[Smirking, Verso cants his head, reaching up with reddened and snow-wet hands to brush his hair aside and reveal the mark on his neck exactly where Clive had left it. Like the scar on his face, it's a little more black than red, lightened by swirls of white, present for however long he wishes it to be so.
The snowball in his hand dematerialises into hammerspace, and he makes a couple more that meet the same fate as he watches Clive embrace a worrisome amount of snow and hold it up to his chest. And it would be easy, Verso thinks, to launch an attack while Clive's so focused on standing up again, maybe knock him off guard, claim whatever victory he can before the inevitable escalation, but instead he watches with pretend blitheness, even as he moves to close the distance between them.
It's a bluff, he tells himself; Clive is very big and while Verso isn't small, he is aware that it is very difficult to be anything besides dwarfed by him. Surely he would not do what he's suggesting he'll do. And to that effect, he says:]
You won't.
[So, he stays put, cocksure and calm, playing a solo game of chicken that he can't lose regardless; either he's right and Clive stops and he wins, or he's wrong and Clive takes him by surprise and he finds delight in both that and in figuring out how to not only meet this new challenge but lift it to new levels.]
local expeditioner gets dumped by local immortal man after attempting to sing (poorly)
[ Another crime to add to the pile: showing Clive that lovebite when he's still too far away to appreciate it properly. It's a curious but lovely reminder of their desperate scrambling the night before, a night-colored bruise dappled by, again, starlight-like white.
If Verso was expecting Clive to honor you won't, well. Not after that particularly enticing display. (In reality, he was never going to honor you won't.) Funny, how they'd spent all that time between the graveyard and now with their hands linked, but had spent it worlds apart; funny, how Clive yearns for Verso even in Verso's company.
The fearsome monster approacheth. Snow in hand, promising ruin.
It shatters Clive that Verso trusts him so much. Clive loves him, and he doesn't know if there'll ever be a right time, a perfect time, to say it. ]
Won't I.
[ So: this. Long strides, sure and even, until 'being in Verso's periphery' turns into 'being in Verso's immediate vicinity', and―
―the warden of fire unleashes an avalanche. A downpour that drenches Verso's hair, his jacket, his shirt, which in turn drenches Clive's jacket, his shirt, his trousers, and sends them both careening down onto the ground, cushioned (mercifully) by the soft carpeting beneath them.
It's ridiculous. It's so fucking stupid. Every inch of Clive is screaming in cold, but he doesn't care: he rolls and tries to pin Verso under him, breathless with affection. ]
or!!! local immortal man gets dumped by local expeditioner after 168-hour singing lesson marathon
[A repetition, no less sure than before; no more correct, either. And so he's proven wrong, standing firm until the very last moment, letting out a grunt mangled by surprise as Clive, for the first time ever, strips Verso of warmth in one fell swoop rather than suffusing him with it through his gentle ways.
Not much of that gentleness lingers in the way his body collides with Verso's own, either, or in how Verso hits the ground with a snow-softened thud that casts another incredulous noise from his throat, this one breathier, more amused. So caught up is he in the absurdity and the wonder and ever-realised fantasy of each being this close to the other that Clive has all the opportunity in the world to do whatever he wants. Verso's arsenal of snowballs almost – almost – goes forgotten as he loses himself in the mischief and the love and the blue of Clive's eyes, so blue, how are they so blue?
When laughter finally rings out, there's still an element of competitiveness to it, still a chime of victory as if being pinned to the ground is exactly what Verso needed to earn back the upper hand. It's not, of course, but like hell is he going to concede that yet. So, he glides his focus along all the parts of Clive's body that he can see like this, taking in how completely drenched the man's made himself and trying not to shiver from the cold as the sight of Clive's more reddened chest reasserts how fucking covered in snow Verso is, too.
He has the absolute audacity to sound cocky about this whole thing.]
Good one. I'm pretty sure you got yourself better than you got me.
[It could not be less true and he fucking knows it.]
ben starrs separate citing creative differences (i will never let this happen)
[ They are the both of them devastatingly beautiful men; they are also sopping wet messes now, a mop and a dishrag, altogether far too old to be courting death by cold in the middle of a snowfield. Clive thinks to use his chroma to warm them before his hands (numb, getting number by the second) fall off, but he's distracted by the twinkle of Verso's laugh, that laugh that makes him feel like he missed a step going down the stairs, displacing his center of balance with ease.
He still wants to take Verso by the shoulders and shake the stain of coward off of him (you're human, you're human), but that grief is too old and too ingrained; there's no point trying to rub that out of Verso's makeup. It will forever remain a part of him, and Clive can only hold it the way he holds Verso's face now, cradled in too-cold palms (this can't be comfortable) as he rubs their damp foreheads together in his own statement of victory. ]
Exactly. [ A mirrored laugh. ] I've got you.
[ The same, but different. Not "gotcha", but "I have you". The slyest a man like Clive can get, trying to make Verso agree to the obvious: Clive will always have him.
His next kiss is frozen solid, snow-paled lips pressed to Verso's mouth. Perfect anyway, but he doesn't have the gift of immortality to shield himself from an early grave, so. A little burst of scarlet chroma, and Clive deigns to melt a little of the ice from Verso's white-streaked hair. ]
[Oh. Oh, it takes Verso a moment to catch up to what Clive is saying. There's a retort about how the fight isn't over yet right there on the tip of his tongue, and another about how those sweet – if frosty – hands on his cheek and that soft – if wet – meeting of their foreheads will do nothing to tame his drive to overcome the admittedly significant obstacle of Clive's weight pinning him down, when he circles back to that exactly and realises what this whole thing was about.
He swears it makes him warm enough to melt more of the snow beneath him. Or maybe it's the kiss to blame. Or maybe it's just Clive's chroma working the ice free from more than just Verso's hair. Maybe it's everything this man does for and is to him. That's probably the most likely explanation.
I don't deserve you, he thinks, as he so very often does, but nothing good could come of giving that thought breath, so he holds it as part of his resolve to be better and to do better so as not to squander the faith that Clive has in him and his humanity. So, lifting a snow-cold hand to the back of Clive's winter-cold neck instead, he runs his fingers through his hair and chooses a simpler path.]
Thanks.
[The laughter is gone and the smile alongside it, but what's replaced them both is a quieting and a stillness. It does hurt a little to be thinking about the what behind the why again, but it's the good kind of pain, like a sore muscle throbbing from getting stronger.
Even so, it is, perhaps, absolutely ludicrous for him to even be considering saying what on his mind now, the two of them laying in the snow, frozen and wet, red from cold, the chaos of their impromptu battle still written all over them, but what else does he say, what else can he say to the man who listened while he shared the worst of himself and responded by lobbing a snowball at the back of his head? So, he takes a deep breath followed by a slow exhale and then:]
[ The world teeters on the edge when Verso's smile fades. Clive, dripping droplets onto Verso's collar, watches the planes of the other man's face shift and settle, and wonders if the unseriousness offended― if it somehow read as callous or dismissive of the depth of Verso's current state of emotion.
But the hand tangled in his hair stays, and Clive is kept where he is, poised over Verso in freezing snow, waiting for a verdict―
―which is I love you, misting from that beautiful mouth.
