"I wouldn't take him from you, Jill," he reminds her, continuing to watch her from just over Torgal's back. She's never been so reluctant to meet his eyes, and his brows knit in concern. For this, for all of it. "Would it be overstepping to suggest we walk him together?"
It's that or enlisting someone else, and he'll take his damn dog back before he suggests Dion.
Strange, how the suggestion both makes her stomach sink and her heart jump.
"I don't think that's a very wise idea, Clive," she says, still refusing to look at him as she scratches under Torgal's chin. The dog huffs, pleased to have the affection of them both, and Jill is sorry it won't last.
The furrow of his brow deepens, and he feels nothing but hurt for her, for them, for the pain he has caused. If he could wave it all away, he would, but if he had that ability, perhaps he could have found his courage and endured his woes to begin with.
“I know,” he says, quietly. “I’ll understand if it’s too much, but to me, walking Torgal together is a good place to start. You shouldn’t fear seeing me forever.”
"It's not fear," she says, feeling vaguely insulted. She has nothing to fear from him. She only grows tired of enduring, and the wound he's left cannot heal if he's there to open it every time she speaks to him.
Jill finally looks at him, sadness written on her face.
The look in her eyes is about as arresting as what she says, and he has the knee-jerk reaction of refusing that very thought. A beat later, he’s still there.
“You’re still the girl I grew up with, who held my hand as we ran in the rain, who made my cause her own,” he says. “If the parts of me that are broken make me a stranger to you, then so be it, but I at least remember.”
"Oh, Clive. We've always had broken parts, you and I both."
She doesn't think she's that same girl he knew. If so, how could he discard her so easily? How could he ever think she'd be better off like this? There's too much disconnect for her to make sense of it.
“I know,” he agrees. His chest feels tight, his eyes misty when she looks at him that way. When she says his name. “But not like this, in a way that won’t mend.”
He gives Torgal one more squeeze and then he stands.
“Just take him off the lead. If you’re fined, I’ll pay it.”
“I just wanted to take a step back, not sever ties completely,” he says, cautiously. “I think that leaves plenty, but if that’s how you feel... I’ve earned your disgust.”
"What did you imagine that looking like, Clive? Like the years before, walking on eggshells around our feelings?"
Moments stolen and swept under a carpet because there was so much bigger than them and their relationship. His devotion was always pulled in too many ways for one man.
Jill shakes her head.
"I can't accept that. I don't know how to not... love you, and I hate that you've made me ashamed of it. Made me question if it's too much."
“I never once considered our hesitation to make love or say the word a matter of our feelings a mistake,” he replies, a little rumble of disagreement on his voice, but there’s no lack of concern there, either. “I thought we were doing the best we could.”
He’d been grateful for every moment with her. Grateful that he’d been an inch short with his blade, grateful that he could look at her across a campfire. He still is. Had she seen that as inadequate, some extended deprivation? Had he always failed her as a partner?
There’s a growing pit in his stomach, and for a moment he looks at her, on the cusp of saying something else. But the questions continue: Is he worthless to her if he isn’t her lover? Better off dead to her than not with her? Was that why she was fine with him leaving the first time?
"Then are we talking about this now, somewhere else?"
She's quietly irritated enough, and Torgal's ears flick downwards in response. Jill doesn't want to go anywhere with Clive. She doesn't want to talk to him. And yet here she is, not walking away when she should.
"And you seem to think we do. Perhaps this time you simply run your blade through me and save me the agony," she spits out, and it's so ugly she momentarily looks unsure, surprised she let the words out.
"No," he says. It doesn't feel less venomous, but maybe that's the sting continuing. "I knew you'd be hurt. I knew you'd be angry. I never took that lightly."
Torgal whines.
Defensively:
"I did not imagine you'd hate me for it, or that living like a common man and his wife mattered more to you than being in each other's lives."
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It's that or enlisting someone else, and he'll take his damn dog back before he suggests Dion.
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"I don't think that's a very wise idea, Clive," she says, still refusing to look at him as she scratches under Torgal's chin. The dog huffs, pleased to have the affection of them both, and Jill is sorry it won't last.
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Surely he must know how much it hurts to be around him, now.
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“I know,” he says, quietly. “I’ll understand if it’s too much, but to me, walking Torgal together is a good place to start. You shouldn’t fear seeing me forever.”
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Jill finally looks at him, sadness written on her face.
"You and I are strangers. I don't know you."
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“You’re still the girl I grew up with, who held my hand as we ran in the rain, who made my cause her own,” he says. “If the parts of me that are broken make me a stranger to you, then so be it, but I at least remember.”
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She doesn't think she's that same girl he knew. If so, how could he discard her so easily? How could he ever think she'd be better off like this? There's too much disconnect for her to make sense of it.
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He gives Torgal one more squeeze and then he stands.
“Just take him off the lead. If you’re fined, I’ll pay it.”
He’ll figure out how to afford that later.
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"I suppose that's the only option. The outlaw returns," she says, and once she would have laughed at her own joke. Now, it's just grim.
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"I'm sorry I don't have better answers for you."
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“Do you like the city?” he asks.
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"Sometimes. I didn't think I would be spending my days here with Dion, but it is what it is, isn't it?"
She keeps her eyes on Torgal.
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"I can't imagine we have anything left to talk about."
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“I just wanted to take a step back, not sever ties completely,” he says, cautiously. “I think that leaves plenty, but if that’s how you feel... I’ve earned your disgust.”
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Moments stolen and swept under a carpet because there was so much bigger than them and their relationship. His devotion was always pulled in too many ways for one man.
Jill shakes her head.
"I can't accept that. I don't know how to not... love you, and I hate that you've made me ashamed of it. Made me question if it's too much."
All she's wanted is to be by his side.
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He’d been grateful for every moment with her. Grateful that he’d been an inch short with his blade, grateful that he could look at her across a campfire. He still is. Had she seen that as inadequate, some extended deprivation? Had he always failed her as a partner?
There’s a growing pit in his stomach, and for a moment he looks at her, on the cusp of saying something else. But the questions continue: Is he worthless to her if he isn’t her lover? Better off dead to her than not with her? Was that why she was fine with him leaving the first time?
Clive finally just says:
“I don’t want to talk about this here.”
Did you despise me after I left for Origin, too?
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She's quietly irritated enough, and Torgal's ears flick downwards in response. Jill doesn't want to go anywhere with Clive. She doesn't want to talk to him. And yet here she is, not walking away when she should.
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She's already upset.
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"How could you say that?"
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But she can't stop. The venom at least lessens in her tone.
"You really don't understand what you've done, do you?"
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Torgal whines.
Defensively:
"I did not imagine you'd hate me for it, or that living like a common man and his wife mattered more to you than being in each other's lives."
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