Title: Give Love a Chance
Author: Erika
Summary: Their dream can become a reality. Mark/Roger slash. RR. T for non-graphic sex.
Rating: T for the man-schmex
Disclaimer: The late, great Jonathan Larson owns all the rights to RENT and all characters from RENT. I own nothing, not even the picture of perfection that is Anthony Rapp. The song "Under Pressure" is copyrighted to David Bowie and Queen.
Author's Note: Yes, I know it takes months to show whether one
has HIV, but please, for the sake of the story, allow me to take
creative license. Thank you
:D
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i. pressure pushing down on me
Mark has always done well
under pressure. When Roger is in need, Mark is expected to be there.
When Maureen needs him to repair her equipment, Mark is expected to
help. He knows his place, he knows where his friends place him in
their lives. He is the confidante, the play toy, the enemy, the
friend. For others, all this pressure to be what people expect them
to be might be too much to handle. But Mark has had years of practice
in perfecting the mask he hides behind. Or the camera, rather. A
smile from Mark can brighten a room, but Mark's day gets dimmer every
time he fakes that happiness. His only safe haven is behind the
lens.
Unless Roger is with him. With anyone else, Mark
allows himself to become numb. Roger knows this, and Mark knows he
knows. With Roger, Mark feels. With Roger, Mark feels safe,
like nothing can touch him or hurt him, which, he often muses, is
quite ironic. When Mark is with Roger, he remembers why he is still
alive. But Roger will also be his downfall. Mark would lay his life
down if it meant he could help Roger. When he dreams, he pictures a
life in which Roger is free from AIDS, free from pain, free to live.
Mark only wants the best for Roger. That is why the money he earns,
the food he buys, the emotion he feels is all for Roger.
ii. watching some good friends scream, "let me out"
Roger
has always been good at being angry. He had been angry when April had
killed herself. He thought she was coward until he found the note.
"We have AIDS." He had been angry that three simple words
had had the power to change his entire life. He had been angry when
Mark had forced him into withdrawal. He had been furious when Angel
died. He hadn't understood how such an amazing person could die from
such a terrible disease. He had been angry when Mimi started using
the drugs again, so soon after their reconciliation. Mark had
desperately tried to get Roger out of the loft so that he wouldn't
drown himself in self-pity. It only took two months.
But
most of all, Roger is angry that he watches his best friend, the man
who'd seen him through the chills and the violence and the hateful
words, the man who always makes sure he takes his meds, the man he
loves--yes, Roger muses, he loves Mark. Mark has always been
there for him, without fail, after all--fall apart, little by little
each day and does nothing about it. He sees the pain etched on Mark's
face when the filmmaker thinks he's not watching. But Roger is always
watching, always noticing the flickers of regret and sadness on the
young man's face, the silent reach for help just to get through this
life, to deal with the knowledge that he will be the one to survive.
Roger wishes he could do something. But he doesn't know where to
begin.
iii. pray tomorrow takes me higher
Most nights, Mark lies awake
in bed, just listening to Roger strum his guitar in the next room.
After Roger had permanently broken things off with Mimi, Mark had
come to the realization that the reason he can feel with Roger is
because he equates Roger with love. Roger is Mark's reason for
living, Roger is the air Mark breathes. Roger is Mark's entire world.
So Mark turns in early and crawls onto the mattress because sometimes
he just can't take being in the same room with Roger when he knows
nothing could ever happen. Roger loves him, Mark knows this, but he
could never be in love with him. It is an empty dream that
Mark will see when he closes his eyes, wishing that the next day will
be a better day. It never is.