It almost doesn't register. Blissful dissonance: the statement is at once too obvious and too blindsiding to digest. The three words that have defined Clive ever since they first kissed in witness of black-and-gold. That vague Something, flourishing under pressure and heartache.
For a moment, Clive forgets to breathe, bowled over by the substantive enormity of what they both knew to be evident. The ache in his chest is sweet, and paralyzing, and reaches far beyond what human physicality should allow for. ]
―As do I. [ Finally, on the tail end of a held inhale. ] I love you too, Verso.
[ Does it feel liberating to say it? Not quite: it feels like an unraveling. Clive unfurls, and god, he's sentimental about it. ]
Mon étoile. [ Hands still bracketing Verso's face, thumbs along the corners of both of Verso's pale, pale eyes. ] I love you.
[ His voice scrapes in the back of his throat; he's never said this before to anyone but Verso, and he wonders, briefly, if he can be believed. ]
I love you so much.
how dare these sad men tbh (please continue daring, sad men)
[Just as the brute force of Clive's counterattack had bowled Verso over moments earlier, so too does the emphatic expression of his love, those perfect three words delivered a perfect thrice, bring Verso to his figurative knees. Their love for each other is no competition, but the part of him that always wonders how he stacks up against others – born of his early unsurety over how he stacks up against the other version of himself – finds himself laughing and at peace over how Clive has emerged on top twice over.
Aside from that one fleeting thought, it's impossible to focus on anything besides how the sentiment itself feels, anyway. Fantastically warm enough to stave off the very real cold, empowering in ways Verso hasn't experienced since he realised the truth of his existence and set out on his scrambling and thus far futile course to make it mean something other than suffering, every bit as heartbreaking and beautiful as music, just as inviting and soothing as a crackling fire in a familiar hearth.
The impulse to put it all to words strikes him, but soon he realises that he has no words available, just the desperately fond look in his eyes, and the subtle shift to how he moves his fingers through Clive's hair as if testing the believability of this newly spoken but long-felt reality. Eventually, after beginning his languid descent from the high of reciprocation, he brings back his smile as a crooked, impish thing that casts a new twinkle to his suddenly damp eyes.]
Enough to warm me back up?
[Casual though the request might be, the way that Verso's voice draws tight and falls quiet, the centring breath that follows and the smile that chases after it – those demonstrate the real truth of the matter. In the face of everything, their shared love feels like such a human expression in a world that has attempted to strip them both of their humanity that he can't help but embrace the normalcy of this extraordinary thing that they share. Clive makes him feel like a person, not a concept; he helps him understand who Verso No-Last-Name is, separate from the Dessendre who's fully stepped aside in this moment, leaving just the man who craves to become something more than a conduit of grief.
Still, he follows it up with a tease of a tickle of starlight through his fingertips at the nape of Clive's neck, and more words that call out his wet hair and his wet eyes and the way he radiates trust and belief and belonging.]
[ What Verso is to Clive is as of yet still-undefinable, even after giving a shape to I love you. They're lovers, certainly, bound to each other through body and now-spoken sentiment, but even that designation doesn't seem to encompass enough of what it means to relish the odds that they're facing together. Verso isn't simply a man that Clive wants― he colors the world that Clive inhabits, gives it texture and meaning.
Clive wants to hold him. Wants to be held by him. Is privately thrilled when he's asked for his warmth, because yes, he can give it; is more thrilled by the fact that Verso is asking, because yes, Verso is allowed to. He's permitted more than the handover of pain and burden, permitted to wear more than masks to ensure his comfort, permitted to inhabit himself without guilt.
No more enduring. Not here, anyway. Clive gathers Verso up into his arms (emboldened by the feeling of silver chroma on his skin), from pinning to sitting in a few fumbling seconds, tucked chest to chest. Lips skim over the ink-swirl scar on Verso's face, grazing just along the corner of one glossy eye to see if he can taste salt there. ]
You're the most beautiful thing I've ever seen.
[ Vulnerable and bare-faced. Guardian of nothing: just Verso. They're both in the process of figuring out what these things even mean, but even the vague shape of this misty-eyed struggle is lovely, so lovely. Clive wouldn't let Verso sacrifice it for anything, not even his own life.
A smile, and Clive finally does the sensible thing of misappropriating the monster in his chest as a furnace (a personal act of rebellion on his own part). Red-orange floods through him, out of him, covering them both where they sit embraced on snow and chasing away the immediate threat of freezing to death. With that pulse, he also presses I love you into the small of Verso's back: scarlet light right along his love's spine, tracing up to the nape of his neck. Impossible to misinterpret. ]
[There's something liberating about going from being pinned to the ground to being pinned to Clive's chest. Verso doesn't have the experience to name and qualify this new something, only that the way Clive's arms wrap around him makes him feel like he's sprouted wings, and the tickle of his facial hair across his eyelashes looses a tear, and he's overwhelmed by the feeling of wanting something and needing something without also miring himself in the worry of being an imposition.
Warmth enters him with Clive's chroma. It breezes across his cheek with Clive's breath. That expression of beauty – his beauty – delivered by the most breathtaking man he's ever met further warms his essences, those parts of him that aren't physical but that reap the greatest benefits from being held like this all the same.
Not all wounds heal. Not all guilt abates. Not all sins can be absolved. Verso has long understood these truths, even if it took a while for him to be able to hold them as his own without lying to himself. But he still maintains the belief that had guided him through the aftermath of what happened to Search & Rescue – that everyone brought to life on this Canvas deserves to exist, even if that might not be possible in the long term anymore – and so he lets himself remember how it feels when that allowance is granted to him as well, breathing deep and centring breaths as it suffuses him with new life and greater strength.
And he thinks that it's such a wonderful thing that this shared love exists across all of his senses now that he knows how it sounds in Clive's voice: like a rumble, like a rally, like a purr. Like a power to wield in its own right.
In this moment, though, that love manifests as a vibration up his back, a crackling flame that ignites across his scalp and casts him in a lovestruck haze. He rests more of his weight against Clive, curls himself closer against him, then takes his other hand, lifting it to his lips and kissing warmth into those still-chilled fingers. Laughter brings even more warmth to them as he releases a puff of it at the thought of catching Clive staring.]
You'll have to convince me to leave your arms first. They're in the running for my favourite place here, you know.
[Especially being held in the snow, pristine white stretching all around them, crystalline beneath the sun, beautiful like a blank sheet of music waiting for its potential to be realised. A soft sigh follows that thought and he nestles a little closer, seeking more of Clive's impossible warmth.]
[ Precious, formidable starlight. It's a privilege to hold Verso like this, to witness his need and to provide for it. The sentiment skews Clive's body language protective, back arched forward and arm tight around Verso's waist, fingers drumming along that beautiful tear-streaked face with its subtle ink-like lines just under thin skin. ]
I don't know, [ Clive hums. ] The carousel sounded like stiff competition.
[ So he says, while pulling Verso more solidly against his chest. Still channeling ember-warm chroma through the both of them, acknowledging that this is perhaps not the best place for extended time without movement; he'd like to keep Verso forever like this, safe and seen with his heartbeat pressed close, but it might also be slightly traumatizing for Verso to doze off and wake up to Clive's frozen corpse.
Clive doesn't want to move, though, so he'll stay as long as Verso needs. Drawing circles along the small of Verso's back, layering kisses to his jaw, his temple, his mouth. ]
―Your friend might not appreciate me holding you all the time, either.
