Memes that Aren't Convoluted (
simplememes) wrote in
bakerstreet2015-11-24 01:31 pm
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Things We Lost in the Fire
![]() Mutual Healing Shipping Meme |
Healing doesn't come quickly, whether the need comes from physical or mental wounds. But you're trying regain your strength - and yourself. People, as a general rule, are kind, or at least not outright inflammatory to you, it seems. Still, you just can't connect with them. No matter how nice, how caring, they don't understand. They've never experienced anything like what you've gone through, or they're not like you in a way that lets them see what you still go through; they have no frame of reference. Sure, they have sympathy, but it's not the same. So there's no real connection, despite any friendliness. It's so easy, then, to feel detached... ...until you meet them, in this place of both death and healing. They may not have been through the exact same struggles, they may not be exactly the same as you, but they know what darkness is light. How they handle this fact may be better or worse than how you do, yet you can see yourself in their actions. And for once? There's connection; more than that, too. Slowly, you can feel yourself opening up towards them, and then, falling for them. Is this something your used to? Will you fight your feelings, or will you jump at the opportunity to be with someone who can begin to get you? You may have little choice in the matter, as your instincts may just reach out to be with whatever compatible contact you can get. That's better, in the long run, though. Who else could have wounds like yours?
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(Sometimes, at night, he would imagine himself sitting here, still, a year from now. Just an Englishman whose mind had been lost to the war, people would say, and he would cradle her letters to his chest as he tried not to lose her.)
Instead she's there, suddenly, and his hand wraps around an object that ought to be familiar, but that's been shaped by her hands as much as his, now. He looks at it, breathing fast, before he lifts his eyes to hers.
"You came," he rasps, eyes wide and almost disbelieving. They did it- they actually did it.
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What's most important right now, though, is her eyes, and his happy disbelief mirrored in them. Hers are already full of tears, and this time she doesn't try to hide them or stop them from spilling, doesn't so much as try to wipe them away when it would mean letting go of his hand.
"I'm here," she whispers, her voice breaking -- and on second thought, she does let go, but only to throw her arms around him and bury herself in the warm, solid comfort she's been without for much, much too long.
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For all his faults, for all that he is from where he is, Tommy isn't embarrassed, now, to cry. The years have been long and dark, and she's emerged as a bright point, the only thing keeping him sane. He's quiet about it, his tears soaking into the collar of her dress as he keeps her close against him.
"Welcome back, Nina," he whispers eventually, breath hitching, still not pulling away.
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Eventually, she hears him speak and tries to quiet herself with a shuddering breath of her own, though she doesn't yet move a muscle, either. "Were you waiting long?" she manages to get out, her voice coming out small and soft.
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"I have lodgings- are you hungry? Thirsty? I-"
He doesn't want to talk about this in public. He wants to get to relearn the shape of her, the way she fits into his arms, the way she looks when he makes her laugh. But they're still in the middle of a train station, and it feels like he has more right to see her than the rest of the world right now.
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She sniffles a little and swipes at her other cheek, then actually smiles when she pulls back and sees the identical glimmer on his. She cups her hands around his face to brush his tears away, too, then and draws him in to rest her head briefly against his. "Can we take care of that there?" Food, drink, she means.
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"Yes. We'll take care of that 'ere, and then we'll go."
She might need to be the one to stand up first, though- somehow, it feels very hard to let go of her.
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She trembles a little when he kisses her forehead, so tender that she very nearly breaks down all over again. She closes her eyes to ward the tears off, and though her lashes grow damp again, no more fall down her cheeks. She's as aware as he that they should get up, but it takes her a moment, too, to bring herself around enough to move so much as another inch away.
But eventually, the sounds of the station start to intrude, and even though she finally has the luxury of not caring what they look like or who sees them, she sniffles again and draws back with a watery smile, absently wiping at her face again. She picks up the horse from where it's fallen to rest on the bench between them, pressing it back into his hand, then closing hers over it. "Okay," she says softly, feeling her legs steady underneath her. She picks up her bag with her free hand, looping the strap over her shoulder. "Show me?"
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It makes him feel impossibly strong and certain, and he smiles brilliantly at her as he tugs her along. Buys her something with the money his family has been sending him (his family, who knows about Nina, who knows why he hasn't come home yet even if he really, really ought to have done), watches her eat and drink and warm up. People around them don't even look at them anymore, and he looks amazed at it.
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She meant what she'd written: she doesn't care anymore what happens next, if it happens with him.
She smiles at him over the rim of her cup, surer, happier now that the initial teary shock has passed. Now her eyes aren't just glassy, but shining. "It's good," she assures him, offering him a bit, like it's important that he know this about what is, technically, their first meal together.
