[She always liked herself for her enthusiasm, but that's been worn down by time and trial. She's tired. She was tired when she came down here, before that too. Her hands curl loosely between her knees.]
My head? [That's certainly a question.] Sometimes it's noisier than others.
[Yes, it's a quote, and he sits back as though she's shoved him physically with the words, as sure a tell as any that he recognises them too. Hidden by the new, downward tilt to his head, his lips form a tight line, a crease working its way in between his eyebrows.]
[Everyone he knows in this city last knew him three years ago - back when he was a completely different person. He could write a book on not knowing where he stands.]
I don't think you'd find many people who'd feel the same way as you do, about who you were before. People who don't want to see you tearing yourself apart now— but that's not the same thing.
[Don't mention when the resolve slips. It does take resolve.
He shifts from his seat, running shoes scratching against the sandy steps as he turns to kneel on the one below, facing her.]
Because sex, enjoyable as it is, is a cheap fix. And if you do it often enough, with enough people, you kill off the few chemical elements that relate it to bonding, and it starts being a way to distance yourself, instead. Nobody in their right mind wants to do that with someone they care about.
You asked me if I liked almonds. You have some idea what it's like to want to know more about a person than what they can do with their tongue.
[Because she's always clinging to that. That she can find that reason (She can hurt herself far worse than anyone else can, that's safety, right? That's bravery, right?) Her mouth twists, hands twisting uncomfortably under his too.]
I'm not one of them.
[She bites that out perfunctorily, an admission that disgusts her absolutely.]
[Everyone who has ever cared and lost has a reason to be. Chase has had reasons since his dad walked out. Since he watched his mother, jaundiced and soaked in sweat and bile, maddened and dying. He's a few reasons to be.
Granted, none of them ever shot him in the head, or rebuilt him afterwards. He's always done the rebuild alone.
He keeps her hands, gently, sliding a palm up her wrist, but not to test how cold she is. Not, even habitually, in search of a pulse. It's not distance.]
You know, intentionally or not, you might have given yourself a second chance.
[She's not used to loss. Her only experience had been with Barbet, a deep cut opening up a great fear. Then more had followed here, and every time she struggled to comprehend how anything could hurt so much when she didn't want it to. When she didn't even want to believe in those sorts of emotions, like she could exclude them by will. She can't.
She's staring intensely at where his hand is, frowning and shoulders tense.]
I know. The serpent said the same thing. [Here's another quote:] I should expect that a quasi-successful suicide in the City is going to render null and void your ladybird self-abasement contract. Have some of the marzipan.
[Truthfully, if he's thinking about it, Chase might notice that she's turned to quoting others twice now. A simple avoidancy tactic that takes pressure off of her to voice her own messy thoughts. The dead girl had done it often.]
Not what I meant. Your contract with anything at home could have been voided when you got here, as soon as you let it be. I meant—
[His hand is in her lap, arm over her knee, a little more so when he leans in, leg against hers. He does hesitate, a moment, over phrasing. She's too keen to take her own meaning to suit her and leave the rest - storing these quotes like a dictionary.]
Whatever you did, here, there was always the chance you'd walk through a door tomorrow and be back in the middle of everything you got away from. That can be a barrier to anyone starting again. It's different, for the dead, here.
[No chance of being whisked back to where they were. There are two viewpoints.
or steps leading into the sea
I don't know if I want to track the extra sand in.
or steps leading into the sea
Better?
or steps leading into the sea
Alright.
or steps leading into the sea
I've always liked you for your enthusiasm. [And that's admitting something, anyway.] How's your head?
or steps leading into the sea
My head? [That's certainly a question.] Sometimes it's noisier than others.
or steps leading into the sea
There's not much noise out here to contend with it. What's it about, the noise?
or steps leading into the sea
There's nothing wrong with you except not being somebody else. And the only one in this place who knows that, is you.
[Yes, that was a quote. Yes, she heard it when he said it, though it had taken its time sinking in. She shrugs. That sums it up, doesn't it?]
or steps leading into the sea
Maybe I should have shut up after the first part.
or steps leading into the sea
[And here is the problem: what she would say and what she can say. What's true now.]
