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Post by Gladiolus Amicitia on Sept 27, 2021 17:42:20 GMT -6
The floor of the cell was ice against the throbbing ache in his skull. Consciousness seeped into his mind like an oozing wound and with that awareness of the world around him came awareness of the pain consuming every inch of his body. Something crawled across his hand with a dozen chitinous legs. He didn't move. He opened his eyes through the resistance of a congealed crust on his eyelids and even the dim light of the cell was a knife in his brain. He grimaced and exhaled a feeble grunt. He tasted iron in his mouth.
Gladio's mind was a murky haze and it held no answers for why he was on the floor of the cell, why his skull felt caved in, why there was fire running the length of his nerves. It hurt too much to ask the questions in the first place. He grasped blindly for something and his hand found the metal frame of the bunks. He pulled himself up by inches, skin scraping over the layer of grit and grime coating the stone. A wave of nausea hit him as soon as he lifted his head from the floor. He settled for sitting vaguely upright. Someone had replaced all the cartilage in his right knee with acid.
Too long ago to think about, Gladio would wake from the nothing space of unconsciousness and before his senses returned to him he would search the darkened cell for Noct. In the depths of the Hole, shivering and delirious, he would call out for his father.
He did neither of those things anymore, because he could not forget where he was. Nothing existed beyond Gorgon's walls.
"Iggy," he grunted. His bleary eyes searched out the blue-grey shape of his friend in the shadows of their cell. His speech was a hair above mumbling. "The hell happened?"
Post by Gladiolus Amicitia on Aug 1, 2021 1:15:27 GMT -6
The cameras loved drama.
They swiveled on their tripods and focused in on Ignis getting unceremoniously dragged from the ring, on Gladio bellowing for the ringside guards to get their 'goddamn hands off him'. Warden Demichev and his guests watched the proceedings with mild amusement, discussing bets in low voices, and drank expensive alcohol from ornate glasses. Demichev spit the shells of sunflower seeds between the bars of his private box seat.
The bell rang.
Vicks and Wedge closed on Gladio at angles with the low guards of a couple of headhunters. He circled out and kept distance. Had to. If they flanked him he was done for, and so the opening minute of the fight might well have been a dance. Shuffling feet, the slip of callused soles on dirty canvas, the rattle and bounce of the plywood. The two worked in tandem to press him into a corner, but Gladio ducked under a rangy jab and circled out again. He stepped on a wet patch of Murdock's blood. The crowd murmured their collective discontent. A dissonant sound punctuated by heckling. They wanted blood and it didn't matter whose. Whatever goodwill Gladio had earned with his destruction of Murdock lasted only as long as he continued to destroy. Survival wasn't worth the spit on the floor.
"F---ing KILL him!" someone deep in the mass of bodies shouted.
Wedge stepped wide to cut Gladio off and before he could pivot, Vicks closed in with a long hook. Gladio covered high and took it on the arm but Wedge immediately dug his knuckles into Gladio's exposed body. He felt the impact all the way through to his spine, nausea in its wake. He swung back, missed. Vicks chopped at the meat of his thigh with a stiff leg kick and Gladio's knee buckled. The ache spread across the whole of Gladio's muscle like floodwaters. He stumbled backwards until the ropes chafed at his back. Vicks and Wedge wouldn't give him a second to breathe.
Vicks rattled his skull with a right cross. The deep cut on his eyebrow reopened and the warm trickle of blood ran down the contours of his face. He tasted the iron, and the salt of his own sweat. When he moved to parry the followup, Wedge again hammered the body, and the followup connected anyway. The impact was sharp and bright and he felt numb behind the eyes. His vision went dim at the edges, spotted with white stars. Gladio brought his forearms up in a pillar guard, a desperate shell. Vicks hammered him. Wedge dug at the body with shovelhooks. Gladio crunched down, clipping a fist with his elbow. Sweat and blood stung his eyes.
If he didn't move now he was dead.
Gladio peered through the inch gap in his guard. Vicks' weight dropped, shoulder began to turn. Gladio dropped his hands to guard his midsection and threw himself back against the ropes until they ran out of slack. Vicks' fist went wide and Wedge's followup bounced off his forearm. Gladio weaved under Vicks' arm and slipped out of their trap, circling out into the open canvas. He threw a parting lead hook to the back of Vicks' skull that stumbled the man.
For a moment, Gladio was back in a brightly lit gymnasium somewhere in Insomnia, on clean mats that smelled like rubber and bleach. There was no reason to panic. Gladio inhaled deeply until his head cleared, until the ring and the two men trying to take his head off came into full focus, until his heart no longer felt like it was going to crack his ribcage from the inside. Sweat beaded on his skin. He marched forward and went to work.
