Even if this is real, even if she sleeps in his arms and wakes in his arms, what happens then? What happens when they have to dress, have to leave the tent, have to part?
For all that they had sharedโ the waking dream of it, the intensity, the look in his eyes, his claim that she was stuck with himโ this man is not bound to her the way she cannot help but feel she is to him, sewn to him with thread spun of fear and loneliness and wishes and love. She does love him. This him. And he isn't hers. It doesn't matter that so much is the same, he isn't hers. They have only just met. She cannot possibly mean to him what he means to her and it makes her limbs tighten around him again in her anticipation of loss.
That is the same too. The old fear that still has roots around her bones. She had shrieked at her husband long ago because of it. Now it is soft when she speaks it. ]
I am afraid that I mean little to you. That I am only the grieving wife of someone very like you and you feel no such tie to me and will not stay. Or that I have dreamed this, and you are not real at all.
[ He feels real, but so did the dream shared by the Gallows. The loss, the rebellion. Her children.
Even softer, then: ]
Do you think me a weak and foolish woman? To admit so soon, so readily, I could not bear your loss?
[ Loki's fingers on her back still their movements before he moves it to settle, palm wide, between her shoulderblades. ]
If I have any control over it, I will stay by your side. I will strive to grant you the forever you've asked of me.
[ That is easier to say he knows because he feels very little control over anything at this point in time. That doesn't feel good, exactly, but he can recognize the truth of it. ]
I don't know how to convince you of my reality. [ It feels like a heavy, impossible thing in his chest. In a world where dreams walk into reality, how does one convince another that they're not just a dream? Especially when they're unsure of themselves? ] Or of what even the possibility of you would mean to me. [ That someone loved him, once, a version of him and then himself in turn. It would warm and haunt him by turns to know that and to be removed from it. ]
But know this: I could never think you weak or foolish.
[ The Loki she married is so often circuitous. He plays with words, turns them in his hands. Builds castles of them with secret corridors for truth to dart through out of sight. Shines oblique light across his meanings, winds through the land of conversation like a meandering river with tricks and turns, delights in the cleverness of it all.
Then, sometimes, strikingly direct. Unadorned and unwavering with no back corridors for her fears to hide in; words that she can lean against with the full weight of her uncertainty and know they will not move.
This is almost of a voice, and so she trusts him. Nods where she rests against him and becomes heavy and loose again, free to let her hand go back to slowly carding through the hair that is not pressed against the pillow. To let it wander to trace the shell of his ear, find the corner of his jaw, run down the length of his nose. To touch him merely for the sake of touching him. Because she wants to. Because she can.
It is the blue of evening now, and she tries to wriggle slightly closer, reach to find the blanket and pull it more snugly around them to ward off the chill that is coming to touch the sweat on her skin and take the warmth they'd made.
[ Her touch is so gently, so exploratory, that it brings a soft sort of smile to Loki's face. When is the last time he allowed anyone to be gentle with him? When was the last time he thought he deserved it?
He's not sure he does right now, honestly. ]
It's... it doesn't bother me, exactly.
[ He sighs, settling underneath her and the blankets. It's a complicated thing, isn't it? But she's asking and he feels no particular need to lie to her about it. A strange thing, that, and one he will turn over in his mind... later, maybe. ]
It is a reminder. That I am not what I was raised to believe I was. That I'm not Asgardian but Jotun, an ice giant. [ A scoff. ] Not a particularly large one, however.
[ There is a kind of gratitude in Alexandrie, for the dark.
She misses seeing himโ the shifting beauty of his eyes with their blues and greens and sharpness and innocence, self-satisfaction and confidence and hesitance and wonder; the little private game of new-and-old she is playing with the shapes of his body, the way his hair curls, all the little fleeting expressions and the ones that form and stay.
But she likes the way it draws them close and makes speech softer, as if they were being mindful of the resting sun. The way difficult words come easier, spoken into the small space without worrying about what they might see in the other upon the hearing. And she likes the other ways it makes her see; how it means she learns him with fingertips and breath. The curve of his collarbone, of throat, of chin, of shoulder. The places where she can find the beat of his heart. Untangling the scent of him from battle and blood and leather and the ones she knows as her own and trying to breathe only that.
