[He's still angry--but something in her voice quiets that feeling, a little, at least enough that he holds his silence, even after she's stopped talking.
[She does stay there. When he gets there she's making tea, but it's not her tea, it's the bad space tea, because her tea is down on their floor, not up here, and she didn't feel like going down to get it.
And maybe it's a little bit of revenge, too. Hot bad tea on a sweltering ship, even though Annie doesn't really feel the heat and she's a mini cooler.]
[It's far too fucking hot for tea, but there's something grounding about stepping into a kitchen with Annie doing tea. It could be the shittiest tea in the world, but it's still Annie, it's still tea. It's nearly like being home, which never, before, meant much to Mitchell. Living with George, and with Annie--that changed it.
He stops in the doorway and studies her, first, almost cautiously. Down to just jeans and tank top, still wearing his gloves (of course), his hands loose at his sides. He doesn't know what the hell to say to her.]
[Somehow it's easier, it's an old habit, familiar and comfortable - making tea, setting it in front of him, even if he doesn't drink it. Her making tea has never been about drinking it, or even about making it for her flatmates, but something reassuringly normal, something about home.
It takes her home.
She doesn't look at him, at first. She holds her head down, her fingers around the handle of the kettle. It's a good sign that she can hold it.]
[It's not like he has to be invited in to the kitchen--but it feels like a vote of confidence to be asked in, however small. Stupid, right. He goes and leans against the counter just behind her, a little ways off, so she doesn't feel closed in or anything--which is equally stupid, because she's capable of just rentaghosting away.
There's another few beats of silence.]
Look, I'm-- sorry, all right. It got-- out of hand.
[He smiles, thinly, at that exception--and doesn't disagree, but then again, he doesn't agree, either. Instead he steps over, just a little closer to her, staring at the floor between them.]
It was meant t' be just to you. We really are worried for you, Annie. I'm-- God. [He huffs something that could nearly be a laugh, a short, sharp sound.] I don't know. It got all-- cocked up. You're right about that.
[She takes a moment, and set her hand between them. How can she explain it? That she can't hurt him, and that George suggesting - she was hurt, she knows what it's like, to be afraid of someone you loved, he killed her, and then Mitchell didn't speak up for her, he didn't defend her-
[He looks at her hand instead. It looks substantial, lying there, pressed to the countertop. If he took her hand, it would feel cold; it would be there, but it wouldn't be there, too.]
[They were all talking and angry, and Mitchell and George were pissed--and like your judgement's any good whilst pissed, you just say whatever. George more so than other people, probably.]
Look, I don't know why he said that, all right, I can't control, what he says. I didn't tell him t' say it. If you want an apology for that, you're going to have t' talk to him about it, because I didn't say it. I don't think of it that way. But he's worried for you too, I know he is.
[He steps closer still--not too close, but close enough, close enough that the distance between them is nearly closed.]
It was a lot at once. And I was drunk, Annie, I wasn't thinking-- ah, Christ, it's not you. It's never you. You're the best thing that's ever happened t' me, I've said it, already, but I'm saying it again. You are. There wasn't anything that was really good, before you, but it's-- this ship, these people, it makes me feel like I'm losing my mind sometimes, and I can't-- lose you, I can't ever lose you.
I don't care about werewolves or private investigators or...or...I don't know, other vampires! I care about you! But these people have been kind to me, but don't you think if I felt threatened I would't come to you?
That you wouldn't be my very first line of defense?
[She reaches for his hand, and it's cold, cool, a little island of something that isn't this oppressive heat.]
[He doesn't say anything, then. He grabs back at her hand, and that's enough, for now--to just hold onto her. The tingling that her grip sets off spreads through his glove, over his hand, up his arm a little--a chilly feeling, pins-and-needles, like plunging your arm in icy water. It's good, it's a relief, a reprieve from the cold, but it's not better than what he's really craving, and that's just Annie, herself. Annie.
He holds onto her hand, it's like a drowning grip, and he can't make it any less desperate. Being without her has been hard, it's put him on edge. Hardly any time at all, but time enough to regress, a little; it's fucking pathetic and there's not a thing he can do about it.]
[She turns and reaches for him, and holds onto him, her arms around his neck. She loves him, she does, sometimes she feels without him she would just float away, vanish into air, and it scares her, but it's not him, it's never him.
[He puts his arms around her in return--of course he does; he puts his arms around her waist, wraps them tightly around her, his fingers digging in as he holds to her. It's cold, but it's such a relief, such a bloody relief--]
I know. I know, I'm sorry--
[He's pressed close to her, he's mumbling it against her shoulder, her neck, whatever.]
I'm sorry, Annie, I just can't think straight, I can't--
[Can't lose her, he's said it a hundred times, but it never feels like enough. Because every time he thinks of it--even if she went off on her own, even if she chose it--Christ, it would be selfish, but just the thought of that makes him feel fucking unglued. He can't.]
[She holds onto him, tight. She knows. She knows he needs her. She thinks sometimes that he needs too much of her, but that's not true, that would imply there isn't enough of her to give, and there's more than enough, at least for him.]
I forgive you, all right? I don't forgive George but I forgive you.
[He huffs something like a damp laugh, still pressed close to her, his eyes shut tightly.]
That's a little unfair.
[But the protest is really more--for the sake of protesting, than anything else, like that's going to get back some sense of normalcy. Which is pretty stupid, considering he's still holding desperately to her.]
