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2 August, 2023
It's been so long since he received a hand-written letter that its arrival almost made him suspicious at first. He'd stared uncomprehendingly at the little envelope, the child-like scrawl of his name and address, and the sender's name, thinking Who the hell is Gwendolyn Blake? before he'd finally realized and torn the envelope open with a mix of disbelief and feverish curiosity.
He'd read the letter three times, first shocked, then ashamed, then finally with an odd mix of amusement and regret. It was just so... sweet, down to the bit where she explains that she'd have to stab him again if he ever tried to stab her. He'd clutched the thin sheet of loose leaf, the sort of thing he'd normally associate with school work, tightly between his fingers for several long seconds, trying to think what to do and how to do it.
There hadn't really been much to ponder. Poor Gwen deserves to be set at ease, and the only thing that had been holding him back was the assumption he and John had more or less shared, that she wouldn't want anything to do with them. But now that she's made this clear of an overture, there is nothing to hold him back.
It had been too late in the day for it, so he excuses himself from work the next day, heading straight for the Children's Home. He still has the letter, folded neatly in his pocket. He's not sure why, exactly. He supposes he could show it to someone if there are questions about his intent to see one of the kids, though it's not the sort of letter that should be shown around, either. Maybe it's just for some kind of odd moral support.
The woman who greets him doesn't ask for any such evidence, anyway. She just asks his name and relationship (with some hesitation, Martin offers that he's a friend, for lack of a better option), and then has him wait while she goes to find Gwen herself.
So he waits, as patiently as he can. He doesn't really know what to expect. Maybe this was stupid. Maybe he should have written her back first, asked if this would be okay. That would have been a lot more considerate. Christ, she might be scared he's come to get her in trouble. Why is he always so impulsive?
But before he can even consider the possibility of finding another adult to mitigate any potential misunderstandings, the woman he'd sent returns, with Gwen alongside her.
"Gwen!" he blurts before she can say anything, and he offers a slightly strained smile, awkward, but hopefully reassuring. "I, erm... I got your letter."
It's been so long since he received a hand-written letter that its arrival almost made him suspicious at first. He'd stared uncomprehendingly at the little envelope, the child-like scrawl of his name and address, and the sender's name, thinking Who the hell is Gwendolyn Blake? before he'd finally realized and torn the envelope open with a mix of disbelief and feverish curiosity.
He'd read the letter three times, first shocked, then ashamed, then finally with an odd mix of amusement and regret. It was just so... sweet, down to the bit where she explains that she'd have to stab him again if he ever tried to stab her. He'd clutched the thin sheet of loose leaf, the sort of thing he'd normally associate with school work, tightly between his fingers for several long seconds, trying to think what to do and how to do it.
There hadn't really been much to ponder. Poor Gwen deserves to be set at ease, and the only thing that had been holding him back was the assumption he and John had more or less shared, that she wouldn't want anything to do with them. But now that she's made this clear of an overture, there is nothing to hold him back.
It had been too late in the day for it, so he excuses himself from work the next day, heading straight for the Children's Home. He still has the letter, folded neatly in his pocket. He's not sure why, exactly. He supposes he could show it to someone if there are questions about his intent to see one of the kids, though it's not the sort of letter that should be shown around, either. Maybe it's just for some kind of odd moral support.
The woman who greets him doesn't ask for any such evidence, anyway. She just asks his name and relationship (with some hesitation, Martin offers that he's a friend, for lack of a better option), and then has him wait while she goes to find Gwen herself.
So he waits, as patiently as he can. He doesn't really know what to expect. Maybe this was stupid. Maybe he should have written her back first, asked if this would be okay. That would have been a lot more considerate. Christ, she might be scared he's come to get her in trouble. Why is he always so impulsive?
But before he can even consider the possibility of finding another adult to mitigate any potential misunderstandings, the woman he'd sent returns, with Gwen alongside her.
"Gwen!" he blurts before she can say anything, and he offers a slightly strained smile, awkward, but hopefully reassuring. "I, erm... I got your letter."
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The revelation that Martin is boyfriends with The Eye Man, though, that makes Gwenny's eyes go a little wider. She shifts in place, worried suddenly that she might have said something out of pocket during their conversation so far. Whether or not Martin is trustworthy, whether or not he's, he's dating The Eye Man, Gwenny isn't going to be hurtful about something he can't control. And she's never thought that that is something someone can control.
She thinks about Finney and Donna, how he got all blushy and embarrassed and squeaky-voiced when Gwenny teased him about liking her. She thinks about how relaxed and easy his shoulders got when Robin was around, the trusting look in his eyes because he knew, no matter how tough and strong Robin Arellano was, he'd never hurt Finney, ever. She thinks about those bullies she'd jumped when they'd cornered him, the way they're always calling him a girl and saying he's a Nancy and a fudgepacker and a f— She's always wondered if there's been some shred of truth to it, like maybe he could half-like boys and half-like girls. But when she thinks about all of those things, she can't, not even with the most imaginative, wild part of her mind, picture Martin and The Eye Man looking the way Finney looks when he's teased about Donna.
"Oh," she says, realizing she should at least say something. "N-no, you don't have to leave. I just... Really? Him?" Maybe that's not the most important thing he's said, here, but... Really?