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"Your trip- how was it?"
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"There isn't much to say about it," she admits, leaning into him again, reaching for his hand. "A blur. I slept most of the way." She had thought to try to stay awake, to watch the countryside go by -- but at this point, she really couldn't be more sick of the German countryside, and she wanted to be wide awake to look for him if it hadn't been so easy.
She hesitates, then tries to ask again: "How long?" He's been here long enough to have lodgings, to get money... How long has he been waiting here for her?
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"Four and a half weeks," he replies, squeezing her hand once. "My family's- sent me money to stay here."
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Which means both that he had enough faith in her to wait here for over a month, and that surely, his family must know why. She feels, suddenly, like a leaky faucet, because she very nearly starts to get weepy all over again. "Tommy--"
She manages to fight off any further tears, but she drops his hand to wrap both her arms around the one of his nearest her, pressing her face briefly into his shoulder. Even when she looks up again, she keeps walking like that, clasping his arm tightly.
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"You're here now, eh?"
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She nods into his shirt, returning the embrace tightly, though she doesn't need to linger in it this time as she had before. "I'm sorry to have kept you waiting so long," she murmurs, explaining as she draws back to look at him. She reaches up to clasp his cheek briefly. "But thank you." For waiting, for being here, for trusting her.
"Let's go--" She hesitates. Go home isn't right, when she knows this is just a stopover, but there's nothing she can think of in either language that feels more right. "Let's get away from all these people," she decides instead, linking her arm through his now. "Show me where you've been while you've been waiting?"
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"Mostly here," he quips, weakly but with intent. "It's a small walk. Close to the station- convenient. It's small, but my landlady's nice. French."
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No, she can imagine it exactly, because she had been just as lonely in the camp hospital, fighting her own ravaged body and trying to hold onto scraps of letters in her mind until she was well enough to write new ones. She had been lonelier still in the days before the letters, so sure then that she would never see or hear from him again, so sure that there was no one left for whom her life held any value at all.
"Show me," she says again, a little more adamantly, urging him to a faster walk. "You can teach me French when we get there," she tries to joke, though her voice doesn't quite carry the humor. In a crowd like this, they could both still be lonely; alone together, they can both be so much happier.
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He's renting an attic room in a small house in an alley- it's small within small within small, and it's not the best part of the city. He holds his arm tightly around her, though, wants to protect her even as he usher her up the stairs.
It's just a room- a single bed pushed against the wall, a dresser, a bowl for water on top of that. He has his military-issued bag standing in one corner, still packed. It's bare, of course, but it's cozy enough for such a small space. He closes the door behind him, and then-
They're alone. They're finally alone, and they're not in the woods, they're not scared.
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She lets out a soft sound, not quite a laugh, but just as happy. She lets her bag drop to the floor, then slips the horse into her coat pocket and quickly unbuttons it, allowing for just the slightest nicety of hanging it from the doorknob. Underneath, she's wearing a dress he knows well: the same one that had gotten soaked that first night in his barracks. She smooths it down, then turns to him, smiling helplessly.
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His hands rest on her waist comfortably, so familiar. "I remember this dress," he whispers, smiling, and then another step closer: "I want to kiss you, now, very badly."
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He has to know, she thinks, what she's been doing in his absence. He must know how she's been literally making her living. She knows he must, but the thought still makes her hesitate, suddenly guilty, because she's never actually told him. Should she--?
She bites her lip, then goes up on her toes to kiss him once, very softly, very sweetly, her hands coming to rest on his chest. "Could we..." For once, she struggles with the words. "I'm not... like I was before." She glances up into his eyes, uncertain. "I need a little time."
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He ignores it even now, preferring to rest a hand on her cheek and nod. "I don't expect a single thing from you, Nina. I won't do anything you don't want."
If there is something else than love and trust in his eyes, it's because he's thinking very briefly of the people who have changed her, and what he would like to do to them.
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She's not quite as confident as she wishes she were in what she sees, so she moves her hands up to clasp his jaw between them, speaking earnestly, if softly: "I want you," she whispers. "I want to make love with you." And she does, she does. She remembers how good it was before, how much better it could be now that there's no part of her trying to stay detached from him, now that they have no distractions between them.
She does, just-- "Just-- slowly?" she pleads.
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"We can wait, love," he whispers, surprising himself by calling her that. "I missed it terribly, but I missed you more. Eh?"
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!! this totally didn't make it into my dw inbox wth i am glad you edited
!! my pedantry saved the day
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