Raleigh Harper / Emily Watkins (
callmeemily) wrote2014-09-19 01:04 am
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Calling home (spencer)
It's purposeful, the time she looks for Spencer. Joel's not home - he's not home on purpose, because Raleigh - she can't forget, right now, about what he said about not thinking about anything that'd happened to her. That's not what he'd said, of course - He'd said I think you need to stop being so hard on yourself for what you have or haven't done, but what she'd heard...
It was very different. It was harsher, because she was harsher on herself than Joel ever would be to her. So she finds Spencer when Joel isn't home on purpose, because she knows that this is going to be hard, that it's going to be hard on her and she's incredibly scared, and she knows that she's not going to be able to hide how difficult it is.
She's grateful, though, for what Joel did for her. That he'd helped her when her leg was messed up, that he'd been there for her more than once. With the letter. She's grateful, oddly, for the reminder that she shouldn't slip, that she's doing the right thing keeping a lot of this to herself; it's probably not what he meant, but she can only think of it that way. But Spencer... Spencer's different.
Spencer's safe. He knows, and he understands. He understands the things with Mark. He understands a lot of what happened, and that's why she knocks - absurdly, she knocks - on the doorframe of the living room, and she's actually wearing a set of pajamas that she only wears when she's not feeling well. It's the ugly sweater he gave her the first day she stayed here and a pair of his old sweatpants; Raleigh helped herself to the pile of old clothes long ago, and Spencer hadn't seemed to mind.
"Hey, you busy? I... was sort of thinking to make that phonecall," she said quietly as Huxley lifted his head from where he'd been curled up against Spencer's leg, and when Raleigh talked his tail slowly started to thump on the couch - he always seemed glad to see her, even though he was still pretty new.
It was very different. It was harsher, because she was harsher on herself than Joel ever would be to her. So she finds Spencer when Joel isn't home on purpose, because she knows that this is going to be hard, that it's going to be hard on her and she's incredibly scared, and she knows that she's not going to be able to hide how difficult it is.
She's grateful, though, for what Joel did for her. That he'd helped her when her leg was messed up, that he'd been there for her more than once. With the letter. She's grateful, oddly, for the reminder that she shouldn't slip, that she's doing the right thing keeping a lot of this to herself; it's probably not what he meant, but she can only think of it that way. But Spencer... Spencer's different.
Spencer's safe. He knows, and he understands. He understands the things with Mark. He understands a lot of what happened, and that's why she knocks - absurdly, she knocks - on the doorframe of the living room, and she's actually wearing a set of pajamas that she only wears when she's not feeling well. It's the ugly sweater he gave her the first day she stayed here and a pair of his old sweatpants; Raleigh helped herself to the pile of old clothes long ago, and Spencer hadn't seemed to mind.
"Hey, you busy? I... was sort of thinking to make that phonecall," she said quietly as Huxley lifted his head from where he'd been curled up against Spencer's leg, and when Raleigh talked his tail slowly started to thump on the couch - he always seemed glad to see her, even though he was still pretty new.
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It somehow sits better than what Joel said even though it's the same thing; it's possibly because he wasn't telling her explicitly that she has to ignore the past. She's too wrapped up in it to forget it, and right now she's too caught up in all of it to be objective. But she can do her best. He's right, and the weight of his hands on her shoulders grounds her enough that she can take a deep, shuddering breath. She listens to every word, and when he says she's not a monster her chin quivers, and she presses her hand to her mouth as she hiccups back a sob and can't help but nod.
He understands. That's the thing, that's always been the thing. Spencer understands. He's in a unique position to understand her, to understand the situation, and she knows he's in the position where her mother and Matt are. The fact that he is the one who's told her she's not this horrible person, she can believe it instead of it just being what you say to a friend. "I thought-" She has to stop and clear her throat because her voice is raw. "I thought that the police would come, because if they had looked for me and they- and they found out I was okay, that's got to be- I was so scared when I left, but who would believe me? Who would believe me that I just- I just ended up here, and that it wasn't me running away?"
Shaking her head, she pulls in another thick breath as his thumb smooths her cheek and she tips her head towards his hand for just a second, before she nods again, sniffling. "I'll just- I'll try my best."
It's so clear in Spencer's voice that he's not just talking about Matt, he's talking about himself, and Raleigh can't talk with how much her throat hurts. It's like there's a lump of pain, just keeping the words in, keeping it all in, but he's right. He's right, and Raleigh moves. She moves up onto her knees and to hug him as tight as she can, and she's crying into the shoulder of his shirt, but she doesn't care.
