My mom is downstairs watching the presidential debates, and I watched 3 minutes. My heart rate spiked to 137 and I feel a panic attack threatening.
I didn't talk a lot about this during the 2018 or 2020 elections, because I was still recovering from my dad's death and a lot of different huge life changes. But in 2018, one of my students came into my classroom and I knew something was off. After the assistance of an interpreter, a phone call to his mother revealed that he had watched his father the night before be taken from his home because he was suspected of being undocumented. This child was in first grade. We didn't know what to tell him. Mom asked us for advice and we didn't have any.
During the 45 presidency, I had many students ask when "they" were coming to get their parent. I had students ask me not to speak Spanish, because they were afraid that if they were heard speaking Spanish in front of the school somebody would hurt them. I have multiple intellectually disabled students, multiple physically disabled students, and I didn't know how to tell them that the person that the president put in charge was willing and interested in pulling away their educational rights. Not to mention my students who have any variation of a palsy watching videos of 45 mocking them on television.
I don't like Biden. I think there's a lot of things he's doing wrong and a lot of things he can do better. However, there's a lot of stuff he's done right. Not enough, but some. Voting for 45 is bringing back trauma into the lives of very young children who aren't old enough to understand it. It's enforcing laws on bodies. It's enforcing laws on identity. And it's absolving those who have committed actual violent crimes, because you cannot tell me that somebody becomes a billionaire without hurting others, to the degree of reducing their taxes.
Not voting is a mistake. Not voting is a privilege. Unfortunately the reality is we have two shitty options. One is a failing grade at a 50%, and the other is a failing grade at 0%. As a teacher, I know full well that you can recover from a 50% in the grade book, but you can never recover from a 0%.
— ;; Snowfall premature to its conventional end-of-the-year debut has the streets coated in a pearly blanket of frost, amply bundled denizens scurrying to-and-fro all around.
Catenating after the Doctor, miscellaneous bits of scrap tucked underarms, Tails is no different. Muffs, gloves, a scarf and a puffy coat protecting him from the gelid onslaught, he pauses as they pass the obtuse front window of one of the many shops lining the road. Gazing into its displayed setup of festive décor, awe consumes his features as he tilts his head, craning it to peer at Robotnik, whose bootprints leave a rhythmic impression on their path back to the shop the further he gets.
❝Feels like winter took forever to get here this year,❞ he comments, ocean eyes searing into the back of the skull in such a way that prompts the other to pause as well, finally turning back, ❝when we disappeared a few months ago, I thought the year would go by just like that. But… wow.❞
— ;; Quirking a brow, Robotnik stares at Tails from behind those dense ocular spectacles, as if attempting to discern the actual tone behind his words. Momentarily processing, before deciding with certainty that Tails is not, in fact, being sarcastic for once, he gives a rather desiccant reply.
❝You do realize it’s been more than “a few months”, don’t you boy?❞
— ;; Hustle and bustle, brumal static in the air, incoherent chatter from all around fully stands still, just like that. Torpidly, his heart suddenly ringing in his ears, Tails turns his head to meet Robotnik’s confused expression, his own twisting into something of mortified disenchantment.
❝…What?❞ Faintly, the singular leading query spills from Tails’ lips, in disbelief of what’s been stated. Lowering wide eyes to their feet, subconsciously observing the frigid fractals that land all around, making the snow its only home. ❝You… you’re lying. I don't believe you. ...How long… has it been?❞
Contemplating for a second, and with the click of a tongue, Robotnik answers, ❝I’d wager it’s been somewhere around fifteen or sixteen months. Did you honestly think time wouldn’t continue to pass from where—❞
❝My birthday,❞ interjecting before he can finish his mordacious remark, Tails’ head whips back up to stare desperately, ❝did my birthday pass?❞
❝I figured you'd have noticed on your own, but it came and went.❞
— ;; Resisting the sudden urge to disgorge, to stain the sleek sheet of ivory into a versicolor canvas of bodily suppuration, the congery of stray mechanical pieces cascades from his tenacious grasp instead, spilling all around their feet.
❝How—❞ cadence oscillating, forcing back the voluminous lump plaguing his throat, ragged breaths leaving puffs of cold air in front of him, he dares to ask. ❝—H-How old am I?❞
❝Fifteen,❞ Robotnik answers with lukewarm certainty as he hunches to collect the discarded parts. ❝You’d be fifteen at the moment.❞
— ;; Quailing to the ground right then, clammy knees pressing into the cold, Tails barely even registers lissome hands webbing ‘round his form effortlessly, gathering everything in calculated silence. That’s it; that’s all he’d needed to hear for any sense of stability he’d had to come toppling down, thousands of miniscule fragments spilling out like hail that rubs against his bare arms, leaving him with freezer burnt welts—
—Leaving his entire world dark, ensnared in a Cimmerian cloister whose clutches stretch with emptiness as far as the eye can see in any direction.
❝You ne- you never told me—❞
❝It’s not my job to make sure you’re keeping your head on straight, boy. Get up.❞
— ;; Breathless, as if he’d just been gutted, all he can do is shake his head, collapsing sideways into the snow. Legs curling to meet his chest, arms folding around them and holding tight as if they, too, would disappear were he to release them. After a moment, he hears Robotnik scoff.
❝Do you want to lie here and freeze to death? You’re acting ridiculous.❞
— ;; Readying a snarky response, any form of quip to get the Doctor off his back, his mouth grows agape, but no sound comes. Neither in the way of movement; he feels locked up, glued to the ground in this manner. Silence, having befallen the pair, grows thick with every passing moment, until the point at which it’s shattered by Robotnik’s swivel of the heel, restarting the earlier trek towards the workshop.
❝When you’re feeling up to acting your age and rejoining society, I’ll be back at work. Lest you decide you want to perish from hypothermia, at which case I would advise you to expect an unmarked grave and an empty funeral.❞
— ;; But Tails doesn’t hear, curling those namesakes around his body in some feeble attempt to self-assuage. Tears, tepid in comparison to the weather, drizzle down his face, melting small holes into the snow beneath as they roll off his cheeks lopsidedly.
He realizes in that moment that he will never know home again.
ok so... i had a panic attack on the job. hid in the bathroom and just sat there. i'm a little better now but still shaky. adhd and anxiety sucks... i hope this lavender chamomile drink saves me /lh.
yeah sometimes i get anxiety/panic attacks that make me sick. and as much as i love and adore volo, i can see him doing this during spear pillar... 😔
that's why i'm here, writing this wholesome thing with melli. well, its sort of wholesome besides the warnings i'll be giving out. i hope everyone is having a good day regardless.
-goddess anon 💖
⚠️cw/tw: panic attacks, nausea/vxmxtxng (not graphic), violence and bullying. it's perfectly fine if you don't want to read this. your comfort is the most important thing to me⚠️
"arceus lied to you!" the blonde man in front of you yelled. "i'm the one that's supposed to be blessed! not this shitty outsider!"
it hurt to breathe.
it hurt to look at him.
volo, who you had considered a close friend throughout your journey, had revealed who he truly was; what he truly wanted out of you.
you were nothing but a pawn in his game of chess.
you stare at him as something appeared behind him. a wing?
"volo..." you choked out. "why?!"
you couldn't help it.
you screamed.
"why?! i thought we were friends! i helped you! you helped me!"
"exactly," volo smirked. "you're nothing to me. just another lowlife in the way of my new world..."
you see the form looming behind him. it's massive, its golden plating and red markings immediately striking more fear into your heart.
giratina.
your limbs shook, your breathing is shallow, your lungs felt like they were on fire. the back of your neck grew hotter the more you started hyperventilating.
"n-no... volo..."
you ended up spilling your guts out in sheer terror and agony. the shadows kept approaching you, and your heart starts pounding more and more. then you find the shadows brutally beating you.
"please stop... please!!!"
the more they attacked you, the more you begged for mercy.
but volo wouldn't give you any.
"this is for leading lord arceus on," volo laughs. "giratina!"
no.
no no no no no no no no no!
