Jacob isn't sure he knows how to do it either. But he thinks this is a better option than the others he's tried, tried and suffered through, and got nowhere. If talking and thinking could work, he's going to try it, and he's going to try it properly. Of course, here is different from home, for all of them. Here, something will happen probably two weeks from now, maybe less, because there's something in the water and Duplicity can't go six weeks without something going wrong. But, and it's important but, you usually can still breathe and think and get through it. You can still work on what you need to work on. You can still rely on those around you.
If she'd said what she's thinking, about skipping the middle step and just dragging the shit behind you, he'd say that wasn't any different to ignoring it. You're not dealing with it, you're not letting it crush you, but it's still holding you back. That doesn't work either, not really. Not in the long term.
"I suppose that's the triumph of experience over optimism. Those of us who caused problems thought we could shield people, but... we couldn't." He regrets it too. It does hurt. It's another thing to add to his list of failures, but that's not why it hurts, not really. It's because he made the same mistake he always did, when he was younger. Rushing in head first, thinking he knew better. And people died because of that.
"My dominant, Vrenille, he said that people up here started searching- and the Creator tried to stop them. But they did it anyway, and eventually, they found... wherever it was they'd hauled us. I understand the fight was bloody rough."
"Vrenille." It's a name that keeps popping up, and it reminds Rosita that she's going to need to talk to him sooner rather than later too. She owes him something kinder than she gave him, but also a proper conversation.
She may have spoken about how terrible people are and that allows her to be terrible in turn if she needs to be - but when she doesn't, she tries not to let it ruin her. She tries. She presses her lips together and nods.
"I'm not always right. I've seen it go down that hitting hard and hitting fast was the right call, and I've seen waiting for an opening just make it easier on the assholes. But this time - they found us, and we could've done with a few more strong arms when it happened." It's not accusatory, just... sad. "I'm not angry with you. But I don't accept apologies that are just words - hopefully we'll never need to find out if next time goes differently."
She doesn't say it like she has much hope. She doesn't. "What finally got through to you?"
"He's a good man, but this has been very hard for him." Not meaning Jacob's return specifically, but having all his friends and contract partners end up in the Pit, having to go search for them. It had clearly hurt him, and Jacob does feel partly responsible for Vrenille's pain, because he didn't walk out of there. He shouldn't have been kidnapped in the first place. But even Vrenille and his magic powers can't change the past.
Rosita's confession earns a small tug at his lips, a little smile that withers quickly.
"No one can be right all the time. But in that time and place, you were right. You had experience and logic behind you. I was young and stupid." And he hadn't done any good. He hadn't stopped people dying nor had he made this better for those that didn't die. But her saying that... he knows what she's getting at. He knows it's coming from a kind place.
"I'm afraid I can't tell you a moment of sudden realisation, I simply... knew it. I think having the time I've had, the things I have seen and experienced? They have made me more inclined to watch and consider before I make a move."
"Well, I am amazing," is her dry reply. She's earned a lot of respect in the communities she moves between back home, and she likes that her word goes as far as it does, that her opinion is sought even if it doesn't prevail. But she got her start by being woefully underestimated, and that comes with side effects.
She knows herself, and she can start again, so it's easy to be calm now. "It was hard on a lot of people. It still is. Most people live their whole lives without experiencing anything like that, from either side. I'm getting off easy - I had a friend on the outside and a friend on the inside who are both from my world. I knew if he wasn't dead that Jesus was looking for us. Now that we're out we can just keep going."
She glances sidelong at him. "Is that time and experience helping you and your friend now?"
"Ah, why didn't you just say that in the first place?" He replies in an equally dry tone, but his eye is broght woth mirth. "That would have reassured me amd we wouldn't have this problem."
Jacob wasn't amazing. Not as the young man she had first met. But by the time he was in his thirties, and was Master Assassin of London, his own opinion had similar weight. The council who had once begrudge him anything tripped over themselves to ask his thoughts. But he was by no means infallible. Recent events proved that.
"I suppose knowing people from home males a lot of difference." Jacob doesn't have that luxury. Never has. But he thinks the fact that Vrenille's best friend from home was also in the Pit had made the experience even harder for Vrenille.
"I don't know. I have tried to ask but he wasn't ready to talk. I'll have to go back to the Down sooner or later, but that distance might be better fir him. He won't feel... obligated."
