Finally caught up with the last three episodes of 12 Monkeys. I love this show like I love the sun. It brings light, vitamin D, and a nice tanning method. Maybe the similarities arenât quite what I thought, but you get the picture.
I love, like, everyone on the show. Considering I started out with just a crush on Otter Eyes, my adoration has grown exponentially. Sign them up for season three already.
So does no one think that the Witness is actually a somehow-alive Aaron sent completely round the twist from his experiences with Cassie/Cole/being burnt to death?
Oh man, I am strangely digging the Cole/Cassie/Deacon dynamic. I mean, I know how I feel about it, but Iâm not sure about how I feel about how I feel about it, if you catch my drift. Mostly, even though Iâm such a Cole/Cassie shipper, I 100% approve of the writers doing different things with the relationships on this show. Please, continue to throw curve balls. You guys are awesome.
Turn Back Skies // Cassie/Cole // coda for 2x02 // PG
Cole canât unmake Cassie, the way she is now. But at least they have a party to look forward to.
In the wake of it all, everything feels a little pointless.
Time travel. 2044. Being tethered, sling-shotting through time and space. Blinking out of existence, and into it. Lights flickering.
He wonders if she hates the pain, when she alights out of the time stream and into the chair in the midst of the machine. Or if she has grown to accept it, as he has, apart from the arched back and the gritted teeth. If it comes with a cold certainty instead of a lick of flame.
He canât ask her.
Well, he could. He could break down the wall he feels that heâs been beating against, and just say everything he wants to say. Is this it, then? he wants to know, a bit passive-aggressively. Everything we went through, when I came to your time, is all for nothing, now that youâve come to mine.
Or he could say, maybe, Youâre not supposed to be here. Even though itâs his fault that she is. Anyway what he means is, Youâre not supposed to be like this. Like me.
What he wants to say, what he wants to ask, petulantly, is Arenât you even a little bit glad to see me?
None of this matters. He canât turn back skies; he canât unmake Cassie from what she has become. Theyâve overshot each other, sliding back and forth along rogue timelines; there was a time when they were more alike, but itâs becoming a distant memory. Everything she does now leaves him with a bad taste in his mouth. He wants to celebrate her strength, but instead he just regrets the loss of her soft edges, her teasing him about his being enamored with her time and the ease of it. He misses who she was, before he happened to her. He doesnât know who she is, anymore.
Never be the same again, he thinks. He is turning bitter.
Heâs thinking too hard to listen, to pay attention to whatâs going on around him, and so he flinches away when she sits down next to him. She gives him a wary glance, judging him for it. He sighs.
âDonât do that,â he says.
âDonât do what?â
âAssume things.â
She turns away from him, and he feels the need to explain.
âYou look at me like you think living in your time has made meâ soft, or something.â
Cassie holds her mouth open a bit, while she thinks.
âMisguided,â she says. âI think youâre misguided. I think youâve lost sight of what really matters.â He shakes his head, but doesnât say anything. âBesides,â she goes on, âif you were going to get soft, my time would be the one to do it. Iâve seen you in the presence of cheeseburgers. Nothing like a life of ease and unlimited access to drive-through.â
He turns back to see her smiling at him, unexpectedly. Itâs unexpected for him, but it looks as though it is unexpected for her, too. It looks as though she is doing it against her will.
Iâve missed you, he thinks. I miss you. He clears his throat.
What comes out of his mouth is not what he has planned.
âWhen I sent you forward,â he says, âyou thought you would never see me again. You thought you were going to die.â
She turns away again, drops her eyes to the floor.
âIt doesnât matter,â she says. âI didnât. You saved my life.â
Her voice is cool.
âSorry about the time period,â he says. âThings are pretty rough here.â
Her eyes on his, briefly but heavily, and she bites her lip.
âItâs beenâ an education,â she says. âI wantâ I want to talk to you about it. I want to tell you everything that happened. Some time. Some other time. Not now.â She lifts one shoulder in a half-shrug. âAnyway, I found something important here.â
âYeah?â
âA purpose,â she says.