He fed Vicks a quick one-two, cartilage crunching under his knuckles, pausing to kick Wedge in the stomach before the latter could close in and flank him. He found their rhythm and their range, and he exploited it until Vicks' face was a mottled mess of swelling and bruising and blood, his eyes ballooned up, the skin taut and shiny under the halogen light. The canvas was dotted with a fine spray of blood and sweat and spit. He had Vicks near to unconsciousness when Wedge closed in once again. Gladio threw a kick, but Wedge caught it and drove an elbow into his knee. Something snapped. There was a bright, burning burst of pain and he couldn't bite back the sudden cry in his throat.
Bad move. They smelled blood, now.
Vicks staggered up behind Gladio and grabbed his arms behind his back. Gladio struggled against the grip like an animal caught in a trap. Wedge dropped Gladio's hobbled leg and started laying into him with punches, whipcrack strikes audible over the frenzied braying of the crowd. His lip split open. His nose was a fountain of blood. The darkness came seeping into his vision again like a slow oil spill. He saw Ignis at ringside, the dim shape of him. Another hook rattled his brain in his skull. What would they do to Ignis if they knocked him out here? A left straight snapped his head back. His eye was swelling shut. Iggy'd be a sitting duck if he fell now. He ate a cross and stars burst in his eyes. He slumped in Vicks' grip, gobbets of blood leaking from his nose and mouth, spattering on the canvas at his feet. The crowd demanded an execution.
Gladio refused to lay his head beneath the blade. He planted his one good leg, threw his weight forward, then shot back and up and drove his skull into Vicks' chin. The grip on his arms slackened and in that split second he freed himself, grabbed Vicks by the arm, and threw him over his shoulder. As Vicks turned end over end in the air his heel came down and struck Wedge on the crown. Both men hit the canvas. Gladio, too, followed them to the mat, losing his balance on his one good leg. He landed with a forearm across Vicks' brow, the entirety of his bodyweight behind it. Wedge started to scramble back to his feet. Vicks didn't move.
A deep burn developed in Gladio's left shoulder as he pushed himself to his feet. His right leg was useless, the knee ablaze with pain. Blood coated his face in a crimson mask, soaked his beard, smeared across his chest and his arms. The ring looked like the scene of a murder. It might well be, when all was said and done.
Gladio closed the distance between himself and Wedge at a limp. With one arm and one leg there was no place for finesse or technique. He threw right hands to take Wedge's head off. Like a drunk in a bar fight, he had a puncher's chance and he took it. They traded punches. A looping hook landed on Wedge's jaw first, then another, then an uppercut, again and again, never giving Wedge a second to recover. It was an overhand that finally dropped him, and as Wedge's head bounced off the canvas and the crowd erupted, Gladio stumbled over to the ropes. The only way he could stay standing was to loop his arm around the top rope. A deep red trail marked his path around the canvas.
He didn't hear the referee call the fight, or the bell, or the announcer. All he heard was the blood pounding in his ears, his own ragged breathing. He wiped the blood out of his eyes and tried to find Ignis at ringside. He didn't see Rurik step through the ropes. He didn't hear the mocking applause, or Rurik's sarcastic praise. When he finally noticed movement out of the corner of his eye it was too late.
Gladio turned his head enough to see the flash of a foot before Rurik's hook kick landed with a sickening crack against his skull. The lights went out. Gladio instantly went limp and slumped to the canvas. His head bounced off the mat, and his blood splattered like spilled paint.
Post by Gladiolus Amicitia on Jun 25, 2021 9:58:49 GMT -6
Gladio sat down on the stool in the corner and stared past Ignis’ shoulder. His fingers curled reflexively around the bottle of water and the condensation mingled with the sweat soaking into his hand wraps. The ring announcer swept one of Murdock’s teeth out of the ring with his shoe while the cornermen hauled Murdock’s limp body out of sight with all the urgency of overworked garbagemen. The adrenaline hadn’t faded and he didn’t notice the way he bounced his heel while Ignis worked on the cut over his eye. He didn’t notice much of anything; not the sound of the crowd, or the sweat beading on his face, or the welts where Murdock had landed a good shot or two. All the aches and pains would wait for him after the final bell.
For a moment he was elsewhere. The world receded from the scope of his awareness and he was staring through the blur of dull colors into nothing, into a moment that stretched through time like a smear of glue across a sheet of paper and where every breath he took spanned a thousand years. The sharp sting as Ignis pressed the swab into the cut over his eye pierced the haze of his mind and reality snapped back like a rubber band. The damp filth of the prison. The jackhammer in his chest. He lifted the water bottle and filled his mouth, swished it around between his aching teeth, spat it out onto the canvas beside him. Ignis seemed to be grasping the gravity of the situation, if he hadn’t already. Gladio thought a moment before responding. Now wasn’t the time to make it worse.
