sympathy for the devil | dante x wrenââ
dante-carringtonâ:â
Wren, of course. Long week?Â
.
Longest week Iâve had in a while, thatâs for sure. I assume itâs been equally busy for you?
.
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@wren--phillips
sympathy for the devil | dante x wrenââ
dante-carringtonâ:â
Wren, of course. Long week?Â
.
Longest week Iâve had in a while, thatâs for sure. I assume itâs been equally busy for you?
.

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sympathy for the devil | dante x wrenââ
Hey there. You have a minute?
@dante-carringtonâ
mens rea | lissy & wren {ruina rex: funeral}
lissy-mccallâ:
[[ He never turns off, does he? Makes sense, in a way, when she saw him in his office. clearly on something. Lissyâs smile is a little broader because she does still like the man, even if she canât picture telling him more about her thoughts. If he can barely cope, how the hell could she expect him to bear the extra weight of Lissyâs fucked up time in the wastes? She started to worry that she might be partly responsible for it. ]]
Yeah, yes. The other girls are there for me, and weâre all here for each other. Weâre still doing really good. Me and the âCalGalsâ [[ Lissy throws up a hand to make some air quotes, their silly little group name sheâd been very excited to share with Wren at one point. Of course, sheâd stopped seeing him soon after that.
âItâs only natural to feel a little vulnerable,â gives her pause. ]] Do youâ [[ Feel vulnerable? ]] Do you have someone to help you out? Cause, I mean, youâre a helper. Theyâre always busy with others, yâknow?
Iâm so glad to hear youâre all still friends. {Wren remembers well and with much fondness the day Lissy had arrived at their session with bright eyes and a smile to match, excitedly launching into telling him all about the two girls sheâd befriended before heâd managed to properly close the door. Heâd been so happy to see her progress yield results, so proud to see how much more confident sheâd appeared.
Heâs still proud now despite no longer acting as Lissyâs therapist. Seeing patients regain parts of themselves previously thought lost is one of the best things about his job; every day he can go to sleep knowing heâs made at least one personâs life a little better and brighter. Most days thatâs enough. It has to be.
Lissy flips the question and Wren smiles. Itâs a tactic he faces at least three times a day, but he decides to humour her.}
Oh you know me, Iâm always good at keeping myself occupied. It helps to have a task to focus on when things get rough. {The question lingers at the tip of his tongue but he swallows it again.} I find that even the most mundane of activities help me keep my thoughts straight. Folding laundry, dusting my office, organising books⌠that sort of stuff. Have you discovered any good books lately? I remember you saying you wanted to get back into reading.
oath and burden | cambie & wren {ruina rex: funeral}
cambieandrewsâ:
[She wonders if he knows she made the sausage rolls. It seems like the sweet sort of subtle thing Wren would do, saying the sausage rolls are good because he knows itâll boost Cambieâs mood to hear that. Then again, maybe he just thinks theyâre good. Cambieâs not had much of an appetite today, partly because of the mood of the whole event and partly because sheâd been up so late cooking, and tasting as she went.
Wren probably knows her too well, asking if sheâs eaten. He apologises for always being switched on, but it makes Cambie smile. Itâs one of her favourite things about him.]
Yes, mum. [She offers a small, teasing smile, but takes a sausage roll anyway and manages a bite. Often she thinks how glad she is to have people like Wren, and Mitch, and Cameron, to help look after people â but she forgets sometimes she needs looking after, too.] I canât take all the credit, I had plenty of help. Enoch especially has been an absolute star. Dâyou think it all went alright? I mean, I know nobody âenjoysâ funerals, but⌠it was okay?
[She gives an anxious, brow-furrowed look to Wren, before glancing around the room. Itâs certainly not the funeral Kaiser would have wanted, and thatâll weigh on her for a long time.]
Cambie. {Wren can practically hear the gears turning in her head, see the steam leave her ears. He knows that brow-furrowed expression all too well and wishes there was something he could do to ease her worries.} Stop fretting. You did a fantastic job with the tools and resources available to you. The funeral was perfect and the wake is going just as well. It isnât about how much money you spend or how grand the decorations are, people just need a place to come together to mourn. Nobody expected you to put this much effort into it, and I bet every single person here appreciates everything youâve done more than they can say.
{He didnât know Kaiser personally but itâd been so hard to avoid hearing the rumours and gossip surrounding him, Wren feels like he did know him a little after all. He certainly heard enough to know that this isnât the kind of funeral a man like Kaiser would have wanted, but itâs what the people of the Colony need.
