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A cold drizzle of rainwater trickles against Five's scalp. He wanders under the stone gazebo.

Five never used to think much of it. Barely fit one person and over time would be overrun by weeds and poison ivy if the hired hands by Sir Reginald or Pogo didn't maintain the grassy landscape of the Academy's courtyard. To him, that seems to be more trouble than it's all worth.

(Besides, Five often took to his studies with mandatory education and theories of quantum physics indoors.)

The stone-layered gazebo had been the only thing left standing when Five ran back home. He remembers coughing and hacking, breathing in the soot. He whirled around, shouting again for Vanya, for Ben.

Hot pieces of ash clung to Five's damp, trembling lashes. His nail beds and to the tip of his tongue.

Eventually he discovered the corpses of his family, one-by-one. Most of their deaths could be amounted to hemorrhaging out or being crushed alive by the smoking, cinder-crusted debris. At the time, Five couldn't broaden his mind around the possibility. That he had somehow accidentally time-jumped into the future where he did not exist. Where humanity died so meaninglessly.

Remembers howling out in anguish and terror and rage, Five's thirteen-year-old back straining as he pulled and dragged Luther's body out, huffing. The pulsing, constant stabs of agony.

They all buried Ben in the courtyard, so Five buried them the same. Right in front of the gazebo.

Five opens his eyes, banishing the memories of emptiness surrounding him for miles and the roiling, uncontrollable flames. His dark hair flattening down with rain. He stares down vacantly at the ground, feeling the wet, fresh soil sinking under Five's weight. They lie here.

Or they will… if he can't stop the apocalypse from happening again.

(He never could find Vanya. Five searched for days, high and low, tearing and scratching and bleeding his palms open on the rubble. She would have been the one without their umbrella-tattoo. But, considering it, Vanya perhaps had been buried too deep for Five to reach her.)

Glancing up and sensing Allison behind him, Five takes in a quiet, steadying breath. Those old emotions welling up. He blinks his eyes rapidly and drags a sleeve under his nose.

"Five?" Allison joins him, lowering her umbrella. He doesn't understand why she still hunches in private. During her movie premieres and interviews, Allison gives off flawless posture, her chin lifted as she gives professional, handsome smiles. Confidence. Beauty. Superiority.

And even still, with no stagelights and reporters, she hunches in her fitted, grey-pinstriped pants and the miniature-sized sapphire camisole beneath a pleated, diamond-white coat.

"Five, are you crying—"

"Irrelevant," Five grumbles, stiffly walking around her.

Allison makes an irritated noise, grabbing onto his wrist — she's dead, DEAD, Five stumbles back, vomiting into the ruins until he's quivering and sweating, Allison's head and neck intact while the rest of her gleams a blood-saturated, gory mush of organs and bones and sinew in the peeks of sunlight — and Five jerks out of the traumatic flashback, and Allison's grip, yelling at the top of his lungs.

She puts up her hand that reached for him defensively, staring horrorstruck as Five mutters to himself, to calm down, rubbing his fingers over his nose and mouth.

"Hey, whoa. I'm sorry. I'm sorry, Five." Allison tells him, "I didn't… I haven't seen you this upset before. I…"

Klaus stumbles out of the parlor-entrance to the courtyard. It seems like he's thrown on a distressed, long black nightshirt fluttering against Klaus's hairy and knobby knees. It's printed on the front with a pale crescent moon. A black spaghetti tank-top beneath it. Black fishnets. Grudge boots with huge, black-leather buckles. "Guys, have you seen Diego? He was supposed to drive me out to—"

Allison sighs, watching him curtly. "I hope it's rehab."

He doesn't response, at first confused, trying to process the view of Five's scrunched features, his watery, red-rimmed eyes. Five purposely looks away from the other man, gritting his jaw.

"Oh, no way," Klaus murmurs. "Is he crying?"

"What is the matter with you both? Don't you have something BETTER to do?"

There's silence before Allison and Klaus meet gazes together, declaring, "yeah!" and then proceed to open their arms, hugging a thrashing and sneering Five between them. He doesn't fight them for long, panting, listening to Klaus hum out a comforting note, shushing Five, pushing his fingers messily through Five's dark, soaked hair as a frowning Allison smooths a hand up and over Five's back.

He doesn't want to bury them, Five tells himself, rainwater dripping down his cheeks.

Not again.

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TUA isn't mine. I just wanted some sad soft angst with Five and his family! Here we go! Crossing my fingers you guys like it! Any comments totally appreciated!