Verso's expression darkens, too, into something visibly ashamed. The thought of Gustave thinking that Verso would just up and leave after he'd said something so vulnerable is awful, and... not entirely unfounded. Isn't that what he's always done, the moment things get too close for comfort? Every time, he'd told himself that he was doing it for Gustave's benefit, but it surely hadn't felt that way on the other side. It had probably felt very lonely.
He blows a stray strand of hair out of his face, arms akimbo as he looks for the nearest trash can to hurl himself into.
"Historically," he says, and he sounds as if he's choosing his words with painstaking care, "things haven't turned out well for people who..." He hesitates, unsure if it would be too much to drop the word love here. Unsure if Gustave even still feels that way after how he'd reacted. "Care. About me."
A guilty glance Gustave's way, and he confesses, "I thought that I was protecting you." But he'd also been too selfish to deny himself, so he'd engaged in a never ending cycle of pulling Gustave closer before pushing him away.
Protecting him from what, Gustave wants to ask and doesn't. He's briefly struck by the absurdity of the moment, of having this serious conversation out on the street instead of in the privacy of one of their homes. Then again, they had done so few things in this relationship normally; a heartfelt conversation in the open air of Lumière was hardly beyond the pale.
He doesn't know if this idea of Verso trying to protect him is any better or worse than his initial assumption of just being humored.
"I don't need your protection. I'm— I know what I'm setting myself up for." Heartbreak and pining, but what else is new. He makes a face, glancing away while he thinks, but his keel remains even. "I just don't think I care. I'd rather just keep you as long as I'm allowed."
"Allowed isn't the word I'd use," because it implies that Gustave is somehow putting Verso out with this, when the opposite is true. If there's anyone Verso is disallowing from having this, it's himself; Gustave is only collateral damage.
He leans against the bricked wall of a bookshop, slumped in defeat. Another admission: "I poison things." Not intentionally, and in fact he spends a great majority of his time trying not to poison things, but— it must be in his nature. Some sort of incontrovertible byproduct of his existence. "I just don't want to poison you."
Canting his head, he drones, as if reciting from a script, "I know. You don't need my protection."
Gustave rolls his eyes at that droning admission and can only again think of how much Verso reminds him of Maelle in these moments, of her anger and shame at the way the world around her seemed to work when they'd first taken her in.
"That is," he starts, rounding to lean against the same bookshop wall, "pretty dramatic, you know. But I suppose you've probably studied theatre, too, huh." He's gentle through the needling.
"You've got a dramatic heart," Gustave says, glancing over to watch him, before he seems to settle on what he actually wants to say. "I'm— sorry. That life has been fucking unfair to you." It's the sort of thing that could be sarcastic, but Gustave is being utterly sincere. "As far as I can tell, you've been thrust into impossible situation after impossible your situation your entire life, and—" He hesitates. He really does hope Verso will open up more about the last seventy'ish years at some point, thinks it could be good for him. "I just... worry a bit. That you're so convinced that things are going to fall apart that you're pulling the linchpin and making the wheels fall off early just so you can say you did it on your own terms."
At least, that's how the hot-and-cold treatment felt to him, especially when they were on the Continent.
It doesn't feel good to hear, but it's not exactly wrong, either. (Probably why it doesn't feel good to hear.) He's had such a fixation on ruining things in the future that he's ruined them in the present instead.
"...You're very astute," is all he says for a moment, crossing his arms. Then: "Must be that big brain of yours."
He nudges Gustave with his shoulder very gently and quips, wry to hide his embarrassment, "Pretty hot."
Gustave snorts, nudging him back. "Everything ends eventually. We don't need to help it along." Even if Maelle never leaves the canvas — as grim as it is to think, she won't live forever. "I'd— do and say a lot of things differently, if I could go back in time. But all of those choices would still lead me here, to this exact moment, with you tonight."
It's so many words to say "I don't regret you," but he means it.
"Who's dramatic now?" he asks, but he's smiling faintly, a little tug at the corner of his mouth. It's a relief, honestly, to get all of this off his chest. It doesn't necessarily make anything better, but it does make it feel a bit more bearable. A burden shared and halved, as the case may be.