"Well now you know, so you have no more excuses," she quips back, that crooked smile putting in another appearance. This one does reach her eyes as she starts to relax.
As she starts to consider what he's telling her in the present rather than the past tense.
"That sounds hard." She thinks again of Jesus, but they're from very close together; he didn't live a whole life here without her or vice versa before they were brought together again. And for however close they are - and they are - they are still just friends.
Jacob and Vrenille sound like more. "For both of you."
He gives a nod- no more excuses. But even as he does, he can't help but notice how that smile spreads across her face.
"It... has been." Jacob admits. "But I can't expect things to be the same, not after what has happened."
Not immediately anyway. Perhaps not ever. He loves Vrenille, and part of that love is not trying to make this any more unpleasant than it already is. He'll just offer what support he can.
He considers asking her how all this has impacted her contract, but he realises that's making some assumptions and, more over, it's highly personal. He volunteered the information about his contract with Vrenille, but he won't pry into hers.
"As it is, there's still work to be done. The group that kidnapped us, they seemed to havwxbeen very well organised for Zealots. But I've nor heard a good explanation yet for why they did what they did."
"And we may not ever," she answers in a voice that goes hard like the flick of a switch; she doesn't expect a good answer out of it, obviously. "The SIN guards took all the prisoners. If I'd been thinking straight I would've kept one, but I ran out of arms."
And no one was listening to her anyway. "When this is healed, if we still haven't heard anything, I'm going to figure out if LIERs can become guards." She'll have answers one way or another.
This is how long it takes her to put together the vague bits and pieces Jacob's given her, about things not being the same, about contract partners, about going back to the Down.
"Wait - how different are things now? Like awkward silence different, or I never want to see you again different, or something in between?"
"We may not," He says, nodding. "But that doesn't sit well with me. And clearly not all of this sits well with you, if that's what you're planning. We do need more information. Especially regarding that lot. It seems their number have dropped considerably. That alone might make it wasier to assimilate."
He wants to find out all he can about the bastards that did this. Make sure they are all dead and not just waiting for the next chance to fuck up all their lives.
He shakes his head regarding his contract, or lack of one. "It's nothing as dramatic as all that. He isn't used to me. Like this. It doesn't matter that I was the man he knew, the fact is... he doesn't think he knows me any more. Trying to have a conversation is a little like pulling teeth."
The thing is, Rosita isn't as hard as Michonne, but once someone's crossed her people, she's a very hard sell on forgiveness. She's killed - murdered, she supposes, in a society that still has laws - before and she readily will again if the situation demands, which getting her hands on one of the guards from the pit absolutely will.
Things she's learned not to say. She focuses on the part she can potentially do anything about, which is the personal pieces.
"Is that normal for him? To have difficulty talking at first?"
That desire is understandable. Jacob, should he find someone who was involved in the plot to kidnap and murder so many people, to drown a whole city, will not be letting that person live. But he will be extracting every last bit of information from them before he gets rid of them.
But he's not going to advertise that either.
"No. No it isn't. He works as a therapist. So this is... new and unpleasant. Talking about how he feels is one of his strong suits. I..." she's a perfect stranger, she doesn't need his hoped, dreams, heartbreak. So he clears his throat and finishes the sentence differently from how he'd intended.
"I think it may take him some time. Grief isn't something you can fix overnight."
A therapist. Christ. No wonder he and Jesus get along, she thinks, attention pulled back again from watching around them by the hesitation, by the clearing of his throat.
"What about you?" The man checking on people, insisting the best way to deal with pain and trauma is to talk about it, having his own reaction while mentioning how Vrenille is coping when she asks. They're strangers, it's true, but sometimes that helps. Sometimes there's no pressure to answer a certain way, or feeling judged by someone cared about.
Jacob should have known she was going to ask him. He should have been aware but... well. He wasn't really thinking about himself.
"Me? I... want him to be settled. To make peace with what's happened. Whether he wants to contract with me or not, I wouldn't hold it against him. I think I might be too old for him now."
And that hurts. If they had grown old together, it would have been better, it would have been wonderful. But that isn't what has happened, and he can't change it.
She considers him - he's older than her now, she thinks, or at least has lived harder years and wears them more plainly. But not that much older. As old as Abraham might have been now, as old as Gabriel might be.
Age matters a whole lot less to her these days, but it's easy to remember that it matters a lot to some. Something around her eyes softens ever so slightly.
