Anders (
dissent) wrote in
systemcritical2015-07-07 09:13 am
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Entry tags:
closed; if heaven calls
CHARACTERS ▶ Anders + Hawke
LOCATION ▶ Home, Zion living levels.
SUMMARY ▶ Post-Olympus Hawke falls unconscious as a result of his role in 3x3, Anders obsessively, angstily cares for him until he wakes up.
WARNINGS ▶ CW: medical stuff mentioned. Will edit if anything else.
NOTES ▶ Ambiguously dated.
LOCATION ▶ Home, Zion living levels.
SUMMARY ▶ Post-Olympus Hawke falls unconscious as a result of his role in 3x3, Anders obsessively, angstily cares for him until he wakes up.
WARNINGS ▶ CW: medical stuff mentioned. Will edit if anything else.
NOTES ▶ Ambiguously dated.
They let him take Hawke home on the fifth day with no changes.
It's true, that their little cubicle of a living space does not have the machines to monitor Hawke's heart rate and respiration and brain activity, but Anders can manage at least two of those on his own, likes to imagine he can read the third if he pays close enough attention. It's enough to carry Hawke to their bed — he's bird bone light in a way that genuinely shakes something foundational in Anders beliefs about the world — and set him up with nothing more than a catheter and an IV drip Anders stole.
Anyway, he's had enough of machines for the next little while, thank you.
It's true, that being away from the crowded, understaffed hospital has its own perils — namely, Anders' coworkers are no longer there to tell him to eat, remind him to stretch and take walks. But Anders talks to Hawke, sometimes rambling confessionals of things they both already know, sometimes stories from his time in the Circle and earlier, the nameless childhood that is both nostalgic and bitter. He imagines Hawke talking back. Hawke would tell him to eat, so he eats. Hawke would tell him to get some rest, Anders, so he crawls in under the covers with him and tries to pretend he can pretend that they're just drifting off together like any other night, even if he doesn't usually leave damp tear blotches on Hawke's shirt.
It's true that he has nightmares where Hawke comes awake but he's blank as a Tranquil, a new twist on an old fear. Wakes up sweating and paralyzed in the night. He always wakes from nightmares unable to move for a few moments, and then he'll jerk himself convulsively around to cup Hawke's face in both hands and peer at it through the dark like he could somehow sense what's gestating inside this coma cocoon.
The worst part is the early mornings, when Anders comes awake and blinks sandy lashes, curls closer into Hawke, and for a moment he's nothing more terrifying than asleep, the day about to begin.
He decides he might hate the Oracle a little bit.
"Wake up," he whispers, meaning it with all his being. "I can't stay like this forever, love."
Both of them stranded somewhere in between. For the entire time that Hawke is unconscious, Anders communicates with barely anyone else, makes no attempt to be anywhere other than right there in that half-state with him, ready to slip away if it should come to that. He had two years without Hawke here, and to have him and then lose him again seems unfair. The idea that there could be more out there, waiting their turn to be unplugged, makes him feel nauseous. No. This skinny-wristed fire-starting gravitational force of a man may not have been exactly the Hawke Anders livved with and loved in the Matrix but that doesn't mean Anders could just be expected to just survive in his absence.
He only abandons him once, to go down below the city where he and Skye had found Proxy, and light a stick of incense and send up a prayer to the Maker, shorthand for whoever's listening. He plays out his return in his head, Hawke sitting up and greeting him longsufferingly, you certainly took your time getting back Anders, the first fractures in their expressions until Hawke's breaks into the broad smile that feels like home and Anders breaks down. It's a cruel daydream. When he gets back everything is as he left it.
It's barely been two weeks. It feels like a lifetime. Anders sets his shoulders against the way the future stretches before him like a featureless grey ribbon, and puts on the kettle to fill their little house with the spicy smell of chai, goes to check Hawke's drip, change his shirt, turn his bedding. "You're growing back your beard, I see," he remarks, dragging fingertips over it and wondering if he should shave it. He thumbs across Hawke's lips, and for a moment he could swear they purse, just slightly, the way Hawke responded to good morning kisses in the moments before they woke him. Anders has never read Sleeping Beauty, but he still pauses, tremblingly still and watching, aching, willing Hawke to wake up.
Nothing happens. Anders turns away and lets out a shaky, disappointed breath. The kettle whistles like the scream that's settled itself sharp behind Anders' breastbone, waiting to be dislodged. Behind him, Hawke's eyes open.
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But to rewind, if he dreamed during that time it fades quickly, as many varied and vivid bits of flotsam and jetsam could have wittered behind his eyes in so many hours. Comas are not like sleep, though it's perhaps questionably whether that qualified as a true coma at all. Anything is questionable, in concrete medical terms, given the cause for such a long period of exhaustion. The details in waking are easily real, however, the quickest to come to his attention besides the aforementioned mouth death are the various implements stuck in various parts of him.