[ Assuming that Clive has heard enough about the Mysterious Monoco, who is their actual destination in this leg of their journey. Verso has been, as ever, remarkably tight-lipped about the man (?) in question, though Clive suspects that it's not out of any desire to obfuscate and more a mischievous sort of "you'll know when you know" deal. Like a long-hanging pause for effect. Clive has no idea what to expect, and that's probably the point.
If the guy (?) is where Verso thinks he is, anyway. If not, they'll press onward despite the absence, ever closer to the grieving mother in the distance.
Together, Clive reassures himself. He tips Verso's chin and kisses him more properly this time, breath to breath, and murmurs another brief je t'aime. ]
[They are having a moment. It is a sweet moment. Soft. Gentle. Love is supposed to be at its core; love is supposed to be all it's about. Verso knows all of these things. He embraces them. And yet when Clive mentions the carousel, Verso cannot help himself. Those kisses to Clive's fingers become a singular bite to a singular knuckle, his thumb running over the reddened skin afterwards as he lets the intrusive thoughts win.]
Mm, I'd rather ride you.
[Definitely not in the snow, though, or in the wide open where anyone could theoretically stumble upon them, even if the chances of that are astronomically low, so in that context the carousel does come out on top. But it's all the way over there, and Clive is right here, touching him and kissing him and...
Bringing up Monoco.
Verso laughs, then relinquishes his hold on Clive's hand and leans slightly away. It's actually a very good point, though; Verso hasn't really put much thought into how he'll introduce Clive to Monoco, or how Monoco might respond, and now that he's flipping through the potential scenarios in his mind, well, he's not sure he's ready for the inevitable ribbing he'll be subjected to when he introduces him to his lover, fire incarnate. So, he pre-empts it instead, stroking Clive's hair into place as he speaks.]
Monoco? Don't worry about him. There's, uh, something else he'll be much more interested in.
[Gotta maintain those airs of mystery. If Monoco is present at the station then there is no doubt in Verso's mind that he'll find one way or another to encourage Clive into a duel, and Verso would be lying if he said he didn't want to see that, so, sorry, Clive, but this secret is remaining unspoken until Monoco sees fit to introduce himself. Those are thoughts for a slightly later time, however; Clive speaks love with his lips and tongue and murmurs, and Verso is helpless against the distraction, humming into the kiss and moving his hand over Clive's chest so that he can attune himself to the rhythm of his heartbeat and what it says about his feelings, too.
One more burst of starlight delivered on the tip of his tongue before he rises to his feet and once again holds out his hands for Clive to take in joining him.]
All right. You've done an awful job of convincing me, but... Let's get going.
[ Oh, well, thanks for that intrusive thought. Clive chokes on it (as gracefully as he can) for a record-scratch moment, imagining Verso on his lap with his fingers tangled in Clive's hair, murmuring good boy the way he did last night (that definitely awakened something inside of him, good god); it's good that they move right on along to the topic of Monoco and inevitably the de-tangling of their bodies, given that he still remembers the intoxicating high of being flooded with silver.
One last hit of beloved starlight, and they're back on their feet. Verso feels much closer when they link hands again, and while Clive will never deny the other man the time and space that he needs when considering the fraught nature of his past, it feels heartening to pick up at a brisker, more hopeful pace. 'Get over it' is not an option for either of them, but they can learn how to hold that knife in their chests without twisting the wound open, at least. ]
Alright. ―And I'll do my utmost not to interrupt a reunion between friends.
[ Even if Clive is still reeling a bit from I love you. Being on his best behavior with this ringing in his ears might be difficult, but he'll make himself sparse if Verso wants a bit of space while he catches up with someone he supposedly hasn't seen in a bit (time is a wobbly concept for Verso, Clive knows).
And if his stupid infatuation keeps running hot through his veins, well. Clive has two hands. He'll make do somewhere, and hope that he doesn't make a terrible first impression. Not the most elegant thing to consider as they make their way to the giant structure emerging in the horizon― a gaping maw that looks to be a station of sorts with broken tracks running crooked and sideways towards it― but a thought that Clive has, nevertheless.
Smitten. It's the only way Clive can justify how he keeps flicking his gaze to the side, catching Verso's face in profile, just looking at him occasionally as they walk. Not the kind of staring that implies that he's afraid Verso will leave or disappear if he stops being vigilant, but a self-indulgent sort that says that he really, really, really just likes the shape of him. ]
[There's something uniquely enticing about how Clive keeps glancing his way; Verso catches him out of the corner of his eye a few times but pretends not to notice, worried that his attention might be easily spooked. It feels good to be wanted in indulgent ways, and better still knowing that Clive knows some of the worst of him and still doesn't struggle to seek out more of the best. Really, genuinely, truly he does not deserve this, he doesn't deserve him, but Clive has made a choice that he keeps making, and Verso won't take that for granted.
At least not while everything still feels warm and hopeful and the haunting impossibility of his own death is, for once, far from the forefront of his thoughts.
So, they continue on like this, hand in hand, cold filtering through the warmth that Clive had infused in Verso but never taking root. Soon, the flames from within the station flicker into sight, gold and orange against the blue-shadowed snow, and the tracks make way for broken-up trains hanging in the air at odd angles. A Grandis watches from atop the stairs leading towards the station, a silent sentinel guarding what remains of his kind.]
Well, here we are.
[There is no sign of Monoco, but there never is this early on. After a quick glance up into the rafters doesn't provide any hints as to whether he's around, either, Verso shrugs and looks over to Clive.]
Oh, and fair warning: you should beware of falling Gestrals.
[Assuming that Monoco is even here to begin with; he could just as easily be elsewhere, accompanying Noco on some mission or another, perhaps, or going on adventures of his own. Again, there's no real fun in saying that, and Clive's reflexes are sharp, so Verso sidles further inside, completely oblivious to what actually awaits them on the other side of the arched entrance as he dramatically gestures Clive ahead.]
[ In love with 1 (one) man, but also suspicious of 1 (one) man. The haunting beauty of the station with its aurora-like lights and its hanging trains is slightly undercut by that warning (falling Gestrals???), and Clive telegraphs his light skepticism before obliging Verso's theatrical push to go on ahead with a dry merci.
(Far too trusting: he does keep his eyes up towards the ceiling, despite the fact that the threat might actually come at him from anywhere else.)
Fortunately― or unfortunately, depending on perspective― there's no ambush. Just a nod from the Grandis standing vigil (Clive assumes that it recognizes Verso, and therefore they both get a pass), and more ice and twisted metal and orphaned compartments arching over snowy walkways in the grand, sprawling beyond. There are a few more scattered creatures huddled in and around broken trains who look at Clive and murmur something under their breaths; he thinks he hears the tail end of one of their bemused whispers, and it sounds an awful lot like "another Expeditioner?" ]
―Your friend may not be home, [ Clive offers to Verso, turning slightly to glance over his shoulder. Instead of the expected, familiar outline of the other man, however, there's yet another rotund Grandis, who has stepped out from behind the shadow of a collapsed pillar to approach Clive with its masked, mouthless face.
"If it's Monoco you seek," it says, its voice like warm gravel. "He went on an errand a few days back, and has yet to return."
