She's asked the exact question which has his eyes glazing over trying to answer it, unable to muster up anything except: "I don't know." There's a free-wheeling existential terror at the thought of it, a complete blank slate spinning out ahead of him. What does he want to do with himself. What does he want to do?
This panicky energy makes him restless and fidgety, and despite the pain still stinging his joints and bruises, Luther rises to his feet and starts pacing the confines of Allison's room like a caged panther, desperate for somewhere to go but reluctant to just outright walk out on this conversation. He's always had too much energy with nowhere to put it, had banished it through push-ups and crunches and the stationary bike. Honing and carving his body, his weapon, the part of him that makes him useful to the academy.
But this isn't a problem he can solve by just punching it hard enough.
"They don't need to be grateful," he says, mouthing off the justification he's been taught to. "I'm not in it for their gratitude. We're in it to make the world safer."
Still, it would have been nice. He'd strutted and mugged for the cameras once, a beaming poster-boy for the academy, flashing a dimpled smile and a wave. Nowadays, he's grown into a tall, strapping young man -- still primed for the posters, but he ignores the photographers and waves off requests for interviews. The only thing the reporters want to ask about is Ben, is Diego and Klaus, is all their lost brothers. (Vanya, they never remember to ask about at all.)
"This is what we were trained to do. If we don't do it, who will?"
Maybe Dad will get off his high horse long enough to do it himself, she wants to say. Tearing down their father,—a man whose self-absorbedness and caprice contributed to the dismantling of this team long before Five had disappeared—would only make Luther stand his ground more, and Allison could tell he was fighting this with every fiber of him. But there was a part of him there that she could tell didn't want to stay here any more than she did, if not for the same reasons.
She reached out to Luther with her hand. "Does it matter who does it?" Her voice soft once more, entreating him. She won't beg, but she gets damn close enough to it. It would all be so much easier if she could rumor her way through this. But she'd never done that to Luther, and vowed she never would. She takes his hand in hers to ground herself and him. "It doesn't have to be us."
He looks down at her hand and instinctively squeezes back, a reassuring tightening of fingers and knuckles. It's such an automatic thing, this; they gravitate towards each other like a pair of satellites caught in orbit. When they're scared, they reach for each other, offer each other comfort, and always had.
Right now, Number One is fucking terrified.
His heart is pattering in his chest with a more sickly kick than it did in the field just a couple hours ago. Robbers, he knows what to do with, but he doesn't know what the fuck to do about staring down the barrel of a lifetime alone or a lifetime outside this mansion's walls. (And even then, despite all this, that persistent voice in the back of his head asks: What am I going to tell dad when she leaves? I've failed them all. What is he going to think?)
Which is when he realises he's thinking 'when' she goes. Not 'if'. And that, more than anything else, makes his heart feel heavy, leaden, sinking down through his feet. Luther's calloused fingers twitch over hers. He thinks about it longer, stewing and considering, but he already knows that the decision's been made.
Until in the end he says, reluctantly, painfully, as if gouging out a part of himself and in all honesty, he is:
"Luther!" Her tone scandalized and admonishing, a last-ditch effort to save this secret mission. "Luther, don't do this!" She grips for him again, unwilling to let him walk away from this. "I know you. I know you want something more than this, more than what he's told you that you have to do."
Her fingers lock onto the strap of his gear, the tight line of his shirt to anchor him to this moment and to her. "We can figure it out together. It's always been you and me, so why not through this, too?" Please, please, please, Luther.
It is, quite literally, the hardest thing he's had to do in his entire life. Harder than looking at himself in the mirror after Ben's funeral. Harder than fighting through bullet wounds or pinching a brother's artery shut or looking Sir Reginald in the eye after Diego jumped ship for police academy. Because none of them had been Allison, and she's always been the one with the closest hold on him, the one he knew and loved best. He knows you're not supposed to pick favourites in a family, but of course they all had favourites.
Allison's voice is growing louder, her hand against his chest, fingers curling into the fabric of his shirt. And the thing is, she's standing right in front of him and yet the specter of Sir Reginald still casts its long shadow over them both, and Luther's mind is still trapped in that loop of What is he going to think?
The others have managed to cut themselves loose, and Allison finally seems to be at that point too -- but Reginald's barbs have sunk in too deep, caught in Luther like an anchor. So he shakes his head again, jaw tight, eyes glistening though he wished they wouldn't.
"Please don't leave me," he says, his voice a low mumble.
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This panicky energy makes him restless and fidgety, and despite the pain still stinging his joints and bruises, Luther rises to his feet and starts pacing the confines of Allison's room like a caged panther, desperate for somewhere to go but reluctant to just outright walk out on this conversation. He's always had too much energy with nowhere to put it, had banished it through push-ups and crunches and the stationary bike. Honing and carving his body, his weapon, the part of him that makes him useful to the academy.
But this isn't a problem he can solve by just punching it hard enough.
"They don't need to be grateful," he says, mouthing off the justification he's been taught to. "I'm not in it for their gratitude. We're in it to make the world safer."
Still, it would have been nice. He'd strutted and mugged for the cameras once, a beaming poster-boy for the academy, flashing a dimpled smile and a wave. Nowadays, he's grown into a tall, strapping young man -- still primed for the posters, but he ignores the photographers and waves off requests for interviews. The only thing the reporters want to ask about is Ben, is Diego and Klaus, is all their lost brothers. (Vanya, they never remember to ask about at all.)
"This is what we were trained to do. If we don't do it, who will?"
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She reached out to Luther with her hand. "Does it matter who does it?" Her voice soft once more, entreating him. She won't beg, but she gets damn close enough to it. It would all be so much easier if she could rumor her way through this. But she'd never done that to Luther, and vowed she never would. She takes his hand in hers to ground herself and him. "It doesn't have to be us."
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Right now, Number One is fucking terrified.
His heart is pattering in his chest with a more sickly kick than it did in the field just a couple hours ago. Robbers, he knows what to do with, but he doesn't know what the fuck to do about staring down the barrel of a lifetime alone or a lifetime outside this mansion's walls. (And even then, despite all this, that persistent voice in the back of his head asks: What am I going to tell dad when she leaves? I've failed them all. What is he going to think?)
Which is when he realises he's thinking 'when' she goes. Not 'if'. And that, more than anything else, makes his heart feel heavy, leaden, sinking down through his feet. Luther's calloused fingers twitch over hers. He thinks about it longer, stewing and considering, but he already knows that the decision's been made.
Until in the end he says, reluctantly, painfully, as if gouging out a part of himself and in all honesty, he is:
"Allison-- I'm sorry. I-- I can't."
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Her fingers lock onto the strap of his gear, the tight line of his shirt to anchor him to this moment and to her. "We can figure it out together. It's always been you and me, so why not through this, too?" Please, please, please, Luther.
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Allison's voice is growing louder, her hand against his chest, fingers curling into the fabric of his shirt. And the thing is, she's standing right in front of him and yet the specter of Sir Reginald still casts its long shadow over them both, and Luther's mind is still trapped in that loop of What is he going to think?
The others have managed to cut themselves loose, and Allison finally seems to be at that point too -- but Reginald's barbs have sunk in too deep, caught in Luther like an anchor. So he shakes his head again, jaw tight, eyes glistening though he wished they wouldn't.
"Please don't leave me," he says, his voice a low mumble.