When Mark wakes up, the
first thing he sees after he puts on his glasses is his camera. He
stares at the antique for at least five minutes before taking it in
his hands and starting his day with the wind of a handle. He walks
into the living room to find Roger sitting on the table, guitar in
hand, as expected. They exchange a nod, Mark reminds Roger to take
his AZT, and the blonde leaves the loft for another day of filming
what people call life. That is the routine. Mark is desperate to
break it, but he knows the only way that will happen will be if Roger
initiates the change. Mark wants more. But he has never been good
with change.
iv. it's the terror of knowing what this world is about
Most nights, when Roger
is plucking at his guitar, he wonders what life might be like if he
had the courage to tell Mark how he felt. "I'm writing one last
song before I..." he sings softly. Before I die. Those
are the words that will always haunt him. He looks to Mark's door,
which is always open just a crack, and just thinks. Give in to
love or live in fear. Roger doesn't know how long he can go on
pretending, but he is afraid to take that one step. Roger has always
hated cowards, and he hates himself for not allowing himself to
pursue the one person he wants to spend the rest of his life with. If
he lies to himself, Roger can justify his hesitation by saying that
Mark could never love him, that he doesn't want to risk passing HIV
to Mark, that he doesn't want to risk losing Mark. But the truth his,
he's just afraid. Forget regret or life is yours to miss. It's
a manta Roger could never live by.
Every day, Roger
wishes he could take Mark in his arms so they could share a
passionate kiss. That would change everything, Roger thinks to
himself. He watches Mark give him another forced smile, watches him
cradling his camera, watches him as he leaves without eating. Mark is
getting thin. Roger is running out of time. Roger wants to hold Mark,
kiss him, stroke his hair, whisper sweet nothings in his ear... Roger
wants to make Mark's pain disappear, and that would require him to
step out of his shell. Roger wants to be with Mark. But he has never
been good with love.
v. it never rains but it pours
Mark loves the rain. He loves sitting by the window, watching the lighting and reveling in the sound of thunder while Roger plays a song, most likely Musetta's Waltz, next to him. These are the times Mark and Roger can share in a comfortable silence, the times when best friends can forget all the animosity that has ever come between them. Mark loves these times because the rain helps him let down his walls. The rain helps him feel free to be himself. The rain brings him closer to Roger. Sometimes, Mark closes his eyes and leans his forehead against the window, feeling the beat of the rain against the glass, and pictures himself in Roger's arms. The image is imprinted in his mind, and it evokes a genuine smile. It will never happen. But he can dream.
vi. turned away from it all like a blind man
Roger loves the cold. Even though things get tough in the loft during the winter, he loves watching the snow fall to the ground while frost creeps across the windows. More often than not, Mark is downstairs filming while Roger watches from above. The snow collects in Mark's hair, and Roger can see him shivering in his ratty old jacket, even from a distance. He needs a new coat, Roger reminds himself every year. Every year he fails to do anything about it because he knows Mark would rather spend the day freezing outside than have Roger spend any money on him. Roger would love nothing more than to join Mark downstairs, to force the filmmaker to put down the camera and pick up a snowball, then battle until Roger pounced on the blonde, straddling his waist, and he would lean down until his lips met Mark's... But Mark insists that for the sake of his health, Roger should stay inside. Roger knows he's right. But he can dream.
vii. keep coming up with love but it's so slashed and torn
Mark doesn't know how it started. It had happened so quickly. It was just another morning, he had been going through the motions of his usual routine. But instead of walking out of the loft like he usually did, he felt a tight grasp on his arm turn him around. Before any words could be said, Roger's lips were crashing against his own. As soon as the kiss had begun, it ended. The tension in the air was palpable as the roommates stared at each other. Mark's eyes were glued to Roger's, and he wondered if his own gaze was filled with as much love and lust as his best friend's. He lunged forward, his lips hungrily moving against Roger's, and the musician quickly pushed Mark toward his bedroom. Mark's heart was racing as his sweater was nearly ripped off his body, knocking his glasses off his face at the same time. He shivered as Roger's calloused fingers ran themselves up and down his sides and back. The pair fell back against Roger's bed, both panting as Roger worked at removing Mark's pants, then his own clothes.
Go slow.
Mark had never felt anything as amazing as the
moment Roger entered him. Mark's dream had come true, and he grinned
in ecstasy as he moved his hips in time with Roger's thrusts. Hearing
Roger whisper his name sent Mark to Cloud 9, and he couldn't imagine
a moment more perfect.