"I've made," he says, "a lot of mistakes."
If he could go back, he's not sure his choices would bring him back here. There's so much that he wishes he could undo, and personal happiness is a sacrifice he would have to make—but the sentiment of wanting things as they are regardless of the shit circumstances they find themselves in is shared. He reaches out, grazing Gustave's bicep with his fingers. "But you're probably the best thing that's ever happened to me."
It really would have sucked if he just let Gustave die, or something. Man.
For once, Gustave is the one slightly staggered by the weight of the admission. That feels like a much bigger deal than a spur of the moment confession of love, and he struggles with it for a moment. "I won't tell Monoco you said that," he starts, and then—concerned but not displeased—he blurts: "I've barely done anything for you." How awful were these other Expeditioners???
"One of the best things," he corrects. Monoco's still his boy.
Verso withdraws his hand after that, amused and bemused at the idea that it's supposed to be about Gustave having done something quantifiably beneficial rather than having merely kept him company after seven decades of bone-deep loneliness. "And sure you have." He crosses his arms again, staring out at a flickering streetlight, thoughtful. For once more contemplative than miserable: "I think you're the first person to love me instead of him."
Verso phrasing it like that makes it a little harder to argue against. Gustave hums low under his breath and decides not to voice his immediate thought: that it's something very few people have had the opportunity to do, given Verso's circumstance. Instead, he just shuffles over so that he can lean his own shoulder into Verso's.
"Doubtful that I'll be the last," Gustave says. "You might not believe me yet, but you're pretty easy to love." It wasn't as if Gustave had fallen for him on purpose, after all.
Oh, please. Nothing about this has been 'easy' for Gustave. For the sake of maintaining the moment, Verso gives him a knowing look, but doesn't argue.
Gustave's weight against his is a pleasant feeling, warm. He's spent a very long time without any real human touch save for rushed wilderness hookups; despite how little familiarity he still has with this casual physical intimacy, it does feel good to have Gustave close to him, and he leans his body a little closer too, shoulder to waist to hip.
"So are you," he says softly, if Gustave isn't already full up on confessions for the night.
Falling in love with him that been so easy that it'd started happening before Gustave had identified the feeling. Convincing Verso that he deserved to be cared for was the complicated part.
They're away from the party now, but a group of people drifts near them on their way toward the music. Gustave leans a little more solidly into Verso, almost protectively, and he seems relieved when they're hardly noticed.
"Am I?" he says, not sure if that's a confession of feelings or just a general statement. "Emma might disagree. Loving me is the most stressful thing you can do, according to her."
Verso lets out a sudden, involuntary laugh—Emma is so right. Then again, he can hardly ever remember loving anyone in a way that wasn't stressful; 'love' and 'worry' are two very closely intertwined feelings ins his heart. "Yeah," he admits.
'Easy to love' and 'stressful to love' are not mutually exclusive, though. It had been very easy to be endeared and very difficult to create distance. The moment they'd met, part of him had wanted to resent Gustave for having everything he didn't, but it had been impossible. Too earnest, too genuinely kind, too dedicated to Maelle. The jealousy remained, but any dislike had faded quickly. Alarmingly quickly.
"You're right. It's been harrowing." A sidelong glance, and an elbow to Gustave's ribs. "But I like to think I've at least been attractively tortured about it."
"Everything you do is attractive," Gustave says, like it's the most exasperating possible thing about him. "That's why I didn't want to come out dancing. Did you see how quickly Lucien started homing in on you? Ridiculous."
It's— okay. That is definitely Verso confirming his feelings in a way that's roundabout but pretty unmistakable, and Gustave smiles just slightly. It changes nothing about the world around them, about their future— but it's still nice to hear, nice to hold onto.
"I bet," he says after a moment, "we could hear enough of the music for one dance up in the gardens. I practiced — all afternoon, actually, I'd rather not let it go to waste."
Unfortunately, Gustave having practiced dancing after their little lesson is the cutest thing he's ever heard in his life. Despite having looked absolutely miserable only a few minutes earlier, his eyes brighten a little with amusement and pleasure. Less 'scary Husky', more 'regular Husky who's excited about going on a W-A-L-K'.
