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statement_ends) wrote2022-12-12 03:44 pm
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A Perfect Waste of Time
There is nothing to suggest that the number of Statements he might extract from the space beneath the Observatory is limited. From what they've gathered, there's far more to work with down there than a single box from the Institute could hold. He should be able to draw from that proverbial well for quite some time. But presuming that his problems have been decisively solved seems foolish, and he's still playing it safe. He visits only as often as he must (for that specific need, anyway; he still stops by for social calls lest Norah start feeling a bit used), and often draws multiple Statements per visit so he'll have tapes in reserve in case something should happen. He tells himself the reserves are for something like rubbish weather, as opposed to the far more upsetting possibility that he might head to the Observatory one day and find it gone.
Granted, it's not just vaguely superstitious caution that has him trying to limit his sojourns. He's started picking up on... something from Martin over the past few weeks. Something he can't quite pin down. It can't be anything as absurd as disapproval, and if it's concern, he can't imagine why. But he has been getting an odd, persistent impression that Martin isn't thrilled with his trips to 'the Ghost Hole,' necessary as they unquestionably are.
Said necessity is why he hasn't got up the nerve to poke the bear, yet. The prospect of them having some sort of spat over something they both know is indispensable is a little too ridiculous for him to go manifesting into reality. If Martin had a sincere concern, surely he'd air it without needing John to prompt him.
Maybe he's just imagining it. Or perhaps Martin is just... having an off day. Several off days. That just happen to coincide with his trips to the Observatory. Sure.
The weather today wasn't rubbish enough to justify staying home, but despite taking a cab for most of the journey, John still returns home with a wet coat and hair that's started to curl a bit from the rain. "Hullo," he says, both to Martin and to The Bishop, who trotted to the entryway to greet him before pulling up short and eyeing his dampened trouser legs with feline trepidation. He leaves his shoes on the mat, sets his bag on the floor, and shucks off his coat, giving Martin a slightly more assessing glance than he normally might. "I don't suppose the kettle's on?" he ventures, trying to gauge whether Martin's vaguely sour mood from this morning has improved in his absence.
Granted, it's not just vaguely superstitious caution that has him trying to limit his sojourns. He's started picking up on... something from Martin over the past few weeks. Something he can't quite pin down. It can't be anything as absurd as disapproval, and if it's concern, he can't imagine why. But he has been getting an odd, persistent impression that Martin isn't thrilled with his trips to 'the Ghost Hole,' necessary as they unquestionably are.
Said necessity is why he hasn't got up the nerve to poke the bear, yet. The prospect of them having some sort of spat over something they both know is indispensable is a little too ridiculous for him to go manifesting into reality. If Martin had a sincere concern, surely he'd air it without needing John to prompt him.
Maybe he's just imagining it. Or perhaps Martin is just... having an off day. Several off days. That just happen to coincide with his trips to the Observatory. Sure.
The weather today wasn't rubbish enough to justify staying home, but despite taking a cab for most of the journey, John still returns home with a wet coat and hair that's started to curl a bit from the rain. "Hullo," he says, both to Martin and to The Bishop, who trotted to the entryway to greet him before pulling up short and eyeing his dampened trouser legs with feline trepidation. He leaves his shoes on the mat, sets his bag on the floor, and shucks off his coat, giving Martin a slightly more assessing glance than he normally might. "I don't suppose the kettle's on?" he ventures, trying to gauge whether Martin's vaguely sour mood from this morning has improved in his absence.
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But he is certainly in a mood, and John knows it. It's obvious from nearly the moment he walks back in, the pointed mildness in his greeting and the lingering look Martin can feel on the back of his head as he stares at his book, not reading. The question doesn't help. Yes, Martin, go put the kettle on; all you're ever good for. A nasty, uncharitable thought, but it carries him through setting his book aside, getting to his feet, and proceeding wordlessly to the kitchen where he fills the kettle, sets it on the burner, and stands there to watch it. He's being ridiculous, and he's obvious on top of it, and he wishes more than anything he could hide it better. Or that John wouldn't pick up on it anyway, somehow.
Even if achieving normalcy is out of reach, he still feels a subtle pressure to break the silence. So: "How was Norah," he says, failing to intone it as a question or to keep the slight frostiness out of his voice.
