forgess: (forge :: Jamie Gunns (give me a fag))
Here’s the thing about working in the dreamshare business. It’s not always with a team.

There are people who work with a team, and then there are team players. Eames is the former, though she would have you believe she is the latter. Eames will work with a group but she’s never without her means. The team could walk out on her and she would, for the most part, be able to hold a job together because she is a person who works with a team. Team players are the reason she has a job- she can do something they can’t.

It probably explains why she’s able to get away with so much.

Seeing the same old secrets, bank codes, adulterers, an endless string of meaningless numbers; it gets old after a while.

Eames doesn’t always act with a team. The reckless, defiant part of her that yearns for independence leads her off the beaten path. Away from dream mazes and liability reports, to more neglected venues.

She finds interesting jobs that others deem ‘too close to home.’ Jobs with tears and jobs with no tears left to shed. Eames seeks them out and smiles the smile she knows they want to see, just the right shade of competent and reassuring.

Eames is always surprised by how much people are willing to assume; the right words and a metal suitcase will get a person very far.

Money could be an issue, and she makes it seem like it is when the job calls for it, but mostly Eames takes these jobs because no one else wants them. Too personal, not high profile enough, frivolous, too experimental. What she walks away from with these jobs is much more than they could ever pay her.

Experience is the best teacher and Eames knows that she could live a thousand years and barely scrape the surface of all the things she’d like to learn. So she finds her answers in other people’s experiences, working through jobs that might be ‘too personal’ but are all the more alluring for it.

She fixes things, finds others, and sometimes she just bears witness. When no one else will, when no one else can, she is the one willing to slip into their subconscious with the right words. Catharsis, she has found, comes in many a varied shade and hue.

Sometimes, she finds things that she keeps.

Beautiful things, so many gems to her eyes, and she yearns to hold them in her hands, to keep them all for herself. She is a thief after all.

The difference in what she takes and what she wants, lies in the sentimentality.

Eames sifts through the memories of her clients, and for a moment (a day, a week, a small lifetime) lives a life she would never get to otherwise. Goes to places and doesn’t feel the heat the way she would feel it, hot and sticky under her arms and between her toes, but evenly across her skin, a warm press on all sides, womb-like in its familiarity. Memories of lavender like a first kiss, the sunrise like the swell of heartbreak within her chest. Eames keeps these moments, needs to remember them as if they were her own because they are beautiful and she is weak.

People are capable of magnificent things, fantasies and perceptions that they hide away, keep out of sight and out of mind because some feelings are too substantial to be borne.

So Eames takes them.

Not literally; no, she would make much more money if she ever perfected that skill-- though something tells her she wouldn’t erase them even if she could. Pain is the body’s way of learning, and suffering is all in the mind. When we suffer, we learn to cope with pain, and Eames would never cripple someone by taking that away.

No, Eames takes these memories with her in her own mind. Stores them deep within her so that every once in a while, she’ll smell lavender and feel the heady rush of triumph, the greedy satisfaction of a kiss she’s waited her whole life for. A gun will fit just right in her palm and the guilt, the sickening, dizzying guilt of first blood on her hands will make her sway.

More often than not, these people have secrets tucked away not in safes, but in boxes from old computer parts, drawers filled with buttons and foam letters and indescribable little scraps of paper that even Eames can’t decipher.

That she can’t puzzle them out makes them unspeakably precious.

In the mind, away from the judgment of coherency, people are beautiful, hurt creatures. Poetic in their incoherency, hungry for the positive feedback loop of their own misery because the human existence can be such a lonely one.

Eames sifts through these paper memories, transcribed in gory detail, so much anger and lust, brimming with passion in its most basic sense, and she takes them to heart.

Sometimes she keeps them as they are, stealing the memories she isn’t sure she will ever make; the thoughts she isn't sure she even understands,

 
wet and soft, your tiny
head fits in my hands. i made you, a
sinner,
i could take you away without nine months and
so much blood.


But then there are the others. The bits and pieces that she molds together- a flash of feeling here, a glimpse of herself there. Until there is something jagged and obscene, heavy and true in her palms. Real enough to make her doubt.

Doubt herself. Doubt the dream. Doubt that these words, that fit so perfectly, don’t belong to her to begin with.

Eames fashions them together and keeps them tucked out of sight, hoarding these secrets of theirs that slowly become her own.

When she leaves, no one is the wiser. The client gets their wish, as best as she can grant it, and Eames comes away with a bit of a world she’s never seen. A symbiosis cleverly disguised as a business transaction.

She keeps these things and wanders her way back into her own life. To those philandering multi-million dollar conglomerate businessmen and the shady underbelly that television dramas can only dream of. Her dreams are never so unfulfilling.

She waits for the call that is always interesting enough. Waits for the text, just this side of biting but always worth her time.

-A

On long days, or simply when the fancy strikes, Eames revisits these stolen words.

She slips into sleep only to find these thoughts, her vicarious memories, have changed. Sometimes it is only a word, a fit that resonates and she isn’t sure if its been changed at all. But other times, without her permission or even her knowledge, these moments that were not her own to rearrange become something entirely more substantial.