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But instead Gwenny distractedly tells him to stay, almost like it's an afterthought, and then—
"W—" he starts, blinking at her in open shock as he's momentarily caught between impulses to burst out laughing or raise his hackles. It's just so... absurd, so surprising, that for a moment he's completely frozen.
It would be even more absurd to feel defensive. She has a right to her incredulity, after all, for more reasons than one. And she's just a kid. Except somehow this kind of thing always feels worse coming from kids. He'd told himself he wasn't afraid of being judged, but that wasn't entirely true. Not when it's about something as insignificant as taste. It's hard not to fall back into the mindset of a bullied, insecure kid himself. It's one of the reasons he's never considered himself very good at talking to children.
He hears himself protesting as if at a distance, too late to stop himself: "Y-yes, really," he blurts, feeling his cheeks flush. "I-I happen to think he's very handsome."
Oh, god. He tips his head down immediately, his mouth snapping shut. Mortifying. Stupid thing to say.
"He's kind," he adds, sheepish, and then shuts his eyes tight, lifting one hand to press against his brow as he struggles to get himself back on track. "He's— W-well, it doesn't matter. That's who he is to me. I care about him, and I try to help him remember himself, just like he's done for me. Sometimes it's... it's just not enough."
Feeling slightly more pulled together — if only slightly — he lifts his head and levels a wry, apologetic look at her. "And I'm sorry for that."
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"That's why he got so mad," she says. "That's why you got in the way! You're totally crazy for each other and in the movies when people are totally crazy for each other they do stupid shit!" Like jump in front of a knife, and scare the hell out of little girls. "I didn't even think about that 'cause I'm not used to—" She really needs to learn the right words for this... "—to boys being with boys, but makes so much sense!"
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"I mean," he says haplessly, "yeah. Yes. I... yeah." Christ, this is ridiculous. But she's not wrong, or she's near enough to right that it feels pointless to argue. "He's usually the one stepping in front of me. So I think it scared him, a bit." He smiles faintly, self-deprecating and a bit fond. "We tend to be a bit stupid," he agrees, finding some strange pleasure in saying so.
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"I'm not gonna say it's not weird," she says, looking back up at him. "I mean... not because you're both boys. Just that..." He's a big scary creep who yells at kids?
She suddenly feels like she has to be careful of how she says things. If Martin loves The Eye Man the way he says he does, then he probably doesn't like hearing her say all the mean shit she's been saying — well, the true shit, but it's kinda mean, too, to call someone's boyfriend a creep or a jerkface. He's let her say it up to now with only some argument, but maybe now that she knows, he'll expect different.
"Well, I don't see it, that's all."
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But as tempting as it might be to let that levity stay, it would be too easy, an escape hatch he hasn't earned. She brought this up because she wasn't sure she could trust him. With that air cleared, it's time to return to the point.
"You're very much entitled to feel however you like," he says. "My... feelings for him don't change what he did."
It's difficult to say, and he feels his gut clench slightly. But it's true, and it probably needed saying. "So all I can promise is that he'll do whatever he can to leave you be," he says firmly, "and I will help him."
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Still, she looks a little uncomfortable, and she fidgets with her nails a little, the microphone long since forgotten.
"Why eyes?" she asks, but there's a worried grimace on her face, like she's afraid of the answer.
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"Well," he says slowly, angling for simple and to-the-point, "where we come from, different kinds of fears would sort of... manifest in different ways. And the one that was drawn to him was sort of about knowledge. Like the fear of being watched. So it often comes out like... eyes."
Granted, it's never quite happened to him this way. John's occasional intrusions into his nightmares are unsettling, but he's never had his body altered like what seems to have happened to Gwenny. It sounds horrible. But he's not certain if it would scare him as much as it scared her, or in the same way. To him, the deepest and most abiding fears planted by the Eye were more about being vulnerable and being perceived. The better for the Lonely to swoop in like it meant to protect him from all that, he thinks with a faint, bitter wince.
"It doesn't always happen like... like what you're describing," he says, because that might sort of be comforting, if you squint. This is still all leaning on his own guesses, for the most part, and he would prefer to be truthful, even when the truth is frustratingly vague. "Unfortunately we don't really know a lot about how it works. We were brought here before we could learn much." He rubs the back of his neck and looks away. "Though I think it would've also been much worse for both of us if we'd stayed."
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“Your home was that bad?” she asks. Her voice is softer, now, with more concern for Martin than her own discomfort in it.
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"It was," he answers, equally soft. "We were involved in some very dangerous things, and we didn't really know how bad it was until it was too late. Being brought here saved us, I think." He smiles faintly, then looks at her. "But it left its marks, and as you've seen, that's quite bad enough."
He hesitates, supposing now might be as good a time as any to turn the conversation back to asking mutual questions. She's borne the weight of that long enough, he thinks.
"Back home, did you know anyone else who... dreamed like you did?" he asks. "Or was it just you?"
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And maybe Martin would, too.
"I think," she begins, then hesitates and trails off.
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There are hints, though, of something that needs to get talked about. That little mention of her father is telling. And the way Gwenny seems to be starting a sentence, only to stop with clear uncertainty. He gives her a moment, but when she doesn't continue, he sits forward just a little.
"You don't have to tell me about any of it if you'd rather not," he says softly. "But also, if you need to talk about it, you can. Whatever feels best to you. It's okay."