“More or less,” he replied tonelessly, and took a drink.
The announcer leaned over the ropes and spoke to somebody out of Gladio’s line of sight. Nodding, grinning, mouthing words Gladio couldn't read on his lips. He stepped back towards the center of the ring, thumbing a switch on the microphone. Two men in fighting gear climbed on to the ring apron and stepped through the ropes. The lean builds of Gorgon oldtimers with the muscle of Rurik's well-fed inner circle. One half a head taller than the other, near enough to Gladio's height. They both eyed him up, cold stares carrying a deep rooted malice.
“What the hell is this…” Gladio hissed through his teeth. The anger rose like a column of fire up his spine.
The announcer quieted the crowd and gleefully declared the next fight to be a ‘special exhibition’ and through the gap between the canvas and the bottom rope Gladio could see Rurik’s smug face. He wanted nothing more than to rip it off the bastard's skull.
Gladio, the announcer bellowed in his carnival barker voice, will take on Cell Block D’s finest - with combined charges of fourteen murders, twenty-two assaults, and eight robberies, and a combined Gorgon record of twenty-three wins, eleven losses - Vicks and Wedge!
He agreed to two fights. That much was true. But they never agreed on the number of opponents.
A low growl resonated deep in Gladio's chest.
“That son of a bitch.”
The referee approached the corner to clear Ignis out of the ring and Gladio rose from the stool, muttering just loud enough for Ignis to hear: “Listen, Iggy, the second this fight is over, be ready to haul ass out of here, alright?”
Post by Gladiolus Amicitia on May 30, 2021 16:10:03 GMT -6
There had always been a kind of ritual in the lead up to that first bell. In his solitude, Gladio rebuilt himself on a foundation of hate. He shed useless notions like honor and pride and cultivated in himself the viciousness of a starving animal, one that would taste blood on his teeth or die trying. In the absence of anything to fight for he fought to make them all hurt. To make them cry and bleed and beg, because that was the only shred of victory he could claim for himself. His father was dead, Noct was gone, and after long years at the mercy of Gorgon even Lucis itself seemed more and more like a dreamworld conjured up by his sleep-deprived mind in a desperate bid to stay sane. Maybe there never was a Lucis, never an Insomnia, never a King to die for. He was always here, in the dark and the cold, a creature of violence. Here to give the pigs their blood, their show. There was nobody around to be ashamed of him but himself.
Then Ignis found him in hell, and the ritual fell to pieces.
Gladio stood barefoot at ringside and couldn't feel his toes. The crowd filled in behind the bars encircling the ring, filthy and dead-eyed. The air in the arena was thick with the sour smell of unwashed bodies and diseased teeth, and of iron. The ubiquitous stench of Gorgon concentrated and magnified. Their heckling bounced off the high ceilings in an indecipherable cacophony. Profanity and bloodlust. It condensed on the crisscrossing pipes and fell one drop at a time onto the canvas and the cold ringside concrete. When Gladio looked up at the VIP seats on the topmost level overlooking the ring, he saw a dying incandescent light and a row of empty chairs. The Warden and his friends hadn't yet arrived.
It had been a long while since Gladio opened a card. He tried not to think about it, to count back the fights. When Ignis let slip the question he never meant to ask aloud, Gladio only grunted in response. He couldn't remember them all, anyway. Black holes punched in the fabric of his memory. Not fuzzy or faint. Just gone. Somewhere in the mass of people was Rurik, grinning his shit-eating grin. Gladio tried to grasp at that flare of hate, but it slipped through his fingers as Ignis wove the wrap between them. The only thing he had in his reach was a vestigial coil of fear winding its way around his insides.
He watched Ignis, the blind man's deft fingers encasing his hands in a shell of gauze and tape. The specter of death was no longer the shield he carried into the ring. Now it dangled like a blade over his neck. As long as Iggy was still stuck in this place, death was no longer an option.
The announcer stepped between the sagging ropes. Red LEDs burned beside the camera lenses trained on the center of the ring. Gladio flexed his fingers once Ignis finished with the wraps, clenched his right fist, and tapped his knuckles into his left palm.
"It'll be the right eyebrow first," Gladio muttered. He could feel the knot of scar tissue sitting over the bone. "Thing splits open if somebody looks at it wrong."
