Um... Is there something else I'm supposed to say?
[SHOULD HE BE MORE SEXY SOMEHOW...? He's not sure he could manage sexier words but he could be more romantic. He pushes up on an elbow and looks down at Crow, earnestly.]
I really enjoy kissing you, and touching you. I don't really know what I'm doing, but you're being so patient, and I'm glad you don't seem to mind too much, letting me figure things out.
[He doesn't know how else to respond. The matter of fact "that was nice" was funny, but the sappy stuff is just embarrassing. It throws him off his "cool funny senpai" groove. The cherry-red flush is bright on his cheeks, and he gives up on being cool in favor of putting his hands over his face with a sigh.]
Hm... You've already done that though. Maybe for a change of pace try dying old next time. In your nineties at least. And because it'll be another new thing, do it after me, for a change.
[He's already taking about living to old age together. Casually.]
[If he keeps up the jokes he won't have to address all the actual scary feelings hearing that brought up. Aside from the warm butterflies thinking of a future together...
That's right. He already died. He can't be too sure of anything after that. And more, he can't imagine dying after Rean. Of course Rean doesn't deserve to watch Crow die again, and of course it's just a joke, but the very idea of Rean dying, even decades from now, makes him want to throw up.
[Crow doesn't mind Rean not seeing through him. In fact he prefers it that way. He doesn't want to talk about it -- his insecurities, his doubts, the constant background noise telling him it's all a lie.
It'll all come to a head someday, probably. But until that day, he has no intention of spoiling Rean's happiness with his own problems. He's too afraid the fantasy will go up in smoke.]
[He intends to nap right here, but ofc Rean is a reasonable person so they end up napping on the couch. There's not a lot of room but that just means they have to cuddle, which Crow is completely fine with (though he wouldn't call it cuddling because that's embarrassing).
Crow's had nightmares since they got back, but he's always slept alone, and he's not loud about it, so it wasn't obvious. With Rean warm next to him, his sleep is pleasantly featureless. When he wakes up, everything is comfortable, and nice, and idyllic, and as he looks at Rean's sleeping face he thinks he could stay like that forever.
...And then he panics. It's too perfect. After dedicating himself to a suicidal goal, he wasn't supposed to get to just go home and be happy. Even when Rean chased him all the way, he died before a happy ending could happen. And that's the problem. He died. He remembers it perfectly: the pain that faded as his life slipped away from him. The dulling of the senses, the agony of regret.
And yet he's here now. He's here, and he remembers the moment his memories came back with the same vividness, as though the first breath he took again as "Crow" was revival itself. What he doesn't remember is how. Oh, he knows, in theory, what happened. He remembers a period of time where he was someone else. But there's a gap between dying and "Siegfried", and inside that gap are all the things he's terrified to face.
Like the fact that it didn't just "happen". It wasn't a spontaneous event. It was a twisting of the world's rules, imposed on him by someone else. He likes being alive, so it feels counterproductive not to be grateful -- he is grateful, but at the same time the lack of agency in that decision, and in the life he led between that and becoming himself again, is something he doesn't know how to address. He doesn't know how to address the fear that he's missing something that makes him who he is.
He doesn't know how to address the constant creeping sensation that he doesn't belong here. This happiness, the weight of Rean in his arms, must belong to someone else. To a version of him that deserves it. To a version of him that didn't die. Is he still even Crow Armbrust, or just an approximation wearing his face?
He doesn't know. He feels like he lost all the certainty he had in his identity and his goals into that gap in his memory. He's not even sure this isn't a terrible dream -- and if it was, who's dream would it even be?
All those feelings rise up in his chest at once, threatening to choke him back into the oblivion he's afraid he belongs to. But the moment is sweet, and he buries the uncertainty, staring straight up at the ceiling until he can breathe.
