limitless.
chapter nineteen.
wc: 1,974. original publish date: november 20, 2020.
There is an inevitable happiness that comes with falling in love. When all the worries and doubts and insecurities are stripped away, what is left is the knee-shaking nervousness, the stomach-wrenching elation, the childishly giddy happiness. Sometimes it feels like falling asleep at midnight or waking up with a smile. Sometimes it feels like standing thigh-deep in an icy ocean, waiting for a wave that never crashes. Sometimes all there is to be done is to wait for the wave to crash.
JFK's smile falls, but he tries to hide it from Van Gogh. Why didn't he say it back? Is he going to say it back?
All Van Gogh can do is stare up into JFK's green eyes, waiting for him to say something else. To change the subject. To take his response as something positive. To let it satisfy him. To move on.
A weak wave fizzes against the shoreline. The ocean draws back and the world is silent.
"I love you, Vincent," Kennedy says again, less sure of himself this time.
Van Gogh swallows, and there is a pause in conversation. "I am falling down a rabbit hole that I didn't even know existed and it's longer and darker than the one I fell through to get here."
Sometimes answers only make half a bit of sense. Sometimes that has to be good enough.
"And what's it like?" John asks. "The rabbit hole, that is."
"It's dark," Vincent replies on an exhale, never breaking eye contact.
Now Kennedy swallows. His grip on Van Gogh never loosens. "Do you like it there?"
"No," Vincent replies too quickly. "I want to fall through it. To feel my feet on the ground."
"You're afraid of the dark," JFK states.
"I'm afraid of the dark," Vinnie agrees.
A wave slams up against the boys' legs, more powerful than the first one. It fizzes out against the shore, spitting sea foam across the sand.
"Kiss me," Vincent says. "Kiss me like you mean it. Kiss me like we're in love."
"We are in love," JFK protests, but his voice is small.
Van Gogh stares up at John, his eye contact so intense that JFK thinks about breaking it. He blinks, and for a split second, he considers turning his head away. But he doesn't. He sees it through.
"It's really dark in here."
"And you're afraid of the dark."
Van Gogh wraps his arms around the taller boy's neck and pulls his face down so their lips meet. He doesn't pull back when he should. He waits to break the kiss until he's sucked every last bit of saltwater off of JFK's lips. He only opens his eyes when he hears another wave fizz against the sand.
"Do you want to leave?" Jack asks when Van Gogh finally lets him go.
Vincent breaks eye contact for the first time. "I want my sketchbook."
JFK's lips twitch. All of this, and it's still not enough for him. All of this, and all he wants is his fucking sketchbook.
"I don't know where it is," John replies.
Van Gogh looks out across the water. He mumbles in response. "But I know that's not true."
"I think we should go," JFK suggests, ignoring the boy's comment.
"Go where?"
"Home."
Vincent sticks his gaze back onto JFK. "Do you even still want our home?"
JFK furrows his eyebrows. "Of course I do."
Van Gogh retreats his touch from JFK and wraps his arms around himself. "And I want out of this rabbit hole."
"So come home," Kennedy begs.
"Do you want me there?"
Kennedy sighs, realising too late how exasperated he sounds. "Yes, Vinnie, I want you there. After all of this, and you think I'd just cast you aside?"
Vincent takes a second to find his voice. "Yes."
JFK lets his guard down, suddenly remembering who he's dealing with. He was given half a person to work with. He'd thought he was special enough to make the boy whole. But it's not like anyone sells missing pieces for people. The ocean draws back after a wave, and an undercurrent tugs against the hem of JFK's t-shirt.
"You said you believed me when I told you I wouldn't leave."
Van Gogh inhales. "You don't get to be mad at me over this."
"I'm not-" JFK sighs. "I'm not mad at you. I just think you could make this a little easier on me."
Vincent scoffs. "A little easier on you? Are you fucking kidding me? You're Mr. Big Shot Jock! Everyone is in love with you! I mean- god! You're ten times more attractive than me! We don't look like a couple! We don't look like we belong together! You have so many other options, and you're mad at me because I can't trust that you're different from everyone else? That you won't pick up and leave when I become too much to handle? When you decide you don't want me anymore? Jesus Christ, Jack. I thought you knew better. I thought you said you could do this. I thought you knew what you were getting yourself into, but I guess not."
JFK goes silent for longer than he knows he should. A wave crashes, stubborn enough to make Van Gogh wobble. The calm before the storm is ending.
"I do know what I'm getting into. But I wish you had a little more faith in yourself."
"Self-doubt is taught," Vincent counters.
Kennedy shrugs. "Maybe. But it's also fixable."
Van Gogh scoffs again, looking away from the boy. "You say fixable like you mean curable. Like it's a disease."
"Change is a choice."
"I know that."
JFK sighs. "So are you going to make it?"
