loficharm: (dread)
Martin Blackwood ([personal profile] loficharm) wrote2019-08-23 08:02 pm

The Boy Is Mine // for John

It's no small miracle, as far as Martin is concerned, that they were able to acquire a space for their would-be Archive so quick after the idea had come. While John secured what is still esoterically being called 'funding' (and Martin has every intention of following up on that despite John's constant evasions), Martin scouted locations. And now, not even a week since the inception of the idea, they have themselves a place. It's small, nothing on the scale of the Institute of course - this is just an Archive, after all - but it'll serve quite well. A former secondhand book shop, closed sometime ago and apparently so difficult to offload that the building agent had let them have it for next to nothing. As starts go, it's... almost auspicious.

John is still off doing god only knows what, so Martin is here alone, taking inventory of shelf space, working out vague layout ideas - all the boring stuff. It's comforting, really. Something concrete to work on, rather than wandering the streets in search of people with stories and willingness to tell them.

This is good, probably. It will be good. It has to be. He and John are both still barely scraping by, tired and worn. They need a - a place of power, he supposes with a little grimace. A base of operations. That sounds a little better. More like a spy novel or something.

It's quiet here. Peaceful. Martin loses track of time as he works, going over everything they'll need, making lists, drawing up budget plans... it feels like home. Working alone on mundane tasks with simple solutions. For a little while, he almost manages to forget where he really is.

It isn't until his breath fogs up his glasses that he realizes something is off. He shudders, sudden and violent, like he's being jolted back into his body and only now realizes how cold he's become. He reels back from the desk he'd been hunched over, the notes he'd been studiously scrawling. There it is, all around him, that... thick, cold fog.

"No," he blurts out, halfway between scared and angry. "No. Go away."

The Lonely has been making its presence aggressively known ever since he shared his Statement about the Spiral, and Tim - ever since he told John quite truthfully that it would be nice to work with him again. Martin's not an idiot; he's sensed that undercurrent of frustration, the entity grasping for him in this place it can't quite reach. It had never been enough to merit bringing it up to John, who'd only worry and likely find some way to do something rash. And he'd thought - well, the whole idea of building an Archive was, in part, to protect him, right? To protect others. Keep the Lonely at bay, unwelcome in the Eye's temporary domain.

Maybe it doesn't count without John here. Or maybe not until it's a proper Archive. Either way, it's seeped back in around him, and Martin didn't even notice.

He turns about sharply and finds the fog filling the area, hanging heavy and unnatural in the dry, climate-controlled space. He huffs in frustration and steps forward, making his way for the door. The fog grows thicker by the second, and he can barely see anything, but he remembers well enough where the door is. He moves through it, reaching out before him. He keeps walking and walking, until he's certain he's gone much, much too far. He's shaking now, whether from the cold or the horror of it - he doesn't know. But rising above the fear is bitter anger. He's tried to cling to the work he'd been doing; he's tried. Being punished for every perceived misstep is beginning to feel infuriatingly petty.

"Get out," he snaps. "You're - you're not welcome here. And I'm not leaving him, so you can just-"

The Lonely shivers around him, all the fog shifting at once, and it's enough to shut him up - not just the uncanny movement, but the way it changes, grows darker, heavier. He can feel it again, like in his dreams, dragging at his limbs. Pulling at him. He grits his teeth and tries to push through the haze, still reaching for the door, but it's so much harder than it was. He knows, then, deep in his chest, that there's no point looking. The door isn't there. Or he isn't. It doesn't matter.

"Let me go," he says, his voice trembling and sounding strangely muffled. "I - I'm not yours anymore, not here. You can't-"

The Lonely reacts as harshly as he's come to expect, lashing out like an impatient child. The mist wraps around him, so thick now that he can't see anything, can't hear anything but his own shallow, labored breaths. He tastes that same salt water taste when he breathes it in, straining for air that isn't seeking to drown him. He struggles, but it holds him; it's impossible, and yet he's stuck, pinned down in this empty, powerless building, utterly, overwhelmingly alone.

It could let him wander. It could let him loose in the emptiness, searching and finding nothing until the agony of isolation drove him mad. But it's never just about that with him, is it? It doesn't feed off his fear; after all, he's not particularly afraid of being alone. It just wants him, wants to keep him, and wants him to know that he's kept.