She will miss, she thinks when he replies, the blankets in summer. The way her husband's comfort was far too warm, and the way it became hers because all of her comfort was him. ]
[ In the dark the parts of him that bristle and feel... afraid, frankly, of this topic of conversation โ one which he has not had with anyone, even his brother โ settle a little. He can pretend he's unafraid, eyes blinking in the dark, soothed by her touch. ]
It would matter to them.
[ It's almost funny, how he was not accepted by Asgardians as one of their own (mostly because of his own behavior, he supposes, but also because he wasn't) but also probably wouldn't have survived very long on Joutenheim either. Unless they, or Laufey, suddenly developed a tolerance for small giants with magical abilities.
Seems unlikely, to him. ]
Considering my biological father left me to die, it would probably matter a great deal.
[ There would have been no welcome for her husband among the Qunari either. Par Vollen would have had him chained and collared. His horns tipped, his clever words taken with muzzle, sewn up with thread, or pulled from him by the root. He would never be alone. If found alone, killed. A saarebasโ a dangerous thing.
She does not think they would keep him now. Not as he had grown.
He could have gone to the Vashoth when he knew, if he had wished itโ the life of a mercenaryโ but he had been raised a human, would be an outsider there as well.
And this man; no welcome at his birth, little enough as he grew. Outside, always. They are made alone everywhere they go.
Maybe if he could not belong to the world, the world belonging to him was the closest thing there was. If love would not give, he would take with fear. Had she not chosen the same?
Alexandrie wriggles herself upwards along Loki's body until she can settle again with her head against his, nose against his cheek beside his ear, hand coming up to settle against the other side. Breathes there, thinks I will be your home from somewhere so deep in her chest that it makes her eyes water, though she does not cry.
[ What is the saying? A child who is shunned by the village will burn it down for warmth? It definitely applies to this Loki, even though he attempted to destroy all of Jotunheim instead of just a village, and he'd be entirely unsurprised to find that other versions of himself are very much alike in that regard.
Alexandrie shifts, climbing his torso, and he moves his arm aside to allow her to make herself comfortable once more. Once she's settled his hand returns to fingers against her spine, though this time they're still. No patterns, no distractions. Just the sound of her breathing and his, the feel of her breath warm against his skin.
Her question surprises him; complex in its simplicity. Not what happened, or even why, but what did it mean? That her voice is hoarse makes him worry he's been too forthright, telling her these things, but.
But.
There's something to be said for sharing even the darkest parts of oneself. Of hearing someone else's voice in response to the terrible things he's done, and not hear judgment. Concern, perhaps, which is an odd and complicated feeling, but not judgment.
He swallows. ]
I told myself it was to prove my loyalty. To Odin, my father. To Asgard. That if I orchestrated their downfall while Odin slept, he'd have no choice but to finally see me, regard me as worthy in the same way that Thor was regarded as worthy.
[ He hesitates. Takes a breath. That is not what she asked, exactly. ]
It was revenge. In a very nice package, mind, with quite the bow, but still. For being abandoned, left to die. For being not good enough to keep.
[ The word 'considered' was probably supposed to go in there somewhere, right? ]
She had thought so often of vengeance, but she had never gotten Rolant. His two cronies who had laughed with him she had. One killed in a duel of her orchestration, one ruined so thoroughly he'd fled the court. She'd thought she would be happy, but she wasn't. Vicious, manic, drunk on the power she'd been denied perhaps, but not made whole. She thought she would, if she could get Rolant. He'd burned to death in the civil war and she had been so angry, so denied.
All these years later she'd found him living, having faked it all. Thought about it again, and felt nothing. Knew it wouldn't matter. Ripping out the heart that made her nothing would not undo what he had done. ]
Did it work?
[ It is gentle, careful, because she knows his answer. Knows its bitter taste. Knows it is the same as hers.
Gutting someone else has never stopped the bleeding. All it means is everyone dies. ]
[ Loki scoffs, as if the idea itself is ridiculous. Perhaps it is.