With cautious fingers, gentle because these permutations are so new (or, at least, that is what she tells herself) Eames learns her new memories.
 
 
i hope you’re well, not hungry, not more lonely
than you can bear. i hope you’re not angry with me.
i think of you constantly.
time goes out, our time
goes out for a good time
and we’re left behind
just the same
forgive me for fucking around
forgive me for getting abstract again
argument
is my meat
i wasn’t ever cut out
for an earth mother. gut talk,
yes, but i like games too,
make this world as i go along,
enjoy the foreplay.
i enjoy you.
i don’t want to change you.
if i could be like you
i’d hurt more than i do
i have
more
to tell you
but not the same things.
please enjoy me too.

i hope you find yourself some gentle, gone chessplayer
hard-headed, soft spoken,
knows how to bug you, how to leave you alone,
how to answer you, dig in and not budge,
what to do with his head, what to do with his cock,
when to make you shut up


with so much love,
 
 
 
 
 
These are the words she tucks away.

In a forgotten time and place, Eames is sure she must have stolen these as well. Forgotten gems at the bottom of a box of treasures that do not belong.

This is what she tells herself when she slips the cannula from her wrist, only as substantial as her smiles and endearments. Because in the end…

It is much easier to keep someone else’s secret, than it is to confront your own.
forgess: (bb!eames - bad posture innit)
Days like today, Eames would have ducked out through the halls, made her way beyond the football field's fence, and been free as a bird were it not for Arthur. First period was excruciating, third was a joke, and now they're stuck in Biology with a teacher who is obviously smart but has no idea how to teach to a bunch of students with no desire to learn.

Or maybe that's just Eames.

The sun spills through the window in the door, cheery warmth inviting mutiny and whispering words of truancy to Eames' ears. Instead, she is here, wasting away under the electric buzz of the fluorescent lights. If Ms. Bostwick turns off the lights to show another movie-- more like, have a twenty minute fight with the computer and the mystifying entity that is the Internet, Eames will be forced to make a break for it. Flee from the classroom, with the trite little planet dioramas and pinned open frog posters, for her sanity and everyone else's safety.

She should only be so lucky.

As the Biology teacher prattles on, occasionally contradicting herself, Eames flips listlessly through the Biology book. The turn of the pages reminds her of the Anne Sexton anthology sitting in her bag, given to her by their well-meaning English teacher, and how she isn't sure if she likes it or hates it yet.

She knows how she feels about the Biology book.

Arthur is on the other side of the room, even though they're supposed to be seated in last name order. That old bitty Ms. Bostwick couldnt take a couple students not absolutely falling asleep in class, and so what if there had been giggling involved, its not like a little cheer would ruin the boring ambiance of the room any how.

Slumped in his chair, Arthur's posture is as abominable as ever. His glasses are halfway down his nose and his eyelids are drooping, Eames can see the tips of his ears peeking out from his curls.

Rummaging around in her bag, Eames pulls out the notebook she'd nicked off of him in third period. He hadn't noticed, but Eames can't blame him, she's got a class set of sticky fingers and diversion tactics a mile deep.

From the looks of the first page, she's grabbed his physics notebook.

Eames flips to a random, unused page near the middle and begins writing.





Don’t look so bored Arthur.

If you didn’t sit so far away I could entertain you.

Page 387 has a boy who looks like you. D'you think when he signed the contract to have his picture in this book he'd known he'd be placed next to a diagram of a small intestine? These insides probably dont look like his insides. His insides probably dont look like yours even.

But I’ve seen you, your outsides at least. A cursory glance at all those sharp bones of yours. Could I press a muscle to the ridges of your ribcage?

Hint: the muscle is my tongue.

It’s a fact, statistical even, females have more adipose tissue than males, evolutions fuck you to modern thought. 3% to 5% -- the statistical likelihood of my surviving by your standards is low. Biologically I need more. Double, nearly triple. A gluttonous amount of cells dedicated toward maintaining life, more of me dedicated to me. Selfish. I’m surprised you don’t call me out on it more often. But that would be unfair.

You don’t care about unfair though, innit that right? Facts. You like facts. Central adiposity, not essential, raises the odds ratio (OR) = 10.7 or is it a minimum of twelve? Diabetes starts young they say. What if I’m too sweet on for you? You probably don’t have to worry, you’ll outrun it. Maybe I should run with you. Get up and do bleachers with you and the boys. Its not like I can bloody well tan anyway- but I keep trying. Persistence for natural ability. A measure of my fitness level- and I’m fit, you’ve seen me. You know I’m fit. In all those places that count.

We fit, not like I’m fit, but fit together- yes, you’re fit but that’s getting away from the point. I had a point. Or maybe I didn’t.

What’s that saying? Chewing the fat? At the end of the day isn’t that all we’re doing? Isnt that all we ever do? I should talk to you about something important, Egypt, art, 6.022e23-- but that’s chemistry and youre physics and I’m just wasting your paper.

You aren’t even paying attention. I can tell. I can always tell.

The thing is, I’m all fat and you’re no chew and I nibble at you endlessly, wanting to take a bite, sink my teeth into your skin, 3 to 5 3+5 = 8 and that’s where I start well after you’ve ended 3 to 4 to 5, but my marks wouldn’t last. Not even the sharp ones on the side. You’re too well hydrated.

Class is ending. Lets see if you noticed.





Eames contemplates folding the page so he'll find it easier, but decides against it. She does this sometimes, writes him notes and sees how long it takes him to find them. Usually he'll find them too late, once the urge that took her into that vein of thought has dried up and left her uninformed on the issue, which gets her that frown. That then why did you leave this for me? look.

He never tells her to stop though, which is both comforting and terrifying.

Flipping the notebook closed she puts it away and goes about half-heartedly tidying up her space.

When the bell finally rings for lunch, Eames slips it back in his bookbag, Arthur none the wiser.
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