Since he's still massively groggy (despite the relative coherency of his initial statement, though ...it's not like Hawke's brain and mouth running on separate tracks to one another is new), and since this is quite a common occurrence, the first thing he does is start plucking at the tape on his IV, peeling disorientedly with his nails in an effort to pull it out.
Hawke, no.
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"Hawke," he rasps, watching him shift and move like he's woken up as Anders is going to work on any normal morning rather than after so long unconscious. Swallows hard against the tide of emotion burning its way up his throat. Honestly, it's probably a good thing that Hawke does start to fiddle with his drip, because it at least snaps Anders out of his reverie and makes him realize that no, this is happening.
"Stop that," he says, coming over to Hawke's bedside and swatting at his hands, tone at odds with the way he can't seem to stop his mouth from beaming. His eyes are all crinkled with happiness and kind of damp — it's possible he's actually about to cry, but first he leans down and kisses Hawke properly, heedless of what died in his mouth. Pulls in a long, shaky breath through his nose as he draws back, trying to steady himself. "Good morning, love." Is it morning? Who cares. "I'll take all your tubes out in a bit."
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"Nice to see you, too," he rasps, teasingly. He's not actually too dehydrated, it just feels like it. This would be the place where he should ask for water, but instead he pats what space is left in the narrow bed next to him, knowing full well the likelihood of Anders ignoring this in favour of fussing.
Not that there's anything so terrible about that, he just ...has very little idea what's going on, although he can at least make a reasonable guess, given the last things he remembers.
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After that he should give him a check up, ears and eyes and temperature and blood pressure cuff and muscle stretches, but he's so worn down that he does just climb into the bed, tuck himself in alongside Hawke, which is much easier now that he's awake. Places a hand over his heart. Pushes his face into his loose shirt at the shoulder and leaks there a little, trembling. Any explanation might have to be a little postponed.
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"Anders--" Not quite an inquiry, despite the questioning tone colour. Even after so many years he sometimes just--panics for a second when faced with this much raw feeling, because Anders is always going to be much better at demonstrating that openly despite the overall intensity of the way they generally exist at each other. Once he's a little less fuzzy he'll probably move right into feeling heinously guilty for saying terrible shit like 'it'll be fine' and then, apparently, proceeding into directly not-fineness, but for now he's just going to make meaningless shushing noises into the top of Anders' head.
"It's all right," he murmurs eventually, like he can basically make this true through, perhaps, sheer force of personality.
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"Sorry," he says, a little wobbly. Sniffs, collects himself a bit. He's not ashamed of being a crier, because he's always been, but he's ashamed of putting that on Hawke so soon after he's woken up. "I'm all right. Just glad to see you wake up. I wasn't sure you would."
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Like his ego needs the help. Anyway, at this point he's content to just stay curled up together til Anders is settled a little bit - a/o for the foreseeable future - since it's not like Hawke was really conscious to miss him, exactly, but it feels that way anyway. They're sort of inextricably codependent at this point, given how long the week away felt before all this, but a] Hawke has no idea what that term is, or means, and b] wouldn't trouble himself much with it if he did.
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Logically he knows neither of them could have predicted or stopped what happened, and he doesn't blame Hawke for playing the hero, since somehow that's the position he always manages to find himself in. But he's still angry — at Hawke for coming back to him unconscious, at himself for loving another person so much that it can ruin him, at Zion and the machines and everything. It's the kind of anger that can't be cried away, only funneled into action, and yet he stays where he is, thumb tracing an idle pattern and his mouth soft under Hawke's ear.
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He sounds like he's teasing, but really, Hawke is of course immediately willing, as ever, to assume whatever spare bits of fault might be lying around the room, to be plastered to his shoulders instantly. It's such an ingrained response it doesn't even occur to him to vocalize, mostly because it's not consciously occurring at all. Much like oysters don't think about accruing grains of sand. Even if he were prone to actually introduce anything on that subject it would probably be just to affirm he's not going to resign from the crew even if it's just gotten a whole lot more exciting.
Not that that excitement wasn't for a whole lot of the civilian population as well, so maybe that's a moot point anyway.
"I could concede to groveling a while, if you like."
Or he could just tighten his arms and live in the top of Anders' head\, that would probably work too. Whether or not it makes any sense there is an actual apology solidifying inside somewhere, it's just going to take a little while to cough up.
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"What if," he suggests quietly, "We just stay in bed forever." That would be a more than adequate apology, he thinks.
