"I do"
Setting: Perhaps two years after "Objects At
Rest".
Summary: A night-time conversation and reflections
later on.
Rating: Safe for all ages. But dark overtones,
so...
Pairing: Lise/Michael (I know, people hate it, but...) and
some
Michael/Bester, although not in any recognisable way...
you'll see what I
mean later.
Archiving: Let me know first,
please.
Disclaimer: I own nought. JMS is a rich man
indeed.
Feedback: Feeds my muse. Esp. since this isn't a pairing
covered by me
before...
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"Do you love me?"
It's a simple enough question, with a simple
enough answer. All he has to do
is nod, and I'll be content.
I hope.
I sigh, shifting restlessly in his arms. The night-light
is on, of course;
he won't sleep in darkness. He tries, but it
scares him, I can tell. So, I
make up childhood demons returned
since I saw him last, and leave the light
on to keep us both safe.
He smiles, and is thankful but silent. He won't
admit his fear,
you see.
He won't admit anything. It scares me sometimes, how
silent he is, how
unresponsive. How unimportant I must seem
compared to everything else in his
life. But then, it's everything
else that keeps the night-light on; and I am
the one he can
welcome darkness with. I'm not entirely sure whether this is
a
good thing. Can someone survive as just a security blanket?
Cruel,
yes, I know. But I'm sure that he thinks of me this way. See -
he
hesitates, and it's enough for me. I can see his face,
blanketed in
half-light and star-light and the almost-morning
light, frowning and tired.
And then the smile, never reaching his
eyes, as he nods, and drifts off. I
can see him, even though I
don't look up, because I have asked him this
question every night
for two years. Every night for two years I have had to
deal with
that hesitation.
I spoke to his friends about this. I was that
concerned... to breach his
former life. I didn't want to, of
course, because I was scared I might lose
him to them again. Lose
him, and wait another five years before he found me
and hugged me
close. Another five years before I could leave the night-light
on
and climb under the covers, clinging to him like a good security
blanket
should.
Do I love him? I don't think that matters
anymore. I leave the night-light
on, don't I? I think that's
answer enough. And still, he hesitates. He'll
never be free of the
past - he'll never embrace darkness. And it's not so
scary, you
know. It's rich and moist and clings to you like warm wet
silk,
draped over you in sleep. And whenever I ask, he changes the
subject. He
says my hair is beautiful - raven's wing, he says. I
know this means he
hates it. It's dark, almost black, and he sees
night-time in it.
Black is a forbidden colour in our house.
Even the front door is rich brown
instead.
I wish he wasn't
so afraid... No. It's a fool's wish, and I know it. I'm
selfish
enough to want him to stay afraid, because that's the only way I
can
keep him. I know that. He talks in his sleep, you see, and so
I know what he
dreams. He dreams of death. Every night.
I
think I love him. I think. Maybe he's my security blanket as well.
Maybe
I'm frightened too - perhaps just frightened of being alone.
Perhaps willing
to give up the night to leave the night-light on,
when I have no demons to
need protecting from. So, we are both
leeches - parasites, clinging to each
other to survive. It's not a
pretty picture, I grant you.
He wanted me to dye my hair.
Well, he didn't say it, specifically, but he
said I'd look nice
with dark blonde hair. I wonder if he ever loved anybody
with such
hair. It's dawn hair, you see - right about the time the sun
is
behind the clouds, and in another moment will burst through
them. After
that, we have golden hair, platinum hair... all the
bright colours of the
morning in our make-believe world with our
nice house and perfect jobs. No,
it's dawn hair that's the most
truthful, the most innocent.
I know he hates my hair. So why
does he kiss it when we climb into bed and
draw up the covers? Why
does he draw his hand through it, playing with it
until I wake up
in the morning, tangled and worn? That's what scares me
most. I'm
selfish enough to want him scared, because it keeps him here with
me.
Because if he wasn't scared, he'd run - he'd turn off the
night-light,
and embrace the darkness. Why else would he fondle
night-dark hair while in
sleep?
He has no light in his
life, and I am his anchor. I relish that thought,
despite it's
perversion. If I could tie him to me with bonds of love, I
would.
I think I do love him. I do. He buries himself in darkness, but
his
eyes still hold half-light and star-light and almost-morning
light. And that
is what hurts the most, when he hesitates
again.
"Do you love me?"
And still, that
hesitation. His hand is in my hair, and he inhales deeply.
Perhaps
he will comment on how it smells of evergreen, even thought
it
doesn't. I have accepted this. To him, dark hair smells of
evergreen, with
liquid chocolate eyes to harden cruelly under his
gaze. My eyes are hazel,
but he never seems to understand. Still,
I hope.
It's the only way I can keep him to me - to ask that
question each night,
and hope that one night there is no
hesitation. To hope that when he smiles
at me, his eyes don't
harden like glaciers of ice, until I freeze in them. I
am, after
all, only a security blanket. I have no warmth of my own. I can
only
hope to draw some out of him and keep myself warm.
And so, I
ask, a third time. "Do you love me Michael?" And I will him
to say
"Yes." And the answer will have no reservation,
no hesitation. He will not
touch my hair again, but kiss me
instead.
No, he does not say this. Once more, he hesitates,
fingers tangled against
my neck. And then, just before I give up
hope and turn off the night-light,
he sighs. "Yes," he
says, smiling against my cheek. He kisses my hair again
and is
silent.
And, up to a point, I believe him. But why would he
need to kiss darkness
again? So, no, once again we deceive
ourselves. We live our perfect lives,
and leave the night-light
on, and ask our questions each night.
It would be so easy to
believe him - to just close my eyes and drown... I
truly wish I
could turn off the night-light tonight. I do.
End "I do"
