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이젠 다시 돌아가고 싶지 않아
It's a dream. It has to be. J knows that, tells himself that over and over until he can't make his mind form the words anymore. At a certain point, the fear and the horror are too much. That's how it always is. He never feels entirely in his own control when he does it, though he knows he is, he must be, to make these kinds of choices. Still, it feels — felt, really — like his hands do the work on their own, like he's watching from afar. It's a terrible contradiction — to need to be far enough removed from it to keep from losing his nerve, to be enmeshed enough to feel it so it has the required effect. To know the fright in the eyes of someone dying at his hands, palpable enough that he takes what he needs from it, held enough at bay he could keep himself from falling apart after the fact or from stopping before he was done.
It's a little bit different tonight. He sees them in the shadows, hardly more than shadows themselves, hovering at the edges of his vision, but there's no victim before him tonight, no murder to relive. There's just a visceral wrongness, like he's hovering on the edge of understanding, aware they're here and that they aren't. He forgets things even as they happen, and it's the last of it he'll remember when he wakes.
There's a car. It's a worn-down old thing, the best he could afford, but it keeps running in spite of that and the damage he's done to it — did to it, that night, going too fast — but it's not moving now. He's sitting behind the wheel and it's quiet and it's dark, and something is very wrong. It's the smell, he thinks, and it takes him a moment for it to click before he realizes he knows it very, very well. It's been a long time, though, since he smelled it so strongly, the sour metallic bite of blood in the air, flooding the car, inescapable. The window won't roll down, and he leans across the seat to try the other (and he wonders, in the back of his head, why he doesn't just open the door, but he doesn't), but his hands slip, the handle slick. The blood was already there, though. He knows that when he sees it, that it isn't touching the door or the seat when he slips that does it. It was already there — is still there, on his hands, on the steering wheel, mottling the passenger seat. He knows it's there when he turns to look at the backseat — too much, more than there should be, more than there was, and it won't come out, it won't ever come out. It's happening now, but when it happened before, he scrubbed at it until his hands were red, his cheeks and eyes were red, and still he felt sure it was everywhere, seeping between the fibers until the seats were soaked in it. And it's not real, it can't be real, because this didn't happen. S didn't die, he knows that, he's sure of it, but he must have, because no one can bleed that much and live.
That's the part that cuts through the panic, slices so sharp he can feel his skin crawl, his breath stop in his throat. There's too much. Is this a dream or was it a dream to think he fixed things somehow? Was he too late? Did he go too far after all? He's faintly aware of the sounds he's making, sharp gasps as he struggles to catch his breath, high-pitched whimpers of protest. When he leans further into the backseat, he's afraid he'll find a body still there, though he should be able to see it from the driver's seat, but he can't stop himself pitching forward, clutching at the armrest. He never got used to this smell. It grew familiar, but he hates it — in the same faraway manner in which he feels everything but abject despair — and he can't get away from it. The knife shouldn't be here, he knows that, he's absolutely certain of it, but then he's not really sure of anything. He left it in his rooms, he knows he did, but maybe he didn't. There's too much that he's can't say with any real confidence, too many patches of time he can't account for, too many memories he might have made up.
It's dark still and he can't breathe, bent forward instead of back, leaning over the blanket and draped over the knees he's pulled up to his chest. Clutching at the sheet, the sounds he makes are incomprehensible even to himself, almost inhuman, harsh, panicked breaths punching out of him as he struggles to get air past how tight his throat has become, past the sobs that start to shake him as soon as his body is alert enough, well before his mind catches up. He tries to call S's name, terrified he isn't there to respond, but he can't make it come out, can't force his body to turn. If he's alone, if it was real, if it's true, then he'll die like this, struggling for air like some of them did. The thought of that is enough to make some part of him want just to give up and let darkness take him again. "Please," he mumbles, desperate, unable to manage anything else. It's hardly the first time he's woken up (he is awake, isn't he?) in a panic, but not like this, rarely so pronounced and all-encompassing.
It's a little bit different tonight. He sees them in the shadows, hardly more than shadows themselves, hovering at the edges of his vision, but there's no victim before him tonight, no murder to relive. There's just a visceral wrongness, like he's hovering on the edge of understanding, aware they're here and that they aren't. He forgets things even as they happen, and it's the last of it he'll remember when he wakes.
