( OPEN | DAY 19 ) the brainiacs club
CHARACTERS: clarke, sam, damon, elena, murphy + everyone who wants to meet the symbiote face to (brain) face
WHERE: Hyrypia - The Graze, an impromptu coroners tent
WHEN: DAY :019
SUMMARY: Before his cremation, Lavellan still offers a few answers to some burning questions.
WARNINGS: Mentions of character death, medically accurate gore, an autopsy, a lot of talk about brains, the symbiote is terrifying, and probably puke.
( ooc | dogpile all in one thread, write your own starters post tent, someone eventually get clarke a jar to put the brain in or something please for the love of god…! basically, do whatever and have fun with it. )
WHERE: Hyrypia - The Graze, an impromptu coroners tent
WHEN: DAY :019
SUMMARY: Before his cremation, Lavellan still offers a few answers to some burning questions.
WARNINGS: Mentions of character death, medically accurate gore, an autopsy, a lot of talk about brains, the symbiote is terrifying, and probably puke.
( for clarke, it seems like the next logical step. first, a rough introduction to the symbiote. second, glimpses of a brain scan from the depths of john murphy's mind. third, seeing it with her own eyes.
so naturally, it doesn't take much convincing.
they have a body. when asked, they're provided with a set of odd tools and a wealth of apologies for their loss by the hyrypian natives. and before they go about building a funeral pyre, they set themselves up in a well-lit tent and carefully remove the corpse coverings. clarke's never done this before, sam's never done this before, and as intently as they hover, damon and elena offer little advice, mostly morbidly driven moral support. murphy has a wide variety of medical supplies at his side, and doesn’t say much. but it's not hard to figure out. under sharp instruments, skin cuts like butter, and dead bodies barely bleed. it's easy to get through the skin and hair, to peel it back and reveal the white bone of lavellan's skull. it's harder to look at the dead man's face, peaceful as if in a deep sleep, while fumbling for an archaic trephine and swallowing down bile.
first, they punch holes. cautious, careful to draw back when the tool burrows too deeply. if they want to examine his brain for answers to all the questions digging (quite literally) in the back of their minds, they can't damage the delicate tissue. as bone dust flies and catches on her hands, clarke quietly wishes for sterile latex gloves — anything to buffer the sensations, to make this feel less real.
then comes the drill, held at an angle to cut relatively straight lines between the burr holes. lavellan's head wiggles under the vibrations of sawing through bone, the same tremors that run up the length of clarke's arms as she cuts, and her throat is uncomfortably tight when she asks elena to hold him still. it takes some time, but piece by piece the hard bone is chipped away, each sliver of skull carefully set aside in a bowl until they're faced with a grey layer of dura. the tissue is cut and snipped, pulled to expose the veins and the intricate tubing of lobes — the brain, the epicenter of all life, now red, and wet, and still.
it's not over. the brain is soft, threatens to break under her fingers as she claws into his skull; pushing and pulling until she can cut at the spinal cord tethering mind to body. and with a trickle of cerebral fluid, the brain is born into her hands, a squishy and floppy mess. the answer to so many questions, and disgustingly delicate.
for a moment, they all just look at it. choke on actions, implications, guilt. then: )
There, ( clarke announces, turning the brain over in her hands. on the underside, just above the base of where the brain stem had been cut, a soft bundle of white. it looks almost like particularly dead nerve endings, a tight grouping of listless threads, but that's not right. clarke uses her pinky finger to shift the elastic folds of the brain, tugging to try to see where the branches of the symbiote dig deeper into grey matter, and brush the hard black flecks embedded into the alien organic tissue. there, that's what it looked like in the flesh.
her stomach churns. nausea or nerves, the uncomfortable idea that that is inside all of us at the forefront of her mind — her distress is tangible in the air, but it's anyone's guess so far as contributing factors. she extends both cupped hands, offering a better look to those around her. )
( ooc | dogpile all in one thread, write your own starters post tent, someone eventually get clarke a jar to put the brain in or something please for the love of god…! basically, do whatever and have fun with it. )

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the silence stretches. there's a lot to say, even more to digest and for the moment clarke is content to grapple with an existential crisis involving everyone she ever cared about dying in her absence; with wallowing in the grief and simmering anger left in bellamy and murphy's wake; with an odd sort of regret, because she'd only meant to separate the boys before they came to more serious blows, and neither of them seemed likely to return. it's several long moments and one wet, gross sniffle later that she's lifting her face to look at lexa — eyes wet, but no longer openly weeping, and mouth set in a hard line. )
You didn't have to talk about Octavia like that.
( murphy may have made the initial cut, but lexa had effectively poured the salt in bellamy's exposed wound. )
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Just because we made the choice without accepting the consequences doesn't mean that we failed to have the means to realize what it was that we did. Even without the symbiotes, the choice would be the same. We left our people to fight a war, and we'll continue to grow old because of it.
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There's a difference between knowing what you've sacrificed, and having it thrown in your face. ( miles of difference between knowing they'd left their people to suffer who knew what, and having a vivid picture of their graves — or lack there off — painted in vivid splashes right before your very eyes, in your mind. )
You're telling me none of that seemed cruel and unnecessary to you?
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Do you truly think he knows? And if he does, why should I be asked to suffer the consequences of his denial once again?
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to that first question: )
Yes. ( steely, pointed, defensive. because bellamy's a lot of things, but he's not stupid. clarke wholeheartedly believes that he understands the weight of their situation because she thinks she understands it now too. the lives of their people are in jeopardy in some far-off universe, and more often than not they were on the same page when it came to survival. so yes. )
And if hoping for a better outcome is what keeps him going, you don't get to detract from that. ( righteous and demanding. she thinks, rather unkindly, that no one asked her to suffer bellamy's optimism. but bites her tongue. still experiencing the sting of angry tears behind her eyelids, clarke scrubs her hands over her face. there's still a curl of blood under a few of her fingernails, and noticing it upon drawing her palms away is like dunking her head into a bucket of ice water.
with finality taking the place of vehemence, her voice is a softer shade of angry when next she speaks. )
I just cut open a dead man's skull. In front of people who were probably his friends. I'm tired.
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Either way, she decides the argument that they're bound to have isn't worth her time or effort. Feeling ... lesser somehow in comparison to Clarke's people isn't where she wants to be. And she definitely doesn't want to feel it with Bellamy of all possible people.
Her lips twist down.]
You should clean up. I'll take a walk. [Lexa moves to rise, not commenting on anything. Anything she says might not even be her. She can feel the threat of surging emotions within her.]
I'll return here. [She might as well. She's laid claim to it, whatever that means now.
(It means nothing. She meant to surround herself with allies, and it feels like she's doing a fine job of losing all of them.)]
wraps this up like a present
she's yanking on the laces of her vest when lexa leaves, and by the time she returns clarke is curled on her side in the relative dark, the picture of restless sleep if not for the palpable thrum of a conscious mind trying to sort through solutions. she's counting the minutes the other three are gone, then weighing the chances bellamy and murphy were going to return at all. and when those odds come up against her favor, it becomes watching the clock and attempting to guess when it would be well, or at least passively received to check in with either of the two. it's a less successful method than counting sheep, and for all they don't speak as lexa goes about her night time routine, there's not much sleep either. )