"That's not fair," she says, quietly. Not that she's blaming Vrenille at all, but it's just not fair on the pair of them.
"Life isn't. You and I both know that. But forcing each other into something we won't enjoy? That is worse, in my mind." He says that seriously, because for him it is very true. "We contracted because we were... close. Emotionally and physically. We aren't either, currently."
"Besides. If its something he wants in the future, then I'm here. I've no intention of getting killed again and coming back in another twenty years. At sixty? The only reason to sleep with me would be for my massive fortune and I don't think I'll have one of those."
"Christ, no," Jacob says, quickly trying to dispel that. Vrenille is most certainly not being a dick. He can be a sarcastic little shit, but they're normally laughing and happy when that happens. When it happened. "He's trying, very hard, to be normal. But that just makes it more unsettling. I don't think... he's been able to accept it yet. And because he hasn't accepted it, he can't accept me."
It's not an easy thing to say. But there's no blame attached, no anger. Things have changed, and they changed rapidly, horribly, and Vrenille has had to deal with that. Jacob doesn't know how to help, apart from offer encouragement when Vrneille wants it, but for the most part, it seems best to stay out of the mesmer's way.
"No one knew. If I'd died and... come back as everyone else had, I doubt there would be a problem. But that isn't what happened. There's nothing we can do about it apart from adjust. And I have... somethings that I have to work through too."
She understands he's not asking her for anything. She does. Honestly if he were she might tell him to go fuck himself, but he's not. He's just talking.
She presses her lips together as he talks, nodding to show she understands. He sounds like he's being very reasonable about it. So does Vrenille, more or less.
In her experience that's bullshit but then most things are.
"Has this happened to you before? Having someone you're close to dying here, I mean."
She asked the question. Jacob isn't wanting anything from anyone- he will go back to the Down, wait out his three months and that will do just fine. True, it's getting into winter, it's cold, his eye is still sore, and the Rubies can't wait to skin him alive. But those are minor considerations. He can manage and has managed, worse situations than that.
"No. But... people left. Disappeared back to their own worlds, and came back different. Changed in ways that... took time to get used to."
There's was Hellboy, who also had lost an eye, been to hell and back, there was Anduin, who had never managed to talk about what had happened to him. Chris who had one body before and came back with a different one. There was... so many changes. Some of them were welcome, some of them weren't. Some of them hurt far more than others.
Rosita nods, and considers that while she carefully navigates a fallen tree across the path, sure footed but still a bit off balance with one arm strapped to her torso. When she doesn't have to pay attention to that anymore, she considers again if she wants to say anything. It's not like she knows anything. She really doesn't, not here.
But she knows her life, so she takes a deep breath.
"My friend - Jesus. That's just what we call him, not his real name, obviously." He enjoys it though, and so does she. "We're just friends, mind. But friends... mean a lot more where I'm from than they used to. Everyone together in my community and his wouldn't even come close to breaking into triple digits, and not all of them fight, but he and I have, together. He and I've stood shoulder to shoulder on a firing line, caught dead to rights." It's a deep bond, one that has more trust than most marriages she remembers from the old world.
"He died, the day before I came here for me. I went to his funeral. I hammered a nail into his coffin, helped dig his grave, threw a handful of dirt back in. I had just started the process of remembering not to look for him at the gates, not to listen for him greeting us at the breakfast table, not to want to run something past him for his thoughts anymore. And then here I am, and here he is, like it never happened."
The touch to her back to stop her slipping is instinctive. He doesn't need to think about it, he just moves, making sure she doesn't fall or break a leg as well as an arm. She'd probably insist on crawling her way to a doctor, rather than be carried. Or refuse to see a doctor at all.
Jesus. A name that seems to keep popping up, like he's managed to get tangled up in a church outing. He keeps that to himself, because what she says doesn't need his disrespectful thoughts.
"I'm sorry. I can't imagine how jarring that must be." He wonders if she's realised, if she goes back, she'll be without him again. She must have done. But that's a horrible thing to have on your shoulders. All the worst if he doesn't know himself. "I've never had anyone from home here with me. But if I did, I'd treasure it. Unless, of course, they were a complete wanker."
If he had Jack. Jack from before the madness set in, Jack from before all the pain, he'd be a happy man. He'd happily have Evie, even if she'd miss her husband. Best she's at home, away from this mess.
