Annabelle Blishwick (
forkedroad) wrote2017-01-27 05:01 pm
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
AU: 1 BROTHER
Since meeting and traveling with the Tanners, Annabelle had seen a lot. A lot of death, destruction, and chaos; all the darkness that she'd always felt magnetized towards, even coveted, had stared her in the eyes several times in their journeys. It humbled her, and finally, had even scared her a little. She didn't let as much on, very often—the two boys had seen her rattled a couple of times, but she always recovered with stoic grace into her eventually typically impish facade.
A year or so into being with them, she pondered loss, having learned why they were alone. She wondered about her own family, and her own heart—if she would feel that sort of grief.
She decided if she lost either of the Tanners, she would.
But it was grief uncompared to Lauren's—she'd never heard such soul shaking wails of despair in her life, and sitting awake in the corner of his room, she can still hear it. Though Lauren has stopped crying, she can't shake the image of his face in the fresh of it. And it hurts her, too—she loved Susan as well. She cried and screamed as well. But quickly, perhaps too quickly, she's gone and steeled herself; she had to be strong for the remaining brother.
She doesn't sleep, and she's not sure if Lauren does, either. But late in the night, she slips out, whispering she would be back—just in case he's awake. She returns hours later, when the sun is up. She feels cold, and wonders if he does as well. The lack of sleep and the despair has left a chilliness in her bones, but the cold morning air hadn't helped.
Quietly, she moves carefully to the bed. They're staying in an inn—the owners have been kind about the cost of their stay, because tragedy is starkly clear when it strikes. She moves the sheets and comforter back, wordlessly moving beneath them. She settles on her side, laying beside Lauren to look at him.
She has no words, and she's not sure if it's okay to touch him. She seems stoic, because she's shocked—but she feels her grief would be imposing.
A year or so into being with them, she pondered loss, having learned why they were alone. She wondered about her own family, and her own heart—if she would feel that sort of grief.
She decided if she lost either of the Tanners, she would.
But it was grief uncompared to Lauren's—she'd never heard such soul shaking wails of despair in her life, and sitting awake in the corner of his room, she can still hear it. Though Lauren has stopped crying, she can't shake the image of his face in the fresh of it. And it hurts her, too—she loved Susan as well. She cried and screamed as well. But quickly, perhaps too quickly, she's gone and steeled herself; she had to be strong for the remaining brother.
She doesn't sleep, and she's not sure if Lauren does, either. But late in the night, she slips out, whispering she would be back—just in case he's awake. She returns hours later, when the sun is up. She feels cold, and wonders if he does as well. The lack of sleep and the despair has left a chilliness in her bones, but the cold morning air hadn't helped.
Quietly, she moves carefully to the bed. They're staying in an inn—the owners have been kind about the cost of their stay, because tragedy is starkly clear when it strikes. She moves the sheets and comforter back, wordlessly moving beneath them. She settles on her side, laying beside Lauren to look at him.
She has no words, and she's not sure if it's okay to touch him. She seems stoic, because she's shocked—but she feels her grief would be imposing.
no subject
The night is dark and the hours long. He still can't quite believe this is his reality. When Anna returns to the bed he doesn't move away, like he normally would to give her space. Instead he shifts closer, taking her hand in his own. She's cold and it shocks him at first. His own body was warm, if only because of the covers he'd surrounded himself in. He may not know how long she was gone, but he knows when she left it was dark and that now it is growing light.
"Don't go." It's a request, more than a command, but there's some touch of desperation to it. He didn't want to be alone right now.
SORRY FOR ALL THE EDITS #rpingwithjaz
"I won't," she answers quietly, barely above a whisper. Normally, if something bad happened, Annabelle might offer to get some tea or food—though she's hardly the hospitable sort. But she doesn't want those things; she can't imagine stomaching anything, and she's sure Lauren can't either. And he's so much more sensitive than she is.
"Have you slept?"
unforgiveable
He shakes his head.
"Haven't." he responds, his voice rough. He sniffs back the tears before looking away from her and down at the space between them. He closes his eyes and his eyelashes grow wet with unshed tears. "Can't."
no subject
"I thought so," she says softly, gently petting over his knuckles with her thumb. That's when she realizes—the coppery scent in the air. His clothes. Her expression suddenly tenses, bowing under the weight of sudden anguish. There's some of it, dried, smeared across his cheek. She hasn't looked at him closely since the early evening of the previous day, when he was torn alive and fresh with the agony and loss.
"Lauren," she manages, almost pleadingly, her voice pinching in what must be a suppressed whimper. "Lauren, you've got to clean up." Her voice is shaky whispers, now. A clumsy, shaky hand comes forward, her thumb brushing that streak of what is some of Susan's remains away in dry flakes. Annabelle already had.
no subject
"I can't." His voice cracks. He knows he can, but he doesn't want to. He doesn't want any of this. "I can't."
no subject
She understands, then, that ultimately, she is being selfish. To be strong for Lauren right now means to endure the scent of death—for now.
"Okay," she concedes, her tone then becoming reassuring. She can feel the hot wet of his tears on her palm, and her voice cracks. "Okay. Not now, it's okay."