The announcer's carnival barker voice came in over the loudspeakers, cutting through the din of the crowd. The Warden and his cronies filed in. The adrenaline hit and ran a current through Gladio's nerves. The words sailed past, fragments of an introduction he'd heard too many times before.
Rurik's hungry new dog climbed into the ring and vaulted over the top rope, beating his chest. He was shorter than Gladio by a few inches, with wiry muscles and quick feet. One arm bore a sleeve of prison tattoos, their edges gone fuzzy, the makeshift ink already beginning to fade. The announcer introduced him as Murdock, convicted on three counts of murder and six counts of assault. Five-and-oh in the ring. Murdock bared his teeth and dragged his thumb across his throat.
Gladio spat on the floor, clapped Ignis on the shoulder, and climbed up onto the ring apron. The announcer spun on his heel and gestured with an open hand at Gladio, as though the showmanship mattered. As though anyone here cared about the theatrics before the bell. He called out Gladio's sentence.
"...eight counts of murder..."
And Gladio grimaced and stepped over the top rope. Something in his right hip clicked like a stuck hinge. Nothing new. He watched his opponent leering at him from the opposite side of the ring, Murdock with the same empty eyes as so many of Gorgon's inmates. Hollowed out of life, of ambition, of hope, replaced by the one thing that meant anything in this place. Bloodlust. The only thing to look forward to was caving some bastard's face in while a crowd of other bastards chanted for more. Gladio didn't hazard a glance back at Ignis. The answer to Specs' question, straight from the official source, came echoing through the speakers.
"...with a Gorgon record of forty-two wins and thirteen losses..."
Gladio was long past caring about records. Every fight blended into the next. A blur of blood and bone, flying plumes of spit and teeth. Every fight the same, he supposed, except this one. Something fluttered in his stomach. He didn't fear Murdock, but he didn't have the luxury of not worrying anymore. He needed to make it to the next fight tonight. He needed to make it through the next fight. He needed to make it to the morning, to back Ignis up in the chow hall and in the yard, and he needed to make it to the day after, and he needed to get Ignis out of here...
And he needed to focus on now.
Gladio rolled his shoulders to loosen the ever present stiffness in his upper body and paced back and forth in his corner, gripping his toes into the canvas with every step. The canvas was old and slick with the accumulated grime of decades of fights, spotted with rust-dark stains of old blood. The plywood beneath creaked. The announcer stepped out of the ring. The referee eschewed the formality of explaining the rules because there weren't any to explain.
Then the bell rang.
There was no feeling out, no finding range. Murdock barrelled forward and fought like a bull, he and Gladio trading punches in the pocket. A mist of sweat and spit flying with every connecting blow. Murdock clipped Gladio with an overhand and his knuckle split the skin open over Gladio's right eyebrow. The blood flowed freely, a warm red river of it following the contour of his eye socket, down over his cheek. The crowd erupted at the first sight of blood, but the sound of them dimmed to nothing. The prison itself melted away into some vague darkness at the edges of his vision. It was just him and Murdock. Him and that stupid, thuggish grin.
Gladio squinted against the stinging in his eye and blinked the blood away. Murdock circled to Gladio's right, two shuffled steps, weight lifted for the third, sliding rightward by inches-- Knuckle met bone with a sound like a gunshot. Gladio caught him with a thunderous rear hook. Those hollow, bloodthirsty eyes went glassy. Murdock's knees wobbled and he staggered, rubber-legged, to the left. Gladio hunted him, cracked a straight left through Murdock's weak guard. His nose caved in like cheap drywall and blood cascaded down over his mouth. Murdock's hands dropped. Gladio slammed an uppercut through his chin and a tooth went flying out of the ring as his head snapped backwards. His limbs turned to jelly, like his strings were cut, and Murdock fell to the mat.
He was out. Gladio understood this, distantly. The fight was over by any metric except Gorgon's, and four years within its walls did nothing if not condition Gladio to brutality.
He descended upon Murdock's limp body and slammed his fist into the defenseless man's skull again and again, to the delight of the crowd and of the Warden and of the gangsters watching with money riding on his victories. He broke Murdock's jaw and he shattered both of his eye sockets and he coated his bright white hand wraps in a thick layer of blood until the referee decided that was enough and pulled Gladio away.
There was a moment's hesitation before Gladio's senses returned to him, a half step and a twitch of the shoulder and an instinct to dive back in and finish the job.
Finish. Now who's metric was that?
Gladio walked back to the corner while the announcer verbalized the result to which everyone had just bore witness and Murdock's corner dragged his body out of the ring. Murdock was done, but Gladio's night was far from over.