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"Fine," John answers after a beat of hesitation. He could elaborate, but it's not as if Martin is radiating sincere interest. He watches him for a moment, brow furrowed, far from eager to get into... whatever this is... but increasingly at a loss as to how to avoid it, or if he even should. And what's the alternative? Waiting for Martin to thaw on his own time? Or waiting for Martin to snap?
"She asked how you were," he says. Admittedly, she'd done so with only a little more enthusiasm than Martin has displayed, but that's not the point. Fixing him with a level look, John adds, "I wasn't sure what to tell her."
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The problem is he's not sure what alternative he has. He's sunk so deep into bitter resentment that he's not sure how to climb out. He's not even sure he could articulate the problem if it were put to him to try.
He stares at the kettle a moment longer, wishing he could reset this interaction. His shoulders slump slightly and he raises a hand to his face, pushing a breath out through his fingers.
"I'm sure she'll be relieved to know I'm fine," he mutters, then clicks his tongue and tries again: "She certainly doesn't need to worry about me, and..." Neither do you dies in his throat, because it's something the Lonely would have him say, and it would be an invitation for actual concern he doesn't want. "Look, it... it's stupid," he finally admits, and it comes out petulant, which is better than reproachful, for all it doesn't feel much better. He lets his hand drop and finally looks toward John, still not able to meet his eyes, like a bloody dog that's been caught misbehaving. "It's stupid and I don't want to talk about it but we're going to talk about it because we... talk about things." Said like it's the biggest burden imaginable. Christ, he's so bad at this.
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Christ, what is this about? Nervousness coils in his gut as he thinks back over the past few days, trying to remember anything that might qualify as a transgression on his part, 'stupid' or no. But everything's been normal — at least as far as he can recall — and despite Martin's evident mortification, he doesn't know how they're going to get past this if they don't talk about it like bloody adults.
"We do, yes," John replies. "When we need to. As it seems we do." He could add that it's a habit that Martin, in particular, insisted on cultivating, but they both already know that, and it would feel a little mean-spirited to belabor the point. Instead, he offers a cautious, "Would it, er... would it help if-if I... Asked?" It's not an offer John makes very often, not least of all because it's a crutch Martin rarely needs anymore. But Martin seems embarrassed enough that he might appreciate the shortcut. Then again, it's also possible that he'd prefer to have a bit more agency over what exactly comes out of his mouth.
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Martin breathes out in a soft, defeated gust and tries to get himself to look at John, though he can't get any closer than the vague direction of his shoulder, too embarrassed and too frustrated for anything as intimate as eye contact.
"I, I just..." He sighs, feeling some of the tension in his shoulders turn to more of a slump. "A little while ago I caught myself wishing that- that I hadn't been so useless, that I'd been the one to figure out how to... to deal with all this, like last time. Or even if I didn't figure it out, at least that it was down to something I could offer. I mean, like... telling you about myself, or... or the City giving me the box. I..." He feels himself blushing hotly, and he turns away, chewing his lip. "I wanted it to be me that fixed it, but I couldn't even help, and now... now it's all fine, and it's so incredibly selfish to be upset about it now, I'm well aware, but... It was just one of those thoughts I couldn't stop having once it started. That's all. It's just childish nonsense and I wish I could shut it off, but..."
He runs out of steam and shrugs wearily. It is a bit of a relief to have it out, in the end; he's only now realizing how tired he'd grown of being stuck in this unpleasant, ridiculous thought loop. Much as he hates having to admit to it, it is immediately better not to just be stuffing it down.
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When it comes, it's... sort of heartbreaking, actually. It might technically qualify as childish, he supposes, if one wanted to be unkind about it. But to whatever extent that John doesn't want Martin shouldering full responsibility for his well-being, it has far more to do with not wanting Martin to feel miserably frustrated than it does with some lofty, logical awareness that obviously Martin can't be everything to him. Not least of all because... well, he very often is. They've always been a bit more codependent than average. Perhaps it's no surprise that he's having trouble gracefully accepting his ability to sit this one out.
"Oh," John says, tone and expression both softening as he takes a careful step towards him. Now that Martin's laid it all out, John feels a bit stupid for not guessing at it sooner. He'd been so busy being grateful for their elegant solution that he hadn't really considered the implications of its source. "I-I didn't know you felt that way. Though I suppose if I'd really thought about it, I..." he cuts himself off with a faint wince and a shake of his head. This isn't the time for mutual self-recrimination, and besides, he's not sure how comforting a notion it really is that perhaps he could've guessed at something that Martin clearly finds a bit humiliating.