Spoken with gentle conviction that 'return' is what Monoco will be doing. The whole thing takes Clive slightly off-guard, but he feels no compulsion to draw his sword against a creature that obviously means him no harm.
He opens his mouth to say something in affirmation― "I see, thank you"― but the Grandis continues before he can get a word in edgewise.
"Or if it's Joshua you seek," is the bombshell addendum, "he went to Frozen Hearts, though I warned him of the danger."
Joshua. Joshua. Clive, who now both looks and feels like he's had a bucket of ice water upturned on his head, stands there and tries, tries, to let that statement sink in.
Finally, he manages a strained: ] ―Joshua? A young man of my height, with golden hair and a kind demeanor?
[ The Grandis nods sagely. "Yes. Joshua."
Clive feels his knees give out; he slumps onto the snow, trying to understand.
[While the Grandis speaks with Clive, Verso steps aside to cast a suspicious glance upwards, just in case the Grandis are suddenly in cahoots with Monoco and his ambushes. There remains nothing above their heads besides the lingering effects of the Fracture, though, shards and scars, a deliberate ugliness cast upon what had once been a beautiful world. Little by little, Verso feels himself slip into reminiscence, trying to see if he can still remember how this place once looked when it was whole and full of trains and people. Leaving Clive to speak with the Grandis is an easy choice because he expected their conversation to carry little consequence and to end with gratitude and maybe some idle chatter.
But there isn't a single word that he can bring to mind that's less idle and of more consequence than Joshua.
Verso's back at Clive's side as soon as he can make it there, though not soon enough to catch him before he falls to the ground. That distance, too, is soon cleared with Verso kneeling before him, hands on his shoulders, head angled to get a better view of his face and, perhaps, a better understanding of what his mental state might be, even knowing that it'll most likely be obfuscated by shock.
When the silence drags on, Verso gives his shoulders a squeeze and takes his place in the conversation.]
How long ago did he leave?
[The Grandis hums, contemplative, then offers, "A short while after Monoco." Which is a small measure of relief for Verso, at least; it means that Joshua hasn't been gone for worryingly long, that Monoco's errand didn't involve chasing after an Expeditioner errant who was supposed to have returned. Small blessings, he thinks, even as he grapples with the possibility that this isn't the good news that it might seem to be on the surface.]
Did he say why he was headed out there?
["No, for I didn't ask." There's an edge of apology to its voice, a lilt of regret that remains unspoken. "Their time is already so short. I never wish to claim it for myself."
A sigh, but at least it's a start. Verso offers a quick thanks to the Grandis before grounding his focus back in Clive.]
[ A dazed nod, when Verso approaches him with the offer to go sit. The world is a blur around him, frost and fractures and the reality that Joshua is alive, and the understanding of that is just as paradigm-shifting as the night he found out that he was Ifrit. Possibly more, even, considering the enormity of Joshua's presence (and non-presence) in Clive's life.
It should be impossible. Clive remembers- what does he remember? Fire and panic and screaming, screaming, so much screaming. He tries to pick at the fragments of that night, tries to slot Joshua into that chaos, and can't find him; maybe he'd closed his eyes to it all as it was happening, too stunned by how unfathomable it all was to place his brother in the middle of that nightmare.
Faltering steps take him to the suggested fire. When he sits, it's heavily; when he shakes his head, it's with raw disbelief. ]
He's alive, [ is the only thing he can think of to say, after a protracted silence. ] My brother- he still lives.
[ The revelation undoes him. His heart's been through a lot today- death and love and survival- and Clive laughs about it, eyes wet and brows downturned, happy, so fucking happy that he doesn't know what to do about all of this.
He shudders, sighs, and reaches for Verso's hand to steady himself. Wanting to make sure any of this is real at all, that he won't suddenly jerk awake on top of that pile of corpses again, steaming and shattered. ]
He's alive.
[ Again, as he glances towards Verso with the sort of desperation that says that he wants this to be true, that he wants this affirmed, lest he break again. He's not sure if he can endure losing Joshua a second time. ]
[It would be cruel, Verso thinks, to speak the thoughts that first come to mind. The realities of this world and the powers that perpetuate its desecration of life can be soulless in their own approaches – and his deepest fears assert, again, that there is nothing beneath them, particularly when it comes to exacting whatever plans they're acting upon on any given day – but they aren't always. Sometimes, good things happen. The fact that he and Clive found each other is proof enough of that. And so Verso casts all his worries aside as best he can, vowing instead to rain hell down on everything that means anything to the Dessendres should this prove to be their doing.
Besides, Clive is strong enough to hope and lose hope, even if the desperation across his face carries his own fears to the contrary. Lacing his claimed fingers with Clive's, he runs the thumb of his other hand beneath his eyes, guiding away any tears that have fallen, helping free those that haven't yet.]
Yeah. And not too far from here.
[Assuming he hasn't left Frozen Hearts to continue on whatever journey he's embarked upon, but that thought doesn't need to be put out into the world, either. Especially when any distance must surely feel like too much distance, minutes stretching into hours, into days, into weeks.
Idly, he thinks about the scarf they'd found in the Forgotten Battlefield and he wonders if it meant something. Come find me in the mountains, perhaps. Take care not to catch a cold, brother. He's never met Joshua, but he can picture a vague-faced, golden-haired man with winter-rosed cheeks and a familiar smile, embracing his brother with... No. The thought stops there. Verso doesn't know Joshua. He can't begin to try and predict what he might feel or how he might respond. So, he stops trying to get ahead of things. It isn't place.]
What are you thinking?
[A question with specific intentions, yet asked generally in case Clive's mind hasn't caught up to Verso's. They're on Clive's time, now; he will occupy it however long and to whatever extents Clive needs him to.]
[ Clive's turn to nestle, now. There's been a lot of this today, but Clive hardly cares or minds the nature of their affection-laced bond, and sees no reason to feel any sort of shame in receiving comfort from Verso's steady presence next to his. Their lives are far too short and irregular to regret the things they didn't say or haven't done.
His forehead rests against Verso's jaw. Close enough to feel the other man's warm breath moving the ends of his unruly hair. Clive's guiding light in the tumult of this upending, too-good-to-be-true news. The same, patient presence that'd endured weeks of Clive's stilted attempts at becoming human again.
When asked what he's thinking: ]
That I'd like to kiss you.
[ Not even a line. Sincerity, like the blunt end of a cudgel. Clive loves Verso far too much for Verso's own good. Tears cooling on his face, he squeezes Verso's hand again, trying to reorient himself back into this new reality, this new timeline where Joshua isn't dead and where there is still a possibility that his brother can be found. ]
―And that I need to go to him. Joshua. [ There's an assumption here, that of anyone that Clive has ever met, Verso would understand what it means to be bound to a sibling the way Clive is. He remembers Alicia sitting next to her brother on the piano bench, and the gentle way Verso had spoken to her, played music for her. ] The creature said that he went somewhere dangerous.
[ (Very rude of Clive to not call 'the creature' by its proper name, but he has to be forgiven his ignorance.) A low, long exhale, and he straightens somewhat. ]
Will you show me the way?
