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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"The options seem limitless. But- I think I'm not ready to share you with the world yet. Just be mine for tonight? I have bread, cheese, we can make coffee and tea here."
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"But--" she adds with another kiss, lightening again, "if you want to be selfish and keep me all to yourself for tonight, I can live with that, too."
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"Think we're allowed to be a little selfish, after what we went through."
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"And chess," she says after a moment's pause, trying to rally all the same. "There's always chess." She glances up, the corner of her mouth ticking into a softer, sadder smile. "And I still have one-third of a book in my luggage."
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But he also doesn't want to hurt her anymore, doesn't want that smile to falter. So he tells himself now to stop bringing it up quite so often: he can ignore it for the time being, until she feels a little more healed and safe to be with him.
He lets her detach herself from him for a second, as he holds up a finger to ask her to hold on- then starts rummaging in his back, taking out piles of clothing and other items before stumbling upon something he'd bought here on his first day in town: a tiny, tiny travel chess set.
"Never used," he admits. "I thought we could make this one ours."
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"It was my move last -- that means I get to go first, yes?"
She's grateful for the change of subject. She knows, at heart, nothing is ever going to be forgotten, and nothing can be ignored forever. He's a tunneler, a prisoner, an officer; she's a spy, a whore, a bit of a traitor, and the first time she kissed him it was because she had been ordered to. They've hurt each other -- she more than he -- and been badly hurt, in all kinds of ways, by the experiences of the last few years. Someday, she'll have to admit to all of this, just like she someday might have to tell him why she went silent for two months, or why she needs things just a little slow when they already know each other's bodies so intimately.
But there's always been a part of her, even from that very first night, that's wanted to live this as a fantasy. Here, in Strasbourg, she doesn't have to be any of those things. She can be just a girl, playing chess with her lover on the floor in a tiny boarding-house room, tearing into bread and cheese and tea like filet mignon and champagne, laughing -- giggling -- at his charms and his teases and his stories. Shedding her dress and curling up against him in her slip when it's time to go to sleep, warm and safe and thoughtlessly happy in his embrace. That's real, too.