"Did you?" He grins, charmed as he imagines Gustave practicing his steps. Did he put on music, or just count out the rhythm? Was it alone, or did he rope his sister in? It doesn't matter; either way, it gives Verso a warm, fuzzy feeling in his chest.
"All afternoon? You should know that my expectations are sky high." He pushes off the bookshop storefront, glancing back at Gustave as he holds out a hand for him to take. "Maybe you'll be the one teaching me now, monsieur."
Gustave makes a mock-annoyed sound, but he'll take a Verso's hand, oddly touched by the offer after such an objectively stressful night. "Alright, maybe for a couple of hours, not exactly all afternoon," he protests, like 'a couple of hours' is any less objectively embarrassing.
"I just thought it would be nice to manage one dance with you," he says, giving his hand a little pull, apparently already aware of the closest entrance to the gardens from where they are. "I don't like to let my effort go to waste."
Verso allows Gustave to lead the way, primarily because he's still a little spent from attempting emotional openness and honesty. He needs a moment to recharge so that he can be properly charismatic when they dance. If Gustave doesn't swoon, it'll be a failed evening in his books.
So, he lets Gustave be his guide for once, following without any complaint. "Just be careful of my injured leg," he jokes, embarrassment at having made such an obvious excuse entering his voice. "Wouldn't want you to have to carry me back."
Verso isn't the only one sort of spent — it's been a Long Fucking Day in every possible way — but Gustave is happy enough to lead them up some narrow stairs.
"You can stand on my feet if you'd like," he says, tone dry but still in good humor.
"You know," Verso says as they start up the stairs and toward the gardens, "the first time I asked a girl to dance, I was so nervous that I stepped on her feet three times."
At least, that's the memory he has of it. He was young enough that it must not have really been him—but is it even an authentic memory of anyone's, or is it just something that his mother thought would add a suitably coming-of-age flavor to his backstory? He pushes the thought out of his mind, unwilling to linger on unpleasantness when Gustave has given him a second chance to salvage the evening.
"...And she wasn't half as good-looking as you are," he concludes. "So I'd be careful with your feet."
"I had an... unyielding crush on a girl when I was young. She was a few years older than me, the daughter of my parents' friends. She came around fairly often when they did."
The story has little to do with dancing, but everything to do with embarrassing himself, and he's both cringing and laughing as he recants it.
"I was so nervous about asking her out that I was— sick. Sweaty. And then when I finally worked up the nerve, I threw up all over her. Turns out the 'sick and sweaty' part had actually been a stomach flu."
Gustave scans the roof for a suitably empty space, quietly hoping no one else had the same idea. "I'm quite a catch, it turns out."
Ooh, Gustave really likes them older, huh. Cougar hunter over here.
If the aim was to make Verso laugh by embarrassing himself, it works. It's amusing, yes, but also incredibly endearing. Not the vomit—that part's a little gross—but the sheepishness with which he tells it, the complete earnestness. If something like that ever happened to Verso, he'd probably take it to his nonexistent grave, but here Gustave is telling it freely.
"I would have thought so," he says as he breaks away from Gustave to step a little closer to the ledge, peering down at the party below. Gustave was right; he can still hear the music up here, albeit faintly. "I would've seen you here and said something like—"
He turns his attention back to Gustave, affection tugging at the corner of his mouth. "Gustave, right?" As if this is just another night pre-Fracture, as if they're meeting for the first time and Verso isn't a billion years old and too messed up for this. "I, uh, couldn't help but notice you from across the room."
If Gustave laughs, it's because the approach catches him by surprise. The way he flusters a little is genuine, but he's also amused; whilst the attraction is very obviously mutual, he can't imagine that Verso would have looked twice at him if the circumstances were different. More normal.
"It's alright," he says with a little laugh. It's too sweet not to play along. "My sister put you up to this, didn't she? She thinks being a wallflower is a sin."
Verso's grin grows wider, pleased that Gustave is giving this stupid little pretend scenario the time of day. Part of him wishes that this could have been the way they met, before every good thing in his life was put on a ticking timer. Another part of him knows that it would have just prolonged the inevitable, but he lies to himself as easily as he lies to others, so he disregards the truth of that.
