Who: Thorir, Aaron, Julien What: Let's find the prodigal pigeon and haul him back home Where: Within the Neuschwanstein boundary; a mountainous place without that many people When: This weekend
yes okay maybe the main reason I cut this was for the text.
Thorir nods over at Aaron and then tilts his head over towards Julien. Go to him, you are much better equipped to handle the situation right now..
A month ago, Thorir would have gone over and tried to let physical contact aid the words said, but now... he said that he doesn't expect Julien to just forgive and forget, and while it hurts for his words to ring true, he accepts it. And it makes his own standing in this situation rather troublesome, and he is not alone here. Aaron has - hopefully - much more leverage.
Aaron gives Thorir a glance -- are you sure? Though he had never lashed out at Julien, his betrayal is older, and Aaron isn't sure how deep the distance between them is. He's done his part to embitter Julien.
But he will try.
He steps forward, sinking to a crouch, one knee to the ground in front of where Julien's face is buried in straw.
"What was that?" he asks, though he knows full well what was said.
Julien levels out his head so his chin is along the ground and hides in the straw, as flattened as he can get. His back is still over knee high, expanding and shrinking with each breath. Past him a black cloak is crumpled, partly concealed by his bedding.
"Don't look at me. Don't!" He groans, aware that this is pathetic, that he is pathetic. He should be quiet. They'll go away. "I don't want anyone to see me like this."
"No?" asks Aaron, gently. "It didn't keep you from helping those skiers." He knows about that. Of course he knows about that. Tracking sightings of the giant white bird had helped him narrow down Julien's location.
It's totally different, but he doesn't want to explain how. It would be work, and Aaron would just pick apart everything. Julien lays there and folds his wings, bringing scattered straw with them back over his body. Like an ostrich, he thinks suddenly, and twitches with revulsion.
He doesn't know what he wants. Everything he can think of, he doesn't like, right down to this moment stretching out unchanging.
"It's true. I knew. I saw you before I came here. And I came anyway."
His tone is mild -- reminding, not scolding.
"Come back with me," Aaron says. He's asking, advising, but not commanding. "It won't be easy. I can't promise that it will be all right. It probably won't. But I can promise that it won't be all bad, and that it will be better than staying up here alone.
He moves his head, and the straw rustles. One round eye can be seen looking up under the grasses and the protective inner eyelid. It seems about as big as a tangerine.
After Julien had changed Gabriel had come and helped him. That help had been important. Julien hadn't been able to stand or lift his head, and Gabriel's aura and the tea he made were soothing, encouraging. But Gabe had been completely oblivious to how horrified Julien had been whenever he reached out and stroked his head. Maybe he hadn't meant anything by it, thought it was like ruffling his hair. It still wasn't something Julien could stand, right then.
"It's been so hard," he says, which isn't an answer. "You don't even know. My face is gone. Just eating is hard."
"But not impossible. You'll learn. It'll come easier."
He's not going to stroke Julien's head. If Julien had been sensitive about the idea of being a bird, being treated like an animal now would be terrible.
Aaron switches to Sindarin.
"Nimbatho--ú-breithoch."
It's then that he reaches forward, kneeling properly to be sure he doesn't overbalance, and takes the sides of Julien's face, hooking fingers under the jaw. If Julien recoils, he'll pull back, but it isn't something one would do to an animal unless one wanted one's hands bitten.
Or unless one knew the animal tolerated or enjoyed being grabbed by the face. Julien's head seems much bigger, what with the dense feathers and the way his face elongates and narrows towards his beak. Still his jawbones at that point feel almost human, incongruous given the rest of him. The feathers are damp and a little bit crusted. He's wept since the last time he washed his face.
"None of this should've happened," he tells Aaron faintly. Straw is scattered over his face and head like the lattice for a disorganized geodesic dome. "I don't know what to do. I don't know how to go forward."
"Sometimes, you don't," Aaron says, keeping his hands where they are. "Sometimes, the only thing you can do is get up. But it's important that you do. You'll figure out where to go from there."
If Julien doesn't fight him, he'll tug gently upward. It's barely enough to pull Julien's face off of the ground -- it's intended to help Julien get his head up, not to do it for him.