Post by Gladiolus Amicitia on Mar 31, 2021 22:04:32 GMT -6
The sight of the prisoners in heaps on the snow, Ignis standing over them with the weight bar in his hand, struck Gladio with a sudden aching nostalgia. Bright blue skies and rolling hills and crumpled Nif MTs scattered across the dirt and the sound of a camera shutter and Noct complaining about the heat.
A world a thousand years ago where he had a purpose, where he fought for something, where he was somebody and there was a point to waking up the next day.
Gladio wanted to linger there a while longer but the situation didn't allow it. The faint memory of warmth left him and the ice seeped into his boned again. There were eyes on them still and a low murmur in the yard. Rurik always had more goons milling about among the unwashed masses and Gladio didn't want to wait around for the next batch to get ideas.
"Should have," Gladio said, "But you're the only guy around here smart enough to take my advice. Let's walk before anyone else decides they're tough."
They walked. The snow melted against the thin canvas of his shoes, but he hadn't been able to feel his feet in so long that he hardly noticed. Gladio's eyes never stopped moving, scanning everyone they passed, watching the way their hands hovered at their sides or the way their weight shifted. Meeting suspicious stares, some holding, others averting their eyes in deference to the Big Guy. Gladio wasn't Gorgon's number one, but he'd cracked enough skulls to earn some sway.
"There's gonna be a lot more of that," he muttered, "But you probably figured that out already." He paused a beat. "Still, good to see you haven't lost a step."
Post by Gladiolus Amicitia on Feb 22, 2021 13:13:51 GMT -6
It snowed the previous night, wet and heavy, and the cold that followed after froze the top layer of snow into an icy crust. It crunched underfoot as the trio of Rurik's stooges approached, and as Gladio reflexively stepped into the space between them and Ignis. Clusters of prisoners scattered around the yard shifted positions ever so slightly. A minor adjustment to view the proceedings from a safe distance. The palpable tension fueled by the collective anticipation of violence hung in the air like a thick fog.
They stopped with a cushion of eight feet in front of them. Each of them sallow-skinned with the sunken eyes characteristic of Gorgon's malnutrition and sleep deprivation. The man in the middle was a head shorter than Gladio with a stocky build that hadn't yet been eaten away by his imprisonment. To his left a miserable, rangy bald man with a mouth full of rotting teeth and the bulge of some object clenched in his right hand. The man on the right stood slightly lopsided in the snow and wouldn't stop cracking his knuckles. Gladio didn't know their names. Rurik had a rotating roster of toadies grasping at anything to make their stay in Gorgon a little less torturous. Gladio refused to sympathize. The enemy was the enemy. When Ignis addressed the trio, the man in the center grinned like a shark.
"Heard the Big Guy decided to bend the rules. Cornerman, tch." He spat into the snow, shook his head, fixed his dull eyes on Gladio. "That true?"
Gladio made a low noise in the back of his throat. The plates scraped against the bar. He didn't look behind him at Ignis, sure of what the other man was doing but unsure of what use it was gonna be when he couldn't see a damn thing. Gladio slid his rear foot backwards and shifted his weight with a practiced subtlety. His eyes narrowed.
"Keep walking."
The man in the middle took a step forward. The men on the flanks spread out to either side.
"Everyone fights here. Maybe not in the ring. But everyone fights."
There was no talking them down. There was no talking anybody down in this place. The words spit back and forth were little more than the preamble while everyone braced themselves for the real show. Gladio's eyes flitted from one man to the next. His mind ran probabilities and scenarios, a subconscious calculus to solve the problem laid out before him. How to take them all down before they could get to Ignis.
The man in the middle stepped forward. Gladio moved to meet him with a punch interrupted by a hard overhand cross from his left side that he never saw coming. It landed clean on his jaw and stars burst behind his eyes and the world went askew. His legs buckled and he staggered. Two of the men rushed past him. The rangy man with the weapon clenched in his fist threw another punch. The yard was a blur, black around the edges, and the noise in his skull was murky and watery. Gladio forced himself forward and the second punch blew past his ear. He grabbed the man by two handfuls of his shirt, wrestling him off balance while finding his own footing. The watery feeling in his head ebbed away and the yard came back into focus. He shifted his grip and clasped his hands behind the man's head and squeezed his forearms on either side of the man's neck and broke his posture with a violent pull down and forward, straight into a knee.
The man gave a choked grunt and Gladio kneed him again. He wrenched him off balance and kneed him a third time. Something in the man's ribcage snapped like a dry twig. Gladio felt him buckle. He threw the man into the snow and wheeled around to rush to Ignis's aid.
Post by Gladiolus Amicitia on Jan 15, 2021 0:21:33 GMT -6
It could've been worse, Gladio knew. It could've been a lot worse.
