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Cornelius Hickey ([personal profile] spotsalone) wrote2025-04-11 07:04 pm
royalmarine: (004)

[personal profile] royalmarine 2025-12-24 12:05 am (UTC)(link)
[ Water is not enough, but Tozer has nothing better to offer. Little stares at him with vacant eyes, the most horrible sight in this entire camp, but Tozer can't bring himself to look away, as if that fixed gaze is the only thing tethering the lieutenant to this world.

Half of the water spills from Little's cracked lips. The other half makes it down, though, and Tozer chooses to consider that a victory. There is some life left yet, and that can be nurtured. They can carry him back to Terror on a sledge, settle him in a cot in the sick bay where it's warm and quiet, gently work the metal out of his face... One more mouth to feed won't make a difference. Tozer can share his own rations if the men make a fuss. They have to try.

"Sergeant," Little says, or perhaps that's just what Tozer hears in the hoarse whisper that may just as well be a wordless groan. He nods anyway. ]


I've got you.

[ Behind him, he hears Hickey and Angelo approach. He lifts the canteen to give Little another short drink, his thumb absently stroking through the lieutenant's tangled hair, an automatic attempt at comfort.

"That," Hickey says, "is the man whose berth you're sleeping in." ]


First lieutenant Edward Little.

[ Tozer turns in time to see Hickey's jaw set at the correction. Tozer waits, expecting a further reaction to discovering a survivor, but Hickey only frowns in mild curiosity as he enters the tent, crouching down on the other side of Little to prod at the chains on his cheek.

"What's this about, do you think?" It's a casual question, as if they're pondering some benign oddity. ]
cleansheets: (16 anger)

[personal profile] cleansheets 2025-12-24 11:37 pm (UTC)(link)
[ Angelo cares precious little about the titles of the half-dead man laying before them and even less about his name, but the fact that he was the previous occupant of his tiny room? That is of relevance. Of course he knew that he'd taken a former officer's berth, but he'd thought the man dead and gone. After his initial deep cleaning of the space, the matter of the prior inhabitant had totally left his mind.

It's harder to ignore now that the guy has turned up-- well, on close observation, 'still alive' seems a generous descriptor for this, isn't it? 'Still breathing' might be more apt. Angelo joins the other two in the tent just in time to witness the way the stranger's skin flaps shit when Hickey's finger makes contact with the chain. Disgusting. ]


Does it matter?

[ Hickey is allured by the mystery of it, but so long as they are standing between corpses and almost-corpses, Angelo does not feel like he has the patience for thought-play. All his hairs stand on end, like he'd been electrified through and through. ]

It's not like he'll be able to tell us within whatever hours he's got left.
Edited 2025-12-24 23:38 (UTC)
royalmarine: (001)

[personal profile] royalmarine 2025-12-28 09:54 am (UTC)(link)
Of course it matters!

[ The sudden ferocity startles Hickey—and even Little, his eyes flicking up to stare at Angelo. Really, the lieutenant's head lolling against Tozer's palm is the only thing preventing Angelo from being shoved bodily out of the tent. Hickey would punish Tozer for it in one way or another, but it would be worth it to remind Angelo of his place. This is not his business, not his fate, not his crew, not his tragedy. ]

You don't know a damned thing about—

[ —"Solomon." Hickey so rarely raises his voice that the name is all it takes to bring Tozer to heel. He must know this, given the pause that lingers in its wake, and yet his hand grips Tozer's shoulder anyway.

"Angelo is referring to the chains, and nothing more. Of course this man matters."

Tozer's fingers tighten in Little's hair. He drops the canteen to instead clutch at Little's sleeve protectively. He may have fallen silent, but his gaze matches Hickey's for intensity.

Later, Tozer will recognize Hickey's blatant about-face for what it is: an act, meant to keep him from fussing over a problem not worth solving. But here and now, suffocated by the ghost of a future that could have been, Tozer can't bring himself to believe that Hickey is still capable of such cold pragmatism. Whether Little has days or hours or minutes left is irrelevant. He is their shipmate. Surely, Hickey must feel that pull, too. He must. ]


We'll need a sledge and some rope. Another blanket, too.

[ Tozer doesn't direct the order at anyone in particular, but it's clear that he has no intention of leaving Little's side. ]
cleansheets: (49 surprise)

[personal profile] cleansheets 2025-12-29 12:44 am (UTC)(link)
[ 'Of course this man matters,' Hickey says and Angelo can't help but look at him as if he's grown another head. Edward Little is hell-bound. Anyone who isn't too blinded by sentimentality can see that at a glance.