After that, he goes on pretending everything is fine. He picks up the house and cooks, he heaps affection (and endless teasing) on Rean, he goes out and gambles and entertains children. He gives Rean's students a run for their money and makes them question Rean's sanity in living with him. Every day it's the same -- every day he's there when Rean comes home, smiling with open arms while the cracks in his heart spider out until he feels like a broken window pane.
Until one evening, he shatters. Nothing dramatic happens to trigger it. He doesn't, honestly, need a push. He was already walking the thinnest of wires, so all it takes is a cut on his thumb to make him slip. A quick stab of pain, a drop of blood smeared on the cutting board, and suddenly he feels like he's right back in the moment his body gave up on him -- the body he was born into, anyway.
His thoughts cut out, and the next thing he knows it's been twenty minutes and something is burning. He manages to cover for it, but when Rean gets home that night Crow is a little... off. He still smiles, and laughs, and makes fun of himself for "getting distracted listening to the radio" and ruining part of dinner. But whenever he's not actively talking to Rean, he spaces out, like he's staring off at something that only exists in his own head.
The next day, Crow packs his things. He scours the house, leaving it perfectly spotless and tidy and completely lacking in any sign that he ever existed. Anything that was his is gone -- he really didn't have anything he couldn't carry with him. And then he leaves his key neatly in the center of the dining room table and walks out.
He can't be here anymore. This happiness hurts too much. It can't be real. It doesn't belong to him. It doesn't suit him and he doesn't deserve it, and Rean doesn't deserve to deal with that. He's not thinking rationally enough to acknowledge that if they were too close for Rean to let him go before, they're hopelessly entangled now. He just can't imagine being the person Rean cares about that much. He feels like he's been lying, and if he just gets away from it the illusion will evaporate and he can go be no one at all.
When Rean gets home, the house is dark and silent and empty.]
[For Rean's part he's deliriously happy for the time he spends with Crow, for the normal, mundane life of teaching and coming home and having a boyfriend. Their relationship to him is important, it always has been, so he's been taking it slow and just enjoying the fact of being together with Crow every day.
He knows there's a lot Crow needs to work on, that Crow is never what he seems on the surface, but he figures they have time and Crow can come to terms with and talk about anything with Rean when he's ready. It's not like Rean's ever tried to be hard to talk to, he's pretty sure.
The night Crow seems kind of off he almost presses, almost asks, but decides that maybe Crow needs some time to figure out what to say, and leaves it for the next day.
Except the next day he comes home to an empty house. That in itself isn't entirely unheard of, the more Crow goes out with the locals the more days Rean sometimes comes home before Crow. But something feels different, and when he finds the key on the table, and walks through the house to find it not only spotless, but devoid of all traces of Crow, the dread builds to a certainty.
He's really going to kill Crow, when he finds him again. Kill him, and then shake him until answers fall out.
Focusing on how mad and determined he is is a good way to distract himself from the stab of heartbreak, but it doesn't really stop it from hurting, either. He's never had a significant other which means he's also never been dumped. It's not fun, it turns out. It hurts enough that he does stand in the living room for a while, gripping the key until it digs into his palm, teeth gritted and eyes squeezed shut but none of that is enough to keep the tears at bay entirely.
But he only lets himself cry for a few minutes before wiping his eyes and pulling his coat back on. He's got to go tell the principle that he'll be taking and abrupt leave of absence. He's got to call his friends and ask them to help look. Keep an eye out because he doesn't have any clue what direction Crow is headed, he'll inquire at the station but he doubts he'll be able to track Crow by train if he left a while ago.
There's a lot he has to do, and when he finds Crow he's going to make him explain. If he did something wrong he can fix it, or at least, drag Crow back. Whatever else they are, Crow is his friend and part of Class VII, and if Crow wants to break up then... fine, but this is a shitty way to do it. And he's not letting Crow vanish out of his life just to break up with him. And if for some reason something else is going on, then he'll get those answers too.
But he has to find Crow first.