Death is traumatic no matter where it comes from. Be it someone close to your heart or a person youâve barely spoken three words to. Doubly so following everything theyâd been exposed to during, and after, D-Day.Â
He canât speak for anybody else, although he imagines heâs not alone in this, but Wren is glad someone did something. The funeral, the wake - Â everyone coming together like this makes him feel less alone with his thoughts and concerns. It makes him feel like thereâs a community out here that cares for each other like family, political rifts aside. It reminds him of life before the end and itâs that small glimmer of hope thatâll get him through the day.}
Have you taken the time to talk about how youâre really feeling? {He canât help himself. Seeing her so worried and stressed is breaking his heart.} To anyone? Or have you been so busy consoling others that you havenât yet found the time to figure out your own thoughts?
CHARLIE ROWE 2020, The Forgotten C. dir. Molly Manning Walker

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mens rea | lissy & wren {ruina rex: funeral}
lissy-mccallâ:
[[ Itâs the first funeral sheâs ever been too. Lissy never thought sheâd see one, after experiencing death so many times, a memorial simply felt off. Out of place when so many others lost their lives unceremoniously.
Lissy has decided sheâs not a fan of them, or wakes for that matter.
Kaiser, from the way everyone speaks about him, reminds her uncomfortably of Orla. A sort of magnetism and charm people almost feared but felt incredibly special and seen when he deigned to turn his gaze upon them. It makes her worry about what he said to Annie to make her care about him. Sheâs the only reason Lissy even turned up. Her and the other girls are taking shifts, of sort, to be at Annieâs side and hold her hand.
Maisie had taken over hand-holding duties for now. There is very little for her to do. Eating feels wrongâin the wastes a death was always followed by a feast. She canât help but think of all the food as someone coming from the man himself. Lissy has instead got a glass of wine to hold more than drink. Hiding in a corner with a frown, someone turns to face her. Oh.
âItâs good to see you again.â The frown dissipates into a little âoâ of surprise. She likes Wren. The first person here that she actually felt safe around.
 Dr. Philips, or Wren as she more comfortably called him, was a good therapist. Kind, patient, and never horrified by Lissy. Besides the CalGals, he is the only other person here whoâs seen her completely breakdown, been told every detail about her time in the Wastes and more. Told him about the guilt she carried. It seems impossible, but it used to be heavier than it is today. The weight used to crush her, stop her doing anything and some days she couldnât even leave the dorm.
Wren would knock on the door, enter with his usual soft smile and gentle words. He seemed to always know the right things to say. She really liked him. Until she couldnât trust him.
Despite it all, she smiles up to him. Fidgets nervously with the stem of her wine glass. ]] Hi. [[ It feels like sheâs playing pretend at being an adult. ]] Um, Iâm holding. [[ A non-answer but Wren of all people should be used to this. ]] Iâm just here for Annie. I never knew the guy. How are you? Did you⌠know him? [[ What the fuck do you talk about at a funeral! ]]
{Itâs been a while since heâs spoken to Lissy, but Wren is pleased to note that she seems to be doing well. She looks a far cry from the skinny and terrified little girl heâd met during their first session; eyes brighter, cheeks fuller, posture more confident.
Initially heâd been a little jarred by her sudden transfer request to another therapist, especially since sheâd left with little explanation, but she seems to be thriving under her new doctorâs care and thatâs all he really hopes for. Pressing her for answers would be entirely inappropriate and unprofessional and no matter how bad he wants to know just what it was that he did wrong, he remains quiet about it, instead offering a sympathetic smile.}
I canât say I knew him all too well either, no. He was never my patient and we didnât stop to chat in the corridors that often. But one doesnât have to have known a person to be sad about their death. Itâs only natural to feel a little vulnerable. {Wrenâs more worried about his patientsâ reactions to Kaiserâs death than actually upset about it, but itâs easy to get swept up in the general sadness in a small community like the one at Col22.}
Itâs very kind of you to be here to comfort your friend, Iâm sure she appreciates it. I hope you have someone who supports you in return?
mens rea | lissy & wren {ruina rex: funeral}
@lissy-mccallâââ
{As the day of the funeral progresses and people start gathering for the wake, Wren starts to feel increasingly more uneasy. He hadnât had much contact with Kaiser and therefore canât really relate to those in mourning, although the rumours surrounding his death have left him rather rattled. No, the worst thing about the entire situation is the helplessness. Wren feels entirely and utterly helpless and he hates it.
Aside from wanting to impress his parents and keep up the overachieving legacy of his family, Wren had become a doctor for one very simple reason: helping others. Itâs clichĂŠ and earns him dumbfounded looks whenever he mentions it, but itâs the truth. What other motive could he possibly have had for putting himself through the hell of med-school if not to achieve something close to his heart? He could have quit after the accident - and maybe he should have - but he hadnât. Heâd continued onwards, dragged himself across the finish line on all fours, because heâs always known deep down that thereâs nothing else for him.
The funeral had been miserable but the wake is even worse. Everywhere Wren looks he sees suffering, resentment, pain. It engulfs the room, suffocating and heavy; a suitably morbid atmosphere for a group mourning not just the loss of a man but the loss of a voice. Itâs almost enough to make him wish he were high, just to ease some of the guilt.
