Rosie Wilson (
forthsofar) wrote2019-09-06 06:10 pm
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oh when the clouds swirl and all the world is waking with the wind
It's only once it's all over, once Nick's been delivered into the far more capable hands of a doctor at Darrow General and there's nothing to do but wait and hope, that Rosie lets herself think about going back home. She could stay, she knows; clean off the dried and drying streaks of blood on her skin as well as she can in the bathroom by the emergency waiting room, look for something clean to wear in the hospital gift shop, stay with the remainder of the same small group that had convened outside the bar only a few hours ago. Maybe she even should, but the thought of a shower, of clean clothes that are her own, of seeing Neil and knowing that everything they'd just done had kept him safe too--all of that is enough to make up her mind.
She makes Charlie promise to text once there's more news, promising him in turn that she'll come back as soon as she can. Someone drives her to Candlewood, drops her at the door. There's a long mirror on one of the lobby walls by the elevator, some attempt at elegance or class that doesn't really fit with the rest of the building; spotted and streaked though it is, it's clear enough that Rosie gets her first proper look at herself. What she sees--rust-colored smears on her forehead and shins, hands gone crimson, stains on her blouse and skirt--makes her go pale and sends her stomach lurching unpleasantly. When the elevator chimes open, it's empty, a small miracle that she doesn't dare question, and she rides up to the eighth floor in silence.
Rosie unlocks the door to the flat, slipping inside as quietly as she can. Now, she just needs to get to the bathroom, get the door locked behind her and the shower on without Neil realizing she'd ever been gone in the first place. Once she's clean, she'll be able to face him, to start explaining what still seems to her more than a little unexplainable.
She makes Charlie promise to text once there's more news, promising him in turn that she'll come back as soon as she can. Someone drives her to Candlewood, drops her at the door. There's a long mirror on one of the lobby walls by the elevator, some attempt at elegance or class that doesn't really fit with the rest of the building; spotted and streaked though it is, it's clear enough that Rosie gets her first proper look at herself. What she sees--rust-colored smears on her forehead and shins, hands gone crimson, stains on her blouse and skirt--makes her go pale and sends her stomach lurching unpleasantly. When the elevator chimes open, it's empty, a small miracle that she doesn't dare question, and she rides up to the eighth floor in silence.
Rosie unlocks the door to the flat, slipping inside as quietly as she can. Now, she just needs to get to the bathroom, get the door locked behind her and the shower on without Neil realizing she'd ever been gone in the first place. Once she's clean, she'll be able to face him, to start explaining what still seems to her more than a little unexplainable.
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When they've settled, he lets her figure out how she wants to preface. The idea that whatever this all is will sound mad almost makes him laugh.
"Rosie," he said softly, "we live in a pocket universe filled with people from all over time and space. There were manifested nightmares a few months back. We were both kidnapped by some sort of snow-devil or whatever. There's--I mean, I can handle a lot of crazy. You know? It's awful, but I don't think I can get surprised anymore."
He sipped his tea, also heavily doctored with gin, and then took one of her hands to squeeze gently. "Just...start at the beginning."
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She lets it go, this brief irritation, too tired and grateful for Neil's company to maintain it for long. "I know," she says, squeezing his hand back. "I just had to say it, before anything else."
Taking another sip of her tea, Rosie considers where and how to begin. "As far as Sabrina was able to determine--she did a spell, a week or so ago, after Nick broke up with her." She doesn't bother trying to explain the web of Sabrina's relationships; it's not really hers to discuss, after all, nor is it particularly important in the larger scope of all she has to tell. "As far as she could tell, last month Nick got one of those horrible little gifts Darrow decides to send sometimes, something from home. In his case, it was this...magical device. She called it an Acheron Configuration. It's a kind of puzzle box, I think? But it can also be used to...to keep things locked up." Rosie shudders faintly. "Like a prison. And when this thing got to Darrow, and when Nick found it, it broke and let out what was inside."
She stops, already frustrated with herself for talking around the biggest piece of the story, muddying the details for her own comfort. If she's going to do this, she has to do it properly. "Not what. Who." Rosie looks up at Neil, her face pale but utterly serious. "It was the devil. Lucifer, Satan, whatever you want to call it. The actual devil, and he broke out of the Acheron and...took Nick over."
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It doesn't really make sense. Puzzle boxes and things inside them, prisons. The Devil, but that doesn't make any sense either. Not because he doesn't believe in the Devil, that's hardly the problem. There's been too much nonsense all over this place to not believe in the Devil, though Neil still has his hesitations about God and faith and all the rest of it.
"...he was possessed?"
