http://sing-my-faith.livejournal.com/ (
sing-my-faith.livejournal.com) wrote in
tampered2008-05-21 06:21 pm
Log; Ongoing
When; Wednesday, May 21, 2008
Rating; G?
Characters; Abel Nightroad (
whofelltoearth), Kyrie (
sing_my_faith)
Summary; Abel keeps Kyrie company on a grocery run. In exchange for brownies.
Log;
It wasn't that she was short, it was simply that Abel was exceptionally tall. Could anything be out of reach for him? Thus far nothing had been, not that too much had been out of Kyrie's reach. Still, it was nice to be shopping with someone that could see the top shelf clearly and find out if any of the items that appeared to be sold out were merely pushed toward the back and out of her line of sight.
And he was good company--he didn't seem to mind going with her on the errand. The extra pair of hands came in handy. Kyrie didn't have to stop and wonder how she was going to get everything back to the apartment.
The only snag came in trying to pick which kind of brownies she was going to make for Abel, in return for his help. The variety was a bit daunting--chocolate fudge, or the ones with chocolate fudge chunks? Or maybe the caramel swirl brownies?
"What do you think, Father?" Well, they were for him, after all. It only made sense to ask.
Rating; G?
Characters; Abel Nightroad (
Summary; Abel keeps Kyrie company on a grocery run. In exchange for brownies.
Log;
It wasn't that she was short, it was simply that Abel was exceptionally tall. Could anything be out of reach for him? Thus far nothing had been, not that too much had been out of Kyrie's reach. Still, it was nice to be shopping with someone that could see the top shelf clearly and find out if any of the items that appeared to be sold out were merely pushed toward the back and out of her line of sight.
And he was good company--he didn't seem to mind going with her on the errand. The extra pair of hands came in handy. Kyrie didn't have to stop and wonder how she was going to get everything back to the apartment.
The only snag came in trying to pick which kind of brownies she was going to make for Abel, in return for his help. The variety was a bit daunting--chocolate fudge, or the ones with chocolate fudge chunks? Or maybe the caramel swirl brownies?
"What do you think, Father?" Well, they were for him, after all. It only made sense to ask.

no subject
The habit had been at times described both as mind-numbing and head-exploding. It was a wonder Kyrie could stand for him, but perhaps she just had more patience than, say, Sister Esther.
Abel had been getting ready to start up talking again when Kyrie asked him a question, and paused and stared down owlishly at her. Abel felt cowed, suddenly. What was she talking about, again?
"Um. About what?"
no subject
Though it's clear her question caught him off guard, so she smiles a bit sheepishly when she replies, motioning to the rows of brownie mixes they're standing in front of.
"About what kind of brownies you might want?"
no subject
Kyrie, of all the people he knew, could use to be listened as of late. Especially seeing as the one person she was closest to was currently missing in action.
He cleared his throat.
"Something simple. Don't bother with fancy things with me, it's like buying expensive chocolates for someone who's just as happy with a jawbreaker. You really don't need to go to the trouble at all, actually. Everything considered."
no subject
She plucked one of the boxes from the shelf--traditional chocolate fudge, as requested. Something simple and uncomplicated, which seemed to fit for the priest. It was a choice she would have made for him, eventually, had he not been here to give an opinion on the matter.
"Besides, you were kind enough to come with me. It's the least I can do."
no subject
It was so very easy for him to fall into an overly-familiar companionship with her, possibly because she treated him herself very much like one of Caterina's attendant nuns would have, were he back in Rome. At times, Abel worried it was almost too easy to be close to Kyrie. He worried for her.
The heavy spectacles creeped down more, and he reached to slide the back up the thin bridge of his nose.
"Not that I consider you an obligation, miss Kyrie, but I never feel right a young woman wandering around town all alone. And I've been meaning to talk to you a little more intimately about certain things."
no subject
"Have you, Father?" Her strides weren't as long as his, but then neither were her legs. One of his steps was two of hers, and so she had to quicken a bit in order to catch up to him. Once she was even with him she turned for the next section, the material of her long dress brushing over her ankles.
