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I'm on waves, out being tossed
Eventually, the lack of sleep was always going to catch up to him. Through three sleepless nights, or at least mostly sleepless, S knew it, exhaustion increasing, though easy enough to push past with so much else to focus on. Still, it was only ever a temporary solution at best, nothing that could have lasted much longer than it did. With that being the case, it shouldn't be such a surprise when, after that third night, on their third full day together, he hits a wall, no longer able to keep his eyes open, drifting off while sitting on the couch. He isn't expecting it all the same, though even that, he barely registers, just as he's only half-aware of J ushering him back to bed, too tired to protest or to focus on why he should.
It's different when he wakes up. S grew accustomed a long time ago to sleeping and waking up alone, though it was one of the most difficult things about all that solitude, no longer having a warm body beside him at such times. He and J shared a bed for years, even before their relationship became more than platonic, cuddling together for warmth in the one bed in their small studio when the weather began to change. Of course, he felt it then, the beginning of something more, and it wasn't all that long after that they admitted their feelings for each other, but they spent ages like that. Even when they fought, even when J would barely speak to him, he still had the anchor of J's presence at his side, the distance sometimes easier to breach that way. It was comforting, always, but like so much else, he never thought he would lose it until he did.
He had months, though, after J left, after J died. At some point, following the former, it just became routine, as sad and empty as everything else about his life, J's absence as tangible as it ever was to be with him. It shouldn't, then, have taken only three nights to change that. They've hardly been apart in that time, though, save for brief moments of one going into another room for something or other. He's spent every night holding J as he slept, so overwhelmingly grateful to be able to do so, determined to do anything in his power to keep him safe.
So, when S wakes up distinctly alone, disoriented and unaware even of how long he's been asleep, the first thing he feels is cold, sheer terror.
For moments — sometimes hours, even — at a time, he's managed not to dwell on it. It's always been there, though, never too far from his thoughts, always ready to creep back in, the memory of how J sounded that first day on his couch, what S was so fucking scared he might do, J's promise not to stay, but to try. Even that was more than S could have asked for, and yet he knows it's not a guarantee, either. And while the past couple of days have been good more often than not, there's no telling what might happen with J alone, left to his own thoughts. Believing that a couple of decent days would be enough to override all that darkness would be entirely too naïve, even for S; it isn't as if he ever stood a chance against it before, and things are far worse now than they ever were then, even if, in some ways, they're better, too. He doesn't know how long it's been, he doesn't know what might have happened, and it's too much, his chest so tight that it feels like he can't breathe. Despite still being tired and out of sorts, it takes him only moments to pull himself out of bed, trying not to move quite as frantically as he feels but unable to take his time about it.
Not so very long ago at all, he woke up to find out, not very long after, that J was already gone. Now, as he moves out of the bedroom and down the hall, he silently prays to whatever deities might exist that he won't be too late again. He only just got J back. He isn't at all ready to lose him again.
He's dimly aware of a few things — muffled noise that he can't distinguish, the fact that the bathroom door is still open and the light off, which is something of a relief in its own right, though he doesn't really feel it until he rounds the corner and sees J sitting on the couch, watching TV. Overwhelmed and breathless, trembling with worry, he presses his free hand to his chest, the other resting against the wall for support he's surprised to realize how much he needs. "You're alright," he finally manages to say, though it's more to himself than anything else, his voice so small he's not even sure it will be fully audible over the sound of whatever J is watching. He doesn't care, just taking in the sight of him, mercifully alive and alright, relief mingling with the panic he can't yet shake off.
It's different when he wakes up. S grew accustomed a long time ago to sleeping and waking up alone, though it was one of the most difficult things about all that solitude, no longer having a warm body beside him at such times. He and J shared a bed for years, even before their relationship became more than platonic, cuddling together for warmth in the one bed in their small studio when the weather began to change. Of course, he felt it then, the beginning of something more, and it wasn't all that long after that they admitted their feelings for each other, but they spent ages like that. Even when they fought, even when J would barely speak to him, he still had the anchor of J's presence at his side, the distance sometimes easier to breach that way. It was comforting, always, but like so much else, he never thought he would lose it until he did.