It occurs to him that Odin's acceptance of himself is simply a memory of a recording from the TVA, not even a memory of his own making. It twists in his chest, brings his breathing up short. ]
Definitely not.
[ He remembers how he'd felt, in that moment. Devastated, empty, like none of it had mattered, like he hadn't mattered. He closes his eyes and remembers the rushing silence of the abyss before the wormhole, and how he'd been willing to let that be it. Allow his story to end there.
Then it hadn't. Because Lokis are survivors, or perhaps because he was too weighted with the glorious purpose of proving himself worthy. To Odin, to everyone.
The words 'I tried to die' are on the tip of his tongue but he can't bring himself to say them. He hasn't tried since then, not really, but something about that acceptance of the nothing that may follow never really leaves him. He survives, and he fights, but that little part of him is never truly gone. ]
[ She strokes the side of his face, and nods against him, and her heart breaks because his did. Because she knows there is a spot of numb silence that lives in him. That wakes with him, and walks with him, is waiting when he laughs.
They had crawled out of it together, she and her husband, blinking into the sun of what it meant to have given their hearts to someone who wanted them. What it had meant to be loved. What it had meant to let themselves be loved.
Here in the dark she tightens her hold and presses her lips to that space just in front of this Loki's ear and silently promises she will go back for him. She would go back a thousand times.
And he had told her where to find him when they met. That his truth is in his leaving, that he is still left there. It is living in his name.
Tender, and carefulโ so carefulโ when she reaches. ]
[ He's not sure, anymore, if his eyes are opened or closed. Blinking in the dark does nothing to diffuse the feeling of emotional vertigo, or make it any easier to tell, so he shifts away just enough to turn onto his side and face her. He can make out the vague shapes and planes of her face, here in the encroaching dark of this tent, and moves his hand to keep hers against his face.
It's quiet outside and warm in here, beneath the blankets and tangled up in her, but he feels cold and a little hollow. Like there is a fire that can't quite reach the corners of the room it's lit within.
That fire is, of course, the redhead in his arms. ]
It seemed... more honest. Thor is Odin's son; I am not.
I don't know, [ he says, and his voice is tired. A small bit afraid. If he is not Odin's son or Laufey's son, then whose is he? Is he no one's at all? Maybe it's foolish to be this concerned with a naming convention, but that doesn't make it any less important in his personal cosmology. ]
[ Her hand movesโ tracing along the side of his face to smooth the hair at his temple, back again to his cheek, and she leans to brush her nose against his. ]
[ Can she promise him that she would, no matter what? Even if he's less... pliant than he is now? Less honest?
Possibly as much as he can promise her forever, he realizes. Asking would do nothing to soothe him. They have no control over the future, he knows that. They can only control how they respond to it, and possibly poorly at that. ]
You're too kind. [ It sounds like a joke but it isn't. ]
[ She winces into closing her eyes at what feels like a withdraw; too far. She'd pushed too far. ]
And I am not always now.
[ Even softer, slightly pained: ]
Is it kind, do you think? To see you and to be so desperate to be close, to be wanted, to be held, to be loved again, that I will press my hands into every wound I think you have to show I know you?
I have thrown myself upon you with my weight of years, and tried to press them into hours so I might have you not in future, but right now. Have pulled a flower open because I wept with want of its bloom, Iโ
[ He opens his mouth but all that comes out at first is a huff of breath before he leans in and kisses her nose.
He had told Mobius that no one was completely good, or evil, and he thinks of that now. Kindness, and unkindness, are not quite the same dichotomy but it feels... similar. Even murderers can be kind. Even the gentlest soul can do harm. ]
What do I really know of kindness? [ He asks her honestly. ] Too much and I distrust it. Turn away from it.
I'm unused to it.
Besides which, you didn't promise me kindness. You promised me honesty, and you promised me now, and as much as I don't want to sour you on me I'm terrified that if I don't, something else will, and I'll be even more unprepared for it than I am in this moment.
[ She said she wanted forever, and he thinks he wants that too. Is afraid of what it will mean if he isn't granted it. If he has it only for a moment just to have her turn away. ]
I'm a sharp and dangerous thing. I've cut you on purpose and now without even intending and you've done me no harm.