At some point, from the corner of his eye, he catches a flash of blonde hair. As he makes to turn, he finds himself face to face with a very familiar frown.}
Ah, Lissy. Hello. Itâs good to see you again. How are you holding up?
oath and burden | cambie & wren {ruina rex: funeral}
cambieandrewsâ:
[Cambieâs good at this bit. It brings back fond memories â embittered by the feelings of loss, but perhaps closer to bittersweet now. Being the only diner in their village, Cambieâs dad had pretty much always catered for funerals, and Cambie would be enlisted to help pour drinks and take trays of food around. Itâs easy for her to slip into her usual easy chatter, looking out for people.
Sheâs checked in on Ricky several times, and is glad to see Charlie is sticking by him. Most people seem to be holding up okay, although she suspects the funeral was harder than a lot of people had foreseen. For many of the Colonyâs younger residents, it would be the first funeral theyâd been to.
Everything is proceeding without any hiccups â rain doesnât count, not in the UK â but Cambie still finds herself battling the anxiety that sheâs not done enough, that this could be better, that she could help more. With her latest tray of sausage rolls distributed, Cambie lays it neatly on a table and is about to go and find another one when Wren waylays her.]Â
Wren, hi. Iâm fine.[Sheâs not sure how convincing her smile is, but she suspects not terribly. Itâs always difficult to keep up a facade around Wren; heâs so sweet, his face so open, that she just hates to be dishonest with him. He really is great, she thinks. The poor thing must be exhausted â the last week or so hasnât been easy for the therapy team but heâs held up admirably well.]Â How about you? I know you mustâve been working so hard the last few days, Iâm sorry Iâve not stopped by. But weâre almost there now, eh?
{Wren hates it when people tell him theyâre âfineâ. Fine means nothing. Itâs an empty word, more often than not accompanied by unconvincing smiles or general resignation. It makes him a little sad as he knows very well what âfineâ stands for but, given the situation, Wren doesnât ask for clarification. That doesnât mean he wonât bug her for a proper answer over the next few days.
Setting down the wine in order to help himself to half a sausage roll, he canât help but smile in mild exasperation. How very Cambie of her. Heâd approached the conversation with the intent of offering her moral support, and instead sheâs managed to spin the question back on him. Were it any other situation he might have insisted she be a little more forthcoming, but given the general mood of the room, it doesnât take a medical degree to gauge how most people are feeling.
With just how much and how fiercely she cares, Cambie is hardly going to be the exception.}
You donât have to apologise for being busy doing your job. I hear you arranged this entire thing by yourself? That mustâve been exhausting. Mhm, these are good. {He helps himself to the other half of the roll before unsubtly giving the tray a little nudge in her direction.} Have you eaten since this morning? Sorry, you know I can never leave my therapist-self in the office.
bonding with your houseplants by watering them from a water bottle youâve already drank from
oath and burden | cambie & wren {ruina rex: funeral}
@cambieandrewsââ
{The day of the funeral is hard and heavy. The crushing weight of an atmosphere of death and mourning blankets the Colony, leaving no one untouched or unaffected by Kaiserâs death. Wren feels it in all corners of the buildings when he makes his way to the natural memorial - sees it in the eyes of everyone present at the wake that follows.
Crowded together in the small space to avoid the weather, itâs impossible to escape the general air of misery. Wren feels it too, that sense of loss, despite having exchanged less than ten words with Kaiser over the span of his years at Col22. Itâs suffocating and overwhelming and heâs of half a mind to leave the moment he arrives.
However heâs not there to mourn, but rather in a more professional capacity. No one had asked him to bring his therapist hat to the event, but heâd figured it might not necessarily be a bad thing. Death is never easy for anyone and people need support, even if they canât admit it out loud. Especially then.
Cambie draws his eye almost immediately, and after watching her buzz and shuffle anxiously about the room for a good thirty-minutes, Wren decides to make an approach. Near untouched glass of wine in his hands, he steps up to her just before she manages to dart off again.}
Hey. How are you holding up?

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Wren Phillips | Twenty Eight; Â Elite
House: Delma Status: Uninfected Elite Specification: Trauma Therapist
[*TW: addiction, drug use*]
History
Wren was a good kid. A good kid and an exceptional student, raised in a family where grades, dedication and ambition were the stepping stones of success and the key to getting everything you wanted out of life. The middle child of three bothers, Wren was eager to be everything his parents wanted him to be, and though they did put some pressure on all three of their boys, it wasnât without plenty of support nor was it enough to be negative.
