind and her cheeks, slightly her chest, so she let them come freely. No sense in hiding, just peeking out slightly through a curtain of hair that she was incredibly grateful for, to wait and see if they'd catch the other girl off guard in their random intimacy.
But, mostly, what existed in each scenario of River's reaction, what stayed consistent is that, no matter what happened, if River was really done with it, that she'd get her book back, hoping that the other girl didn't decide to hold it ransom until Adah's thoughts turn back to more normal ones that didn't involve kissing her.
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She started to draw the returned book in closer to herself, as if that somehow would make it better.
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That might not be enough to comfort Adah though, and River nervously spun around in a circle, trying to think of something better. She jumped up on to the desk and sat down cross-legged, biting her lip and looking at Adah.
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Too quick. Too fluid. Too River.
Adah floundered a little in attempting to center herself again; River sitting on the desk disrupted the balance. She tried to focus, focus, but her mind was leap-frogging from all the stacks of books, River, herself, books, River, pen, straighten the pen. The pen was crooked, ti neth giarts!
Adah, gulping something down her sore, rough throat, straightened it and, as calmly as she could, let herself make a speculation about her doubtfulness of a party that would allow for such dancing, outside of anything more than what they were doing now.
Re: Second Period -- 10/02
"Far safer through an Abbey gallop,
The stones achase,
Than, moonless, one's own self encounter
In lonesome place."
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Ourself behind ourself, concealed -
Should startle most -
Assassin hid in our Apartment
Be Horror's least.
Least horrors be apart, meant hours in, hid, assassin, most startled should, concealed ourselves, behind ourselves...An interesting choice. River, warning her about the dangers of too much solitude. She looked over at the other girl for verification, although she wasn't sure if verification would answer anything.
Or so she told herself, but anyone who could plainly see her thoughts as she knew River could, would be able to tell that Adah felt she already assumed why River would warn about something like that. At least, she had an assumption.
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He bolts the door,
O'erlooking a superior spectre
More near."
River smiled at Adah, eyes glittering. "When things come back to haunt you it doesn't matter how well you shoot." And she could shoot quite well. She pushed the book closer to Adah, into her hand.
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"Sometimes words are troublesome. Different connections for different people."
Re: Second Period -- 10/02
Words were troublesome, because even in cultures with a supposedly agreed upon language, they could mean so many different things. And they, the both of them, seemed to be in the incurable habit of using them to twist endlessly around a single point, circling, circling, closing in, but never reaching that center point.
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Although perhaps that Adah chose to focus on the poem instead of answering herself that question was answer enough.
She pointed to one particular line. She never really thought about that line much before, but now she found it a wonderful contradiction. She certainly did not relate June to innocence after the last three years in Africa.
And, of course, she also knew that she was focusing on that because it brought up the most distant associations.
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The words came easily, and it surprised her. It was a secret, one she rarely told, or one she hid in plain sight. Part of her mind had obviously wanted Adah to know. "Want to know if one day you'll turn your head away in horror." Blair had, after all.
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Which brought her around, finally, to her conclusion. Why would she turn her way in horror at someone protecting something, when she had to spend three years of her life watching a man blindly leading his family into danger without even realizing they were there, trailing on his shoestrings.
He hadn't even considered leaving after Ruth May died. After Ruth May died because he had carelessly made an enemy of a man who knew how to set a trap. Adah's throat was tight, but it had nothing to do with her affliction now, her eyes filling a little. She'd seen horror; her sisters called him Father, and his disease was blindness not of the eyes, but of the mind. One thing she felt certain River would never be afflicted with. And the whole notion that she would think that Adah would ever even consider her on the same field as that man just boggled her.
There were many reasons to kill; death was just another part of life. Kill micro organisms by bowling water, so they don't kill you. Kill chickens so that you can eat them, so hunger doesn't kill you. Kill insane cannibals, so they don't eat you and kill you.
...It was when death was senseless that Adah felt like she might need to turn her head, but not in horror. Just deep, crippling sadness.
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Adah drew in a breath, trying to cut off the flow of thoughts; her fingers twitched a little under River's light touch, and she hoped that River didn't take her lack of response as anything against her. She had a habit of closing herself down over things like this; it demanded a lot of her mental facilities, and so her energy almost transfered entirely to it, and then it left her exhausted, mind, body, and soul. If she even had one of the last.
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