[ Selfish, he knows. Maybe he should be more graceful about this, and give Verso the option to stay here in the Station and wait for his friend to return instead of chasing shadows in Nevron-infested territory. They're lovers, yes, but they needn't be beholden to each other always; Verso is entitled to his freedoms. ]
[Where there is nestling, there are lips to a crown and fingers stroking hair; there's a settling in place and a narrowing of the world down to the two of them and the nebulous space that Joshua now occupies. The fire crackling before them is large but so is the station, and the cold can only be escaped through proximity to warmth, so Verso draws Clive a little closer, too, laughing more breath through his hair as he speaks of wanting to kiss him.
The way they're tucked together precludes that but not the reverse, so Verso shifts enough so that he can press kisses to Clive's forehead, then his temple, his own lips curling slightly more into a smile with each kiss. At least the Grandis have given them their space, he thinks – doubly so when Clive calls them creatures and Verso can only hope they're out of earshot – which is all the more reason to indulge. Not that he minds anyone knowing that he loves the man by his side and in his heart, he's just a man who appreciates his privacy. Especially in moments like this. It's no surprise to Verso that Clive intends to go after Joshua, and nor does Verso expect anything other than the immediate and indefinite halting of their own travels. Even had Clive not said anything to that effect, Verso still would have dragged him along down whichever paths Joshua might have taken.
That Clive wants Verso's help isn't much more of a surprise itself, but it feels good in ways he wouldn't have expected. If it's selfish, then that's its appeal – the resulting confirmation that Clive will lean on him, too, even when that leaning angles them towards danger with no guarantees of what truly awaits them.]
Of course.
[His answer comes quickly, easily, voice laced with encouragement and certainty and the assurance that he would have this no other way. Whatever they do, they do together.]
We'll head out when you're ready.
[A part of him wants to insist that they rest first, get some food in their bellies, dry themselves the rest of the way off, warm those places deep inside their bones that still bear traces of a chill. But, again, it isn't his call and he doesn't want to assert anything in this moment besides his desire to see this through with Clive, so he leaves it at that.]
[ Easy acquiescence. Clive should have known. Verso is too good to him, and he'd have half a mind to push back if he didn't also know that doing so would be an insult. This is Verso asserting his freedom, and Clive will have to accept the notion that he is part and parcel of it instead of another burden for Verso to bear.
So: ] Thank you. [ Gratitude, on the tail end of a warm sigh. ] ―We'll spend the night here, and head out in the morning.
[ Flirting with the vague notion that Joshua might come back, while also acknowledging that it's been a long, long day. Again: death and love and survival. Clive's heart needs to rest as much as the rest of him does, desperate as it is to confirm whether this new development is truth or trick.
His fingers dance along Verso's jaw, appreciating his closeness before telegraphing that he'll relinquish it temporarily. There are tints that he needs to replenish, and other useful supplies and information besides that the Grandis could provide him with: he should also make sure that the blond-haired man really is his Joshua, though he really can't recall any other Expeditioner in recent history going by his brother's name.
One last soft kiss to the corner of Verso's mouth, and Clive untangles himself to do his due diligence. He'll return in time to help Verso with finding a cozy spot to untangle bedrolls, and help him hang their clothes over a warm fire to dry them properly for their subsequent impromptu journey. ]
so what i'm hearing is clive won't be seranading verso with the ben starr version of until next life
[Smirking, Verso cants his head, reaching up with reddened and snow-wet hands to brush his hair aside and reveal the mark on his neck exactly where Clive had left it. Like the scar on his face, it's a little more black than red, lightened by swirls of white, present for however long he wishes it to be so.
The snowball in his hand dematerialises into hammerspace, and he makes a couple more that meet the same fate as he watches Clive embrace a worrisome amount of snow and hold it up to his chest. And it would be easy, Verso thinks, to launch an attack while Clive's so focused on standing up again, maybe knock him off guard, claim whatever victory he can before the inevitable escalation, but instead he watches with pretend blitheness, even as he moves to close the distance between them.
It's a bluff, he tells himself; Clive is very big and while Verso isn't small, he is aware that it is very difficult to be anything besides dwarfed by him. Surely he would not do what he's suggesting he'll do. And to that effect, he says:]
You won't.
[So, he stays put, cocksure and calm, playing a solo game of chicken that he can't lose regardless; either he's right and Clive stops and he wins, or he's wrong and Clive takes him by surprise and he finds delight in both that and in figuring out how to not only meet this new challenge but lift it to new levels.]
local expeditioner gets dumped by local immortal man after attempting to sing (poorly)
If Verso was expecting Clive to honor you won't, well. Not after that particularly enticing display. (In reality, he was never going to honor you won't.) Funny, how they'd spent all that time between the graveyard and now with their hands linked, but had spent it worlds apart; funny, how Clive yearns for Verso even in Verso's company.
The fearsome monster approacheth. Snow in hand, promising ruin.
It shatters Clive that Verso trusts him so much. Clive loves him, and he doesn't know if there'll ever be a right time, a perfect time, to say it. ]
Won't I.
[ So: this. Long strides, sure and even, until 'being in Verso's periphery' turns into 'being in Verso's immediate vicinity', and―
―the warden of fire unleashes an avalanche. A downpour that drenches Verso's hair, his jacket, his shirt, which in turn drenches Clive's jacket, his shirt, his trousers, and sends them both careening down onto the ground, cushioned (mercifully) by the soft carpeting beneath them.
It's ridiculous. It's so fucking stupid. Every inch of Clive is screaming in cold, but he doesn't care: he rolls and tries to pin Verso under him, breathless with affection. ]
or!!! local immortal man gets dumped by local expeditioner after 168-hour singing lesson marathon
[A repetition, no less sure than before; no more correct, either. And so he's proven wrong, standing firm until the very last moment, letting out a grunt mangled by surprise as Clive, for the first time ever, strips Verso of warmth in one fell swoop rather than suffusing him with it through his gentle ways.
Not much of that gentleness lingers in the way his body collides with Verso's own, either, or in how Verso hits the ground with a snow-softened thud that casts another incredulous noise from his throat, this one breathier, more amused. So caught up is he in the absurdity and the wonder and ever-realised fantasy of each being this close to the other that Clive has all the opportunity in the world to do whatever he wants. Verso's arsenal of snowballs almost – almost – goes forgotten as he loses himself in the mischief and the love and the blue of Clive's eyes, so blue, how are they so blue?
When laughter finally rings out, there's still an element of competitiveness to it, still a chime of victory as if being pinned to the ground is exactly what Verso needed to earn back the upper hand. It's not, of course, but like hell is he going to concede that yet. So, he glides his focus along all the parts of Clive's body that he can see like this, taking in how completely drenched the man's made himself and trying not to shiver from the cold as the sight of Clive's more reddened chest reasserts how fucking covered in snow Verso is, too.
He has the absolute audacity to sound cocky about this whole thing.]
Good one. I'm pretty sure you got yourself better than you got me.
[It could not be less true and he fucking knows it.]
ben starrs separate citing creative differences (i will never let this happen)
He still wants to take Verso by the shoulders and shake the stain of coward off of him (you're human, you're human), but that grief is too old and too ingrained; there's no point trying to rub that out of Verso's makeup. It will forever remain a part of him, and Clive can only hold it the way he holds Verso's face now, cradled in too-cold palms (this can't be comfortable) as he rubs their damp foreheads together in his own statement of victory. ]
Exactly. [ A mirrored laugh. ] I've got you.