He had months, though, after J left, after J died. At some point, following the former, it just became routine, as sad and empty as everything else about his life, J's absence as tangible as it ever was to be with him. It shouldn't, then, have taken only three nights to change that. They've hardly been apart in that time, though, save for brief moments of one going into another room for something or other. He's spent every night holding J as he slept, so overwhelmingly grateful to be able to do so, determined to do anything in his power to keep him safe.
So, when S wakes up distinctly alone, disoriented and unaware even of how long he's been asleep, the first thing he feels is cold, sheer terror.
For moments — sometimes hours, even — at a time, he's managed not to dwell on it. It's always been there, though, never too far from his thoughts, always ready to creep back in, the memory of how J sounded that first day on his couch, what S was so fucking scared he might do, J's promise not to stay, but to try. Even that was more than S could have asked for, and yet he knows it's not a guarantee, either. And while the past couple of days have been good more often than not, there's no telling what might happen with J alone, left to his own thoughts. Believing that a couple of decent days would be enough to override all that darkness would be entirely too naïve, even for S; it isn't as if he ever stood a chance against it before, and things are far worse now than they ever were then, even if, in some ways, they're better, too. He doesn't know how long it's been, he doesn't know what might have happened, and it's too much, his chest so tight that it feels like he can't breathe. Despite still being tired and out of sorts, it takes him only moments to pull himself out of bed, trying not to move quite as frantically as he feels but unable to take his time about it.
Not so very long ago at all, he woke up to find out, not very long after, that J was already gone. Now, as he moves out of the bedroom and down the hall, he silently prays to whatever deities might exist that he won't be too late again. He only just got J back. He isn't at all ready to lose him again.
He's dimly aware of a few things — muffled noise that he can't distinguish, the fact that the bathroom door is still open and the light off, which is something of a relief in its own right, though he doesn't really feel it until he rounds the corner and sees J sitting on the couch, watching TV. Overwhelmed and breathless, trembling with worry, he presses his free hand to his chest, the other resting against the wall for support he's surprised to realize how much he needs. "You're alright," he finally manages to say, though it's more to himself than anything else, his voice so small he's not even sure it will be fully audible over the sound of whatever J is watching. He doesn't care, just taking in the sight of him, mercifully alive and alright, relief mingling with the panic he can't yet shake off.
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But S is crying, too, even if he tries to hide it. That's one of the hardest parts of all of this. If it were just him, he thinks, he probably would give up. None of this would be worth it for him to keep on living alone, nothing left but the fear and the guilt. For this, though, for S, for love — he has to try. He has to win. But just as S is the one who would be left behind if he's unable to carry on, S is the one who has to bear witness to all of this now. Either way, J knows, he'll hurt him. But like this, at least, he can offer some comfort in return.
He ducks forward, brushing a kiss against S's cheek in turn. "I mean more... I feel selfish saying it hurts at all," he says, "when... I know you're right. It's... hard. It has been for a long time. But with what I did — it feels wrong to say so." He worries at his lower lip, shame creeping into his expression. "I don't know. I'm trying to figure it out. It's not fair to whine about how much it hurts that I have to live with what I did when other people don't get to. But it's not fair either if I get the chance and I spend all of it being sad and guilty. And I want this. I'm so lucky..." His voice wobbles a little and he frowns, nose wrinkling, at the sound of it. "I am. And then I feel guilty for being lucky and getting what I want. For being... relieved."
It's a horrible cycle. It gets better sometimes, the reality of what he did fading into the background, but that makes it worse when he remembers. Maybe as time goes on, all of it will be easier, or he'll figure out some philosophical stance that lets him get on with his life. Right now all he knows for sure is that it's worth it regardless. This time, he kisses S on the lips, soft and brief. "I know it sounds bad," he says. "I promise, I'm telling you. Maybe not every time I think about it, but... when it's more than a passing thought. I'm... mostly trying not to think about it."