Even if he has friends in high and low places in every corner of Erebonia it still takes a while to track Crow down. Not as long as it would if someone less well-connected than Rean were looking, but a week, maybe two until he's showing up at whatever inn Crow is staying at, looking determined and serious as he stands in Crow's doorway.]
[Crow spends that week focused on running. If he only thinks about what train to take and where to sleep, he doesn't have to think about feeling lost, or scared, or angry, or... guilty. He knows, in the rational part of his mind, that he shouldn't have just left. But he couldn't stand it anymore, and he was well aware Rean wouldn't let him go if he just told the truth. So he doesn't -- well, he doesn't regret the leaving in itself. He regrets the hurt he knows it must have caused Rean, but not enough to make him go back.
He wants to disappear. Not just from Rean's life, but from reality -- from his own name and all that's attached to it. He could just die, but he doesn't actually want to do that, not because he's opposed to being dead but because he's petrified of coming back to life. He doesn't want to have to remember death again.
And he doesn't want Rean to find him. That would mean explaining himself and/or returning to the life he's scared of and that Rean deserves better than. But he doesn't actually want to think about all of that either, so he spends as much time as possible either moving or sleeping.
There's only so much sleeping a guy can do though, so he's lying on the bed in his room when Rean shows up, listlessly counting the grains in the ceiling and willing his mind into a void. He groans at the knock on the door, slowly forcing himself to get up and open it. It's probably housekeeping, in which case he doesn't care, but there's always the chance he's found out, and that makes him hesitant to answer.
But he's trying not to stand out too much, so instead of being weird at the probably-maid, he opens the door and-- it's Rean. He freezes when he sees him, his hand slack on the doorknob and his face white like a sheet.
He can't even force a smile. His expression is just blank, like all those times in the past he didn't know how to react to Rean, only this time he's not staring at him but right through him.]
[Actually seeing Crow's face is a mess of emotions he doesn't even know how to begin processing. Heartbreak, relief, anger, worry. Crow looks like hell. And chasing him down this last weak has been hell in anxiety, for Rean. Turns out it's hard dealing with being broken up with while trying to stay reasonable and focused and still being incredibly worried about the person who ran out on you. Why is Crow like this?
He takes a breath to steady himself, and puts his hand on the doorframe so Crow would have to literally break all his fingers to shut him out. He's certain Crow won't do that.]
Hey. Come take a walk with me.
[He doesn't want to start anything violent in a hotel room, he's not uncivilized, but right now the only way he thinks he can calm down is to make Crow fight him. Maybe that will focus Crow a little too, he looks shellshocked.
[It's true he won't slam the door on Rean's fingers. But he isn't being cooperative, either. He's not gearing up for a fight, though. He just steps back from the door, all measured quiet and deep, blatant exhaustion.]
[If Crow won't come and fight it out with him he'll just come inside and make him talk. He doesn't ask if he can come in either, because he's not going away even if Crow says no so he's not going to try being polite. He steps in, instead, closing the door behind him.]
[He doesn't want to talk. He doesn't want to fight, either. He doesn't want to be here. There are too many feelings going on right now. He can't possibly get up the energy to deal with them when he's busy being flattened by them.
He remembers not that long ago, telling Rean he'd always be happy to be caught. The thing is, that's true. He's happy to see him. He's happy to know Rean cared enough to chase him and he's happy to think that maybe Rean will help. But he's so overwhelmed by everything else that that happiness is a knife in his heart. It makes everything worse, because he can't actually believe Rean can help. He can't believe that he should, when he can't even trust that he's the person Rean thinks he's chasing, or that this is even happening in a reality that exists to anyone but Crow.
He keeps a distance between himself and Rean, defensive but not entirely combative.]
[Rean echoes Crow's own word and steps forward, backs Crow into a wall if he has to but he's getting up in Crow's space.]
Not without you. And not until you tell me what's going on.
