mlle meme (
mllememe) wrote in
bakerstreet2021-12-28 04:21 am
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
![[community profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/community.png)
Entry tags:
otherwordly.

Sometimes all you need is a word to spark off an idea.
How to play -
1. Post a comment with your character's name, canon, and any preferences you may have (no shipping, no smut, etc.)
2. Leave the comment blank or post a word or two in the body. (It may also help if you list scenarios you would like to play.)
3. Reply to other people, either with words you picked out, or words they posted as prompts for a thread.
no subject
I disagree.
[ He steps a little closer, just to feel that bump of hip against hip, the increase in heat and proximity. Around them, people drift from one social constellation to the next and the next and it almost feels as if they're somehow momentarily exempt, him and Elio, like they're watching from their own little private bubble, not exactly present. It's a good feeling. As if they've managed to claim their own space, even here. ]
This look - [ He looks him over blatantly, from head to toe and back up, lingering over his front a little because that suit jacket looks fantastic on him, emphasising his long lines perfectly, even making him seem taller than he is. ] - is just new. It makes you look different.
[ Another sip. He tilts his head slightly. ]
No doubt, in time...
[... in time, what? He stops. Trails off. The other man has made him no promises - he certainly can't expect him to agree to any repeat performances and he can't make him, either, he's got nothing to bargain with and no strings to pull. So instead, he just stares at Elio, his look veering dangerously close to deer-in-headlight-territory whilst he leaves the silence between them as it is, full of unspoken implications.
Fuck, he spews bullshit for a living. ]
no subject
How do you put that in words, though? Non-dramatically.
How do you finish that sentence, in time?
Elio wants to know. ]
How long did it take you to get used to?
[ He’s read up on the other man on the Web, first things first, the official story, the gossip, he’s more movie star than Oliver ever was. Tragic backstories make people marvel at your great achievements, don’t they, but that’s only because people in general don’t have professors for fathers who’d use the Illiad as a bedtime story. Elio knows about heroes.
He knows about forevers.
Letting his hand run down Jean Louis’ back, he makes the touch heavy, insistent, he lets him feel that Elio’s also going to be there tomorrow, the taste of cock in his mouth. ]
Give me chances and give me time, Jean Louis. Give me all the time.
no subject
In this world of riches and gossip and power, it didn't take him nearly as long.
But that's not what they're talking about right now and Elio says, give me chances, his hand warm and heavy, leaving invisible imprints through the layers of his jacket and shirt, maybe even through his very skin. Give me all the time, he says, because he's new - he's nothing like any of them, like anyone he's ever met before.
So in turn, Jean Louis becomes ignorant all over again, to the point where he can't even be sure of what he's learned to begin with. He looks at the other man for a long moment, expression relatively blank, though there's a very slight furrow to his brow and a rare stiffness to his mouth. ]
I'll give you whatever you want.
[ He swallows and straightens a little, his gaze gliding away from Elio. They're still alone in the crowd. Imagine that. ]
Doubt I ever got used to it. Rather - [ He smiles, unpleasantly, but his grip against Elio's back doesn't waver or tighten and he doesn't impose any sort of distance between them. This is just truth. For some reason, he likes that between them, the feel of honesty. ] - it got used to me.
no subject
[ He says it with conviction, because Jean Louis hasn’t let his hand slip away and isn’t moving out of reach either, simply keeping his hold on him and serving him honesty, the kind that says, I’m strange in the eyes of the world and Elio wants to tell him, me too, caro, me too. Almost hopefully, if he’s allowed that and tonight Elio thinks he is, he thinks about a future where he isn’t weird alone and it seems so utterly surreal that he can’t place it amongst these rich investors and sponsors and philanthropists, but here they’re standing regardless, Jean Louis and him. Here they are and they’ll be here again before long, because Jean Louis will give him anything, he says, including repeat performances, in bed and in public and maybe a mix of both, when they’ve settled a little more. Jean Louis will give him anything, including an overbearing kind of understanding. A perspective in which Elio isn’t entirely too much.
A life where he’s allowed to ask for more than he’s learned to. Out of fear.
Jean Louis isn’t afraid. That’s the difference.
So Elio wants to not be afraid, either.
Looking out over the crowd, Marie-Claude, that was her name, she’s just one of many now, one in a row and the row ends with him, Elio thinks that he shouldn’t already wonder what to get, from Jean Louis, just because the other man is willing to give. That’s the polite thing, but he doesn’t think their feelings are any definition of polite, Jean Louis’ and his, that’s the point, right? They’re doing it differently. Because they’re inherently different people.
People who others have to get used to. ]
My parents celebrate Hanukkah at my mother’s summer house near Bordighera. It’s a big thing, my father and his new wife, their son, my mother and her new husband. Me. Our cook. The men who keep the place presentable when we aren’t there. [ His fingers bury into the fabric of Jean Louis’ suit jacket, desperately. Make me feel less strange there as well. ] Please come.
no subject
It's really very odd how normal it feels here, with Elio, how unremarkable he makes it. He can feel the tension in his shoulders dissipating again, the way it tends to do around the other man, and he wouldn't know how to pay him back for that, how in a million fucking years... Sighing, he sips his champagne again - the flute is nowhere near empty, seeing as Jean Louis generally drinks with extreme care and not a small amount of dislike - and listens as Elio tells him about his family's Hanukkah celebrations. Bordighera, he says. Up north, isn't it. Close to the French Riviera. That's a nice place.
And then, his grip tightens against Jean Louis' suit jacket because -
Oh. It's like that.
He blinks, his breath actually catching in his throat for all of two seconds before he fixes the problem and replies, voice steady and sure: ]
Naturally, if you wish.
[ It's not that he doesn't want to, obviously, or he would've said no. He really isn't in the habit of doing things despite himself. But something about being invited to Elio's family gathering makes him feel strangely thrown, like there's an empty space where his reaction and his ideas concerning these things ought to be. His family had traditions, he thinks. Not Hanukkah, for obvious reasons, but Christmas. Easter celebrations. Fleur couldn't do without.
Regardless.
Odd. ]
no subject
And Elio relaxes, then, because although he knows he can be too much, he also knows that Jean Louis can take him, that Jean Louis wouldn't take him if he didn't want to, it's all a matter of want between them. They're inclined towards each other, simple as that. He exhales, long and slow. Then, he bends his head to the side and rests his cheek on Jean Louis' shoulder, it's an an awkward angle because they're the same height, but Elio doesn't care, like he doesn't care how it's a bit more of an obvious gesture than sneaking a touch of the other man's hand. The few people who steal peeks as they pass by are fast to look away again. Like, somehow, they're still the only two people here, when in fact they're surrounded.
It's been just the two of them from the beginning and maybe long before, too, he thinks. ]
I wish.
[ It's said with that childish simplicity that no one allows him except Jean Louis. Jean Louis who'll look great in the middle of the chaotic good of his extended family, whom his mother is going to love, Mafalda, too, who will make Elio's father silently wonder and Miranda approve, after much skeptic deliberation. In that crowd, too, they'll be the only two people to each other and Elio remembers another time when he was twosome rather than lonely.
He hadn't thought he'd ever get that feeling back. He thought he'd lost it along with his name.
Elio smiles. Jean Louis doesn't care about theoretical things like names, he cares about purposes and outcomes. Here Elio thought he was the only one who acted selfishly in love, sometimes he even thought he was a bit terrible for it.
But this doesn't feel terrible.
This feels true. ]