naephilim:
It’s easy for Jesse to accept, disbelief never registering when he himself wasn’t normal. David calls them not-dreams; he can fill in the blanks on his own what that might mean. Visions or prophecies, fortune telling or effortless prediction, he doesn’t really know what the right word might be, but without that doubt filtering his thought process only fear can follow.
It leaves him still, frozen in place even when David holds out a hand for his. He stares at it, gaze tracing the lines of his palm while he tries to remember how to breathe. His blood’s already running cold, tongue stuck to the roof of his mouth, fingers pressing tighter against the ceramic cup in his hands. Even that won’t warm him now, because this is how too many of his nightmares begin; someone knows. Even if David only knows half, or fragments, it’s already too much, and Jesse doesn’t have a fraction of that foresight.
He doesn’t know what happens next. Only what he imagines will, and those nightmares always end with him dead. Whatever trust he’d like to place in the boy in front of him, it’s too tenuous and fragile a concept to wrap his fingers around now.
He’s terrified to even ask the question waiting on his tongue. As if the second he gets an answer this whole room will simply collapse inwards and crush him, every carefully constructed wall rendered worthless. It’s only the awareness that it’s too late to run that has him unhinging his jaw, voice steadier than he feels.
“What did you see about me?”
David knows confessions are dangerous.
They’re promises, in a way. He hasn’t sworn himself over to a cause as unpredictable as Jesse since he first decided to work past his visions. But the truth is, this feels like more of a turn in his life than even his choice to alter the future–to very likely shorten his lifespan–and only God knows what else.
He just doesn’t have time to weigh in the other options. “The first time? It was complicated.” David speaks carefully, deliberate. He knows Jesse doesn’t do so well with cliffhangers–he probably wants to know he’ll be safe. At least they’re at his house.
“I didn’t know your face, but I knew you could use a hand. What I saw–” It wasn’t quite divine, but the aura he could see around Jesse emanated something otherworldly. “It was just you. Moving, I don’t know. You looked like trouble–and like fun.”
But he’s all talk, and there’s no reason to hold off the rest. “Last night, I think I saw something more. But you might want me to stick around a little longer when I tell you. Or... maybe not–but I can help.”