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He does, though, drop his hand from J's shoulder so he can wrap his arms around himself instead, as if physically trying to hold himself together. It makes little real difference, but it's the best he can do. He can't fall apart like this, he can't. If he wants J to be able to talk to him about this, and he does, then he has to be able to bear it. That doesn't make it any easier, though, to consider J feeling that way and to know that there's nothing he can do but be here, which has only ever been inadequate before. How could he even hope to stand up to all of that? What difference could he possibly make? He never could before, and things weren't nearly as bad then as they are now.
All he can do is try, taking a breath that's shallower, shakier than he would like it to be. If nothing else, there are things he knows he needs to say here, small truths that J should know. "I don't think it's wrong," he murmurs, his voice wavering, "or unfair. I think how you feel matters, too. And you aren't telling anyone but me, so..." Trailing off, still all drawn in on himself, he shrugs. Maybe it won't change anything about how J sees it, but J should at least know how he feels about it. J did horrible things, yes; S can't and wouldn't try to deny that. But that doesn't make him any less deserving of sympathy, too, or lessen the extent of his suffering. Nothing could change his mind about that. He knew how he felt even before he saw J struggling with it in person. Everything that's happened in the last few days only makes him more certain that he's right about this, whether or not J ever agrees with him about it.
"I know you might not ever see it that way," he adds, quieter still. "But I made up my mind a long time ago."
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It helps, a little, to hear S acknowledge that, knowing that J might never be able to see it the way S does. Neither of them wants him just to wipe this away and pretend nothing happened. No one else ever needs to know, but the one thing J is certain of is that he can't just will himself to forget. It would be like killing them all over again, denying what he did, a further step from goodness.
It helps, too, to hear how certain S is, in spite of how softly he speaks and the way J knows he's still crying. Truthfully, though guilt plagued J for a long time before he stopped, though he knew in that last week that he couldn't continue, it was only in his final hours that he really came to grips with what he had become. It was as if his mind protected him from this one thing, shielding him from that word until the professor used it, called him what he was in clear and unyielding language. Murderer. As if that unlocked the door his mind had kept so carefully closed, it wasn't far from there to monster. He isn't well. He's known that for a long while now, though only in fits and starts, gaining a more solid form in only the last few days. But that hasn't seemed to him like cause for sympathy. Once he thought himself a monster, he began to lose his sense of himself as a person, not some terrible creature; it's S's love and tenderness, his persistence in seeing it for J, that's helping to keep him aware of himself as nothing more or less than human.
Again J lifts his head, again he presses a kiss to S's cheek. "I love you," he murmurs. He knows what S will say if he tries to thank him; this is the best he can do, inadequate though it is. It's also the only thing he knows how to say at first, S's words tumbling through his mind. "I think... maybe that's something else you'll have to keep telling me. Until I can think it for myself." He bites his lip, thinking. "It's like hearing it gives me permission. I don't know if that makes sense. As if I can't permit myself to feel I get to have those feelings, but if you say it's okay... I don't understand it, but it's true."
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"I'll tell you," he replies, his voice breaking. "I will. As many times as you need to hear it." It's the least he can do, really, what he's felt since he first got and read J's journal, long before he had any reason to believe that they could be reunited like this. The pain he felt was there in every word, the depth of it learned about too late for S to do anything about it. He worried, and he knew something must have been wrong, but he had no idea the extent of it until J was already gone. That is, at least in part, exactly why he wants J to be able to turn to him with these things, afraid now that that won't happen if he just starts to cry every time the subject comes up.
He wants to apologize, but he's sure J wouldn't want to hear it. He keeps trying to breathe instead, desperately attempting to get himself under control, trembling a little with the effort it takes. Even now that J is alive again, grief isn't so easily quieted, that much stronger when crossed with worry this intense. Losing J once very nearly broke him. He can't bear the thought of losing him again, of J being so unhappy and so guilt-ridden that he won't feel like he can stay alive; he can't say that, not wanting to give J one more reason to feel guilty if it does come to that, even as a part of him wants, as he did a couple of days ago, to beg J to stay. Instead, he says just, "I love you so much."