[ More trust than there has been, in the matter of Alexandrie's heart, is still a tenuous and fragile thing; so much moreso, here, with him. With how she'd pressed it into his hands faster than thought, believing it already there.
They were different hands, but it's too late now by far for her to take it back, and every moment she believes he holds it precious in his chest next to his own means she is safe again forever and every moment she does not is one in which her body knows she is abandoned. That it isn't the same, won't be the same, he does not love her, will not love herโ
But the simplicity of a kiss for her nose and she is quiet again. Able to listen to him speak without the rising howl of wind behind it.
She takes a breath, long and deep, looks at him as if even in the darkness he could see the firmness of her truth in it. ]
I have held the blade that sometimes bleeds; have chosen it, knowing it will, and chosen it with joy.
[ Softer, then: ] I am not afraid of what you are. Only afraid that you will see I bleed and turn away to save me in a way I do not wish for.
I will not ask for trust, but I will ask for this: that you will not leave me when I love the parts of you that you cannot. That you will not leave me when you fear I will leave you and your only choice in it is when.
[ Something Loki is learning, here, in the dark, with Alexandrie Lucette Seraphine Arienne d'Asgard, is that being seen? Is akin to having a spotlight on one's soul, when it's been content and furious to hide in the shadows.
It is hot and bright and terrifying.
Her words cut him to the quick because it is what he would do โ leave her in anticipation of being left, turn away because he's hurt her too greatly and surely, surely, she will tire of him and his shenanigans.
He's tired of them.
Loki can feel her gaze upon him in the dark, waiting for his answer. ]
Du har mitt ord. Even if I am afraid, I won't turn away from you. [ A breath, shakier than he'd like. Can he do this? Will he manage to keep his word? ] But I can't promise I won't be afraid.
[ She lifts herself up a little so she can move higher in their little makeshift nest and tugs at his hand, offering her arms and the softness of her breast as a pillow. ]
I cannot say it will not.
But I can say that if it does, it will notโ
[ She chokes on it, and suddenly her voice is rough with emotion because she believes. She still believes that if her lord, her love, her Loki, the man whose House and name she bears, had had a choice in it, he would be home. ]
It will not be a thing that I have chosen. And wherever we may be, I weep for you.
[ He takes the invitation, moving to rest his head on her shoulder, face close to the skin of her chest. It's best that she doesn't promise him that nothing terrible will happen; they both know better than to presume that.
Neither of them are children after all and they've already lost so much. ]
Don't weep too long, [ he tells her quietly, seriously. ] You've cried enough over me just today.
[ He wants to promise her that whatever happens, he'll make the attempt. Try to reach her, to reconnect, to... something.
But he's not sure he can promise that, all things considered, and he'd rather not lie to her right now. ]
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Even if this is real, even if she sleeps in his arms and wakes in his arms, what happens then? What happens when they have to dress, have to leave the tent, have to part?
For all that they had sharedโ the waking dream of it, the intensity, the look in his eyes, his claim that she was stuck with himโ this man is not bound to her the way she cannot help but feel she is to him, sewn to him with thread spun of fear and loneliness and wishes and love. She does love him. This him. And he isn't hers. It doesn't matter that so much is the same, he isn't hers. They have only just met. She cannot possibly mean to him what he means to her and it makes her limbs tighten around him again in her anticipation of loss.
That is the same too. The old fear that still has roots around her bones. She had shrieked at her husband long ago because of it. Now it is soft when she speaks it. ]
I am afraid that I mean little to you. That I am only the grieving wife of someone very like you and you feel no such tie to me and will not stay. Or that I have dreamed this, and you are not real at all.
[ He feels real, but so did the dream shared by the Gallows. The loss, the rebellion. Her children.
Even softer, then: ]
Do you think me a weak and foolish woman? To admit so soon, so readily, I could not bear your loss?
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If I have any control over it, I will stay by your side. I will strive to grant you the forever you've asked of me.