There's a car. It's a worn-down old thing, the best he could afford, but it keeps running in spite of that and the damage he's done to it — did to it, that night, going too fast — but it's not moving now. He's sitting behind the wheel and it's quiet and it's dark, and something is very wrong. It's the smell, he thinks, and it takes him a moment for it to click before he realizes he knows it very, very well. It's been a long time, though, since he smelled it so strongly, the sour metallic bite of blood in the air, flooding the car, inescapable. The window won't roll down, and he leans across the seat to try the other (and he wonders, in the back of his head, why he doesn't just open the door, but he doesn't), but his hands slip, the handle slick. The blood was already there, though. He knows that when he sees it, that it isn't touching the door or the seat when he slips that does it. It was already there — is still there, on his hands, on the steering wheel, mottling the passenger seat. He knows it's there when he turns to look at the backseat — too much, more than there should be, more than there was, and it won't come out, it won't ever come out. It's happening now, but when it happened before, he scrubbed at it until his hands were red, his cheeks and eyes were red, and still he felt sure it was everywhere, seeping between the fibers until the seats were soaked in it. And it's not real, it can't be real, because this didn't happen. S didn't die, he knows that, he's sure of it, but he must have, because no one can bleed that much and live.
That's the part that cuts through the panic, slices so sharp he can feel his skin crawl, his breath stop in his throat. There's too much. Is this a dream or was it a dream to think he fixed things somehow? Was he too late? Did he go too far after all? He's faintly aware of the sounds he's making, sharp gasps as he struggles to catch his breath, high-pitched whimpers of protest. When he leans further into the backseat, he's afraid he'll find a body still there, though he should be able to see it from the driver's seat, but he can't stop himself pitching forward, clutching at the armrest. He never got used to this smell. It grew familiar, but he hates it — in the same faraway manner in which he feels everything but abject despair — and he can't get away from it. The knife shouldn't be here, he knows that, he's absolutely certain of it, but then he's not really sure of anything. He left it in his rooms, he knows he did, but maybe he didn't. There's too much that he's can't say with any real confidence, too many patches of time he can't account for, too many memories he might have made up.
It's dark still and he can't breathe, bent forward instead of back, leaning over the blanket and draped over the knees he's pulled up to his chest. Clutching at the sheet, the sounds he makes are incomprehensible even to himself, almost inhuman, harsh, panicked breaths punching out of him as he struggles to get air past how tight his throat has become, past the sobs that start to shake him as soon as his body is alert enough, well before his mind catches up. He tries to call S's name, terrified he isn't there to respond, but he can't make it come out, can't force his body to turn. If he's alone, if it was real, if it's true, then he'll die like this, struggling for air like some of them did. The thought of that is enough to make some part of him want just to give up and let darkness take him again. "Please," he mumbles, desperate, unable to manage anything else. It's hardly the first time he's woken up (he is awake, isn't he?) in a panic, but not like this, rarely so pronounced and all-encompassing.
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It's an uncomfortable thing, to be so unsure how much control he had or in what ways he allowed himself to be controlled. None of this had to happen. If he'd listened sooner, if he'd been stronger, if he'd seen through the professor's manipulations, he wouldn't have done the things he did. Maybe he would have been a terrible boyfriend even so, still falling apart without knowing why, but he wouldn't have killed anyone, and the former is much easier to fix than the latter.
That S understands why he never said anything leaves J feeling all the guiltier. He knows, he's sure, that S is thinking of the same thing he is. If he'd stabbed someone in a drunken stupor, it would have been awful, and yet he still thinks he might have confessed to S more readily, too panicked to hold it in. But driving drunk, hitting someone — he could never have told S. Even now, he's never really talked about it, only let his journal speak for him. It's too horrible to face. "I know you would have," he sniffles, just barely making himself let go of S's shirt so he can rub at his face with his forearm. It registers a moment later that he's thankful he wore something with long sleeves. They make for a more convenient handkerchief and he doesn't want to see or feel his scars right now. "I should have..."
He was, he's pretty sure, the worst boyfriend in history. Since coming here, he's done much, much better. It would be difficult to do as poorly or worse, but he's worked hard all the same, and found that focusing on doing his best to give S the kind of relationship he should have has helped him in turn. If nothing else, it gives him something to do with his days when S isn't home and it means he's much better than he's ever been about communicating when something is wrong.
That's harder right now, when he's still crying, mostly quiet but for the occasional tiny hiccuping sob. "I don't know how I didn't see it," he says, utterly miserable. Or mostly, at least. There's a comfort in the way S strokes his back and holds him close, and an uncomfortable sense of relief that goes with all the things he's having to reevaluate in his memory. "I'm sorry you were alone too." He did that. That's on him, leaving S all by himself because J trusted the wrong person, because S just wanted to protect him. Because J is hard to protect, too stubborn and contrary, too determined and defiant, and if he'd known, he would have done something stupid and the professor would have ruined them both anyway.
