obediences: ((human after all) 04)
luther "the big shy one" hargreeves | #00.01 ([personal profile] obediences) wrote2019-03-08 09:00 pm
Entry tags:

for [personal profile] numberthree.



And I’d choose you; in a hundred lifetimes, in a hundred worlds, in any version of reality, I’d find you and I’d choose you.
numberthree: (☂ 00.52)

[personal profile] numberthree 2024-03-11 02:45 pm (UTC)(link)
It's worse than every moment before it. Her panic is manifold. Desperation swallowed in d e s p a ir. Her heart is ice. Plummeting down, shattering on the descent, because there is no ground floor to hit, no place will be low enough. The moment when Luther's eyes film over. Milky white blocking the blue. Subsuming every spot of that familiar light, worse than any faint glaze. Even when she lost him that day it'd been his choice.

She's a frozen rictus as it clears, and Luther lumbers to her, and the damning realization hits her too late—isn't it always that way? Isn't she always too late? Doesn't she always forget to be wiser? She might be smart, but she was never made to lead, to balance, to think enough before she speaks the current of her desire made manifold. A weapon from her first word, a child with the touch of a God. She can win, but only because she can take everything from everyone.

Luther lumbers toward her and her only feeling is terror still. Worse.
Because she catches it a second later. Lost. Too late.

Come back to me

to me



me


When has she ever been anything more than a foolish, selfish child, reaching for what she wants, using whatever it is only for herself? Why hadn't she said anything else? Something more true, something unencumbered?? Why hadn't she told him to come back to himself?? How was she so selfish to make it about her? Why couldn't she still outrun that claxon screaming in her head? Luther's arms are too rough, and Allison is drowning in her own air, and the feel of his arms back around her, and the disconnect from anything that feels real. She feels disgusting. Dirty. No word Diego called her once ever dark enough—she's a monster with a pretty face and only pettier and pettier choices.

She can see Ray's face again as she closes her eyes.

Did you use it on me?

But if you had, would I even know?


The answer varies; her siblings often did, but not always, but the question had landed deeper than any violence in the riot during the sit-in. A clarion note about how well she could be trusted even by the man who loved her so much better than she'd loved him. How much even the one person she'd sworn never to rumor could trust her. Now. She'd had to, the argument makes itself. Because of what was done to him. Slick as oil, stained black and bloody and vile. And not even knowing if this thing—that might not be Luther anymore forever, too—is even safe.

There's a shudder in her breath and tears in her eyes because she has to do it now before another moment passes, and has to own the ruin that she always runs riot. Choose it. Fix. It. Knowing she can never fix it. How many millions of times had they tried that in her childhood? She knows it, and her mouth is still open. She has to try. To make it better and cleaner, choose him, choose Luther, protect Luther for himself. From them.

(From her.

For what always comes next.

In her messes. To the Umbrella Academy.
If it can get worse, and it always can, it will.)

"I heard a rumor—" Her voice cracks, and distantly, damningly, so does everything else in her, and as she feels the body around her freeze and slump, as strings stronger than she's ever had a right to have, make him meat and bone and passiveness that is no longer a person, she pushed back from him. Vision half-blurred but refused to let herself let a tear fall. Just his face, devoid of self. Just. Him.

Not herself. Not what it'll cost, even as it swallows her.
It has to be for him and only him. He has to be safe.

Once he knows. Once she's lost him.
If they come for him again.

She has to know she tried.
To do her best.

Protect him.

From all of them.

"—that no one could ever mess with your mind again."
Edited 2024-03-11 15:00 (UTC)
numberthree: (☂ 00.96)

[personal profile] numberthree 2024-03-11 10:12 pm (UTC)(link)
Luther drops like a sack of stones, but one that weighs over a ton. A carefully balanced, constantly spacially aware pillar of strength. Sprawling forward suddenly. Falling like an unexpected mountain avalanche. Cut at the knees. Sudden. Solid. The floor under her feet shudders with the impact of him. The plaster is probably spider-cracked under the carpet. And Allison still can't breathe in.

It's not enough.
It'll never be enough.

She can never undo it.

She'll never be certain.
He won't. Can't.

All she can do is stare at the top of his bowed head, the vast expanse of those shiny black-clad shoulders. All she can hear are his ragged breaths. It's the momentary void of silence after the bomb explosion rolls out. The eye of the hurricane, resting not in peace but in belabored, unprepared knowledge of the subsequent unavoidable obliteration about to hit.

She'd rather die than look him in the eye now.
Stop being histrionic, Number Three.


(She has to know if any part of him is okay,
if there is a chance this part worked,
before she's sent away.)

And then Luther moves again, raising his hands to wipe his face. Slow at first, and then that first is gone entirely. Luther becomes a manic movement at abject opposite with her frozen inability to breathe, move, run away, or step forward. Tearing at that bow tie, and maybe his shirt, before he suddenly fought with his own hands. And before she can entirely connect what he threw out, there's a window cracking, shattering, glass falling in a shower of shards on the far floor. Whatever it was thrown away without any of his vaunted restraint.