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But of course he ended up involved anyway, because that's what happens. They both know this, which wouldn't keep him from insisting he was fine if Anders asked, despite having no way of knowing anything beyond the obvious consciousness. At this point, though, even if he did attempt to start some kind of routine surface checkup, Hawke would do his best to head that off at the pass. If there are any lingering side effects they probably can't be addressed in the next ten minutes, and he'd rather just stay like this. As he demonstrates by cupping the back of Anders' head to keep their faces lined up, tangling their legs together like tree roots.
"And maybe not, but it might make me feel better."
Grovelling. Even if it's totally unnecessary. Probably that just means being extra solicitous, and in this case, finally: "I'm sorry." Presumably he's not expected to say it won't happen again, because that would be ...unlikely. Still: "You worry enough as it is."
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"I worry about you whether you're conscious or not," he murmurs, kisses Hawke quickly because he's still upset and still glad that Hawke is alive and, really, it's all a bit much, feeling all of this to the intense degree that he does. "I forgive you, anyway," he says, one hand sliding over Hawke's waist and actually clutching there, feeling the general lack of spare flesh. It's not really a health check up at all.
"What happened, though?" he asks finally, since he thinks that might be a clearer window to any possible side effects.
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"Some frighteningly accurate facsimile of Meredith, anyway." As enlightenment goes its vague, but he only understands so much of it himself. "If I never have to serve as representative of the human race again it'll be far too soon."
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means... Hawke.)
They're curled close and he still feels all post-weeping and shivery, but he manages a smile nonetheless. "You are an excellent specimen of humanity, though," he points out, all heart eyes. "I can't think of anyone better to represent us." Even if he hates that the result was... this.
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There's no rumbling. He emerges a little, sounding thoughtful. "It was some sort of test, near as I could work out. I suppose it won't take too long to find out if I passed."
The lengthy spate of unconsciousness seems like it could go either way in that direction.
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Not that the reverse isn't often true too.
"What does that mean, passed," Anders asks, though it's mostly rhetorical since he knows Hawke probably won't have any idea. For all his enthusiasm about Hawke representing humanity, it does seem like an unfair amount of pressure for one man, especially if they don't manage to 'pass' — what consequences then?
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What a lovely thought. He lapses into silence a moment, enjoying the hair petting even in the midst of what he just shared. Maybe especially so. "Difficult to prove you deserve a chance to live if you're dead, isn't it? A bit of a circular argument, but she seemed to accept it. As much as she was going to accept anything I had to say."
Another pause, not as long as it ...maybe should be for what he comes out with next, abrupt subject change, impulse and an idea he's been considering at intervals for years all in the same breath. "We should get married. Not in case of imminent death, mind you, but--"
Well. A little in case of imminent death, but primarily because the option is there when it's never been before. Apparently there's nothing like a couple weeks of unconsciousness to make a person cut to the quick.
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Despite his offended tone, and his best attempts to school his expression, Anders can tell his smile has gone all dopey. Probably there's something wrong with him for loving an idiot, but not as much as there is wrong with Hawke wanting to spend the rest of his life with an apostate slash former abomination slash all the other ways that Anders is integrally flawed. Actually, it's probably good that Hawke only asked casually, it means the panic is setting in slower.
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Since it's also an excellent vantage point for that. "Well. The convenience part, not the jewelry thing."
Look, he's still pissed about the evaporating chantry amulet. Months later. Stupid matrix. "I am serious, I'll have you know." As per usual he is incapable of not talking out of the side of his mouth, probably especially because he's asking for something he really wants. That's harder than taking a morality compliment. "Marry me. I know the timing's terrible, but when isn't it?"
Perhaps he can convey his myriad feelings by staring soppily, yes? Maybe some hair petting? Also yes. Also, also, Anders should definitely voice 'former apostate' as an intrinsic flaw, so Hawke can raise seventy miles of eyebrow at him. It's possible if he were going to care about that - or anything else - he would have started years before this.
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He doesn't like to think about the other Hawkes and other Anders' but he can't help feeling like he's being offered something that should rightfully belong to another man. Who is him, because his life is just that strange now, but probably treated Hawke better and was more essentially deserving of a lifetime with the man. Anders hates him. Which is par for the course, really.
It's possible the creeping doubt is starting to show in his eyes if not his entire mobile face, and he wishes he maybe had pushed Hawke out of the bed (as though the doctoring instinct in him would ever allow it so soon after he's woken up.) "Look," he says suddenly, looking away, and then catches what he's about to say and stops abruptly. Can I think about will only give him more time to think about it. Probably this conversation is becoming somewhat enigmatic, as Anders beats himself up for being so hopelessly broken that he almost went and turned Hawke down.
"I do like jewellery," he says softly at last, playing with Hawke's returning curls where his hand is still resting. He also likes Hawke. A lot. Beyond reason, even, and that feeling isn't what he's afraid of, it's having it returned.