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"I know you are," he murmurs, something twisting guiltily in his chest even as he does, as if he shouldn't even be acknowledging how alone he was, giving J one more burden to carry. Even if he tried, though, he doesn't think he could convincingly deny it. J knows him too well for that. Besides, if there's anything to take away from tonight — and there's a lot, really, but if there's one thing that's most prominent — it's how important it is to him to be honest with J. He should have said all of this sooner, though he knows why he didn't. He should have told J everything from the start, to hell with the consequences. There was no way, of course, for him to have that perspective back then, to guess at how much worse things could be than the pair of them being outed, but all the same, he wishes he'd been straightforward from the jump, told J how he got his scholarship before the professor could really sink his hooks into him. "But you're here now. We're together. And he can't touch us here."
That's been a comfort since he first found J on the sidewalk that day, really, but never so much so as it is right now, when he can reassure J with it, too, the truth, or at least most of it, out at last. Sniffling again, his arms still around J as if in a belated attempt to protect him, S kisses his hair, about all he can do right now. "No more secrets, alright?" he says, just a bit more of a question in his voice than he intends for there to be, though he pushes past it. "I mean that for me, too. Not... It doesn't have to mean saying everything, but the big things. Whatever it is, we face it together." They're so much better together than apart. He's always known that, or at least believed it, even when they were children and allying himself with J made an outcast of him in turn and defending his best friend landed him in trouble at school on more than one occasion, but he's never felt as sure of it as he does now. Anything they could be up against, they stand far more of a chance together. At least, no matter how bad things might be, they'll be able to weather it with each other.
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He nods, tiny and quick, into S's shirt, shifting slightly in his arms so he can move his head to S's shoulder. "Together," he echoes. The thought of being safe here leaves him a little sick, mostly because it makes him think of the alternative. Had they been at home still, had he somehow survived, he would still have thought all of that was entirely on him. He would have trusted the professor in the aftermath and done as he was told he should, and it's unnerving to realize now how malleable he was. He has the uneasy sense he hasn't yet fully grasped all that this means, but it's hard enough to know that a lot of what he believed was a lie. Maybe there's a bit of relief in it, too — one thing that's worried him again and again is the thought that this was always in him, that he was always a killer deep down, and now he can, at least, tentatively prod at the likelihood that isn't the case. Even so, it's going to be a while before he knows what to make of all of it beyond the immediate sense of hurt and betrayal and foolishness.
"No more secrets," he adds with another nod. "I know better now." The truth of that is probably evident in how he's behaved these last few months. Even when it's hard, even if it takes him a little while to say something or to know how to put things when he tries to, he's made an effort to do it anyway. But there are times, he knows, when he brushes things off for too long or he worries about saying them. And yet, even if S is bothered by any of it, he's always so patient. He doesn't judge the way J so often does — other people, maybe, but not J.
"It helps." His hand traces down to S's chest again, curling in his shirt. J has a brief flicker of desire to place his hand against S's heart again, to feel it steady and sure, but the fabric is damp at best, and it isn't worth it. Sniffling again, he draws in a deeper breath, trying to get his lungs to cooperate more thoroughly. "When I tell you things... just knowing I can," he continues. "Ah, I've felt better, I really have. I should have said before about that night, but I really didn't think it was that important." He leans his head to the side so he can look up at S again. It's dark and he's tired and his eyes hurt, but even his boyfriend's silhouette is comforting. "You help me see things differently. Or at least feel less alone. You should have that too."
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"It's important to me," he says softly, as if he hasn't already made that obvious, studying J's face as best he can in the dark. "Knowing that you did that for me..." He shrugs, nose wrinkling, self-conscious. It isn't as if it makes any kind of difference where his feelings are concerned, or his sense of safety. For months, he's been here, sharing his life and his bed with J, without any qualms about doing so. Never once has he felt uneasy about doing so or like J might try to hurt him again. Even so, it means the world to know the lengths that J tried to go to for him — that he wasn't subconsciously spared, that J wasn't just unable to follow through on what he started, but that J actively tried, and succeeded, to save his life before it was too late. Although there were times when surviving felt like a punishment, it's different on this side of things, and deeply moving to consider.
Given his own words and how utterly he means them, he knows that there's more he should probably say here, details he hasn't yet given voice to. Better, maybe, to get it all out in the open like ripping off a band-aid than to have to go through all of this multiple times. Still, he doesn't want to put too much on J all at once when it's all so upsetting. J deserves the truth — S should have told him sooner, he knows he should have, but it was hard to risk venturing into territory that would leave J in a state like this and harder still to shake the residual fear of what was held over his head for so long, even knowing logically that they would be safe here — but now that they're here, S can give it to him a little at a time. He wants this moment, anyway, for the two of them just to be together. "And you do give me that too," he adds, quiet, fond. "Being with you... It helps so much."
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What he also knows is that this is one particular way in which he differs greatly from S — from most people, he thinks. People can be tough on themselves, he knows, and often tend to be more so than their friends and family. But somehow he can't turn it off. He has to struggle to find the good in himself, sees only the flaws, and he knows he's doing it, because S looks at the same things in such a different light, and he knows that he takes it to extremes. Like most things, really.