"strike them down!"
you try to dodge, but your body feels like tungsten. you couldn't move if you tried. moving was agony.
and then, everything went black.
...
...
"...up!"
"...ake up, already!"
you came to.
wait, you were alive?!
"melli?" you croaked. "i... thought i died."
"that's what we all thought!" he countered. he wasn't giving you his usual glare, though.
"...so it was real," you said, whimpering quietly. you don't have the energy to sob anymore, but the panic sets in your heart again. "i can't... i can't do this..."
wordlessly, melli scooted himself closer to you and holds your hand, circling his thumb on your palm.
"name something you can see."
"um," you notice you're staring at nothing in particular, but you answer anyway. "your hair. i-it looks soft..."
"good, good. now name something you can hear."
"the gentle breeze outside," you mumbled. you start feeling more and more relaxed as time goes on.
"how about something you can smell?" he asks, not noticing you were mere inches away from his face.
"the camellia blooms on you," you smiled; the first smile in a long while.
he doesn't ask any more questions. instead, he gently holds you closer as you nuzzle into him. you never knew how much you craved his affection until now.
"i love you," you mumbled.
melli blushes a bright red, but smiles back and kisses your forehead.
Relationship: Jonathan Sims/Martin Blackwood
Tags: Post-Canon, Hurt/Comfort, Angst with a Happy Ending, Conversations and Arguing, Panic Attacks
Work Summary:
Jon coughed again, and blood stained his lips and blood stained Martin’s hands where they pressed against Jon’s back and blood stained the floor beneath them and help, they needed help.
Martin doesn’t remember shouting. He barely remembers the faces that had surrounded them, wide-eyed and terrified, all utterly unfamiliar.
.
Jon and Martin wake up somewhere else. Jon begins a slow path toward physical recovery, and several important, long-put-off conversations are had as they begin to navigate a new world that they hadn’t thought they’d be alive to see.
Chapter Summary:
Regarding abandonment, guilt, and the Archivist
Read on Ao3
Chapter One | Chapter Two | Chapter Three | Chapter Four | Chapter Five | Chapter Six | Chapter Seven | Chapter Eight | Chapter Nine | Chapter Ten
Or read below:
(cw for anxiety and panic attacks, arguing, insensitive/cruel comments, swearing, mentions of apocalypse, mentions of violence/murder)
When Jon tells Martin that he’s still tied to the Eye, Martin shouldn’t be surprised. He’d seen Jon sputter back to life in his arms; he’d known that, somehow, Jon had Known what identities to fake and what credit card numbers to use and what house to stay in as they attempt to slot themselves into a reality that doesn’t have space for them.
He decides, after a moment, that the quickening of his pulse and the sudden tightness in his chest isn’t surprise. It’s anxiety.
Martin has a million things he wants to say. He wants to ask what that means for Jon, now that they’re in a world where Fear once again lingers around the periphery, re-learning how to test the edges of its constraints. (Nothing good, probably. But Jon’s alive, and that’s more than Martin could have ever asked for.) He wants to ask if it was worth it, to go through everything, if nothing really changed at all. (He knows, deep down, that it was. That, somehow, against all the odds, they’ve saved their world and survived in this one.) He wants to tell Jon that he’s sorry, that he wishes Jon didn’t have to go through this again when they’ve been given a second chance in every other way. (It would be a half-truth. Relief pushes its way into his mind—relief that the Eye brought Jon back to him, that they have some semblance of control, a foothold in the Fears still—and he’s dizzy with it in a way that turns his stomach when he thinks too hard about it.)
Instead, he says, quietly, “Are you okay? With- with still being… are you still the Archivist?”
Surprise flickers across Jon’s face for a moment before his mouth flattens into something pinched and unhappy. “Yes, but it’s… it’s not quite in the same way?” He opens his mouth again, closes it, makes a frustrated gesture with his hands.
Martin doesn’t say anything as Jon searches for the words. He thinks he might have, a few weeks ago, but in the short time they’ve spent in uneasy peace here, he’s… noticed things. Things he hadn’t when they’d been living in the safehouse, tucked away from it all in a state of near-domestic bliss. Things he hadn’t had time to think about when they’d been surrounded by fear and suffering and the heavy gaze of an unblinking Eye.
Things he wishes he’d noticed sooner.
Jon taps his fingers together when he’s upset—a rhythmic pattern, thumb to index middle ring pinky and then back again, over and over again. Martin thinks of all the times he’s captured Jon’s hands in his own to comfort him, squeezing tight and offering reassurances. It was a natural thing, and Jon never said anything to indicate he would rather Martin not, but Martin can’t stop staring at Jon’s hands when he wakes from another particularly vivid nightmare, gasping and trembling and tap tap tap.
Jon masks hurt with curtness, with bitter words and snappish comments. It’s a little thing that sets it off, near the end of their first week: Martin fetching Jon things from shelves he can’t quite reach. Martin had made a light comment about Jon being ‘even shorter than usual’—stupid, insensitive, he hadn’t been thinking, he never thinks—and Jon had snapped that he would get his own dishes if he could, but he didn’t have a choice now, did he?
Martin isn’t proud of how that argument went. Later, he’d caught Jon trying and failing to lift himself out of the wheelchair to get something out of the medicine cabinet, wincing at every motion but his mouth set into an unwavering, determined line. The guilt had been nauseating.
And he’d realized, a few days ago, that Jon hates being interrupted. That Jon’s processing time between his brain and his mouth is long, long enough that Martin’s often filling the silence before Jon has collected his words into a form that someone other than him can understand. That Jon will either end up skipping words, condensing his sentence into a few clipped-off, frustrated sounds, or dropping the thought altogether with a curt never mind or it’s not important or I don’t know, Martin.
Martin thinks back on their journey to London, skimming his memories for times his stress-induced need for answers had prompted him to cut in too early, press Jon for answers too soon, not give Jon time to explain. He’s not happy with what he finds.
So, Martin fights against the urge to speak and waits, worrying the inside of his cheek between his teeth, for several seconds more before Jon finally says, “I still need stories—statements—and I- I can still compel people and- and Know things, but it’s not… rooted in fear? At- at least not in the same way.”
“What does that mean?” Martin says, a bit more insistently than he intends.
Jon makes a frustrated noise. “This world, it- it had fear, but it wasn’t… it didn’t take a physical form like it did in our world. The Fears are here now, but they’re scattered near the edges again. They- they don’t really have a foothold in this world yet. The fear here, it’s… well, for now, it’s normal. It’s still feeding the Fears indirectly, and- and any statements I take will feed the Eye, but they have to… relearn how to manifest themselves within this new reality.” Jon frowns slightly, and his gaze goes distant for a long moment before refocusing again. “It’s like looking through fogged glass, but I can Know things if- if I concentrate on them. It’s not like it was after the Change, where the Eye could see everything and Know everything and I could draw on that, but it’s not like it was before either? I- I have more control over what I Know, just… not how much.”
“… Right,” Martin says slowly. “And are you still…?”
He searches for a delicate way to approach the subject, and finding none, he sighs and says bluntly, “Is there any chance you could be used in a ritual again?”
Jon winces, his expression twisting into something pained, and Martin feels that pain reflected in him tenfold. “I’m sorry,” he says quietly, though he’s unclear if he’s apologizing for the question itself or for the memories it’s likely summoned. “I just… I just want to make sure it isn’t a possibility.”
Jon looks vaguely ill. His fingers are moving, tap tap tapping together, and so when Martin reaches out for him, he instead settles his hand on the side of Jon’s face, exerting a gentle pressure that he’s grown practiced in over the time they’ve spent together. Jon leans into his touch, letting out a slow, ragged breath before saying, “I… I’m still marked. The, uh. The fear hasn’t gone away or- or burned up—I can still remember it all, very clearly, but…”
Slowly, Jon shakes his head, a minuscule motion that Martin can feel against his palm. “It won’t happen again. The Fears aren’t established enough yet, and even if they were, I… I wouldn’t let it happen again.” Jon turns his head slightly, something fiercely determined yet profoundly sad in his eyes when he looks at Martin. “Whatever it would take. Whatever price I’d have to pay, I- I would pay it.”