"Ooh, that obvious?" he says, grimacing as if he's been found out. Even in this fake scenario, he knows that he would be lying. Emma wouldn't have told him to do anything, but he'd readily use her as an excuse to get closer to Gustave.
"I've been tasked with forcing you out onto the dancefloor." Despite being far too old to be doing anything boyishly, he gives a boyish grin, one that's self-aware of how charming it is. "Unfortunately, my hands are tied."
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He blows a stray strand of hair out of his face, arms akimbo as he looks for the nearest trash can to hurl himself into.
"Historically," he says, and he sounds as if he's choosing his words with painstaking care, "things haven't turned out well for people who..." He hesitates, unsure if it would be too much to drop the word love here. Unsure if Gustave even still feels that way after how he'd reacted. "Care. About me."
A guilty glance Gustave's way, and he confesses, "I thought that I was protecting you." But he'd also been too selfish to deny himself, so he'd engaged in a never ending cycle of pulling Gustave closer before pushing him away.
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He doesn't know if this idea of Verso trying to protect him is any better or worse than his initial assumption of just being humored.
"I don't need your protection. I'm— I know what I'm setting myself up for." Heartbreak and pining, but what else is new. He makes a face, glancing away while he thinks, but his keel remains even. "I just don't think I care. I'd rather just keep you as long as I'm allowed."
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He leans against the bricked wall of a bookshop, slumped in defeat. Another admission: "I poison things." Not intentionally, and in fact he spends a great majority of his time trying not to poison things, but— it must be in his nature. Some sort of incontrovertible byproduct of his existence. "I just don't want to poison you."
Canting his head, he drones, as if reciting from a script, "I know. You don't need my protection."
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"That is," he starts, rounding to lean against the same bookshop wall, "pretty dramatic, you know. But I suppose you've probably studied theatre, too, huh." He's gentle through the needling.
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At least, that's how the hot-and-cold treatment felt to him, especially when they were on the Continent.
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"...You're very astute," is all he says for a moment, crossing his arms. Then: "Must be that big brain of yours."
He nudges Gustave with his shoulder very gently and quips, wry to hide his embarrassment, "Pretty hot."
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It's so many words to say "I don't regret you," but he means it.
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"I've made," he says, "a lot of mistakes."
If he could go back, he's not sure his choices would bring him back here. There's so much that he wishes he could undo, and personal happiness is a sacrifice he would have to make—but the sentiment of wanting things as they are regardless of the shit circumstances they find themselves in is shared. He reaches out, grazing Gustave's bicep with his fingers. "But you're probably the best thing that's ever happened to me."
It really would have sucked if he just let Gustave die, or something. Man.
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Verso withdraws his hand after that, amused and bemused at the idea that it's supposed to be about Gustave having done something quantifiably beneficial rather than having merely kept him company after seven decades of bone-deep loneliness. "And sure you have." He crosses his arms again, staring out at a flickering streetlight, thoughtful. For once more contemplative than miserable: "I think you're the first person to love me instead of him."
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"Doubtful that I'll be the last," Gustave says. "You might not believe me yet, but you're pretty easy to love." It wasn't as if Gustave had fallen for him on purpose, after all.
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Gustave's weight against his is a pleasant feeling, warm. He's spent a very long time without any real human touch save for rushed wilderness hookups; despite how little familiarity he still has with this casual physical intimacy, it does feel good to have Gustave close to him, and he leans his body a little closer too, shoulder to waist to hip.
"So are you," he says softly, if Gustave isn't already full up on confessions for the night.
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They're away from the party now, but a group of people drifts near them on their way toward the music. Gustave leans a little more solidly into Verso, almost protectively, and he seems relieved when they're hardly noticed.
"Am I?" he says, not sure if that's a confession of feelings or just a general statement. "Emma might disagree. Loving me is the most stressful thing you can do, according to her."
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'Easy to love' and 'stressful to love' are not mutually exclusive, though. It had been very easy to be endeared and very difficult to create distance. The moment they'd met, part of him had wanted to resent Gustave for having everything he didn't, but it had been impossible. Too earnest, too genuinely kind, too dedicated to Maelle. The jealousy remained, but any dislike had faded quickly. Alarmingly quickly.