He lifts his head a little, pressing a soft kiss to S's cheek. "I wish I saw myself more like you do," he murmurs. "I don't know how to be so nice to me. I only saw how it wasn't enough or it didn't count. It's still hard sometimes to see how I can help any. But I'm glad I do. I love you so much, darling." It's been a hard night, condensed into a very brief period, and he's too tired to process it fully. This, though, he knows with absolute clarity. He's lucky to have S in his corner, lucky that he can give S anything in return, lucky in so many ways. They wouldn't be in such a mess if he'd understood that a long time ago, or if he'd never forgotten, but at least they're here now.
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"I love you, too," he replies, the words easy and heartfelt. "I'll just have to be nice to you for the both of us." He almost leaves it at that, the faintest flicker of a smile crossing his face. Despite how wrecked they are, there's a sweetness to J's demeanor now, too, that leaves S ridiculously fond. Maybe it's the awareness that there's more still he hasn't told J yet, or maybe it's the fact that he's just agreed to have no more secrets, but he finds himself wanting to continue. These past few months, he's barely alluded to the time after J left, after J died, saying little more than that it was difficult. For that matter, he's still wary of talking about just how fucked up he was in J's absence, too tired and frayed to give more than a passing thought to the notion that he might have already made that too clear tonight. If there's any time to make reference to it, though, he thinks it might be now, knowing no other way to make clear just how much being with J helps.
His hand smooths over J's hair again, his touch light, instinctive. "I don't know how to tell you," he continues, voice quieting a little, "how much it helps just to have you here. How bad it was before we found each other again." He had no one and nothing left, only determination to make the professor pay, and that could only ever have sustained him for so long. "That's why... I wanted... At least that was one thing I could do. Getting him to admit what he did. It wouldn't make things right, but... as close to it as they could be." He shrugs, helpless, without pulling away. "Other than that, it was all just... empty. It's not, now."
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Until tonight, though, he didn't know what S had done or what the professor was guilty of. That's why he nearly starts crying again, the sudden pang of realization at S's words. Nudging into S's touch, he closes his eyes. He'd thought, for a moment, of saying that S is already nice for both of them, but this new perspective is a bit overwhelming. "For me," he murmurs. "You did that for me."
Even when he was already dead, even when he'd tried to kill S, not even knowing J had tried to help him in the end, S did what he could to set things right. Some of that, J is sure, was because S needs to be able to do things. But he could have found something else, surely, to focus his energy on. He chose the path that would bring some measure of justice for J's victims. For J.
"You're incredible," he adds, soft. "Even with me gone, after all I did, you protected me."
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This, too, is almost funny, in a sad sort of way. Both of them protected each other, both of them did what they felt like they had to, belated damage control for the other's sake. Just like J's getting him to the hospital on time didn't change the fact that his life needed saving at all, his confronting the professor couldn't undo what J went through or bring back the dead. To him, knowing what J did for him means the world, but he wouldn't even have given that much thought to what he did if not for what J says now.
"Of course I did," he replies, soft and a little bewildered, hand cradling the back of J's head. "I love you. And knowing what I knew... I couldn't just let him get away with that." That it gave him a purpose when he badly needed one helped, but he's sure he would have done the same anyway, to get some justice for J and the dead, and to prevent the professor from using anyone like he used the two of them again. If he had to put himself at risk to do so, it would be worth whatever came of it. Nothing without a cost. "Not what he did, and not what he took."
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That, too, has been taken from him. He'd rather know the truth than take on one more delusion, but it's difficult all the same, realizing that what he perceived as someone seeing his potential was just his being assessed as useful and malleable.
"It would have been safer," J points out gently. "But, no, I know you. Of course you couldn't." He wishes so much that it wasn't an undertaking S needed to assume, but he's thankful for it all the same — a reminder both of how loved he is and how well he's chosen. He doesn't know what their future would have looked like had he steered clear of the professor. He knows he was already having trouble, but it would have turned out differently, he's sure of that. But they have this, and maybe that's better. He smiles, small though it is. "You're too stubborn for that. I love that about you."
He's too kind for that, for that matter, and he loves J too much, but the way J sees it, both of those require a certain degree of stubbornness anyway.
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"I know it would have," he murmurs, gaze dropping, though his hand doesn't. "But it was worth it. Whatever he could have done to me..." S shrugs again, letting out a slow exhale. "It didn't matter. I didn't care." When he glances up again, it's hesitant, almost apologetic. He doesn't want to say this. But he's the one who just said they should have no more secrets, and J has told him multiple times since he got here that he wants to hear these things, for S to be able to talk to him. If he doesn't say it now, S isn't sure he ever will. "I had nothing. No one. My parents were gone. You. I might've lost my scholarship for it, but I'd all but dropped out anyway." He pauses for half a beat. This, too, he's resisted saying outright. "I don't write anymore. I haven't in a long time. I barely play. So..."