It's just a little bit until she gathers herself, until she pulls back and scrubs at her eyes, taking a deep breath. "I don't know what I'd do without you." She shakes her head as she says it, like even thinking of that is completely incomprehensible. She can't imagine what it would be like, anymore. "You are such a good person, and- and I am so lucky-"
She has to stop, she has to stop talking because she can't find the words, but she takes another deep breath to center herself. "I'm so lucky that you're here."
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Raleigh calls him a good person, and it makes something in his chest start to ache because he hopes that she's right. He's never strived to be particularly good or kind or anything that might draw people to him in a way that someone like Raleigh or Coop draw people, he's always just tried to be. The thought that maybe he helps people now, that he has people who are willing to help him in the same way, makes his eyes start to well up, and he has to duck his head so that Raleigh doesn't see.
He manages to swallow down the lump forming in his throat so the silence that's settled between them doesn't stretch on for too long, and he smooths down a wrinkle in his cardigan before finally answering softly, "Anyone who wouldn't believe you isn't worth your time." He knows that from experience, has been stared down by people he and his mother both would help in the library all the time, has been threatened by former classmates and pushed around by strangers and sneered at by police officers; he knows what it's like to feel like he's completely alone, to start to feel like maybe it is better that way because at least if he's alone, there's nobody left to show him how little they think he's worth.
He doesn't think that anymore, of course. One reason for that is the same reason he looks forward to getting up in the morning, another is beside him on this couch. He's not alone anymore and sometimes he has nightmares about having to choose, about losing everything all over again, but when he wakes up to Joel's arms around him, it makes him remember that he can't spend the rest of his life worrying. He doesn't want Raleigh to spend another second worrying that people will think she'd a terrible person, and he knows that's not something he can change with a snap of his fingers, but he can at least make sure she knows he doesn't think it.
"I'm lucky, too," he tells her, "because someone like you decided that she wanted to befriend someone like me. I was nobody's good company, not for a long time, and sometimes it would make me wonder terrible things about myself. But how bad can I really be when one of the most kind-hearted people I know is willing to be a fixture in my life?"
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She doesn't argue when he says he's lucky, too. She knows he is, of course he is, but when he says someone like you, she actually looks a little... surprised. Especially after today. It makes no sense, with the conversation they'd been having, but she thought he was talking about Joel. He was lucky because he had Joel, but he talks about her, that she's one of the most kind-hearted people he knows, and her brows furrow.
"I just... bake," she says quietly. I just bake, because that's how she looks at her life. She had to leave Boston and ended up here, and stuck her head in the sand and wasn't brave enough to step out of her shell for months. She'd kept to herself, but then she'd gotten- she made stupid choices, because she was lonely. That's why she finally stepped out and talked to people, how she met Spencer and Joel both. "You're not bad, Spencer. You're not." She shakes her head. "I... you have been so kind and generous, I try-" She has to stop for a second, and her chin quivers. She's been trying so hard to be honest, these days. She's been trying so hard, and that's why she'd had such gut-wrenching conversations with Joel.
Joel says it, Levi says it, Spencer, Les, and Coop. They all say it - that she's a good person, but she knows she keeps everything so close to the vest, she is terrified that they'd lift up the rock of who she is and see all the bugs and change their minds. She keeps such a careful facade, and she'd only told Joel.
She's not worried about other people thinking she's a terrible person, to be honest. Raleigh's worried she just is a bad person. That she keeps it hidden, but she is, because she's a coward; because she hid even though it got her anyway. That she hadn't gone to the Siren Cove police, or even told anyone what'd happened for such a long time. She can believe that they believe it, the group of men who had somehow become so incredibly integral to her life. Herself, though...
Herself is another story. "You say it like it's a chore. Befriending you. The moment I met you, you fed me your sandwich, remember? That's not exactly you being unfriendly." She rubs her arms - she's so goddamned cold, so cold all the time. "I... Uhm." Her eyes dart to the clock, and she hesitates, her tongue flicking over her lips because she's nervous. Quiet and raw, her voice wavers as she speaks. "If... If you have a minute- I.. .uh. I talked to Joel, the other day - I don't know if he told you, but-"
She pulls in another breath. "I, uh." She takes a deep breath while forcing a small smile. "I guess I'm having a hard time, right now?" The end of it lilts up in a question, and this... it's apparently her being honest. Her... trying as hard as she can to ask for help instead of just... shoving it all down as far as it can go. "And.. uh. I-"
She remembers, how much she told Spencer right when it'd happened, back in June. How much she'd written to Joel in August, too, but how much she'd told him about her knowing she wouldn't be okay. She's wondered a little, over the last three months, if he's wondered why all the things she said she'd have problems with never seemed to show up, minus the one nightmare he'd actually come to save her from.
