Title: a scent of plums
Author: darkstar
Email: clone347@aol.com
Feedback: yes, it is okay to feed the monkey
Archive: Anywhere that will take me in, only please let
me know who's doing the taking so I can properly demonstrate
gratitude.
Category: Logan/Marie angst, bay-bee. Post-MRA. Sorry.
Rating: PG
Disclaimers: I was criminally insane when I wrote this,
and therefore cannot be held responsible.
Author's notes: This was uncalled for. Really. It
is a vague sequel to an older fic, "Riverwater",
but it has very little relation to the story itself, other
than a thematic link. Again, I know that I need to stop writing
post-MRA, eventually. You all no doubt think I can't do anything
else, and I'm beginning to think it's true.I really do need
to start writing Deep And Meaningful Stuff sometime rather
than this mind candy. ::grin:: Help me! Intervene! Slap me
out of it! Foist un-MRA plot bunnies upon me!
Summary: A summer night, a broken lamp, three dollar
bills, and the scent of plums. The elements of good-bye.
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a scent of plums (1/1)
by darkstar
--------------------------------------
Grant that I may not so much seek
to be consoled as to console
To be understood as to understand
To be loved as to love.
-- The Prayer of St. Francis
He opens the door, she's there: a dress of cobalt blue, three
buttons undone at the neck. He can see the beads of sweat
in the hollow of her throat, an ocean the size of his thumb,
but this is the wrong picture. She is supposed to be in the
third seat, fourth row of the last bus headed out of this
burned-out town, sleeping on her duffel bag and banging her
head against the window on right turns. En route to safe things,
which is somehow different than the things he can offer.
She holds one hand up to him, palm down, then twists suddenly
to reveal the plum hidden beneath her fingers.
"I give you the end of spring," she says. "Look,
we can hold it in our hands."
Hers is the ability to leave him breathless even when he
is enraged with her. He wants to throttle her, hands around
her neck like snapping bird bones; he wants to throw the bedsheet
over her face and kiss her through the cloth; he doesn't know
what impulse will win out. He begins to ask her what she is
doing here, why didn't she leave with the others....but her
hand catches him at the wrist. A white lace glove, ripped
at the palm, like stigmata. She is his despairing saint.
"Adagio," she whispers, "adagio."
He pulls her inside before the searchlights grow curious,
shuts the door behind her. A flick of the switch and light
from his only lamp (cracked, the shade torn, a general fire
hazard) colors the room in warm spice tones. Yellow, orange,
brown. She walks over to it and holds her hands above the
glow as if before a fire.
"I had only walked six blocks and I had already forgotten
how beautiful this is."
"What is?"
"The light of our lamp at night."
"It's a piece of junk."
"Our piece of junk."
(He's deciding whether to love her forever or cut her throat.
Right. The usual choices.)
"Yer insane, ya know that." She grins. "Certifiably.
It's rubbed off, over the years."
"We had a plan.Ya take the bus out of here, get to the
Scooter and his safehouse, and I catch up as soon as I finish
a few minor details for the professor."
"A dreadfully good plan to be sure."
"Bite yer tongue."
"Do it for me." Her eyes thin to two slits cut into
a sheet of paper with a knife. A dull knife, because the edges
of her eyelids are worn ragged. "But don't lie to me,
Wolverine. Logan. Whatever the heck your name really is. You
aren't coming back. You're going to do something stupid and
heroic and then they're going to hurt you. You're going to
be in pain and you aren't going to let me be a part of it."
"Ya don't want to be part of it. They're landing ground
troops to weed out what's left of us, they have names. They
want us alive--"
"I'm not afraid of that."
"That's because you're young. You have to live--"
"No, I don't. We have to live, or it's not worth it."
"You ever seen me taken down hard?"
"Course. All I gotta do is kiss you in the right spot."
"That's not what I meant."
"And you think they're not gonna have something worse?"
"No."
"You're not a hero, you idiot. Don't you get that? You
just aren't. Neither am I. We're in it for the bed sheets,
right? The torn silk gloves. Come on, boy, I'm waiting. You
wanna give me my three dollars before or after?"
Silence.
"Logan, I'm--
"Dont' say it. We don't have time to apologize."
All during this conversation he orbits her without touch;
it is important to maintain his balance, not to be the one
who falls first. He watches the moonlight slide across her
collarbone and thinks that to this day, even now, she has
never forgiven her skin for its betrayals. I would rather
it disappear altogether, she says, like a ghost. Every time
her hands passed over him, he was left with that impression:
the idea of erasure. She was condensing him to a ghost, to
nothing but soul.
He tries another angle.
"Ya hungry?"
"Why do you think I brought the plum?"
"I'll cook us something. We'll use the plum for dessert."
"Fine."
"You like stirfry?"
"Fine."
There is something hypnotic to him about the preparation
of food with their bare hands, each without gloves, and this
magnifies the details: the tango of the lamplight across the
knife as she slices three carrots into chunks the thickness
of her pinky; the dot of blood across the thumb when the knife
slips. Before he can react, the finger disappears into her
mouth, and she sucks the wound clean before dousing it in
a blast of water from the sink. War wounds, she says, a sideways
grin. (She's following his lead, he suspects, allowing him
to play her to the bone. What'll it be, Mister? Three dollars
before or after. He would slap her if it wouldn't prove her
point.)