Julien heaves a huge and gusty sigh that goes on for almost ten seconds, and then draws his head back so it's over his shoulders, the S-curve of his neck hiding in feathers, which rouse enough that his face is partially obscured. Only then does he shift his feet and rise off his heels.
Small horse. Tiny car. Refrigerator box. Between the bulk of his keel and the density of feathers it's hard to tell how this came from a human body, he's so big and seemingly shapeless. His body is arranged more horizontally than vertically, especially when he doesn't feel up to holding himself upright, but like this the level of his eyes is close to what it was when all this started. His body feathers are kept ruffled and round, disarrayed against cold and unhappiness enough to feel ill.
"All right." Resignation and weariness slow his voice. "I came out here to feel better. It's not working."
Aaron climbs back to his own feet. He reaches forward and brushes some of the straw off of Julien's head and shoulders, quick and deft, like patting down someone who fell in grass. He squares his shoulders, taking in a deep breath himself and letting it out.
"Time to try something else, then. Where do you think you'll go?"
He shuts his inner eyelids while Aaron is brushing off some of the straw, instinctively protecting his eyes. "I don't know. Not where I was before. I can't stand that. People shouldn't just... look at me. Not right now."
There is a long pause. Julien does make friends easily. Lately though many are either in spite of or because of what he's looked like. He knows it.
So many of his friends on the network have gone off, and he has more contact with some than others. Ariel, maybe, though Killian being there would make it awkward.
On the network just now all he can think of are Liam, and Gabriel, and Isabela. Liam came to help and Julien sent him away, he'll think of the difference. Gabriel came after and tried his best, and petted him. -but he has a house in Locke which he isn't living in, not right now. Isabela... he can't cringe very well. How do you go up to your lover and say It's me?
"...yeah," he says at last. He can break in at the Stark mansion if it comes to that. "Sure."
Yes, that's incredibly convincing. Aaron is very sure you thought of someone to stay with.
"Do you need one?" he presses. Without his echoes, maybe he would have thought it best to let it lie, but now? He's been giving Julien space for a year, and it's left Julien lashing out. Space is clearly not the best thing here.
He flicks his wings partially open and refolds them. "I know a couple places I can go," Julien says defensively.
It will be warmer in one of the other zones. He won't need shelter. He can find food and water. If Julien has learned anything in the two weeks he's been out here, other than coordination and what it is to fly over mountains on his own power, it's that his body is very good at surviving, discomfort or not.
"My house in Locke City isn't ideal," he says. "There's not much space, and it would be hard to come and go unnoticed. But if it's better than where you're thinking, and especially if where you're thinking is hiding in the middle of nowhere again, you'd be welcome."
"It has doorknobs." He's been there, he remembers. Julien has had so much trouble with doorknobs. Scales slide off them, feathers can't grip them well. It won't be any better now.
"Anyway if I go to Locke it won't be the middle of nowhere, and that's a shitty place to hide when you turn into a- a giant- this." Somehow he can't bring himself to say anything more specific just now.
"As if you couldn't work around that if you put your mind to it," Aaron says, mildly challenging.
"But I won't deny that Locke is a terrible place to hide." In the TV show that is this game, there is a dramatic beat there, and the audience will wonder what's up with that heavy-handed foreshadowing.
"I won't tell you where to go. But you can come to me, if you need it. That hasn't changed."
Julien does not want to fight, not really. He's tired of all this. His wings come out of their tight fold to droop, the tips of his primaries touching straw.
"I do know a place," he mutters. "It's not good for me in the long term, but that's incentive to leave, isn't it. I wouldn't be a strain on the owner."
Because if he goes with Aaron, he will be a strain. Julien knows how small that house is, how big he is now, how much he eats, and Aaron will want to help him, when he's putting plenty of himself into work as it is.
He looks back, eyes huge and round and blue. Minuscule adjustments in the sizes of his pupils, drawn small now with effort, are all that make him look less opaque than a trapped animal. It's a hell of a poker face, or it could be if weariness and hurt and defeat hadn't made themselves far too clear by now.