I love you.
They
came. Mark shuddered as Roger rode his orgasm out, burying his head
in the crook of Roger's shoulder.
I love you,
too.
Another real smile. Mark purred as Roger
placed gentle kisses on his lightly freckled shoulders, lacing their
fingers together. And then, the world seemed to stop.
viii. we're breaking
Roger knows exactly how it ended. It
had happened so quickly. The moments after making love to Mark for
the first time had been so elating. Until he had remembered one very
important and very forgotten detail. Instead of continuing with
leaving a trail of kisses down Mark's body, he suddenly pulled out of
the man beneath him without warning, all Roger could do was stare
down at Mark's bare body. He took a moment to really take it in, the
jutting rips, the bony hips, the ruffled hair, the confusion in those
deep blue eyes. And it took all Roger to hold back his
tears.
Condom.
The fear that
flashed in Mark's eyes had been clear to Roger, but everything else
became a blur. Sitting against Mark's bedroom door, Roger regrets
what he can remember. Fleeing from the bed as though it had been
Mark's fault that the condom had been forgotten, the yelling,
banishing Mark from his room... Roger cringes. He tries again to call
out to Mark, to knock on Mark's door, to apologize, but all attempts
he makes are ignored.
I love you.
The
words had been so perfect, the timing so right. But now, the world
seemed to have come to a stop.
ix. love dares you to care
Mark has always been an expert at hiding
his emotions. When Maureen had broken up with him, Mark acted as
though they'd never had a relationship in the first place. When Angel
died, he hadn't shed a single tear. But with Roger, the heartbreak
had been too much. The time he would normally have spent filming
became dedicated to sobbing in his locked room. Knocks on the door
went unnoticed, Roger's pleading went ignored, his camera went
forgotten. Mark hates himself for being so stupid, for making Roger
upset. But he doesn't regret it. Forget regret, that's what
Angel always said. Mark loves Roger, and he knows now that Roger
loves him the same way. But he isn't sure that Roger would want him
now. He isn't sure that he'll be alive long enough for Roger to want
him.
x. love dares you to change our way
of caring about ourselves
Roger has never felt so sure of
his place in life. It takes a week for Roger to finally coax Mark out
of his room. When the filmmaker finally emerges, Roger wants to fall
to his knees and beg Mark for forgiveness. Mark is thinner and paler
from his time away from the real world, and Roger is tempted to throw
the smaller man over his shoulder and march him to the hospital.
Instead, he suggests that Mark visit the clinic to get tested. He is
relieved when Mark asks him to come.
As they sit in the
waiting room, Roger glances at Mark, who doesn't move a muscle. On a
whim, Roger reaches out to take Mark's hand, and Mark looks up at
him, surprised but seemingly pleased. They haven't spoken a word
about "that day." They are both too afraid of what might
come of it. But Roger realizes in the moment he takes Mark's hand
that Mark is the one in need now. Mark needs Roger to take care of
him, to hold him, to comfort him, to do everything Roger has ever
wanted to do for Mark. So when Mark's name is called, Roger pulls
Mark in for a tight hug and whispers that every will be all right. At
that moment, it is the best he can do. And it seems to be enough for
Mark.
xi. give love one more chance
Mark has never felt so sure of what he has been missing in life. The results from the test had come back negative, and Mark had never felt so relieved in his life. Roger had been ecstatic, even going as far as to pick Mark up and twirl him around. After putting him down, Roger moves to pull away, but Mark knows a miracle when it happens, and pulls Roger back toward him to place a soft kiss on the musician's lips. Roger's green eyes widen to the size of saucers, and Mark laughs.
Do you love me?
The question is innocent, and Mark needs to know. He needs to know how he is going to live his life from now on.
More than anyone.
Mark knows he won't be able to let Roger make love to him again. He trusts Roger, but he's not sure if he trusts himself. So when Roger cups his cheek, Mark nestles against his lover's hand and places another kiss on Roger's lips. At that moment, it is the best he can do. And it seems to be enough for Roger.
fin
