THE RIGHT THING. the right thing. well, it’s good to see tom’s sobered up now, at least … he’s right. of course, he’s right. greg is young and idealistic, and even through this bitter fight and betrayal, yet another secret slotted into his book, stained pages inked in tom’s handwriting, passed off and expected of greg to shred them forever. would you kiss me? tom had asked, once. the answer then was yes, but i won’t say so, but not here, and the answer now … so much had changed. nothing had changed. everything changed. that was before tom had promised to look after him, before greg had gotten a taste of wealth, of greed, of lust, and power. this was before tom … this was before greg had started to give a shit.
a little known fact : when you’re pushed to the side, and you’re left on the outskirts and silenced, there’s not much left to do except observe. wide - eyed baby blues constantly drink in everything around him, until he’s memorized the faces of his coworkers, of his family : he knows tom’s tells about as well as he knows his own mother’s … probably better. he can place the look in tom’s eyes before. ( he thinks back to the bachelor party — greg, i’m having the time of my life! — the way greg had felt his heart lurch at the comment, coupled with the guilt - stricken look in tom’s eyes, hidden behind a grin. to the safe room, when tom refused to look greg in the eyes — i don’t always like who i am, greg. greg had searched for tom’s gaze, but it was never returned. why would i let you go? he’d asked. and greg was stupid enough to believe it. )
tom’s hands leave his hips, and the loss of heat hits him instantaneously : is this because he’d grown so comfortable in such a short time, or because the ice - cold chill of guilt is bleeding in. even as tom rips his hands away, the aggression that stains each of their encounters is missing ; it makes greg feel worse. he’s grown quite talented at playing the fool, at feigning ignorance and hiding his anger / frustration / pain. ( he needed to, if he wanted to make any progress at waystar. no room for feelings there but malice. ) he does his best to keep his expression as neutral as he can. and there it is, the pronoun — we. greg catches on the we and not the you, and somehow that kills him even more. ( he’d rather be insulted, be shouted at or pushed away. that was the tom he was used to. that was the tom he knew how to handle. ) greg pulls his hands back, away from tom, careful not to feel like he’s jerking away, but that’s what he wants to do. ‘ yeah, ’ he answers dumbly. THERE WAS STILL ONE WAY TO BREAK GREG HIRSCH : and as in every other, tom had found this too. ‘ i don’t — i’m sorry. i shouldn’t — i shouldn’t have said anything. i shouldn’t have said that. ’
THE RIGHT THING : the mythical beast that none of the roys had ever really believed in ( i am not a roy, says a ringless finger and a bitter glare, i am what the roys leave behind ... the beating scar, the bleeding heart, the voiceless voice : he is the water that pools at the bottom of the drain and he’s the rotting food left on the side of the counter ... tom wambsgans is the right thing made wrong ). kendall would say the right thing and he’d mean strangling power between his bare hands until it finally yielded to him, no matter how hard those hands shook or how hard the power fought back. roman would say the right thing with a bleating laugh and a roll of his eyes, treating morality like casino dice. shiv would say the right thing and tom would have no idea what she meant. maybe she meant nothing at all ( it was just another vapid talking point ). tom would say the right thing and it would mean storing tiny little pieces of happiness away in his chest to last him through the winter.
there’s no way out of places like this. the altar to cheating - that - wasn’t - quite - cheating, cheating that came with the pretense of an open marriage ( OPEN FOR SHIV : the details had become blurry beneath tom’s gagging tears and shiv’s hiccuping voice, alcohol colouring their voices into something a little more truthful ). he wishes that she’d just kept lying to him ... he wishes that he’d known the truth from the beginning. he was fashioned into yet another joke, the laughing - stock of the roy family dressed in suits that felt wrong and a tie that strangled him. OPEN FOR SHIV : because what applied to shiv didn’t really apply to him, not in any concrete way. because he couldn’t look at anyone else without feeling like a dirty child let loose on a world not quite made for him. because he didn’t want anyone but the woman he married ( he wouldn’t let himself want anyone else ). but he hadn’t really let himself want greg, had he? greg had sneaked in, soundless as any reckoning could be. ‘ you shouldn’t have said that, ’ tom agrees, silently. his hands sit on his hips, the inside of his cheek caught between his teeth. ‘ i shouldn’t be here. ’