And Allison skitters back several steps in a way she hasn't since she was very small. If ever. The Rumor was never afraid of Space Boy. He could let an eighteen-wheeler crash into his outstretched hand and hold it off, tear through it if need be—he'd broken doors, music boxes, and even one of their arms—and she'd never once pulled away. Only pushed in closer. Remained arrogantly untouchable in his space when it could be gotten away with. Only smiled in vicious camaraderie at the ruinous results of his best and worst.

But she'd never deserved to be its focus before.

It'd never been a competition—not really—keeping up with him. There was no way she could—any of them could. He proved it every day. Unassailable in every way. But she'd never done it either. Not unless it was required of her. In training. Pitted against each other in preparation for all the world might throw at them. Never even in the field. The one thing she could do—and only she could do—that could make even perfect Number One have no power to fight against her softest whisper.
Edited 2024-03-11 22:19 (UTC)
numberthree: (☂ 00.221)

[personal profile] numberthree 2024-03-12 06:45 pm (UTC)(link)
Luther pushes back up, and her gaze follows him up, locked on him, drowning in that utterly alien urge that says to move, pull away, and get as far from him as possible. Even if that's only a handful of rooms in any direction. Even if his being near has been one of the three deepest-held, never-spoken, ever-felt absences in her last two years.

(Even if it's already tearing apart whatever fragile foundation she had left.)

There's a weight that settles cloyingly on him—his shoulders, his face, the very way he holds the bulk of his body. She's pinned in place, a roil of despair that's become her whole body, watching the horror that fills up his face. Realizations washing into place, driving away his manic ease and flighty glee entirely.

The need to do something, stop whatever's coming jackhammers Allison's heart, its own wordless horror hinged on. It almost feels like a blow, something tearing her in two as his gaze rips away from her. He looks toward the window, and she can watch the frisson that rocks his body, no matter how subtle—looking toward the light that's too bright to be a rising or setting sun. Is only destructive fire swallowing up everything, coming closer and closer by every minute.

When Luther looks back, he's sputtering, words finally starting to fall out, scattershot, and Allison can feel her head nodding more than she ever chose it. Nothing in the world feels attached anymore. It's all ending. All of it. Everything. But there's a desperate edge of a not-quite question in Luther's words, and nothing in her knows how not to answer.

"They did something. Sloane or one of the others—" But she's equivocating that small answer; it's bifurcating the actual responsibility, isn't she? That's not the greater problem. And even to look in the other direction, her words come too fast and fall out like a fountain too full. "I'm sorry."

It's not enough. Those two words are never enough, and Allison Hargreeves apologizes for nearly nothing—to no one, ever, even when she's wrong—but they won't stop. Not looking at him. At Luther. And they're as powerless to pull back what came before them as they were with Ray, Claire, and every misstep in her life. It's never enough. Two words, three—"I'm so sorry. I couldn't think of what else to do."

Isn't that always her sin?
She didn't even think to tell anyone first.
Edited 2024-03-12 18:45 (UTC)
numberthree: (☂ 01.48)

[personal profile] numberthree 2024-03-13 02:03 am (UTC)(link)
Allison has spent the last several years of her life certain she was broken, worth little more than what she could do, and less by the overwhelming damage that little would wreak after her. Aware, even when she was smiling and not looking at it, that her life was a weave of conveniently spoken rumors and then unspoken lies, sometimes side-by-side with sincere love and friendship, each viewed through the murk of a mirror-glass where no one saw her completely.

But this.

This runs cracks through all of what kept that last room of her, her, from crumbling. Dissolving into only rage and grief. The woman who was just as much a creation of The Rumor thrown into the world narrowed down to an explosion of spiderweb cracks. But unlike those covered by a carpet, Allison has rarely been able to hide anything from Luther, and never when they were alone, with nothing else to distract them from each other.

(Fool, she still is—the world burns, unending, unchanged, throwing lighted shadows on the walls, and for the first time since arriving, there's something worse than her life going from a world dying with Claire in it, to a world dying without Claire in it.

And it's this.

It's crossing a Rubicon she can never uncross.
It's twisting the only true thing she's ever had.)

Everything feels precarious. Every iota of safety, of certainty—something one decade and then two years couldn't touch or take from between them—feels only a too-big breath pulled into her lungs from entirely shattering. His fingers—large and warm and so careful—curve her shoulder, and all Allison can do is shake her head, looking up at him. (So few words, and she feels so small in a way she so rarely ever has with Luther, of all people.)

"You don't know that. I could have gotten it wrong."

She started it wrong. She wasn't careful enough.
Hadn't she ruined enough that way before leaving Dallas?