Levi knows a little, Joel knows a little, Coop knows a little - she'd ended up on his doorstep out of the blue, after all. But Spencer knows the most, and he doesn't even- he's not seen most of it, because she tries so incredibly hard to hold herself together. To pull herself together until she's alone, because she was scared they'd think that living in this house wasn't good for her; to not hurt them more with the way she is. She's done this before, Spencer hadn't, and he was still recovering from what Mark did to him, and the thought of making that worse - it was worse than any hurt.
Raleigh rubs her arms with her hands, and she forces herself to at least look at the couch, even if she can't quite look at him, until she finally speaks. "I... uh." It's the third time she's made that sound, because she doesn't know what to say next. Trying to reach out for help is foreign to her. "I have always been the one in my family who has all of their crap in order," she finally says quietly. "And I've always had to be that, because if I didn't, everything falls part." Her gaze finally finds his, and she swallows thickly, twisting her hands together just out of habit. "But- But I just-" There's too many things, now. There's too many pieces and too much hurt and she's not okay, no matter how many times she says she is. "I don't know what to say," she says after a second, her shoulders hunched slightly. "Just... just that I- I know I'm- I guess I just... can hide it well." She hides how wrong things are, but... he should know, even as she still tries to fix it.
"
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"You know you'll always be safe with me, right?"
Spencer had known, Joel had explained; but he lets Raleigh talk because he thinks she needs to. It's strange to be on the other side of things, to be someone who isn't drowning on dry land in his own personal pool of tragedy, in the hell he hadn't realized he'd been living until Joel had shown him how much better everything could be. She's struggling with her words but he's patient, he has nowhere to be but here and for her, and he lengthens his arm to invite her closer because he can see how hard she's trying, the way she rubs her arms, and he's not exactly know for his love of physical contact but sometimes it just helps.
He remembers being in the lighthouse, Joel with his back to him as they'd faced Mark Fuller. Joel had held his hand back for Spencer to take, a protective and comforting gesture all rolled into one, and Spencer had curled his ziptied wrists and broken fingers so that he could have that touch. It hasn't dissolved the dread he'd felt but it had helped, and he knows that this is hardly the same situation but it's all he wants to do. Help.
"Nobody wants people to see that they're broken," he tells her. "It hurts enough to know it ourselves, doesn't it? When others start to catch on, sometimes it feels almost like a failure. I know what it's like." He pauses for a moment, staring into the fireplace and watching the flames dance and crackle and pop. "After my mom and brother died, I didn't cry. Everything happened so fast, she was dead and I was in a jail cell and Dane was dead, and I wanted so badly to convince myself that I could handle it all that I didn't cry. After they let me go and we had the funeral, it was... I just couldn't do it anymore, I couldn't keep up the facade. I think I cried more that day than I have in my entire life. It wasn't just fifteen, thirty minutes, it was hours and hours of tears constantly streaming down my face."
He turns back to look at her, though he can't seen to hold her gaze and his eyes flicker between hers and the couch. "After Mark, I locked myself in the house until I looked in the mirror and couldn't see my own reflection without seeing his beside me. I got my hair cut so I wouldn't have to think of him pulling on it every time he wanted to hit me again. It was just another way to hide, to try to forget what had happened, but we can't just forget those things because they're painful or because we're afraid of what people will think of is if they find out we're not the well-oiled machines we want them to believe we are. Raleigh, if there's one thing I want you to remember, it's that you don't have to be afraid to ask for help. The world isn't going to shatter if you stumble or if I fall, it'll just keep going until we can't catch up. We need to stay caught up. But we can't do that alone."
Spencer has no idea if anything he's saying is helpful or useful or any of those things he hopes it would be. All he knows is that he doesn't want Raleigh to feel like she has to put on an act when there's so much more going on underneath the surface.
"You're not alone," he reminds her. "I know you feel like you need to be the strong one for everyone else but... But you deserve to be taken care of, too."