( alert the media, look who's texting first )
You busy?
You busy?
( You know, he'd half convinced himself she wasn't gonna answer at all. Would've left it at that, probably. )
Fine.
Come over after if you want.
I'll buy dinner.
Fine.
Come over after if you want.
I'll buy dinner.
Only if they pay for their own damn pizza. I'm not made of money.
Yeah yeah yeah the garlic sauce, I know
( Through a combination of dedication and happenstance, Frank's managed to find the one good pizza joint in this whole goddamn city. As far as he's figured out, it's somebody's great-great-grandfather that came over from some version of New York, and passed the recipe down from generation to generation, shunning any member of the family that suggested they try switching to Chicaco style sometime.
Anyway, the point is, the pizza's already there by the time she is. He answers the door, gestures her in, and maybe shoots a cursory glance around the parking lot just to make sure no hint of motorcycle has dared to tread in his biker-free domain.
He's already half-way to the fridge when he asks: )
You want a beer?
( Assuming that's a yes by default. He'll get into the whole reason he invited her over in a minute, he's gonna give her two goddamn minutes to settle in first. )
( Through a combination of dedication and happenstance, Frank's managed to find the one good pizza joint in this whole goddamn city. As far as he's figured out, it's somebody's great-great-grandfather that came over from some version of New York, and passed the recipe down from generation to generation, shunning any member of the family that suggested they try switching to Chicaco style sometime.
Anyway, the point is, the pizza's already there by the time she is. He answers the door, gestures her in, and maybe shoots a cursory glance around the parking lot just to make sure no hint of motorcycle has dared to tread in his biker-free domain.
He's already half-way to the fridge when he asks: )
You want a beer?
( Assuming that's a yes by default. He'll get into the whole reason he invited her over in a minute, he's gonna give her two goddamn minutes to settle in first. )
Hey- come on, now-
( He starts in as soon as she goes about pizza time like an absolute monster — but it's that automatic dad reflex that ends in a sigh, as he puts forth exactly zero effort into enforcing the use of plates like civilized human beings. Matter of fact, he joins her on her level and, once he thunks the beer down across from her, takes to eating his half of the pizza directly out of the box as well.
Then comes the question, which he opens his mouth to answer, only to find himself cut off abruptly, and — does he know who the hell Tera is? There's a pause, a blink, and then a huh kind of shrug.
Two-for-one beer's a goddamn deal. )
Shit, alright...
( Gonna be real awkward trying to remember which one Tera is, but he'll figure it out. He could obviously ask Nash now, but —
He waves his hands vaguely, dismissing the whole thing, intent to get back on topic. To demonstrate the Seriousness of this whole thing, he even drops his slice back into the box and wipes his hands on a paper towel before he starts. )
I owe you an apology.
( Straight up, like a man. No beating around the bush, no ego, just the level truth. )
The way I acted the other day when you told me- everything, it wasn't okay. I know it wasn't. I didn't handle it well, I lost my shit, and I scared you. I didn't mean to do that, and I want you to know that I wouldn't- ( He falters here, because... shit, if he says I'd never hurt you and she doesn't look like she believes him, it's gonna rip a hole in him. ) The point is, I'm sorry. And I got you somethin'. It's not- I'm not trying to buy you off, I just wanna. You know.
( Vague gesture.
Make up for it. )
( He starts in as soon as she goes about pizza time like an absolute monster — but it's that automatic dad reflex that ends in a sigh, as he puts forth exactly zero effort into enforcing the use of plates like civilized human beings. Matter of fact, he joins her on her level and, once he thunks the beer down across from her, takes to eating his half of the pizza directly out of the box as well.
Then comes the question, which he opens his mouth to answer, only to find himself cut off abruptly, and — does he know who the hell Tera is? There's a pause, a blink, and then a huh kind of shrug.
Two-for-one beer's a goddamn deal. )
Shit, alright...
( Gonna be real awkward trying to remember which one Tera is, but he'll figure it out. He could obviously ask Nash now, but —
He waves his hands vaguely, dismissing the whole thing, intent to get back on topic. To demonstrate the Seriousness of this whole thing, he even drops his slice back into the box and wipes his hands on a paper towel before he starts. )
I owe you an apology.
( Straight up, like a man. No beating around the bush, no ego, just the level truth. )
The way I acted the other day when you told me- everything, it wasn't okay. I know it wasn't. I didn't handle it well, I lost my shit, and I scared you. I didn't mean to do that, and I want you to know that I wouldn't- ( He falters here, because... shit, if he says I'd never hurt you and she doesn't look like she believes him, it's gonna rip a hole in him. ) The point is, I'm sorry. And I got you somethin'. It's not- I'm not trying to buy you off, I just wanna. You know.