His older brother a varsity jock, his younger, an aspiring musician, Wrenâs parents were pleased when he decided to go into the medical field. But Wren wanted so much to meet his parentsâ expectations, not to mention his own, that he began to buckle under the stress of the university workload. In an effort to increase his productivity, Wren bought into the black market of amphetamines, using one of the more widely-known campus dealers. He never meant to make a problem of it, never dreamed it would get out of control, but what started as something to help him through his cram sessions, became a daily thing to make him more alert in class, and then a nightly thing, to help him finish his work faster, and then a constant thing to make up for the fact that his new habit was making time for everything but sleep.
It was the weekend before his finals in his third year of university that it happened. Heâd been up for three days straight, cramming and high on medication in his desperation to cover everything. On his way to campus on Monday morning, he was speeding through a school zone and was unable to stop on time when a fourth grader ran out into the street.
It was by some miracle that the little girlâEmma-Sophia, was her name, a name that would both haunt and comfort Wren for the rest of his lifeâsurvived. Wren spent countless hours in the emergency waiting room that day. Waiting, waiting, waitingâwaiting for what he was sure to be bad news, but he prayed to be proven wrong, to anyone or anything in the universe willing to listen. Not for his sake, because he was the last person to deserve itâbut for hers. Dear God, if only for little Emmaâs sake.
And a miracle came. Sheâd gone into surgery and come out safely, her fierce little heart still beating, with only some stitches, bruises and a broken arm to show for how narrowly sheâd escaped death. Her parents hadnât wanted to so much as see Wrenâs face and he didnât blame them, but heâd waited until the doctors had come with the news and heâd managed one final look at her through the window of her room, the little machine beeping away as she slept, looking so peaceful, and he cried.
But miracle or not, the incident crushed him. Â And what could have or should have served as an irrevocable motivation to straighten his life out, only made matters worse. âThanksâ to his familyâs wealth and excellent defence lawyers, he got off easy in courtâtoo easyâwhich had brought relief for his parents, but a relentless, angry guilt for Wren. He can still hear Emmaâs motherâs angry, heartbroken wail when heâd been sentenced only to a yearâs probation and a temporary suspension of his student practicing licence, on the condition that he attend court-ordered professional help.
Of course, Wrenâs troubles sleeping only escalated, and though therapy served as some outlet to cope with the trauma, he found losing himself in his work to be more effective, and he had several missed exams to make up for. However, for all the ways in which Wren struggled, he was altogether too efficient at hiding them from his friends and family. Customarily of a warm and gregarious nature, heâd slide the evidence of his trauma behind a bright smile and warm, puppy-dog eyes. He soldiered on through the remainder of his undergraduate program, battling insomnia, addiction and fluctuating depression, and by some miracle, finished his first year of medical school in the top ten percent of his class.
Wren was in his second year of medical school and working part time at a small facility in Wales, when the End came. He spent about a year travelling with a group of wandering survivors, searching for sanctuary. With his addiction still an unresolved issue, the first six or seven months were hell for him in more ways than one. In the clan that formed around him, he found support and even friendship, but they were dark days for him and unfortunately, the darkness persisted as his fellow survivors slowly started to fall around him, dying of starvation, infected injuries, or victims of manslaughter.
About fourteen months after D-Day, however, Wren was discovered thin and weak, on the shores of the South of Wales. He was picked up by one of the merchant ships and taken aboard, where he stayed for a few weeks while they completed their run. They nursed him back to health as best they could, then dropped him off into the hands of Colony 22.
Wren Today
Going on five years later, Wren has reunited with portions of the man he used to be and he believes he has his position as a therapist on the CISM team to thank for a great deal of that. Again working with his passion, he finds it has helped to keep him in touch with himself, and within the Colony he is an amicable and approachable individual. Heâs grateful every day for being saved the way he had been, is happy at Colony 22 and loves what he doesâhowever, becoming a registered citizen and an Elite did come with its downsides: the exposure and access to medication.
With his addiction not so much overcome as it was simply cut off at the source, the temptation suddenly at his fingertips proved to be too much. Though Wrenâs abuse of the meds available is limited in comparison to his struggles before the End (vastly due to the actual supply being rather limited, as well as the extreme guilt involved in taking from the minimal resources they have for those truly in need) itâs something he battles on a regular basis, fighting temptation and succumbing to weakness, a constant roller coaster.
Wren is one of the few therapist who still goes to therapy himself. He has difficulty sleeping, the uppers being only part of the problem, as the incident that had first caused his crash nearly ten years ago still haunts him in his lows, as do the memories of his post D-Day trauma, the deaths that heâd been forced to witness while at his weakest.
Nonetheless, Wren is otherwise still much stronger than he used to be, and is more often than not, high energy, cheery and positiveâand as far as some of the crankier citizens are concerned, excessively so. Heâs a team player, which is useful in the Games, and heâs always looking to help a friend out, whatever way he can. Though no one is aware of his problem, in theory it is difficult to tell where his natural friendly demeanour ends, and where his addiction begins.
TAKEN