"Then if you ask me, you still come first. You, outta millions - might just be random. And if it is, you don't owe anyone shit. And anyway," he says, shifting, putting a finger on the table for emphasis,
"If I can go home and live my life, why can't you? 'Cause your planet's fucked up?"
He's right –– what does she owe anyone, anyway? She could stay on for something ungodly selfish, or take off the moment she graduates, and no one at home would ever know it was ever a possibility.
The urge to cave feels overwhelming, but he's not shutting her down like Joel did any time hope came up. Might as well tough it out.
"I'm just talking about taking a year or two to get a deal for them, not going back there."
"I know, Tess," he says, reaching out to her, and taking her hand.
He wants her looking at him, because he means this very seriously.
"But it is not your goddamn responsibility. If you graduate and want to,
then I'll be damn proud of you, and you'll have done a great thing. But it
can never be the reason to graduate. You gotta do that for you,
darlin', okay? It don't mean you're selfish. It just means you got your
priorities in order."
The Admiral doesn't make any fucking sense, she thinks. He could have made her a warden to begin with and put her to work on her own deal, motivated entirely by her fucking guilt complex, and that would have been worth more than just her getting her priorities in order. What are her priorities, anyway? Whatever works best for her at the time?
She feels like she's tripping up on something invisible, and she gives Arthur a terse look, but she doesn't pull her hand away.
"I have no idea what having my priorities in order is supposed to look like if it's not making up for this shit, Arthur. None."
What's to say she wouldn't freak out and do something stupid if she graduated tomorrow?
"Why d'you wanna do it, huh? You wanna do it 'cause you feel you gotta? Or because you wanna help people?"
He's keeping a hold of her hand, feeling like she'd walk out if he gave her a chance at it. His calloused thumb is rough on her skin when he strokes it, just a few times, absently.
“Because it’s the right thing to do, and it’s something I can do in a situation like this.”
Being right has felt situational for a long time. If it’s all you can do in the moment, then you don’t have to fuck with miserable little feelings like guilt. You do what you can.
“I think I need to do something like that just to prove I can do something good without needing to be paid, or a gun to my head, or because I’m dead anyway. Otherwise I haven’t changed at all. I’m just me in a better situation.”
He lets his hand go slack around hers, so she can pull away if she wants - but he's happy to keep a hold of her. He doesn't think she realizes how big that is - and he hadn't known that's why she wanted to do it. Not out of guilt, or out of some sense of making up for all the misery she's caused. You can't make up for death by giving life.
But you can do good. He looks proud of her, and says: "You came to that realization all on your own, Tess. I'm sorry I thought it was - guilt, misplaced or not."
She doesn’t pull away. It doesn’t feel like a massive revelation either, but maybe that’s on how overwhelming it is to consider being anywhere in the universe, anywhere at all, and still treating life like it’s winner take all.
And apprehension, maybe, at abandoning something she’s good at when there’s little alternative lined up.
“It’s okay,” she replies. “It was just... shooting Edward, and I had a conversation with Ellie and realized how broken she is. And that stupid ranch, it was boring but it was a life where I was surviving on my own terms and not watching the world around me shrink...”
She shakes her head. She feels hideous somehow, the list of things happening to her mounting, the ability to do anything with it just out of reach.
“And you’ve been crazy patient through all this. I know I’m not exactly open.”
"That's the plan," she agrees. There's something unreal about that, trying to figure out what to do next... ideally for the rest of her life. "I can't remember the last time I planned for anything further than six months ahead of me, and even that was generous."
"What you end up doin' the first six months, or first couple years, don't have to be what you have to do the rest of your life. Just - thinkin' ahead a little more than usual might be wise."
Plans on top of plans. A year ago she might have been able to pluck together a plan on the fly, but this feels like too much. A call to plan when she has no idea where she'll be in weeks, let alone months or years.
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"Then if you ask me, you still come first. You, outta millions - might just be random. And if it is, you don't owe anyone shit. And anyway," he says, shifting, putting a finger on the table for emphasis,
"If I can go home and live my life, why can't you? 'Cause your planet's fucked up?"
no subject
The urge to cave feels overwhelming, but he's not shutting her down like Joel did any time hope came up. Might as well tough it out.
"I'm just talking about taking a year or two to get a deal for them, not going back there."
no subject
"I know, Tess," he says, reaching out to her, and taking her hand. He wants her looking at him, because he means this very seriously.
"But it is not your goddamn responsibility. If you graduate and want to, then I'll be damn proud of you, and you'll have done a great thing. But it can never be the reason to graduate. You gotta do that for you, darlin', okay? It don't mean you're selfish. It just means you got your priorities in order."
no subject
She feels like she's tripping up on something invisible, and she gives Arthur a terse look, but she doesn't pull her hand away.
"I have no idea what having my priorities in order is supposed to look like if it's not making up for this shit, Arthur. None."
What's to say she wouldn't freak out and do something stupid if she graduated tomorrow?
no subject
"Why d'you wanna do it, huh? You wanna do it 'cause you feel you gotta? Or because you wanna help people?"
He's keeping a hold of her hand, feeling like she'd walk out if he gave her a chance at it. His calloused thumb is rough on her skin when he strokes it, just a few times, absently.
no subject
Being right has felt situational for a long time. If it’s all you can do in the moment, then you don’t have to fuck with miserable little feelings like guilt. You do what you can.
“I think I need to do something like that just to prove I can do something good without needing to be paid, or a gun to my head, or because I’m dead anyway. Otherwise I haven’t changed at all. I’m just me in a better situation.”
no subject
He lets his hand go slack around hers, so she can pull away if she wants - but he's happy to keep a hold of her. He doesn't think she realizes how big that is - and he hadn't known that's why she wanted to do it. Not out of guilt, or out of some sense of making up for all the misery she's caused. You can't make up for death by giving life.
But you can do good. He looks proud of her, and says: "You came to that realization all on your own, Tess. I'm sorry I thought it was - guilt, misplaced or not."
no subject
And apprehension, maybe, at abandoning something she’s good at when there’s little alternative lined up.
“It’s okay,” she replies. “It was just... shooting Edward, and I had a conversation with Ellie and realized how broken she is. And that stupid ranch, it was boring but it was a life where I was surviving on my own terms and not watching the world around me shrink...”
She shakes her head. She feels hideous somehow, the list of things happening to her mounting, the ability to do anything with it just out of reach.
“And you’ve been crazy patient through all this. I know I’m not exactly open.”
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"That's got nothin' to do with anythin'. I'm honored to be able to help you at all, so it's - it's good, when you open up at all."
He means it. His thumb rubs small circles over her knuckles.
"Those things all came together for you, made you realize - you wanna do somethin'?"
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That touch feels nice. Soothing.
“I don’t want to live like that anymore.”
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"Without hope for something better?"
He understands that. Hope is indispensable.
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A pause.
"But I'm good at it. And I can't walk away from what I'm good at if I don't have something else lined up."
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"So that's the plan, then. You find something else you're good at, somethin' hopeful."
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"That's the plan," she agrees. There's something unreal about that, trying to figure out what to do next... ideally for the rest of her life. "I can't remember the last time I planned for anything further than six months ahead of me, and even that was generous."
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"What you end up doin' the first six months, or first couple years, don't have to be what you have to do the rest of your life. Just - thinkin' ahead a little more than usual might be wise."
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She breathes out, long and slow.
"Easier said than done, but I'll try."