the love series, iii: when love is just (enough).
[RECORDING #00142, AMONGST XAVIER’S FILES FROM DECEMBER 2017:]
I was... probably just barely nineteen at the time, when I met him. (Laughter.)
Now, the late tens is a strange time in any person’s life, but I can surely tell you, it was an especially odd time for me. Let me try to plant you in my shoes.
I had just earned my second bachelor’s in science, and for the first time in my life, books were starting to grow quite mundane. There was so much knowledge scribed in them, but I wasn’t sure if knowledge was what I wanted anymore. I ended up with a new job every other week, for the sake of experience. I was trying to find the purpose in existence, I presume. Something all nineteen year olds seem to do. I was in midst of a quarter... quarter like crisis of some sorts.
And amongst it all, I had just come to terms with my abilities, and I had just decided that whether they were gifts or curses, that I wanted to use them for the greater good. The very question I was struggling to stumble upon an answer to was what “greater good,” exactly meant, especially in perspective to my barely twenty year old self.
That’s when I met him.
(Long pause.)
Blythe, I mean.
You would think a nineteen year old with two degrees would have better logic than to fall in love, but that’s exactly what happened. It was gradual and sudden all at once, and I’m never quite sure how to describe just what happened.
He just happened to me, gradually, and suddenly. And all of a sudden knowledge meant nothing, if not knowing him.
I only knew him for a year and some, until the incident happened. I... won’t get into the specifics. (Long pause.)
What I do wish to tell you, was how difficult it was to not direct my grievance into anger, -- how it took so much to keep myself sane. Perhaps I did go insane, deciding to continue to work for the same man that had murdered him -- and I definitely had lost it when I transfigured my grievance to the greed I had when I soon figured out he was not quite dead. He had cloned Blythe.
I took this better than you think someone would. I understood the science behind it after all -- all too well.
I thought it might be a second chance at something. (Pause.) I knew it could be a redeeming chance at something that was taken from me. (Loud, incontrollable laughter.) I’m sorry. I realize how ridiculous this all sounds, but it really was my thought process at the time. I did the impossible; the ridiculous. His name is Parker, and I somehow managed to redeem myself. (Pause.)
(Another pause.) For some reason, he seems to love me, and I can’t quite understand it.
Now the question I struggle with is whether any of this was right to begin with. I know by science, that is it all in the right: Blythe and Parker are identical, down to the last codon and anticodon. Every dot that was speckled on Blythe is on Parker, and I know that for fact.
And yet they are so different, and I no longer seem to be able to distinguish who I am in love with.
And the most outworldly bit amongst all of this: (Pause.)
Parker knows.
He knows about Blythe, and our history. He knows about the experiment, about this whole timeline, and perhaps even parts of the story I do not even know or cannot be bothered to come into knowledge of. And yet. (Pause.) And yet...
He says we are enough.
He says his love is enough, to look past it all. He says my love is enough to look beyond it all.
He says it is just enough. Barely, but just enough.
(Pause.)
End recording.
@xoctis














