Jonathan Crane (
restingstitchface) wrote in
maskormenace2017-03-01 12:25 pm
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Entry tags:
- abigail hobbs | n/a,
- jonathan crane | scarecrow,
- † alfie solomons | n/a,
- † chato santana | el diablo,
- † frederick chilton | chief of staff!!,
- † jesse pinkman | diesel,
- † john watson | n/a,
- † josuke higashikata | crazy diamond,
- † kaito kumon | baron,
- † lapis lazuli | n/a,
- † robbie reyes | ghost rider,
- † the (twelfth) doctor | stop that
24 ⚜ Anonymous Text / CW: abuse mentions
Whether a man is a criminal or a hero is a matter of perspective.
But if you don't want to play your role anymore, and are removed from your motivation for being who you are, what do you do? Do you seek redemption and rehabilitation and transform as an individual, or do you repeat negative behavior? How much do you believe people change only because they are imPorted? In short, do you believe people can change?
If I had anybody willing to discuss this in private with me, I assure you, I'd not be raising the issue publically.
Thank you in advance.
But if you don't want to play your role anymore, and are removed from your motivation for being who you are, what do you do? Do you seek redemption and rehabilitation and transform as an individual, or do you repeat negative behavior? How much do you believe people change only because they are imPorted? In short, do you believe people can change?
If I had anybody willing to discuss this in private with me, I assure you, I'd not be raising the issue publically.
Thank you in advance.
no subject
Primarily, his utter lack of presence. And the lack of violence against my person.
[He says with a practised tone.]
Regardless, if you are scared of being seen with me, may I suggest you return home?
no subject
[A bit of tongue in cheek, and his tone signified as much. Nevertheless:]
You are on a strict and narrow path already. I've heard good things. [Behaving nicely, that Doctor Crane.] Does it suit you? Or does it suit them to think it suits you?
no subject
[He wraps his fingers together in his lap and ignores the tingling in his skin, and the burning sensation that threatens to scour away his cold anger. Hearing his name given in such an unbalanced position, personal and unprofessional, draws him away from himself. So he keeps himself steady, doing nothing but looking calm and in control.]
I cannot rob you of the opportunity to do a little analysis, can I? It would be inhumane.
[And maybe he's interested to hear what Chilton thinks. Since few people think at all.]
no subject
[Spoken with a quirk of a smile, as Chilton looked over the posture that Crane presented. So precise, so controlled. The very image of a civilized man with nothing to fear, surely.]
I think you are biding your time. Waiting for an opportunity -- you are not a stupid man, Jonathan. You won't simply jump back into the fray because you are inclined to do so, no.
[Chilton crossed one leg over the other now, and rested his elbow on the top of the back of the bench.]
And I am sure he knows that, too. Must be giving you a lot of special attention.
no subject
He seems reluctant to discuss his special project at first. He clears his throat a little and makes a show of seeming lost in thought. It's a display that's as tightly controlled as his expressionless facade. Chilton is not a stupid man - he would not tolerate his voice if he were. He is very smart to be afraid. That's why he's crossed his leg to protect himself, and is asserting his dominance by resting his elbow over and behind.
His eyes close to deny the unspoken threat, and he unfolds his hands into an open position.]
Not as much as you're hoping, I'm afraid. Not unless you think he lives and breathes his existence with the goal of helping people like me.
[Those with problems. He doesn't have to lace his voice with his disgust at that popular opinion.]
Which, incidentally, would be a partly correct analysis. He invests a lot into fixing his hometown. Wherever that maybe.
no subject
[The way Chilton says the word, the implied capitalization is pronounced. A measure of importance, a relatable endeavor. Crane and his ilk, it seemed, already belonged to another. Chilton found that to be interesting.
And even more interesting was how Crane considered Batman to be the opposite, not as a project manager but of a special project all his own. Eventually one reality would supersede the other, eventually one man would be muzzled.]
A hometown you are familiar with, of course. [A quick tilt of his head, acknowledgment that Crane knew a lot more than what he was letting on.]
Do your timelines match up?
no subject
[Crane clenches his jaw without realizing. It isn't right. He's been creating threads and spinning them tightly for so long. Now where they end and where they've gone to - he has no idea.]
The names and behaviors are essentially the same for me to handle, but they are not the personalities I am accustomed to. [He straightens his back.] Everything considered, I suppose we're an eclectic family. Awfully different, but we share a purpose that somehow makes us fit together.
[He twists his answer to Chilton's first question together with his answer to the second. Harleen Quinzel. Julian Day. Himself. A mismash of strange people who know the Batman and share a home in common.
There's also the noticable absence of a discussion of his own special project. Batman. The name might be the same, but this one's not his. Frustrating, isn't it?]
no subject
[Alloying the mind with the heart, it was a bit cheeky on Chilton's part. But he wasn't about to undersell the value of a nemesis, now when he had his own experiences with Hannibal Lecter. His dislike and sense of betrayal fueled his projects that had followed Hannibal's wake, after all.]
I wouldn't expect you to be forthright about your intentions with him, but...
[But Chilton was asking anyway.]
no subject
His voice dropped in inflection.]
He is a man beneath that mask. My intentions are not aimed towards the symbol, nor the superstition accompanying it, but...