The scent of spice and chicken and peppers curls in steam
towards the ceiling when he shakes the skiller just right,
and he opens the last remaining ration tin of milk-- no use
holding back now. He lifts it in a toast to the curve of her
lower lip. One bowl, one fork, one tin between the two of
them; they sit near the breeze of the window and pass them
back and forth as shadows that slip between their hands in
the spiced light.
After all of this, she peels the plum with her teeth, pulling
back the skin with deft skill. She has not learned this from
him. Because of this he understands who she was a young girl--the
kind of child who grew up around trees with plums that you
ate on hot nights at the end of June. He hears her mother
tell her not to wipe the juice from her mouth with her dress.
She's a good girl; she uses her hand instead of wiping it
across her mouth, each finger searching out wasted juice,
and then she licks the stickiness away. Your turn, she says.
"Why do you insist on showing up at my doorstep every
time I try to send you somewhere better?" He asks, taking
the plum from her hand. A sweet pulpy wetness, like she's
put half of her heart in his palm.
"Why do you insist on opening the door?"
"Asked you first."
She stands up, wipes the excess of her hands onto her skirt.
This she has learned from him, or maybe she broke Momma's
rule all along. He takes a bite of the plum, then another.
He swallows without chewing.
"Because I can." It's hard to hear what she's saying,
she's stuck her head and shoulders out the window, into the
street. Her fingers braced on either side of the window, for
balance. "Because they can't stop me. They can't tell
me who I am." Her fingers constrict, relax, beating a
fragmented rhythm into the wood, aimless and desperate. "Because
the entire world's gone mad." She mutters into the street.
"I'm going mad and I'd just as soon be here when I do
it."
He cups the back of her skull in his hand, as if checking
for swelling, or some other such indication of madness. Her
last word hangs over the street for a second, one drawn out
moment, then dissipates. She has nothing else to say.
"We have five hours until dawn." He brushes her
hair away from the back of her neck, which is salty with sweat,
and pries her fingers loose from the window, one at a time.
"A long time."
Her eyes catch him unexpectedly, a flash of lightning on the
edge of a horizon. "You owe me my three dollars first,"
she whispers. "Pay up."
He takes his wallet out of his back pocket, and pulls out
three crumpled dollar bills. He slides the money down her
wrist and tucks it into the band of her glove. One word for
every dollar. "I. Love. You."
"You want change for that, mister?"
"Keep it."
What follows next is not a surprise. (O the water of love
that floods everything over, so that there is nothing the
eye sees that is not covered.) Or at least this is what she
whispers after the lamp has been knocked over, the bulb broken.
The room, he will remember, smelled of shattered light and
half-eaten plums.
In the time when early morning is a blot of ink dissolved
into water, he rolls off the broken mattress in the corner,
untangling his legs from the sheets, and he realizes he is
alone. His hand touches the coolness of the reflex, searching
for her back, for her shoulder, for the thin ridge of scar
tissue at the base of her neck (biking accident, age twelve)
that he has never been able to heal. All this is a reflex,
understood by anyone who has lost a limb.
He kicks the sheets across the (broken) chair and begins
to pack his duffel bag, everything he will need for the mission.
Food, water, ration kits, money, fake papers, two identical
guns. Bullets...a lot of bullets. The wrinkled envelope that
contains his death letter to her, the one that she will never
see, either way. He finds the note on the windowsill, but
he does not read it to find out where she is going. He knows.
Safe places. Places Other Than His.
It is now that he understands her presence on the doorstep.
She will not fight beside him, she will not die for him, or
with him, or any of the above. This is a grace she has given
him, this stubborn self-preservation, because she knows that
he will not allow himself to live without her. Which would
constitute a problem, given his inability to die.
Three pairs of words on the scrap of note paper: (Amo te.
Amabam te. Amabo semper te.) Underneath, three dollar bills.
Weighted down by the stony heart of a plum. He slides the
piece of paper into his wallet; later he will mount it on
his dashboard in lieu of a picture of her, which he has never
had.
He tests the weight of the plum heart in his palm, and then
carefully wraps it into the wilted money. (Cut her throat
or love her forever, the usual choices. O the water of love.
Amabam. Amabam. Amabo semper.)
Then it's flying out the open window, arching across the
broken streets, arching into the darkness, a wild rocket speeding
into darkness under the light of a one-eyed streetlight. It
is her heart, his heart, that is flying, wrapped together
with all of the cheap, irreplacable things. He is already
gone before it falls back to the cement; he will never see
them hit the ground. He carries these pieces of her with him
into the broken city: the stigmata lace glove, the scrap of
note paper.
And on his hands, his mouth, his face, a scent of plums.
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.end credits.
(The borrowed elements of my insanity)
Theme songs: See The Sun by Lisa Gerrard,
The Prayer of St. Francis by Sarah Mclachlan
Translations: Amo, Amabam, Amabo. I love, I loved, I will
love. Adagio. A slower tempo
"He is her despairing saint."
-- The English Patient
"He was deciding whether to love her forever or cut
her throat. Right. The usual choices."
-- The Blind Assassin
"O the water of love that floods everything over, so
that there is nothing the eye sees that is not covered."
-- Elizabeth Smart
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