She moves closer, remembering the first time that Lauren had seen her cry—one of the only times—when she'd witnessed an unexpected, horrible murder with the two brothers. She moves her arms around him, giving some awkward hesitation beforehand. The blood is dry, she tells herself. Lauren had held her, restraining her with gentleness as she screamed, and stroked her hair as she heaved with panicked sobs.
She encourages him closer, not currently having the strength to completely move him, and places a kiss on him—above his brow, against his bangs, clung together with sweat and bloody mud.
no subject
"You're cold." He comments lamely as he feels her limbs press against him under the covers. His voice is waterlogged and his nose is stuffy.
no subject
She wants to counter by saying that all the fire has left her, but she realizes it wouldn't be helpful. She sniffles a little.
"Well, you're soggy," she retorts quietly, meaning it with humor, but unable to smile. She hooks her legs with his, and she gets goosebumps from the temperature contact. "—and so warm. Almost hot."
Moments ago, Susan was so cold. Enough to make her fingers numb. Her fingers pull the fabric of his shirt, tensing with agony.
no subject
"I was supposed to protect him." he forces out, his words wavering as his voice cuts out on him.
no subject
"You did what you could... The world is chaotic, powerful, and unfair." Her voice breaks with a little sob, and she rests against his side and arm, almost laying on him. She presses her face into his arm to take the tears, and lifts her face again to look at him as she stroke his faces. She doesn't want to say that they're too young, and too weak to be invincible.
That can change, she thinks.
"I'm so sorry, Lauren."
no subject
He knows she doesn't blame him for this, but he can't think like she does. He's not alone, but it feels like he is. As a child he'd somehow convinced himself that Nana and Father were there watching him, even if he couldn't see or speak to them at all. The thought comforted him, and he'd wanted to make them proud. He doesn't feel that way now. It was like they'd left him all over again, but now it was even worse because they'd taken Susan as well.
He should never have thought he could be the right kind of family for Susan. He'd tried so hard, done everything he could to do right by him, but in the end it had all been meaningless. He should have known better than to think he could succeed here when he'd failed so much everywhere else. It wasn't fair. It wasn't fair. All he'd ever wanted was to do this one thing right. Why was he such a failure?
no subject
But...the contact makes it hurt a little less, or maybe that isn't accurate. It makes it more bearable. She sniffles loudly, hugging him tight.
She thinks that how Lauren felt about Susan is how the hermit must have felt about her. She feels guilty, now, scorning his care; misunderstanding his love. She tucks her face against his neck, staining the neck of his dirty shirt with her tears.
"You're a good man, Lauren," she whispers unsteadily, and strokes the back of his head. "You've a good heart."
no subject
His hold on her weakens, and he shifts his nose brushing against her hair as she hides against him. He wondered how Anna could think such things, that he had a good heart. He didn't think his heart too extraordinary, especially wounded as it was, but clearly she appreciated it and that had to mean something, even if it wasn't something he could understand.
"...I miss him."
typo central
She pauses, breathing out a quivering sigh.
"I've never loved anyone like I've loved the both of you. I've never felt this."
She's never said anything like it; even when she told her family she loved them, it was obligatory and reactionary, parroting back at them like a trained pet. She brings in a hand to wipe her eyes. Loving people this way is freshly frightening.
She considers, suddenly, she never told Susan that she loved him—it hits her, and her chin dimples, thick, fresh tears falling anew.
"I never told him I loved him...!"
That...
really made her feel like a terrible person.
Re: typo central
"Please don't cry. He knew already."
no subject
She takes some scattered breaths, repeating Lauren's words in her head, and she nods, sniffling. Another little sob breaks through, but she seems to be wrestling reigns on her composure. She's able to believe Lauren; he knew Susan so well, of course.
But Annabelle still wants to tell Susan. She wants to pet his hair, kiss his warm face and tell him so, especially if it weirded him out.
"Okay," she manages, nodding again with a curt sniff. She wipes one of her eyes, then throws her arms back around Lauren in full. "Thank you. You're right." She squeezes him, then sounds a little exasperated. "The grief is confusing my logic."
no subject
"There is no logic to something like this." he murmurs, voice breaking as he tries not to cry. There really wasn't, if there was any logic in the world at all Susan would be hear with him. He would be warm between them, laughing or talking about something. He was the better of the two of them, so why did he go while Lauren was left behind.
no subject
She buries her face into his neck as he squeezes her, sniffling.
She's quiet, her cold hands relaxing finally against his back. It's a little broader than when they'd first met. She flattens her palm against his shoulder blade, rubbing him softly.
"If you want to sleep...or when you want to, Lauren, I... have something."
no subject
no subject
"Right. Of course."
But she has to stop pushing him—to bathe, to sleep.
She nods, closing her eyes, eyelashes wet, cool from the morning air. She continues to pet his back, listening to and relishing in his heartbeat. She can feel it.
"Sorry."
no subject
"You don't have to apologize." he murmurs, his voice nothing more than a whisper. It least he had Anna now. He would never have been able to do this alone. "Thank you."
no subject
"You don't have to thank me," she counters, shifting to get a little more comfortable. She's exhausted; her eyes hurt. But her mind is a numb, loud buzz. She can't rest. Absent-mindedly, she combs her fingers upwards, through Lauren's dirty hair to rub his scalp a little. She remembers as a child, her mother used to do this sort of thing for her when she was stressed about her studies; it had always done well to calm her.