"I didn't even mean it when it started." The words are tumbling out too fast, too bare, and that is the baldest lie—even if, also, true—and they all know it. Have for almost all of their lives. Whether petty or pissed, delighted or bored, Allison had to want, or will, or believe, in some shade of those greys, for it to work. Or it wouldn't.

She hadn't meant it. Or she'd meant it too much. (Come.) Both. Both at once. (Come back.) Stricken with the terror of losing him somewhere beyond her reach, even feet away. (Come back to me.) She couldn't lose him, too. Not after everyone else. Not again. Not forever.

Was she any better than whichever of them had done it?
Were his words now just the shades of grey hers had changed them to?
Edited 2024-03-15 00:18 (UTC)
numberthree: (☂ 00.150)

[personal profile] numberthree 2024-03-15 02:01 am (UTC)(link)
"Maybe?" At the moment she said it, she was half wild—at the idea of bringing him back wrong, at the idea that she couldn't protect him, at the idea that they might drag him right back under whenever she wasn't next there, and at the idea that maybe she'd just upstaged them for the biggest threat to Luther. The path to hell, good intentions, and all the mess she made of it—all but apocalyptic.

The person who best destroyed all she loved, when she touched it, herself.

"I don't know. I've never—" Done that before. Had a reason to. Thought about whether she could put a dome around someone that made them impervious to her. There's something marrow-deep and trained-dark that feels sub-human, even as it feels too familiar that throbs against the idea of making any potential enemy impervious to her attack or defense. Their father would scoff at the blunting of the weapon of themselves before anything else. Hadn't he so many times?

Except that Luther isn't.
Hasn't ever. She'd never.

(...Again?

It feels like stabbing herself.

Never was supposed to be never,
never-never stayed never, with her, did it?)

"I didn't want them to be able to do it again. If I wasn't there."

Except that's only half of it—maybe calling it half is too much—and it's tangled up clear as anything on her face—the shame of the unspoken part, the ownership, and the tangled, manic uncertainty. Maybe she'd wanted him to be as safely untouchable by her, too. If her desperation could get the better of even Luther. The way she couldn't burn out his face, eyes turned milky white. The way he'd come right at her and hugged her right after.
numberthree: (☂ 01.34)

[personal profile] numberthree 2024-03-15 08:39 pm (UTC)(link)
It's the rarity—the all-but impossibility—that shatters something harder. So much more completely. Luther's hand traveled up the soft skin of her neck, catching her jaw with the kind of just more than normal pressure that meant she couldn't just jerk away. And she's not certain she could. Would. She deserves whatever he could—

But his words aren't angry. She can hear a matching kind of desperation, but she can't feel it because all she can feel is his hand's warm, solid presence. All she can feel is how much Luther doesn't touch her, shouldn't be touching her, a kaleidoscope of too bare, too shameful things all lining up together, as his blue eyes blur in her vision. The way her fingers knot at her sides and touching him is the last thing she could let herself do now.

He's always been something she wanted too much.

Throwing her arms around Luther's neck and leaping into him. (And how his arms just floated around her.) The feel of his hand over hers. (When she admitted she'd married a man, not for love but to survive.) Pushing her way into his arms in the kitchen after he told her she had to leave her husband. (The feel of his hands on her back, the tilt of his head against hers.) The press of his mouth against hers. (The instant flustered apology after.)

It's always been more than nothing. They've both known that.
But attraction—even love—isn't always enough.

Never with their family. With them.

Not enough with Claire. (Had she rewritten whoever Claire was originally supposed to be?) Not enough with Ray. (Who chose the cause, the fight, the mission over her in the end, just like Luther. In their childhood, in the basement, in the concert hall.)

"I didn't m—I wouldn't—" But she had. She did. She'd said the words. She'd watched his eyes go empty and white the first time. Then, she'd said the actual words and felt him go limp around her. She made a mess and then did it again, trying to take it back. (I did what I always did. I made a wish, and then I couldn't take it back.). Half of the terror now is that her despair will make it worse. She's already slipped, and it never stops there. "I just wanted you to come back to me. I couldn't lose you."

"Not again. Not a third time." It's all useless, and selfish, and ashamed. What doesn't she ruin if she lets herself touch it? Didn't he understand? How important it was? He was? Himself and his whole existence in her world? "But I'd never. Not you. You know that." It's so weak, but it's all crawling out of her at speed. Maybe the only chance she'll get to tell him it all, as everything else becomes rust and stardust debris. "You're the only person who knows who I am and still likes me anyway."

Pretty and petty, vicious and vengeant, manipulative and ashamed, jaded and jagged, always aware she was more broken than she was ever whole; willing to survive at any cost—almost. And even with all her worst flaws, even when she turned herself on those closest to her, he'd never turned his back on her. He was the one thing she could trust in the three worlds and timelines.
Edited 2024-03-15 20:47 (UTC)