She's surprised by the touch, glancing quickly back but keeping what balance she has; they're in the forest and that means scouting rules, that means no touching unless it's to signal silently.
But they're not scouting. There are no rules. She settles again without saying or doing anything about it.
"I just mean... As people, there's a shock that comes with someone we love dying. A finality. It hurts like hell but part of the reason we can move past it is it's just the way it is. Done. No changing it. Except here, that process is interrupted. I'm just wondering if that's factoring in at all for Vrenille."
It's not meant to be something that surprises her, but then again, it's the first time he's ever touched her, and it was unbidden and unexpected. The glance back tells him that, and more besides. She was expecting something else, not help, not for him to try to keep her steady. She wasn't expecting him to hurt her either. He's sure that if she thought he might try to hurt her, he'd probably be on his back right now with one of those knives to his throat- or already buried there.
But then she's on the other side of the fallen tree and nothing is said about it, no warning, no nothing. Then again, does anything need to be said?
"I know." They've both lost people. He hasn't asked about her family, friends, partners. It seems callous to do so. He wants her to share, if she feels she wants to, but to ask, and learn that everyone she loves is dead- he doesn't want that. He doesn't want to make her say it. "And I think you might be right. Everything that you should do, that you would do? It's different here, messed around with. And I'm not... I'm not the right person to speak to him about it."
She nods at his answer - she can see that. Hell, she hasn't said more than the bare bones to Jesus since they were reunited, and he hasn't brought it up at all with her; they each have their piece of it to deal with, and all the sharpest edges are aimed at each other or themselves, so they just keep moving forward instead.
It must be so much worse when there's a more formal partnership involved. More direct influence and expectation on each other's life, and that's before the contracts even enter into it.
"You remember enough you still love him?" she asks, because she's still a little fuzzy on how the whole memory thing works, and she'd rather ask than assume with this one.
Moving forward, dragging their deadweight behind him. Jacob doesn't want to drag this, he doesn't want any more pressing down on his shoulders. He wants to find a way to forgive himself for all his sins, for his mistakes, and let go of it. But he's not sure how he can. Not when there's so much blood on his hands. The people he killed directly. The people Jack killed. The people who died in the Pit because he didn't know the right way of saving them.
But the talk is of Vrenille, as they reach a little shallow stream, large stones just peaking out from the surface as steps across. The sound of the water is... peaceful. It helps him banish those negative thoughts.
"I don't know if love is a memory, or if it's something else somewhere in you. But I never stopped or lost it. The fact was just... in some part of me I didn't know about."
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If she'd said what she's thinking, about skipping the middle step and just dragging the shit behind you, he'd say that wasn't any different to ignoring it. You're not dealing with it, you're not letting it crush you, but it's still holding you back. That doesn't work either, not really. Not in the long term.
"I suppose that's the triumph of experience over optimism. Those of us who caused problems thought we could shield people, but... we couldn't." He regrets it too. It does hurt. It's another thing to add to his list of failures, but that's not why it hurts, not really. It's because he made the same mistake he always did, when he was younger. Rushing in head first, thinking he knew better. And people died because of that.
"My dominant, Vrenille, he said that people up here started searching- and the Creator tried to stop them. But they did it anyway, and eventually, they found... wherever it was they'd hauled us. I understand the fight was bloody rough."
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She may have spoken about how terrible people are and that allows her to be terrible in turn if she needs to be - but when she doesn't, she tries not to let it ruin her. She tries. She presses her lips together and nods.
"I'm not always right. I've seen it go down that hitting hard and hitting fast was the right call, and I've seen waiting for an opening just make it easier on the assholes. But this time - they found us, and we could've done with a few more strong arms when it happened." It's not accusatory, just... sad. "I'm not angry with you. But I don't accept apologies that are just words - hopefully we'll never need to find out if next time goes differently."
She doesn't say it like she has much hope. She doesn't. "What finally got through to you?"
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Rosita's confession earns a small tug at his lips, a little smile that withers quickly.
"No one can be right all the time. But in that time and place, you were right. You had experience and logic behind you. I was young and stupid." And he hadn't done any good. He hadn't stopped people dying nor had he made this better for those that didn't die. But her saying that... he knows what she's getting at. He knows it's coming from a kind place.