He doesn't have it in him just to leave it at that, wanting even now not to upset J too much. "And you said it yourself, I'm stubborn. I couldn't just walk away. At least I got the truth out. No matter what it took."
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This, instead, is awful: S alone, entirely so, no music, no longer caring. J isn't sure how he feels now, struck both by the bravery and the desperation of that, and by how utterly awful it is that music has been taken from both of them. It's frightening, really, to think of his beautiful, passionate boyfriend, so alone he no longer cared what risks he ran. J wants to scold him for it, but his heart aches too much. It was, now, a long time ago, another world, another life, but it's still sad.
"It took too much," he murmurs, lifting a hand to S's cheek, voice steeped in sorrow. There's so much he wishes he'd done differently, so much he wants to change, but it's too late by far. "I —" His voice wobbles again, surprising himself. It's so stupid, to be emotional about saying something they both already know, but it's not like he's let himself talk about it. And like this, knowing that he was coaxed and prodded into the position he found himself in — it'll take some time for him to grasp it entirely, but already it hurts terribly, a gnawing ache in his chest, a feeling of falling. "I haven't either. Since I finished writing it. I can't." It's a different sort of can't than before. He's not sure if he'd have anything now if he tried, but he doesn't dare.
"I haven't played at all — not even when you're at work, if I go out, I — there's nowhere I'd go anyway," he says, and he feels incredibly foolish, certain he's making this about himself when they were talking about how lost S felt. "I haven't gone this long since before I could play. We learned together, and now..." He shakes his head, small and quick, as if he might shake himself clear of the threat of getting overwhelmed again. "You have me again, though. You always will. We're here, we don't have to hide." He sniffles and lets out a small, watery laugh. "Or go to school."
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It's different now, in ways that are both wonderful and terrible. Being back together, on the same page again at last, newly devoted to each other, is so much better than anything S expected he would get. However obvious it may have been, though, when they haven't talked about this at all, it hurts to hear J say it outright, that he doesn't write anymore, that he doesn't play. S understands it, he thinks, at least as much as anyone would be able to without having been in J's position, but knowing how much J has always loved it, it's still painful to consider, maybe even more so because he gets it.
"Fuck school," he mumbles, because it's the easiest place to start, and he thinks they need a moment of levity, leaning in to press a soft, brief kiss to the corner of J's mouth. "And fuck hiding." He knows why they did, of course. Futile as it may ultimately have been, he doesn't regret doing so, either. Now that they don't have to, though, he has no intention of ever going back to that. Maybe it will take them a while still to work up to doing things openly that other couples do, but he's not going to pretend anymore that he doesn't feel about J the way he very much does. For now, though, his expression softens to a sadder one, the tip of his nose brushing against J's before he draws back a little. "You have me again, too. No matter what. Whether... you ever decide you want to try writing again or not."
There's more he wants to say on that subject, too — the simple fact that's rattled around his head for months now, that he'll give up playing entirely if it keeps J from being so jealous of him again, that he should have done so years ago. With J having alluded to the sonata, though, S knows that he should say this now, while he can, rather than circling back to a subject that's already painful later. "Jae-eun-ah... that last piece you wrote, your sonata..." He winces, closing his eyes again for a moment. "That was what I meant, before. The professor... he took it. Said it was his." When he looks at J again, it's with sadness and worry and regret, but something a touch bittersweet, too. "It won."
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Before he can, though, he can feel it, the slight shift that tells him S has something else to say, even before he says his name.
He's not expecting that, though. He didn't think that far ahead or back, whichever it might be. It isn't as if he had any other music to steal, by the end, but he's been so swept up in these changes that he didn't consider that. Everything goes a little bit fuzzy, then, even the distant ringing in his ears and the warmth of tears spilling down his cheeks again.
So maybe it wasn't that the professor chose him solely for his weakness. His potential played a part after all — a big one, in fact. There's too much churning inside J's chest, a sharp surge of fury chased by dawning horror. He should be proud, probably. There was a time when he would have been, grateful and relieved to have done well. Given the circumstances under which he wrote the sonata, he would have been so thankful to have it well-received, to be able to tell himself that he'd made art of his victims, that it wasn't in vain. How stupid he was, how naïve. All the despair and the bloodshed, for what? To fuel the ego of a thief?
