lord_wizard (
lord_wizard) wrote in
paradisalogs2013-09-05 12:36 pm
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Entry tags:
All changes, even the most longed for, have their melancholy
Who: Felix and Ashura
What: Breaking up is hard to do
When: The evening the Fairfield/Winchester expedition team returns
Where: Room 626
Rating: Likely pg-13 for yelling
Sitting in the dimly lit dining room, Felix had to admit that he was a coward. He was afraid to lose anything to the point that he often stopped himself from getting it in the first place. Still, despite the many dalliances he'd had in the past, he'd never actually left anyone whom he genuinely cared for. Once he had something, he tended to cling rather tightly to it. So this was a first. A terrifying first. But he'd made his decision, for all the pain he knew it would cause.
Everything was in order. His clothes and sundry other belongings already packed and moved to his new room across the hall from Chimera headquarters. There were only two items remaining. The first, the ring Ashura had given him, was clasped so tightly in his hand the design was starting to bite into his skin. The other, a faintly glowing stone on a long chain, was still hidden under his shirt. This was the last time he would wear it, but he was loathe to give it up as easily. Sibyl was still in residence as well, but uncommonly quiet and wary, as if sensing the impending storm that was about to befall their suite, her ears pressed back and eyes watching. Felix wasn't sure she would follow - but he would make to move to force her from Agni's side.
He waits patiently, knowing from the journals that the expedition is due back soon. That Ashura will be coming home with the hopes of a happy reunion that he'll be forced to quash very quickly. That was the one benefit of his delay. No painful period of coming and going while he removed himself from the other man's life. Just a goodbye. Quicker, but not likely to be simple.
What: Breaking up is hard to do
When: The evening the Fairfield/Winchester expedition team returns
Where: Room 626
Rating: Likely pg-13 for yelling
Sitting in the dimly lit dining room, Felix had to admit that he was a coward. He was afraid to lose anything to the point that he often stopped himself from getting it in the first place. Still, despite the many dalliances he'd had in the past, he'd never actually left anyone whom he genuinely cared for. Once he had something, he tended to cling rather tightly to it. So this was a first. A terrifying first. But he'd made his decision, for all the pain he knew it would cause.
Everything was in order. His clothes and sundry other belongings already packed and moved to his new room across the hall from Chimera headquarters. There were only two items remaining. The first, the ring Ashura had given him, was clasped so tightly in his hand the design was starting to bite into his skin. The other, a faintly glowing stone on a long chain, was still hidden under his shirt. This was the last time he would wear it, but he was loathe to give it up as easily. Sibyl was still in residence as well, but uncommonly quiet and wary, as if sensing the impending storm that was about to befall their suite, her ears pressed back and eyes watching. Felix wasn't sure she would follow - but he would make to move to force her from Agni's side.
He waits patiently, knowing from the journals that the expedition is due back soon. That Ashura will be coming home with the hopes of a happy reunion that he'll be forced to quash very quickly. That was the one benefit of his delay. No painful period of coming and going while he removed himself from the other man's life. Just a goodbye. Quicker, but not likely to be simple.
no subject
The worst of it? The worst of it was that a part of him understood. Through the haze of anger and pain, he understood, because he remembered Yasha, remembered what they had shared and if he had come here, could he honestly say he would stay beside Felix? Of course, he did not examine such thoughts to deeply, not with his heart once again crumbling into dust.
"So you wrong another in the process."
He said it with that smooth face, that quiet regality that was surprisingly icy for a king born from fire. And, truthfully, it was how he felt.
no subject
"If I must," he answered roughly, "even if it means none of end us end up happy for it. Every minute I am with you is salt in his wounds, and I cannot do it anymore."
no subject
When would he find his happiness, instead of having it taken away and thrust back into his heart like a killing strike?
"I am glad to hear you seem to care for the wounds of at least one person."
He did not mean to be cruel with his words. He did not want to be, but his emotions spilled into them and became barbs of ice. He wanted to wound Felix as he was being wounded, and he did not care if that made him uncharitable or petty. He wanted to not be the only one with an aching heart, who would walk away from this with more tears than soul left.
"I should have heeded your warnings better."
no subject
"Maybe you should have. But do not act as if this were easy for me. You can say what you wish, darling, but I never lied to you about one thing. I don't feel any differently about you. Gideon's presence changes nothing about that, other than the fact that I had to choose."
no subject
"Then you could have at least chosen neither of us."
At least then it would feel less like losing, less like he was somehow beneath Gideon. He would feel less like he had failed. He wondered what words Gideon had said to draw Felix from him, and then it occurred to him none might have been necessary. Felix was a carnal creature, as he well knew, and his gut shifted again. Felix had given his reasons, but the 'how' bothered him as much as the 'why' now. This, though, he dared not ask. He didn't think he would have the strength for the answer.
no subject
But he could not dissuade a thought he could not read. He could only answer to the words he was given.
"For now, that's all this is. Gideon has promised me nothing but a second chance. I'm leaving. Not going to him, though I'm sure the distinction changes little for you," he said, bitterly, biting his lip a little to contain the agony in his chest.
no subject
"You leave me for a "chance"? You do not even have the promise and you..."
He shook his head, the ache only growing. Gideon had persuaded Felix on a chance. A chance! He had not made the promise, not taken him back, and still Felix left. No, no he had not lost to a shadow at all.
He had lost to the faintest flickers of redemption.
He had given him a new reality, a new opportunity, but not redemption. Ashura could never give Felix that, and this he knew. Which only made it worse, a failing.
The chair creaked as he stood, turning his side to Felix, no longer able to look at him. On the table, the ring remained, the epicenter of the spider-web cracks.
no subject
In a quiet, unsteady voice, drained of his brief bout of anger, he finally says, "Chances are all we have here. Any of us could leave at any moment. Any chance can be wasted. But it is still a chance. I think you understand that. You'd feel the same thing if Yasha came here."
Reaching behind his collar with a finger, he drew out the long chain and the red stone pulsing with warm light. "There is one last thing. You gave this to me, and you should have the chance to take it back if you desire it. But...I'd like to keep it. The same as anything I've given remains a gift."
no subject
But it had been a gift, a heartfelt one, and even now he hoped that Felix would change his mind. If he left it with him, he just might, though that hope was dying so fast it hardly even lived.
He turned his back fully to Felix now, refusing to look at him. He simply could not do it anymore. He thought himself strong, but this... this was to much.
"Go."
The words were icy, cold, the voice of a king dismissing someone who had displeased him beyond the measure of atonement. It was the only way he could hold onto himself, could keep himself from crying and begging, from shattering entirely.
no subject
"Sibyl. Come, if you are coming," he said, terse and rough, as he opened up the door. The animal jumped up from the couch and bolted for the opening, pausing there to do what Felix himself could not - she looked back, letting out a plaintive meow in the direction of the broken kind and her friend Agni - before darting though as the door closed with a snap. She followed at Felix's heels, a worried look on her feline face as he walked with purpose to the elevator. But rather than down he pressed the button for the top floor.
He was shaking by the time he reached the roof, and could only afford a brief glance around before his calm broke, leaving him a weeping heap at the edge of the railing. It was over. All nearly three years, more than he'd ever gotten with Gideon, was crushed flat at his feet for a foolish hope. He had no way of knowing if it would be worth it, but there was no turning back time. As he'd said to Gideon, there was only moving forward. Even if the process felt like turning himself inside out.
Eventually he found the power to get up, wipe the mess from his face on a sleeve, and head back to his room and the refuge of his share of the liquor stores. Reality could hit in the morning.