[ The same, but different. Not "gotcha", but "I have you". The slyest a man like Clive can get, trying to make Verso agree to the obvious: Clive will always have him.
His next kiss is frozen solid, snow-paled lips pressed to Verso's mouth. Perfect anyway, but he doesn't have the gift of immortality to shield himself from an early grave, so. A little burst of scarlet chroma, and Clive deigns to melt a little of the ice from Verso's white-streaked hair. ]
it would be a crime they both deserve a ben starr
He swears it makes him warm enough to melt more of the snow beneath him. Or maybe it's the kiss to blame. Or maybe it's just Clive's chroma working the ice free from more than just Verso's hair. Maybe it's everything this man does for and is to him. That's probably the most likely explanation.
I don't deserve you, he thinks, as he so very often does, but nothing good could come of giving that thought breath, so he holds it as part of his resolve to be better and to do better so as not to squander the faith that Clive has in him and his humanity. So, lifting a snow-cold hand to the back of Clive's winter-cold neck instead, he runs his fingers through his hair and chooses a simpler path.]
Thanks.
[The laughter is gone and the smile alongside it, but what's replaced them both is a quieting and a stillness. It does hurt a little to be thinking about the what behind the why again, but it's the good kind of pain, like a sore muscle throbbing from getting stronger.
Even so, it is, perhaps, absolutely ludicrous for him to even be considering saying what on his mind now, the two of them laying in the snow, frozen and wet, red from cold, the chaos of their impromptu battle still written all over them, but what else does he say, what else can he say to the man who listened while he shared the worst of himself and responded by lobbing a snowball at the back of his head? So, he takes a deep breath followed by a slow exhale and then:]
I love you.
THEY DO!!! i'm neither sane nor normal about them
But the hand tangled in his hair stays, and Clive is kept where he is, poised over Verso in freezing snow, waiting for a verdict―
―which is I love you, misting from that beautiful mouth.
It almost doesn't register. Blissful dissonance: the statement is at once too obvious and too blindsiding to digest. The three words that have defined Clive ever since they first kissed in witness of black-and-gold. That vague Something, flourishing under pressure and heartache.
For a moment, Clive forgets to breathe, bowled over by the substantive enormity of what they both knew to be evident. The ache in his chest is sweet, and paralyzing, and reaches far beyond what human physicality should allow for. ]
―As do I. [ Finally, on the tail end of a held inhale. ] I love you too, Verso.
[ Does it feel liberating to say it? Not quite: it feels like an unraveling. Clive unfurls, and god, he's sentimental about it. ]
Mon étoile. [ Hands still bracketing Verso's face, thumbs along the corners of both of Verso's pale, pale eyes. ] I love you.
[ His voice scrapes in the back of his throat; he's never said this before to anyone but Verso, and he wonders, briefly, if he can be believed. ]
I love you so much.
how dare these sad men tbh (please continue daring, sad men)
Aside from that one fleeting thought, it's impossible to focus on anything besides how the sentiment itself feels, anyway. Fantastically warm enough to stave off the very real cold, empowering in ways Verso hasn't experienced since he realised the truth of his existence and set out on his scrambling and thus far futile course to make it mean something other than suffering, every bit as heartbreaking and beautiful as music, just as inviting and soothing as a crackling fire in a familiar hearth.
The impulse to put it all to words strikes him, but soon he realises that he has no words available, just the desperately fond look in his eyes, and the subtle shift to how he moves his fingers through Clive's hair as if testing the believability of this newly spoken but long-felt reality. Eventually, after beginning his languid descent from the high of reciprocation, he brings back his smile as a crooked, impish thing that casts a new twinkle to his suddenly damp eyes.]
Enough to warm me back up?
[Casual though the request might be, the way that Verso's voice draws tight and falls quiet, the centring breath that follows and the smile that chases after it – those demonstrate the real truth of the matter. In the face of everything, their shared love feels like such a human expression in a world that has attempted to strip them both of their humanity that he can't help but embrace the normalcy of this extraordinary thing that they share. Clive makes him feel like a person, not a concept; he helps him understand who Verso No-Last-Name is, separate from the Dessendre who's fully stepped aside in this moment, leaving just the man who craves to become something more than a conduit of grief.
Still, he follows it up with a tease of a tickle of starlight through his fingertips at the nape of Clive's neck, and more words that call out his wet hair and his wet eyes and the way he radiates trust and belief and belonging.]
Look what you've done to me.
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Clive wants to hold him. Wants to be held by him. Is privately thrilled when he's asked for his warmth, because yes, he can give it; is more thrilled by the fact that Verso is asking, because yes, Verso is allowed to. He's permitted more than the handover of pain and burden, permitted to wear more than masks to ensure his comfort, permitted to inhabit himself without guilt.
No more enduring. Not here, anyway. Clive gathers Verso up into his arms (emboldened by the feeling of silver chroma on his skin), from pinning to sitting in a few fumbling seconds, tucked chest to chest. Lips skim over the ink-swirl scar on Verso's face, grazing just along the corner of one glossy eye to see if he can taste salt there. ]
You're the most beautiful thing I've ever seen.
[ Vulnerable and bare-faced. Guardian of nothing: just Verso. They're both in the process of figuring out what these things even mean, but even the vague shape of this misty-eyed struggle is lovely, so lovely. Clive wouldn't let Verso sacrifice it for anything, not even his own life.
A smile, and Clive finally does the sensible thing of misappropriating the monster in his chest as a furnace (a personal act of rebellion on his own part). Red-orange floods through him, out of him, covering them both where they sit embraced on snow and chasing away the immediate threat of freezing to death. With that pulse, he also presses I love you into the small of Verso's back: scarlet light right along his love's spine, tracing up to the nape of his neck. Impossible to misinterpret. ]
I think I'll be looking at you for a long time.
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Warmth enters him with Clive's chroma. It breezes across his cheek with Clive's breath. That expression of beauty – his beauty – delivered by the most breathtaking man he's ever met further warms his essences, those parts of him that aren't physical but that reap the greatest benefits from being held like this all the same.
Not all wounds heal. Not all guilt abates. Not all sins can be absolved. Verso has long understood these truths, even if it took a while for him to be able to hold them as his own without lying to himself. But he still maintains the belief that had guided him through the aftermath of what happened to Search & Rescue – that everyone brought to life on this Canvas deserves to exist, even if that might not be possible in the long term anymore – and so he lets himself remember how it feels when that allowance is granted to him as well, breathing deep and centring breaths as it suffuses him with new life and greater strength.
And he thinks that it's such a wonderful thing that this shared love exists across all of his senses now that he knows how it sounds in Clive's voice: like a rumble, like a rally, like a purr. Like a power to wield in its own right.
In this moment, though, that love manifests as a vibration up his back, a crackling flame that ignites across his scalp and casts him in a lovestruck haze. He rests more of his weight against Clive, curls himself closer against him, then takes his other hand, lifting it to his lips and kissing warmth into those still-chilled fingers. Laughter brings even more warmth to them as he releases a puff of it at the thought of catching Clive staring.]
You'll have to convince me to leave your arms first. They're in the running for my favourite place here, you know.
[Especially being held in the snow, pristine white stretching all around them, crystalline beneath the sun, beautiful like a blank sheet of music waiting for its potential to be realised. A soft sigh follows that thought and he nestles a little closer, seeking more of Clive's impossible warmth.]
