ascends: @neuchimonai (91)
suguru geto. ([personal profile] ascends) wrote2020-08-12 05:33 pm

inbox - locomo


@ itadakimasu
In what is definitely Satoru Gojo's voice: "You've reached Suguru Geto! Leave a message!"

✉️ ☎️ 📷
mugen: (pic#14864010)

[personal profile] mugen 2021-08-31 06:11 am (UTC)(link)
[There's another reason that Satoru is here, beyond his attempts to avoid responsibility in the form of setting up his own camp, in addition to his need to let down both his guard and his Infinity long enough to rest. A reason that he doesn't fully acknowledge, but that arises when Suguru doesn't hand over his phone — when he takes Satoru's attempt at discovering his survey directive and turns it around on him. It feels like an exchange plucked from their past, and whereas yesterday Satoru ran the gamut of emotion as he and Suguru toed — and then completely obliterated — that line, right now it's an odd (and foolish) comfort.

Long ago, before Satoru mastered his self-reverse, there were times when was vulnerable — after long and grueling missions, while sleeping, and while healing from injuries. And here he is again: having to regenerate his energy the old-fashioned way, still working on catching up from several days of avoiding that task, and feeling out of sorts as a result. He doesn't remember how to be weak, even as his body demands it from him, and so he's falling back on old habits by default — seeking out Suguru when he isn't feeling his best because Suguru was always safe. He was one of the strongest, and therefore capable of picking up whatever Satoru had to put down for a time. Suguru may not be an entirely willing partner in their binding vow, but he's Satoru's partner nonetheless, and Satoru therefore derive a strange solace from all of this, even if it's marred by promises sworn in cursed energy and the threat of what lies at the end of their vows.

He's made promises too, and he hasn't forgotten those — his cursed energy wouldn't allow him to forget, if he tried. So whereas he might continue to bluster or even profess that he could definitely take on a lynel without issue right now (true, in the sense that he could take it on, but not entirely true, in that it would cost him), he remembers: honesty.

He withdraws his hand, then goes back to digging into his pockets, though he forgoes the blindfold for now, choosing to rub his eye with his free hand while searching for his phone.]


Nah, I'll spare the centaur for now.

[Maybe not the most honest, but honest enough: Suguru will know why; Satoru doesn't have to make a show of dragging out his every vulnerability into the open.

Honesty, and this whole new exchange of information and working together, is why he decides to give up his survey result without too much fuss. A show of good faith! But also:]


My result's boring, anyway. 'Say yes to something you would normally say no to,' or something like that. I'll say yes to whatever you make for dinner and that should do it.

[Not that he's particularly concerned by the survey result in general. Bigger fish to fry. Bigger concerns around them. Besides, Satoru has a tendency to ace challenges without exactly trying, and has no reason to think this will pan out differently.

He pulls out his phone, finds the survey result, and holds it up with raised eyebrows and very innocent blue eyes: Look how good I'm being, his expression says as he extends his hand for Suguru's phone again.]


Gimme.
mugen: (pic#14951699)

[personal profile] mugen 2021-08-31 09:29 pm (UTC)(link)
[Accepting Suguru's phone (and ignoring his advice, as predicted), Satoru tosses his own back on the mattress and begins scrolling around to find Suguru's survey results. While he isn't aiming to make changes to Suguru's phone as he would have in the past, he does notice that Suguru has put forth no effort to make it a little homey. It's as default as default can be, so Satoru makes a private plan to dress it up a little: find him a background, check to see if he's even bothered setting up his voicemail...

But! First he has to earn his keep (and his right to complain) so he holds back and instead focuses on the survey directive — which is a little bit more interesting than his. And also more amusing, so he exhales a light laugh as he hops down from the shack.]


This is easy. We can get it out of the way right now.

[Easy, because they just did it for the binding vow, so why not just do it again to get this directive completed? Now that they are bound by their promises, it isn't a huge deal for Satoru to let Suguru into his Infinity; and even when Suguru had him vulnerable before, he chose not to act on it. So there shouldn't be any concern — this act should be simple, barely worth considering.