( Vague gesture.
Make up for it. )
( Jesus Christ. )
You know, sometimes adults have these things called 'serious conversations'. You should try it out.
( ...but he did actually remember the garlic sauce, which he fetches from the damn counter and chucks at her.
What a god damn gremlin. )
You know, sometimes adults have these things called 'serious conversations'. You should try it out.
( ...but he did actually remember the garlic sauce, which he fetches from the damn counter and chucks at her.
What a god damn gremlin. )
( What a captivating display of physical prowess. Truly it is a wonder she didn't get that basketball scholarship or WNBA recruitment she'd been hoping for.
She wipes her hand across her mouth. He pushes a paper towel her direction automatically, expression unimpressed. Instinct, old habit. Once upon a time it was followed up with a spaghetti sauce covered grin from either of his kids, and it's hard not to let that flash through his mind. Especially after the conversation they had the other day. )
Doesn't matter. Doesn't matter how you delivered it, I shouldn't have lost it on you. That's on me.
( Firmly, factually, beyond questioning. He's a grown god damn man. She's a young woman, a young woman who was in a scary situation with a guy she barely knows — one she's absolutely seen outright kill people before. The fact that she's even still willing to come around and be alone with him is insane, but then, she'd been willing to invite those drunk assholes to ride in the back seat of her car once upon a time, too. Her judgment's not always the most sound, if you ask him. )
Anyway, money's already spent, so.
( Too fucking bad. Take it anyway.
He produces a brown paper bag from the empty seat beside him, where it had apparently been lying in wait since before she walked in. It's sizeable, hefty. He pushes it across the small table her direction, and then pointedly goes back to eating his pizza.
She can look at it now, she can look at it later, whatever she wants. It's hers, and he'll feign disinterest for the sake of not pressuring her.
Inside is a leather-bound (faux leather, actually, because she strikes him as the type to give a shit about that sort of thing) refillable sketchbook, with the letter N embossed on one of the flaps.
He manhandled hers, and then commandeered two pages out of it, so.
It's supposed to be practical. Maybe it is, maybe it isn't. Either way, it's not like it cost an arm and a leg or anything. Wasn't cheap, but it wasn't egregious either. She can spike it into a dumpster if she wants for all he cares, it's hers. )
She wipes her hand across her mouth. He pushes a paper towel her direction automatically, expression unimpressed. Instinct, old habit. Once upon a time it was followed up with a spaghetti sauce covered grin from either of his kids, and it's hard not to let that flash through his mind. Especially after the conversation they had the other day. )
Doesn't matter. Doesn't matter how you delivered it, I shouldn't have lost it on you. That's on me.
( Firmly, factually, beyond questioning. He's a grown god damn man. She's a young woman, a young woman who was in a scary situation with a guy she barely knows — one she's absolutely seen outright kill people before. The fact that she's even still willing to come around and be alone with him is insane, but then, she'd been willing to invite those drunk assholes to ride in the back seat of her car once upon a time, too. Her judgment's not always the most sound, if you ask him. )
Anyway, money's already spent, so.
( Too fucking bad. Take it anyway.
He produces a brown paper bag from the empty seat beside him, where it had apparently been lying in wait since before she walked in. It's sizeable, hefty. He pushes it across the small table her direction, and then pointedly goes back to eating his pizza.
She can look at it now, she can look at it later, whatever she wants. It's hers, and he'll feign disinterest for the sake of not pressuring her.
Inside is a leather-bound (faux leather, actually, because she strikes him as the type to give a shit about that sort of thing) refillable sketchbook, with the letter N embossed on one of the flaps.
He manhandled hers, and then commandeered two pages out of it, so.
It's supposed to be practical. Maybe it is, maybe it isn't. Either way, it's not like it cost an arm and a leg or anything. Wasn't cheap, but it wasn't egregious either. She can spike it into a dumpster if she wants for all he cares, it's hers. )
( He's honestly all set for the conversation to end there. Her soft gratitude, his quiet grunt of acknowledgement because it's better than giving any kind of indication that her reaction meant very much to him. All set to let things veer back into whatever stupid nonsense it is she wants to talk about, or not talk at all and instead focus on shoveling down pizza. That's what he's braced for.
Instead, he gets to have a nice challenge demonstrating the sincerity of his apology by being put back in the exact same position for a second time.
She slides forth a sketch of Maria.
He hadn't asked. It had been a deliberate choice not to ask. He didn't want to know.
But now he does anyway.