"You're right. It's been harrowing." A sidelong glance, and an elbow to Gustave's ribs. "But I like to think I've at least been attractively tortured about it."
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It's— okay. That is definitely Verso confirming his feelings in a way that's roundabout but pretty unmistakable, and Gustave smiles just slightly. It changes nothing about the world around them, about their future— but it's still nice to hear, nice to hold onto.
"I bet," he says after a moment, "we could hear enough of the music for one dance up in the gardens. I practiced — all afternoon, actually, I'd rather not let it go to waste."
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"Did you?" He grins, charmed as he imagines Gustave practicing his steps. Did he put on music, or just count out the rhythm? Was it alone, or did he rope his sister in? It doesn't matter; either way, it gives Verso a warm, fuzzy feeling in his chest.
"All afternoon? You should know that my expectations are sky high." He pushes off the bookshop storefront, glancing back at Gustave as he holds out a hand for him to take. "Maybe you'll be the one teaching me now, monsieur."
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"I just thought it would be nice to manage one dance with you," he says, giving his hand a little pull, apparently already aware of the closest entrance to the gardens from where they are. "I don't like to let my effort go to waste."
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So, he lets Gustave be his guide for once, following without any complaint. "Just be careful of my injured leg," he jokes, embarrassment at having made such an obvious excuse entering his voice. "Wouldn't want you to have to carry me back."
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"You can stand on my feet if you'd like," he says, tone dry but still in good humor.
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At least, that's the memory he has of it. He was young enough that it must not have really been him—but is it even an authentic memory of anyone's, or is it just something that his mother thought would add a suitably coming-of-age flavor to his backstory? He pushes the thought out of his mind, unwilling to linger on unpleasantness when Gustave has given him a second chance to salvage the evening.
"...And she wasn't half as good-looking as you are," he concludes. "So I'd be careful with your feet."
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The story has little to do with dancing, but everything to do with embarrassing himself, and he's both cringing and laughing as he recants it.
"I was so nervous about asking her out that I was— sick. Sweaty. And then when I finally worked up the nerve, I threw up all over her. Turns out the 'sick and sweaty' part had actually been a stomach flu."
Gustave scans the roof for a suitably empty space, quietly hoping no one else had the same idea. "I'm quite a catch, it turns out."
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If the aim was to make Verso laugh by embarrassing himself, it works. It's amusing, yes, but also incredibly endearing. Not the vomit—that part's a little gross—but the sheepishness with which he tells it, the complete earnestness. If something like that ever happened to Verso, he'd probably take it to his nonexistent grave, but here Gustave is telling it freely.
"I would have thought so," he says as he breaks away from Gustave to step a little closer to the ledge, peering down at the party below. Gustave was right; he can still hear the music up here, albeit faintly. "I would've seen you here and said something like—"
He turns his attention back to Gustave, affection tugging at the corner of his mouth. "Gustave, right?" As if this is just another night pre-Fracture, as if they're meeting for the first time and Verso isn't a billion years old and too messed up for this. "I, uh, couldn't help but notice you from across the room."
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"It's alright," he says with a little laugh. It's too sweet not to play along. "My sister put you up to this, didn't she? She thinks being a wallflower is a sin."
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"Ooh, that obvious?" he says, grimacing as if he's been found out. Even in this fake scenario, he knows that he would be lying. Emma wouldn't have told him to do anything, but he'd readily use her as an excuse to get closer to Gustave.
"I've been tasked with forcing you out onto the dancefloor." Despite being far too old to be doing anything boyishly, he gives a boyish grin, one that's self-aware of how charming it is. "Unfortunately, my hands are tied."
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write it cœur with the ligature like a real frenchie or get out of here
you literally cannot make me
only bc i lack the power to freeze the thread 😔
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i don't like that while i wrote this you dmed me "speaking of gay incest"
😎
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"you're irreparable invalid markup"
no babe YOU'RE irreparable invalid markup
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the default iconing will continue until morale improves
im on so many drugs im just glad I'm on the right account?!
honored to receive the codeine tags
won't be offended if you ghost me until recovery is over tbh ...
no i welcome the codeine tags with open arms
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