Something in Martin’s chest twists at that, and after a moment, he’s surprised to find that it’s anger. Which doesn’t make any sense, because he would do the same thing. He’d thought about that moment so many times as they’d traveled—if he’d come back early, if he hadn’t left at all, if he hadn’t grown complacent and begun to trust that they were safe, they were happy. Given the chance, he would have done almost anything to stop those words from coming out of Jon’s mouth. He still remembers the way Jon had shaken apart in his arms, hysterical laughter bubbling out of him for hours and hours until it had transitioned into tears. He’d clung to Martin, sobbing into the crook of his neck and muttering over and over and over again, I’m sorry, I couldn’t stop it, the whole world hurts, I’m sorry, I tried so hard to stop, I’ve killed the world, it’s all my fault, my fault, my fault.
Oh.
Martin’s anger resolves into a crystal-clear, needle-sharp point, and he says, with no room for argument, “I refuse to let you sacrifice yourself again because you think you deserve it.”
Surprise flickers across Jon’s face for a moment before his eyes narrow and he says, flatly, “Then what would you have me do, Martin? I won’t condemn another reality to eternal torment, you know I won’t.”
“No, that’s not- ugh, that’s not what I meant, Jon.” Martin retracts his hand, runs it over his face with a low groan. “Of course we wouldn’t let it happen again—I’m not saying we should.”
“Then what are you saying?” Jon says, that bite that Martin recognizes as hurt bleeding into his voice. “Because sacrificing myself, that- that’s not what’s happening here.”
“But it was before,” Martin says sharply. And once he starts, the words tumble out like an avalanche, burying everything beneath them in ivory white snow, heavy and cold and suffocating. “You left, Jon. We had a plan and you- you just went off on your own, because you always think that your way is the right way. You don’t trust me—you lied to me, after everything, you lied to me and decided that you were better off without me than with me, and it was supposed to be together, Jon!”
“Martin—” Jon begins, voice hard and icy, but Martin doesn’t stop—barely registers his name.
“You promised, Jon!” There are tears slipping down Martin’s cheeks, dripping off his chin and staining the front of his shirt, but he barely feels them. His face is flushed hot with anger and frustration and heartbreak, because Jon is here and they’re alive but they could have just as easily not been, and Jon would have chosen that. “You said you wouldn’t sacrifice yourself, you said you wouldn’t if there was another option, and there was! But you did it anyway! Because you decided it was the right decision, and so of course you just had to do it because that’s what you do, Jon. You think your life doesn’t matter so you- you just throw it away! You’re impulsive and- and stubborn and self-absorbed—”
“I’m self-absorbed? I’m not the one who wanted to doom millions to the same fucking thing we were trying to stop—”
“Because you only trust yourself, Jon, and let’s face it—you don’t make good choices! You never have!”
“Oh, you want to talk about choices? Sacrificing yourself to the Lonely seems like one hell of a bad decision.”
“Don’t use that against me. You have no right—you have no right!”
“Why not? You seem intent on branding everything I’ve ever done as one big fucking mistake, I don’t see why I can’t—”
“Because this is different, Jon! This was you, martyring yourself, refusing to even believe that none of this has been your fault and that you don’t have to do this alone, making me murder you, Jon!”
“I asked you to—”
“That doesn’t make it better!”
Jon throws his hands up in the air, tangling one of them in his hair on the way down. Martin doesn’t miss the way it makes him wince in pain. “What do you want me to say, Martin? That I regret it? That I wouldn’t make the same choice again? Because I would. I would again and again and again because nobody- nobody should have to go through what I had to. The only regret I have is that you were there.”
“Ouch,” Martin says flatly.
“This isn’t about you, Martin! This is- it’s bigger than us, it’s thousands of worlds—”
“Isn’t it?” Martin snaps. He gestures to Jon—to the wheelchair, to the bandages that’ll need to be changed soon—and says, “You put me in a position where I had to kill you. You lied to me, you didn’t trust me, even after everything, and- and I don’t know how to get past this, Jon!”
He sucks in a long, shaky breath; it sticks in his throat, and suddenly, he feels like he’s suffocating, like he can’t breathe, like the walls are too close around him and he’s being crushed and drowning and falling and choking choking choking. “I need some air,” he manages to say, taking a short, stumbling step back from Jon.
“Martin—”
“Just- I just need some time to think. Some time to myself.”
Martin turns to go.
“Martin!”
Jon’s voice breaks around the word, revealing something desperate and pained underneath, and a thin, scarred hand closes around Martin’s wrist with surprising force. “Don’t- don’t go. I- I can’t, not- not like this, not after- after- after—”
Jon cuts off abruptly, and Martin turns as much as he’s able to with Jon still gripping his arm to see Jon staring at him with wide, frantic eyes, like a deer staring down the barrel of a gun. He’s shaking.
Martin’s anger doesn’t slip away so much as it’s glazed over by a paper-thin layer of concern, and he maneuvers himself so that he’s facing Jon fully and says, voice pitched higher than normal, “Jon? Jon, okay, just- just breathe with me, okay? Deep breaths, in and out, just like we’ve practiced—focus on your breathing, just- just focus on keeping count. In and out. I’m here, I’ve got you. In and out.”
It’s something that had come up often at the safehouse—less often after the Change, but not never. Jon would wake up scrabbling at his throat, gasping for air, or would begin to cry silently as they sat on the couch, or would grip the sleeve of Martin’s jumper tightly as they walked and lean into his side like it could stave away the things that haunted him. It’s almost second nature by now to help Jon through the worst of it, and Martin lets himself lean into the routine so he doesn’t have to think about the frustration and hurt still simmering under the surface, colored with the aching desire to be alone.
He's always processed his emotions better on his own. Though that hasn’t been much of an option lately.
It’s several minutes before Jon’s calmed down enough to say, voice rubbed raw and hoarse and broken around the edges, “I just… I- I don’t know what I would do if you left and- and something happened and I… I lost you.” A pause. “Again. I… I just can’t go through that again. Not knowing if you’re safe. Not knowing if I- I’ll ever see you again.”
Martin softens, ever so slightly, even as the words cut into him because he knows what Jon’s thinking about, what happened the last time they argued like this. He ignores any feelings he might have about that and stuffs the residual anger down as best he can (which is to say, not at all, but he tries) before reaching down and laying his hands, palms-up, on Jon’s knees. It’s an odd angle, but Martin doesn’t mind, and when Jon gives him a confused look, Martin says, “You like to fiddle with your hands when you’re upset. I didn’t want to take that option away from you. But if want, I… I’m here.”
He’s angry and scared and bitter and tired, but he’s here. He knows, without a doubt, that he’ll always be here—for better or for worse—because he doesn’t think he could ever stop loving Jonathan Sims. Even if right now, bitter words still sit heavily on his tongue and he just wants space.
Jon looks at Martin, as if assessing something, before slowly shaking his head. “I know,” he says, and Martin can hear that same bitterness reflected in Jon’s voice. “But I… you’re right, I- I could use some time to think as well. Just- just not… not apart.”
“Not apart,” Martin agrees, retracting his hands and trying to pretend like it doesn’t sting, just a bit. “I’ll… I’ll be in the kitchen if you need me. You can take the bedroom.”
“Martin—”
“You can take the bedroom,” Martin repeats, more firmly. “I- I have some washing up to do anyway. Should probably do some cooking as well.”
Jon hesitates a moment more before giving Martin a single, shallow nod. “Okay,” he says quietly.
The bedroom door shuts behind him with a click, and Martin sags against the counter, rubbing his hands over his face and through his hair over and over and over again, as if it can stave off the messy cocktail of frustration and guilt that’s begun to take hold in his chest. “Fuck,” he mutters. The word meets only empty air.