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"I love you, too," he murmurs instead, reaching up to stroke S's hair. "More than anything, I love you." He isn't going to make promises he isn't certain he can keep, but in this, too, he can try to be honest. "I love you more than I hurt. I don't know if it'll ever stop hurting, but I know I want to live. You make me want to live. I don't think I was before, not for a long time. I just... was. And now... this is all I want. Just to be here, alive, with you."
Hand dropping to S's cheek, he runs his thumb gently over it, swiping away tears even as they keep falling. As badly as it hurts to see S like this, there's a strange kind of relief in it, too, almost a catharsis. They haven't been able to be this honest in a long, long time, not like they have been the last couple days. This, he thinks, is the kind of thing he'll need to keep reminding S of, too. "Have you ever seen me give up when I want something?"
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J does raise a good point, though, prompting a faint, watery almost-laugh from S, followed by a sniffle. "Never," he says, all fond, even adoring, despite his tears, though it's only a moment before his expression turns bittersweet, tinged with an apologetic self-consciousness. "Except me." There's nothing accusatory in it, just a little sad. When J is so stubborn — when he really never does give up when he wants something — it stung that much more to have J walk out on him and shut him out entirely for so long. It makes him worry, too, that if he wasn't enough before, wasn't worth fighting for, then he won't be again. Even that, though, he could live with as long as J stayed safe and alive. If happiness for him lies elsewhere, if that last part of what he's just said he wants changes, then S can't make him stay. He can only hope J will want to.
"It's all I want, too," he adds, voice dropping to a mumble, eyes closing for a moment as he tries to memorize the soft touch of J's hand against his cheek. There were so many details he couldn't remember clearly before, things he never expected to lose until he'd already lost them. Fragile as this is, he won't make that mistake again this time.
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It isn't like it was an easy decision. It was a burst of desperation, of guilt and pain, struggling for any kind of exit, but it wasn't simple, no matter how bad things were. Or, in a way, it was — something that circled through his mind for a while, an erratic rhythm creeping in and out, taunting and cruel, a possibility that felt sharp as a knife, terrible and impossible to ignore. He pushed it aside again and again until he couldn't. Until, as with so much else, he simply snapped. And none of it makes it okay, and none of it makes it easy to explain. He's not sure he can, not sure anything could justify hurting S the way he has, even as he knows S isn't looking for an apology. That isn't why he said it, and J would rather hear it than not, but it stings terribly.
"I should have fought harder," he says quietly. He had a lot of reasons. Few of them made any sense at all. At least, looking back now, he doesn't think they did. "I told myself it would be better for both of us if I left, but... I was just being selfish. Wanting to be able to compose again..." That hurts, too. There was a time he loved music with all every bit of his being, loved it as much as he loved S, thought he'd devote his life to it. There was a time when that was what made him feel alive, one of the only things that could really light him up. Now there's nothing left of it but ashes. "I was stupid and selfish and scared. And wrong — Sihyun-ah, I swear to you, that won't ever happen again. I promise."
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He couldn't have asked J to choose him over his music. He wouldn't have expected that. J was always the more ambitious of the two of them, and S can only imagine how miserable he would have been, how much a different sort of resentment might have built instead. It should never have had to be only one of them or the other, but he doesn't know how to say that any more than he knows how to say that he should have given up composing instead. However much it would have hurt, it would have done so less than losing J and everything that happened after, and maybe then, J wouldn't have been so jealous or felt so unable to write. Part of why S loved it so much was because it was something they shared, but it wasn't worth holding onto it to the point of driving them apart, especially when he wound up losing his own ability to write anyway.
"It wasn't selfish to want to keep doing what you love," he says, quiet, a little reluctant. By the end, he's not sure J did love it anymore, but S is likewise unsure how to bring that up. Despite this being one of the first times they've spoken about it, the moment doesn't seem quite right for it anyway, at least not yet, when it feels more important to try to mask the implied truth in his own words: that J loved music more than he loved him. S believes that, and he's alright with it, but he doesn't want to hurt J even more by making it too clear. "It's just... That was the only time. That I've ever seen you stop fighting."