Except, as Satoru temporarily pockets Suguru's phone to playfully tilt his head and wiggle his fingers at Suguru as an invitation, suddenly it feels too much — too far. Whereas last time, Satoru worked on impulse and let down his Infinity on a whim, now he has the burden of forethought and memory. He thinks of holding Suguru's hand yesterday — remembers the warmth of his grip, the way Suguru's forehead felt against his, the sound of his voice as he said I swear — and contrasts it with a time when Suguru was cold, still, and silent. A time when that very hand he held was missing — and Satoru, lifting Suguru's body from the equally cold ground, grieved.

It's too late now, though — Satoru's hand is already reaching out, and he does have to make an effort to help with some of these train objectives, since he's been half-assing it at best until now — and so he remains committed, tease on his lips, hand poised to tempt.]


Let's hold hands.
mugen: (pic#14951761)

it was either that or wide-eyed and crazy...i'm out of eyecons

[personal profile] mugen 2021-09-01 03:41 am (UTC)(link)
You said I should make myself useful! Which is what I'm doing.

[Technically the truth! Although Satoru knows that's not what Suguru meant; he's aware that this is yet another chide about politeness. Which, just as Suguru will have to get used to Satoru showing up at his camp and naming his curse(s), Satoru will have to get used to this all over again: being told to watch his manners, something that he actually does make a point of doing from time to time, ever since Suguru's last piece of advice on the matter. But that isn't an argument he feels like making, considering what that says about him in the wake of Suguru's parting.

This is the second time that Satoru's extended hand has been rejected by Suguru, but this time, Satoru doesn't kowtow as he had earlier in an effort to make him give in. He gives Suguru a long look, thinking about those words, You're assuming that I care about the prize, and decides that it's time for his blindfold after all. He stops wiggling his fingers and finally retrieves it from his pocket to put it on and face Suguru again. Even through the fabric, Satoru sees their combined cursed emanating from Suguru — an ever-present reminder of what they did, and what this is between them.]


When'd you get so boring?

[Suguru turned him down before, when Satoru was attempting to bridge the gap between them with another stupid game conducted over text messages. Satoru is with him in theory — he isn't interested in being the conductor's pawn here, just as he isn't interested in being used by the higher-ups back home. But this is more than a stupid survey — this is Satoru making an effort, in his own obnoxious way, to work with Suguru the way he's requested Suguru to work with him. It's a silly directive for what will surely be a stupid prize, but silly games and stupid prizes were always theirs.

(But the question is rhetorical, nonetheless: Satoru knows the when behind Suguru's change of heart. It wasn't when he left; it wasn't while he was gone. It was after Suguru's point of no return, when Satoru what was supposed to be a final decision.)

There's another way that Satoru could make himself useful while still ensuring that Suguru fulfills his directive: he could find him someone else to hold his hand. Undoubtedly, Suguru won't want to touch the hand of a non-sorcerer, but Satoru has met a couple of people with abilities that aren't so far off from cursed energy. He could make a suggestion, a phone call, and exchange one favor for another to bring someone with their hand out for Suguru to hold. Networking! Something that, for all that Satoru is a menace to train society, he's actually not half-bad at. But that's an unfair burden to anyone he were to pull in to this scenario; Suguru may be bound now, but he won't be bound forever, and there's no telling what the future holds.

And Suguru is Satoru's now: his responsibility and his burden, his past and his future, and his enemy and his best friend, all wrapped up into one. If Suguru is going to hold anyone's hand, it's his, and his alone.

So, after only a minute pause, he extends his hand again, wiggling his fingers once more, but this time he encroaches on Suguru's space.]


Aren't you a little curious?

[About the prize! About his hand! About how peaceful the evening could be, if he gives in now rather that later...]
mugen: (pic#14951796)

[personal profile] mugen 2021-09-01 07:43 am (UTC)(link)
[Satoru isn't the egocentric teenager he was when Suguru first turned away.

He's a different person — one who is mindful of the students he teaches, even when he's forgoing typical teaching methods to impart lessons. He's cognizant of the issues in jujutsu society, and he understands the importance of having strong allies stand beside him, rather than behind him. Satoru truly strives for change — and does his best to ensure that his students will be strong enough to seize it when the time comes.

He is no longer blind to what is in front of him.

