Rosie Wilson (
forthsofar) wrote2020-01-20 09:11 am
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in days to come when your heart feels undone
At first, she'd given that late-night text from Caleb--a friend in trouble, Caleb okay but out of school for the week--a healthy amount of sympathy, but no real concern. She sought out Clint in the senior hallway and divvied up the task of collecting assignments and notes from Caleb's classes, ignoring to the best of her ability the vague sniggers about sex cults she overheard from a few of the other members of the team as she walked away.
It was all working rather smoothly, with very little room for worry--until she stopped by Caleb's apartment that night and actually saw him. Whatever had happened, it left him drawn and tired, something almost lost behind his eyes. Rosie hadn't pried, despite the flurry of questions that rose to her mind, just handed over the collected assignments and made the appropriate vague noises of sympathy before he pushed the front door slowly shut again. Still, the sight was enough to make her worry, to increase that faint concern from before to something far harder to ignore.
Clint had agreed to drop things off the next two days, leaving Rosie time to think--and to plan. By Thursday, she had at least the seed of an idea, something that might provide Caleb with a little more comfort after a situation that had so clearly rattled him. She got Clint's half of the assignments from him after school, then stopped by the small market a few blocks from Candlewood to pick up a few additional things before heading home.
That night, she loads everything into a few tote bags she and Neil had picked up from one Darrow event or another and heads downstairs. She knocks once, twice, then tries the knob, finding it unlocked and barging in before she can quite stop herself.
"It's just me," she calls, nudging the door shut with her foot.
It was all working rather smoothly, with very little room for worry--until she stopped by Caleb's apartment that night and actually saw him. Whatever had happened, it left him drawn and tired, something almost lost behind his eyes. Rosie hadn't pried, despite the flurry of questions that rose to her mind, just handed over the collected assignments and made the appropriate vague noises of sympathy before he pushed the front door slowly shut again. Still, the sight was enough to make her worry, to increase that faint concern from before to something far harder to ignore.
Clint had agreed to drop things off the next two days, leaving Rosie time to think--and to plan. By Thursday, she had at least the seed of an idea, something that might provide Caleb with a little more comfort after a situation that had so clearly rattled him. She got Clint's half of the assignments from him after school, then stopped by the small market a few blocks from Candlewood to pick up a few additional things before heading home.
That night, she loads everything into a few tote bags she and Neil had picked up from one Darrow event or another and heads downstairs. She knocks once, twice, then tries the knob, finding it unlocked and barging in before she can quite stop herself.
"It's just me," she calls, nudging the door shut with her foot.
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"He'll... I don't know. I hope so." Fuck, he hopes so, so much it almost hurts. "I don't... think I'm gonna be in school this week, either," he admits. "I'm sorry..." The idea of walking through those hallways, of sitting in those desks, surrounded by kids whose problems are nothing compared to what Michael's going through... It feels fucking laughable.
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"Don't be sorry," she murmurs, still sitting there on the coffee table, staying close even without the link of their hands. "I'll talk to Clint tomorrow, we'll make a plan for next week." One corner of her mouth lifts. "Or, I'll make a plan and tell him, and he'll go a bit wide-eyed and go along with it. If I didn't know better, I'd think he was afraid of me."
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Her sly, playful amusement falls away in an instant as she sees the way his expression falters, his eyes filling with tears before he turns his face away. "Oh no, oh, Caleb," she murmurs, holding tightly to his hand. "I'm not going to tell you it's okay, it's not, but...I'm here."
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So he does. He doesn't let go of her hand, but he curls away from her on the couch, so his arm is stretched back behind himself, and he's this ball of emotion on his couch, anchored to this one sturdy point.
He either doesn't notice the Hot Pocket and its plate slide down between his torso and the back of the couch, or he doesn't care.
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It's a little awkward, but she gets onto the couch behind him, trying to curl herself around the tight ball of his body. He's larger than her, taller and broader even folded in on himself like this, but Rosie does the best she can. "I'm so sorry," she says, letting go of his hand only so she can wrap her arms around him. "Whatever happened, I'm so sorry you had to go through it."
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When he's finally cried himself out, he slowly rolls to face her, fingers still tangled, and gently arranging their hands so neither of them are twisting or awkwardly bending.
His face is wet, eyes red and drawn, but he doesn't look so lost. He traces her palm with his thumb, sniffles, and offers a weak, wet, "Thank you."
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As he starts to turn, Rosie gives him space, rearranges the tangle of their arms and legs as he settles again and faces her. Her own eyes are a little bright, sympathetic tears gathering that she blinks away hard. "Sorry," she whispers, a slight and wobbly smile flickering on her face for a moment. She glances down at the slow, soft brush of his thumb along her palm, a faint and involuntary blush pinking her cheeks. "And you're welcome."