"I'm afraid I can't tell you a moment of sudden realisation, I simply... knew it. I think having the time I've had, the things I have seen and experienced? They have made me more inclined to watch and consider before I make a move."
In short: he grew up.
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She knows herself, and she can start again, so it's easy to be calm now. "It was hard on a lot of people. It still is. Most people live their whole lives without experiencing anything like that, from either side. I'm getting off easy - I had a friend on the outside and a friend on the inside who are both from my world. I knew if he wasn't dead that Jesus was looking for us. Now that we're out we can just keep going."
She glances sidelong at him. "Is that time and experience helping you and your friend now?"
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Jacob wasn't amazing. Not as the young man she had first met. But by the time he was in his thirties, and was Master Assassin of London, his own opinion had similar weight. The council who had once begrudge him anything tripped over themselves to ask his thoughts. But he was by no means infallible. Recent events proved that.
"I suppose knowing people from home males a lot of difference." Jacob doesn't have that luxury. Never has. But he thinks the fact that Vrenille's best friend from home was also in the Pit had made the experience even harder for Vrenille.
"I don't know. I have tried to ask but he wasn't ready to talk. I'll have to go back to the Down sooner or later, but that distance might be better fir him. He won't feel... obligated."
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As she starts to consider what he's telling her in the present rather than the past tense.
"That sounds hard." She thinks again of Jesus, but they're from very close together; he didn't live a whole life here without her or vice versa before they were brought together again. And for however close they are - and they are - they are still just friends.
Jacob and Vrenille sound like more. "For both of you."
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"It... has been." Jacob admits. "But I can't expect things to be the same, not after what has happened."
Not immediately anyway. Perhaps not ever. He loves Vrenille, and part of that love is not trying to make this any more unpleasant than it already is. He'll just offer what support he can.
He considers asking her how all this has impacted her contract, but he realises that's making some assumptions and, more over, it's highly personal. He volunteered the information about his contract with Vrenille, but he won't pry into hers.
"As it is, there's still work to be done. The group that kidnapped us, they seemed to havwxbeen very well organised for Zealots. But I've nor heard a good explanation yet for why they did what they did."
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And no one was listening to her anyway. "When this is healed, if we still haven't heard anything, I'm going to figure out if LIERs can become guards." She'll have answers one way or another.
This is how long it takes her to put together the vague bits and pieces Jacob's given her, about things not being the same, about contract partners, about going back to the Down.
"Wait - how different are things now? Like awkward silence different, or I never want to see you again different, or something in between?"
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He wants to find out all he can about the bastards that did this. Make sure they are all dead and not just waiting for the next chance to fuck up all their lives.
He shakes his head regarding his contract, or lack of one. "It's nothing as dramatic as all that. He isn't used to me. Like this. It doesn't matter that I was the man he knew, the fact is... he doesn't think he knows me any more. Trying to have a conversation is a little like pulling teeth."
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Things she's learned not to say. She focuses on the part she can potentially do anything about, which is the personal pieces.
"Is that normal for him? To have difficulty talking at first?"
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But he's not going to advertise that either.
"No. No it isn't. He works as a therapist. So this is... new and unpleasant. Talking about how he feels is one of his strong suits. I..." she's a perfect stranger, she doesn't need his hoped, dreams, heartbreak. So he clears his throat and finishes the sentence differently from how he'd intended.
"I think it may take him some time. Grief isn't something you can fix overnight."
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A therapist. Christ. No wonder he and Jesus get along, she thinks, attention pulled back again from watching around them by the hesitation, by the clearing of his throat.
"What about you?" The man checking on people, insisting the best way to deal with pain and trauma is to talk about it, having his own reaction while mentioning how Vrenille is coping when she asks. They're strangers, it's true, but sometimes that helps. Sometimes there's no pressure to answer a certain way, or feeling judged by someone cared about.
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"Me? I... want him to be settled. To make peace with what's happened. Whether he wants to contract with me or not, I wouldn't hold it against him. I think I might be too old for him now."
And that hurts. If they had grown old together, it would have been better, it would have been wonderful. But that isn't what has happened, and he can't change it.
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She considers him - he's older than her now, she thinks, or at least has lived harder years and wears them more plainly. But not that much older. As old as Abraham might have been now, as old as Gabriel might be.
Age matters a whole lot less to her these days, but it's easy to remember that it matters a lot to some. Something around her eyes softens ever so slightly.