The echo of it, the ghost of it, jolts his memory into action. But it isnât the purpose that he thinks of. Jennifer is right, he thinks; she doesnât love me. Not now. And that isnât what time travel is for; thatâs what living is for. Plodding. One foot in front of the other.
Heâs always been better at that, anyway.
Not now. Not yet.
He feels something odd, something foreign, something sweet in the way her tentative smile echoes at the back of his teeth, lurks at the root of his tongue: hope. A baseless hope, unexplainable and undefined, but hope nonetheless. Everything changes, Cole. Everything and everyone.
I know.
âAre you ready for this?â he says.
âNo,â she says. âBut letâs go anyhow.â
He thinks of the picture, the one theyâre about to go and create: the two of them, side by side, arms around each other. He thinks of her smile.
Aloud, he says, âIâm pretty sure we end up at a party. At least weâve got something to look forward to.â
She does him the delicacy of not bringing up the last party they went to. Not the getting in trouble, or beating someone up, and not, God forbid, the tandoori skewers.
âOr backward,â is all she says, but thatâs just Cassie being precise. She isnât arguing. She stands up, and doesnât reach for his hand. But he stands up beside her, and their shoulders are on a level. They are on the same side.
I need to get a dog. I have been so emotionally screwed since I had to put Ricky down last June, and now itâs been close to a year and I still go on random crying jags every couple of days. I am better at human-ing when I have a non-human who loves me.
okay maybe this is just me but like when youâre deep inside of a good book but forced to put it down for a bit does the outside world seem weird and soft and like you find yourself thinking in the authorâs voice and even after youâre done with the book thereâs like this âbook hangoverâ where youâre still in the writerâs world and seeing the characters and hearing the narrator and stuff feels⊠different âŠ.
Yes, I did watch the premiere of season 2 of Twelve Monkeys, and I have this to say about that. Infodumping galore? You betcha. A little clunky dialogue? Natch. Still worth watching? Absolutely. I love time travel, I love Cole and Jennifer and Ramse, and I am still digging this show. Also, Todd Stashwick is hot, pass it on.
If, next time someone talks about time moving around the time traveler, someone could mention how that explains why Coleâs adorable scruff never changes, Iâd appreciate it. Like, Cassie could ask him why he never shaves, and he says plaintively âBecause itâll never grow back unless I go back to 2043,â and she can ask whatâs so wrong with that, and Ramse can say, âBecause he looks like a twelve year old.â
12 Monkeys // Cassie/Cole // PG-13-ish // Coda for 1x12
Before Cassie wakes up to see him smiling at her, this happens.
âThere are other foods in the world beside cheeseburgers, Cole,â she says, and he shakes his head.
âBelieve it when I see it,â he tells her. Which sounds like a challenge.
She takes him home. As she drives, she sneaks glances at him now and then, sidelong looks, afraid to break the silence. Heâs staring out the window, and she canât read his expression. How does he feel about this, this being stuck in 2015? She canât really believe that he could regret the loss of his real life, but who is she to know? Heâs been through a lot since he started his mission. Heâs been through a lot since he was a boy, since she found him on the swings. Her heart twists a little, awkwardly, erratically, to think of that sweet-eyed boy.
He turns to look at her and catches her eyeing him, and his mouth twitches into a smile as though he canât help himself.
âWe should talk,â he says.
Cassie heaves a deep breath, and grips the steering wheel more firmly in both hands. White-knuckled.
âYes,â she says, voice heavy with portent. âWe should.â
âAbout dinner,â says Cole, cutting her dramatics off at the root, and when she looks at him again heâs grinning, that loose and easy grin that sheâs only seen a handful of times, inviting her to respond in kind. She faces front again, and smiles at a stop light.
âThere are other foods in the world beside cheeseburgers, Cole,â she says, and he shakes his head.
âBelieve it when I see it,â he tells her. Which sounds like a challenge.
