[Totally not going to work. That's such a picky answer, isn't it--and what's the alternative? She just never goes anywhere? And he knows that it's unreasonable, he knows that it's fucking controlling, but he's started this now, so the rest spills out of him--]
Annie, it's not just these people, it's this ship, this whole fucking ship. It doesn't matter who you are, or what you are--what we are--it can get us, still, any of us. You, or George, if you just go off and--you could be friends with the nicest people, you could be meetin' up with Jesus Christ himself, and something could happen, on your way, and I can't-- I can't, Annie, I can't lose you again, not after everything. And then these people, on top of it all-- Christ, I just keep thinking of it, I can't stop thinking of it.
[She tried that before--or she will try it--sort of, anyways, following him around. It was grating, to say the very least. And there will be times he has to go off alone too, right--for reasons he doesn't necessarily want to consider, but who knows what the hell will happen--
(And it's not a good sign, to already be making those sorts of provisions and allowances. Thinking that way damns him before he starts. But it's a thought that's always there, at the back of his mind, and he can't shake it.)]
And I know you do, I know, I just-- God, Annie. I don't know-- what would happen, I don't.
[She holds onto his hand, then, moving away just a little, to look him in the eye. Sometimes she thinks his intensity is driven by his fear, but then other times she thinks, no, he's just like that, intense all the time, that's just how God must have made him, if there is a God.]
[He studies her face, almost feverishly. After a second, he reaches out to touch his fingertips against her cheek, and then it's his hand, on her cheek, less carefully, like he can't help himself.]
It doesn't work that way. You can't always see, what's a threat, and what isn't, you're-- [Too good, sometimes, in a way that he wants and admires and needs, Christ, he needs it from her, to balance him out, to give him something--] It can happen so quickly, Annie. Believe me. I know. You don't even know, until you're in it, and then you can't rescue yourself.
[His eyes flick over her face again. He smooths his thumb against her cheek, almost a compulsive gesture, and a little trickle of cold travels up his arm--but his face twists a little, when she says that, and it's nothing to do with the cold.]
I'm not going to lie to you, Mitchell. I wish I had met you when I still had a life. When I was still...
[She pauses, because she doesn't know the word for it. Solid? Actual? Sturdy?]
...real.
[That's not the right word either but it's the word that fits the best just at this moment. When she was still real, back when she still felt solid. Before Owen.]
[He shifts his hand a little, so it's more of a grip.]
You're real. Jesus, Annie, you're more real than anyone I've ever-- I've never had anything like this. It's never been about love, it's come close, but it was never like this. This, this, and you, this is what I need. It's all real.
[Then I would have killed you, or gotten her killed, maybe--and he should just say it, but he can't. Fucking coward that he is. He can't say it to her, not right now.
Instead, he touches his other hand against her cheek, far more carefully--and then he leans in, all at once, and kisses her. It's a good kiss, more sweet than hungry. He's so tired of being hungry anyways.]
[He mumbles that, between kisses--not that either of them really need to take breaths, but the instinct is there anyways--]
I know, I love you too, Annie--
[So much so that just saying the words seems somehow inadequate, like there's something else that can prove it to her. Everything he's said has been true. He needs her, just like this, just her--and George, too, but that's nothing like this. When he kisses her, it's cold and steadying; when he's with her, and there aren't any threats, there's no one else--just them--then he hardly thinks of feeding, of hunger, because she's everything. He can put it all to her instead, and he kisses her again, his fingers clenched in her hair.]
[His fingers are in her hair and knotted in her curls and her hands are in his, cupping his skull, and finally, finally, she just leans her forehead against his.]
Please, please trust me, please trust me to stay for you-
[His breath, when he lets it out, is long and ragged; he leans against her, hard, clutching at her, like that's going to be enough to make her stay, to keep her here.]
I can't.
[It comes out low and miserable. He squeezes his eyes shut, his teeth set together. He trusts Annie and George, more than anyone--almost more than he's ever trusted anyone--but in the end, when it all falls away, it will only be Mitchell. Because it will fall away. And there are things they don't know, things that he has to protect them from--both of them--]
I can't, Annie, there's always some part of me-- God, I want to. I want to. I can try.
[She says it with a need - she needs it, she needs him to do it, because Owen didn't trust her and it killed her - literally - and she can't go through it again, she can't.]
[As first steps go, it isn't difficult. He lets out another breath, just as shaky--but he pushes back so he's looking at her, and drops his hands from where they're gripped at her.]
[There's doubt--there's always doubt, in him, but when she looks at him like that, he nearly feels convinced. He smiles at her, quietly, and presses his hand to hers, pressing it close.]
