annebonny: (adrift)
Anne Bonny ([personal profile] annebonny) wrote2020-07-03 12:01 am
Entry tags:

The Drain // for Jack

October 21, 2019

It's impossible to forget what's happened. She don't even get the freedom of dreams and a confusion on waking. It's a wonder she gets any sleep at all here, with the wrong-smelling air and the sounds both too much and too quiet, distant and strange and muffled. She wakes several times and each time she knows exactly where she is, the sheets damp from sweat and her a shivering mess, not just from cold. Jack is beside her, the only familiar thing in the whole world. He still smells right, still feels right, and even in this impossible nightmare he's still by her side, like whatever force made this happen knew even it wasn't strong enough to pry them apart. So she pulls close to him, stays close, sleeping fitfully with her head resting on his chest or burrowed in the hollow of his neck and shoulder. This is safe, has always been safe when nothing else was; now more than ever.

When dawn finally breaks, she lifts her head to look at him, waiting until he's opened his eyes before she says, "We can't stay here."

It's obvious. It doesn't need to be said. But she needs to say it, which is different. As if someone might be listening, someone who needs to hear her say it: "There has to be a way back."

As if speaking it aloud will make it so.
jackrackham: (windswept)

[personal profile] jackrackham 2020-08-21 06:49 pm (UTC)(link)
"If nothing else, we can see what's stopping us from walking out of the city." Greta had said that there's some sort of barrier, but he doesn't want to take her word for it. It's hard to even conceptualize what that would be. He hadn't seen any great walls or barricades surrounding the city, but he doubts it will be that simple- their arrival by sea had but sudden and startling and impossible. What then, is this barrier like?

They walk out, and Jack directs them towards the train tracks. The train hadn't been how they had arrived, but they are how many people arrive in Darrow and, it seems, the only clear way of travel beyond its borders. It's still cold and Jack draws his coat around himself, wondering if maybe this journey should have waited until they both have some warmer clothes, but everything still feels so uncertain. He can't help but wonder if there's some window of escape that's rapidly closing.

He looks at the strange businesses and cars with a mix of curiosity and wariness as they pass, and soon enough they're beyond the city. The tracks themselves are unfamiliar, but he likes the crunch of gravel underneath his boots and the blue-grey of morning sky. After the tumult of their arrival, this trip doesn't feel safe or good or certain, but doing something feels necessary.