“Being here? …I’d like to know if he survived, but… a close friend of mine from home is here. And I think overall it’s healthier for me that I can’t see him and he can’t call me. So I guess…. net positive, yeah.”
There’s a knife in his bedside table, though, reminding him of what he did.
Malcolm swallows. Does he mean that? Maybe it’s just a nice thing to say.
“I’m glad. That. You’re still going to come. I… wanted to call but. I thought. I mean. I didn’t want to bother you when you were going to be coming by in a few days.”
“There have been some mysterious maulings in Dogtown,” Malcolm points out. “Can’t rule it out.” He pauses. “Do you think… “ He trails off and huffs a laugh at himself. “Nevermind. I don’t know what I’m…” He picks at a piece of lint that isn’t there on the blanket by his knee. “Are you going to go to the job fair?”
he’s totally not ignoring it because I haven’t read stuff yet >.>
He’s about to check if the line is dead, so to speak, when Malcolm says something.
Says that.
Neal’s breath catches a little. Of all the possible scenarios, Malcolm asking him out and doing it so soon was not one he thought of. “I…”
All at once, there’s Rebecca smiling face. Rachel’s, not Rebecca’s, expressionless, open eyes in a face pale from blood loss.
Keller’s smirk, the monologue that drove home for Neal how much he put in danger of the Panthers figured out he was a mole. Keller’s morgue-blue face, perfect little circle on his forehead, the back of his head opened like a dropped tomato. Neal had gone to see the body just before he left for Paris. He’s still not sure why he did that. He hadn’t been with Keller for years. Neal hated him for everything he’d done.
Rachel he knew was a lie, even if she saved him in the end. She was a lie, and after almost two years he should be past it.
He’s been too quiet. Neal clears his throat.
“It’s not that I wouldn’t,” he says softly. “It’s really not that. You’re smart, curious, kind.”
A tiny smile. “Absolutely gorgeous.”
Another pause. “The… last person I was with—-”
He cuts himself off. Suicide is too blunt. “I lost her. I haven’t… It’s not that I wouldn’t go out with you. It’s that I don’t think I could be a very good partner.”
It’s not you, he says, it’s me. He’s just looking for a friend. In truth, Malcolm is maybe very slightly relieved that he’s cleared that up. It is, in fact, definitely a relief and not a sinking lead weight in his chest. Definitely good to know and not a devastating disappointment.
“That’s. Understandable.”
Say something. Be cool.
“I… do you want us to… get a dessert or something?”
“I’d like that,” Neal says quietly. God, he wants to fix this, he wants to make it better, but he can’t, not really.
But God he wants Malcolm to know it’s not because he wouldn’t.
“Her name…”
All I can see is the girl I fell for.
Remember her like that, Peter had said.
“Her name was Rebecca,” he finally says. “We… I was going to—-”
He laughs breathlessly, clearly pained. The only proposal he’s ever gotten to go through with was for part of a con. No matter how much he wanted it, how much Sara did, how much he really meant it—-they couldn’t be, in the end.
And then Rachel-not-Rebecca.
“We met when I was pulling a job at the gallery where she worked. She lost her job, because of what I did. I tried to make it better, somehow, and we ended up…”
He trails off again. “We we’re together almost a year, and she—”
Neal steels himself to say it. “She killed herself. That was almost two years ago, now, but. I can’t do it. Not yet. If I could, I would love trying with you.”
It’s true, at least, every part of it. No details, sure, but no lies.
“I’m sorry,” Malcolm says softly. “I… get it. I do. The last girl I went out with… I found out she was looking for information about one of my father’s victims. She said she really cared about me, but once my father didn’t have any more information about the person she was looking for, she left. They found her body in the river. The man she was investigating put an assassin on her. I do get it.”
"I'm sorry too," Neal murmurs. It's so like Rachel he almost tells Malcolm the whole truth, but no. That requires too much of everything about his life. A half-laugh. "That never seems like enough, does it? 'I'm sorry'?"
"You can call too," Neal reiterates, for the sake of... not making things awkward. For the sake of that and nothing more. "If you wanted to. Either way, I'll see you tomorrow."