[A man can be observed, investigated, experimented upon, controlled.]
Everything in mind is educational, I assure you.
[Because he's so good at doing that, right?]
no subject
[A believable enough line, as such was Crane's forte. But anything with I assure you on the heels gave Chilton reason to raise an eyebrow; it was in his nature to be the skeptic. It was in his nature to identify obsessions.]
And have you wrapped him in your very own caution tape, so to speak? Quarantined him from others interfering? Or is that a step you have yet to take?
[It was possible the Batman would anticipate such tactics from Crane, after all. But Chilton knew how subtle Crane could be, he knew how insidious... And given that Batman and Crane were from parallel experiences, different perspectives, that could very well have given the doctor the upper hand.]
no subject
Confident. Cocky. Conceited.]
Interference wouldn't be necessary. It's obvious how much he invests himself in his fellow psychopaths, isn't it?
[His fingertips move under his chin. Co-dependency. It's so insidious.]
no subject
[Not Chilton, of course. Frederick Chilton has his own project in motion, whether or not William Walker liked it. But he had identified enough of the material that routinely gets imported to know that others of a certain psychological perspective might take an interest in Batman.]
I'm simply advising you to act firmly.
no subject
Crane removes one leg from the other and replaces the lid on his container of feed. He takes a deep breath and retains his composure by letting it go. Hearing those words from this man was not unlike hearing them from the one who had advised him throughout university.
And that had ended so well for him, hadn't it?]
I'll keep your advice in mind.
[The disgust in his voice is well-disguised. But the fact he says nothing more...]
no subject
Firm action requires a firm hand.
[He glanced down at Crane's own; Chilton was too keen on self-preservation to take Crane's in his, as was his impulse. Mm.]
But friendly advice aside, did you have another tangent you were interested in discussing?
no subject
[There was something right in indulging in friendly psychiatric banter about their projects. It was natural. Except he had to do something more than just depend on his patients. He had to impose himself.]
If you would like, I will tell you about what my... employer... has me working on.
[Medication. Because he certainly wouldn't be employed in a clinical setting without his license - and with his reputation? But medication is a sphere that crosses over into psychiatry. And he knows exactly how insidious he's being.]
no subject
Oh, Jonathan. [He smiled as the name hit his teeth Such familiarity.] Do tell.
[A little work-appropriate gossip to behold.]
no subject
Serotonergic psychedelics. Primarily to assist psychotherapy.
[There is a wrinkle between his brows.]
Primarily, he is concerned with redirecting my work into therepetic practice, not therapeutic abuse. [A short tone. The idea seems to piss him off. Tastes bitter.] Given the formal necessity of clinical work, it has been limited to theoretical applications...
[Not that he cares about checking he is licensed but YOU KNOW.]
no subject
Oh my goodness. You are playing with a masochist.
[Clearly he enjoyed the slap of failure, and surely even Crane knew that. Chilton, in contrast, preferred to pick the battles he could win.]
When does tenacity end and delusion begin?
[It was, of course, a rhetorical question.]
no subject
Oh, that's nothing. You should see the havoc he unleashes at night. Masochists do enjoy their hard games...
[He does, of course, IGNORE the double-entendre. Don't be disgusting, now.]
no subject
A less merciful man would inquire for details.
[And while Chilton was by no means merciful, he could be polite; simply alerting Crane to the fact that he had anchored meaning onto those words was not the same as prodding them.]
I am relieved you have him in good hands.
no subject
Careful, cautious Chilton.]
Obviously. Idle hands are the Devil's workshop, after all.
[He slyly cocked his head.]
And we've shared our fair attention of the Devil here, haven't we?
[Lucifer was a particularily fascinating example.]
no subject
[Despite his better judgement, Chilton always encircled the Lucifer figure -- be he literal or figurative, his role would nevertheless be undeniably compelling. Chilton caught the orbit of such men, perhaps less in spite of and more because of his heretical nature.]
You have always seemed to come out in the good graces of demons, however, haven't you?
no subject
[He closes his eyes and focuses on everything but his hands. He could remember them stuck behind him. Could feel his lungs constricting under his straitjacket. He remembered why he had lost his freedom and who had made him too good an offer not to risk it.]
Science is no protection against them. You understand this, don't you?
no subject
[He didn't know it at the time, but he would rebuff the next Lucifer to walk through the Porter; Chilton had been forged through a hellfire and came out like Damascus steel.
He was something so much more than what he had been.]
I will give you the benefit of the doubt-- [He said with a smile, his skeptical sneer melting.] And say it was rhetorical. But rest assured, Doctor Crane, I will not fall prey to them again.
[Well -- not the literal demons. But Chilton had such a fondness for the human ones. He got to his feet, his smile more pronounced. Whatever had prickled his ego was now forgiven.]
I ought to be on my way, but this chat was illuminating. Part of me is delighted to see you back on track.
[A deep fondness for the human ones.]
no subject
Better to do it first than be a victim.
But Chilton's acid words vanish first, and then his ire. He feels frustrated, but it doesn't show on his facade. He tingles everywhere but holds his nerve and politely bows his head.]
Thank you.
[Politeness, Jonathan. Control.]
I suppose this is good night, then. Goodnight, Frederick.
[Oh, he so much wanted to put doctor, but, control.]