[ That is easier to say he knows because he feels very little control over anything at this point in time. That doesn't feel good, exactly, but he can recognize the truth of it. ]
I don't know how to convince you of my reality. [ It feels like a heavy, impossible thing in his chest. In a world where dreams walk into reality, how does one convince another that they're not just a dream? Especially when they're unsure of themselves? ] Or of what even the possibility of you would mean to me. [ That someone loved him, once, a version of him and then himself in turn. It would warm and haunt him by turns to know that and to be removed from it. ]
But know this: I could never think you weak or foolish.
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Then, sometimes, strikingly direct. Unadorned and unwavering with no back corridors for her fears to hide in; words that she can lean against with the full weight of her uncertainty and know they will not move.
This is almost of a voice, and so she trusts him. Nods where she rests against him and becomes heavy and loose again, free to let her hand go back to slowly carding through the hair that is not pressed against the pillow. To let it wander to trace the shell of his ear, find the corner of his jaw, run down the length of his nose. To touch him merely for the sake of touching him. Because she wants to. Because she can.
It is the blue of evening now, and she tries to wriggle slightly closer, reach to find the blanket and pull it more snugly around them to ward off the chill that is coming to touch the sweat on her skin and take the warmth they'd made.
After she does so, with a quiet curiosity: ]
Do you hate to be cold?
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He's not sure he does right now, honestly. ]
It's... it doesn't bother me, exactly.
[ He sighs, settling underneath her and the blankets. It's a complicated thing, isn't it? But she's asking and he feels no particular need to lie to her about it. A strange thing, that, and one he will turn over in his mind... later, maybe. ]
It is a reminder. That I am not what I was raised to believe I was. That I'm not Asgardian but Jotun, an ice giant. [ A scoff. ] Not a particularly large one, however.
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She misses seeing himโ the shifting beauty of his eyes with their blues and greens and sharpness and innocence, self-satisfaction and confidence and hesitance and wonder; the little private game of new-and-old she is playing with the shapes of his body, the way his hair curls, all the little fleeting expressions and the ones that form and stay.
But she likes the way it draws them close and makes speech softer, as if they were being mindful of the resting sun. The way difficult words come easier, spoken into the small space without worrying about what they might see in the other upon the hearing. And she likes the other ways it makes her see; how it means she learns him with fingertips and breath. The curve of his collarbone, of throat, of chin, of shoulder. The places where she can find the beat of his heart. Untangling the scent of him from battle and blood and leather and the ones she knows as her own and trying to breathe only that.
She will miss, she thinks when he replies, the blankets in summer. The way her husband's comfort was far too warm, and the way it became hers because all of her comfort was him. ]
Does that matter? [ Clarification: ] The last.
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It would matter to them.
[ It's almost funny, how he was not accepted by Asgardians as one of their own (mostly because of his own behavior, he supposes, but also because he wasn't) but also probably wouldn't have survived very long on Joutenheim either. Unless they, or Laufey, suddenly developed a tolerance for small giants with magical abilities.
Seems unlikely, to him. ]
Considering my biological father left me to die, it would probably matter a great deal.
[ A beat. ]
I killed him. Later, of course, not as an infant.
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She does not think they would keep him now. Not as he had grown.
He could have gone to the Vashoth when he knew, if he had wished itโ the life of a mercenaryโ but he had been raised a human, would be an outsider there as well.
And this man; no welcome at his birth, little enough as he grew. Outside, always. They are made alone everywhere they go.
Maybe if he could not belong to the world, the world belonging to him was the closest thing there was. If love would not give, he would take with fear. Had she not chosen the same?
Alexandrie wriggles herself upwards along Loki's body until she can settle again with her head against his, nose against his cheek beside his ear, hand coming up to settle against the other side. Breathes there, thinks I will be your home from somewhere so deep in her chest that it makes her eyes water, though she does not cry.
After a moment there, a little hoarse: ]
What did it mean to you, to do so?
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Alexandrie shifts, climbing his torso, and he moves his arm aside to allow her to make herself comfortable once more. Once she's settled his hand returns to fingers against her spine, though this time they're still. No patterns, no distractions. Just the sound of her breathing and his, the feel of her breath warm against his skin.
