angermanaging: (tears γ I'll kneel down)
[personal profile] angermanaging
Time is a distortion. Sometimes Bruce thinks about that apocryphal anecdote of Einstein's, about the relativity of time being clear after spending an hour with a pretty woman, but that makes him think about Betty and his mind skitters around the subject.

After a few months, the boredom starts to fade into a kind of numbness that blocks out other emotion. Grief means he's supposed to feel something -- and Bruce is no stranger to grief -- but it's like whatever he should be feeling has fully eclipsed his capacity to feel it. His normal coping mechanism of burying himself in work is impossible here of his own volition; he's not about to agree to playing scientist for the military-industrial complex again, putting his head in the sand like that absolves him of the consequences.

Clearly, it hadn't absolved him of anything.

Ironic, really, that he'd spent years searching the Earth for techniques to learn absolute emotional control to no avail, and what had finally done it was Betty's death. Bruce isn't having any trouble feeling nothing now. Since it's impossible for him to die (and he'd tried that first), he's in the second-best place, locked up where he can't hurt anyone. Where he doesn't have to try anymore.

It's this blank malaise that gets sharply, acutely interrupted by the arrival of another prisoner. The implausibly clear walls (Bruce has wondered about their material composition multiple times, a better distraction than Einstein) afford no privacy, so he has a full visual on the dramatics as someone else is dragged in.

Bruce sits up shakily, mind sparking to life. No doubt they're placing them beside one another to glean intel from their eventual conversations, but, well. He's always been terrible at staying out of things.
angermanaging: (091)
[personal profile] angermanaging
[From here.]


Well. Not needing to be rescued was apparently right on the mark.

Bruce eyes him warily, sidelong. Truthfully he hates violence and tries to avoid hurting (killing) even the soldiers after him, goons that they are, because they didn't ask to chase after an enormous green monster. He doesn't want to kill Ross, either-- that's Betty's father, and he has no reason to believe them even estranged. Sometimes they don't get along, he's aware, but she's lost her mother already and that had devastated her for years. She shouldn't have to lose her father, too.

So by and large, Bruce restrains himself from any baser urges. He's a smart-- very, very smart-- human being. He's not a monster. But apparently this man feels no such need for restraint. Is that meant to balance him, maybe?

But again, it's not the time to think about it, which is unexpectedly frustrating. Usually it takes no effort at all for him to remain focused, if not hyper-fixated on the threats around him. Instead, it seems a more remote concern to the warm pressure on his shoulders, which he's uncharacteristically made no move to duck. Caught up in it, Bruce snorts at the comment about his popularity, correctly reading the sarcasm. “Popular, yeah. More like runaway property.” There's a dark undercurrent that belies how much he actively resents and disagrees with that.

He wouldn't be restraining himself if he didn't have something to restrain himself from. And there's a lot he needs to keep packed way down.

“I, uh. I hope downtown is pretty close.” That park looks like an ambush site for sure. He's been jumped in multiple locations like that, with plenty of cover and a lack of innocent bystanders.