He wants to believe J now. And he does believe that J means it, but deep down, he still worries that it will come to that again, that all of the anger and resentment will come back, that everything that drove J crazy about him before will do so again. Things were so bad for so long, and they've only just gotten back together, making it hard to say what will happen when the rush of so impossibly reuniting wears off.
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He loved music before he loved S, before he even knew who S was. It's been a part of him for as long as he can remember. Even when he couldn't make himself write, even when every note sounded wrong, there was hardly a day that went by that he didn't try. This is the longest he's gone without touching a piano since he first got one of his own. What he hates about that, more than its absence, is that it's a relief. He misses music in a distant, background way, but for the first time in months, he has room to breathe.
"I don't know if I loved it anymore," he admits quietly, his voice tight. Just saying it is terrifying, and he shrinks in on himself, pushing himself to keep talking, to say anything that isn't that. "I just... wanted it back. I didn't know who I was anymore. I was scared and confused — I was fighting everything else, Hyunie." It sounds like an excuse. He hates that. It is an excuse, a stupid one, and he didn't want to try and defend his behavior when he knows he was in the wrong. It spills out of him anyway. There was only so much he could handle, and, back then, he didn't know how to handle any of it anyway. "I was fighting to feel like I was anyone at all. It was the worst mistake I could have made, not staying. I should have just told you everything."
He doesn't know how to say it more clearly. He might have the other day — he really can't remember — but it's hard to put into words without making things worse. In the end, his leaving wasn't about S at all, but that sounds horrible and he knows it. It should have been. Like everything else about their relationship, it should have been, and they should have talked, and he should have ignored the paranoia and trusted S instead, but he doesn't know how to explain any of it right.
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If just thinking so feels cruel, though, then saying so would be even worse. So would pointing out that if J was fighting everything else, it still means he came last. Even the way J phrases it as having wanted music back — it's hard to hear that and not think that J didn't want him back, at least not enough to measure up to that, and S feels awful for even considering it. It doesn't matter now, it can't matter, and hurt as he might be, it isn't as if he holds a grudge. He wouldn't have spent so long attempting to get J back if he did. With what he knows now, he understands it far better than he did back then anyway. He just can't change how much it stings.
But then, so does the way J sounds now, making S feel a surge of guilt. It has to be better, he thinks, or at least hopes, to say it rather than holding it in, but J seems about as hurt for having left as S was — is — by J's leaving. "At least I know now," he murmurs, though he's not sure how reassuring it will be when he still can't manage to stop crying. Still, he can't help the impulse to try to make this better somehow, though he's not the one who walked out on what they had. "Anything you ever want to tell me... I promise, I'm here. I'll listen."
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None of that makes J any less frustrated, both with himself and, a little bit, with S. "You can be mad at me," he says, almost pleading for it. He reaches for S's hands, grasping them tight, as he leans toward him. "I know — I know now, I can talk to you, and I will, but you don't have to just support me all the time. I was horrible, you can say that."
He doesn't actually want that to be the case, but after everything he did to S, a part of him wants to hear it anyway. It isn't right that he kept hurting S again and again, that he's doing so now, that there's no excuse for the fact that he gave up on them. He had reasons, but that doesn't mean they were good ones. S can be angry with him for it. He must be, or must have been at some point, and yet here he is, crying over it and still being so sweet and thoughtful. Maybe what J deserves has nothing to do with what he can get or will accept, but he'd deserve it, too, if S yelled at him a little for the way he fucked up. Neither of them can just pretend it away.
