Partially inspired by @bellygunnr ’s fic and descriptions of the atrium on the Infinity, have a bunch of words that came from me listening to Black Pear Tree on repeat for a week.
It got sad and also somehow turned into 1500 words. This is between Canon halo 4 and 5 before the Argent Moon mission and Something has happened Offscreen, that may be revealed later. Very early in the au timeline.
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The stars visible through the atrium window of the UNSC Infinity look nothing like the ones that shone above Reach.
The constellations are wrong and the branching arm of the Milky Way lights up the sky in warm hues. Reach was different. Clear skies and a deep ocean of space as the backdrop for pinpricks of light sparkling through the rich tapestry of blue-black.
Reach had mountain ranges and wind and so much greenery. Here there was no wind, just cycled air, mimicking the feeling of a breeze on his naked face. The bench beneath him creaked under his weight as he leaned back and took in the view. Stars overhead and greenery around him, yes, but the cold gray walls that enveloped the space reminded him where he was. Another ship, another steel coffin. The Infinity was massive. The lead ship of her class and called the culmination of human achievement. John had hesitantly begun to think of her as home. But that didn’t change the lessons he had learned again and again. Spartans didn’t win in space. Equipment could fail.
The unfamiliar constellations winked at him, distant and cold. He wondered if the stars above Reach would fade from his mind like the stars he saw as a child had. John couldn’t remember much from before the coin toss, and he had told himself that was fine.
There was the mission, and the next one. He had his orders and would follow them and complete his missions his own way before marching back into cryo and waiting for the next time they needed him. He’d face down the cold, claustrophobic embrace and dreamless darkness.
Mendez had pushed him to lead his Spartans to victory. He was fine to keep moving. Insurrectionists, Covenant, Flood, Forerunners, Banished. There was always a new threat, never a moment’s rest and he needed to be ready. John was a Spartan and team leader.
He was the first to try the armor, first to jump into battle, and now he’s always last. Out of place and out of time, years and people gone that he could never get back. His own teammates were almost strangers.
He was an aging spartan, a relic compared to the new blood. They may be undisciplined and cocky, but soon they’d have to do.
Too many fast thaws and hard landings. Ceramic bones didn’t stop joint pain. A huff escapes him as he comes back to himself, incredibly aware of the bench beneath him digging into tired muscle and aching bones.
He’s slowed enough that introspection caught up. John has tried to shove it all back down, but this isn’t an enemy he can beat.
It’s him. His body and mind catching up and taking stock. Apparently constant repression of trauma and loss does not lead anywhere good. He’s listless and agitated when they don’t let him go on missions and after the altercation, he’s shipbound.
Some days he wants to scream and break things, and other times he wants it all to stop.
Most days, he just wants the familiar back. Even when he knew deep down it was bad, he knew how to get through it. He has to beat this somehow. It’s hurting his team and making him lose control and confidence.
So he sits in the memorial park and hopes that he can breathe and ground himself. John lists the names he can remember in his head, feels the earth under his feet, and imagines the cycled air is a breeze and not recycled air from a pump keeping them all alive in this metal coffin.
He wonders if his therapist would call what he’s doing processing or moping. Their next session is still a few days away, and he isn’t cleared to use the gyms yet. Roland is kind enough to check on him during his nightly patrols when he can’t sleep, but the atrium is his space. Even Blue Team knows to let him be when he comes here. Kelly will still be nearby, planning her runs so she can keep an eye on him without smothering him.
He’s about to leave when he hears quiet cursing and rustling branches off in the distance.
As he stands he spots two gardeners struggling with a large sapling, and he heads over without really thinking about it.
“Move it, Harris, but be careful of the root cluster! I swear if--” They stop as they notice him approaching. Harris still has their back to him, but is quick to set the tree down in the freshly dug hole and turn and salute, for some reason.
“Harris, what the hell are you doing?” Harris has left them with all of the tree’s weight as it tips back towards them.