Her question surprises him; complex in its simplicity. Not what happened, or even why, but what did it mean? That her voice is hoarse makes him worry he's been too forthright, telling her these things, but.
But.
There's something to be said for sharing even the darkest parts of oneself. Of hearing someone else's voice in response to the terrible things he's done, and not hear judgment. Concern, perhaps, which is an odd and complicated feeling, but not judgment.
He swallows. ]
I told myself it was to prove my loyalty. To Odin, my father. To Asgard. That if I orchestrated their downfall while Odin slept, he'd have no choice but to finally see me, regard me as worthy in the same way that Thor was regarded as worthy.
[ He hesitates. Takes a breath. That is not what she asked, exactly. ]
It was revenge. In a very nice package, mind, with quite the bow, but still. For being abandoned, left to die. For being not good enough to keep.
[ The word 'considered' was probably supposed to go in there somewhere, right? ]
no subject
She had thought so often of vengeance, but she had never gotten Rolant. His two cronies who had laughed with him she had. One killed in a duel of her orchestration, one ruined so thoroughly he'd fled the court. She'd thought she would be happy, but she wasn't. Vicious, manic, drunk on the power she'd been denied perhaps, but not made whole. She thought she would, if she could get Rolant. He'd burned to death in the civil war and she had been so angry, so denied.
All these years later she'd found him living, having faked it all. Thought about it again, and felt nothing. Knew it wouldn't matter. Ripping out the heart that made her nothing would not undo what he had done. ]
Did it work?
[ It is gentle, careful, because she knows his answer. Knows its bitter taste. Knows it is the same as hers.
Gutting someone else has never stopped the bleeding. All it means is everyone dies. ]
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It occurs to him that Odin's acceptance of himself is simply a memory of a recording from the TVA, not even a memory of his own making. It twists in his chest, brings his breathing up short. ]
Definitely not.
[ He remembers how he'd felt, in that moment. Devastated, empty, like none of it had mattered, like he hadn't mattered. He closes his eyes and remembers the rushing silence of the abyss before the wormhole, and how he'd been willing to let that be it. Allow his story to end there.
Then it hadn't. Because Lokis are survivors, or perhaps because he was too weighted with the glorious purpose of proving himself worthy. To Odin, to everyone.
The words 'I tried to die' are on the tip of his tongue but he can't bring himself to say them. He hasn't tried since then, not really, but something about that acceptance of the nothing that may follow never really leaves him. He survives, and he fights, but that little part of him is never truly gone. ]
no subject
They had crawled out of it together, she and her husband, blinking into the sun of what it meant to have given their hearts to someone who wanted them. What it had meant to be loved. What it had meant to let themselves be loved.
Here in the dark she tightens her hold and presses her lips to that space just in front of this Loki's ear and silently promises she will go back for him. She would go back a thousand times.
And he had told her where to find him when they met. That his truth is in his leaving, that he is still left there. It is living in his name.
Tender, and carefulโ so carefulโ when she reaches. ]
And Laufey's son, more than Odin's?
no subject
It's quiet outside and warm in here, beneath the blankets and tangled up in her, but he feels cold and a little hollow. Like there is a fire that can't quite reach the corners of the room it's lit within.
That fire is, of course, the redhead in his arms. ]
It seemed... more honest. Thor is Odin's son; I am not.
I don't know, [ he says, and his voice is tired. A small bit afraid. If he is not Odin's son or Laufey's son, then whose is he? Is he no one's at all? Maybe it's foolish to be this concerned with a naming convention, but that doesn't make it any less important in his personal cosmology. ]
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[ Her hand movesโ tracing along the side of his face to smooth the hair at his temple, back again to his cheek, and she leans to brush her nose against his. ]
But I will hold you, as you learn.
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Possibly as much as he can promise her forever, he realizes. Asking would do nothing to soothe him. They have no control over the future, he knows that. They can only control how they respond to it, and possibly poorly at that. ]
You're too kind. [ It sounds like a joke but it isn't. ]
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[ She winces into closing her eyes at what feels like a withdraw; too far. She'd pushed too far. ]
And I am not always now.
