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Richard Campbell Gansey III ([personal profile] thatsallthereis) wrote2016-07-20 03:05 pm
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And everything you've ever been is still there in the dark night

Gansey was dreaming.

He was in Monmouth -- no, he was in a hotel room. Monmouth stood empty in Henrietta, with Adam and Ronan tucked away at the Barns and Noah at rest. Gansey was only dreaming he was in Monmouth, but when he dreamed, he was never asleep enough to confuse it for reality. Much like in his waking hours, he kept one foot on the ground, checked in with himself to make sure he knew where he was. Tulsa, not Henrietta. Some hotel, not Monmouth. Home, but not those safe walls. After years of traveling and seeking, Gansey was relieved that he'd found a sort of peace that made him feel that home was wherever he, Henry, and Blue laid their heads for the night. Home was his Camaro, buzzing down interstate highways noisily despite the fact that there was no machinery to whir, no head gasket to blow every 45 minutes. Another thing he and his precious Pig had in common: a separation from time and the laws of the universe proper. Neither of them made any sense. No one Gansey loved did.

Gansey was awake. Calling what he was doing "dreaming" was a bit of a leap anyway. It was more like he was looking at Monmouth and noticing how empty it was. There wasn't even a ghost to haunt its empty halls.

Blue was gone. Henry was gone. A few moments ago, Gansey swore he felt Blue exhale a sleepy sigh against his neck, close enough to notice and far enough away to wonder if it had happened at all.

There was a vast expanse of a window spilling bright light into the room. Tulsa's forecast showed rain for days, heavy enough that Gansey had been able to convince Blue to let him get a hotel for a few days rather than risk flying off the road trying to flee the downpour. Gansey liked the rain. The sound of it on the roof had been one of his only companions in times of sleeplessness on his travels.

The sun was out and Gansey was alone. It sat wrong in his chest. Then, he looked around.

Books. Books he might read. A desk. A desk with knots in it the size of fists, all knuckle and no regard for bone. It made him think of Ronan, much the way gasoline smelled like Adam and the cold reminded him of Noah. This room was stark. The books were stacked in a way that felt familiar to him.

Then, he heard voices. The walls of this room didn't reach the ceiling and Gansey could hear the sounds of someone banging around in the kitchen, could smell their cooking. Occasionally someone would speak, and Gansey's heart was pounding too hard in his ears to find the voices familiar. What if he'd been kidnapped? What if Henry and Blue weren't safe? Some uninformed idiot might have traced some of Gansey's research and thought there was something to find, as Gansey once had. Though never, ever would he have tried to find it like this.

Still, the smell of breakfast was not very menacing. Gansey took the space of a few breaths to calm himself, work through some rational thought, and push himself to his feet. Distressingly, he was only dressed from the waist down, glasses still on his face. He looked around fruitlessly for a shirt. Unless he fashioned one out of a nearby book titled Questioning Darrow's History, that wouldn't change. He decided not to harm the book in any way and headed for the door. He pushed it open. He had no idea what he might find on the other side.

Ceilings, high as the ones in Monmouth. Maybe higher. There were several bedrooms, laid about a very open floorplan. There was some shuffling below that suggested activity beneath, a table set, some more ruckus in the kitchen. No one seemed to be guarding the door. This wasn't a kidnapping. What the hell was it then? His brows knitted deeply over the tips of his wire frames and he skidded a thumb over his lip as he rounded the corner to the kitchen.
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[personal profile] formicine 2016-08-08 03:21 am (UTC)(link)
Blue closes her eyes and lets herself be tugged close. It feels good, it feels safe. He does: like she could quiet the million stresses in her head if she just let herself forget them. About weird crushes, about the things her friends are going through, about the store barely scraping the black, about what to do with her life -- if she just surrendered to apparent destiny, to feeling good. Maybe it would be all right.

He tucks his head against her neck and she can feel his heart racing. She could be the one to listen to his heart slow, to run her hands through his hair and talk him down, and she knows how to do that. It could be so easy.