Vincent swallows, returning his attention to John. His quicksand eyes are full, and not of light. His lip quivers. His skin goes pale, but it's not because of the water. His gaze is glossed over, like he's not really here. Like he's thinking. Like he's remembering.
"No one else ever made that choice for me. I was always the one who had to make the choice for them."
JFK nods. "So you're tired of making it."
"So I don't think I should have to."
"You're better than them."
Van Gogh shivers. "I'm freezing."
"Let's get out of the water."
Vincent agrees, and JFK guides him back to land. He holds the shorter boy's shoulder, pulling him close and making sure he doesn't fall in any holes. The ocean's currents are unpredictable. The sand beneath their feet could give out at any moment.
The boys step out of the water, their legs pale and bumpy from the cold. The sand is rough against their ankles, harsher than when they were in the water. Van Gogh bends down to pick up a seashell discarded onto the shoreline by the waves, a jagged crack etched down the middle. He bends it until he breaks. Vincent keeps one half of the shell and gives the other to JFK.
"What do you want me to do with this?"
Van Gogh answers in a low voice, "Just hold it."
John obeys, too nervous to say anything else. It shocks him that he'd forgotten about this part of his best friend -- the part where he withholds details, doesn't share everything that's on his mind. Vincent never gives out the final puzzle piece. Not anymore, at least. He used to give it out, but he never got it back. It was taken away from him, like all the people who ever left.
They walk down the beach, the foamy waves licking at their feet. They keep a foot in between them -- just enough distance to be separate but not enough to feel alone. JFK bends down after walking a few more yards. His eye is caught by a smooth and shiny black rock, flat enough to close his hand around.
"What's that?" Vincent asks, holding his seashell half close to his chest.
Kennedy's gaze flicks over to the boy. "It's a skipping stone."
Van Gogh chuckles. "I never learned how to skip."
JFK examines the rock in his hand, holding it close to his face and turning it over before his eyes. "Me neither. I just always sort of knew."
Vincent shrugs. "Could you show me?"
Something inside JFK lurches and tells him not to say anything. Going down to the river just outside of town to skip stones with his foster dads was part of his childhood. He hadn't met Van Gogh yet. Doesn't he have to keep their lives separate somehow?
But Vincent looks so hopeful, so genuinely interested. JFK nods softly.
"To be honest, I don't know how to explain it," John admits.
Van Gogh smiles politely. "You never were very good at explaining."
Kennedy nods in agreement. "I'm trying to get better," he replies, begging Vincent to meet his gaze.
The shorter boy locks his eyes with JFK's. "Are you trying for me, or for you?"
"Does it matter?"
Van Gogh takes a deep breath. "I guess not."
JFK nods, satisfied with the boy's answer. He turns toward the water, and Vincent does the same. "Okay, so first, you've gotta get a flat rock."
"Like the one you have," Van Gogh comments.
"Exactly. And then, you sort of hold it in between your thumb and your middle finger, like this," he shows the boy. "And, like, rest the rock on your index finger. But bend it. See how I'm doing that?"
Vincent nods to show that he understands.
"And then you wanna face the water, but angle your body the slightest bit. And really what you're doing is flicking your wrist. It doesn't come from your hand. It's from your wrist."
JFK lets the rock fly, and both boys watch as it skips over the water three times. It probably would've gone farther, had they been standing closer to the water. It's still impressive to Van Gogh, though, who's never seen anyone do that before. He seems to be bewildered by everything the boy does.
"You wanna try now?" John asks, turning to the boy.
Van Gogh shakes his head. "No. I want to go home."
JFK frowns. "But you wanted me to teach you."
"No, I asked you to show me," Vincent shrugs weakly. "And besides, I couldn't do it like you can."
The taller boy's frown deepens. "I wouldn't expect it to be perfect the first time around. What I just did -- that took years of practice. A lot of weekends of my dads taking me down to the river to practice and me being horrible. Nothing is perfect on the first try."
"Why are you mad at me right now?" Vincent asks, his eyebrows furrowing.
"I'm not mad, Vincent. I just don't know why you do this."
"Why I do what? I'm not doing anything."
JFK sighs, and this time he doesn't care how exasperated he sounds. "That's my point. A lot of things come easily to you. All your art and your grades in school and stuff -- you've never struggled with any of that. You've become so accustomed to just being good at everything that you never try anything new because the worst thing in the world is to be bad at something."
Van Gogh's jaw clenches. "That's not fair."
"Isn't it?"
The world is still, except for the low waves of the ocean. The fizzing and drawing back of the water fills up the boys' ears. Finally, Vincent speaks, his voice so quiet it's a miracle it drowns out the ocean.
"Teach me how to drive a car."
"I already said I would-"
"Teach me how to drive your car," Van Gogh clarifies, and his face is so stoically serious that all JFK can do is swallow.
"Then let's go," he replies. "I'll teach you how to drive a car."
















