Lily (
notfaking_it) wrote2012-03-30 01:13 pm
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(no subject)
Things were bad.
Lily was aware of that much and little else as she stumbled away from the party. It was that thought alone, over and over, cycling through her mind as she walked into the trees. The boardwalk would be somewhere ahead. Somewhere. And things were bad.
Eames was gone, which had been hard enough, though she thought she dealt with it as best she could. Nina had been worse. Losing Nina felt like losing a part of herself and Lily couldn't make sense of it, couldn't understand the extent to which Nina had gotten under her skin. But the truth -- and the truth seemed so clear right in that moment, almost tangible -- was that Nina had disappeared and Lily had shut down. Not in any discernable way, she'd hidden it well, but it had occurred all the same. She'd taken the drugs for a reason she couldn't remember anymore. To wake up again or to drop further down, she didn't know.
Didn't matter anyway. It was done and things were bad.
Still, Lily's lips were turned up into a faint, confused smile as she walked. Around her, the jungle rippled and shifted. Her arms stretched out in front of her looked strange, like there was something moving under her skin and her smile slipped, just for a moment. And something was moving out there, too, through the trees. There was a soft rustle, more like feathers than leaves, and Lily turned, expecting to see Nina standing there.
There was no one. Just the dark and the trees, the moonlight expanding and contracting, almost as if it was breathing.
She couldn't remember how she'd gotten here or why the light looked like it was changing. It shifted toward her and Lily took a step away, her hands covering her mouth before she turned again. She didn't know where she was anymore, where the party was, if there had been a party at all.
"God," she said on an exhale, the word broken.
Things were bad. She remembered that. Things were very bad.
Lily was aware of that much and little else as she stumbled away from the party. It was that thought alone, over and over, cycling through her mind as she walked into the trees. The boardwalk would be somewhere ahead. Somewhere. And things were bad.
Eames was gone, which had been hard enough, though she thought she dealt with it as best she could. Nina had been worse. Losing Nina felt like losing a part of herself and Lily couldn't make sense of it, couldn't understand the extent to which Nina had gotten under her skin. But the truth -- and the truth seemed so clear right in that moment, almost tangible -- was that Nina had disappeared and Lily had shut down. Not in any discernable way, she'd hidden it well, but it had occurred all the same. She'd taken the drugs for a reason she couldn't remember anymore. To wake up again or to drop further down, she didn't know.
Didn't matter anyway. It was done and things were bad.
Still, Lily's lips were turned up into a faint, confused smile as she walked. Around her, the jungle rippled and shifted. Her arms stretched out in front of her looked strange, like there was something moving under her skin and her smile slipped, just for a moment. And something was moving out there, too, through the trees. There was a soft rustle, more like feathers than leaves, and Lily turned, expecting to see Nina standing there.
There was no one. Just the dark and the trees, the moonlight expanding and contracting, almost as if it was breathing.
She couldn't remember how she'd gotten here or why the light looked like it was changing. It shifted toward her and Lily took a step away, her hands covering her mouth before she turned again. She didn't know where she was anymore, where the party was, if there had been a party at all.
"God," she said on an exhale, the word broken.
Things were bad. She remembered that. Things were very bad.

no subject
"You don't think anyone's story is finished?" Sawyer asked, lips twitching in what was almost a smile. He probably would have disagreed with that particular statement. Some people's stories finished. Some people's stories finished, or came to their conclusion, years before death. Sawyer's wasn't even close.
And he was none too proud of what had brought him to that very spot.
Shifting, Sawyer hesitated for a moment before following Lily's command, the fight in him having drained long ago. Not against her, really. Against his own better judgment. Sliding up and over the bed, Sawyer waited until he was within arm's reach of her, laying on his side behind Lily. The easiest position from which to reach out, he supposed.
Not that he was quite yet.
no subject
"I think..." she said, then paused, frowning. "I think the stories we live tend to be far more complicated than we know. And I think... I think I'm still far too stoned to be trying to figure this out," she said with a soft but genuine laugh.
Turning toward him, Lily propped her head up on her hand. "I think I probably owe you big time for bringing me back here," she said. "God knows where I would have ended up if I was still wandering around out there."
no subject
"And if you're still stoned, sounds like a good excuse to sleep it off." He grinned faintly. "Promise I'll make sure nothin' happens to you, Pavlova."
no subject
"Thank you," she said, then leaned toward him, brushing a kiss over his mouth, lingering for a moment with her fingers pressed lightly against his chest. He was warm and solid, something real. The sound of the feathers, the glimpse of things out of the corner of her eye, there were all gone for now and for that she really was grateful.
no subject
What wasn't was the fact that a part of him, buried deep down, reacted positively, just a portion of that wall falling down.
Of course, he tried immediately to build it back up.
Sawyer did manage to return the kiss, a soft nudge of his lips and a hand brushing over the one she pressed to his chest. But it was barely beyond chaste, for he wasn't sure if either of them could really, truly stand still underneath the weight of a tryst started right then. With her grieving. With him locked away.