âWe have a lot to do,â she says, notwithstanding that. âWeâve got so much to figure out, still. Whatâs our next move?â
âEating,â says Cole. âDrive-thru if you want.â He sounds a little hopeful.
âButââ
âNot tonight, Cassie.â
She makes a right turn.
âAlright,â she says. âIf youâre sure.â
She takes him home: because he has nowhere else to go, for one thing, and because she wants him there, wants him there a little fiercely. He needs to come home and clean up and eat and sleep and she will take care of him. She reaches out to take his hand again, and he lets her willingly, folding his fingers around hers and putting his other hand on top.
âYou must be exhausted,â she says.
âNever too tired to eat.â She doesnât think thatâs true, but sheâs not going to question it.
She squeezes his hand.
âYouâre here now,â she says, because she can barely believe it. He looks down at her hand, wrapped in both of his.
âHere,â Cole says. âNow.â
He follows her closely as she unlocks the door. There wasnât much point to locking it, of courseâ her windows are nothing but dark tarps taped over the gaping holes where glass used to be, and it would be the simplest thing in the world to break in. But old habits die hard.
âWe shouldnât stay here,â she says. âIâll get us a hotel room.â
âI want to see,â he says.
He follows her into the front room, stands for a moment with his hands at his sides and regards the marks on the floor, the eye of the blast. It throbs like a migraine to Cassie, and she canât imagine how he feels. But he seems curiously disassociated, somehow; heâs standing right there beside her, but she can see in his eyes that he has gone somewhere else.
She clears her throat.
âThe upstairs is fine,â she says. âI guess weâll be safe enough if I lock the stairwell door. Weâll get a hotel tomorrow.â She takes his hand and leads him towards the stairs. âGo and take a shower. Iâll make something to eat and itâll be ready when you get out.â
He pretends to sniffle a little and says, âThatâs the most beautiful sentence Iâve ever heard,â as he drops her hand and heads for the stairs. She canât catch a glimpse of his eyes before he leaves. She wonders if heâs come back yet, from whereverâ wheneverâ he goes. She thinks briefly of calling after him, asking him if he will shaveâ just for the noveltyâ but decides against it. Let him make up his mind what he wants to look like.
She makes him spaghetti, with a jar of sauce because itâs easier, quicker. She doesnât imagine heâll linger long enough in the shower to give her time to make anything from scratch. She makes three trips up the stairsâ with wine and glasses, with bottles of water, and finally with the pasta. A one-course meal. She doesnât think heâll complain. Thereâs cheese for on top.
Heâs still in the shower. She goes down for another couple bottles of wine, double-checks that she hasâ pointlesslyâ locked the door, and returns up the stairs. She locks the stairwell door behind her, and tries to feel safe, but the feeling eludes her. She canât remember it, she thinks, thatâs probably the problem. Maybe she wouldnât recognize it.
Heâs left a few changes of clothes here over the past several trips, and she takes him a clean shirt, soft grey trousers, underwear. He tells her to come in immediately when she knocks on the door.
He hasnât shaved, as it turns out, and sheâs briefly filled with a sense of disappointment. She thinks heâd look very young underneath the stubble, even younger than he looks with it. But would she know him? She would, she thinksâ sheâs seen him as a child, and there again that now-familiar heart-twist. Thereâs a towel wrapped around his waist but all she can see is the scars on his torso, his arms and shouldersâ bullet holes. Knife wounds. Angry arcs of a violent past.
She averts her eyes and hands him the clothes.
âDinnerâs ready.â
His eyes glow.
âIâll hurry,â he says, and she half expects him to drop the towel and start dressing with her still standing there. But he doesnât, just stands and waits politely as she leaves. Itâs all of forty-five seconds before he emerges, though, still tugging down his shirt. His hair is wet and clings to his forehead. She makes a grandiose gesture in the direction of the sitting room, where the spaghetti is on the little table in front of the sofa.
âGo ahead,â she says.