Given said humiliation, he's wary of indulging his own desire to simply throw his arms around him. Maybe that would feel condescending. Instead, he adds, "But you've never been useless, Martin. I just..." he scratches the back of his neck with a sheepish exhale. "I guess I thought it was sort of nice that it didn't have to be your problem, or— or something you felt like you had to manage."
Which is its own kind of childish, really. Like they might more easily cosplay a normal couple if John could safely satisfy his darker appetites without Martin having to involve himself at all. Christ.
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Well, most of it. He can't help but wince a little at the idea that any of this was Martin's problem. The kettle starts to whine, and he switches the burner off with scarcely a glance, turning and finally looking at John, his whole demeanor relaxing at last.
"It's never felt like that to me," he says softly. "It's not a burden, it's... it's important to me. You're important. I'm so, so grateful you're okay, that matters more than anything, it was just... it was so hard watching you struggle and not being able to do anything to help. So I guess I started feeling like the relief wasn't mine, or... or something."
It had been agonizing, all those months watching John suffer, seeing the gradual uptick in hunger and stress that could not be alleviated. It would be insulting to imply it was in any way harder on Martin than it was on John, but nevertheless, that ache was something Martin hadn't quite allowed himself to feel until it was safe to feel it. And the solution was so... out of the blue, so far outside his expectations and wheelhouse, it was hard to find satisfaction in it. Suddenly having to let go of all that anxiety with no palpable resolution that he had any hand in took a greater toll than he'd realized.
Of course, he's not sure if he can articulate any of that better than his fumbling attempt so far. But he's also not sure he needs to. John probably understands just fine, and conversation now feels less important than the sudden, overwhelming desire for comfort. John had stepped closer, but hadn't made a move toward him beyond that, exercising a cautious respect for boundaries that now feels completely unnecessary. Martin closes the remaining distance, throwing his arms around John's middle and pulling him close with a soft huff.
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He's weighing his phrasing when Martin steps forward and pulls him into a hug, and for a moment he abandons speech. His arms curl around Martin in turn, and he dips his head to press a kiss to Martin's crown. Any lingering chill from outside is banished by Martin's warmth, and John basks in it for a few more moments before he ventures to speak.
"I wouldn't say you didn't help, even if you weren't fixing everything," he murmurs into the soft weft of Martin's hair. "It helps that you care so much. It helps that I— that I don't want to disappoint you. It helps that you're here." He gives Martin's back a slow rub. "Maybe the solution wasn't your idea, but... I wouldn't have held out long enough for us to find it without you."
Then, his tone taking on the faintest hint of wry indignation, he adds, "And Christ, you've certainly earned your fair share of the relief." Things are better, more stable, than they've ever been; he shouldn't be the only one actually enjoying it.
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He smiles faintly at John's last remark, and answers with a slight nod against his chest. "Okay," he says eventually, and breathes out, slow and audible. "Yeah."
He lets his hands pass slowly up and down John's back in a mirror of John's hands on him; he holds him a little closer as if reassuring himself that he's here, he's all right, he'll be all right. When he finally lets go, he pulls back, but not far, a little embarrassed but much more relaxed.
"I'm glad I... that I've been able to help," he says, slightly awkward but sincere. "And that you're okay." He meets John's eyes briefly before glancing back at the stove. Tea does sound good now, the subsequent sit-down even moreso. "H-how about that tea?"
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"Please," John replies, not without feeling. Martin's embrace has banished some of the chill, but none of the damp, and a hot beverage and some fresh clothes sound perfect. He leans in to press a kiss to Martin's temple, murmuring, "I'll be right back." Then, he gently extricates himself and heads for the bedroom, The Bishop trotting alongside and making the occasional bid to rub up against his shin.
It only takes him a minute or so to exchange his trousers for some dry joggers and his button-up for one of his loose jumpers (longer than it would have if he didn't need to navigate around a very insistent cat), and he wanders back out with The Bishop in his arms, feeling a great deal more comfortable. "All right?" he asks, pausing at the edge of the kitchen to see how Martin's getting on.