It’s been what feels like a lifetime since Martin hasn’t had someone around him to answer. He tries to ignore the nagging voice in his mind, the one that still smells of sea salt and morning dew, that tells him it’s better this way and goes to make some tea.
leaves too high to touch (roots too strong to fall): a TMA fanfic
Tumblr tag || Also on AO3
Chapter 26: Jon
When Jon’s grandmother passed away peacefully in her sleep, not long after his twenty-fourth birthday, he quickly discovered that her life insurance and savings weren’t enough to cover all the bills that needed to be covered and put the house he’d grown up in on the market. He only vaguely remembers the whole procedure, as he was in something of a state of shock at the time, but he does remember accepting the first offer presented to him despite the realtor’s comments that he could “probably hold out for a bit more” if he wanted. Thus, he’s the only one not really startled at the speed with which he, Martin, and Tim find out that they’ve got the house.
To be clear: He’s not startled at the speed. He is, however, startled that they got it. Surely someone must have been willing to pay more for it, been better qualified. But no. They learn their offer has been accepted less than a week after the Primes’ disastrous encounter with Basira’s partner and the closing is scheduled for the following Friday. Martin theorizes that their position at the Magnus Institute gave them some extra clout. Tim jokes that it’s his charismatic personality. Jon frets that Elias might have had something to do with it for nefarious purposes.
Sasha finally does some research and tells them that it’s being sold by a pair of siblings barely out of their teens whose parents died unexpectedly and probably just need the money fast.
Martin doesn’t have much, just the little he managed to bring with him to the Institute when first escaping Jane Prentiss and the few things he’s re-acquired since then, and Jon’s things are still packed up from when he declined to renew the lease on his flat in August, so it’s mostly just Tim who needs to decide what he’s keeping and what he’s ready to part with or needs to replace. It takes them the better part of two Saturdays, but they manage to get everything boxed and sorted in time to move out the last full weekend of September.
The moving-in process is surprisingly fun. Sasha and the Primes even come to help (Tim suggests the latter so that Martin Prime knows his way around the house from the get-go, which is actually really sensible) and they make a party of it. Tim insists on setting up the sound system first, then gets everyone to contribute a certain number of songs to a playlist on some app he has on his phone. He puts it on shuffle and lets it play while they work together on the various rooms.
“Oh, my God,” Sasha moans after the eighth song that she evidently didn’t pick comes on. “Do any of you listen to a single band that’s put out an album since 1984?”
“Yes,” Martin says indignantly, his cheeks coloring slightly.
“Remasters don’t count.”
Martin Prime grins. “None of mine have come up, either.”
“What did you put on?” Sasha asks suspiciously.
She gets her answer a few minutes later when, after shuffle coughs up a Spice Girls song they all tease her mercilessly about, an honest to God sea shanty comes on. Tim and Jon laugh at Sasha’s dramatic, despairing groan, but it’s hard not to respond to the Martins’ enthusiasm as they—surprisingly—harmonize along with the recording while they set up the living room.
They’re almost done assembling the new bed Tim bullied Jon into buying (“You’re not in uni anymore, you don’t need to be sleeping on a futon, and anyway, when was this made, the Thatcher premiership?” “Brown, and shut up, Tim.”), which is the last piece of furniture they need to put together, when there’s a sound from the front door—two firm, solid knocks, audible all the way upstairs. Jon nearly drops the screwdriver as his heart kicks against his ribs. It’s stupid, and he knows it’s stupid, but two knocks like that always makes him think of that book.
Tim makes a noise in the back of his throat. “God, hope the music isn’t too loud.”
“I don’t think that’s it,” Martin says, but he sounds uncertain. “I-I mean, it’s been ages.”
Jon pushes himself to his feet. “I’ll check.”
He hurries out of the bedroom before anyone can comment on the clear break in his voice. He is, and there is no way to deny it to himself, legitimately afraid of what might be outside. The likelihood of it being a being of another entity is slim, but…well, there was Mr. Spider, and Jane Prentiss knocked on Martin’s door more than a few times to keep him off-balance, so there’s always the chance. It’s something he feels he can deal with, though, so he heads out to face it.
He does not, however, expect to open the door and be faced with what is either a small child or a casserole dish with tennis shoes.
“Hello,” a tiny voice says brightly from behind the dish. There’s a bit of shifting, and then two big brown eyes and a mass of curls appear over the rim. “I’ve brought you a cake.”
Jon will deny to his dying day that those words freeze his blood in his veins and make his heart stutter to a stop, but since this might actually be his dying day, he’ll be lying if he tries. His lips part, but no sound comes out.
“And a casserole, too,” the child continues, completely oblivious to Jon’s unwarranted panic attack. “That’s not as much fun, though, but Nan says it’s important to eat good, hearty food when you’ve been doing lots of work and that cake shouldn’t be a whole meal. I think there’s no point in being a grown-up if you can’t eat whatever you want, but…” The child heaves an enormous, dramatic sigh that seems too large for such a small body. “My Nan’s very, very old, and you don’t get to be old if you don’t do something right, so she must know what she’s talking about. Anyway, we made the casserole with lots and lots of cheese and she said that was okay, so at least it’s a little better.”
“Ah—thank you?” Jon manages. “H-here, let me…take that.”
He manages to extract the casserole dish, which certainly feels as if it’s laden with cheese; it weighs the proverbial ton. Quite possibly a literal one. It’s solid enough to anchor Jon to reality, though, and he studies his benefactor. The child can’t be more than seven or eight, at the most, with a round face and limbs hidden in an oversized, threadbare sweater that looks like it’s been handed down through more than a few generations. Dangling from one arm is a wicker basket that does indeed appear to contain a cake.
“It’s a chocolate cake with marshmallow frosting,” the child says. “I tried to write ‘Welcome to the neighborhood’ on it, but I didn’t put the tip on the piping bag right and it came off, so now it’s just a mess, but it’ll taste just as good, I promise. My Nan makes the best cakes.”
Jon smiles in spite of himself. “I don’t think I have enough hands to take it from you now. Would you mind bringing it into the kitchen for me?”
“Oh, sure!” The child practically hops over the threshold. “I always wanted to see what this house was like on the inside. Tibby used to babysit for me sometimes, but she always came over to our house, never me coming over here. Nan says it’s better that way, and Tibby always said it was laid out exactly like all the other houses, but it’s not the same as seeing it for yourself. Firsthand knowledge is best, that’s what I think. What do you think?”
“I—I think I agree with you,” Jon says. He also feels a bit like he’s staring at his younger self. “I assume you live in one of the other houses on the row?”
“Two doors down,” the child agrees cheerfully. “With the window boxes. My Nan likes to garden a bit, but she can’t bend over so much anymore, so Toby set up the window boxes for her a couple years ago.”
“And, uh, who is…Toby?”
“Oh, sorry, I thought you knew. Toby McGill. He and Tibby—that’s his sister Tabitha, but everyone calls her Tibby—they were the ones selling this house after their parents died. He’s at Surrey University now and he says he’s going to stay out there when it’s all said and done, and Tibby got a job on a boat.” The child sounds deeply impressed. “I want to be a sailor someday, too. Can you imagine getting to see the whole wide world by water and getting paid for it, too? I’d never want to leave. I told Tibby she has to save a spot on the crew for me and she laughed and promised, so I can’t wait. I’m going as soon as I grow up. I’m not going to university. You don’t need to go to university for everything, you know. I know Nan really wants me to go ‘cause Mum didn’t and neither did Dad and she doesn’t want me turning out like them, but you can turn out well even if you don’t go to university, can’t you?”
“Absolutely,” Jon says gravely. He casts an involuntary glance in the direction of the stairs, thinking of Martin. “One of my housemates didn’t go to university, and he’s one of the most brilliant people I know.”
“How many of you live here, anyway?”
“Just three of us.” Jon has no idea how much this child has seen and how many people he knows are in the house at the moment.
“Oh. There used to be three of us in my house, too.” The child scuffs a toe against the carpet just before they step into the kitchen. “And then there was going to be four, but Mum died and the baby did, too.”
“I’m sorry,” Jon says softly, feeling a pang. “I grew up with my grandmother, too.”
The child looks up at Jon and smiles, in such a way that Jon can’t help but smile back. “And you turned out okay.”