He hangs up, staring at the phone a moment, seized with the desire to throw it off the roof and into the street.
It seems safer than keeping it. Safer than checking the number every time it rings.
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Then hopefully go home. He’ll make it, if that’s an impossibility, he can adapt, but he held out some hope he’d get to see his people again.
A pause. “Is it better or worse for you? Given what happened with your dad.”
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There’s a knife in his bedside table, though, reminding him of what he did.
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“When I’ve got such interesting company to look forward to? Definitely not.”
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“I’m glad. That. You’re still going to come. I… wanted to call but. I thought. I mean. I didn’t want to bother you when you were going to be coming by in a few days.”
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Theft. Sex. Things like that…
“…Are werewolves actually a thing here? Maybe I should take that back.”
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he’s totally not ignoring it because I haven’t read stuff yet >.>
“Do I think what?” It’s a gentle prompting.
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“Do you think that maybe next week you’d want to… do something? With me. After work. It’s too soon to ask, right? Tomorrow could change your mind.”
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Says that.
Neal’s breath catches a little. Of all the possible scenarios, Malcolm asking him out and doing it so soon was not one he thought of. “I…”
All at once, there’s Rebecca smiling face. Rachel’s, not Rebecca’s, expressionless, open eyes in a face pale from blood loss.
Keller’s smirk, the monologue that drove home for Neal how much he put in danger of the Panthers figured out he was a mole. Keller’s morgue-blue face, perfect little circle on his forehead, the back of his head opened like a dropped tomato. Neal had gone to see the body just before he left for Paris. He’s still not sure why he did that. He hadn’t been with Keller for years. Neal hated him for everything he’d done.
Rachel he knew was a lie, even if she saved him in the end. She was a lie, and after almost two years he should be past it.
He’s been too quiet. Neal clears his throat.
“It’s not that I wouldn’t,” he says softly. “It’s really not that. You’re smart, curious, kind.”
A tiny smile. “Absolutely gorgeous.”
Another pause. “The… last person I was with—-”
He cuts himself off. Suicide is too blunt. “I lost her. I haven’t… It’s not that I wouldn’t go out with you. It’s that I don’t think I could be a very good partner.”
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It’s not you, he says, it’s me. He’s just looking for a friend. In truth, Malcolm is maybe very slightly relieved that he’s cleared that up. It is, in fact, definitely a relief and not a sinking lead weight in his chest. Definitely good to know and not a devastating disappointment.
“That’s. Understandable.”
Say something. Be cool.
“I… do you want us to… get a dessert or something?”
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But God he wants Malcolm to know it’s not because he wouldn’t.
“Her name…”
All I can see is the girl I fell for.
Remember her like that, Peter had said.
“Her name was Rebecca,” he finally says. “We… I was going to—-”
He laughs breathlessly, clearly pained. The only proposal he’s ever gotten to go through with was for part of a con. No matter how much he wanted it, how much Sara did, how much he really meant it—-they couldn’t be, in the end.
And then Rachel-not-Rebecca.
“We met when I was pulling a job at the gallery where she worked. She lost her job, because of what I did. I tried to make it better, somehow, and we ended up…”
He trails off again. “We we’re together almost a year, and she—”
Neal steels himself to say it. “She killed herself. That was almost two years ago, now, but. I can’t do it. Not yet. If I could, I would love trying with you.”
It’s true, at least, every part of it. No details, sure, but no lies.
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He hadn’t been able to stop there.
“I would… still like to hang out some time. If. That’s okay.”
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A pause, then: "It was good talking to you. I mean that. I like talking to you."
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But then he says that.
The first two sounds that come out of his mouth aren’t words. He swallows and takes a breath and tries again.
“I’m glad you called. I’ll see you tomorrow,” he says evenly, because maintaining a careful control is what’s making the sounds be shaped like words.
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He hangs up, staring at the phone a moment, seized with the desire to throw it off the roof and into the street.
It seems safer than keeping it. Safer than checking the number every time it rings.
Shit.