Allison Hargreeves | #00.03 (
numberthree) wrote2021-04-12 10:49 am
Entry tags:
Mask or Menace ☂ IC Phone Post
INBOX
Voice | Text | Call | Video | Surprise Me
A flat computer automated voice comes on and states in monotone:
"This is the voicemail box for Allison Hargreeves. Leave a message at the beep."

no subject
His mouth opens; his voice catches, trying to figure out how to ask about the third thing, before his courage fails him and he just clams up instead. Those other memories. The ones that are even blurrier, not as crystal-clear as the other images (by virtue of coming to them via another universe entirely), and yet. And yet.
In the end, all Luther says is, "Yeah," and it sounds awful and inadequate even to him. But it's still a promise, and his gaze has softened. They're often still so secretive, even with each other; not duplicitous, exactly, but guarded. Old habits are hard to break. They'd been trained to never show weakness. Even with each other.
Allison's just always been the eternal exception, for every single rule Luther's had written for him or tried to write for himself.
"I didn't, uh." He still can't find the right words, but if he doesn't say this now, his nerve will leave him entirely and he'll slam the door shut on this entire subject and likely never let it come up again. "I didn't... go insane or anything, up there. I always knew, rationally, that you weren't there. But in the end, it was just... easier. To let it happen."
To cut through the loneliness. To avoid losing your mind. You did what you had to.
(Five would probably understand, if Luther ever got a chance again to ask him about it.)
no subject
Not when it takes being psychically attacked to share things like these.
Allison isn't expecting the single word, that stutters into two, and then roles out into a direction she hadn't expected, but she should have. She should have seen these words coming. Having to be said. By the time he froze. Or maybe when he'd started explaining. But even as he roles into it, she knows better.
It's the one thing she knows most of all.
And maybe she needs to know it so he can, too.
I know.
She can't speak it as fast as she thinks it, but it's only a few seconds before it flies through the air, the network, between them. Because it's not so much about the details, even when Luther is all reason and explanations. He always has been. Cold, hard, firm, logic. A cover over the emotions everywhere else. Especially now. Especially during all the months in this place.
I know you weren't crazy when we all met up for the funeral, and you'd only just come down. He was distant and sad, and angry, in many turns. But not crazy (and she'd seen hundreds of versions of crazy in L.A.)
If there was any moment she'd ever questioned that possibility, it wasn't that first day. It was the one she woke up on the infirmary table and found Vanya with them in the vault. Every time he refused to listen to her and lied to her. But he wasn't crazy, then, either. He'd been scared of how close she'd come to dying, and he'd made a lot of bad choices because of it.
She's not sure she even thinks about it before she does it; aside from that, the room is empty, and she does know, she does. She reached out and laid a hand on his jacketed arm and just looked up at him. Resiting the urge to look away and type it again. That she knew. There wasn't even a shred of doubt. She knew, she knew, she knew. Who he was. The only place she ever felt she belonged. As deep down as anything in her went.
If there was anyone who she knew most in this world, for whatever that said about her, it was him. She knew him, and there was nothing she could be shown that could horrify or frighten or surprise her away.
maybeee end or yours to wrap? ♥
(He wasn't, really, but he kept patching it up until those fractures became less and less visible over time.)
Usually he's the one steering their contact, Allison purposefully leaving it to him to dictate how comfortable he is or isn't with touch. But now she reaches out and she touches him and he doesn't actually pull himself away. Luther just feels that distant pressure of her hand on his arm, and he reaches up, rests his hand gently over hers, squeezes once.
I think maybe you're the only person who really knows who I am and still likes me anyway; and really, he could have said those same words right back at her. Luther's a mess. He's a goddamn mess and he feels such, such a far cry from the person she'd once known, and yet he's slowly, ever so slowly starting to accept that maybe she, too, likes him anyway.
He's not really sure what there is left to say, or how to bridge this gap and everything sitting there, so he just settles for: "We'll be alright."
They aren't yet. But they will be.
no subject
And somehow -- some ways she can't even explain -- it's the breath she pulls in her nose, surprise cut with relief, cut with the warmth and pressure on her hand that almost makes her want to tear up suddenly. Out of nowhere. Because she doesn't want him to feel he has to do, go through, even just live with these things in his head, alone anymore. That he isn't alone. He'll never be alone, not like that, ever again.
Aren't we always?
If the words seem light, her expression isn't. Doesn't change in the slightest. They are who they are. Who they've always been. Who they trained to be deeper than any thought, choice, breath. They don't know how to stay down, and they don't know how to go any direction but forward. Even when every part of them is still cut open and bleeding and everything refused to go right.
It's not a joke.
(It might be the most epic,
least funny, joke of two universes.)
Allison let her hand slide, then. Just a little, to tug him at his jacket, give him a direction to go in as much as a reprieve that he didn't have to keep standing in this second any longer than he still had chosen to (for her?). C'mon. Let's go home.