“Debatable,” Jon says. He sets the casserole dish on the counter. “I’m Jon, by the way. Jonathan Sims.”
“I’m Charlie. Charlie Cane.” The child smiles up at him and hands over the basket. “It’s nice to meet you.”
“Likewise. Tell your grandmother we said thank you. I don’t know that any of us will have the energy to cook tonight. We’ll bring back the dishes tomorrow.”
“There’s no hurry. Nan doesn’t go anywhere.” Charlie flashes Jon a grin that’s missing two teeth, then turns and waves to the doorway. Jon glances up to see Martin, looking somewhere between worried and amused. “Hi! I’m Charlie Cane. Welcome to the neighborhood. Do you live here, too?”
“Um…yes. I’m Martin Blackwood. It’s…nice to meet you?” Martin raises an eyebrow at Jon.
“Charlie and his grandmother made us a casserole,” Jon says, gesturing at the counter. “And a cake.”
“That’s very nice of you. Thank you.” Martin smiles at Charlie and winks, although Jon doesn’t quite understand why.
“Welcome.” Charlie’s beaming smile could probably light the house for a week. “I’d best go before Nan thinks I’m doing something stupid again. See you later!”
He’s out the front door before Jon can respond, or even blink. He looks back to Martin, who isn’t even trying to hide his amusement. “Is everything okay?”
“Everything’s fine, Jon. We were just wondering if you were okay. You were gone for a while.”
Jon gestures vaguely at the front door. “I don’t think that child has many people to talk to. Or at least not many people who will listen to him.”
Martin snorts. “I think you’ve got yourself a new best friend.”
Jon almost wants to say something flippant like Just what I need, but thinking on it, he actually doesn’t mind all that much. “Considering how much I would have given to have an adult pay that kind of attention to me when I was his age, I think I can handle that.”
Martin reaches over and pulls Jon into a hug. Jon lets himself be comforted for a moment, then extricates himself gently and smiles. “Come on. Let’s see if the others are ready to eat.”
As it turns out, the others finished putting together the bed and even made it while Jon talked to Charlie, so they’re all too happy to come into the kitchen for a hearty meal. It’s exactly as cheese-laden as Charlie promised. Jon recounts his conversation, to general amusement, although something flickers briefly across Martin Prime’s face and Jon Prime shoots Jon an understanding and slightly frightened look when he repeats Charlie’s opening words. If anyone else notices, they give no sign of it.
Tim lets the music keep playing while they eat. Jon mostly tunes it out, no pun intended, and he rather suspects the others do too. But just as they’re scraping their plates clean—the food is delicious, and Tim declares he’s going to try and charm Charlie’s grandmother out of the recipe—Martin Prime suddenly tilts his head to one side, as if trying to catch a sound. A smile twitches at his lips, and he stands up and holds out a hand to Jon Prime. “May I?”
Jon Prime looks startled for a split-second, then smiles—no, grins—and places his hand in Martin Prime’s. He lets Martin Prime pull him away from the table and into his arms, and the two of them start slow-dancing.
Jon pauses, fork suspended over his plate, and watches them. Jon Prime lets Martin Prime lead him in a simple box step, one arm draped casually over Martin Prime’s shoulder, while Martin Prime’s hand rests firmly at his waist; their other fingers are laced together in a way that would make it difficult to telegraph intended moves if they didn’t—probably—know each other so well. The space between them is so little it’s a wonder they don’t constantly trip over each other’s feet, and before long their foreheads touch. The song is gentle and plaintive, encouragement from one partner to the other to trust and relax and allow the first to take care of the second, a promise that the second person won’t be considered weak or lesser if they allow themselves to be comforted.
I promise you’ll be safe here in my arms…
Martin Prime lifts his arm and spins Jon Prime around gently, and when Jon Prime comes back into the closed frame, he leans his head against the shoulder where his hand isn’t resting and closes his eyes. Martin Prime pulls him closer and rests his cheek alongside Jon Prime’s as they continue dancing. It’s one of the most intimate and romantic things Jon has ever seen, and he almost has to look away from it.
Almost. Not quite. Something keeps him drawn, and there’s a tiny part of Jon’s brain that suggests it probably isn’t just the pleasure at seeing someone who’s basically him safe and happy and in love mixed with the vague sense of longing for something like that—maybe not that exactly, but something like it. It may also be that watching the Primes slow dancing means he doesn’t have to look at anyone else.
The song plays itself out. Martin Prime turns his head slightly; Jon Prime turns his at the same time, and their lips meet gently in the middle. This time Jon does look away. He’s never quite been able to figure out how he feels about kissing, to be honest; it’s one of the things that sent his and Georgie’s relationship down in flames, was the fact that he always acted like you think I’ve got poison in my lip gloss, according to her. But he finds himself wondering for a moment what Martin’s lips would feel like against his, if they’d be as soft and warm as the rest of him. If it might make a difference to kiss Martin instead of Georgie, or Meredith, or Kelly. And that’s not a question he’s comfortable asking himself just then, let alone trying to answer.
The scrape of a chair breaks his attention, and he looks up to see the Primes sitting down like nothing happened, although they’re still holding hands. Tim clears his throat. “Who wants cake?”
The cake is, as promised, a bit of a mess—it looks like someone tried to tease out the blob created by the icing tip popping off with a toothpick or something, but the resultant design looks like the pictures someone showed Jon once of a web woven by a spider that had been fed caffeine, and the fact that the icing is bright red doesn’t help—but it is absolutely delicious.
Afterward, Tim and Jon store the leftovers while Martin and Sasha start on the dishes. Jon Prime glances at the kitchen clock and touches Martin Prime on the shoulder. “We should probably go. The later it gets, the more likely that…someone might cruise by the Institute, and I’d rather not risk that.”
Martin Prime squeezes Jon Prime’s hand gently, and Jon swallows on the sudden surge of nausea. They haven’t seen anything of Detective Tonner, and Basira didn’t say anything about her when she showed up last week to switch out the tapes, but the memory of the Primes’ faces when they stumbled back to Tim’s place to change and return his car is a hard one to shake. Even though Jon Prime swears he and Daisy eventually became friends, it’s the eventually that sticks out, and Jon isn’t sure what he’ll do if Daisy turns up at the Institute. It’s also obvious that the Primes are more afraid of her than they’re letting on.
Tim opens his mouth, probably to invite them to spend the night or something, but Sasha beats him to it. “Can you wait a few minutes? I’d rather not walk to the tube station by myself, if it comes to that, and I think you said there’s an entrance to the tunnels near there.”
Jon Prime frowns slightly. “I…don’t think I did, but there is.”
“We’ll walk with you, Sasha,” Martin Prime assures her.
Tim sighs theatrically. “I feel a little better, which is a relative statement not to be taken as approval.”
“Your objection is duly noted.” Sasha hands Martin a plate to dry.
All too soon, everything is cleaned up, just as the playlist comes to an end, and there’s really no way of stalling them further. There’s a round of hugs and see-you-Mondays, and then Sasha and the Primes head out the door, leaving Jon, Martin, and Tim alone in their new house.
It’s not that late, comparatively, so Jon suggests a card game. They’ve played most nights since Sasha went back to sleeping in her own flat; they’ve played a couple of games of Rummy or Go Fish, and Tim once tried to teach Jon and Martin a game he learned from his grandparents that uses a forty-card deck (Martin picked it up quickly, Jon did not), but most of the time they play Crazy Eights. Tim declares that they’re going to keep playing until either he or Jon or both manage to overtake Martin’s score, which is clearly going to be an impossible task, as he’s up by nearly a thousand points and consistently wins at least three or four games a night. Still, they give it a valiant effort. After Martin manages to go out while both Tim and Jon still have an eight each in their hand, though, they decide to call it quits for one night.
“Someday I’ll figure out how you keep doing that,” Jon says, shuffling the deck lightly before putting it back in the box.
Martin shrugs. “Practice, I guess? I used to play with my granddad a lot when I was younger. We kept a running total, too, and I think I was up three thousand points or so when he died.”