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"I'm not mad," he says slowly, mouth curving into a deep frown. "I'm... hurt, but I'm not mad." Even that feels uncomfortable to say, but it is, again, the only truth he has here, and if J wants him to be able to turn to him, then he has to be able to say such things. Ignoring the worst parts of their past won't do either of them any good. They both know what happened, though. It's painfully apparent that J feels guilty enough as it is without S pouring salt in that wound. He's had a long time, anyway, to try to come to terms with all of it, though he didn't really understand until the other day, though he's still not sure he entirely does. If he was angry, though, it's long since burned out. All of it just makes him sad, really — not just for himself, and for what might have been, but for J, too.
Sniffling again, he turns his head towards his shoulder, trying to wipe away some of his tears with it, not wanting to pull his hands away from J's. "And you don't need me to tell you what things were like before you left," he adds, quiet, a little unsteady. Horrible is J's description for it, not his. S can't argue that, really, but he doesn't feel like he needs to say it when J has done so more than once already. "But... you weren't happy. You hadn't been, for a long time. I can't be mad at you for that. Or for feeling like you couldn't talk to me." If anything, the latter feels more like his own fault than J's, but he can't imagine it would do any good to add that.
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He wants to pull his hands away and wipe S's tears. Instead he just squeezes them a little more tightly, lifting their hands to hold to his chest. "I'm mad," he says, not realizing that he's going to say so until he does, or even that he felt that way. "I was so stupid and I fucked everything up, and — I thought it made sense and it didn't. Just like — fuck, everything." He can't say it. Even now, he can't make himself say what he did, though they both know. Somehow he managed to rationalize murder, and he knows, he knows, it made sense. A part of him still understands that, and that scares him, but not being able to understand his own actions would be just as frightening.
"I don't know," he says, quietly helpless, clutching S's hands close, though he only half-notices that he's doing so now. "Even when I wanted to talk to you, it was like everything got stuck in my throat. I wish I'd made myself."
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Letting his eyes fall briefly closed, he takes as deep a breath as he can manage, not pulling away from J in the slightest. "I wish you had, too," he replies, barely above a whisper. Even that feels a little like too much, but it's one more thing he can't pretend isn't different. "I wish... so many things." Though there's little he can say that he actually regrets, there's still so much he would change if he could go back and do it all over, knowing what he knows now. No matter how happy he is to have this second chance together, it hurts more than he could put into words to consider that they weren't supposed to get this. That, despite how much they love each other, everything went as wrong as it possibly could have, and they didn't stand a chance.
They can't undo any of it, though. They can only try to do things differently now, to get it right this time. "But you can talk to me now," he says again, an attempt at optimism, quietly encouraging. "We're so lucky, aren't we? We get to try again."
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That he's the one who was angry is stupid, but he supposes he should have understood that sooner too. S is perfectly capable of fighting if he wants to. He held his own back then, and he let it go. J was angrier with himself than with S this whole time anyway. Of course he's still mad at himself now.
He fucked up so much.
And now S is crying, still crying, and J is, too, though much less so than he was earlier. However much J can't help that he can't wholly accept their good fortune for what it is without pushing back, he won't let it out either, not now. He's hurt S enough. Instead, he lets go of S's hands to reach out for him instead, wrapping his arms around S's shoulders and pulling him close. "I'm sorry," he murmurs, kissing his cheek. "No, we are. We're so lucky. I never thought I'd even see you again..." In his last hours, he wasn't even sure if S still lived at all. "I'm sorry, darling. We are trying. And I will talk to you, I am talking to you. I know better now. I was so fucking stupid, but I'm here now, and I love you so much. I love you more than anything, Hyunie. I'll make sure you know it this time."
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He doesn't want to think only about the past, though. He doesn't want to ignore it, either, but getting lost in old hurts and regrets when J being here is downright fucking miraculous would be such a waste. Maybe everything was fucked up before, but it doesn't have to be now. They should, instead, make the most of it, make this last, he thinks — learn from what they got wrong before, but move forward, too. These past few days have turned everything on its head. He could say the same thing to J, after all, having been certain that they would never see each other again; he thought, really, that there was at least a good chance he would spend the rest of his life alone. No one could ever come close to J for him, after all, and no love could ever compare to this.