"What about?" She wouldn't hazard a guess--it was an effort to purposely not try and guess what he might be getting ready to say. If she was wrong, Kyrie didn't want to be left to dwell on the things her imagination had conjured up.
no subject
"Ah--"
He paused clumsily.
"Well. Nero."
no subject
Nero. The worry she was trying to keep at bay swam up behind her eyes and made her feel, for a second, dizzy. She ducked her head and closed her eyes, trying to settle her world into a steady position again. Telling herself not to worry didn't help; it hardly mattered if Nero would want her fretting over him or not, because even telling herself that he wouldn't (and she knew he wouldn't, he'd only feel worse for it) nonetheless couldn't keep her from doing so.
"Ah." And, because that wasn't really a response, and because Father Abel only had the best of intentions, Kyrie shook her head slightly and put the box back where it belonged. Rubbing her palms over her thighs she turned back to him, hoping she didn't look quite as worried as she felt. "Have you...heard anything?"
no subject
He wondered why he'd started the conversation this way and realized, after a very loud sort of silence, that it was so he wouldn't rue having not started it. But you've got to finish what you started, Nightroad, a voice chided him.
His hand hovered over her shoulder again, spread wide, waiting to comfort her.
"I'm sure he's fine. What I really mean is, how are you? Everything considered, and I don't mean to belittle your strength of character, Kyrie, I've known my share of very strong women. But be honest with me, how are you?"
no subject
She'd had friends, of course; some she'd grown up with, some from the choir at the church. She'd been friendly with them, but it hadn't been the same. She'd trusted Credo, and Nero, in a way that she hadn't let herself trust anyone else.
Could she change that now? She didn't have Credo anymore. In a circumstance like this, he'd be the one she would turn to. Kyrie felt her throat close momentarily, missing him so sharply that her eyes prickled. When was the last time she'd let herself cry over him? Over anything?
"Honestly, Father," and she paused to clear her throat, thick with the things she was holding back, "I've been better." It wasn't really an answer, but it was a start.
no subject
"I can understand why. You've been put through extraordinary circumstances, and then Nero leaves without giving you explanation or room to ask questions which need to be asked, one way or another."
He cringed at the sound of it-- there he was again, speaking from what everyone must believe was experience without agency or effect without cause.
She, of all people, Abel wanted to speak honestly with, perhaps because he knew how it felt, in some ways, to be in Nero's place. He knew that instead of telling Kyrie what she really needed to hear from him, he would give her comforting platitudes and send her to Esther. Esther could tell his truths for him. He tucked his bangs behind his ear.
"I just want you to know that he's probably just giving you the time to be able to think about what happened without flinching. He's probably ashamed."
no subject
"No, I know." She did. This wasn't the first time he'd done something that he hadn't been proud of, though Kyrie knew that this was much bigger than him accidentally burning breakfast so thoroughly it stuck to and ruined one of their pans. Much bigger, and it had taken him some time to feel like he could look at and talk to her again. He'd never stayed away this long, but nothing like this had ever happened, either.
She looked at Abel, who was suddenly so close that her vision blurred--or maybe, embarrassingly enough, for another reason entirely. He looked nothing like Credo; she wasn't sure she'd be able to pretend he was, even if she were blind. But he was a friend, someone that she knew cared about the people she cared about, and she needed someone.
"I can't tell him not to feel bad. What he did--" She stopped and swallowed. "It doesn't matter. That wasn't him. We all do horrible things, but he...he never would have done that if he could have stopped himself."
no subject
Her eyes were on him then, and he tried to keep his own blue ones on hers, but eventually his look shied and wandered away to the side, maybe because of how familiar she was to another woman he knew, maybe because it was just a typical masculine behavior. Don't look at me, don't show me your eyes. People's souls were in their eyes, supposedly.