[ Even softer, slightly pained: ]
Is it kind, do you think? To see you and to be so desperate to be close, to be wanted, to be held, to be loved again, that I will press my hands into every wound I think you have to show I know you?
I have thrown myself upon you with my weight of years, and tried to press them into hours so I might have you not in future, but right now. Have pulled a flower open because I wept with want of its bloom, Iโ
[ A bare whisper, now: ]
I cannot think it kind.
no subject
He had told Mobius that no one was completely good, or evil, and he thinks of that now. Kindness, and unkindness, are not quite the same dichotomy but it feels... similar. Even murderers can be kind. Even the gentlest soul can do harm. ]
What do I really know of kindness? [ He asks her honestly. ] Too much and I distrust it. Turn away from it.
I'm unused to it.
Besides which, you didn't promise me kindness. You promised me honesty, and you promised me now, and as much as I don't want to sour you on me I'm terrified that if I don't, something else will, and I'll be even more unprepared for it than I am in this moment.
[ She said she wanted forever, and he thinks he wants that too. Is afraid of what it will mean if he isn't granted it. If he has it only for a moment just to have her turn away. ]
I'm a sharp and dangerous thing. I've cut you on purpose and now without even intending and you've done me no harm.
no subject
They were different hands, but it's too late now by far for her to take it back, and every moment she believes he holds it precious in his chest next to his own means she is safe again forever and every moment she does not is one in which her body knows she is abandoned. That it isn't the same, won't be the same, he does not love her, will not love herโ
But the simplicity of a kiss for her nose and she is quiet again. Able to listen to him speak without the rising howl of wind behind it.
She takes a breath, long and deep, looks at him as if even in the darkness he could see the firmness of her truth in it. ]
I have held the blade that sometimes bleeds; have chosen it, knowing it will, and chosen it with joy.
[ Softer, then: ] I am not afraid of what you are. Only afraid that you will see I bleed and turn away to save me in a way I do not wish for.
I will not ask for trust, but I will ask for this: that you will not leave me when I love the parts of you that you cannot. That you will not leave me when you fear I will leave you and your only choice in it is when.
no subject
It is hot and bright and terrifying.
Her words cut him to the quick because it is what he would do โ leave her in anticipation of being left, turn away because he's hurt her too greatly and surely, surely, she will tire of him and his shenanigans.
He's tired of them.
Loki can feel her gaze upon him in the dark, waiting for his answer. ]
Du har mitt ord. Even if I am afraid, I won't turn away from you. [ A breath, shakier than he'd like. Can he do this? Will he manage to keep his word? ] But I can't promise I won't be afraid.
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I am afraid too.
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What do you do, to stop feeling afraid?
[ Is there a cure? Probably not. But everyone does something. ]
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[ Little quiet puffs of mirthful air come from her nose. ]
When I rage, it covers up the fear. I feel it less, but it is always there.
[ She squeezes back. ]
Speak of it, and then be held and told it is not real. Or at the very least, that I am not alone.
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[ Besides which, his shrieking would bring someone to the tent, surely, and Loki doesn't want that.
He brings their entwined hands up to his lips, where he can kiss her fingers. ]
I'm afraid something terrible is going to happen. That just when I begin to feel certain in this, in you, that it's going to be taken away from me.
And I don't know what I'll do, then.
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I cannot say it will not.
But I can say that if it does, it will notโ
[ She chokes on it, and suddenly her voice is rough with emotion because she believes. She still believes that if her lord, her love, her Loki, the man whose House and name she bears, had had a choice in it, he would be home. ]
It will not be a thing that I have chosen. And wherever we may be, I weep for you.
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Neither of them are children after all and they've already lost so much. ]
Don't weep too long, [ he tells her quietly, seriously. ] You've cried enough over me just today.
[ He wants to promise her that whatever happens, he'll make the attempt. Try to reach her, to reconnect, to... something.
But he's not sure he can promise that, all things considered, and he'd rather not lie to her right now. ]
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I will weep as long as I need to.
It is how I keep my promise of forever on my own.
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