As much as Hickey is correct in the most literal form - Angelo had been referring to the chains when he opened his mouth - Tozer is correct in the spirit of it. There is no value in trying to save this man. They'll only waste their strength and his limbs already feel like they are splintering under any significant exertion, a sensation he refuses to examine too deeply. ]


How are we supposed to--

[ If he argues this, is he going to undo whatever work Hickey just put in for him to defuse the situation? Is 'this man matters' Hickey's order to go along and try to haul him all the way back to the ship, likely to just watch him perish midway into the absolute emptiness of the shale? What a waste, based on nothing but Tozer's desire to play hero!

Angelo may have thought better of completing his sentence, but the rest of his refutation still visibly burns on his tongue. While Tozer is busy looking at Little like he was the game they'd been so desperately seeking, Angelo feels safe to make a much more open expression in Hickey's direction. Despite no words accompanying the look, it is still quite clear what Angelo is saying:

Elias, what the fuck?! ]
Edited 2025-12-29 00:45 (UTC)
cleansheets: (13 anger)

[personal profile] cleansheets 2026-01-10 12:24 am (UTC)(link)
[ Angelo watches the little sketch play out in front of him in perfect silence, but the movement of his eyebrows is betraying the amount of displeasure he's feeling at the way the scene is progressing. It's easy to see that Hickey has given Tozer an inch and now he'll take the whole mile, and it's a far cry from the way Hickey had initially described how pliable Tozer can be. For a month now, the idea of an effortlessly loyal Tozer has been falling apart in front of them, but it's insane to think that something like this would make him double down for real. No matter how Angelo looks at it, Little is doomed. The idea of carrying his still-breathing corpse with them gives Angelo the creeps, even before he begins considering the physical effort.

He follows Hickey out of the tent without giving Tozer so much as another glance, and as soon as they are enough steps away to be plausible out of ear-shot, he turns to Hickey and let's his anger flow. His voice is a low hiss, owed to just enough awareness to keep quiet and not start further strife with the marine in the tent. ]


He can pull that sledge himself, if he so direly wants to play the good samaritan!

[ Inside the tent he'd engaged the same restraint that he often had to apply when standing in the back of Frontal's office, forced to tolerate the most foul disrespect in the name of diplomacy. Outside of it, that past habit melts away all-too-quickly. Angelo would never have talked back to Frontal, but Hickey--- Hickey is not his leader in the same way. And anger sustains Angelo. The camp is a little less eerie if he's channeling all his frustration towards Tozer instead. ]
cleansheets: (55 serious)

[personal profile] cleansheets 2026-01-10 09:25 pm (UTC)(link)
[ Hickey tells him to calm down and Angelo does - outwardly. Inside, his anger is swirling as violently as before, if not more so for the flat way in which he's being told off. He'd wanted to speak to Hickey as his companion, and he got Hickey as the leader instead - does it comfort Hickey, to know that when he's lost control of Tozer, he can still tame Angelo with the wave of a hand? With tensions running high and his brain feeling like a live wire, Angelo almost goes off about that... but the same tension holds him back as well. Whatever matters are like emotionally, Hickey is correct that they are still on a mission. Angelo is soldier enough to understand as much. ]

Understood.

[ A short acknowledgement, coming along with a sharp exhale. The resources... Little seems seconds away from death, so Angelo is hard-pressed to be worried on the strain he'll have on their food supplies. He'll croak before he can have even a single poisoned can, surely.

No, food is not a concern. He can be rational about food, but... The knowledge that this other lieutenant used to occupy his old room is what gnaws at Angelo. That man is who Tozer wishes were still in there. That man is who Tozer feels has earned a right to be here. Angelo kicks the rocks by his feet a bit harder than needed be as he turns away from Hickey. ]


I'll grab what we need, then.

[ There is nothing gained by having this conversation now, when neither Tozer nor Hickey will change their minds. Angelo doesn't want to linger in this graveyard a moment longer than he needs to. ]
royalmarine: (010)

[personal profile] royalmarine 2026-02-03 09:39 am (UTC)(link)
[ Angelo scrounges through the scattering of tins to collect any yet unopened, and Hickey helps Tozer load Little onto the sledge. His lack of commentary or even further direction makes it clear that the sergeant has crossed a line, but Tozer finds that he doesn't care. If he's made an enemy of Hickey, that price is well worth it for the first sound decision he's made in months. Even if Little dies before they make it back to the ship, even if Hickey decides he's no longer of use and kills him for it, Tozer will have tried. It's the best atonement he can manage in their current situation.