But Satoru doesn't always want to see what he has no choice to observe, and there are still ways in which he remains flawed. This is a case in point: still tired, still vulnerable, still observing the way their cursed energy intertwines, Satoru strives for forward momentum and distraction, making gestures that are more annoyances, backsliding because it's easier.

Satoru doesn't regret much in his life, but when he thinks about regret, it always takes the shape of Suguru: Suguru walking away. Suguru's body without Suguru inside.

As Suguru's fingers finally reach for him, finally make contact, Satoru thinks that this, too, feels something like regret: wistful, nostalgic, and too dangerous to indulge. His Infinity allows Suguru in without any fanfare, and that also feels too much like before to settle quietly in the now.

But Satoru has egged this on, and so he doubles down in his commitment. He takes Suguru's hand entirely in his, linking their fingers together, and thinks about how warm and alive Suguru's hand feels — how whole Suguru is, missing nothing at all. He thinks about all the things his hand has done, and all the things it could do, and despite the burden of history and the unknown days to come, how perfectly it still fits in his own.

This was supposed to be the easiest of all the possible ways that Suguru could earn his keep — a simple gesture, to indicate his willingness to make an effort. It wasn't supposed to cost him anything.

But when he has to suppress the urge to tighten his grip to keep Suguru from pulling away — to force himself to remain jovial when he realizes that this is, somehow, even more difficult than yesterday — Satoru thinks that this might have been the most costly of all options.

See? he might say. This isn't so bad, is it?

But that's a lie, and Satoru has promised to be honest.

So instead he asks:]


Think that's long enough?

[And, with a mixture of reluctance and regret, begins to let go.]
mugen: (pic#14951801)

[personal profile] mugen 2021-09-02 11:00 pm (UTC)(link)
[This is a direct consequence of Satoru's own actions — a means by which Suguru is proving to him that he's gone too far — but it feels cruel nonetheless, that Suguru would tighten his grip and prevent him from pulling away to make a point. To force Satoru to face what he has been attempting to avoid with his antics — to use the joining of their hands as yet another example of how much is different between them, marring what once would have been a comfortable grip by rendering it into something painful.

When faced with uncomfortable or heavy situations, Satoru relies on his antics to carry himself — and those around him — back to a state of normalcy. But there was a time when he showed Suguru his true self: when he admitted to feeling nothing, in the aftermath of trauma; when he admitted to being tired, after overexerting himself; when he was the one clutching Suguru's hand tightly, preventing him from leaving so he wouldn't be alone.

This is an inverse of what once was, twisted to make a point, and Satoru knows that it's his own fault — for swooping into Suguru's camp as though the binding vow isn't still fresh and painful for them both, and for grasping Suguru's hand as though he hadn't once taken his life. But this is only the beginning; they'll have to work together on this train, through a variety of objectives. Suguru will have to accept him in his camp so he can rest safely. And Satoru has two choices: either be unrelentingly himself, or dwell in how difficult it feels to look upon Suguru as an unwilling ally — and an enemy waiting to strike at the end.

And what can Satoru do here, other than smile and tighten his grip once again, embracing the prolonged hold as if it doesn't go right for his chest, a blow that reaches its mark. He takes everything in stride, even when he doesn't want to, and Suguru can't be the exception he once was.]


Yeah, I think this should do it. [There was no time limit on the directive, and his curiosity has been more than satisfied; in fact, his interest in the survey's prize is gone.] But we can wait a minute more to be sure.

[He looks away from their hands — and away from Suguru — and offers a shred of honesty, in accordance of their agreement.]

One night'll be enough.

[Enough to get him back on his feet, in fighting shape, recovered for at least a few days of the distance that Suguru has demonstrated they need. Satoru will eat his dinner, sleep in his bed, and then go off until he needs to recharge again. His statement is meant to communicate that: he may be milking this now, tackling it as he does all things, invading Suguru's peace and pretending that everything is fine, but it is out of necessity, a way of coping with a situation that is difficult for them both. And he won't prolong it for either of them.

A light squeeze of Suguru's hand then — which could be read as a tease, or a means of pushing boundaries even further, but it is meant as another form of honesty: an acknowledgement. An apology. A way of saying: I get it.

Then he severs their hands with his Infinity — and lets Suguru go.]
Edited 2021-09-02 23:02 (UTC)