âYou too?â
âI need a shower more than I need the food, at this point. Go eat. Iâll be fast.â
He looks at her a little uncertainly but heads for the sitting room. She takes her pajamas in with her and closes the door, and stands and breathes in the steam for a moment.
She has promised to be fast but she canât help but linger in the hot water, letting it undo the knots in her muscles, wash away the blood. Sheâs not crying, though. Crying would be ludicrous. Theyâre doing all they can. Theyâll get through this somehow.
Cole is here with her. She canât cry when heâs right outside the door.
She canât help it, thoughâ her eyes well up a little when she emerges into the sitting room and finds that he has been waiting for her, patiently. She canât speak, can only look at him.
He gives an embarrassed little shrug.
âNeeded the company more than I needed the food,â he says.
They sit beside each other on the little sofa, and they eat, and they drink, and it takes all of two bites before Cole declares spaghetti to be his new favorite thing. She laughs and eats and drinks and talks and puts aside the fact that, all protestations to the contrary, he is in fact looking at her as though she is his new favorite thingâ old favorite thing? She doesnât know what the proper terminology is. She saw him as a child this afternoon, and here he is beside her as an adult, and the really ludicrous thing isâ or maybe it makes the most sense, in the endâ both versions make her heart twist within her as though something is trying to get out. She knows that she is looking at him with a softness that is undeniable and impossible to ignore. She canât stop. Cole has made her soft. She feels as though something is growing, as though she could sprout and flower.
Heâs looking down.
She adjusts her robe a little, self-consciously.
âWhat?â
âYour legs,â he says, staring a little. âThey look so smooth.â
âOught to be, with my lotion budget,â she says, and takes another drink from her wineglass. âYou look like youâve never seen a woman with shaved legs before.â
âNot really a major concern after the apocalypse,â he says.
âOh.â Sheâs quiet for a moment, then lifts her feet and puts them in his lap, over his lap, shuffles down and sideways a little till her back is against the arm of the couch and sheâs stretched out over it. His hands are on her immediately, before she can think about the wisdom of what she has done, and he runs his palms down her calves, trailing his fingertips afterwards. He shakes his head and sucks in a breath and Cassie canât look away from him.
âIâm sorry,â she says.
âDonât be sorry. Why are you sorry?â He sounds a little angry, a little wounded, and he follows it up with, âIs that what this is? Is this pity?â
âNo.â
âBecause if it is,â says Cole, tracing his fingers up the back of her leg, âIâll take it.â
âItâs not pity. Itâsâ an error in judgement, maybe.â But she doesnât move. She feels hypnotized now, and everything is far away except for herself, and Cole. âIâm sorry, Iâ I canât quite believe that youâre actually here. That youâre staying here.â
âIâm not going anywhere,â says Cole, âever.â He slides his arms under her leg, palms flat and fingers splayed, and lifts it toward him. It looks a little weirdâ his bare forearms wrapped around her bare legâ and it feels a little weird. The arch of her foot is pressed against his bicep, and itâs like standing on a rock. He is unyielding. He turns toward her and rests his cheek against the bare skin of her leg, and closes his eyes.
She wants to laugh, but opts not to. Probably wise, she congratulates herself. Besides, in order to laugh you need to be able to breathe, and breathing is proving a little difficult at the moment.
âGood,â she says, breathlessly.
She reaches over and runs a hand through his hair, clean now and soft and smelling like her own shampoo, and he gives her a look of disbelief, as though he is not now half wrapped around her leg with his lips just under the dimple of her patella and the fingers of his right hand making slow circles in the hollow of her knee. Something unknownâ nerves or giddiness or panicâ loosens her mouth.
âThe world is wonderful,â she says, â2015 is wonderful. I mean apart from having to try and prevent the apocalypse, and losing your friends and loved ones to terrifying strangers who need to get more sunshine. Apart from that. The world is full of good things. This should never end.â
âPreaching to the choir,â he mutters against her knee, and she panic-laughs, a high-pitched thing that she regrets immediately. But he doesnât seem to notice, he is wrapped up in her, wrapped up around her, and she sits forward and pulls her legs back and when she is done with that, they are practically nose to nose.