"Please stop apologizing," he mumbles, pathetically sad, as he clings to J, letting his head rest on J's shoulder. It's all he can get out at first, his breath quietly hitching. He's not even entirely sure why at first, until he finds himself reminded of the time after his parents died, when they did plenty of this — him crying, J holding him. Then he realizes that it's probably grief, still, at least in part, the sort of thing that, once set off, is hard to stop. That mingled with everything else — his panic from earlier, the sadness and hurt for how wrong things went before and how they nearly lost each other, the sheer overwhelming relief at having J here, safe, at least for the time being — is a staggering combination. "I never thought I'd see you again either," he says into J's shoulder, trying desperately to collect himself. "I love you more than anything, too."
More than piano, more than the shell of a life he left behind back in Seoul, more than enough to counter the ways in which J has hurt him, physically and otherwise. The words he finds on the tip of his tongue are none of those, though, and he can't see any reason to hold them back. "You're my best friend, you know."
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"You're my best friend, too," he murmurs, eyes shut tight, then lets out a hiccuping laugh. "My only friend, but you'd be my best friend even if I had a hundred others." He wouldn't want even a quarter as many, but the point still stands. No one could compare to S. No one ever has or will. "I'll try to apologize less. And to be better. I don't want it to get like that ever again, even close to that."
It isn't just the way he treated S, though that is a key reason to want things to change. The way he felt back then, though, was so overwhelmingly painful and frightening, he would have felt suffocated even if he hadn't decided that S was trying to baby him or expected him to get better. Maybe talking about it won't stop things from getting bad again, but he has to try. "I'm right here, darling. I've got you."
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He falls silent for a moment then, or as close to it as he can get when he's still a crying, sniffly mess, letting J hold him, trying to keep his breathing deep and steady. It seems both incredibly strange and not strange at all, how safe he feels, curled close against J's chest, wrapped up in his arms, his embrace as familiar as it ever was, even after all this time. Like this, no matter how shaken he might be, he believes it, too, that things will be better this time, that it won't be like it was before. They love each other too much and came too close to losing each other for good to let things fall apart the way they did back then. Of course, that's entirely dependent on whether or not J can stay alive, which S knows isn't guaranteed. Right now, though, he's here, and that means more than S would ever know how to say.
Instinctively, he wants to apologize, but having just told J not to, he's sure it wouldn't be particularly well-received. He makes a small, grumbling sound instead, too soft to sound very self-conscious. "And you think you cry too much," he says, a little wry. "Ah, I can't stop."
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"But it's okay," he adds. "Cry as much as you need." It was like that before, in the early days after S moved into the tiny apartment with him and his mom, wanting S to let it out, not to feel self-conscious about it. If anything, J felt insecure, not knowing how to help, but he knew that much, that S should get to feel what he felt. This isn't the same really, but that part is still true. "I do cry too much, but that... you've been through a lot, Hyunie. And that kind of panic earlier is exhausting."
It's hard to keep up one's guard after having felt that. He can never manage it. He always spends the rest of the day nervous and on edge. The pair of them have always been pretty emotional and open with each other in a way they can't be with anyone else, but it seems all the more warranted after that.
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But it is a lot. New grief built on old grief, an empty life made even emptier, trying to process having been almost murdered, and then why, a slow, painful recovery from his near-death, attempting to see some meager shred of justice done — none of that was easy in the slightest, and that's all without getting into the events of the last few days. Those have been better, but still incredibly draining, all the more so for his not having slept. It's no wonder, really, that he's such a fucking mess, as if all of it has caught up to him now that he has a chance to breathe and feel anything resembling content. It doesn't seem entirely fair, especially when he doesn't really want to say any more than he already has about how awful things have been, but it does make sense.
Coming from J, it's just hard to accept. S has no doubt that he means it, but while he meant what he said a few minutes ago about it not being a contest, J has had it so much worse. It was one thing to lean on him after his parents died, when he had no one else. He shouldn't need to be held together like this now.
