"'Got caught'," he repeats in disbelief. Got caught? Like he was purposefully sneaking around behind her back? Like he was cheating on her? It's unthinkable.
"I wasn't trying to hide anything."
Maybe it's a relief that he doesn't have anything like Diego's empathy or Klaus' telepathy, to not feel— whatever it is that's bowling her over. To feel it any more than he already is, the sympathetic bruising ache and panic that he feels just looking at her, just hearing it, just hearing that sharpness in Allison's voice and knowing that she's furious at him and he's still struggling to follow why.
So he almost wishes for it, now. Those powers. To understand her better. Because this feels like it's slipping away from him, the thread of the conversation furiously unravelling and he can't hold it in place.
But the same boy who could unconsciously exclude Vanya from everything in the family, because she wasn't the Academy, was the same one who could unconsciously exclude his friends from his family and his family from his friends. The two groups weren't the same, and so weren't supposed to line up. Until now, like a bucket of cold water being thrown in his face.
"It doesn't fix it or make it better. But I want to fix it. I'll— look, I'll tell you whatever you want to know. I can try to open up more."
She's only person he'd fall all over himself to promise these things to; to try to be better for; to communicate better for, which isn't exactly a Hargreeves strength.
"I don't want that!" It comes out so much louder and faster than even parsing his words into a thought first, and somehow even she distantly realizes that feels weird even through it. Discordant. Like a shoe that somehow doesn't fit right either, even when it's absolutely her, too. She hasn't been able to react this fast in months. Over a year.
But Allison doesn't back down. It's not what she was built for.
"I don't want--" He hands raise like quotation marks, her second hand finally coming off the strap of her bag again. "--'whatever you want, Allison.' I don't want to force you to tell me all these things if you don't want to, or wouldn't ever even think of it, or actively don't even want me to know what you're doing or why or with who."
Promise me, she'd demanded. Stupid. Childish.
So unaware. Of everything. Except that she'd regret it. Letting her hurt, anger, fear, arrogance force his hand.
She won't do it again now. She wasn't supposed to have to.
It wasn't supposed to be like that, or like this. It was supposed to be like three nights ago. Before she stayed too long. Before he fell asleep. Back when it was unexpected laughter echoing through the house, and then they were curled up next to each other on his bed in the dark, just talking, whispering in the dark. Too old to forget they weren't thirteen anymore, and letting it happen anyway. Safe enough to say the truth, no matter how dark or raw that truth might be. It was supposed to be that.
But it wasn't. "Just stop, Luther."
"Just-" There's an angry shrug, shaking her head. "-figure out whatever it is you want or don't want." But that's not enough, is it? There's too much emphasis like she has to be clear adding, "With me." Which sounds so goddamn childish, too, but she's tired of assuming. Tired of trusting blindly in something that obviously isn't anything she thought it already was. "That's not on me to tell you."
A second after, barely, "I have things to put away." Allison turned away from the living, heading toward her room.
Luther could easily have reached out and snagged Allison's arm and kept her here, stopped her from leaving, but she was too volatile and he was nowhere near eager to prolong this—
Well. This fight. He had to admit it, it was a fight. An argument that he still wasn't entirely sure where it had come from or how it had so unexpectedly slammed into both of them, leaving him reeling.
Whatever it is you want or don't want. With me.
The answer was, in fact, so easy. So incredibly easy that he could have automatically blurted it out to her back, her shoulder as it turned away from him — you, I want you, everything about you, in any way you'll have me — but the words died on his tongue. In the end, he was left alone, standing in the center of the living room and watching helplessly as she marched up the stairs to her bedroom, and as he heard the distant slam of a door.
no subject
Like he was cheating on her?It's unthinkable."I wasn't trying to hide anything."
Maybe it's a relief that he doesn't have anything like Diego's empathy or Klaus' telepathy, to not feel— whatever it is that's bowling her over. To feel it any more than he already is, the sympathetic bruising ache and panic that he feels just looking at her, just hearing it, just hearing that sharpness in Allison's voice and knowing that she's furious at him and he's still struggling to follow why.
So he almost wishes for it, now. Those powers. To understand her better. Because this feels like it's slipping away from him, the thread of the conversation furiously unravelling and he can't hold it in place.
But the same boy who could unconsciously exclude Vanya from everything in the family, because she wasn't the Academy, was the same one who could unconsciously exclude his friends from his family and his family from his friends. The two groups weren't the same, and so weren't supposed to line up. Until now, like a bucket of cold water being thrown in his face.
"It doesn't fix it or make it better. But I want to fix it. I'll— look, I'll tell you whatever you want to know. I can try to open up more."
She's only person he'd fall all over himself to promise these things to; to try to be better for; to communicate better for, which isn't exactly a Hargreeves strength.
no subject
But Allison doesn't back down. It's not what she was built for.
"I don't want--" He hands raise like quotation marks, her second hand finally coming off the strap of her bag again. "--'whatever you want, Allison.' I don't want to force you to tell me all these things if you don't want to, or wouldn't ever even think of it, or actively don't even want me to know what you're doing or why or with who."
Promise me, she'd demanded. Stupid. Childish.
So unaware. Of everything. Except that she'd regret it.
Letting her hurt, anger, fear, arrogance force his hand.
She won't do it again now.
She wasn't supposed to have to.
It wasn't supposed to be like that, or like this. It was supposed to be like three nights ago. Before she stayed too long. Before he fell asleep. Back when it was unexpected laughter echoing through the house, and then they were curled up next to each other on his bed in the dark, just talking, whispering in the dark. Too old to forget they weren't thirteen anymore, and letting it happen anyway. Safe enough to say the truth, no matter how dark or raw that truth might be. It was supposed to be that.
But it wasn't. "Just stop, Luther."
"Just-" There's an angry shrug, shaking her head. "-figure out whatever it is you want or don't want." But that's not enough, is it? There's too much emphasis like she has to be clear adding, "With me." Which sounds so goddamn childish, too, but she's tired of assuming. Tired of trusting blindly in something that obviously isn't anything she thought it already was. "That's not on me to tell you."
A second after, barely, "I have things to put away."
Allison turned away from the living, heading toward her room.
end
Well. This fight. He had to admit it, it was a fight. An argument that he still wasn't entirely sure where it had come from or how it had so unexpectedly slammed into both of them, leaving him reeling.
Whatever it is you want or don't want. With me.
The answer was, in fact, so easy. So incredibly easy that he could have automatically blurted it out to her back, her shoulder as it turned away from him — you, I want you, everything about you, in any way you'll have me — but the words died on his tongue. In the end, he was left alone, standing in the center of the living room and watching helplessly as she marched up the stairs to her bedroom, and as he heard the distant slam of a door.