[He can tell Crow is freaking out, that something is really bad if Crow can't even try to pretend he's fine, that he's not having some kind of crisis. He wishes Crow would just tell him what so he can work on fixing it.]
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That was nice, though.
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[It's kind of funny and kind of sad. What a good honest boy Rean is. Crow loves him so much.]
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[SHOULD HE BE MORE SEXY SOMEHOW...? He's not sure he could manage sexier words but he could be more romantic. He pushes up on an elbow and looks down at Crow, earnestly.]
I really enjoy kissing you, and touching you. I don't really know what I'm doing, but you're being so patient, and I'm glad you don't seem to mind too much, letting me figure things out.
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[He doesn't know how else to respond. The matter of fact "that was nice" was funny, but the sappy stuff is just embarrassing. It throws him off his "cool funny senpai" groove. The cherry-red flush is bright on his cheeks, and he gives up on being cool in favor of putting his hands over his face with a sigh.]
I'm going to die young.
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[He's already taking about living to old age together. Casually.]
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[If he keeps up the jokes he won't have to address all the actual scary feelings hearing that brought up. Aside from the warm butterflies thinking of a future together...
That's right. He already died. He can't be too sure of anything after that. And more, he can't imagine dying after Rean. Of course Rean doesn't deserve to watch Crow die again, and of course it's just a joke, but the very idea of Rean dying, even decades from now, makes him want to throw up.
Not that he wants to tell Rean that.]
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[Gentle sarcasm and fondness. And Rean's typical slight obliviousness. Whether that's good for Crow or not, Rean isn't really emotionally all-seeing.]
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It'll all come to a head someday, probably. But until that day, he has no intention of spoiling Rean's happiness with his own problems. He's too afraid the fantasy will go up in smoke.]
You can revive me next free day.
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Sure, I'll put in a request with the student council.
[Make you a side quest Crow.]
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[You think being a sidequest would bother him? Nah. He'll just charm your students and maybe swindle them a bit for fun.]
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Don't say I didn't warn you.
[He's absolutely going to make dealing with Crow a quest for his students next free day. It'll be good for them to be thoroughly messed with a bit.]
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[This is a less embarrassing subject, so he removes his hands from his face and just sprawls. On the floor. It's perfectly comfortable.]
I'll make sure they learn something about awareness.
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[Said all fond and sincere. After all, he's learned a lot from Crow?]
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[He's not annoyed, really -- it's a joke, said with a dry, sleepy kind of humour.]
Like, say, to take a nap?
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[Look he can be a sassy teasing person when he wants, okay.]
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[He's not committing to anything! He won the race, after all.]
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[He intends to nap right here, but ofc Rean is a reasonable person so they end up napping on the couch. There's not a lot of room but that just means they have to cuddle, which Crow is completely fine with (though he wouldn't call it cuddling because that's embarrassing).
Crow's had nightmares since they got back, but he's always slept alone, and he's not loud about it, so it wasn't obvious. With Rean warm next to him, his sleep is pleasantly featureless. When he wakes up, everything is comfortable, and nice, and idyllic, and as he looks at Rean's sleeping face he thinks he could stay like that forever.
...And then he panics. It's too perfect. After dedicating himself to a suicidal goal, he wasn't supposed to get to just go home and be happy. Even when Rean chased him all the way, he died before a happy ending could happen. And that's the problem. He died. He remembers it perfectly: the pain that faded as his life slipped away from him. The dulling of the senses, the agony of regret.
And yet he's here now. He's here, and he remembers the moment his memories came back with the same vividness, as though the first breath he took again as "Crow" was revival itself. What he doesn't remember is how. Oh, he knows, in theory, what happened. He remembers a period of time where he was someone else. But there's a gap between dying and "Siegfried", and inside that gap are all the things he's terrified to face.