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I don't know, [ Clive hums. ] The carousel sounded like stiff competition.
[ So he says, while pulling Verso more solidly against his chest. Still channeling ember-warm chroma through the both of them, acknowledging that this is perhaps not the best place for extended time without movement; he'd like to keep Verso forever like this, safe and seen with his heartbeat pressed close, but it might also be slightly traumatizing for Verso to doze off and wake up to Clive's frozen corpse.
Clive doesn't want to move, though, so he'll stay as long as Verso needs. Drawing circles along the small of Verso's back, layering kisses to his jaw, his temple, his mouth. ]
―Your friend might not appreciate me holding you all the time, either.
[ Assuming that Clive has heard enough about the Mysterious Monoco, who is their actual destination in this leg of their journey. Verso has been, as ever, remarkably tight-lipped about the man (?) in question, though Clive suspects that it's not out of any desire to obfuscate and more a mischievous sort of "you'll know when you know" deal. Like a long-hanging pause for effect. Clive has no idea what to expect, and that's probably the point.
If the guy (?) is where Verso thinks he is, anyway. If not, they'll press onward despite the absence, ever closer to the grieving mother in the distance.
Together, Clive reassures himself. He tips Verso's chin and kisses him more properly this time, breath to breath, and murmurs another brief je t'aime. ]
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Mm, I'd rather ride you.
[Definitely not in the snow, though, or in the wide open where anyone could theoretically stumble upon them, even if the chances of that are astronomically low, so in that context the carousel does come out on top. But it's all the way over there, and Clive is right here, touching him and kissing him and...
Bringing up Monoco.
Verso laughs, then relinquishes his hold on Clive's hand and leans slightly away. It's actually a very good point, though; Verso hasn't really put much thought into how he'll introduce Clive to Monoco, or how Monoco might respond, and now that he's flipping through the potential scenarios in his mind, well, he's not sure he's ready for the inevitable ribbing he'll be subjected to when he introduces him to his lover, fire incarnate. So, he pre-empts it instead, stroking Clive's hair into place as he speaks.]
Monoco? Don't worry about him. There's, uh, something else he'll be much more interested in.
[Gotta maintain those airs of mystery. If Monoco is present at the station then there is no doubt in Verso's mind that he'll find one way or another to encourage Clive into a duel, and Verso would be lying if he said he didn't want to see that, so, sorry, Clive, but this secret is remaining unspoken until Monoco sees fit to introduce himself. Those are thoughts for a slightly later time, however; Clive speaks love with his lips and tongue and murmurs, and Verso is helpless against the distraction, humming into the kiss and moving his hand over Clive's chest so that he can attune himself to the rhythm of his heartbeat and what it says about his feelings, too.
One more burst of starlight delivered on the tip of his tongue before he rises to his feet and once again holds out his hands for Clive to take in joining him.]
All right. You've done an awful job of convincing me, but... Let's get going.
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One last hit of beloved starlight, and they're back on their feet. Verso feels much closer when they link hands again, and while Clive will never deny the other man the time and space that he needs when considering the fraught nature of his past, it feels heartening to pick up at a brisker, more hopeful pace. 'Get over it' is not an option for either of them, but they can learn how to hold that knife in their chests without twisting the wound open, at least. ]
Alright. ―And I'll do my utmost not to interrupt a reunion between friends.
[ Even if Clive is still reeling a bit from I love you. Being on his best behavior with this ringing in his ears might be difficult, but he'll make himself sparse if Verso wants a bit of space while he catches up with someone he supposedly hasn't seen in a bit (time is a wobbly concept for Verso, Clive knows).
And if his stupid infatuation keeps running hot through his veins, well. Clive has two hands. He'll make do somewhere, and hope that he doesn't make a terrible first impression. Not the most elegant thing to consider as they make their way to the giant structure emerging in the horizon― a gaping maw that looks to be a station of sorts with broken tracks running crooked and sideways towards it― but a thought that Clive has, nevertheless.
Smitten. It's the only way Clive can justify how he keeps flicking his gaze to the side, catching Verso's face in profile, just looking at him occasionally as they walk. Not the kind of staring that implies that he's afraid Verso will leave or disappear if he stops being vigilant, but a self-indulgent sort that says that he really, really, really just likes the shape of him. ]
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At least not while everything still feels warm and hopeful and the haunting impossibility of his own death is, for once, far from the forefront of his thoughts.
So, they continue on like this, hand in hand, cold filtering through the warmth that Clive had infused in Verso but never taking root. Soon, the flames from within the station flicker into sight, gold and orange against the blue-shadowed snow, and the tracks make way for broken-up trains hanging in the air at odd angles. A Grandis watches from atop the stairs leading towards the station, a silent sentinel guarding what remains of his kind.]
Well, here we are.
[There is no sign of Monoco, but there never is this early on. After a quick glance up into the rafters doesn't provide any hints as to whether he's around, either, Verso shrugs and looks over to Clive.]
Oh, and fair warning: you should beware of falling Gestrals.
[Assuming that Monoco is even here to begin with; he could just as easily be elsewhere, accompanying Noco on some mission or another, perhaps, or going on adventures of his own. Again, there's no real fun in saying that, and Clive's reflexes are sharp, so Verso sidles further inside, completely oblivious to what actually awaits them on the other side of the arched entrance as he dramatically gestures Clive ahead.]
Apres vous.
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(Far too trusting: he does keep his eyes up towards the ceiling, despite the fact that the threat might actually come at him from anywhere else.)
Fortunately― or unfortunately, depending on perspective― there's no ambush. Just a nod from the Grandis standing vigil (Clive assumes that it recognizes Verso, and therefore they both get a pass), and more ice and twisted metal and orphaned compartments arching over snowy walkways in the grand, sprawling beyond. There are a few more scattered creatures huddled in and around broken trains who look at Clive and murmur something under their breaths; he thinks he hears the tail end of one of their bemused whispers, and it sounds an awful lot like "another Expeditioner?" ]
―Your friend may not be home, [ Clive offers to Verso, turning slightly to glance over his shoulder. Instead of the expected, familiar outline of the other man, however, there's yet another rotund Grandis, who has stepped out from behind the shadow of a collapsed pillar to approach Clive with its masked, mouthless face.
"If it's Monoco you seek," it says, its voice like warm gravel. "He went on an errand a few days back, and has yet to return."
Spoken with gentle conviction that 'return' is what Monoco will be doing. The whole thing takes Clive slightly off-guard, but he feels no compulsion to draw his sword against a creature that obviously means him no harm.
He opens his mouth to say something in affirmation― "I see, thank you"― but the Grandis continues before he can get a word in edgewise.
"Or if it's Joshua you seek," is the bombshell addendum, "he went to Frozen Hearts, though I warned him of the danger."
Joshua. Joshua. Clive, who now both looks and feels like he's had a bucket of ice water upturned on his head, stands there and tries, tries, to let that statement sink in.
Finally, he manages a strained: ] ―Joshua? A young man of my height, with golden hair and a kind demeanor?
[ The Grandis nods sagely. "Yes. Joshua."
Clive feels his knees give out; he slumps onto the snow, trying to understand.
"Oh," the Grandis rumbles, clearly concerned. ]
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But there isn't a single word that he can bring to mind that's less idle and of more consequence than Joshua.
