Tara Knowles (
drownedindreams) wrote2014-01-26 09:14 pm
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She'd nearly dropped the house key twice trying to let herself into their apartment. It wasn't home yet but it was the closest she had. Since Jax was there, and the boys were there, it was close enough... which made what she did once she got the door open probably weirder. She opened the door, then pushed it shut, leaning back against it. Tara tipped her head back, and she took one deep breath, then another, then another, not realising that Jax was on the couch, and could absolutely see her having her tiny little meltdown.
She took another deep breath, and then reached for the lock on the door. She pushed it closed without looking at it, and then finally looked around the apartment, and she was torn between talking to Jax, and checking on the boys, until she finally spoke. "Just- Just one minute, I need to check on them." She didn't even say why, but she moved down the hall, to their room, and thank god, they were fine. They were fine and whole. She'd been afraid that somehow, somehow, they would both be laying there, their faces blank. Gone. Like the man outside the hospital. She didn't hear Jax get up, for the way the blood was roaring in her ears as she stared down at their sons who just slept soundly.
She took another deep breath, and then reached for the lock on the door. She pushed it closed without looking at it, and then finally looked around the apartment, and she was torn between talking to Jax, and checking on the boys, until she finally spoke. "Just- Just one minute, I need to check on them." She didn't even say why, but she moved down the hall, to their room, and thank god, they were fine. They were fine and whole. She'd been afraid that somehow, somehow, they would both be laying there, their faces blank. Gone. Like the man outside the hospital. She didn't hear Jax get up, for the way the blood was roaring in her ears as she stared down at their sons who just slept soundly.
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She pulled in a breath. "They're human, Jax. You can shoot them. This thing? This caterpillar thing? If you see it, you just can't show emotion, or else it steals your face. How would you know that? How do you not show emotion??"
She sighed, and then nodded. "Yeah. Yeah, I know you would, that's why- I knew I must not... get it, or something. I must not understand, because you're not... way more upset." He didn't warn her before she'd gone out.
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"You get used to it, all that fucked up shit." Which was fucked up in and of itself. "Doesn't get any less weird but you figure out how to deal with it."
Carefully, he steered her into the kitchen and started dumping grounds into the coffee maker and readying a new pot. Coffee, bottles and baby cereal. Those were the simple, immediate realities that kept him centered and breathing, even through the madness.
"I promise that we are gonna be okay."
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"I mean, I guess- I don't even know how to live my life without you in it, when I try everything falls apart." She reached out her hand for his when he'd finished putting the coffee on, and she pulled him closer to her, so her was standing in front of her. "I put in my transfer papers today. They're going to call me Monday, let me know if I need to interview or who I need to talk to before I know if I have the job." Her hands smoothed down his chest to his waist, her head tipped back to look up at him.
"There'd be daycare like there was at St. Thomas, so things would be a little better for you. I know..." She paused for just a second. "We weren't on the best of terms when you left for Belfast," she said after a long moment. "I keep forgetting how difficult this has to be for you, and I shouldn't forget that."
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Never let it be said that he forgot a slight where one had been dealt, nor his own retaliations, but Tara had always been a blind spot for him. There was a lot he'd forgive from her.
"Free for employees?" If it was, that would put a stopper right into one of the bleeding holes on his financials.
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They both had to do a lot of forgiving when he got back. She wanted to tell him, sort of, that the shit that happened with Ima wasn't okay, it was never okay, that if he ever did it again-- but she wasn't that woman anymore. She'd take care of it, if it happened, but she wondered if it was just who he was, after the shit with Colette.
She nodded when he asked if it was free - she knew that right now, paying for somebody to watch Abel was bleeding him dry. "Yeah. That's why we started using the hospital instead of Aleda, at home." She let her hands skim back, needing to keep that touch, the hands on his waist - they'd spent seemingly forever together, that every time they've been apart in their lives coming back seemed like coming home. "Does this seem more real, to you?" She said it softly. "Or does it still seem like a dream?" She was still trying to find her own way through.
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"Will they take Abel?" They weren't married. Not here anyway. Tara's bonds with Abel weren't by blood or by law, which always complicated things.
But that seemed almost secondary compared to Tara's hands over his back and waist. Everything fell away when Tara was looking at him. "You're here with me. That's what feels the most real."
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And he was. He had been without fail, since the moment she'd pounded on his door two days ago. "You know I want this to not be impossible for you, right? To not be... hard, if that's a thing we can make happen?" She said it softly, and she shifted to tug up his shirt just enough that her hands were pressed to the bare skin above the waistband of his boxers on his hips, because she needed that connection. She wasn't going any further, just... that much.
She'd tried to get this across earlier, but it was important to her. "I know that I'm not the only one adjusting, and I want to make sure it's okay." She'd fallen into that role, before. The person who tried to make their family okay, before she'd gone to jail and then he'd tried, but it was too late.
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"Abel's our boy. Wendy hasn't got shit to claim. He's ours."
He bent to kiss her again and then pulled back just enough to laugh. "You're making it real hard to think, your hands on me like that, but I can deal with that kinda...hardship."
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She wasn't able to stop the way her lips quirked into a smile, her skin flushed as she looked up at him, as she tried to push away just how much this was both familiar and something she thought was long gone. "I feel connected to you," she whispered as her eyes searched his, that smile small and sweet on her lips. "I feel connected with you, and it... it helps me remember who you are," Her smile didn't falter when she said that, but when she leaned up to kiss him again, there was a thread of need there that wasn't there before. Something heavy and emotional, her hand that'd moved to his chest fisting his t-shirt without realising how tightly she was holding it.
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It was so easy to rest against the counter with her, to see Tara finally smiling and happy to be here. There was a hunger in them both that felt so good, like simmering heat under their skin.
"The boys are in bed," he said, a subtle offer.
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Her eyes searched his, and she spoke quietly, her brows quirking upward. "Do you know- before the night I showed up, it'd been months? I..." Her hand found his chest, and she could feel his heartbeat under her hand. "They are." And she ran her hand up to cup the back of his neck, her eyes searching his. "I need to be connected," she finally said softly, and it wasn't just some innuendo, it was--
We don't know who we are until we're connected to someone else.
"I need to remember who you are, Jax," she murmured before she leaned up to kiss him, her fingers still tight on his shirt.
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They would be okay. He believed that. Had to, wanted to.
More than okay. Things would be good this time.
"C'mon," he said, putting the undrunk coffee aside to guide her to their room. "Let's connect then, babe."