Meyer Lansky (
recognize_an_opportunity) wrote in
kore_logs2013-06-18 09:04 pm
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Entry tags:
And every time you go to sleep...
Who: Meyer Lansky and all y'all
Where: ~Only in dreams
When: Day 83-88
What: Meyer is having some dreams. Perhaps you'd like to stumble into them.
Warnings: There is definitely disturbing imagery in here. There's copious amounts of murder and blood, kidnapping, drug dealing, and traumatic childhood memories that most definitely include murder and gore. There is also swearing, of course. More warnings will be added if more come up during the dreams.
[[This is an open dream log, to keep things tidy! I set up a couple specific threads for people, but other people can jump in as well, or they can make their own thread, or they can jump into the collective dream thread!
Please just note what day the dream is occurring on if you tag!]]
Where: ~Only in dreams
When: Day 83-88
What: Meyer is having some dreams. Perhaps you'd like to stumble into them.
Warnings: There is definitely disturbing imagery in here. There's copious amounts of murder and blood, kidnapping, drug dealing, and traumatic childhood memories that most definitely include murder and gore. There is also swearing, of course. More warnings will be added if more come up during the dreams.
[[This is an open dream log, to keep things tidy! I set up a couple specific threads for people, but other people can jump in as well, or they can make their own thread, or they can jump into the collective dream thread!
Please just note what day the dream is occurring on if you tag!]]
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And how many times has he kicked himself over that? That Meyer had been tied up and scared and fearing for his life and Charlie had been cities away. But wait, how can he remember it if it just happened?
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He feels slow and stupid, not understanding how Charlie possibly could have tried to get to him if Charlie wasn't in the room at all, if Charlie hadn't witnessed what had happened. True, Charlie had shown up in this room, the eerily silent room with the pool table, but he hadn't been there seconds before. How could he possibly know what had just happened?
"I was scared." The words come out unbidden -- he hadn't even been thinking anything like that a second before, had been too busy puzzling over why Charlie was suddenly here -- but now he's said them, and he stares at Charlie with consternation, wishing he could take them back.
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It's a simple enough question. He doesn't know what Charlie has to be scared of. Charlie wasn't there, even though he seems to know quite a bit about what had happened, so he can't be afraid of that. Maybe he's referring to something else.
He leans back against the table, feeling unsteady and off kilter in an unpleasant way. Something's wrong here, but he can't figure out what it is.
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But being there, in the room with him, the fear had been palatable. It had gripped his heart, squeezing it into ice. He couldn't tell if it was Meyer's fear, infecting the air and the two of them, or his own for not being able to stop it.
He follows Meyer to the table, leaning against him, buring his nose in his hair. He's loathe to stop touching him now that he has him again. When he speaks again it's mostly into his skin, mumbling against him. "I don't know."
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He's envious of the anger Charlie can conjure, because it's something more, something tangible. He's never been able to get that mad, and it bothers him in a strange and inexpressible way. There's something he wants to say, he thinks, something he wants to tell Charlie, but he can't get the words out, because he sees the door they'd come through slowly begin to open, and in the bizarre way of dreams, he just knows that something or someone awful is going to come through the door.
There's dread in his eyes as he looks up at Charlie. He doesn't know whether they should run. He doesn't even know what's coming for them, but he knows it's bad.
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The words are barely out of his mouth when he feels it, senses it more. It feels like someone dropping a chip of ice down the back of his collar. The chill passes through him, leaving a tingling in his fingertips and a dread creeping into every corner of him. He reaches for Meyer, presses a hand against his back.
"What the hell is that?"
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He knows, somehow, that they're here for Charlie. He doesn't know how he knows, only that he's seized by an irrational fear. He finds himself unable to speak as he watches their approach, realizes that he doesn't have a gun on him. The men, whose faces are still obscured by shadow and by their hats that they wear tipped down low on their foreheads, seem to be taking forever to approach them, the room somehow growing bigger, giving them more space to cross.
He wants to warn Charlie to run, but he can't speak.
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"Meyer, what-" he turns to look at him, eyebrows furrowed. He looks frozen, like he can't move a muscle. All the while the men move closer, and out of the corner of his eye, he sees a gun raised.
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"Run." He doesn't know what language he's speaking, but it doesn't matter. The intensity in his voice is enough to speak volumes, even if he's speaking a language Charlie doesn't or can't understand. He wants Charlie to get out of here, but even as he's saying it, he's aware of the sound of a shot ringing out, at once sounding very far away and very close. He tries to throw up his hands to protect himself, to protect Charlie, but the chains hold him back, and he struggles futilely.
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And then the shot hits.
He staggers, hitting the pool table behind him. His movements are still slowed, the pain he must be feeling far away in his mind. The men are gone, just as soon as they came, and he knows this clear as day even though he can't see the door. Blood is pooling on the table as he falls backwards, seeming to take an eternity.
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He's suddenly unchained, as though he'd never been restrained at all, and he's immediately bent over Charlie, trying to sit him up, trying to put pressure on the wound, trying to put Charlie's blood back in his body. It's coming out too fast, staining the green table red, and there's blood coming out of Charlie's mouth, too.
"You'll be okay," he says, but he knows he won't. Neither of them will be. His hands are soaked with obscenely red blood, and they shake as he desperately tries to stop the bleeding.
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"They'll be coming back for you."
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His hands are still trying to find the bullet wound to stop the bleeding, but there's so much blood he can't seem to find the source of it to apply pressure, and Charlie's growing paler and paler, and he knows that look, knows the grey tone that people take in death, has seen it many times before and hasn't let it affect him, but this...
"You'll be okay," he says again. He's normally honest with Charlie, but he needs to lie now, for both of their sakes.
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"Kiss me."
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He can't tell if Charlie's breathing anymore, and it terrifies him. He pulls back from the kiss, desperately trying to see any sign of life.
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But he's still falling, no matter how hard he holds on. Meyer turns to vapor under his hands and he can't hold on any longer, slipping through him and down, down, down.
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He's still yelling as he wakes up with a start, his back aching terribly from the stitched up wounds, his heart pounding so hard he swears he can hear it nearly beating out of his chest. He's breathing as though he's just sprinted a mile, and he's still not sure what's a dream and what's reality.
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Why does that feel odd, just saying his name? Like he's done it a lot recently.
But he hasn't known Meyer this long without being able to read him like a book, and everything about the way he's sitting and breathing and holding himself tells him something's wrong. The idea of it being connected to his nightmare is too ridiculous to even contemplate, so his mind takes the more logical leap. "You're hurting."
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"I had a..." He sighs. It sounds ridiculous, juvenile, and although Charlie must know by now that Meyer has bad nightmares, they've never discussed it. "Bad dream, that's all. Nothing to worry about."
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"Yeah, I dreamt that, and then I dreamt that you were there, in this..." He shrugs, not knowing how to explain the room, how to describe the sense of dread it had given him. Saying it was a room empty except for a pool table doesn't ascribe nearly the fear to it that it had caused him. "A room," he says, "And you showed up in it. And these two guys were chasing us."
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Okay, now this is verging onto the creepy. If he can make it out in the dark, Charlie's brows are furrowing hard.
"Right?"
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