Verso's back at Clive's side as soon as he can make it there, though not soon enough to catch him before he falls to the ground. That distance, too, is soon cleared with Verso kneeling before him, hands on his shoulders, head angled to get a better view of his face and, perhaps, a better understanding of what his mental state might be, even knowing that it'll most likely be obfuscated by shock.
When the silence drags on, Verso gives his shoulders a squeeze and takes his place in the conversation.]
How long ago did he leave?
[The Grandis hums, contemplative, then offers, "A short while after Monoco." Which is a small measure of relief for Verso, at least; it means that Joshua hasn't been gone for worryingly long, that Monoco's errand didn't involve chasing after an Expeditioner errant who was supposed to have returned. Small blessings, he thinks, even as he grapples with the possibility that this isn't the good news that it might seem to be on the surface.]
Did he say why he was headed out there?
["No, for I didn't ask." There's an edge of apology to its voice, a lilt of regret that remains unspoken. "Their time is already so short. I never wish to claim it for myself."
A sigh, but at least it's a start. Verso offers a quick thanks to the Grandis before grounding his focus back in Clive.]
Hey. Let's go sit by the fire, yeah?
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It should be impossible. Clive remembers- what does he remember? Fire and panic and screaming, screaming, so much screaming. He tries to pick at the fragments of that night, tries to slot Joshua into that chaos, and can't find him; maybe he'd closed his eyes to it all as it was happening, too stunned by how unfathomable it all was to place his brother in the middle of that nightmare.
Faltering steps take him to the suggested fire. When he sits, it's heavily; when he shakes his head, it's with raw disbelief. ]
He's alive, [ is the only thing he can think of to say, after a protracted silence. ] My brother- he still lives.
[ The revelation undoes him. His heart's been through a lot today- death and love and survival- and Clive laughs about it, eyes wet and brows downturned, happy, so fucking happy that he doesn't know what to do about all of this.
He shudders, sighs, and reaches for Verso's hand to steady himself. Wanting to make sure any of this is real at all, that he won't suddenly jerk awake on top of that pile of corpses again, steaming and shattered. ]
He's alive.
[ Again, as he glances towards Verso with the sort of desperation that says that he wants this to be true, that he wants this affirmed, lest he break again. He's not sure if he can endure losing Joshua a second time. ]
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Besides, Clive is strong enough to hope and lose hope, even if the desperation across his face carries his own fears to the contrary. Lacing his claimed fingers with Clive's, he runs the thumb of his other hand beneath his eyes, guiding away any tears that have fallen, helping free those that haven't yet.]
Yeah. And not too far from here.
[Assuming he hasn't left Frozen Hearts to continue on whatever journey he's embarked upon, but that thought doesn't need to be put out into the world, either. Especially when any distance must surely feel like too much distance, minutes stretching into hours, into days, into weeks.
Idly, he thinks about the scarf they'd found in the Forgotten Battlefield and he wonders if it meant something. Come find me in the mountains, perhaps. Take care not to catch a cold, brother. He's never met Joshua, but he can picture a vague-faced, golden-haired man with winter-rosed cheeks and a familiar smile, embracing his brother with... No. The thought stops there. Verso doesn't know Joshua. He can't begin to try and predict what he might feel or how he might respond. So, he stops trying to get ahead of things. It isn't place.]
What are you thinking?
[A question with specific intentions, yet asked generally in case Clive's mind hasn't caught up to Verso's. They're on Clive's time, now; he will occupy it however long and to whatever extents Clive needs him to.]
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His forehead rests against Verso's jaw. Close enough to feel the other man's warm breath moving the ends of his unruly hair. Clive's guiding light in the tumult of this upending, too-good-to-be-true news. The same, patient presence that'd endured weeks of Clive's stilted attempts at becoming human again.
When asked what he's thinking: ]
That I'd like to kiss you.
[ Not even a line. Sincerity, like the blunt end of a cudgel. Clive loves Verso far too much for Verso's own good. Tears cooling on his face, he squeezes Verso's hand again, trying to reorient himself back into this new reality, this new timeline where Joshua isn't dead and where there is still a possibility that his brother can be found. ]
―And that I need to go to him. Joshua. [ There's an assumption here, that of anyone that Clive has ever met, Verso would understand what it means to be bound to a sibling the way Clive is. He remembers Alicia sitting next to her brother on the piano bench, and the gentle way Verso had spoken to her, played music for her. ] The creature said that he went somewhere dangerous.
[ (Very rude of Clive to not call 'the creature' by its proper name, but he has to be forgiven his ignorance.) A low, long exhale, and he straightens somewhat. ]
Will you show me the way?
[ Selfish, he knows. Maybe he should be more graceful about this, and give Verso the option to stay here in the Station and wait for his friend to return instead of chasing shadows in Nevron-infested territory. They're lovers, yes, but they needn't be beholden to each other always; Verso is entitled to his freedoms. ]
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The way they're tucked together precludes that but not the reverse, so Verso shifts enough so that he can press kisses to Clive's forehead, then his temple, his own lips curling slightly more into a smile with each kiss. At least the Grandis have given them their space, he thinks – doubly so when Clive calls them creatures and Verso can only hope they're out of earshot – which is all the more reason to indulge. Not that he minds anyone knowing that he loves the man by his side and in his heart, he's just a man who appreciates his privacy. Especially in moments like this. It's no surprise to Verso that Clive intends to go after Joshua, and nor does Verso expect anything other than the immediate and indefinite halting of their own travels. Even had Clive not said anything to that effect, Verso still would have dragged him along down whichever paths Joshua might have taken.
That Clive wants Verso's help isn't much more of a surprise itself, but it feels good in ways he wouldn't have expected. If it's selfish, then that's its appeal – the resulting confirmation that Clive will lean on him, too, even when that leaning angles them towards danger with no guarantees of what truly awaits them.]
Of course.
[His answer comes quickly, easily, voice laced with encouragement and certainty and the assurance that he would have this no other way. Whatever they do, they do together.]
We'll head out when you're ready.
[A part of him wants to insist that they rest first, get some food in their bellies, dry themselves the rest of the way off, warm those places deep inside their bones that still bear traces of a chill. But, again, it isn't his call and he doesn't want to assert anything in this moment besides his desire to see this through with Clive, so he leaves it at that.]
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So: ] Thank you. [ Gratitude, on the tail end of a warm sigh. ] ―We'll spend the night here, and head out in the morning.
[ Flirting with the vague notion that Joshua might come back, while also acknowledging that it's been a long, long day. Again: death and love and survival. Clive's heart needs to rest as much as the rest of him does, desperate as it is to confirm whether this new development is truth or trick.
His fingers dance along Verso's jaw, appreciating his closeness before telegraphing that he'll relinquish it temporarily. There are tints that he needs to replenish, and other useful supplies and information besides that the Grandis could provide him with: he should also make sure that the blond-haired man really is his Joshua, though he really can't recall any other Expeditioner in recent history going by his brother's name.
One last soft kiss to the corner of Verso's mouth, and Clive untangles himself to do his due diligence. He'll return in time to help Verso with finding a cozy spot to untangle bedrolls, and help him hang their clothes over a warm fire to dry them properly for their subsequent impromptu journey. ]