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Regression to the mean. Things returned to normal.
Well, Hywel wouldn't describe anything as normal right now. There was still an unsolved murder. Cats from his past re-emerging with clues to things he couldn't understand. Rhiannon spoke to him as if they were estranged siblings, all clipped words and spraying perfume over a casket they had yet to bury.
Oh, and Hywel? He had left that night, on the city streets and gone to the shadiest alley he could find, and satisfied his own carnal desire with another party. Another night, living completely off the fumes of whatever he was doing to forget about that twisted night. It had been Cezra at first, indulging in whatever darkness he could find within the other tom, and then the weeks flew by. Nameless faces. Sleepless nights. If he stayed asleep too long, the face of his father would laugh at his misery, after all.
The face would morph into a tortoiseshell one, and he'd push it away, in anger, in rage, in anything but what was right here, right now, because even pain was easier to feel than that hollow disappointment that reminded him once more, that he had put his trust in the wrong person, that there really wasn't much hope out there for him. Self pitying was an ugly look, but Hywel had seen uglier at this point. The disappointment on Rhiannon's gaze was never met by his as he left their den without a word.
He had found the first tom he had met on the streets, and here he was, all laughter and easy-going charm, hiding the darkness that seemed so hollow in the dark underneath his eyes. Apparently other cats liked that; who didn't love a sleep-deprived tragedy to save? Here he was, in the lap of another tom, large and muscular, as he simpered in his grasp, all giggles and laughter, unaware of anything other than what was right here and right now.
He didn’t know why he’d gone to the League’s old territory, where he knew Hywel was most wont to hang out. He didn’t know what he was hoping for, what he was searching for, what he wanted to give - an apology, closure, a goodbye, an ’it truly wasn’t you.’ Nothing. He didn’t know. All he knew was that that morning, he’d had to go see Hywel - even if it was to do only that, see him. Know he was alright. He was safe. He’d accepted, after long, black nights and numb, rosy days that he was in love with him. He wasn’t denying that anymore, at least not to himself. But that didn’t take away the grief of it, the fear, the exhaustion. He was so tired. He hadn’t been sleeping. His pelt was still perfectly smooth but it was forced; he was just going through the motions, staying pretty because he always stayed pretty - he just drifted through the days with his eyes on the ground, mumbling replies to Sunpetal or Shaded or forcing a small, tired smile for Bluebell. Everything felt so hectic and so stagnant at the same time - his mind was grey and lifeless and empty, yearning for something he was going to keep on denying it, like he was starving a little bird; his heart was restless and pleading and bright, thrashing against all the constraints, but he’d resigned himself, and so it would have to resign itself as well. To a life half-happy, to a ribcage half-empty, to mute smiles and dull eyes and constant fatigue. To lying awake at night with the warmth of Shadedsun’s thick fur beside him, hardly able to register the sweetness of the honeysuckle or the heather.
And so, when he’d suddenly felt that today he had to go to the city, he didn’t argue with himself. He was going through the process of grieving, of letting go; he’d do it just for that, to let himself let go of the last and only tom he’d ever love like he loved Hywel. There would be others - there were always others - but they wouldn’t be this. They would never be this. As he limped through the streets that had become familiar, he was almost calm, almost at peace. It was a bleak, sad sort of peace, but it was peace all the same. He knew why he was here, or at least he understood that his heart needed it, even if he wasn’t quite aware of the reason. He knew this would be the next step, and after that it would get easier. Not less agonising, not less like his lungs were filled with glass every time he inhaled, but easier. Like picking at your skin got easier the more used to it you became, even if it still bled.
And then he rounded the corner.
At first, the look on his face was as honest as Doefreckle had ever been - wide eyes, caught off balance, caught vulnerable and left like that; pure grief, slightly open-mouthed and entirely too young. The tom was everything Doe wasn’t, everything Hywel had promised he’d choose him over. He was keening for him in a way he never did for Doe. Was practically whimpering. Hywel, who he loved - who’d cast him aside so easily and sunk down to drown in other lovers. Doe hadn’t done that - he’d been too deep in mourning to even feel any sort of attraction. And here Hywel was, like he’d never existed at all.
He’d been stupid enough to love him — and for what? For this? For this?
