Gabriel Fletcher (
overdrawing) wrote2015-08-02 12:43 am
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In all my dreams I drown [Closed to Wren/Mira tw: suicidal imagery, drowning, depersonalization]]
Ever since Mira took him to the beach, he's dreamed and dreamed of waves and water and woken up with an aching heart. Some nights, the longing actually pulls him out of bed and Mira's parents have found him sleepwalking, gently turning their somnambulant guest back to their guest room and closing the door. He wakes disoriented, but at least he wakes in the bed her parents insist is his.
Tonight, his dreams are especially potent and Gabe dreams of a calm, moonlit ocean, the salt air, and the gentle crashing against the shore. It tugs him out of bed and unnoticed through the Kazmis' unattended doors. The people who know him are used to seeing a quiet Gabe who walks with his head down and don't think to engage him as he sleepwalks to the beach.
With instinctive knowledge, bare feet take him to the end of the slippery pier and over the edge. Halfway through falling into the distant, low-tide ocean, Gabe wakes and his heart thuds in panic as he braces himself. The water is so cold his lungs feel like ice and he thinks he'll drown as a riptide pulls him out further. Thrashing, Gabe tries to make it to the surface, afraid and panicked because he can't swim.
Then suddenly he stops being cold and the water turns clear in his vision. Dark, silty water is as bright as daylight and Gabe blinks as instinct drives him to swim sideways, out of the current. His hands stroke in front of him and Gabe shouts, filling his throat and lungs with sea water. These aren't his hands. These are webbed, clawed paws, animal and inhuman.
Panicking, he thrashes again into the shallows.
Tonight, his dreams are especially potent and Gabe dreams of a calm, moonlit ocean, the salt air, and the gentle crashing against the shore. It tugs him out of bed and unnoticed through the Kazmis' unattended doors. The people who know him are used to seeing a quiet Gabe who walks with his head down and don't think to engage him as he sleepwalks to the beach.
With instinctive knowledge, bare feet take him to the end of the slippery pier and over the edge. Halfway through falling into the distant, low-tide ocean, Gabe wakes and his heart thuds in panic as he braces himself. The water is so cold his lungs feel like ice and he thinks he'll drown as a riptide pulls him out further. Thrashing, Gabe tries to make it to the surface, afraid and panicked because he can't swim.
Then suddenly he stops being cold and the water turns clear in his vision. Dark, silty water is as bright as daylight and Gabe blinks as instinct drives him to swim sideways, out of the current. His hands stroke in front of him and Gabe shouts, filling his throat and lungs with sea water. These aren't his hands. These are webbed, clawed paws, animal and inhuman.
Panicking, he thrashes again into the shallows.
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Tonight he's tried writing, reading old books. But insomnia, anxiety has always pulled him to the ocean if it can, and he walks along the rocks, watching the lights of the lighthouse and the still-full moon reflect off persistent waves.
That's when he sees the boy on the pier.
"Hey," he calls out, but the wind takes it; he's too far away. His heart picks up a little at the definite movement of the figure toward the end of the pier. His mind has a cold flashback to that Thanksgiving drive home, all but drowning himself with very little care if he did. It's been less than a year, but things have changed so radically. He doesn't know if this is suicide or spell, siren or human, but it doesn't seem like it can be good, no matter what, and he takes off toward the pier.
The figure steps off the edge before he can get there. Fuck.
Wren kicks off his sneakers, tugs off his shirt before he's finished making the decision. He can already feel his body shifting in preparation as he hits the water, casting about to see what's going on with newly-protected bird eyes.
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Maybe he's already dead. Maybe this change is Hell taking his body, damning him and warping Gabe into one of them as they drag him screaming into perdition.
But all he can think, again, is just help me. Gabe doesn't think he even knows anymore what that help means. The shore is far away and instinct can only take him so far when he's bogged down with soaked clothes and a complete inability to coordinate his limbs for even the most basic doggy paddle.
What's happening? What is his body doing?
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He comes up for air finally, and looks around, treading water, making a grab for the half-changed boy. Wren tries to force his body back to human, because if the panicking young man isn't aware of what sirens are, he's going to frighten him even more. And also so he can talk.
Wren gets purchase on a soaked t-shirt, dragging him upwards and wrapping an arm around his waist to keep them both afloat. "I've got you, don't panic," he says. (There's a little part of him that wants to say be not afraid, because he's an asshole with wings saving a drowning kid, but maybe he'll use that when he's not trying to stifle his own instincts.)
[Ooc: am I right that Gabe's only half through a transformation here? Let me know if I need to edit this.]
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His strange new hands are clawed and strong and his feet–unencumbered by shoes–kick powerfully but not enough to get himself free of the other man.
This is not the help he wants. Or maybe it is. Gabe can't think, can't feel anything beyond numb terror.
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"You're going to drown yourself," Wren yells against the boy's fighting, against the waves. Changing back, his feet are still webbed enough to make each movement a powerful paddle. He can feel his body fighting to transform further, to something safer and he shoves it down. "I won't hurt you. I promise." Even the young man's energy is frenetic, panicked, self loathing and reaching out at the same time.