Hickey has Angelo handle the sack of tins while he carries the duffel of guns, undoubtedly the heavier load of the two. Tozer is left to haul Little up and over the miserable ridge by himself, and he is not surprised by this. No one says a word as they make their way back to the ship. No one looks back to the camp once they're clear of it.

It's a brutal climb, with the sledge catching awkwardly every few steps and the shifting rocks as uncooperative as ever. This would be hell even if he were well fed and rested. Now, he's not even a third of the way up before his lungs are heaving painfully and heart is thumping at a frightening pace. Little hardly weighs anything anymore, but Tozer may as well be hauling a boat by himself. The sledge clatters along over the uneven stones, and every so often, Tozer hears a weak groan from behind him. He doesn't have the breath to apologize.

Hickey and Angelo only pause to wait for him at the crest of the ridge, and once he catches up, they start off on their own again. His legs urge him to stop and rest a moment, but he knows he'll never get up again if he sits. Instead, he tells himself the path downhill will be easier. It isn't.

They return to the boat, and then they return to the ship, and even rowing slowly isn't enough to let Tozer catch his breath. His arms are shaking as they haul Little onto the deck, much to the surprise of the men standing watch. Hickey, of course, explains nothing, only issuing a curt order for Hodgson to watch for Pilkington and Des Voeux to return to the shoreline. Someone will need to row out and collect them. Hodgson balks, trying instead to follow them below deck, fumbling through half-formed questions.

"Lieutenant," Hickey snaps. "You are not needed here."

Hickey does shoulder the brunt of the effort in lowering Little through the hatchway and into the sick bay. Tozer knows he's only doing this to put on a show for the men, but he doesn't argue. He barely made it down the ladder himself.

They manage to lay Little in one of the berths after Tozer refuses to let Hickey leave him on the center table. Not even Angelo follows them into the sick bay. Stunned murmurs drift in from the forecastle, and Tozer can hear enough to know that most of the commentary is about the chains in the skeletal lieutenant's face. He yanks the curtain closed without a word.

Hickey stands over Little, studying him curiously as if trying to puzzle out how he hasn't yet expired. At first, Tozer finds it disgusting, the way Hickey regards him as a specimen instead of a man—but then, he remembers the thought he'd had back at the camp. Hickey's flaws are his strengths, somehow. This detached, cold curiosity is to their benefit, and it must be their circumstances that have rendered him so emotionless in the face of these horrors.

Perhaps Tozer's insistence on rescuing Little was foolish in the same way that Hickey's insistence on breaking form to retrieve Lady Silence was foolish. Perhaps they both let their need to take action override their better judgment. Perhaps, too, the Hickey that is sharp enough and brave enough to fight off the Tuunbaq with a makeshift bomb can only exist inside of that detachment. Tozer doesn't allow himself to feel fear in the face of danger, either. Not when there's a job to be done. ]


Thank you.

[ Hickey straightens and looks up at him, expression as unreadable as ever—but he doesn't smile, and that says enough. Tozer turns away to look for a washrag, and by the time he turns back, Hickey is gone.

That night, Tozer suffers through another nightmare. Canvas snapping in the wind, rocks clattering, the horizon blurring against the endless expanse of gray. The landscape tries to claim him. Shales slip away like sand under his boots, sharp and frigid and churning, dragging him under as the frantic bodies dragged Heather under. Gibson's butchered carcass rotting in its pathetic grave. The wreckage of Morfin's skull staining the rocks. David Young's face, crushed under the massive weight of the earth. Tommy, mangled and frozen, floating alone somewhere in this uncaring labyrinth. His own hands bound, led to the gallows, led south, the sickening taste in his mouth, a wind so cold that it feels like knives on his face, a streak of blood on the ice, a head ripped apart at the jaw, skin flayed from his palm, the crack of a whip striking flesh, Hickey's hands cradling his head, a chain around his wrist—

Mr. Collins stands over him as he is consumed by the shales. The fate that should have been.

Tozer wakes with a tight pain in his throat and pricks of tears in his eyes. The cabin is dark still, the ship silent save for the light lap of the waves, the pans of ice bumping against the hull. He scrubs his hands over his face, breathing in time to the sway of the sea beneath him. Then, he goes back to sleep. ]