'Anima' in Latin.
He looped an arm around her shoulder protectively but carefully, in lieu of his gaze.
"How very right, miss Kyrie. We all of us feel...ways that we shouldn't, and think things that we shouldn't, in moments of weakness. Whether or not it was his behavior, it wasn't his real sentiment, was it? This place just took away his humanity momentarily. It could happen to any of us."
no subject
Odd how, in her mind, he never aged--he was forever and always an adult, while she moved from child to teenager and beyond in his wake. The only hint that he'd been following the years with her had been the gradual progression of his hairline, ever backwards.
"This place can so easily take away our free will." There was a certain bite to her words, if not her tone. This last curse had been hard on her, but in a way she supposed she should be grateful for it opening her eyes. Kyrie hadn't really thought badly of this place until now; it was one thing to hear people talk about the things that could happen, the things the deities could or might do. It was quite another to see it, to experience it. "It's frightening."
no subject
His pace quickened and he smiled back at her, ministeringly.
"It is hostile, isn't it? And frightening. But you shouldn't worry, fear not. There's only one city, and you have a lot of friends. The odds are in your favour. Nero would never let anything happen to you."
no subject
So she lifted her chin and brushed the ends of her bangs out of her eyes, following after Abel.
"It's not that I'm worried about myself." Because she wasn't. Even if trouble found her, she knew that Nero would be there. Besides, it wasn't natural to worry about herself--Nero and Credo had always been the ones with the dangerous jobs. Being concerned for their welfare came almost naturally for Kyrie. "I'm worried about him."
no subject
He stopped walking abruptly, heavy, armored boots squeaking on the flooring.
"He worries about you. You can worry about one another, and shout and cry and stamp and anything else. It's a very human reaction. Very human. And worry will keep you from being afraid. I'm sure that Nero is afraid of himself, after what occurred. Possibly even afraid of you, which is why he...can't face you."
no subject
She'd stopped when he did and was watching the tips of his long fingers, but it was quickly turning into staring. In deference to his comfort--even if they were friends, it was still rude to stare, despite the fact that she was thinking rather than looking--she turned away and moved down another aisle.
"I...yes. The thought had crossed my mind." Maybe there was some irony there--that Nero would face down demons that wanted to kill him, horrible monsters straight out of someones nightmares, all seemingly without fear. And yet now he was possibly afraid. Of himself, and perhaps of her.
She'd laugh if the thought didn't break her heart.
no subject
When she was a yard away, he followed after her, clearing his throat again.
"I won't press the topic any further, miss Kyrie. I know how mortifying it can be to have an emotional conversation in such a public place. But I do want you to know that Nero will come back soon enough. And that what he did that night is not all of who he is."
Abel paused, examining the ceiling with unnatural fervor, considering his next words very carefully. When he spoke, it was with a voice pitched to be deep and not travel, speaking just for the young woman.
"Our life is a narrative, whose past does not define but rather explains the present. In this way, whenever it seems that we know the least about a person, we actually know them the best."
no subject
She just wished it was sooner, rather than later.
Then again, she never had been that good at hiding what she was thinking. Abel was a good friend--what else could you say to someone you cared about, when it was so obvious they were scared? Worried? When there was nothing you could do, except offer kind words and attempted comfort? Were the situation reversed Kyrie might be doing the same thing, telling Abel things he could very well already know simply because speaking the words was the only thing left to do.
"I know it's not who he is." She looked at him, then back at the shelves of items for sale, picking up a can of soup and rolling it between her hands. "But does he know that? Does he know that he's a good person? That he's a human, no matter what this city makes him do?" She looked up at Abel, all of her thoughts etched over her features, heavy on her shoulders and deep into the tense line of her mouth. "Anyone could have...that curse could have affected anyone. But it was him, and he'll--"
She put the can back on the shelf and picked up a different kind, cradling it in her palm.
"He'll carry around that guilt for a long time."