Once Ignis was back on his feet, Gladio shot a look past the man's shoulder at a few stray gawkers rubbernecking from a table away. He didn't have to tell them that it wasn't a god damned show. They saw the fury in his eyes and turned away just as quickly. Their deference did nothing to ease the sting of Rurik's petty display of power. He felt in his bones a deep and overwhelming need to break someone. Not in defense of Ignis, or to destroy Rurik's hold over the other prisoners. Nothing so noble as that. Something nameless and primal within him just wanted to make them all hurt.
He'd have his chance soon, and he knew that wouldn't make anything better, but that didn't matter.
He brushed off Ignis' guilt with a wordless sound, not quite a scoff, as though the situation could never be any other way.
"Don't worry about it," Gladio said. A parting pat on the shoulder, then he stepped back around the table and sat down in front of his bowl of cold gruel. "This isn't my first fight, Iggy. Besides, you got yourself tossed in here 'cause of me. Fair's fair."
Of course there was no such thing as fair in Gorgon, but if a man couldn't cling to a few relics of the world outside its walls then what was the point? He tore a chunk of stale bread and scooped up a mouthful of gruel with it. The combination did nothing to improve either component but it broke up the monotony. He chewed and spoke around the lump of paste in his mouth.
"Sit down and get some calories in you. We still got a couple days."
And what was a couple days in Gorgon but a thousand years? Ample time for Gladio to get Ignis up to speed. It's not like any of it was complicated. Barbarism was always simple in the end.
DAY 2
The fights had a mocking veneer of sport. They took place in a boxing ring, and there were three five-minute rounds, and there was a bell and a timekeeper and announcer and even a referee whose job was ostensibly to stop the fight when it became clear one fighter could not continue.
But by Gorgon rules no fight ended unless one of the fighters wasn't moving anymore and even then the referee might let the end drag out, the room filled with the noise of bloodthirsty spectators and the meaty impacts of fist on flesh, the crack of knuckle against orbital bone, while the referee waited for a signal from the Warden that he and his associates were entertained enough. That they'd had their fill of blood. That whichever fighter who dared to annoy the Warden in some way, large or small, had been punished enough.
Gladio had been on both sides of that punishment. The new crooked line of his nose spoke to that. And the scar tissue that made up his right eyebrow. He left that detail out as he explained the lay of the land to Ignis.
"...All you've gotta do is mop my face up between rounds," Gladio said. A hollow clang of metal on metal as he racked the barbell. The unsecured plates rattled. He sat up on the bench and rested his forearms on his thighs. They were outside now, in the yard, in the limited respite of open air. There was no sun. A sheet of gunmetal clouds hovered low over the prison such that the fact they were outside at all was the only method by which to reckon the time of day.
It was cold enough that Gladio's breath plumed white. The warmth of exertion ebbed out of his muscles. He sneezed into the crook of his arm and wiped his nose on his sleeve.
Word got around quickly enough that Ignis was 'with the Big Guy', and anyone who respected Gladio's mid-tier status on the political ladder of Gorgon left them alone. The head-down types. The trio of men approaching the weight bench presently weren't head-down types. They were some of Rurik's stooges, looking to ingratiate themselves to the boss. Gladio caught them in the corner of his eye and sneered when he recognized them. He stood.
Post by Gladiolus Amicitia on Oct 30, 2020 10:26:34 GMT -6
The politics of Gorgon had long become one stone among many that built the walls of his confinement. He learned, in the frigid damp, through the iron taste in his mouth and the sting of open wounds, that it was better to let them be than try to tear them down. He convinced himself it was a matter of survival, but in the back of his mind Gladio knew it was little more than giving up. He became another pawn in Rurik's quest for status, another income stream for the Warden and the guards who handled gambling and distribution of the fight videos, another beaten dog in a cage, let out on a short leash when the master felt like drawing blood.
He learned to tolerate it in the same way he learned to tolerate the bitter cold and the rotting food and the ubiquitous stench. Alone, it was manageable, but Gladio wasn't alone anymore. He stood rooted in place by two years of knowledge and experience with what it meant to try to break Gorgon's system from within, staring at the smear of blood on Ignis's face and on the scarred wooden table. The sight filled him with an intolerable, impotent rage. He wanted nothing more than to snap Rurik's neck with his bare hands. He didn't move.
"Ignis," Rurik repeated. He looked up at his men, flashed a wide ugly grin of yellowed enamel and silver dental amalgam. There was a cruel glint in his eyes. "Ignis," he said again, drawing out each syllable in a mocking singsong, and the two goons stifled laughter that sounded like the sputtering motors of heavy machinery.
