Tara Knowles (
drownedindreams) wrote2015-07-19 11:18 pm
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"Abel, honey, please don't play with Mama's files." It's odd, the things that echo the past.
Abel had been taken from home when he was too young to remember what he'd learned over the two extra years he'd had with Tara and Jax - and his grandmother - but he still had some of the exact same habits, like how he currently had managed to grab some of the manilla folders that Tara had stacked on the coffee table so she could do her paperwork and still be with her family.
Keira was on her hip, lunging for the pureed sweet potatoes that Tara was heating up, and she could hear Thomas 'reading' to himself in their bedroom over the sound of the TV.
"Jax, honey," Tara called over her shoulder, "could you give Abel a coloring book and put up my files? I need to feed your daughter before we go out to dinner." His daughter, said with good humor purely because in times like these, she'd sometimes say the kids were his, like she's avowing herself of responsibility.
The fact that the file Abel was currently scrawling all over wasn't one of her patients probably was worse than him drawing on them, but she didn't actually know that, yet. All she knew was that they were going out to dinner tonight - she was actually dressing up in a dress short enough that if they actually made it to the restaurant, it'd be a miracle, and Molly was watching the kids - he deserved a good birthday, and she'd do her best to make it happen.
Abel had been taken from home when he was too young to remember what he'd learned over the two extra years he'd had with Tara and Jax - and his grandmother - but he still had some of the exact same habits, like how he currently had managed to grab some of the manilla folders that Tara had stacked on the coffee table so she could do her paperwork and still be with her family.
Keira was on her hip, lunging for the pureed sweet potatoes that Tara was heating up, and she could hear Thomas 'reading' to himself in their bedroom over the sound of the TV.
"Jax, honey," Tara called over her shoulder, "could you give Abel a coloring book and put up my files? I need to feed your daughter before we go out to dinner." His daughter, said with good humor purely because in times like these, she'd sometimes say the kids were his, like she's avowing herself of responsibility.
The fact that the file Abel was currently scrawling all over wasn't one of her patients probably was worse than him drawing on them, but she didn't actually know that, yet. All she knew was that they were going out to dinner tonight - she was actually dressing up in a dress short enough that if they actually made it to the restaurant, it'd be a miracle, and Molly was watching the kids - he deserved a good birthday, and she'd do her best to make it happen.
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It doesn't take long, and they're set for the night, smiles not really true as they kiss their children and thank Molly profusely for giving them a little time to themselves, like they weren't walking into a disaster.
It's not a long drive, her bag between them like a bomb, just waiting to go off. The closer they get to the hotel, the tighter her shoulders are. She's barely skimmed it; it's not a thin file, but she knows it's his.
Happy birthday.
"Jax?" She says his name once they've parked the SUV, once she gets out and has her bag looped over her shoulder. She's come around the SUV to him, to loop her fingers in his beltloops and tug him closer, her eyes searching his.
"I love you. And it'll be okay. Alright? I swear."
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"Let's check in. Get the birthday champagne and strawberries shit." Or else a bottle of vodka and a pack of cigarettes. He has a feeling they're going to need something intoxicating and powerful to get through the night.
But they're going to be okay. Somehow.
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It's an hour later when they're in a pretty fancy hotel room with white comforters and bathrobes hanging on the door, with an ashtray on the bedside table and a room service cart holding their empty plates. She'd insisted on them eating before - mostly because she doesn't think she'll want to eat after, and there's just a certain amount with this that she's got to be practical. She's the anchor, right now. The foundation.
Finally, she leans over to kiss Jax, and it's still heavy in her eyes. "Hey - happy birthday." She wants him to know that, before he finally pulls the trigger, and says he just wants to know.
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It's hard to imagine that they'd do this kind of thing back in Charming. Back there, the only reason to get married was because you couldn't get a mistress if you didn't have a wife and he knows what kind of man he'd be. In this place, Tara's been able to raise her child without Gemma's prying fingers trying to turn them into the Club's children.
"Thanks, babe," he says, cupping her cheek for a long kiss. The other shoe has to drop sometime, but he keeps trying to push it.
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"We should get it over with," she says lowly, her hand moving to find his, to smooth over his knuckles with her thumb. "It's not going to disappear. I wish it would, but you know it's not."
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Kissing her hand, Jax nods. "I love you. I trust you. We'll get it over with."
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"Jax," she says after a moment, and her voice has the weight of a thousand burdens, but it's steady and even.
"It's your file."
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Taking a cigarette, he can't even speculate how it must have gone. Too many opportunities for him to die have presented themselves by now. It doesn't even surprise him that he's dead in that world, not when it was just a matter of time.
"Christ." What else can he say.
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She doesn't know how to say what she's got to say. What she's got to tell him.
"You're not him," she says first, her voice oddly faint. "He..." Not you. "Rode his bike straight into the path of a semi." Her voice cracks on the last word, and the file drops to the comforter, as Tara pulls in a breath. The man she left - the one who lost her, who lost everything -- he'd lose himself, in the end. More than she'd ever guessed.
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Had that Jax been tired too?
"Without you. Without Opie..." He reaches out for her hand, already desperate for a center, needing her to hold him down to this earth. "We know what man I would've become."
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She doesn't, because she's moving, she's moving bodily on the bed so that she's pouring herself into his lap, her arms around his neck and her face buried against his jaw. "You're not him." The words are thick and pained, and she's mourning. She's mourning the man she'd left behind, who's only escape from the life he'd made was the same death as his father's. She's mourning their sons - their beautiful boys, and she knows he needs her to be strong for him, but she can't stop the tears that are slipping down her cheeks because of Abel and Thomas, because of her sons, not the boys here, not Keira, she doesn't weep for them.
She cries for the boys in Charming, who are going to grow up even worse than Jax, even more entangled in this life with no hope. Their mother murdered, their father commiting suicide-- not even choosing to live for them, but dying for them in a way they'd never understand.
She cries for the man she's loved since she was sixteen, the one who wasn't pulled away before he'd come home from Ireland, holding so tightly to her husband that she never wants to let go.
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This isn't Charming. For the last year and a half, almost two, Jax has told himself that almost every day. This isn't Charming. In Charming, his life was outlined before he was born. In Charming, Jax doesn't really expect a reason for his life not to end under tires or a hail of bullets.
It's the fact of how many people he's taken with him or left behind. Holding her tight, Jax lets Tara cry because he understands what she's grieving.