Arthur Lester (
theotherright) wrote2022-09-11 07:55 pm
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come sail away IC inbox
Cabin 127. No calls, we text like men on our disney cruise phones.
If you send Arthur a message it will be read out loud in one of a selection of friendly automated voices!
If you send Arthur a message it will be read out loud in one of a selection of friendly automated voices!
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When Arthur's voice grows thick, Crichton reaches out to gently take his hand, so he doesn't have to relive this alone without comfort.
"She sounds like she was a joy in your life and a blessing to anyone who got to know her. She would have grown up to be a caring young woman, since she was already so willing to come and comfort you. I can almost see it... I can tell she meant the world to you."
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"She did." His voice is bitter and disgusted, almost seeming to come from a different person than the one with wet eyes and rivuleted cheeks. "She would have."
If he'd been worth a god damn as a father. If he'd paid more attention, not gotten so involved in his fucking work, set an alarm, anything.
Now he withdraws his hand, and clasps both in front of him, as the door closes and what holes had formed in the wall are filled back in. And he says forcefully: "We're not talking about this any more."
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"Okay. I won't ask about it anymore." His gentle tone implies that he'll always be ready to listen whenever Arthur is ready to share it again.
"But... call this a crazy suggestion: would it help if you weren't sleeping alone in bed?" Sometimes, when the nerves and the nightmares struck him, it helped to have someone nearby. A warm body to reassure him that he wasn't alone. They already sleep in the same room, and that pull-out couch isn't the most comfortable looking thing he's ever seen. It wouldn't be that big of a leap to just share the actual bed. It doesn't have to mean anything serious. If it works, however, maybe they'd both get better rest.
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He drags it back inside himself. The question takes him by surprise, but even as numb and bitter as he feels just now, he's aware that what Crichton's offering is something he's thought about wanting.
Crichton's really gotten the short end of the stick in this friendship, hasn't he? He shows up with sunglasses and gets rewarded with Arthur crying on the sofa. Arthur drags it even further back in, and attempts to stop being so fucking self-centered.
"Perhaps. It's worth a try."
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"Okay," he offers once Arthur's composed enough to speak. "Then, let's try it. Worst that happens is we don't end up liking it and then the couch is still right there, right?"
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"Let me," he says thickly, "try that again, without... being a prick. I... thank you. Very much. I-I, I'd like to try that."
He means it, and he wants Crichton to know it, and maybe if his instinct had been to say it first then he'd be a better person.
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There's forgiving warmth in Crichton's tone. He knows. And he's not upset anymore now that he knows what the problem was.
"We'll give it a shot tonight. See how it goes. Sound good?"
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"That sounds good."
Arthur's need for that comfort overwhelms his feeling of guilt at accepting it, and now he leans the inches sideways onto Crichton's shoulder, and he searches for Crichton's hand again with his own.
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