"I thought," he says, slow, and his words feel too thick in his mouth, "that I was disappointing him. That I wasn't good enough. Never enough. And it won?" He'd wanted that, once upon a time, desperately, and now it infuriates him. Another accolade in the professor's storied career — how many of those were lies? "All those months — all those people —" His voice breaks, and when he swallows hard, his throat feels too sharp, but it's not enough to stop him. "How can he be satisfied like that? With something that isn't even his? With all I did? All the times I thought he was pushing me to do better, that I just needed to work a little harder —" He presses his lips into a line, shaking his head. A moment later, he lowers it, leaning back into S's chest. It's so painfully unfair, J doesn't know what to do. He knows that, for all the crimes he committed, he deserves some form of punishment, but this must be too far. Some quintessential part of what made him him, he can't have for himself anymore, and the professor gets a fucking award.
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"Shh, shh," he murmurs, as soothing as he can sound under the circumstances, drawing J close to him as if in another belated bid to keep him protected. "I'm sorry. I'm so sorry." Hearing J cry, it's hard not to feel like he could cry again himself, vision blurring a little with it, and maybe a little, too, with the relief and shock of having this all out in the open at last. Most of it, at least, he's known he would tell J eventually, or that he should, that it would just be a matter of finding the right time. Actually saying it, though, is very different, somehow both heavy and a weight lifted off his shoulders at once.
Taking a shaky breath, he brushes another kiss against J's hair. "You were never not good enough," he says, just as quiet as a moment before. "He just wanted it for himself. Didn't care what it took to get it." That is, he decides, the most he should say about it for now. If J wants to hear more, or if it comes up, then he can get further into it, but right now, comforting his boyfriend is his top priority, no matter how furious he might still be. "He won't get away with it. I made sure of that before I wound up here. Everyone will know that he stole it. That his career was a lie. He didn't... It wasn't a confession, he didn't care, but he acknowledged all of it while I had a mic on."
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"I can't believe I never saw it," he murmurs, eyes firmly shut. "I — good. I'm glad everyone will know. But —" He shivers a little, breath catching. "What do I do now?" These last months, he's been able to console himself that, if nothing else, in avoiding music, he was doing the right thing, and that it was better not just for the safety of others but because he had no skill anyway. He'd simply flail around and fail and get desperate again. And maybe that's true. He has trouble imagining having such confidence in his work again. But he doesn't even dare try, and now it turns out he never lacked as much as he believed.
"I miss it," he whispers, a pained confession, though S knows him so well, he must have known this long before J even allowed himself to think it. "Sometimes it's okay and sometimes everything feels wrong. And I don't think — that wouldn't fix it, not everything, I know that. It's not just that, it's me. I just... it's been so long."
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Now, at least, it might be the least upsetting aspect of this. To him, anyway, what J says is far worse, the quiet anguish in his voice more devastating than giving up the piano has ever been for S. He plays a little at work sometimes, anyway, when there are no customers in the store, and that's enough for him, far more comfortable than playing here would be even if he could afford a piano for them. He misses it, too, or at least the way it once made him feel. Everything was so beautiful back then, even when it was terrible. He'd always liked playing, but he fell for it in earnest as he fell for J, and he lost one when he lost the other. Having J back, though, hasn't restored the passion he once had for music, how he used to feel like he'd found what he was meant to be doing, as natural as becoming more than friends with J was. Maybe that's for the best, even if it's also, at least in part, because of what he decided months ago. J should be able to play again if he wants to, and S doesn't want to stand in his way, to let it erode their relationship like it did the first time.
"Do you want to try it?" he asks, soft, a little hopeful, if uncertain. "If you do..." He trails off for a moment, lifting one shoulder without pulling away at all. "I'm calling out for the next few days, but you could come to the store next time I close. Play a little before I lock up. And if you don't feel good about it, it's not like we can afford a piano anyway. There wouldn't be one here for you to have to look at."
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The rest makes him more hesitant. He knows, of course, what he wants. Everything else is more complicated. S knows him so well, even without their having discussed this, and he's grateful for that, too, but it still hurts to think about, hurts to have the possibility in front of him. "I don't know," he says, almost breathless with uncertainty, with despair.
In all the months he's been here, he's never felt like he might hurt someone, except, occasionally, himself. He's never acted even on that, beyond losing track of himself and scratching his arm too hard or digging his nails in too deep, and he's sure he used to do that before, too, didn't he? But back in Seoul, it isn't like he wanted to hurt people, let alone kill them. He has a temper, but not like that. He didn't actively desire to do any of that, but he still did it, and he doesn't know if that makes him more or less of a threat now. The professor urged him on, he can see that, even if the pieces are still a bit hazy, and he's not here to do that, but is that a big enough difference for it to be safe?
"I do," he admits, quick, though he's shaking his head. "But I — I'm scared." That hurts as much as anything else he's learned or done, knowing that the thing which once gave him more joy than almost anything else in the world has been so utterly corrupted that he's afraid of it. Of himself, really, but it amounts to the same thing. For a while, it didn't matter. He was so tired, so burnt out, he couldn't imagine ever writing again, or even wanting to play. "Even if I just play... what if I want to write then? I can't do that."