"Just the cloak. I can't fly wearing it." He'd had a pin that he was pretty sure he'd taken from Aaron, but it had vanished days ago, and even Julien's ridiculous eyesight, expanded even farther now that his eyes are so enormous, hadn't helped him to find it. Anyway even with the pin, the cloak had flapped like a flag in a high wind and got unmanageable.
Julien turns his head - with his neck held coiled like this the motion looks almost owl-like - to face away. "I hate you," he says, and in the same breath, "I missed you."
Aaron takes a breath, closes his eyes, and sighs it out.
"I know," he says, resigned. "I could have made last year easier for you, and I didn't. I'm sorry."
He offers no excuses. Aaron recognizes that some of it was not his fault -- that losing his Echoes was out of his control. However, that doesn't change how it made Julien feel.
He bends down, picks up the cloak, and shakes it out. He begins to fold it.
At last Julien shifts on his feet, taking a couple of steps. He's so painfully aware, here, of how he's forced to move his legs, crouched and wide, almost waddling. The center of his gravity is around his knees instead of having much to do with his hips. Ponderously he swings the keel of his chest through a turn.
And mushes the crown of his head against the back of Aaron's coat, between the shoulderblades, pressing hard enough to splay out his feathers, to feel through the layers. "I," he says, and stops, breathing slowly.
He hadn't meant to hurt Aaron. -well, yes. He had. Julien was so, so endlessly good at picking himself up and dusting himself off and carrying on like everything was fine. People expected it. Give him time and he was always okay, like it came automatically and had no cost, like backsliding was never an issue. They all hung above him, uncomprehending. He wanted...
So, okay, he had meant to hurt Aaron. But having done it didn't make him feel any better. Julien presses against him with the crown of his head, and his operculum, and the point of his beak. "You need to hug me," he says.
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A month ago, Thorir would have gone over and tried to let physical contact aid the words said, but now... he said that he doesn't expect Julien to just forgive and forget, and while it hurts for his words to ring true, he accepts it. And it makes his own standing in this situation rather troublesome, and he is not alone here. Aaron has - hopefully - much more leverage.
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But he will try.
He steps forward, sinking to a crouch, one knee to the ground in front of where Julien's face is buried in straw.
"What was that?" he asks, though he knows full well what was said.
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"Don't look at me. Don't!" He groans, aware that this is pathetic, that he is pathetic. He should be quiet. They'll go away. "I don't want anyone to see me like this."
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He doesn't know what he wants. Everything he can think of, he doesn't like, right down to this moment stretching out unchanging.
"I know you knew. You don't have to rub it in."
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His tone is mild -- reminding, not scolding.
"Come back with me," Aaron says. He's asking, advising, but not commanding. "It won't be easy. I can't promise that it will be all right. It probably won't. But I can promise that it won't be all bad, and that it will be better than staying up here alone.
"Will you come back?"
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After Julien had changed Gabriel had come and helped him. That help had been important. Julien hadn't been able to stand or lift his head, and Gabriel's aura and the tea he made were soothing, encouraging. But Gabe had been completely oblivious to how horrified Julien had been whenever he reached out and stroked his head. Maybe he hadn't meant anything by it, thought it was like ruffling his hair. It still wasn't something Julien could stand, right then.
"It's been so hard," he says, which isn't an answer. "You don't even know. My face is gone. Just eating is hard."
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He's not going to stroke Julien's head. If Julien had been sensitive about the idea of being a bird, being treated like an animal now would be terrible.
Aaron switches to Sindarin.
"Nimbatho--ú-breithoch."
It's then that he reaches forward, kneeling properly to be sure he doesn't overbalance, and takes the sides of Julien's face, hooking fingers under the jaw. If Julien recoils, he'll pull back, but it isn't something one would do to an animal unless one wanted one's hands bitten.
"Gi ú-eriol."
A beat.
"Or, at least, you don't have to be."
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"None of this should've happened," he tells Aaron faintly. Straw is scattered over his face and head like the lattice for a disorganized geodesic dome. "I don't know what to do. I don't know how to go forward."
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If Julien doesn't fight him, he'll tug gently upward. It's barely enough to pull Julien's face off of the ground -- it's intended to help Julien get his head up, not to do it for him.
"Come on," he murmurs. "Off the ground with you."
