http://nurse-boy.livejournal.com/ (
nurse-boy.livejournal.com) wrote in
paradisalost2011-07-12 01:34 am
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Entry tags:
- thirty-seventh year waiting -
[dictated]
[alone on a bed in the medbay on Eleven's TARDIS, Rory Williams wakes up from a week-long sleep. He feels extremely disoriented and doesn't really remember collapsing in the castle lobby--there's so many new memories to process this time around, two thousand years' worth and then some--and he's got a pounding headache. But both of these are minor concerns when, upon regaining consciousness, the first thing he realizes is that he has a heartbeat. A pulse. And he's breathing. Not because he can, but because he has to. Which can only mean one thing:
He's gone home. And he's come back human again.
The realization hits him like a sucker punch to the chest and he makes to bolt upright into a sit, grabbing frantically at his right hand to check for the hinge--except his head throbs like it's been hit with a sledgehammer and a wave of nausea crashes over him. He sinks back onto his bed with a groan, squeezing his eyes shut and grimacing in pain. Okay, maybe the headache's not such a minor concern after all.
Swallowing to wet his dry throat, he croaks out:]
Amy? ... Doctor? Wha ...?
((open like an open thing! Rory's back from a trip home and has been canon-bumped up through Series 6, Episode 7: A Good Man Goes To War. He's no longer an Auton (buh-bye plasticness and handy gun in his hand!) and brings with him a metric fuckton of new emotional baggage courtesy of the Doctor and River Song))
[alone on a bed in the medbay on Eleven's TARDIS, Rory Williams wakes up from a week-long sleep. He feels extremely disoriented and doesn't really remember collapsing in the castle lobby--there's so many new memories to process this time around, two thousand years' worth and then some--and he's got a pounding headache. But both of these are minor concerns when, upon regaining consciousness, the first thing he realizes is that he has a heartbeat. A pulse. And he's breathing. Not because he can, but because he has to. Which can only mean one thing:
He's gone home. And he's come back human again.
The realization hits him like a sucker punch to the chest and he makes to bolt upright into a sit, grabbing frantically at his right hand to check for the hinge--except his head throbs like it's been hit with a sledgehammer and a wave of nausea crashes over him. He sinks back onto his bed with a groan, squeezing his eyes shut and grimacing in pain. Okay, maybe the headache's not such a minor concern after all.
Swallowing to wet his dry throat, he croaks out:]
Amy? ... Doctor? Wha ...?
((open like an open thing! Rory's back from a trip home and has been canon-bumped up through Series 6, Episode 7: A Good Man Goes To War. He's no longer an Auton (buh-bye plasticness and handy gun in his hand!) and brings with him a metric fuckton of new emotional baggage courtesy of the Doctor and River Song))
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Sometimes it seems like his quiet sobs are easing, but then they'll return anew, fresh and worse than before, and one or twice Rory feels like he's ripping apart at the seams he's crying so hard inside his head, mouth open in a silent, gut-wrenching scream. And he has no idea how long they both stay there, crumpled and devastated and broken, before his tears finally do subside. And all that's left is a Rory who is hollowed-out and numb, exhausted from venting his emotions in such a raw way, face slick with tears and his shirtsleeves and jeans damp with the ones that fell]
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Sorry.
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Don't be.
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You shouldn't have had to see that.
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Why not? I signed up for 'worse' right alongside 'better'.
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Because ... [he swallows again, trying to articulate it] Because ... I dunno.
[she's going to hit him for this, probably, or at least scoff louder]
Because I'm, I dunno, a bloke.
[it's a stammered, badly-done way of saying he doesn't want to cry in front of her because he's a man and he ought to be stronger than that]
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You're so stupid.
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Yeah. I know.
[there's barely a trace of the deadpan cheekiness usually present in a response like that from him; instead he sounds tired, and like he believes he really is]
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You're still my stupid.
[she'd like to get him off the floor, maybe back on the bed, but... she's all too well aware that people this upset will sometimes move only when they're good and damn well ready to. Nagging might not be the better part of discretion and all that in this case]
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Yeah. [a sad, bitter laugh] Well.
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Well, what?
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Always've been stupid, haven't I.
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Most of the time... s'why I love you so much.
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But I lost you.
[his eyes are stinging again]
Both of you.
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[Amy swallows, hard, and hugs him as tightly as she can]
We were... taken away from you.
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Her words are echoing and bouncing around his head. Taken away, taken away, taken away ... he'd had nightmares in those weeks following the monastery: frantically searching for Amy, always searching, and never finding her. Searching for the rest of his life without a sign, dying without ever seeing her again, never meeting his child. Or finding her only to see blame and anger in her eyes--'Why did it take you so long?' 'Where have you been?' 'I've been waiting for you, and you never came!' 'You left me. You said you'd never leave me and you did.' 'It's too late, you took too long, I don't love you anymore.' Or finding her, only to REALLY be too late--she was dead, for any number of reasons. The number of nights he'd woken up screaming or crying far outnumbered the nights he slept straight through.
If he slept at all.
Rory wants--so much--to turn to Amy and hold her tight, cry something like happy tears, grateful to have her here with him, alive and whole, but--he can't. He doesn't want to frighten or bewilder her, or make her feel worse than she already does (because he KNOWS she feels helpless).
He doesn't know what to say, or do, or how to react and properly grieve, in a way that won't alienate Amy.
Once again that feeling of isolation washes over him]
Amy--I--
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Remembering those times--they can't possibly hold a candle to his.
So she struggles to take in another steady breath and doesn't ease her hold on him, not one inch, because he's her stupid face husband and she loves him and she's going to do her level best to support him, as well as she knows how]
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Amy, I--
[he's not even really sure what he wants, or is trying to ask of her. He shifts a little, and pins and needles shoot down his leg as feeling returns to it. It's still unfamiliar and jarring, feeling these physical things. Sighing heavily again, he shifts one more time and, again, seems to tangibly withdraw into himself. He changes he subject]
Come on, let's--um--let's get off this floor ...
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Do you want some water?
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Gently squeezing Amy's hand, he lets go and moves to push himself up off the floor]
I'll get it.
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Hey ... hey. Here.
[he looks like absolute hell. His face is red and blotchy, eyes swollen and bloodshot from all the crying, skin shining with tears where he missed with his sleeve. His entire demeanor screams of exhaustion and hollowed-out numbness, but there's still concern there in his eyes, for her]
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He stays there for a moment, splayed hands pressing lightly into her back and his face nestled in the crook of her neck, before sniffing once and standing back. He keeps one careful arm around her]
Come on ... let's get you out of here.
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