But maybe it would be easier to find a place if I understood where I stand in relation to anyone.
[Her tone is flat, self-denigrating because she hates having this conversation.]
Re: or steps leading into the sea
I don't think you'd find many people who'd feel the same way as you do, about who you were before. People who don't want to see you tearing yourself apart now— but that's not the same thing.
[He lifts his chin, enough to look up at her.]
Have you tried asking?
or steps leading into the sea
[She glances back at Chase reluctantly.]
It bothers me that I still need that.
[So, no, she doesn't really ask. Except with Saya who might be the worst possible resource in this situation.]
or steps leading into the sea
Comforting? Perhaps only to him.]
Is that why you make it so hard for anyone to know what you want.
or steps leading into the sea
[It might be a legitimate question, even if she won't phrase it like one.]
or steps leading into the sea
[Don't mention when the resolve slips. It does take resolve.
He shifts from his seat, running shoes scratching against the sandy steps as he turns to kneel on the one below, facing her.]
Because sex, enjoyable as it is, is a cheap fix. And if you do it often enough, with enough people, you kill off the few chemical elements that relate it to bonding, and it starts being a way to distance yourself, instead. Nobody in their right mind wants to do that with someone they care about.
You asked me if I liked almonds. You have some idea what it's like to want to know more about a person than what they can do with their tongue.
or steps leading into the sea
[An investment of what? Her head tilts slowly, eyes drifting off. Time, attention, maybe emotion. Respect was the most likely culprit, actually.]
And I only asked you that because I was cursed.
or steps leading into the sea
[He tugs down on a corner of his mouth, catching lip between teeth.]
Not wanting to need anyone in your life doesn't make you look strong. It makes you look scared.
or steps leading into the sea
[There you are.]
or steps leading into the sea
[He reaches for her hands as he sits down beside her again, shoulder-bumping.]
The only people who aren't are idiots.
or steps leading into the sea
[Because she's always clinging to that. That she can find that reason (She can hurt herself far worse than anyone else can, that's safety, right? That's bravery, right?) Her mouth twists, hands twisting uncomfortably under his too.]
I'm not one of them.
[She bites that out perfunctorily, an admission that disgusts her absolutely.]
Re: or steps leading into the sea
Granted, none of them ever shot him in the head, or rebuilt him afterwards. He's always done the rebuild alone.
He keeps her hands, gently, sliding a palm up her wrist, but not to test how cold she is. Not, even habitually, in search of a pulse. It's not distance.]
You know, intentionally or not, you might have given yourself a second chance.
or steps leading into the sea
She's staring intensely at where his hand is, frowning and shoulders tense.]
I know. The serpent said the same thing. [Here's another quote:] I should expect that a quasi-successful suicide in the City is going to render null and void your ladybird self-abasement contract. Have some of the marzipan.
[Truthfully, if he's thinking about it, Chase might notice that she's turned to quoting others twice now. A simple avoidancy tactic that takes pressure off of her to voice her own messy thoughts. The dead girl had done it often.]
or steps leading into the sea
[His hand is in her lap, arm over her knee, a little more so when he leans in, leg against hers. He does hesitate, a moment, over phrasing. She's too keen to take her own meaning to suit her and leave the rest - storing these quotes like a dictionary.]
Whatever you did, here, there was always the chance you'd walk through a door tomorrow and be back in the middle of everything you got away from. That can be a barrier to anyone starting again. It's different, for the dead, here.
[No chance of being whisked back to where they were. There are two viewpoints.
If you're dead, you're stuck here.
If you're dead, you get to stay.]
It removes some of the risk.
or steps leading into the sea
[Honestly, she's asking his permission to think of it like that. She's not sure she can, but... She could try.]
or steps leading into the sea
[Still there are things he only tells her.]
or steps leading into the sea
[Because you're a ridiculous goody-two shoes. She edges her hands away.]
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
Re: or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea
or steps leading into the sea