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Rosie thinks of that moment in the bar, just before Sabrina plunged the lance into his side. Nick--the real Nick this time, in control of himself just long enough for the plan to work--had sounded so small and shattered, his voice raw from weeks of screaming within the confines of his own head. She looks down at her mug for a long moment, blinking away a fresh round of tears.
"At first, he tried to be Nick," she says. "To pretend and avoid suspicion, I think, while he...figured out where he'd landed. What he wanted to do, or how. He did the play, spent time with Sabrina...for god's sake, I even went to coffee with him." Rosie swallows hard, choking back a sudden wave of revulsion at the memory, hazy though it was. "Not that he was very good at any of it."
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"Managed enough," Neil points out, not a critique of Rosie or Sabrina, but of all of them in a way. And none of them. He sips his tea.
"So...so then...he stopped pretending to be Nick, he must have? And that's..." Neil looks at Rosie like he might be able to see the faint stain of blood on her. At least, he can see it in the memory, and he's not sure if that's better or worse.
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The way Neil looks at her then, searching and hesitant and maybe even a little afraid, settles something cold and guilty in her chest. Maybe this was too much; maybe she was going about it all wrong. But she couldn't not tell him, not when he meant so much to her, not after all the trust they'd already put in one another.
She just had to keep going, extracting it all from within herself like something foul and poisonous, and hope they'd both feel better by the end.
"Sabrina was important to him," Rosie continues. "Back in Greendale, where she and Nick are from, back in their world, there was a prophecy or something that...that Sabrina was going to bring about the apocalypse." It feels like betraying a confidence even saying that, even though it's the truth, and that cold stone of guilt inside her gets a little heavier. "It didn't work there--Sabrina and her friends stopped it from happening, I guess, but Lucifer thought maybe...maybe here, it might."
She laughs once, faint and without mirth. "Second time's the charm, maybe. So, he broke up with her as Nick, and after that's when she did that spell I told you about and found out Nick was Lucifer or Lucifer was pretending to be Nick, or--" Rosie cuts herself off, waving one hand in a frustrated, flailing gesture of impatience. "Whatever, you know what I'm trying to say." She takes another steadying drink from her mug, minding the harsh bite of the gin and the taste of the chamomile less and less the more she has of it.
"I don't know if he figured out that Sabrina was planning to try and defeat him like she did back home, or if he just decided it was time to take over Darrow, but this morning he...called to her, I suppose? Broke into some bar downtown, I don't even remember the name. But we all went with her, when it was...when it was time."
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And it's terrifying. The scattered way that Rosie speaks, the obvious rattle to her nerves, and that everything was just happening around him without him knowing a thing about it.
The mention of a bar makes Neil fidget a little. He doesn't ask her what it was, because she's just said that she can't remember. Not one of the clubs, then, since they've gone to a couple of them. But he hopes it's not Harry's. He'll text him later, check in. Right now is about Rosie.
"Can I give you a hug?" he asks gently. She looks like she could use it, but she's also been through a lot just now. He doesn't want to add to the stress of everything else.
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It wasn't his bar. Or, she doesn't think it was. She wishes she could be sure.
There's a reassurance on her tongue, something vague given her uncertainty but meant to soothe and calm; then Neil speaks instead, and the question's barely out before she's nodding. "Please," she says, again sounding so very young and so terribly old all at once. Setting aside her mug, she all but climbs into the circle of Neil's arms, practically into his lap. It's close and intimate and if it were almost anyone else, she might have been embarrassed by how desperately needy it is. Right now, it's very hard to care.
"I know it was so much worse for Sabrina," she says, her face buried in Neil's shoulder as he holds her. "She was the one who had to stab him, stab her boyfriend, but...after it was done, Charlie and I had to try to keep Nick alive and that was..." Rosie lets out a small, broken sob. "There was so much blood, and everything I did just seemed to hurt him further."
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His fingers tangle into her curls and he rocks them both gently, closing his eyes. It's a touch that his mother used to give him, until he was too old for it. It's one that Charlie gave him back at Welton on more than one occasion, when things became too much and there was nothing else but to be held and cry as quietly as he could.
"But...he's okay now?" They got him to a hospital, and he's as okay as he can be, until they know different. "So you didn't hurt him more. You helped him. You all did."
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"He's okay now," she says, echoing Neil's words like the repetition will make them true. "Or will be, I think. They had to...I think he'll need to rest at home for a time, let the stitches heal, but." She sniffles. "Better than the alternative." That Nick's still alive at all still seems to her more due to the work of the doctors than her own clumsy attempts, but she doesn't have the energy, or the will, to argue with Neil about it now.
Lifting her head from his shoulder, she smudges a kiss against his cheek instead. "Thank you for this."