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"Here we are," he says, setting John's mug down on the coffee table so he can get it after negotiating with The Bishop. He settles in beside them, taking a pensive sip of his own, quiet for a moment. He's not quite sure where to go from here, conversationally; it might be easy enough to share some gentle silence, but there is still something flitting around the periphery of his awareness, like something that didn't quite get settled with all the rest. It's without much thought that he eventually voices it.
"You and Norah don't... actually talk about me, do you?" Almost before he's even finished the question, he already regrets it. Christ, this is the last thing he needs to be prodding. He tries to hastily course correct: "I-I mean — Sorry, that's a stupid question. I'm sure you have much more interesting things to talk about." He frowns into his tea and takes another little sip before he can't quite help muttering, "Though what, I'm sure I don't know."
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First, he blinks over the rim of his cup, riding out the initial burst of incredulity over the thought of Norah being inclined towards gossip, let alone gossip about Martin. It's a shame that the two of them have never really got on (and perhaps that excuses such a gross mischaracterization of Norah on Martin's part), but that generally translates to each of them only asking after the other to the extent that good manners would dictate. And even then, the lack of real interest is palpable. He wouldn't presume to natter about Martin to Norah anymore than the reverse — though Christ, perhaps he should, if only to correct some of these misconceptions before they can take root.
Martin dismisses his own question as 'stupid' before John can respond to it, though the backhanded self-deprecation strikes him as rather unfair. John takes a steadying sip of his own tea to prevent himself from responding a little too off the cuff, but his brows are drawn together in sharp disapproval. The uncomfortable truth of it is that Martin isn't an interesting topic of conversation to Norah, but that hardly translates to him being uninteresting as a rule, or uninteresting to John. If not for the awkward interlude in the kitchen (and even that was mostly about Martin's use as a bulwark against Statement withdrawal, not his overall value), he'd insist that they were well past that.
And perhaps they are, if Martin's final, muttered aside is anything to go by. John swallows his tea with conscious effort, eyes widening slightly as he considers this new piece of information, a square-shaped peg that doesn't quite fit in the round-shaped hole of Martin's usual anxieties. His tone was defensive, perhaps aiming for dismissive, but unable to stick the landing. John gets the distinct impression that Martin truly can't imagine what he and Norah might talk about, and that it bothers him for reasons that go beyond any niggling suspicion that they're talking about him. Maybe it's just that failure of imagination that troubles him — and John supposes that he, of all people, is in no position to fault someone for wanting to know something, even if it's technically none of his business. But this also doesn't feel like simple curiosity, not when Martin has been so stubbornly disinterested in actually getting to know Norah on his own.
He doesn't want to imagine that they talk about him. But he struggles to imagine what else they might talk about, because...?
There is a faint creak of fingers against ceramic glaze as a possibility occurs to him, but it is so outlandish that he cannot trust it, certainly not to the point of voicing it. Not on the basis of what little evidence he's gathered so far. But the thought is as tantalizing as it is completely fucking mental, and he has to lean hard away from the desire to simply Know. He doesn't want to do that to Martin; he has a long-standing policy of not Knowing how he feels. And there is also a small, preemptively giddy part of him that wants to earn this, if he's actually onto something.
John takes another sip of tea, then clears his throat. "I hadn't realized you were so interested," he says, light and faintly teasing. "Should I be recording that, too?"
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When John instead needles him further, it's a bit of a rude surprise, even if it's arguably deserved. Martin blinks, his shoulders tightening into an automatic defensive posture, and he stammers, "Wh- N-no, that's not what I — Don't be ridiculous." He feels himself blushing and realizes there's nowhere to hide, nestled here beside John on the couch. He stares down at his tea, half-wondering if he should attempt to spill it as some sort of diversion and not quite having the nerve. "Look, just forget it."
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But he's discovered a hook so fascinating that he has no intention of letting Martin off of it just yet. It's the blush that convinces him, and John sets down his tea so he can give Martin his full attention, pivoting on the cushions to face him, an incredulous grin tugging at his lips.
"Martin," he says with considerable relish, elbow propped on the back of the couch and eyes bright with interest, "are you jealous?"