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He feels... better... he thinks. Like a pressure behind his breast bone has released, and he wonders if this is what people mean when they call crying 'cathartic.'
Sitting up jostles the plate away from the back of the couch and behind his back. The Hot Pocket flops after it, and he's really glad it's cold, otherwise he would've ruined this couch, he's pretty sure.
"Fuck, I'm such a pig," he mumbles, managing a huffed laugh.
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Caleb levers himself back up into a sitting position, his hand on her shoulder, and Rosie does the same once he settles, shifting to the other end of the couch and pulling off her boots before drawing her feet up beneath her. She sees the plate go wheeling behind his back along with the half-eaten frozen turnover that had been resting on it, and though it's not funny she still lets out a faint and unladylike snort.
"Do you want the honest answer to that, or the tactful one?" she murmurs, looking up at him with an easy, fond grin.
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Then he closes his eyes for a second, and turns to busy himself with the plate and the pastry and the small mess it'd left on the cushion, because he's too drained for panic, but not too drained for self-recrimination.
Maybe she won't get it. Maybe she'll assume it's that weird, perceptive thing he does at school.
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"What do you mean?" she asks, even as he turns away to deal with cleaning everything up. "You're not a mind reader, are you?"
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He places the plate and Hot Pocket on the coffee table, then rolls his shoulders a little. He can feel Rosie puzzling him out, feeling another certainty slot into place. Fuck, he's sloppy.
He wants to say 'mind readers aren't real,' but that'd be a lie, and a disservice to Chloe, besides. So he doesn't, just offers Rosie a lop-sided smile that's a little tight at the corners, then stands.
"What was that about pasta?" he deflects.
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As she talks, she cleans up the counter a little, putting plates and glasses into the sink, flattening empty boxes and sticking them into the recycling bin beside the trash. "And then there's other people who just had something mad happen to them even before they showed up in Darrow."
She grins, thinking of Anterwold and wondering vaguely if Caleb will pick up on the fact he's talking to one of them now.
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On the one hand, he should feel relieved that she's already got some precedence for this, right? But he's still so afraid of just telling people. But... she's not people. She's Rosie. He swallows, then sighs.
"I'm not a mind reader," he says again, and this time, there's no nervous laugh, no strained smile. Because that's the truth. "I'm an empath. I... can feel people's feelings."
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She studies him for a moment, thinking, then decides to take the chance. "A secret for a secret, then. Darrow's not the first time I wound up somewhere different and didn't expect it. Back home, my neighbor had this...I thought it was some stupid sculpture thing in his cellar, but it turned out to be a doorway to another world."
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He drifts closer, hugging himself a little. "You believe me," he says. "Just... Like that."
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Caleb drifts closer, some bright surprise flickering on his face as his arms wrap around his middle, and she grins. "I believe you. And you believe me?"
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It feels weirdly good, that she knows, now. He doesn't have to fight to keep that secret, to be careful and not do or say certain things.
And maybe she'll be a good ally, like Mr. Burgess.
"Oh. Do you know Mr. Burgess?" he asks.
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He asks about Guy, and Rosie lets out a short laugh before she can stop herself. "I'm in his English class," she says, turning to go back to the bags she'd left on the kitchen counter, trusting Caleb to follow. "And we're...I don't know if friends is the right word, but he seems to like having me come round the flat for tea with him and Mr. Blunt. That's his flatmate, he's some kind of art curator at the museum."
As she talks, she pulls out the ingredients she'd brought; dry pasta, a wedge of cheese, canned tomatoes, an onion, and a stick of butter. "Where are your pans?"
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His stomach growls as he takes in the sight of the ingredients, and, wow. He really, really hopes she's making macaroni and cheese, because that's gonna be fucking good.
He sits on one of the stools at the counter and leans on his elbows. He's still tired, but the cry session on the couch, and Rosie keeping him talking, are both doing what they're meant to.
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Finding two pots at the back of the second cabinet she searches through, she shoves both onto the counter before getting up again, smiling as she sees him sitting there. He looks worlds better already from the sad shell he'd been when she first arrived, and Rosie takes a moment to be grateful.
"I'm glad you told me, by the way."
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He is glad it's out in the open, now. So far, there aren't any branches of the AM here, and he doesn't expect they'll crop up, suddenly, unless more Atypicals start showing up. He does miss Chloe and Sam.
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"Can I ask questions, or is that rude? We can trade off, I'll tell you about Anterwold, and you tell me about being...you said it was an empath, right?"
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He's surprised. Most people don't ask if it's okay to ask questions. They just ask, and Caleb doesn't mind talking about his ability, but it's weirdly nice, that she's being so considerate.
And he is curious about this Anterwold place.
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