Does that make things better or worse? Knowing that she's been watching him fall apart, knowing that she's seen what he's become — though, he thinks, part of her already knew what he was. She knew all along. She married him anyway. Maybe none of it is surprising to her, only saddening.
Absurdly, stupidly, he thinks... at least she's there to take care of the kids. If the three of them are together —
There's a deep, dark rabbit hole here that he needs to do everything in his power not to jump down.
He stares down at the crease lines in the paper, and the way it gently distorts her form.
Then reaches for his wallet. Pulls it out. Silently folds the paper back into a square, and slips it in alongside the other sketches. Then tucks the wallet away again. Better that he doesn't spend too long staring. Better that he doesn't-
Better that he doesn't.
He clears his throat and, after that lengthy, pregnant quiet, finally breaks it to give her what he feels like he might owe her: an explanation. The story. )
We were together when it happened. The four of us. We had this ritual, any time I got back from deployment... the next day, we'd go to Central Park. Have a picnic, you know, let the kids ride the carousel. That whole thing. The music's going, the kids are laughing, and then the next thing you know there's gunfire. Them, everyone around us- everyone. Took a bullet to the head myself, but- you know- it uh. It didn't stick.
( His fingertips idly slip into his hair to find the scar, an absent touch, the rest of him preoccupied. He's wondered, off and on, if she thinks he did it. If that's part of why she asked, after Amberly. If she thinks they got swept up in some violence he initiated — which, he supposes, in a way, they did. Just... not like that. )
I just figure... if you've gotta see 'em like that, you should at least get to know why.
Instead, he gets to have a nice challenge demonstrating the sincerity of his apology by being put back in the exact same position for a second time.
She slides forth a sketch of Maria.
He hadn't asked. It had been a deliberate choice not to ask. He didn't want to know.
But now he does anyway.
Does that make things better or worse? Knowing that she's been watching him fall apart, knowing that she's seen what he's become — though, he thinks, part of her already knew what he was. She knew all along. She married him anyway. Maybe none of it is surprising to her, only saddening.
Absurdly, stupidly, he thinks... at least she's there to take care of the kids. If the three of them are together —
There's a deep, dark rabbit hole here that he needs to do everything in his power not to jump down.
He stares down at the crease lines in the paper, and the way it gently distorts her form.
Then reaches for his wallet. Pulls it out. Silently folds the paper back into a square, and slips it in alongside the other sketches. Then tucks the wallet away again. Better that he doesn't spend too long staring. Better that he doesn't-
Better that he doesn't.
He clears his throat and, after that lengthy, pregnant quiet, finally breaks it to give her what he feels like he might owe her: an explanation. The story. )
We were together when it happened. The four of us. We had this ritual, any time I got back from deployment... the next day, we'd go to Central Park. Have a picnic, you know, let the kids ride the carousel. That whole thing. The music's going, the kids are laughing, and then the next thing you know there's gunfire. Them, everyone around us- everyone. Took a bullet to the head myself, but- you know- it uh. It didn't stick.
( His fingertips idly slip into his hair to find the scar, an absent touch, the rest of him preoccupied. He's wondered, off and on, if she thinks he did it. If that's part of why she asked, after Amberly. If she thinks they got swept up in some violence he initiated — which, he supposes, in a way, they did. Just... not like that. )
I just figure... if you've gotta see 'em like that, you should at least get to know why.
( He stills under her touch as though arrested. For one long moment he does nothing, like he's waiting for her to change her mind, waiting for her to realize some mistake she's made, waiting for her to get uncomfortable enough to pull back. When, at length, it seems like she's determined to hang on, only then does he finally respond. It's terribly careful, the way his hand curls. Barely anything, just enough to wind calloused fingers around her much smaller ones, more than a hint of reciprocity, but not by much. Delicate as it is, she could yank her hand away easily any time she wants.
He's a man of many contrasting facets. As physically domineering as he is in a fight, he could not possibly be gentler than he is right now.
His eyes stay fixed on the table's surface between them. Not at any one specific spot, just its general direction, looking without seeing. He finally drags them up at the tail end of it all, so he can look her in the eyes when he says: )
You're welcome.
( Sincerely, and in the most gracious sense of the term.
Her eyes peel away. He follows her gaze, sees nothing at all, and the confusion that stirs only lasts for a second before the realization hits. His fingers twitch beneath hers, some unconscious, aborted tic like pulling a trigger.
He swallows. Forces himself to ask— )
You're lookin' at 'em now, aren't you?
He's a man of many contrasting facets. As physically domineering as he is in a fight, he could not possibly be gentler than he is right now.