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There's so much in what J says, though, just I'm scared telling enough on its own, suggesting that he's walked away from it because he feels like he has to. It makes S's heart ache, frowning as he looks down at his boyfriend, though he doesn't have much of a view with J curled so close. He hardly minds, more than willing to do whatever it takes to try to comfort him even just a little.
"You won't know until you try," he points out gently. "If you do, we can figure out what to do then." The rest of what he wants to say, he bites back. Once again, there's only so much he can or should say at one time, and he doesn't want to overwhelm J too much. Pointing out that J wanting to write would be very different from the way things were back in Seoul seems like it would probably be crossing that line, however true it might be. That, too, he can ease into. For the same reason, in a way, it feels important to add on to his statement. "You don't have to, though, if you don't feel ready. There will always be some piano somewhere."
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"I thought it would be okay," he says, quiet, plucking at S's shirt for a way to keep his hand busy. "I finished it, I was done. It was weird not to play, but I didn't... it was better. I thought it would stay like that, but it didn't. I just don't know if I should." He might have left it like that, at least for a while longer, keeping those thoughts pushed down, something to be dealt with when and if he ever felt more equipped to handle them. Right now, though, in the wake of what he's learned, he's both bitterly sad and deeply angry, though the latter feels more like sorrow, too, than it usually does. It feels wrong. He keeps wanting to say this was taken from him, too, but he's not sure that's fair. Even if he was manipulated, he still did the things he did. He was still capable of that. If anyone took this from him, it was himself.
He draws in a deep breath and lets it out slowly. It's hard to talk. He's not tired in the way he was earlier, but he's fatigued, his head running along too many tracks too quickly too soon after waking. And because the thoughts are whirring so quickly, it's hard to process or share them, but he's also somewhat aware that he's thinking — or trying to think — through a lot of things without saying them. Some of it is hard to put into words or to say directly, but he should, perhaps, at least try. If nothing else, it might force his mind to slow down.
"I know," he says, feeling it out as he goes, "that – what you said. He — I wouldn't have done those things if I hadn't been... encouraged. But I did them." He shakes his head, helpless, and leans it against S's shoulder, his head tipping up though his eyes don't lift. "I don't want to hurt anyone. But I keep worrying I might." What he wants is to be able to say it isn't worth the risk. What troubles him is that part of him thinks it very much is.
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"You've been here months," he says, his hand slipping up to cradle J's head again, "and you haven't hurt anyone." Even now, S finds himself tempted to make a joke, to try to ease some of this tension — unless there's something you haven't been telling me on the tip of his tongue — but he can tell that now isn't the time, if there ever would be one at all. Instead, he offers another quiet truth, one thing he can say with utter certainty. "I've never felt worried, or like you might. And... yes, you did those things, but you also had no one with you but the person who was telling you to do them." Of course his sense of reason got all skewed. It doesn't remove the responsibility of it from J entirely, but it does, he thinks, alleviate it somewhat.
His other arm still wrapped around J's waist, he curls his fingers absently in J's shirt. With as focused as he's been on J, it's been easy to lose sight of how shaken he's been tonight, too, but the proximity of J is comforting, as is the fact that they're facing this together. They should have been from the start, but at least they can try to make up for it a little now. There's more, too, that he should probably say, but all of it matters less than this. "Whatever you decide, I'm with you."
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He never really felt like it was a problem, not knowing many people. Hardly anyone seemed interested in knowing him and he's always been something of an introvert anyway, and so as the circle of people he could go to diminished and faded just to one, he explained it all away so neatly, he didn't think about how much it affected his thinking, to be trapped so much in his own head. He's told himself again and again that he knew what he'd done was wrong, and he did, until he found ways to smooth that over — until the professor gave him reason to see it otherwise. But he was desperate, and that isn't the case anymore. He was alone, and he isn't now. S feels safe with him and no one, no one else ever has to know.
Licking his lips, he sighs quietly, settling into S's embrace, thankful for the stability he provides, both physically and emotionally. "I know," he says softly, a bit delayed, but earnest all the same. "I know you are. I'm so glad that you are, darling." He wouldn't be here otherwise, he's almost certain of that. It's just hard to imagine carrying all this alone anymore, the paranoia he would feel if absolutely no one knew what he'd done. He'd never stop thinking about it. With S at his side, there are long stretches of time where life feels more or less normal. Wonderful, actually. "I want to." It comes out more of a question than he means it to be. "I — no one else would be there?"
