Title:
Savin’ Me
Genre:
angst, future!fic
Rating:
PG-13
Warnings:
miscommunication, mentions of self-harm (in one chapter only), angst galore,
unbetaed
Disclaimer:
Glee and its characters are not mine, I put them away when I’m done playing
with them.
Word Count:
~2800 in this part, ~14 400 total
Summary: It
was a time of talking and singing, discoveries and first times, courage and
acceptance, dreams and plans. It was supposed to last forever. It ended
entirely too soon, a year ago, in their favorite New York café.
Chapter
summary: Tell me about your year. Also, who the hell is Paul?
Author's
Note: Title based on a song by Nickelback. College future!fic. It's getting
more and more angsty. Seriously.
This story is complete. New chapters will be
posted every other day (or daily, because apparently I can't help
myself).
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<-- Chapter 4 CHAPTER 5
After a
while there’s a sound of water running in the shower.
Kurt enters
the kitchen, hair still wet, just as last of the pancakes land on the plate. In
the unforgiving morning light the damage the year has done is obvious. He looks
painfully thin, pale and exhausted. His hands shake visibly. His eyes are red
and puffy from crying, deep shadows underneath still there, even after 18 hours
of sleep. Blaine feels a fresh pang of guilt at the sight. Yet there’s a shadow
of a smile on Kurt’s lips.
“Something
smells good. I can’t remember when I last ate.”
“That’s
what I thought when I saw your kitchen.”
“You didn’t
have to do all this, you know.”
“I wanted
to. Even if you hate me, I still care for you. Deeply. I really, really want to
take care of you, if you let me. As a friend if nothing else. You need help,
Kurt. I’m terribly worried about you.”
“I don’t
hate you. I thought I would but… it’s just not there. Anger, a lot of regret,
but no hate.”
“I’m glad.”
They eat in
silence.
After
breakfast they take their coffee to the living room and together clear all the
books from the ratty couch. Then they sit cross-legged on opposite ends, facing
each other. The silence feels awkward, heavy. They both know this talk is
inevitable and potentially life-changing, so they stall. Kurt is the one to
finally dive in.
“You
honestly believed I would cheat on you?”
Blaine
sighs. “I honestly didn’t. I was sure you’d give me some logical, innocent
explanation and then proceed to rip my head off for doubting you. And you would
have, of course, had I actually asked you if it was what I thought it
was.”
“Yeah,
well. I didn’t tell you what it was exactly,
did I? We both screwed up.”
“No, Kurt. I screwed up. I doubted you for a
moment. I got angry, I gave my insecurities free reign and I didn’t insist we
talk about it all rationally. I just ran. I cut all connections. I refused to
let you explain. It’s all my fault. I screwed up big time, so big that I’m not
sure if I’ll ever be able to fix it.”
“Some
things are unfixable. I think we’ll have to accept it. Many things happened
since we’re not together and we can’t erase them.”
They sit in
silence for a while, each lost in his own thoughts. Finally Kurt looks up.
“Tell me
about your life now.”
Blaine
shrugs. “Not much to tell. I study, I work. I write music for a small
independent theatre and sing in several cafes. It’s not much, but it pays the
rent and keeps me busy.”
“You don’t
live on campus anymore, do you? I went to your dorm the next day after… um.
They told me you moved out and didn’t leave the address.”
“No. The
apartment I told you I found for us? I’d already signed the lease. So I moved
in. I thought I would hate it because I imagined us together there and
everywhere I looked, I saw you. But soon it became soothing, like it was the
last thing connecting me to you, somehow untainted, because it was all
imagined. It’s our ‘what should have been’ in the best of ways. And apart from
that, it’s just a great place, with a really nice old lady for an owner.”
“I wish I
could have seen it. I wish we could have lived there together, just as you
imagined.”
“Yeah, me
too. You have no idea how much.”
“So, do you
have… are you with anyone?”
“No. I
tried dating, but it didn’t feel right so it never went beyond dinner and
coffee.” Blaine doesn’t understand why Kurt’s face seems to crumble at that. “I
decided not to push myself. It would hardly be fair, anyway, when I still love
you. I’m just afraid I’ll never stop and end up alone for the rest of my life
because no one will ever be good enough. But, well. I did it to myself, so I
have no right to complain.”
“Oh Blaine…
You don’t love me.” Kurt’s face is serious, apologetic.
“Yes I do.
I know I acted like an ass, but it wasn’t for lack of love! If anything, it was
because I love you too much.”
“No, it’s
not about that. You may love the boy you knew a year ago, the guy you left in
that café, with his looks and personality, and plans, and dreams. That boy was
happy and innocent, and whole,
Blaine. I’m not. I’m broken. I may be broken beyond repair. You know nothing
about my life this last year and believe me, you wouldn’t say you love me if
you did. Not after all that.”