Tim gives a low whistle. “How old were you?”
“Nine. We’d been playing pretty regularly since I was five. At least one game every time I went to visit.”
Jon thinks back to the conversation he and Martin had in Tim’s kitchen the morning after Prentiss’s attack. “Is this the grandfather who had the cherry trees?”
“You remembered.” Martin looks pleased. “Yeah, he was my mum’s dad. I never met my dad’s family, that I remember anyway.” He pauses. “You, uh, you told Charlie you were raised by your grandmother. Was that…?”
Jon didn’t know Martin was there, but he’s kind of glad he doesn’t have to figure out how to bring it up. “My father’s mother. She was…formidable. My father died when I was two, from an accidental fall, and my mother died a couple years later. Surgery complications.”
“I’m sorry,” Martin says softly. “That must have been hard on you.”
“Harder on my grandmother, I think. I was barely old enough to remember them.” All Jon remembers of his father is his laugh, and he’s fairly certain that most of his memories of his mother come from his aunt.
Tim leans forward, resting his arms on the table. “Is she still around? Your grandmother?”
Jon shakes his head. “She died just before I started working at the Institute. What about yours, Tim?”
“My dad’s dad is the only grandparent still around. I think.” Tim worries at his lower lip with his teeth for a moment. “I’d like to think someone would call me if something happened, but I don’t know.”
Martin hums sympathetically. “Is he…in a home?”
“Not as far as I know. Last I heard, he was still living with my parents. Moved in when Granny died, just after I left for university.” Tim sighs. “We’re not…close. After Danny…”
Jon reaches over and touches Tim’s arm gently. “It must be hard on them, losing a son. No parent expects to outlive their child.”
“That’s just it. Mum refuses to believe he’s dead.” Tim smiles weakly. “No body, you know? Dad isn’t sure, but he also thinks I know more than I’ve told them. Grandfather all but accused me of having a hand in Danny’s disappearance.”
“What?” Jon blinks, shocked. “How could anyone think you’d—you would never.”
“I know, but…well, Dad’s family was always a bit conservative, blue collar and all that, and I’m…well, me. I think that’s why Dad encouraged my hiking and camping and all that. Hoped it would knock some ‘sense’ into me,” Tim says with a wry twist of his lips. “Once I came out as bi, though, I think they decided there was no hope left for me. It just got worse after Danny died.”
Martin’s expressive face closes down, and Jon’s stomach lurches. This is the most they’ve talked about their families in…ever, he thinks, but from the little bits of information Martin—and Martin Prime, for that matter—have let slip, Jon has formed a very unfavorable impression of Martin’s mother. He’s always kind of had a hazy idea that Tim’s family situation was better, especially after he heard the pride in his voice when he talked about Danny when giving his statement, and finding out that it wasn’t much better than theirs…
“How old were you?” he asks, not sure why. “When you—told them.”
“Seventeen. There was a guy I’d been seeing—nothing serious, really, but we had fun together—and we went out for Valentine’s Day. My parents were confused because they knew my girlfriend and I had just broken up before Christmas and I hadn’t mentioned another girl, so I told them about Steve.” Tim gets quiet for a second. “Mum cried. Dad just…told me to stop upsetting my mother and never brought it up again. Not until Grandfather started in on me.”
Jon swallows. “You’ve a great deal more courage than I have. I—I never admitted to my grandmother that I ever had any interest in boys, let alone dated one.”
“Only one? You’re missing out.” Tim’s grin is a pale echo of his usual one, but it is at least genuine. “How ‘bout you, Martin?”
“A few.” Martin relaxes with a visible effort that makes Jon’s heart ache. “Been out since I was fourteen. Mum reacted…about as well as she reacted any other time I told her something she didn’t like or did something she wasn’t expecting. I never brought anyone home to meet her or…really talked to her about my dating, and she only ever brought it up in relation to herself. Like saying it was a good thing there wasn’t any risk of me passing on any of my numerous undesirable traits to a helpless child.”
“I don’t think your mum understands what ‘bisexual’ means,” Tim points out.
“Probably not, but it doesn’t matter. I’m gay.” Martin grimaces. “I’m also ace, so no risk there anyway, but…”
Jon wants to say any child would be fortunate to count you as a father or I can’t think of a single undesirable trait about you, but what actually comes out is, “Ace?”
“Uh, asexual. It’s—I don’t…get attracted like that. Romance, sure, aesthetic stuff and all that, but not…” Martin gestures vaguely. “Tried it anyway, for a couple of guys I was with, but i-it didn’t go well.”
Jon’s world view shifts abruptly on its axis. Tim, though, looks suddenly worried. “Are you okay? They didn’t—”
“No, no,” Martin says quickly. “It wasn’t—I just don’t like it. That’s all.” He sighs and runs a hand through his hair. “Never bothered telling Mum that part. She wouldn’t…I’ve done enough damage.”
Tim pulls Martin into a quick one-armed hug, and Jon reaches across the table to squeeze his hand as gently as he can, but they change the subject after that.
They end up sitting up for a while in their new living room, relaxing. Tim props his feet up in the recliner and works on a crossword; Jon curls up at one end of the sofa with a book he’s been meaning to read for years that Jon Prime assures him he’ll love; Martin sits at the other end and knits. It about bowled Jon over completely when he learned that Martin made most of the sweaters he wears, but the sight and sound of him working away has become increasingly familiar in the last few weeks, especially after the Primes and the rest of the crew collaborated to get him an array of needles and knitting wool in all colors of the rainbow for his birthday. Jon usually finds the gentle clicking of the needles soothing, but tonight it’s just a hair distracting, and he keeps glancing up from the page to watch Martin’s fingers as they expertly manipulate the yarn or Tim tap the eraser of his pencil thoughtfully against his jaw while he contemplates an answer. He’s not even quite sure what he’s looking at.
Finally, Tim lays down his puzzle with a sigh. “I think I’m gonna turn in,” he says, sounding oddly reluctant. “Long day and all that.”
“Yeah, I’m just gonna—” Martin works a couple more stitches and folds up his project. “Probably a good stopping place for tonight.”
Jon considers saying he’s going to stay in the living room and finish the chapter he’s on, but if he’s being completely honest, he’s been on the same page for however long it’s been and hasn’t taken in a single word. Silently, he slides the scrap of paper he’s currently using as a bookmark back between the pages and closes the book. “Well. Good night, then.”
“’Night, Jon.”
The bedrooms are all upstairs, two on one side and one on the other with the bathroom handy, and the three of them wish each other goodnight again before disappearing into their rooms. Jon closes the door and looks around the room, his room.
There’s not much to it, to be honest. A nightstand, a dresser, a battered desk he’s had since he was a child, a lamp and the bed. He sets the book on top of the desk and changes into his comfortable sleep clothes, then crawls into the bed and pulls the covers up over his shoulders.
It’s…odd. No, not odd. Jon can’t quite think of the right word for it. But the sheets feel unfamiliar against his skin, and they don’t smell right, either, probably because they’re new. The mattress that felt perfectly comfortable when he tested it out in the store doesn’t seem to afford the same comfort now, and he wonders if the floor model has simply had much of the stiffness tested out of it over time. Even the pillows, which he did retain from his old bedroom setup, seem determined to thwart his attempts to find a comfortable position.
He rolls onto his back and stares up at the ceiling, arm draped over his midsection. He won’t fall asleep like this, he’s always been a side-sleeper, but his mind is a seething roil of emotions and he needs to get his thoughts under control before he can even have a hope of getting comfortable enough to sleep, he guesses.
Asexual. Jon probes at the word, at what it describes. I don’t get attracted like that. I just don’t like it. Honestly, until meeting Georgie, Jon had no idea that sort of attraction really existed; he thought it was just something out of the lurid romance novels his grandmother favored and he’d read once or twice in sheer desperation. It was something she’d wanted, though, so he’d tried a few times, but his efforts hadn’t satisfied her and he never really saw what all the fuss was about. He can take it or leave it, preferably the latter.