[Annie being cross can be pretty legendary--so despite himself, despite the fact that he feels slightly sorry for George--he has to smile a little. Or maybe it's the kiss.]
Ah, go easy on him. Think he was even more pissed than I was.
Really. You've never been so drunk that you've-- said things you didn't mean t' say? Got so drunk you couldn't shut up? Come on, I know you have. Everyone has. It's like, part of bein' human.
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[Totally not going to work. That's such a picky answer, isn't it--and what's the alternative? She just never goes anywhere? And he knows that it's unreasonable, he knows that it's fucking controlling, but he's started this now, so the rest spills out of him--]
Annie, it's not just these people, it's this ship, this whole fucking ship. It doesn't matter who you are, or what you are--what we are--it can get us, still, any of us. You, or George, if you just go off and--you could be friends with the nicest people, you could be meetin' up with Jesus Christ himself, and something could happen, on your way, and I can't-- I can't, Annie, I can't lose you again, not after everything. And then these people, on top of it all-- Christ, I just keep thinking of it, I can't stop thinking of it.
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[She knows all too well what that kind of isolation can do to a person. It's not feasible, to not have some time apart.]
Don't you think I worry about you?
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[She tried that before--or she will try it--sort of, anyways, following him around. It was grating, to say the very least. And there will be times he has to go off alone too, right--for reasons he doesn't necessarily want to consider, but who knows what the hell will happen--
(And it's not a good sign, to already be making those sorts of provisions and allowances. Thinking that way damns him before he starts. But it's a thought that's always there, at the back of his mind, and he can't shake it.)]
And I know you do, I know, I just-- God, Annie. I don't know-- what would happen, I don't.
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[She holds onto his hand, then, moving away just a little, to look him in the eye. Sometimes she thinks his intensity is driven by his fear, but then other times she thinks, no, he's just like that, intense all the time, that's just how God must have made him, if there is a God.]
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You saved me. More than anyone.
[And that's why he needs her so badly.]
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[She watches him, careful. She lets him touch her even if he is wearing those ridiculous gloves]
I wish I had met you before I died.
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[His eyes flick over her face again. He smooths his thumb against her cheek, almost a compulsive gesture, and a little trickle of cold travels up his arm--but his face twists a little, when she says that, and it's nothing to do with the cold.]
Don't say that. Don't.
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[She pauses, because she doesn't know the word for it. Solid? Actual? Sturdy?]
...real.
[That's not the right word either but it's the word that fits the best just at this moment. When she was still real, back when she still felt solid. Before Owen.]
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[He shifts his hand a little, so it's more of a grip.]
You're real. Jesus, Annie, you're more real than anyone I've ever-- I've never had anything like this. It's never been about love, it's come close, but it was never like this. This, this, and you, this is what I need. It's all real.
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I still wish I had met you then.
[She doesn't like being dead. She knows she doesn't have as much to complain about, but she doesn't like it.]
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Instead, he touches his other hand against her cheek, far more carefully--and then he leans in, all at once, and kisses her. It's a good kiss, more sweet than hungry. He's so tired of being hungry anyways.]
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I love you, I love you so much-
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[He mumbles that, between kisses--not that either of them really need to take breaths, but the instinct is there anyways--]
I know, I love you too, Annie--
[So much so that just saying the words seems somehow inadequate, like there's something else that can prove it to her. Everything he's said has been true. He needs her, just like this, just her--and George, too, but that's nothing like this. When he kisses her, it's cold and steadying; when he's with her, and there aren't any threats, there's no one else--just them--then he hardly thinks of feeding, of hunger, because she's everything. He can put it all to her instead, and he kisses her again, his fingers clenched in her hair.]
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Please, please trust me, please trust me to stay for you-
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I can't.
[It comes out low and miserable. He squeezes his eyes shut, his teeth set together. He trusts Annie and George, more than anyone--almost more than he's ever trusted anyone--but in the end, when it all falls away, it will only be Mitchell. Because it will fall away. And there are things they don't know, things that he has to protect them from--both of them--]
I can't, Annie, there's always some part of me-- God, I want to. I want to. I can try.
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You have to.
[She says it with a need - she needs it, she needs him to do it, because Owen didn't trust her and it killed her - literally - and she can't go through it again, she can't.]
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[He doesn't pull away, at all, he holds tightly to her, his eyes still shut. God, what is wrong with him? When did it get to be like this.]
I can try, but I can't-- I can't do any of it alone, Annie. Just tell me what to do. Please.
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[She means that she can't do this with him attached to her, and also, she wants to look him in the eye.]
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We're work on it, all right? You and I. Together.
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Together.
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Come on, let's go back down, and I'll be cross at George.
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Ah, go easy on him. Think he was even more pissed than I was.
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