His hands fumble for purchase against the nothing that envelopes him, his fingers tracing down to one solid object he has on him, the one remaining connection to the outside. He's not sure how he manages to get the phone out of his pocket, his hands leaving slowly furling tracks in the murky air. He's certain that if he were home, where the Lonely could reach him unfettered, this would not be possible. As it is, he finds himself clutching onto the little device, bowing over it as if weighed down, fighting to get out any sort of contact. It feels exhausting, far more exhausting than it should; his fingers are starting to go numb, and in the end, he can't keep his hold on the phone any longer, and it slips out of his grasp. He doesn't even hear it hit the floor. He thinks he might have managed to send something, but he just can't be certain, and in a moment, it no longer matters. The fog pours in around him, and he can feel the satisfaction thrumming through it. Anger and fear seem far, far away now. There's no reason for any of that. He's where he belongs.
statement_ends: (ugghhh)

[personal profile] statement_ends 2019-09-11 05:07 am (UTC)(link)
Next time. Given half a second and considerably more courage, he might have made that insistence, himself. Maybe. But probably not. This... whatever the hell you'd call it, this sort of camaraderie, feels far too new and fragile to presumptuously lean upon. Hell, Martin's been refusing his friendly overtures more or less as a rule. He might be welcome to pull him out of the fog, or chase off his aggressively faux-concerned landlord, but there's been little to suggest he'd be welcome to put forth the idea of a next time.

Now that he thinks about it, it's entirely possible that Martin doesn't even mean it. That it's just an excuse to get the check sorted with a minimal amount of fuss and end the evening as expeditiously as possible.

John's on the verge of sinking into a maudlin funk over the depressing likelihood of that premise when Martin decides to complicate matters by offering him a -- Christ -- a friendly hand up. John looks at him askance for half a second, trying and failing to make that detail fit the narrative.

It occurs to him, for the barest instant, that he could refuse it on some sort of petty principle. But he shakes off the impulse -- as if the few, often gentle rebuffs Martin has doled out aren't dwarfed by the pile of nastier brush-offs John has been responsible for over the years. As if he isn't rather pathetically touched by the gesture, by the casual, startling humanity of it. Like that's something people do: offer their hands to him, to be kind and not to burn.

So he takes Martin's hand, curls his fingers around his palm. The scar tissue is still a little more sensitive than the unmarred skin used to be, and the warmth of Martin's hand is heightened as a result. But it doesn't hurt, it's just... pleasant. And then he's tugged out of the booth and up onto his feet, and his head swims. "Ugh," he mutters, scrunching up his face in displeasure, his grip on Martin's hand tightening unthinkingly for a few moments until the room settles. At which point he makes himself let go, running his other hand over his face.

"Maybe Archivists don't get hangovers," he muses, without any real hope.
statement_ends: (baw)

[personal profile] statement_ends 2019-09-15 11:40 pm (UTC)(link)
John hums in acknowledgment, nose wrinkling a little at the humidity. London summers certainly have their moments, but not with the sort of consistency that Darrow summers seem to. At least in Darrow, much like America, air conditioning is ubiquitous. Even his flat has an admittedly rather rickety unit built into the wall.

"Right," he says, dropping his gaze to Martin, who's looking up at him with a solemnity he isn't quite sure what to do with. Solemnity and... something else that he can't name, but that fills him with a sort of electric anticipation, like that nerve-jangling instant between the flash of lightning and the crack of thunder that'll tell you just how close you were to being struck.

Not that there's any cause for it. Martin just thanks him. Again. "You're welcome," he replies, just as seriously. What else is there to say, really, or to do but nod his head in agreement at this oddly casual farewell. An 'I'll see you' might not be ideal coming from him, so he sticks with what he hopes is a blandly inoffensive, "Later, then."

He also knows he shouldn't just stand there and watch Martin leave, so he turns toward the Bramford, making it a few steps before he can't help but glance back over his shoulder, as if to make sure the fog hasn't rolled in already. But Martin looks fine, his outline perfectly clear as he passes beneath a streetlight.

No obvious outward reason for him to curl his arms around himself.

John's steps falter, and he waffles uncertainly for a few moments before shaking his head and continuing on. Martin will reach out if he needs him. He said he would, and John just has to trust him. Besides, what's the alternative: legging it down the sidewalk and insisting he come to the Bramford? Christ, just imagining the look on Martin's face is enough to dissuade him from that course of action. It's... it'll be fine.

They're fine.