He could tug on that energy if he tried, calm him down forcibly, but he hasn't yet used his power on someone without their consent, not knowingly anyway, and this is no place to start. Instead he makes himself hum, a steady, calming tune he knows by heart, some sort of sea shanty or something deeper, as he turns them both toward shore. "Your body knows how to keep you alive," he tells him. "Let it."
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The water is so clear. It shouldn't be clear like this; his eyes shouldn't be able to see in silty ocean as if it's broad daylight.
He's not human. He must be damned.
Lungs burning, Gabe surges up to the surface and cool air slaps him in the face. The shore isn't so far away now and he isn't sure that's a good thing.
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This is turning out to be a fight. Wren's whole body is sore and he's pretty sure he's going to have some really interesting scratches across his chest when he gets out of the water.
"I'm not going to force you," Wren bites off, a little harsher than he wants, and makes a face against the seawater he's getting in his mouth trying to talk. He's exhausted trying to pull a full size adult fighting him, and he stops for a minute, letting go of him and raising his hands, treading water. He can grab him again if he has to, but if he's that terrified of being held, it's not going to do anything to touch him.
"I'm not trying to hurt you," he says again. "I know this is frightening."
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"What's happening?" he asks. Adrenaline ebbs back just enough that he can use his words because it's true. Aside from that night with Caleb, Gabe can't think of another time when he's ever been so frightened.
Despite his own panic, Gabe realizes suddenly how tranquil the water is.
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Wren relaxes a little as the young man pauses in his struggle and lets the wave push him; he takes in the constant moving energy of the waves, like home a little.
"You're a siren," he says, bluntly. "Like Siren Cove. Like me. When you --" he still isn't sure if the fall was an accident or a jump. "Hit the water, your body tried to protect you by changing to a form that could swim." He winces a little. "I know this sounds crazy. But you should be able to feel it. That the water won't hurt you."
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"But that's not...I can't be like that." After months in this town, he's come to accept that there's something beyond human in this town, but he can still remember what the Bible says. Thou shalt not suffer a witch to live.
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"I don't think you get a choice," Wren says, gently. He knows how terrible it can feel to not have a choice about who you are. His childhood hurt, and it left lasting marks, but he's been luckier than some. "It doesn't mean anything about you. Who you are. What you do with that."
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This other man can't possibly know how far Gabe has strayed from what he should be. That this does mean things about him. It's another nail in the cross and he can't go back to the life he once knew.
"I'm a demon," he says. "This is...God is angry. I'm being punished." It's strange, now, how placid the water feels, neither cold nor violent. He feels like it's wrapping around him, offering him comfort. Like he belongs here.
Like he's no longer earthly or human. Just a demon.
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The next thing the young man says, though, makes him think he has a different source telling him to be kind to "the least of these".
Wren stretches his arms out, feeling the push of the tide under the moon, washing them back out and back in to the shore, and thinks about what to say. The first time he wanted to destroy himself he was seven years old. In the interim years, he's learned to love the things that make him anathema. Other things still stir that impulse in him, sometimes, but who he is at heart isn't one. But he remembers hating himself and he has to work on not just flaring up in indignant anger when he sees someone younger doing it, like he can force them not to.
"I don't think that's how demons work," he says thoughtfully. He knows neither of them are feeling it, but they're going to start to get cold soon. "Punished for what?"
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Beneath his feet, Gabe can feel the soft sand, velvety with seawater. He feels as though he could sink beneath the waves and bury himself in it. Not to drown, but to rest. It aches in the same way that night with Caleb had ached. What had felt natural had then become terrible and left him confused.
"For my sins." He's already little more than a demon, his body transformed. Why not go to confession while he's at it? "I did...obscene things outside of marriage. With a boy. I ran away. Everything I am is wrong. Of course I'm going to be punished."
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"And the boy you didn't marry first," he says, "is he wrong too?" It's more rhetorical, not with a mind of persuading the stressed out young man to accept himself, but then again he's always been good at putting someone on a pedestal. He stands up and lets the water rock against him. "I ran away when I was 16. If that's what you call it still, when your mother lets you leave. Left home. School."
"You ran away," he says, and this time it's directed at him. "Do you have a place to stay, here?"
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"Mira," he says, rather than put a voice to any of those thoughts. "Oh...oh God if she wakes up. They'll be worried sick!"
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"Mira," he echoes. "The girl from the planetarium." He's only met her briefly, but she's sweet: he can imagine her letting someone crash with them. "Let's get you back to them." He holds out a hand. "You don't have to like me, or like this, but I want to make sure you get home."
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"I'm just a guest. I-It's not my home." He thinks of it as a place of safety, but not as his home.
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Wren isn't great at recognizing when his gaze has moved from serious to creepy. He just looks -- at things, people: his awareness and care about social norms is shaky at best, and except on stage, he has a sort of stillness to him that holds over into things like keeping eye contact a little too long, not moving out of people's way, not speaking when he's supposed to and saying something when he isn't. He is, however, aware that it can put people off, and the young man is a bit of a wounded animal.
He drops his eyes as he speaks, carefully, and glances back up to him. "Well, to where you're staying," he mediates. "You're going to get cold, soon, and I know you feel all right in the water, but you're going to exhaust yourself."
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"Let's go then."
They need to get it over with.