“What’s it look like, Murphy? I’m saluting! You never know who’s on a ship this big, gotta show respect.” Harris spits over his shoulder, before realizing he’s left Murphy wrestling with the weight of the tree.
John watches him turn and jump to help Murphy, and moves closer as they both attempt to move the sapling.
“Need help?” He asks, voice rough and quiet. The gardeners pause, and share a look before answering at the same time.
“Sure!”
“No, we’ve got it, sir.”
Harris and Murphy scowl at each other, but before it goes any further, John reaches over and lifts the sapling.
He straightens it with ease, before lowering it slowly into place. They scramble out of the way to secure it and fill in the gaps with soil. He breathes in the scent of growth and damp earth and relaxes slightly. It’s a little overwhelming without the filters from the armor. Once again he’s struck by all the green, and the new growth he has clutched in his grip. Its bark is thin and young, but digs into his palm all the same.
“What kind is it?” John asks them as they finish filling the hole and set up a support stake near the sapling. He’d been on so many planets and seen so many trees, they all blurred together, but this one was sticking out. Old memories blur like static on a corrupted message with flashes of afterimages burned into his brain.
“It’s one of those cedars from Reach, bit like Earth’s trees, but hardier.” Harris answers as he dusts himself off and Murphy collects their gear. “Got several different species from Reach.”
He points towards a copse of trees near where the path forked. Harris hasn’t noticed that John froze at the mention of Reach, but Murphy had. They had finished gathering the gear, and walked up to grab Harris before he started again.
“Thanks for your help, Uh--” Murphy hesitates.
“John.” He chokes out. He’s still staring at the tree. His hands still touching the bark.
“Thank you, John. Harris and me will be on our way. Take all the time you need, sir.” They drag Harris away by the elbow. Harris shoots one more confused look over his shoulder and waves before they both disappear around the bend.
John inhales and holds it for a moment. He traces the bark, eyes falling on the patterns of the bark and the faded augmentation scars. Reaching up, he touches the fragile young leaves with unsteady hands. New growth from a dead planet. A swell of complicated emotion rises in his gut and he huffs a breath through his nose.
Growth and change. He was sick of those words being thrown at him. Progress slipped from his grasp and felt no closer to leaving this prison of a ship than when he started. Confined to the Infinity and pacing his newest cage left him both claustrophobic and exposed. No missions meant no armor, and his access to hangars and other access points was restricted so he couldn’t even watch his marines come and go on missions.
Blue Team had stopped accepting missions in some twisted sense of solidarity. They weren’t under the same orders, the same punishment. Of course not, they didn’t --, he didn’t mean--
They didn’t put themselves in the infirmary. He did.
John pulls his hands away before he damages the sapling. He’s shaking and his heart is pounding in his ears.
It’s a small thing, probably only a few years old, so it never saw Reach itself. Never stood near the tree where Blue Team stood and Sam carved their mark.
They had been so young.
And then decades later, they returned with one missing. A new mark carved into the glassed wasteland that was once their home.
Will you trust me now? Will you follow me?
He had asked them that, and then he almost killed them all. Working himself to death and dragging them down with him.
How could he ask them to follow him now?
John couldn’t. Maybe Master Chief could, but he hadn’t been seen in weeks.
John sat next to one of the last living remnants of his home and looked up at unfamiliar stars.
🌸- The first thing I thought of when I saw your username
It didn’t make any sense but it did at the same time. In other words, I thought it was really amazing.
✏️- Send me any one word and I'll write a haiku about it
Sure, where’s the word?
Since there is no word,
I’ve decided to write this.
Very poetic.
💌- An honest compliment about your blog
Everything, it’s all perfect and there’s nothing boring on your blog.
🤠- Ask me any "have you ever" and I have to respond honestly (I've got friends keeping me in check, don't worry)
You sent another ask with the question “have you ever snuck out of your house”.
The answer is no because how the fuck do I even do that and where do I go, I have no friends. And how am I supposed to leave the house when my parents probably have cameras tracking my every move, they don’t trust me.