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"We could just go on as we are, you know." Straight-on eye contact; it's not invasive, just steady. They are basically already married, in all the ways it was possible in Thedas; he wouldn't be disappointed even if, yes, because they can have it he wants it. "If I have to strongarm you into the idea it's less palatable."
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"Marrying you sounds like the best thing that could possibly happen to me," he tells Hawke now that they're not looking right at each other. He needs Hawke to know that, to understand it whatever Anders' response is. His brows are still pinched. "You don't have to strong-arm me. I just don't want you to ... do something you'll regret."
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He draws a thumb over one of those pinched brows, light, but still an attempt to to smooth it out despite the lack of pressure. (Oh look it's a metaphor.) "The world won't stop spinning if you let yourself be happy for twenty seconds, you know. Even if you don't think you deserve it."
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"You can't actually guarantee that, though," he jokes, a kind of deflection probably painfully familiar to a master of it. "I'd hate to be responsible for the end of the world."
That's all it seems he has to say on the matter at first, until he finally ventures: "What if we're not happy?" even though the question seems ridiculous once he says it out loud.
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He studies Anders' closed lashes, maybe counts them like a besotted idiot, because ...well, they are talking about this, at least, and Hawke loves him especially when he's difficult, even if he wishes it didn't come from a place of such bedrock self-worth. Maybe, despite the fact that his own emotional sophistication is occasionally also uh, bedrock level, he's amassed over the years the understanding that Anders needs to be loved especially at times like this. It's not hard to demonstrate.
"What do you think will change, exactly?"
Considering. And not a rhetorical question even if it could be.
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That said, he has no idea what they'd fight about. Usually when Anders gets angry he gets all sullen and tells Hawke exactly what he thinks of him and then forgives him because that's the kind of mercurial, heart on his sleeve idiot he is. It's never been a Cold War between them, not even when he lied to Hawke so vastly. So it's illogical. He knows it's illogical.
His eyes crack open, and he looks at Hawke properly. "I want rings. And I don't want a big party."
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In Thedas a big party would have been less a decision than an inevitability, but here the lack of one is such an easy concession to make Hawke doesn't even think about it, conceding with an easy shrug, smile taking over his entire face. "I suppose I can live with disappointing all five people I'd invite anyway."
Deadpan. He finds one of Anders' hands, skims his ring finger with a thumb. It's an easy guess what he's imagining. "Should I surprise you? Or do you want to see what we can scrounge up together." A quick, soft twist of his always mobile mouth. "Maybe you've had enough surprises for one day."
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"Do surprise me," he says, since he trusts Hawke's taste and knowledge of what Anders likes, and the entire concept is too overwhelming for him to be able to deal with ring shopping together, even if he's acquiesced to it. "Now, are you going to let me up so I can get you some water?"
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He's actually just scheming about rings with his eyes shut, but surely especially since he didn't mention them Anders expects that.
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The water is a dull colour, and bright with cold; Anders fills the biggest tin he has as a cup and brings it back. "Sit up," he coaxes. "Drink this. Small sips. Are you hungry?"
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"Let's just assume I am, it's probably true."
He has met himself. "If I try to get up are you going to sit on me?"
...the eyebrow waggling is useless, but he affects it anyway.
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As though he hasn't been doing that for a while now. As though Hawke hasn't spent far too much time in bed. Honestly, Anders wants him up and about just as much as Hawke does, but since he can't just wash a couple of clean green spells over him and this is the real world the checking up process is a little longer, more complicated.
As soon as he thinks it's safe to move away from Hawke's bedside, he goes over to start making them food, sawing off thick slabs of black bread to be spread with creamy, salty protein and topped with slices of what might be an actual tomato, small and green. "You've been out for a while, anyway, your muscles might have forgotten how to get you about again."
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This is all still being lobbed into the atmosphere while flat on his back with his eyes closed, by the way. He heaves approximately a dozen persons worth of sigh, and at least sits all the way up, legs out in front of him with arms sprawled loose on his thighs, crossed over each other. Possibly he has more to say on the topic of whether or not it's possible for Anders to sit on him without residual enjoyment - were there ever actually paralysis glyphs involved on previous occasions? signs point to yes - but he's interrupted by his stomach proclaiming a serious of rumbles on the subject of whether or not he's hungry.
Hawke eyes his own torso with exaggerated slowness. "Well! That answers that question, I suppose."
He's also eyeing the amount of food Anders is putting together, which seems to be either enough for both of them, or a bunch of hungry orphans are about to filter through the door. That staves off, for the moment, querying how much Anders has, say, eaten or slept or cared for himself in any way while Hawke has been unconscious, but not for long.
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"Eat," he encourages, still not particularly hungry himself, though he watches Hawke put food in his mouth like the sight is nourishment to a starving man. He has water of his own, though, sips at that to try and kickstart an appetite that's gone dormant over the last couple of weeks.