"You've been through a lot, too," he murmurs, the closest he can get to saying that, fingers curling in J's shirt again. "If I don't cry too much, then neither do you."
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It's territory they've already been over tonight anyway. There's no point in going in circles over it. S isn't wrong — not entirely, at least — and J will just have to sit with that and try to see if he'll ever be able to believe that.
For now, taking care of S is more important by far. That kind of existential agony can wait. When S has clearly been afraid he might kill himself, J figures waxing on about his guilt isn't likely to help right now. "Fine," he sighs, leaning his head against S's. "I'll just keep crying then." He hopes not to, really. If nothing else, he wants to pull himself together before the food arrives, because one of them will have to answer the door. He's barely spoken to anyone but S since he got here, but he's not about to make S handle it. He has enough to deal with now as it is.
"Is that why you were so tired?" he asks as it occurs to him. "Not sleeping well because you're worried about me?"
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He doesn't want to make J feel worse than he already does, though, and those semantics don't really make much difference. The cause and the effect are both the same. Worrying about J kept him from sleeping; several days without sleep wore him out, until, apparently, he just couldn't keep his eyes open anymore. He's still exhausted, for that matter, though it's like he said a few minutes ago. All that panic somehow drained him even further while also leaving him too awake, as if still on guard, his body not yet having caught up to what his mind has been assured of — that, at least for the time being, J is safe, that J will come to him if that ever seems like it could change.
"I just kept thinking," he murmurs, apologetic even as he does, "that if you woke up upset, or... couldn't sleep either, or had a nightmare or something..." He remembers what J said to him that first day, after all, that he hadn't been sleeping, that he sees and hears the people he killed. At least staying awake, he can be sure that J has slept now, but there's no telling what could happen during the night or how rattled he might wake up. "I didn't want you to have to be alone with it. In case..."
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"Darling," he murmurs, sad and fond, turning his head to kiss S's cheek. "I'll wake you up if I need to." He's not sure he'll be able to help doing so anyway. He's grown accustomed to little nightmares — no less shaken by them, but used to it enough to be able to deal — but the bigger ones, he knows he wakes up too abruptly not to make noise or be felt moving. That just makes it worse sometimes, waking up so suddenly that he's not sure if he's really awake at all or if he really slept. "But you need to get more rest."
He draws back a little, brushing his fingers back through S's hair again, expression quietly solemn. "It's not so bad lately," he says, "really. I... it's easier, falling asleep, when you're holding me. And with how tired I've been..." He smiles wryly. They can hardly be blamed for being unable to keep their hands off each other, he thinks, but it's also been surprisingly helpful to exhaust himself in such a pleasant way. By the time they go to bed, he's ready for it, S's embrace helping to make him feel comfortable and safe enough to drift off. "I don't remember much about my dreams. But when they come back, I'll want you awake with me anyway. I'll wake you up."
He'll feel bad about it, but he'll need it, he thinks, for much the same reasons as S has implied.
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"Okay," he murmurs, frowning a little. "Please. I... If things are bad, you can always wake me up, alright? No matter what time it is, no matter how tired I am. I'll want to be with you." It helps a bit, at least, for J to say that he would want him awake. No matter how different things have been in the past day, he spent so long with J not turning to him for anything — not speaking to him at all — that it's a little difficult to expect him to now, but that, S thinks, will come with time. He'll just have to hope that they actually get that.
"I promise," he adds, soft and solemn. "You can always come to me. With anything." His expression turns the slightest bit self-deprecating. "And I'll try to get more sleep."
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"And I'll try," he adds. "I will. It's... I hate upsetting you, but I know you want to know." That's not all of it, though. He knows that as soon as he's said it, and he pushes through, making himself be more honest. "I kept telling myself I should be able to deal with it on my own, and... I couldn't. I just can't. I don't want to anymore anyway. It's..." He shrugs, uncertain. He doesn't want to say it's too hard, though it is. It still doesn't feel quite right. "It gets lonely. Not like being alone, because it's — it's like some horrible part of me telling me these things, but lonely. I need you."
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