drowning || open
silverargentvalkyrie:
There was a weakness in Jeremy that Allison couldn’t bring herself to hate. Beneath all his layers of mundane angst, there was a real person suffering from the plague of the living. Death was the only surefire thing for people like them; those unaffected by the disease that came with being supernatural. Idealistically, death was a gift. A way to cap a beautiful life to only be greeted by the gates of the beyond. Yet, premature death came with an endless bout of grief for those left in their wake. Jeremy knew what loss felt like and she couldn’t hate him for understanding how shitty it felt to be on the receiving end. “Good because even if you did, I wouldn’t have cared. You need someone and I happen to be someone.” Even with nothing left to give, she wouldn’t leave him in the dust. Humans needed each other in this world.
“I guess you have but grief doesn’t care about distance or time. It’s not some quantified marathon of misery. Small bursts is enough for the universe to choke on it.” She scoffed. “Faking it makes other’s less uncomfortable. Isn’t that what we’re trying to do? Make everyone around us feel better because they can’t fix us–nor do they can to do so.”
“Because misery loves company, Jeremy. I am content with that because it means I won’t be alone.”
Jeremy nodded solemnly. He didn’t know what Allison being here really meant, but he was still glad that she was. There was a pain in Allison’s eyes, a darkness that had always intrigued him. Though once upon a time he might’ve played games with that darkness, he now found a simple comfort in it. He wasn’t sure if he could find the kind of darkness he would need to protect Elena yet. But at least there was someone beside him who he could relate to. Well, at least somewhat anyway.
His mind started to whir along a bit faster than he liked but he wasn’t going to pass up this opportunity. “Want to go find somewhere a little quieter?” He hoped she’d agree.
“You’re right. Feel like a dick now for trying to compare that pain. Guess practice doesn’t make perfect in this case anyway.” A humorless laugh slipped out as she offered him the entire point of this day. “Just another reason why I don’t believe in faking it. That’s their problem not mine. I know I’m a real ass hole but I don’t really care. Not sure if you’ve noticed.” He offered a small joke to bring the conversation towards a place of a bit more normalcy.
Her next words silenced him though. Jeremy had to admit he’d never thought about loss like this and it was refreshing to hear her perspective. “I take back what I said. You are better at this than me.” Jeremy sighed. “But, if it’s worth anything--and I can’t promise anything either but--you won’t have to be alone if I’m around.”