If he starts to feel poorly, whether from panic or hurt or even passing thoughts of causing harm to anyone at all, himself included, then he doesn't want anyone else around to see it. But he hates so much that even the idea of playing unnerves him this badly. For so long, he's placed the blame for that entirely on himself. Now that it turns out to be at least a little bit shared, he's determined at least to try, not to let one more thing be taken from him.
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He just likes this best, the steady warmth of J in his arms, the lilt of the familiar endearment when J calls him darling. It's soothing in a way he keeps forgetting and then remembering again that he needs, too, his focus having shifted so fully to J that it catches him off-guard every time he realizes how worried he still is, how rattled, how moved. Really, it's probably going to take a while for all of this to sink in, both the fact that J saved his life, whether or not J would see it that way, and the fact that he has said all of these things now. He's meant to for ages, told himself that he would eventually, but actually doing so is one hell of a change. It has to be for the best, though. Just this conversation has gone better than he would have expected it to, despite all the crying. He snapped and scared himself in the process, blurting out something he'd kept secret for so long, but they've talked through everything instead of fighting. J was right, he thinks, months ago. Stubborn as they both are, when they face something together rather than at odds, no one else could stand a chance.
"No one but me," he confirms, voice still soft. "It would be after hours, no one could get in. And I'd be right there with you the whole time." As soon as he says it, he wonders if that might make it worse instead of better, but S pushes that thought down, trying to tell himself it's irrational. He can't take the words back now anyway. "If you got uncomfortable, you wouldn't have to play for a second longer than you wanted to."
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It's going to take a long time to get past that particular hurt. He's not sure how he ever will, for that matter, how it could be possible. The betrayal is too great to comprehend yet.
Still, the way S holds him, the gentleness with which he speaks, softens it some, at least for now. He remembers with painful clarity how it felt to be utterly alone; this is staggeringly different. If something goes wrong in any direction, S will be beside him, and he trusts S far more than he trusts himself. Besides, alongside the hurt and the fear and the faint prickle of panic, J feels a longing stir, a bit of wanting he's tried hard to push aside. That hurts, too, but not enough to hold him back entirely. If anything, it makes him feel all the more defiant, further inclined to try, however scared he might be.
"Okay," he says, firm, nodding once. He can change his mind if he needs to, if the time approaches and he doesn't feel right. This doesn't have to be absolute. But he wants it to be. "Yes." He wants to hold S's hand, but he can feel both of them in awkward to reach places, so he settles for resting a hand at S's arm instead, squeezing gently. Already he's a little unnerved by the prospect, but he won't back down unless he has to. "And I'll tell you if — I don't know, if anything feels wrong." He draws in a sharp, quiet breath between his teeth, huffs it out in a sigh, a commitment made. "As long as you stay with me, it'll be okay."
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"Of course," he says without hesitation, still gentle. "I wouldn't want to be anywhere else. It's you and me, right?" It won't matter if he isn't writing or is barely playing. They can still face this together; it will just take a different form than it did before. "If it doesn't work, if you don't want to, then we'll leave, and if it does and you do... then you'll know. And it isn't like it has to be now or never."
There's more that he wants to say, to ask, but he can't bring himself to quite yet. It isn't as important as the rest of what they've discussed tonight, and he doesn't want to ruin this moment and the quiet sense of hope in it. Whether he says it now or later, it will be true all the same. He just wants J to be able to enjoy the piano again, if he can, fairly certain, based on his writing, that he hasn't in a long time.
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He softens again, shifting in S's grasp, leaning his head against S's shoulder again and gazing up at him. Even mostly in shadow, he knows that face so well, the particular lines and curves of his silhouette, the gleam of his eyes in the dim light. It's one thing to coax himself into boldness, another entirely to believe it. When he's lucky, both are possible. He's very rarely been so lucky in a long time, though. "It feels strange," he admits quietly. Better out than in, better shared than drifting through his head only half-formed in perpetuity. "All of it. Missing it. Not having played in so long. And that was okay for a while, like I said, and that was weird too. And being scared... It's all a mess."
For a while, he just didn't have the space for that. He was far too busy, even when he was doing nothing, adjusting to everything — to life in another time and place, life after killing himself, finding some way to live with the things he's felt for a long time and the new feelings the last months of his life brought, making himself accept S's forgiveness, dealing with the fact he doesn't have to worry about being out anymore. Quiet though his days have mostly been, a lot has been going on under the surface, and it's taken time, he supposes, for all of it to settle. Not entirely, of course, and he's not sure it ever will, but enough for him to face this, too. It's been there for a few weeks now, maybe longer, continuously tucked out of sight, but this conversation means he can't hide from it anymore.
And maybe that's for the best. He spent a long time alone and in darkness. It's helped, bringing things out into the light.
"It's like I've spent this whole time trying to figure out who I am now," he says, "and I'm still not completely sure."
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