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"Wh—" Alarm bells are going off in the back of his head, and the worst of it is, he has no right to the surprise. If anything, he'd become far too complacent. It's just he'd been so certain that if this hadn't ever come up before, it never would. Because John's not a child, and neither is Martin, and no matter how obvious he is, his failure to get along with Norah is a mutual affair. So why would John ever think this? Why would he ever ask it?
"N-no!" he sputters, and opens his mouth as if expecting more indignant denial to come forward. His voice betrays him though, and he just sits there like an idiot, clutching his tea.
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But that's the problem. It's not outlandish at all.
"...Okay, maybe," he grits out a moment later, wondering if he can spin this like he hadn't realized it himself, before he finally crumples: "Fine. Fine. Yes. A bit." He stares at his tea, then knocks most of it back like it's a shot, setting the cup aside so he can better bury his face in his hands.
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"Since when?" John asks, or starts to, but he hasn't even hit the final consonant before his own, human intuition once again provides the answer. Martin has always been a bit weird about Norah, stiff and standoffish for reasons John had never bothered to interrogate. But this new information provides fresh context for all that unfriendliness, and the answer spills out of him in an incredulous rush before he can even draw breath: "This whole time?"
This is appalling. This is the best.
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He can't even get his next question out before he's already answered it himself, and Christ, it was over two years ago that he met Norah the first time, her unexpected arrival at The Archive. He barely remembers it, except that she'd called him out for his nosiness and his over-protectiveness, and he'd expected John to confront him about it then but it hadn't happened. Only for it to come out now?
"Wh — Look, listen," Martin says a bit desperately, "She's just — You're always — You get on so well and I just—"
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John feels such an overwhelming swell of fondness for this ridiculous man that he can't resist reaching for him, one hand lighting on his back and the other on his arm, the first suggestion of a proper embrace. He also can't resist continuing to tease a bit, because honestly. "Me and the incorporeal woman who's old enough to be my great-great-grandmother. You think she's going to... what, lock me in the Observatory and have her wicked way with me?" He starts giggling, unable to imagine even joking about such a thing with her. She'd lose all respect for him in a heartbeat.
Something even funnier occurs to him, and he guffaws outright. "Is it, is— sh-should we stop using the phrase 'ghost hole'?" he manages to gasp, so overcome with amusement that it's a struggle to squawk the words out. "T-too suggestive?" At that, he fully lurches over, head landing on Martin's shoulder as he continues to quake with laughter.
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But before he can muster enough stubbornness to make any point about how her technical age has really got nothing to do with it — from what he's seen, she still reads as a young woman to him — John swerves into making childish entendres and collapses onto his shoulder, and Martin can only gawp at the wall beyond them before mustering a scandalized, "John!"
The worst thing of all is he has to admit it is pretty funny, and John's laughter has always been infectious, so it's with a slightly unsteady quiver that he grits out, "For Christ's sake."
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"Can't believe you were worried," he says, lifting his head and pressing a warm, only faintly giggly kiss to Martin's temple. "As if anyone else in this city would put up with me."
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The idea that Norah, or anyone for that matter, wouldn't put up with John is enough to make him annoyed all over again. "Anyone would be," he insists rather aggressively.
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Said explanation really does nothing helpful for the urge to kiss him, and John's expression takes a turn for the hopelessly besotted. "Martin..." he starts, and then flounders for a beat. He wants to insist that Norah is plainly not attracted to him — he has a hard time imagining her being attracted to anyone, honestly, but it feels presumptuous to speculate about her proclivities, or to trust his own assumptions on the matter. At any rate, he's confident that if she had such inclinations, and considered them to be any of his business, he'd have been made aware by now. His ignorance, then, could be taken as evidence that it's really none of his concern.
But he's getting bogged down in the details, and he gives his head a small shake. "I suppose it's lucky that I'm madly in love with you, then," he murmurs, lifting his hand to Martin's cheek and leaning forward until their foreheads touch. "Though if you needed a little extra... reassurance," he adds, voice dropping to a purr, "I would be more than willing to oblige."
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"I—" he blurts, not even certain why he has any instinct to push back against this. Perhaps for the same reason that he refused to abandon his own sour mood: he's pretty sure he doesn't deserve to be let off the hook for all this, much less rewarded for it.
But that's too many words to get out just now. For a few beats he just stammers silently, then he finally manages a completely bewildered, "What?!"
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