“So try me.
Tell me. I want to know everything.”
“No, you
really don’t. Because if you still love me, even just the memory of me, what
I’d say would be really painful for you.”
“As painful
as it was for you to live through it? I don’t think so. And I deserve painful,
don’t you think?” Kurt just shakes his head stubbornly.
Blaine
tries a different angle. “What about people who know all about it? Your family,
friends? I bet they don’t care and still love you.”
“They don’t
know. Nobody knows.”
“Wait, nobody?
You never told anyone what’s going on with you? And nobody noticed you don’t
sleep, don’t eat, work yourself to death?”
“No. They
know I’ve been fairly depressed last year. Some people here might have noticed
I seemed to party a bit too hard for a while. But that’s it, nobody knows the
whole story and I like to keep it that way. I’m a good actor. And nobody cares
enough to dig deeper.”
“I do. And
I think you really need to tell somebody. You said it yourself: you need help.
I want to help. So tell me. Please, Kurt. Just tell me.”
After another
moment of hesitation, he does.
“When you
left the café, I was stunned - what did just happen? Why did you freak out so
much? Then your words sunk in and I understood you didn’t just go out to clear
your head and come right back. But it made no sense, so I was sure it must be
some mistake. I mean, I knew about the rehearsal, so I never even thought how the
picture looked out of context. I decided to give you an hour or so to cool off
and then get you to talk to me and explain, because seriously - no
sense at all. But then you didn’t pick up your phone all day or answer my
texts and I began to suspect it was serious. When I went to your dorm the next
day and learned that you moved out, I knew it really was.
For the
first couple of days I must have been in shock. I don’t remember much of it,
just lying on my bed and staring at my phone for hours, thinking that you would
call any minute and say that you overreacted and we need to talk about it.
I couldn’t
understand what happened - I mean, we’ve never really talked about it, but
knowing how comfortable you are with physicality, I thought you would be okay
with the concept of certain degree of sexuality on stage. I hesitated about the
offer myself, but the play was great, it had so much potential, so I considered
it, decided to try the most risqué scene out before I said yes. I’d never go
for full nudity, but this was more suggestive than explicit, and Henri was
straight, nice and more experienced in acting, so it felt comfortable. I was
going to tell you before signing the contract but after I made up my mind, so
that I could hear your opinion, but not just base my own on it.”
“That’s
sensible. And I wouldn’t mind. I mean, I might have felt a bit jealous and
possessive, but not to a degree where it would be a problem.”
“That’s
exactly what I thought. But then you totally freaked out over a rehearsal photo,
and you just went and left me.
Because of a possibility of my acting in an erotic scene. It made no sense. So I thought about what
happened, turned it over and over in my mind as days went by and you didn’t
contact me at all - and I sent you dozens of texts and e-mails, and then wrote
letters in case you lost your phone, forgot my number, had no internet access
or something equally absurd. I was going crazy trying to understand. Finally, I
came to the only logical conclusion - that you just wanted out and this was a
good opportunity to end things. You know, I’ve always feared that I’d lose you
here, with so many other options available. That I’m not good enough for you.”
His voice shakes and he hides his face in a couch cushion.
“Kurt?
Kurt, please, look at me.” The wide eyes seem very blue and bright with unshed
tears. “Kurt, that’s exactly what I thought about you. That you finally
realized I’m not worth it and found someone better.”
Kurt shakes
his head incredulously. “Are you crazy? You’re perfect for me.” He blushes and
looks away, realizing the present tense.
“Well, I
must have been crazy then. And so did you. You’ve always been perfect for me.”
“Not
anymore.”
“Let me be
the judge of that. What happened next?”
“Rachel
happened. Oh don’t look at me like that, not this way, are you out of your
mind? I’m not that broken, even now.
No. It’d
been two weeks and I was so depressed that my roommate decided drastic measures
had to be taken. He knew that beside you, Rachel was the only person I was
really close to here so he took my phone and demanded intervention. She was in
her element, of course. She got all bossy. Came to the dorm like a hurricane
and made me her charity project of the month. She was there every day. Made me
eat, sleep, change my clothes every now and then. Made me go back to work. Sat
with me when I cried or ranted. She may not be your biggest fan after that.
Sorry.”
“I gathered
as much. Remind me to send her flowers.”
“Why?”
“She helped
you. She was there for you.”
“Yeah, she
was. And it wasn’t easy, believe me. I’ve never been as bitchy in my life and
that’s saying something, don’t you think? Everyone in their right mind ran and
hid when they saw me after the few initial blasts of my charms. I even managed
to drive Paul away and that was a feat I thought I’d never manage.”
Blaine’s
heart loses a beat at that name. “Paul?”
