"People who have never had to do the things we've done," she tries to get around it, but for someone who shares her words out more often than not, apparently now she can't shut up.
"I'm not judging them, I'm glad they don't know what it's like to scrape a layer of mold off the top of something to chance that what's underneath is good, or stab one of their friends in the head, or push for a week straight to get to a safe house. But it makes me feel like I have an extra head or something, sometimes."
"The day Aaron and I found you, I snuck out to meet Aaron in the woods. I left Tara with a list as long as my arm of things the camp needed, but it was all...noise complaints, and neighbors bickering, and laws they wanted me to entertain. Property laws." He taps his fingers on the edge of the table. "I'd known for a while that the Hilltop wasn't where I belonged anymore. I knew it, though, when I found you and brought you back to heal there. Sometimes I think this is just karma: I left Tara in charge when she didn't want it, either, and now this is all I've got. A place where the biggest problem is what interesting, kind, attractive person I get to have sex with next week."
She can't even judge him. Michonne wanted her on her council but Rosita never would agree, preferred to be with the scavenging and hunting parties, going outside the walls again and again like few others could. She didn't want to sit in a town hall and talk about things that would only matter if Michonne agreed. She didn't want to talk and talk and talk and talk about things that were important, yes, but not vital in the way clearing walkers always was.
"Were you one of the people that wished we could go back?" she asks. She was in the beginning. She doesn't think she is now, not if she's being honest.
"There's no going back," he shakes his head. "And people who wish for it are just setting themselves up to fail. I wanted to go forward. When I met you I really thought I'd be part of the future."
He shrugs, looks away, looks at what he does have. He tries not to have an opinion on it. "But the future is for the kids."
How often has Rosita heard that, from how many people? Worded differently, yes - usually in the form of people who don't see a future for themselves at all and thus no reason to keep fighting for it - but the same sentiment.
But what is she supposed to tell Jesus, for whom this is genuinely all there is?
"If anyone in the communities has a future, you played a huge role in winning that for them."
The problem, he's realizing right now, is that he never had a personal stake in the future. Babies were being born in the Hilltop before they were in Alexandria, and Jesus knew their parents, but he can't recall ever being directly attached to them. He didn't ask about baby names like he has asked about Socorro.
He smiles slightly, pained and trying not to be. "I hope it's a good future for you." And Socorro.
She has an opinion on that future for herself. With anyone else she might at least have considered saying it, but this is Jesus. Any loss she feels is just that, a feeling, while his loss is very, very real.
She smiles back, gentle in a way few people see from her. She appreciates that, even if she's still caught in worrying about whether or not she even actually has one, or what it looks like.
"No one's taken their clothes off here yet," she points out. "But I bet it's coming. I don't want them to make us try to do anything together."
"Good." She doesn't know Hakkyuu, but as far as just sex goes, Jesus can handle himself. She just needs to not screw him up, if that's even a possibility here.
She doesn't trust it. She stands instead, leans across the table, and slides her fingers gently through Jesus's hair so she can kiss the top of his head affectionately.
She leans her forehead there for a moment, lingering, before she straightens up.
"Remember, we promised." To touch base afterwards, somewhere, somehow, even if it's just a text.
"I'll come to you," he promises, hand at the back of her head until she draws away. Then he composes himself and gets up to go to Hakkyuu instead, still within eyesight of Rosita.
no subject
"I'm not judging them, I'm glad they don't know what it's like to scrape a layer of mold off the top of something to chance that what's underneath is good, or stab one of their friends in the head, or push for a week straight to get to a safe house. But it makes me feel like I have an extra head or something, sometimes."
no subject
no subject
"Were you one of the people that wished we could go back?" she asks. She was in the beginning. She doesn't think she is now, not if she's being honest.
no subject
He shrugs, looks away, looks at what he does have. He tries not to have an opinion on it. "But the future is for the kids."
no subject
But what is she supposed to tell Jesus, for whom this is genuinely all there is?
"If anyone in the communities has a future, you played a huge role in winning that for them."
no subject
He smiles slightly, pained and trying not to be. "I hope it's a good future for you." And Socorro.
no subject
She smiles back, gentle in a way few people see from her. She appreciates that, even if she's still caught in worrying about whether or not she even actually has one, or what it looks like.
"No one's taken their clothes off here yet," she points out. "But I bet it's coming. I don't want them to make us try to do anything together."
no subject
no subject
She doesn't trust it. She stands instead, leans across the table, and slides her fingers gently through Jesus's hair so she can kiss the top of his head affectionately.
She leans her forehead there for a moment, lingering, before she straightens up.
"Remember, we promised." To touch base afterwards, somewhere, somehow, even if it's just a text.
no subject