His eyes stay fixed on the table's surface between them. Not at any one specific spot, just its general direction, looking without seeing. He finally drags them up at the tail end of it all, so he can look her in the eyes when he says: )
You're welcome.
( Sincerely, and in the most gracious sense of the term.
Her eyes peel away. He follows her gaze, sees nothing at all, and the confusion that stirs only lasts for a second before the realization hits. His fingers twitch beneath hers, some unconscious, aborted tic like pulling a trigger.
He swallows. Forces himself to ask— )
You're lookin' at 'em now, aren't you?
( Girl talk, Christ... does he wanna know what that is? Does he wanna ask? It's a can of worms for sure, it's just-
If he cracks open Pandora's box, there's no closing it again. He'll get obsessed with it, the thought of his family being just there, right out of his reach. Living in a dimension just to the left of his own, just a hair beyond his fingertips, with Nash as the only connecting bridge between the two points. She deserves better than the ways he'd use her curse to wallow in his grief with the dead.
And the more he thinks about how they're all right there, the more he thinks about how easy it would be to join them. He could. He could do it in a way that wouldn't even be traumatic for Nash to look upon later, he knows exactly where in his thigh to stick something sharp and let it all go.
He won't. That's not him. Not the man he wants to be for his kids, his wife, but — the thought lingers, tempting, insidious, whispering.
He pushes all of his focus back onto her, back to her story. Forces himself to let out a halfhearted snort at the widely-known fictional belief in princesses, like he knows she's expecting him to. By the time the story's actually done, he's more or less reoriented himself with a foot on solid ground again, entirely through sheer force of will alone. )
Brain tumor... ( He murmurs, shaking his head slowly. ) You told your parents about it? What'd they do? They believe you?
If he cracks open Pandora's box, there's no closing it again. He'll get obsessed with it, the thought of his family being just there, right out of his reach. Living in a dimension just to the left of his own, just a hair beyond his fingertips, with Nash as the only connecting bridge between the two points. She deserves better than the ways he'd use her curse to wallow in his grief with the dead.
And the more he thinks about how they're all right there, the more he thinks about how easy it would be to join them. He could. He could do it in a way that wouldn't even be traumatic for Nash to look upon later, he knows exactly where in his thigh to stick something sharp and let it all go.
He won't. That's not him. Not the man he wants to be for his kids, his wife, but — the thought lingers, tempting, insidious, whispering.
He pushes all of his focus back onto her, back to her story. Forces himself to let out a halfhearted snort at the widely-known fictional belief in princesses, like he knows she's expecting him to. By the time the story's actually done, he's more or less reoriented himself with a foot on solid ground again, entirely through sheer force of will alone. )
Brain tumor... ( He murmurs, shaking his head slowly. ) You told your parents about it? What'd they do? They believe you?
Hey— ( He cuts in firmly; it's not a bark, not jarring, just a steady, terse reprimand. ) Do not call yourself that.
( Like he's just gonna sit here and let her put herself down like that, hell no. She's got enough on her plate to deal with without battering her own self-esteem along with it. He's not here for that shit, and if he heard anyone else call her that he'd be having a much harsher conversation right now. )
Look- where I come from... there are people who can do all kinds of shit. I didn't luck into that, that's not me, but- it's not all that uncommon. People with gifts, people who can shit other people can't do. Stuff you wouldn't even believe. It's 2018, shit like that's the new normal.
( It is definitely not 2018 in Diadem, but he's still operating on former Local Time in the back of his mind, so. Whatever. Sue him. )
I'm sorry you didn't have anybody in your corner for it before now. Seems like the kind of thing that can leave you feeling alone, but- you're not a freak. You don't need to treat yourself like one anymore.
( Like he's just gonna sit here and let her put herself down like that, hell no. She's got enough on her plate to deal with without battering her own self-esteem along with it. He's not here for that shit, and if he heard anyone else call her that he'd be having a much harsher conversation right now. )
Look- where I come from... there are people who can do all kinds of shit. I didn't luck into that, that's not me, but- it's not all that uncommon. People with gifts, people who can shit other people can't do. Stuff you wouldn't even believe. It's 2018, shit like that's the new normal.
( It is definitely not 2018 in Diadem, but he's still operating on former Local Time in the back of his mind, so. Whatever. Sue him. )
I'm sorry you didn't have anybody in your corner for it before now. Seems like the kind of thing that can leave you feeling alone, but- you're not a freak. You don't need to treat yourself like one anymore.
Not that I need to tell you this since you shouldn't be going there anyway but steer clear of the god damn fringes for a while.

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