He never knew there was a word for it.
Suddenly, he wants to talk to Martin about it, about how he realized, how he knew. Where he found the word. If there are many more like—well, like them, he supposes. If that’s one of the reasons he was reluctant to tell Jon how he felt. He wants to ask about Martin’s experiences, if they were bad just because his body didn’t want them or for some other reason. A part of him also wants to cry from sheer relief. He isn’t broken. There’s nothing wrong with him. Well, not in that respect, anyway.
He sighs heavily and rolls onto his side again, plumping the pillows and curling one arm around them. They’re too flat, he thinks idly, too soft and yielding. Which is odd, because that’s never bothered him before. He can’t seem to get warm, either, which is also bizarre because it’s been an unusually mild day for late September and he’s under the duvet he’s had for years, which suddenly seems too light and insubstantial. The room is too quiet and still. It all feels…wrong, somehow.
Jon closes his eyes and stubbornly tries to force sleep, to no avail. The sense of wrongness pervades his being, curling through him and keeping him tethered to consciousness. He runs through the list of problems he seems to be having and tries to come up with which one might be keeping him awake. The only thing he can think of is the unfamiliar mattress. Everything else is exactly the way it was in his old flat.
And when was the last time you slept there? The thought hits him all of a sudden, and his eyes snap open. He forgot. The last time he slept in his apartment was the night before Jane Prentiss attacked the Institute. Ever since then, he’s been sleeping in Tim’s living room…or in Tim’s bed. With the others.
That’s all it is. He isn’t used to the silence of being alone. He’s not used to not knowing, right away, exactly where Tim and Martin are and if they’re safe. He’ll just go and check on them, see that they’re safe, and he’ll be able to get to sleep just fine.
He throws back the covers, slides his glasses back on, and heads into the hallway. Jon somehow ended up in the room by the bathroom, while Tim and Martin are on the other side of the hallway. Martin’s room is first, though, so Jon heads there. He’s as careful as he can be. Martin is probably asleep by now. He definitely seemed tired while they were still in the living room, and Jon wonders if he lingered because the other two were still sitting down there. It makes him feel slightly guilty, like he should have called it a night earlier so Martin can get some sleep. And after all, they did have a very emotionally draining conversation, which probably exhausted him as well. All that runs through Jon’s mind as he slowly, slowly eases the door open and peers around it to see into Martin’s room.
It’s sparsely furnished; nothing but a bed and one of those flimsy pop-up cloth jobs bisected into cubes, which is serving as his dresser. Martin’s laptop and phone sit on the floor, both connected to their chargers. The bed is mussed slightly and shows signs of having been occupied, but Jon’s heart rate accelerates when he looks at it. It’s empty.
There’s no sign of a struggle, he tells himself, and he heard nothing, so surely everything is fine. Martin’s probably just in the bathroom, or downstairs getting a glass of water or something. It’s fine. Everything’s fine. Jon will just…go check on Tim and Tim will be fine and then he’ll go find Martin and make sure he’s fine and it…will…be…fine. He pulls the door closed and turns to Tim’s room.
The door is slightly ajar, and there’s a faint glow coming from the room. Jon hesitates, then taps lightly on the door three times before easing it open. Tim is sitting up on the bed, cross-legged and leaning forward slightly. And—Jon’s shoulders slump in relief—Martin is there, too, on the edge of the bed, one leg hanging off the side and the other tucked underneath him. They’re talking quietly, but both obviously exhausted. They look up at the sound of the door opening and watch Jon stand in the doorway. He opens his mouth, then realizes he doesn’t know what to say and closes it again.
“Couldn’t sleep either?” Martin asks gently. The circles under his eyes are almost black.
“No,” Jon admits. “I—I just wanted to—” He breaks off, still not sure what to say.
Wordlessly, Tim holds out a hand. Jon lets the bedroom door shut behind him as he comes forward and takes it. Martin wraps an arm around him from behind, and the two of them pull Jon onto the bed and into a lying-down position. Tim rolls over and snaps off the lamp by his bed, then pulls the covers up over all three of them. Jon manages to reach down and snag the middle to help.
“Better,” Tim murmurs.
It’s not a question, but Jon hums in agreement anyway. Trying for levity, he says, “Shame to waste money on new beds, though.”
“We’ll be able to sleep there eventually,” Martin says. Jon only realizes how much stress was in his voice when it’s drastically lessened. “At some point we’ll probably want the space. But for now, there’s this.”
“For now, there’s this,” Jon agrees. He tilts his head back briefly to rest it against Martin’s shoulder, and Martin scoots in closer.
Tim does, too, the two of them sandwiching Jon securely between them. “Get some sleep,” he says. “It’ll be all right tomorrow.”
Jon yawns and closes his eyes, and it doesn’t really surprise him when he falls asleep straightaway. The nightmares are as present as ever, but in the morning, he can almost fool himself into believing they weren’t so bad.
hi friend!!!! i love your writing!!! if you're taking prompts from the bingo card (if you're not then feel free to delete this!!), how about N5 for Jon? :) i hope you have a great day!!
‘fighting to pay attention to urgent information’ ahh i love this prompt!! thank you so much for the ask, it means a lot since i love your writing so much (and it inspired me to starting posting my stuff, to be honest). Here you go, I hope you like! This takes place right after Sasha makes her statement to Jon in season one.
Sasha is talking but Jon can’t hear her.
It’s all muddled in his mind. So many things have happened over the last couple of weeks- Martin’s worm attack and now Sasha’s encounter with Michael- and his mind is refusing to process. She gave her statement in his office and was now explaining the situation to Martin and Tim while Jon stood awkwardly in the doorway, trying to nod at the appropriate time.
“We’ll need a plan of attack if Prentiss comes or if any of us encounter Michael again,” she’s saying. “Martin’s already living here, but-”
A plan. Yes. A plan would be good but Jon can’t think beyond Sasha bleeding in his office and Martin throwing open his door demanding to be heard. The worms on the pavement crawl and creep and remind him of something he thought he’d finally put behind him but he’s been chasing it the entire time, hasn’t he?
His body feels at once too hot and too cold. Jon’s never understood that about illness. How a body can burn with fever and shake with a chill at the same time. But he’s not sick, he’s just...overwhelmed. Needs to eat a normal meal, needs to get some sleep. If he could just get a deep breath in his lungs the black spots would stop dancing in front of his vision and he could pay attention and come up with a plan.
But every other word is ‘worms’ and ‘infestation’ and all matter of disturbing things and his mind goes wild with imagination, horrible scenarios playing out in his mind as his breaths turn into an uneven staccato of sound that he tries to stifle.
“-could get more CO2 you think? Jon?” That’s your name.
“A-Ah, yes. I’ll t-talk to Elias.” Sasha nods and Jon is relieved to have said the right thing. The fog in his brain lifts; the panic eases for just a few moments but it only reveals more physical pain and he starts to shake. He knows he needs to sit down soon or he’ll be lying on the ground either way. So he slowly backs out of the room, hoping no one notices as his hands grasp at the wall for balance. He manages to stumble back to Document Storage before he hears someone calling his name. But he’s lost now, barely breathing as his heart stutters in his chest and he sinks to the floor.
________
Martin had been watching Jon while Sasha spoke. Martin watched Jon a lot- innocently, of course, and Jon never seemed to notice. He was either willfully ignorant or really that oblivious.
Martin was starting to double down on the ‘willfully ignorant’ theory.
Jon was nodding along, sure. But his face held a detached blankness, as if each word were in one ear and out the other. Of course he would zone out during this conversation; it involved real, actual supernatural occurrences. He only contributed once, a vague promise to talk to Elias, who was turning out to be a very useless manager. Martin thought Jon was getting better about this. After all, he seemed to believe both Martin and Sasha’s stories. But he watched as Jon moved further and further out of the room when he should be contributing to the conversation. He disappeared down the hallway and Martin let out an irritated sigh, drawing Tim and Sasha’s attention.