I'm sorry, Annie.
[This back and forth, this string of apologies, she's going to get tired of it eventually. She can't get tired of it. Sometimes it all still feels so unreal.]
[She's not letting go of him, because some days this is as close as she can get, she wishes maybe if she had met him when she was alive, maybe things would be different, maybe she could be everything for him instead of just this remnant.]
Can we figure out something? Something that doesn't upset either of us?
[He doesn't say anything to that, at first. His hand goes to the back of her head, his fingers in her hair--that's a grip, too, but more one that presses her a little closer. He doesn't say anything, but stares fixedly at the wall just over her shoulder, letting that silence hang between them a moment.]
I just want t' know where you are. So I don't--have to think about it, Annie, so I don't have to worry.
[voice]
[voice]
[She stops, she stops talking]
-you have George, you can go and get pissed and spend as much time as you like with him, he'll be thrilled I'm sure, as he can't-
[She can't say it.
He can't hurt you, but apparently I can-]
[voice]
After a pause, quietly:]
Annie. Where are you?
[voice]
In the kitchen. On the 25th floor.
[voice]
All right. Stay there, I'll-- be there, in a minute.
[voice]
And maybe it's a little bit of revenge, too. Hot bad tea on a sweltering ship, even though Annie doesn't really feel the heat and she's a mini cooler.]
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He stops in the doorway and studies her, first, almost cautiously. Down to just jeans and tank top, still wearing his gloves (of course), his hands loose at his sides. He doesn't know what the hell to say to her.]
Can I come in?
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It takes her home.
She doesn't look at him, at first. She holds her head down, her fingers around the handle of the kettle. It's a good sign that she can hold it.]
Yes, you can.
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There's another few beats of silence.]
Look, I'm-- sorry, all right. It got-- out of hand.
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She knows it otherwise she would just dissolve into air.]
Yeah, it did. You both cocked it up.
[She pauses, and looks back down at the kettle]
You, less.
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It was meant t' be just to you. We really are worried for you, Annie. I'm-- God. [He huffs something that could nearly be a laugh, a short, sharp sound.] I don't know. It got all-- cocked up. You're right about that.
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She takes a breath]
I'm not Owen.
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I'm not either.
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[Other people have said it, other people have implied it, but she told him, didn't she? She told him, why isn't that loyalty?]
But George said I was, Mitchell! He said I would hurt you!
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[They were all talking and angry, and Mitchell and George were pissed--and like your judgement's any good whilst pissed, you just say whatever. George more so than other people, probably.]
Look, I don't know why he said that, all right, I can't control, what he says. I didn't tell him t' say it. If you want an apology for that, you're going to have t' talk to him about it, because I didn't say it. I don't think of it that way. But he's worried for you too, I know he is.
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[She feels small, but her voice isn't, she's not quite yelling but she's not shrinking, either.]
Have I? Have I lost my temper, has something hit you and I didn't say? Mitchell, have I hurt you?
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[He steps closer still--not too close, but close enough, close enough that the distance between them is nearly closed.]
It was a lot at once. And I was drunk, Annie, I wasn't thinking-- ah, Christ, it's not you. It's never you. You're the best thing that's ever happened t' me, I've said it, already, but I'm saying it again. You are. There wasn't anything that was really good, before you, but it's-- this ship, these people, it makes me feel like I'm losing my mind sometimes, and I can't-- lose you, I can't ever lose you.
That's what hurts, Annie. Not you.
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That you wouldn't be my very first line of defense?
[She reaches for his hand, and it's cold, cool, a little island of something that isn't this oppressive heat.]
Mitchell-
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He holds onto her hand, it's like a drowning grip, and he can't make it any less desperate. Being without her has been hard, it's put him on edge. Hardly any time at all, but time enough to regress, a little; it's fucking pathetic and there's not a thing he can do about it.]
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She presses her nose into his neck, holding on.]
Mitchell, Mitchell-
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I know. I know, I'm sorry--
[He's pressed close to her, he's mumbling it against her shoulder, her neck, whatever.]
I'm sorry, Annie, I just can't think straight, I can't--
[Can't lose her, he's said it a hundred times, but it never feels like enough. Because every time he thinks of it--even if she went off on her own, even if she chose it--Christ, it would be selfish, but just the thought of that makes him feel fucking unglued. He can't.]
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[She holds onto him, tight. She knows. She knows he needs her. She thinks sometimes that he needs too much of her, but that's not true, that would imply there isn't enough of her to give, and there's more than enough, at least for him.]
I forgive you, all right? I don't forgive George but I forgive you.
[George isn't apologizing, after all.]
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That's a little unfair.
[But the protest is really more--for the sake of protesting, than anything else, like that's going to get back some sense of normalcy. Which is pretty stupid, considering he's still holding desperately to her.]
I'm sorry, Annie.
[This back and forth, this string of apologies, she's going to get tired of it eventually. She can't get tired of it. Sometimes it all still feels so unreal.]
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[She's not letting go of him, because some days this is as close as she can get, she wishes maybe if she had met him when she was alive, maybe things would be different, maybe she could be everything for him instead of just this remnant.]
Can we figure out something? Something that doesn't upset either of us?
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I just want t' know where you are. So I don't--have to think about it, Annie, so I don't have to worry.
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