Kurt shrugs
dismissively. “Oh, just a guy from classes. And the theatre, he worked there part
time and actually told me about auditions for that play. He had a crush on me. Of
epic proportions. He thought I was the love of his life, his soulmate, his
other half, I just needed to realize it. He started to talk to me about
marriage once! I tried to discourage him gently at first, then less so, but nothing worked. I was out of ideas on how
to show him I was not interested. I guess my bitch phase opened his eyes.”
“The
theatre. Oh my god. Kurt, did he see that rehearsal?” Blaine feels like he
can’t get enough air in his lungs.
“He might
have, he was always there somewhere. Why?”
Blaine
reaches to his bag and takes out his laptop. He turns it on, finds the old
e-mail and places the machine in front of Kurt, who scrolls through the
message, eyes wide.
“Wow, they do look convincing. They could almost
fool me if I didn’t know what I was doing there.” Then he checks the sender’s
address and suddenly spews a string of profanities Blaine would never expect to
hear from him, before shooting through the room with impossible speed. “My
phone. Have you seen my phone? Oh, here. Shit, it’s dead.”
He returns
with a charger, plugs the phone in and switches it on. The look on his face is
scary. Blaine feels sorry for the person whose name Kurt just stabbed. After a
few seconds the unlucky individual answers and Kurt’s pale face darkens.
“Don’t ‘hi
Kurt’ me, Paul!” he snarls and Blaine stops feeling sorry and clenches his
fists, trying to control anger that shoots through him like a bullet, while
Kurt continues. “Paul, I want you to listen very carefully. Pray to whatever
deity you believe in that I never meet you again because if I do, I’m gonna
hurt you. Slowly and with great pleasure. And after I’m done with that, I’m
going to destroy your life. Piece by fucking piece. And believe me, with all the
things you told me and the level of hatred I feel, you will be still gathering
the pieces five years from now. You know I’m perfectly capable of that, don’t
you? So if I were you, I’d start arranging a transfer. I heard Siberia is
beautiful and it’s suitably far away.”
There’s a
beat of silence, then… “What happened? You dare to ask me what happened?! I’m
sitting here with Blaine, Paul. Remember Blaine? My ex-boyfriend? I’m just
looking at a certain message in his inbox. Do I need to say more? No? ...
What?!”
Blaine can
see that Kurt’s breaking apart. He’s shaking all over, bad, and he breathes
fast enough to hyperventilate. Blaine gets up and stands in front of the other
boy to stop his incessant pacing. Taking the phone out of his hand, he
disconnects the pleading voice on the other end and pulls Kurt into a tight
hug. He feels the thin frame tremble violently, hears the first sobs muffled by
his shoulder. It’s the most natural thing to sit back down, pulling Kurt into
his lap like a scared child, and just sit there, stroking his back soothingly
until the tears run dry and the shaking subsides, much later.
“He thought
with you out of the way he’d stand a chance.” Kurt’s voice is rough, ragged.
“He destroyed my life - both of our lives - because he couldn’t take no for an
answer.”
Blaine
doesn’t say anything because really, what can he say? The truth is, it
shouldn’t have worked. It should have taken all of one short conversation to
clear it up. Guilt is like a heavy black cloud over his head.
After a
while Kurt extracts himself from his embrace.
“I’m sorry.
Your shirt is soaked through.”
“Don’t
worry about it. I have a change of clothes.” Blaine goes to his bag and takes
out a fresh T-shirt. He changes quickly, without thinking, and turns to find
Kurt watching him with a weird expression. He laughs nervously, running his
hand through his hair. “Sorry. Did I make you uncomfortable? I won’t do it
again if it bothers you. It’s just that I’m so used to living alone now that I
didn’t even think. Anyway… we could eat some lunch and go for a walk, what do
you think? You need a break from this talk, we’ll come back to it later.”
Kurt just nod
silently and follows Blaine to the kitchen. They make sandwiches together and
eat them in comfortable silence. A while later, when they are almost out the
door, Blaine does a double take.
“Kurt, it’s
insanely hot today. Are you sure you don’t want to wear something lighter?”
Kurt still has the long-sleeved, thick cotton T-shirt on.
“No, don’t
worry. I’m just hardly ever warm anymore. Must be all this weight loss. Most of
the time I’m freezing, even when it’s hot.”
They walk
aimlessly for an hour, just talking, then sit in a nearby café. The
conversation is easy and effortless - about classes, old friends, families.
Blaine can’t help feeling that he is where he was supposed to be all along.
When they are walking back, Kurt asks carefully.
“When do
you have to go back? You must have more important things to do than babysit
me.”
“Why, are
you tired of me already?”
“No, not at
all.”
“Because if
you’re not throwing me out, I’d like to stay at least till tomorrow - feed you
up some more, talk, you know. I called and cancelled my next gig so I’m free
for two more days and even later I work mostly evenings.”
“Good.
That’s… thank you, Blaine” Kurt says quietly.
Chapter 6 -->