"That's not fair," she says, quietly. Not that she's blaming Vrenille at all, but it's just not fair on the pair of them.
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"Besides. If its something he wants in the future, then I'm here. I've no intention of getting killed again and coming back in another twenty years. At sixty? The only reason to sleep with me would be for my massive fortune and I don't think I'll have one of those."
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"Because... I mean yeah, the dying. But you didn't know this was going to happen. I haven't heard of it happening to anyone else."
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It's not an easy thing to say. But there's no blame attached, no anger. Things have changed, and they changed rapidly, horribly, and Vrenille has had to deal with that. Jacob doesn't know how to help, apart from offer encouragement when Vrneille wants it, but for the most part, it seems best to stay out of the mesmer's way.
"No one knew. If I'd died and... come back as everyone else had, I doubt there would be a problem. But that isn't what happened. There's nothing we can do about it apart from adjust. And I have... somethings that I have to work through too."
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She presses her lips together as he talks, nodding to show she understands. He sounds like he's being very reasonable about it. So does Vrenille, more or less.
In her experience that's bullshit but then most things are.
"Has this happened to you before? Having someone you're close to dying here, I mean."
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"No. But... people left. Disappeared back to their own worlds, and came back different. Changed in ways that... took time to get used to."
There's was Hellboy, who also had lost an eye, been to hell and back, there was Anduin, who had never managed to talk about what had happened to him. Chris who had one body before and came back with a different one. There was... so many changes. Some of them were welcome, some of them weren't. Some of them hurt far more than others.
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But she knows her life, so she takes a deep breath.
"My friend - Jesus. That's just what we call him, not his real name, obviously." He enjoys it though, and so does she. "We're just friends, mind. But friends... mean a lot more where I'm from than they used to. Everyone together in my community and his wouldn't even come close to breaking into triple digits, and not all of them fight, but he and I have, together. He and I've stood shoulder to shoulder on a firing line, caught dead to rights." It's a deep bond, one that has more trust than most marriages she remembers from the old world.
"He died, the day before I came here for me. I went to his funeral. I hammered a nail into his coffin, helped dig his grave, threw a handful of dirt back in. I had just started the process of remembering not to look for him at the gates, not to listen for him greeting us at the breakfast table, not to want to run something past him for his thoughts anymore. And then here I am, and here he is, like it never happened."
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Jesus. A name that seems to keep popping up, like he's managed to get tangled up in a church outing. He keeps that to himself, because what she says doesn't need his disrespectful thoughts.
"I'm sorry. I can't imagine how jarring that must be." He wonders if she's realised, if she goes back, she'll be without him again. She must have done. But that's a horrible thing to have on your shoulders. All the worst if he doesn't know himself. "I've never had anyone from home here with me. But if I did, I'd treasure it. Unless, of course, they were a complete wanker."
If he had Jack. Jack from before the madness set in, Jack from before all the pain, he'd be a happy man. He'd happily have Evie, even if she'd miss her husband. Best she's at home, away from this mess.
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But they're not scouting. There are no rules. She settles again without saying or doing anything about it.
"I just mean... As people, there's a shock that comes with someone we love dying. A finality. It hurts like hell but part of the reason we can move past it is it's just the way it is. Done. No changing it. Except here, that process is interrupted. I'm just wondering if that's factoring in at all for Vrenille."
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But then she's on the other side of the fallen tree and nothing is said about it, no warning, no nothing. Then again, does anything need to be said?
"I know." They've both lost people. He hasn't asked about her family, friends, partners. It seems callous to do so. He wants her to share, if she feels she wants to, but to ask, and learn that everyone she loves is dead- he doesn't want that. He doesn't want to make her say it. "And I think you might be right. Everything that you should do, that you would do? It's different here, messed around with. And I'm not... I'm not the right person to speak to him about it."
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It must be so much worse when there's a more formal partnership involved. More direct influence and expectation on each other's life, and that's before the contracts even enter into it.
"You remember enough you still love him?" she asks, because she's still a little fuzzy on how the whole memory thing works, and she'd rather ask than assume with this one.
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But the talk is of Vrenille, as they reach a little shallow stream, large stones just peaking out from the surface as steps across. The sound of the water is... peaceful. It helps him banish those negative thoughts.
"I don't know if love is a memory, or if it's something else somewhere in you. But I never stopped or lost it. The fact was just... in some part of me I didn't know about."
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