Like the fact that it didn't just "happen". It wasn't a spontaneous event. It was a twisting of the world's rules, imposed on him by someone else. He likes being alive, so it feels counterproductive not to be grateful -- he is grateful, but at the same time the lack of agency in that decision, and in the life he led between that and becoming himself again, is something he doesn't know how to address. He doesn't know how to address the fear that he's missing something that makes him who he is.
He doesn't know how to address the constant creeping sensation that he doesn't belong here. This happiness, the weight of Rean in his arms, must belong to someone else. To a version of him that deserves it. To a version of him that didn't die. Is he still even Crow Armbrust, or just an approximation wearing his face?
He doesn't know. He feels like he lost all the certainty he had in his identity and his goals into that gap in his memory. He's not even sure this isn't a terrible dream -- and if it was, who's dream would it even be?
All those feelings rise up in his chest at once, threatening to choke him back into the oblivion he's afraid he belongs to. But the moment is sweet, and he buries the uncertainty, staring straight up at the ceiling until he can breathe.
After that, he goes on pretending everything is fine. He picks up the house and cooks, he heaps affection (and endless teasing) on Rean, he goes out and gambles and entertains children. He gives Rean's students a run for their money and makes them question Rean's sanity in living with him. Every day it's the same -- every day he's there when Rean comes home, smiling with open arms while the cracks in his heart spider out until he feels like a broken window pane.
Until one evening, he shatters. Nothing dramatic happens to trigger it. He doesn't, honestly, need a push. He was already walking the thinnest of wires, so all it takes is a cut on his thumb to make him slip. A quick stab of pain, a drop of blood smeared on the cutting board, and suddenly he feels like he's right back in the moment his body gave up on him -- the body he was born into, anyway.
His thoughts cut out, and the next thing he knows it's been twenty minutes and something is burning. He manages to cover for it, but when Rean gets home that night Crow is a little... off. He still smiles, and laughs, and makes fun of himself for "getting distracted listening to the radio" and ruining part of dinner. But whenever he's not actively talking to Rean, he spaces out, like he's staring off at something that only exists in his own head.
The next day, Crow packs his things. He scours the house, leaving it perfectly spotless and tidy and completely lacking in any sign that he ever existed. Anything that was his is gone -- he really didn't have anything he couldn't carry with him. And then he leaves his key neatly in the center of the dining room table and walks out.
He can't be here anymore. This happiness hurts too much. It can't be real. It doesn't belong to him. It doesn't suit him and he doesn't deserve it, and Rean doesn't deserve to deal with that. He's not thinking rationally enough to acknowledge that if they were too close for Rean to let him go before, they're hopelessly entangled now. He just can't imagine being the person Rean cares about that much. He feels like he's been lying, and if he just gets away from it the illusion will evaporate and he can go be no one at all.
When Rean gets home, the house is dark and silent and empty.]
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He knows there's a lot Crow needs to work on, that Crow is never what he seems on the surface, but he figures they have time and Crow can come to terms with and talk about anything with Rean when he's ready. It's not like Rean's ever tried to be hard to talk to, he's pretty sure.
The night Crow seems kind of off he almost presses, almost asks, but decides that maybe Crow needs some time to figure out what to say, and leaves it for the next day.
Except the next day he comes home to an empty house. That in itself isn't entirely unheard of, the more Crow goes out with the locals the more days Rean sometimes comes home before Crow. But something feels different, and when he finds the key on the table, and walks through the house to find it not only spotless, but devoid of all traces of Crow, the dread builds to a certainty.
He's really going to kill Crow, when he finds him again. Kill him, and then shake him until answers fall out.
Focusing on how mad and determined he is is a good way to distract himself from the stab of heartbreak, but it doesn't really stop it from hurting, either. He's never had a significant other which means he's also never been dumped. It's not fun, it turns out. It hurts enough that he does stand in the living room for a while, gripping the key until it digs into his palm, teeth gritted and eyes squeezed shut but none of that is enough to keep the tears at bay entirely.