But that isn't Blue, just accepting things, and under the safety Gansey feels terribly transient . Is it better, to let him hold her, to risk kissing him or indulging any fantasy she might have ever had about permanence with a boy meant to die, and know that tomorrow he could be gone -- again -- where she can't follow?

It's not. She can't. Hell, he could not even be here through today; this could be a Darrow trick, though she doesn't think it is.

Blue nods. It doesn't feel better, not to do whatever it is they're supposed to do. It just feels more necessary. She chews on her lip as he reaches to brush her tears away, following the gesture with a self-conscious roll of her eyes and a utilitarian wipe of the palm of her hand against her cheek.

His offer is so gentlemanly and so Gansey and also so remote. He steps back from her space so easily when she asks, and she hates asking. He always managed to respect her limits, even when it was agony to have them. "I'd like to have it," she says, pulling herself together.

Part of her is glad he has a new phone number. Gansey -- before, the Gansey who had been here before -- if you called the number, you'd get a this phone number is disconnected message. But it had been his phone from home; it just ran on Darrow signal. If he didn't have a number, she thinks she might have lost all the texts that still sat, saved on her phone, and she wants to remember that he'd been here, texting her at 3 in the morning.

She finds her phone where it's charging in the kitchen. "I've got a new phone too," she says in a mock show-off tone, waving the little cell phone at him. She'd never had a cell back in Henrietta, though who knows now.
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[personal profile] formicine 2016-08-16 03:25 am (UTC)(link)
His smile is brilliant and wide and a little on the real side of charming (vice presidential, maybe, she thinks).

"Thanks, Dick," she drawls, smirking, and lets him handle her phone, watching him deftly program his number in with only the slightest flip of her stomach. "Never had one and I still use it more than Ronan."

"Thanks." She takes it back and just looks at the number for a moment. Usually, she just texts straight back to have hers in their phone, but their conversations have always been at odd times, and it's even odder right now. She's not sure what she's feeling. What she needs. She doesn't know what the last phone conversation she had with him was, back in Henrietta. She can guess it wasn't just thoughts said out loud, at 3am though, because there, they're together. Back home, he could kiss her goodnight.

She feels abruptly, terribly guilty.

"Yeah," she says and nods. "Both of us do. I mean, sort of. I have my own place..." She looks up. "This city gives you an apartment, and money, even. So I just kept up the rent. In case. If I want to go work on something, or if Adam and Ronan --" She pauses halfway to a joke and frowns, measuring. "They're. Together, here..."
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[personal profile] formicine 2016-08-23 11:35 pm (UTC)(link)

He interrupts to sputter a laugh, and she laughs too, and it's so so easy to fall into, even as much as the inside of her feels a little hollowed out. Because it's Gansey. It's not a Gansey she knows everything about, not yet, and it's not the Gansey that knows this version of her the best, but it's still Gansey and it's painfully easy to relax around him.

Besides, it's abruptly relieving for his own laughter to reassure her that of course he doesn't care, why would he? Raised on red tie affairs Gansey might be, but he's not churchy, and his loyalty runs deeper than just about any trait that could be assigned to somebody. It's just that -- well, it's not always something you can predict, about people. If they'll be okay with someone's sexuality. In Virginia, it's much less fraught to predict that they won't, no matter how well you know them, and she's sure that's one reason why Ronan never said anything.

He looks at her sideways, and she looks at him back; he's clearly wondering the same thing about her.

"Well, good," she says, defiant of his querying eyes, "at least eventually they finally admit it there too."

She looks at the floor and chews on her lip, glancing back up. "Me, too," she says after a minute. "I mean, I like girls too, sometimes. As it turns out." It feels like a confession. It's not that she thinks Gansey will judge her; it's that she's had feelings for anyone else that knots up her stomach. Even with Krem and Hild's advice in her head; even with her own stubborn will to do and be only what she wants raging in the back of her skull: it still feels like she's betraying him.