He looks away first, and she lets out a breath.
âWhat?â
âI thought you were going to kiss me or something,â she says, laughing.
He glances at her, looks embarrassed, briefly, looks away from her. âIâ I want to. I do. But.â His eyes are on hers again. He lifts a hand to touch her hair and shies away at the last moment. âBut I wantââ
âWhat, Cole,â she says, gently. âWhat do you want?â
âI want you to be happy,â he says, finally, closing his eyes. âYouâre sad now, withâ everything. If I kiss you, I want you to be happy. Itâsââ He makes a face. âStupid.â
Sheâs silent long enough that he finally opens his eyes to look at her, and she smiles at him.
âI am happy,â she says. âEven withâ everything. Iâm happy that youâre here.â
But he still doesnât kiss her. Maybe he doesnât believe her. She wonders how she can convince him when the lights flicker and dim, just slightly, and they both send hunted glances upward, as though someoneâs calling him home.
âNo,â says Cassie, but she says it under her breath, and she hopes at first that he doesnât notice, that he hasnât heard. But he heaves a sigh after a moment, and she can feel him relax.
âNo,â he agrees. He rubs his eyes with both hands. âWeâve got a lot to do tomorrow.â
âYes,â she says. Save the world. Figure us out. Which one is going to be more difficult? âWe should go to bed.â
âIâll tell ya, becoming a living paradox really takes it out of a guy.â
âCome on.â She stands up, takes his hand and tugs him up beside her. âI hope you donât snore.â
He gives a half-hearted glance at the sofa, she notices, but doesnât even protest as she leads him toward her bedroom. The bed is plenty big enough for them both. They wonât even have to cuddle. She directs him to the right side of the bed, meanders around it to the other and pulls down the covers.
âWhat are you going to do about it, if I do?â
âDonât test me, Mr. Cole.â
âWouldnât dream of it.â
She pauses in the act of fluffing her pillow and looks at him. âWhat do you dream about?â
âUsually I try not to. I dunno.â He shrugs, sits down on the bed. âYou, maybe.â Â A shy, guarded glance upwards at her. âThat alright?â
She hesitates, then smiles.
âThatâs alright,â she says. âThatâs fine by me.â
Thereâs a little restraint, a little awkwardness as they settle down side by side, but once she turns off the bedside lamp and everything is dark around them, she feels that she can breathe. Heâs disappeared into the darknessâ the way he always disappearsâ and the only flickers in the light are when she closes her eyes. She thinks about sunshine. She thinks about the world ending, and beginning again. She stops thinking.
She must be dreaming. Good things are happeningâ the good things she has promised Cole still exist, here in her time. There is sunshine and life and meadows instead of woods, brooks instead of oceans, and here she is in her bed and someone is leaned over her, and his hair brushes her cheek.
âThis is a good dream,â she murmurs.
âHappy?â whispers the darkness.
She doesnât speak, only nods, but heâs close enough, he can feel it. He puts his mouth on hers, and thereâs sunshine and life and meadows and brooks there, too, the echoes of themâ she can hear them calling like years from the past, like everything that happened to turn her into who she is. She lets it be, lets it grow and flower, and twines around him like ivy.
So I watched the first episode of the Twelve Monkeys and got ambushed by Cole/Cassie. What is this ship. I was not expecting this. No one warned me there would be ship.
This happened to me also. Not that I had heard much about the syfy show before diving in, but it completely tackled me unawares. And there is hardly any fic which mystifies, considering⊠everything. There also be too much of an active fandom, at least in this long hiatus, so Iâve basically been suffering in solitary ship-ness. Welcome aboard lol?
So I make 11? *thumbs up* Well, Iâm three and a half episodes in, and I feel the beady little eyes of a fanfic staring at the back of my head. Lurking. Rubbing its hands together in fiendish glee.