Gladio balled hands into fists tight enough that the dull dirty nails drew blood from his palms. He felt the eyes of the room on him still as if they dared him to take a swing at Rurik. Dared him to buy his ticket to the hole, or worse. Rurik operated with impunity not because he and his men were strong enough to break their enemies but because Rurik had ingratiated himself to the Warden as an important cog in the machine that was Gorgon. A word up the chain of command, and hell somehow got worse.
Rurik delighted in every moment of this. He may have peddled drugs behind the walls, but he was no less a junkie. Every petty exercise of his power brought him a euphoric high just as addictive as the needle. Gladio once dreamed of the day he would chain the son of a bitch up, dangling him by his wrists in the depths of the hole, and beat him to death, but the hollow disappointment on waking forced him to abandon such notions.
"That," Rurik continued with peculiar emphasis, "Is a stupid-ass name. And look at this--" Rurik nodded, and the two men wrenched Ignis back upright. Rurik leaned over the table, grabbed him by the chin, stared curiously at the scarring around his eye. He prodded at it with two grimy fingers. "--Somebody messed you up good, huh?"
"Back off--" Gladio seethed. He took an impulsive step forward, knuckles white.
Rurik dug a short punch into Ignis' throat and Gladio felt it, exhaled sharply through his teeth. He stopped with his weight on his back foot.
"Don't interrupt," Rurik said like a teacher scolding a child. He wagged his finger. "This is how it's gonna be. One of the openers woke up dead this morning, so the Warden asked me to find some fresh meat for the next card. And, boy," Rurik leered and patted Ignis on the cheek. "This one here is the freshest meat in the place. So when I collect my finder's fee--"
"No."
Gladio saw the canvas stained with blood. The rabid masses cheering for death. A broken body crawling feebly to the ropes.
"No?" Rurik cocked his head to the side, ambled up in front of Gladio. "Did you just say no to me, like you have a f---ing say in how any of this works?"
It would have been so easy to grab him by the throat and crack his skull against the concrete. Rurik thought himself a king, but Gladio knew kings, and Rurik didn't rate the dirt on their shoes.
"He doesn't fight. He's my cornerman."
"Since when do you have a cornerman?"
"Since now."
Rurik scoffed, flashed a bitter grin. He shot a glance Ignis's way and then he studied Gladio's face with squinted, suspicious eyes.
"I see how it is. Cute, real cute, Big Guy." Rurik gestured vaguely at his men. "Boys, I think this one's going soft."
"You want a fill in, I'll fight for him. But he doesn't fight."
"You're already on the card, you dumb bastard."
"So I fight twice."
"Twice. Oh, hell, buddy, the Warden's gonna love this. Okay. Okay, you fight twice, with your blind-ass cornerman. Have some f---ing fun with that, Big Guy. Boys, let's go bring the chief the good news."
Rurik snapped his fingers above his head and pointed at the door and like obedient little dogs the two men loosed their grip on Ignis. The first fell in behind Rurik. The second, as he passed Ignis, grabbed a handful of his collar and jerked him down to the floor. As they departed the other prisoners in the chow hall looked away, turned back to their breakfasts. Sounds of shuffling, the dull scrape of the wooden spoons against metal bowls. The murmur of conversation returned like someone slowly turning up the volume knob. The guards looked on impassively.
Gladio hurried to the other side of the table, grabbing Ignis by the arm to help him up. He muttered a long string of profanity under his breath.
"All right, Iggy?" he asked, inspecting the damage.
Post by Gladiolus Amicitia on Sept 30, 2020 22:23:02 GMT -6
The line of the condemned shuffled forward. A low murmur of lifeless conversation filled the chow hall. Dull grey walls and dull grey floor and wan light filtering through the bars as men complained about the food in rote lines with no feeling behind them, just habit. A pair of guards watched with their particular combination of scorn and boredom from a railed catwalk. Gladio stood in line in front of Ignis and scoured the room with a hard stare. He felt eyes on him. He always felt eyes on him, like spiders slow crawling up the back of his neck.
"No culture here," Gladio said as they neared the front of the line. "So you don't have to worry about it."
A leatherfaced prisoner with brittle grey hair and watery eyes manned the window, ladling out a lumpy gruel into beaten tin bowls with a thick wet slopping noise. Gladio gave a look to the man and a nod of his head towards Ignis. If the man knew what it meant he gave no sign, instead ladling another bowl of gruel with robotic efficiency. Something in it smelled faintly rancid. He stuck a wooden spoon in the center of the mound of grey paste and it stood straight up. He set out a chunk of stale bread and a tin cup of lukewarm water. Gladio handed these to Ignis, balancing the bread on the flat rim of the bowl, and once Ignis had a grip on it Gladio turned back for his own meal. If you could call it that.
