( at the truff-fuel stop. 03 )
- but oddly enough, it doesn’t connect.
The grip is back on your arm, now, holding your form above the concrete by inches. So caught off-guard by this - this motion of being jerked back from an impact you were bracing for, and your glasses have definitely slipped off ahead of you, and you absently grab them with your free hand - it almost shakes you out of realizing that there’s still someone touching you, their fingers tight and strong on your shoulder.
Almost. The grip is like lightning tingling on your arm, on your scars, and as the person pulls you back upright, you find yourself ripping it out of their protective grasp, turning your back in perhaps a sad attempt to save some sort of face. Trembling hands do their best to replace your glasses on your face, but your movement is difficult, clumsy and holding your spectacles like they were an earthquake.
It does suddenly become apparent to you, though, that the person behind you is speaking -
- and it drives your thoughts out, suddenly, the voice you hear.
Where before your own thoughts, they had been swarming continuously like a thousand corpse flies, like a thousand maggots to consume your charred husk, suddenly - there’s just this voice speaking now, not your own, and it’s -
“I, are ya gonna be okay there? “
It’s suddenly as if the panic from the car’s long screech had never existed, and a new sort of feeling (very similar) was enveloping you whole, a sensation you had never experienced before. (Or maybe had, once, but the memory had faded, because it was-) You became painfully aware of your position, of your being, of your sweat and tear-stained face and disheveled appearance, and that your back was turned to this person who had stopped your fall. (-a borrowed memory, a moment that had not taken place for you but it had taken place for you, but -)
And their voice continued, a lilt with eagerness in every word, even as you could tell they were doing their best attempt at cautious, god could you tell they were trying but it wasn’t in their nature initially, but they were trying and could learn, you knew this, you knew:
“It’s, ah, it’s gonna be okay! I don’t know what’s gotcha but, uh....”
You want to cry. You want to laugh. Your voice comes out, bypassing your brain first: “I’m fine”, you croak in an embarassing tone that sounds exactly like a lie, and the person lets out a small laugh that betrays that they believe it to be so as well. Your glasses have finally made it onto your face, though, and it occurs to you that you should probably turn around, to face this person. Even though your feet feel suddenly like they weigh ten times more and made of stone - you take two steps, one to the side and one to the side and then you’re facing this person, who stopped you from falling.
He, you think somewhat hysterically - his laugh is still on his face, in his eyes and mouth. He has a lit cigarette in his one hand, and the other - the one he had grabbed you with - is behind his own head, a sheepish gesture as he rubs it. “Ya sure?” he says back to you, eyes fixed on your pitiful form with doubt, but not harsh doubt - concern, you realize, a foreign sensation still to be on the receiving end of, even after years of it.
He continues: “I’m, ah, I’m sorry if I scared ya there... ya looked like ya were, uh, freakin’ out, ‘n I didn’t want ‘cha ta get hurt or nuffin’!” (A drastic understatement.) He gestures with his left hand, the smoke flittin through the night air. “Ya sure ya alright? Do ya need me ta, I’unno, call a doctah f’ya?”
No, you respond quietly. No, you don’t need a doctor.
He smiles more, sheepish and clearly confused. “Ya sure?” he says.