“What’s up?” Tim asked from his perch on Sasha’s desk. “Don’t worry, we’re gonna figure this out-”
“It’s not-” Martin got up, starting to make his way down the hallway. “It’s Jon. I can’t believe he would just walk out on this. I’m going to go talk to him.”
“Martin-” Sasha sounded hesitant but he ignored her as he spotted the open door to Document Storage. Why would Jon go here instead of his office? This was Martin’s room with his things. And I didn’t exactly keep it clean. “Jon?” he called out. “Jon, you need to- what are you doing?”
The man was leaning against his cot, knees brought up to his chest as he stared at the floor. His glasses were tucked into his sweater and his hair was a mess, as if he’d been running his fingers through it. And he was ignoring Martin in favor of whatever the hell he found so interesting about the floor. Martin stooped down to his level, ignoring the twinge in his knees on the cold cement. “What’s going on?” he asked again, trying to keep the annoyance out of his voice. God, Jon could be so infuriating at times, but he was still concerned.
Jon barely spared him a glance and tightened his arms around his knees, looking like a ball of tension. His shoulders moved very minutely upwards in a sort of shrugging motion and Martin thought he heard a mumble of ‘’nothing, fine,” under his breath and he couldn’t help but roll his eyes. He moved in closer, setting a firm hand on Jon’s bony shoulder- when did he get so thin?
“Look, I know it’s a lot,” Martin tried for comfort, though it was getting harder and harder to do so these days when the man refused to see reason. “But you can’t just bury your head in the sand whenever someone says something you don’t want to hear, alright? We’re all struggling and it would be a lot easier if we had a boss who actually listened instead of- shit.”
Jon was shaking so much. How had he not noticed? His breathing was off, like a sputtering engine as his white-knuckled grip dug into his knees. His face was ashen and sweaty. He was clearly unwell but he opened his mouth anyway in an attempt to respond. His eyes did not meet Martin’s.
“It’s- it’s all I think about,” he began, his voice more of a croak than the smooth baritone Martin was used to. “She’s after us, after you and Sasha and now there’s Michael and I don’t know what to do.” Martin watched in horror as his eyes filled with tears and his voice trembled. “And- and what if I go home and she’s waiting there? What if she gets Tim? What if we aren’t safe anywhere?” A slender hand shot out and grabbed onto Martin’s sweater, startling him as Jon’s eyes met his own with a desperate fervor. “I-I can’t sleep. I can’t eat. And Elias doesn’t even care, just w-watches while we all scramble around doing- doing-” his voice broke into a hacking cough and Martin couldn’t witness any more. He dislodged Jon’s hand and backed away. Seeing Jon like this was uncomfortable and he wasn’t sure what to do about it, so he went into his natural problem-solving mode. “I’m going to get you some water, yeah? You’re- you’re not well, we can talk about this later.” Despite keeping his voice soft and low, Martin watched as Jon shrunk into himself, desperately trying to stifle his coughs. “I’ll be right back.”
He hightailed it out of the storage area, eyes firmly on the ground and steps so quick he didn’t notice Tim until he ran right into him.
“Oof! What’s wrong, Martin?” Tim said as he grabbed him by the shoulder. “Boss giving you trouble?” Martin shook his head, voicing his next words as diplomatically as possible.
“He’s, um- I think he’s sick?” Tim’s brow furrowed in concern. “I’m just going to get him some water, yeah.” He walked off before Tim could ask another question; he didn’t want to leave Jon alone for too long but he also didn’t want to be subjected to Tim’s questioning.
It only took him a couple of minutes to grab some water and a cold towel but by the time he got back to the room Jon was laid out on his cot, eyes barely open as Tim said something Martin couldn’t hear and smiled softly at the man in the bed. He knew they’d all known each other before the Archives; it was something that he thought about quite a bit, to be honest. But he’d never really seen Jon interact with someone like this, so quiet and trusting that he nodded off right in front of them.
“There you are!” Tim said, uncharacteristically quiet. He reached out and Martin handed over the supplies, still stupefied by the whole situation.
“Just gonna let him sleep for a mo’ before I force this down his throat,” he chuckled as he gently placed the towel on his forehead. “Glad you checked up on him- didn’t realize he was having a rough go of it. I’m usually a bit more observant.”
“We’re all having a rough go of it, Tim,” Martin felt like he had to explain some of his frustration. “How did he let himself get to this point? I mean, he’s always so skeptical on the tapes but it turns out he’s worked himself up so much he’s sick and it doesn’t make any sense.”
“We all tell our lies, Martin,” The words weren’t said unkindly, but he remembered that Tim knew about his resume and though he didn’t think the man would ever tell anyone it did seem like the words were rather pointed. “His coping mechanism is all this skeptic nonsense. Don’t get me wrong, it’s terrible and very annoying,” Tim conceded, giving Martin a knowing look. “But not all of us ended up here accidentally. Most of us are here for answers. For a reason.” Tim’s far off look reminded him that he knew so little about the people he worked with. He wondered what Tim’s reason was, what Jon’s was. And if they would ever feel comfortable enough to confide in him.
Martin doesn’t know how to respond to those words, so he does what he does best- deflect and nervously offer his services. “I can throw the kettle on, maybe order some takeaway? Food would probably make him feel better.”
“Yeah, reckon it would,” Tim’s just staring at Jon as he fitfully dozed. Tim may not have been attacked directly but he looked tired and worried all the same. “He likes Thai.”
Martin noted the fact down for his mental file on Jonathan Sims. Hates spiders. Likes his tea with milk, no sugar. Hates my handwriting. Likes Thai. It’s not very comprehensive.
Later, when he’s making tea in the break room, he watches as Sasha slips into the hallway to Document Storage, attempting to go unnoticed. She’s got a hand to her shoulder like she’s trying to rub away the ache and Martin grabs some paracetamol out of the cabinet, knowing both her and Jon will need it. Everyone in the Archives likes to hide their pain, himself included. But maybe for one night they could help each other out. Four tired humans against two eldritch abominations.
Mom’s hanging out with me more after my panic attack (she uh...found me hyperventilating at the bottom of an nearly overflowing shower) so I was like ‘WILL U WATCH A LOT OF SHE-RA WITH ME ITS THE ONLY THING THAT MAKES ME HAPPY RIGHT NOW AND I HAVE NO ONE ELSE’ and the ‘save the cat’ episode made her cry so congrats on Making Moms Cry Noelle.
{ an elaboration on SENSITIVE INFO found in required ABOUT page reading }
{ olivier suffers from a panic disorder stemming from the frequent and severe child abuse that he suffered from a young age to 16. at 16 olivier was caught on a ‘date’ with another boy by his brother and then outed to his father, where then he had the traumatic event of his father attempting to murder him while his mother stood by and did nothing to respond to her youngest’s pleas for help. a panic disorder is is characterized by multiple panic attacks that can happen from triggers and/or at random. common triggers for olivier include: blood, yelling and other loud noises in proximity to him, extension cords, and romantic outings with men he holds interest for. out of all of these, BLOOD is his strongest trigger classifying him as a hemophobic - someone with an intense fear of the sight of blood.
because of this, olivier has substance abuse issues. he has been prescribed xanax due to how debilitating the string of consecutive panic attacks can be, but he hates to use his medication. even when he does take his xanax, it is usually incorrectly dosed and/or paired with alcohol. he has a substantial drinking problem as well as a cigarette habit. self-medicating in these incorrect ways make him feel more in control than relying on a doctor’s pills that could run out and be difficult to obtain more of on a short notice, whereas alcohol and cigarettes are plentiful and generally acceptable to stock up on. his behavior gets better when he has more people involved in his life - but it is not a permanent fix as human support and love, while being incredibly important, is not counseling for substance abuse.
it should go without saying, but here’s saying anyway: THIS IS NOT A HEALTHY COPING MECHANISM. please do not think what he is doing is in anyway acceptable simply because it is explainable. olivier’s biggest battle is between the peace and happiness he has from his bookstore and independence and the underlying depression despite his liberation from his abusive family caused by his inability to mentally fully heal from the intense psychological and physical damage he suffered as a child.}