"C'mon, I got us a spot."
He led Ignis to a table, shot a look at the two men sitting there over crumbs of bread and mostly untouched gruel. They blinked slowly and then gathered up their bowls and cups and moved along without a word. Gladio sat. He still felt eyes on him.
"I'll score us some better chow in a few days," he said, grabbing the bread from Ignis' bowl before the man could eat it. He broke off moldy pieces while he talked. "There's ways of getting stuff in here. Blankets, meds, better chow, all the shit the guards hold back." Gladio set the bread back on Iggy's plate. "...All it costs is a little blood."
Silence came over the hall and the hairs on the back of Gladio's neck stood on end. He stared at the entranceway. Tension in the air, thick enough to cut with an axe. His eyes narrowed.
"Just keep your head down, Iggy," he whispered between his teeth.
Three sets of footsteps cut through the silence, the soft slapping of the thin-soled prison shoes. The man in the center of the trio stood four inches shorter than Gladio but carried himself like he was eight feet tall. He had a shaved head and a fur collared jacket that cost him a lot of blood. His name was Rurik.
"Heard you had a new friend, Big Guy," he said. His two men stood on either side of Ignis. Every muscle in Gladio's body tensed up. Rurik clasped his hands loosely behind his back and gave Ignis a once-over like he was inspecting a side of meat. "Looks a little healthier than your last celly. Clean, yeah? Well, there's still time, you know. Everyone takes a taste they been stuck here long enough. Say..." he turned his leering blue-grey stare onto Gladio. "Your old celly still owed us when they put him in the ground. Junkies, right? We got a lot riding on your next fight, Big Guy, but your new pal here looks like he can pay up."
"How about I rip your throat out with my teeth instead," Gladio snarled. He didn't stand up. Not until Rurik's goons each grabbed one of Ignis' shoulders, wrenched his arms behind his back, slammed his face into the old wooden table with a sound like a gunshot. The wood scraped against the concrete floor.
The guards watched with only mild interest.
"You've been around this long and you still haven't learned any damn manners, buddy--"
"Get your f------ hands off him."
"C'mon, Big Buy. Not even gonna introduce us?" he looked down at Ignis with his face pressed into the wood. "Hey, buddy, what do they call you?"
Post by Gladiolus Amicitia on Aug 30, 2020 13:03:09 GMT -6
DAY 1
When the dull gray dawn began to seep through the windows a buzzing alarm sounded through the whole complex in three long pulses. When the last buzz died the echo carried, a distant hollow sound like the other end of the prison was still waking up. Then the staccato tapping of hard soles on hard floor, jangling keys, the clanging of metal as the locks turned. Then the hinges of the cell doors squealed and the hall filled with the noise of listless shuffling feet and the smell of unwashed bodies.
One note after the other like a carefully orchestrated piece. As it had been the day before, and the day before that, and the day before that...
Gladio stared at the cracks in the ceiling and scrubbed a hand down his face. He'd been staring at them a long while, since before the first light found the cell. For all that stayed the same there was one new, important difference.
"Rise n' shine, Iggy," Gladio muttered. He swung his legs over the edge of the bunk and dropped down to the floor. His limbs felt frozen and numb and useless. He sneezed into the crook of his elbow. His jaw ached. All night he clenched it to keep his teeth from chattering. He hadn't been so cold since his first night in Gorgon and that night seemed to last a year. So cold he thought his bones would crack from the shivering.
He hadn't slept at all then and he thought he wouldn't sleep at all this past night. Not until he listened past the howling outside the cell walls to the quiet breathing from the bunk below. Not until he let it sink in that he wasn't crazy, he wasn't forgotten, and he wasn't alone anymore.
In the hallway the guards ushered stragglers along with their batons. Gladio waited in the doorway, watching the flow of the condemned with a hard level stare, until Ignis was up and ready. He flexed his hands to work the stiffness out of the joints. A handful of passers-by glanced Gladio's way. A nod here or there. A leer or a scowl from others. Muttered profanity. Someone complained that Gladio cost them after that beating he laid down two nights ago. Gladio let it drift.
"You take too long they lock the cell again," he told Ignis, "No chow and no air for the rest of the day."
With a guiding hand on his friend's shoulder he stepped out into the hall and followed the traffic towards the vaguely sour smell emanating from the chow hall. The air grew humid the nearer they got, as though the ventilation system in the kitchen wasn't working right.
"You'll love the food here," Gladio deadpanned. "Real gourmet stuff."