But he only lets himself cry for a few minutes before wiping his eyes and pulling his coat back on. He's got to go tell the principle that he'll be taking and abrupt leave of absence. He's got to call his friends and ask them to help look. Keep an eye out because he doesn't have any clue what direction Crow is headed, he'll inquire at the station but he doubts he'll be able to track Crow by train if he left a while ago.
There's a lot he has to do, and when he finds Crow he's going to make him explain. If he did something wrong he can fix it, or at least, drag Crow back. Whatever else they are, Crow is his friend and part of Class VII, and if Crow wants to break up then... fine, but this is a shitty way to do it. And he's not letting Crow vanish out of his life just to break up with him. And if for some reason something else is going on, then he'll get those answers too.
But he has to find Crow first.
Even if he has friends in high and low places in every corner of Erebonia it still takes a while to track Crow down. Not as long as it would if someone less well-connected than Rean were looking, but a week, maybe two until he's showing up at whatever inn Crow is staying at, looking determined and serious as he stands in Crow's doorway.]
Crow.
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He wants to disappear. Not just from Rean's life, but from reality -- from his own name and all that's attached to it. He could just die, but he doesn't actually want to do that, not because he's opposed to being dead but because he's petrified of coming back to life. He doesn't want to have to remember death again.
And he doesn't want Rean to find him. That would mean explaining himself and/or returning to the life he's scared of and that Rean deserves better than. But he doesn't actually want to think about all of that either, so he spends as much time as possible either moving or sleeping.
There's only so much sleeping a guy can do though, so he's lying on the bed in his room when Rean shows up, listlessly counting the grains in the ceiling and willing his mind into a void. He groans at the knock on the door, slowly forcing himself to get up and open it. It's probably housekeeping, in which case he doesn't care, but there's always the chance he's found out, and that makes him hesitant to answer.
But he's trying not to stand out too much, so instead of being weird at the probably-maid, he opens the door and-- it's Rean. He freezes when he sees him, his hand slack on the doorknob and his face white like a sheet.
He can't even force a smile. His expression is just blank, like all those times in the past he didn't know how to react to Rean, only this time he's not staring at him but right through him.]
...Hi.
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He takes a breath to steady himself, and puts his hand on the doorframe so Crow would have to literally break all his fingers to shut him out. He's certain Crow won't do that.]
Hey. Come take a walk with me.
[He doesn't want to start anything violent in a hotel room, he's not uncivilized, but right now the only way he thinks he can calm down is to make Crow fight him. Maybe that will focus Crow a little too, he looks shellshocked.
Afterwards they can talk.]
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I'd rather not.
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[If Crow won't come and fight it out with him he'll just come inside and make him talk. He doesn't ask if he can come in either, because he's not going away even if Crow says no so he's not going to try being polite. He steps in, instead, closing the door behind him.]
Let's talk.
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[He doesn't want to talk. He doesn't want to fight, either. He doesn't want to be here. There are too many feelings going on right now. He can't possibly get up the energy to deal with them when he's busy being flattened by them.
He remembers not that long ago, telling Rean he'd always be happy to be caught. The thing is, that's true. He's happy to see him. He's happy to know Rean cared enough to chase him and he's happy to think that maybe Rean will help. But he's so overwhelmed by everything else that that happiness is a knife in his heart. It makes everything worse, because he can't actually believe Rean can help. He can't believe that he should, when he can't even trust that he's the person Rean thinks he's chasing, or that this is even happening in a reality that exists to anyone but Crow.
He keeps a distance between himself and Rean, defensive but not entirely combative.]
Go home, Rean.
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[Rean echoes Crow's own word and steps forward, backs Crow into a wall if he has to but he's getting up in Crow's space.]
Not without you. And not until you tell me what's going on.
[He can tell Crow is freaking out, that something is really bad if Crow can't even try to pretend he's fine, that he's not having some kind of crisis. He wishes Crow would just tell him what so he can work on fixing it.]
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