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Small horse. Tiny car. Refrigerator box. Between the bulk of his keel and the density of feathers it's hard to tell how this came from a human body, he's so big and seemingly shapeless. His body is arranged more horizontally than vertically, especially when he doesn't feel up to holding himself upright, but like this the level of his eyes is close to what it was when all this started. His body feathers are kept ruffled and round, disarrayed against cold and unhappiness enough to feel ill.
"All right." Resignation and weariness slow his voice. "I came out here to feel better. It's not working."
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"Time to try something else, then. Where do you think you'll go?"
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Julien has friends, Aaron knows; he's never lacked for them. Surely there must be someone.
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So many of his friends on the network have gone off, and he has more contact with some than others. Ariel, maybe, though Killian being there would make it awkward.
On the network just now all he can think of are Liam, and Gabriel, and Isabela. Liam came to help and Julien sent him away, he'll think of the difference. Gabriel came after and tried his best, and petted him. -but he has a house in Locke which he isn't living in, not right now. Isabela... he can't cringe very well. How do you go up to your lover and say It's me?
"...yeah," he says at last. He can break in at the Stark mansion if it comes to that. "Sure."
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"Do you need one?" he presses. Without his echoes, maybe he would have thought it best to let it lie, but now? He's been giving Julien space for a year, and it's left Julien lashing out. Space is clearly not the best thing here.
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It will be warmer in one of the other zones. He won't need shelter. He can find food and water. If Julien has learned anything in the two weeks he's been out here, other than coordination and what it is to fly over mountains on his own power, it's that his body is very good at surviving, discomfort or not.
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"My house in Locke City isn't ideal," he says. "There's not much space, and it would be hard to come and go unnoticed. But if it's better than where you're thinking, and especially if where you're thinking is hiding in the middle of nowhere again, you'd be welcome."
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"Anyway if I go to Locke it won't be the middle of nowhere, and that's a shitty place to hide when you turn into a- a giant- this." Somehow he can't bring himself to say anything more specific just now.
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"But I won't deny that Locke is a terrible place to hide." In the TV show that is this game, there is a dramatic beat there, and the audience will wonder what's up with that heavy-handed foreshadowing.
"I won't tell you where to go. But you can come to me, if you need it. That hasn't changed."
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"I do know a place," he mutters. "It's not good for me in the long term, but that's incentive to leave, isn't it. I wouldn't be a strain on the owner."
Because if he goes with Aaron, he will be a strain. Julien knows how small that house is, how big he is now, how much he eats, and Aaron will want to help him, when he's putting plenty of himself into work as it is.
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"All right. Pack up whatever you've got here and we'll go."
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"Just the cloak. I can't fly wearing it." He'd had a pin that he was pretty sure he'd taken from Aaron, but it had vanished days ago, and even Julien's ridiculous eyesight, expanded even farther now that his eyes are so enormous, hadn't helped him to find it. Anyway even with the pin, the cloak had flapped like a flag in a high wind and got unmanageable.
Julien turns his head - with his neck held coiled like this the motion looks almost owl-like - to face away. "I hate you," he says, and in the same breath, "I missed you."
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Aaron takes a breath, closes his eyes, and sighs it out.
"I know," he says, resigned. "I could have made last year easier for you, and I didn't. I'm sorry."
He offers no excuses. Aaron recognizes that some of it was not his fault -- that losing his Echoes was out of his control. However, that doesn't change how it made Julien feel.
He bends down, picks up the cloak, and shakes it out. He begins to fold it.
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And mushes the crown of his head against the back of Aaron's coat, between the shoulderblades, pressing hard enough to splay out his feathers, to feel through the layers. "I," he says, and stops, breathing slowly.
He hadn't meant to hurt Aaron. -well, yes. He had. Julien was so, so endlessly good at picking himself up and dusting himself off and carrying on like everything was fine. People expected it. Give him time and he was always okay, like it came automatically and had no cost, like backsliding was never an issue. They all hung above him, uncomprehending. He wanted...
So, okay, he had meant to hurt Aaron. But having done it didn't make him feel any better. Julien presses against him with the crown of his head, and his operculum, and the point of his beak. "You need to hug me," he says.
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