futurefold:
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.”
The truths David is trying to spell out for him might not be any easier to say than they are for Jesse to hear, and some logical part of his brain acknowledges that. It just isn’t enough to restore feeling to his cold fingers, or erase the dread churning in his gut.
There’s no satisfaction in the thought that every doubt Jesse had wasn’t just the ugly whispers of paranoia. They hadn’t met by accident. David had dreamed him up, and then he’d come looking for him. It’s a thought he’d like to consider without that awful terror that has it’s claws in him, incapable of shaking the thought repeating in his head; David knows.
“You want to help?" His disbelief makes the words come out quick and sharp, the concept a foreign one. His mother raised him on horror stories and violent warnings, all wrapped in the guise of scripture.
“What’d you see? What do you...?" He can’t finish the question. Even now, he doesn’t dare ask David flat out what he might know about him. Still, he wants the band-aid ripped off, the quiet terror he feels given a name at least, instead of this uncertainty.
“Just tell me.”