And that’s when, stronger than all the soft sorrow, Doefreckle’s temper flared, anger filling his chest with heat and jealousy rearing its ugly head. He didn’t recognise the feeling at first - he so rarely got jealous, and when he did it was just a faint little thing, like the fluttering of butterfly wings. But this was sick jealousy, hot jealousy, nasty, hateful, broken jealousy. This was the jealousy that put blood in your ears and a tingle in your limbs. This was jealousy as sharp as it was dizzy, eagle-eyed and foggy-headed.
“Isn’t this a pretty sight,” he spat, then spun around with a lash of his tail and stalked in the opposite direction. He hated the tom. He hated him for being what Hywel wanted. He didn’t hate himself, not then - he was on his own side, and Hywel wasn’t. Hywel was over there. Hywel had moved on. He hated him. He hated him like fire. Fire was all he could feel, all he could see, all he could hear. Fire was all around him. He hoped Hywel burned in it.
dm me if you want to listen to me ramble about the interstellar soundtrack
2,314 posts
Post by achromatic on Oct 21, 2021 17:00:41 GMT -5
He really just wanted to forget, to numb the disappointment he could still feel so deeply in his bones, to truly forget what had happened with the tom who just refused to get off his mind. Hywel couldn't help but feel regret taking its roots, buring itself deep into the soil of his own soul, still berating himself for how tarnationing stupid he was, to truly believe that Doefreckle would really love him, would really be the right one for him when he was so lost. There was so much bitterness he could feel it on his tongue even as he kissed this faceless lover.
Yet, how could he forget, when that face seemed to reappear wherever he was? When his eyes had landed on Doefreckle, he had half-assumed he was dreaming, having one too many nibbles of his catnip or something, and that this was just a hallucination, just the fact that he was thinking and thinking and constantly thinking of Doefreckle instead of the cat who was trying to flirt with him, and he had been ready to shift his focus back to the cat wrapped around his thumb right now, when he heard the words.
Isn't this a pretty sight. He looked up abruptly; gods, it was him. Incredulity lit up his face as he scrambled to his paws, his mind still clouded with everything. He made a quick excuse before following after Doefreckle, catching up to the other cat on unsteady paws.
"Doefreckle," he called out, confused and angry at himself for still chasing after the tom who constantly rejected him–gods, he really did have some kind of masochistic tendency didn't he?–as he fled, "wait, where are you going?" Despite all of this, he still cared. His heart still beat only for him, and gods, he hated himself for it all the more.
Doe couldn’t stop growling, high and incessant in his throat so his whiskers shook with it, with his anger. The second he heard Hywel call out after him, he stalked faster, his head thrust forward and his shoulders sharp as knives. But with the burden of his paw - how he hated it at that moment, hated it with everything in him - Hywel caught up to him easily. Trapped and cut off from progressing down the street, Doe whirled to the side and began to pace back and forth, back and forth like a wild, caged animal. His ears were back, his tail-tip twitching ominously - which was almost worse than him just lashing it. Whatever rage was on Doe’s face right then, there was far more, far darker, under the surface.
“WHAT, Hywel?” he shot back, still pacing in tight little loops in front of the tom. He didn’t look at him. Wouldn’t look at him. It was a terrible thing, to be terrified of love but to have been built by the universe so utterly dependent on it. On someone else. To be afraid to get close and all the while yearn for it, all the while feel incomplete without someone there beside him telling his heart all the things it ought to feel and fulfilling his half-ness. He was just one half, always just one half, one fragment of a heart locket. He was made for love, and he was petrified of it. He hated being alone, hated every second he spent by himself, and he ran from the alternative, from anything that might bring him happiness. He was created to be someone’s mate, and he’d been mortified by his own destiny. But at that moment, that didn’t fill him with the usual self-disgust, with the nasty assurance that he didn’t deserve joy - instead self-pity, protective of himself for once in his life, became fiery and hateful and fierce. For the first time ever, Doefreckle was defending himself.
And then, it fell apart. Finally, like the fire had burned up him and left dismal ash in its place, he slowed and turned to Hywel - defeated, tired, grieving, worn-down. His ears drooped. “What?” he repeated in a voice that was so utterly ruined. Like this was the pathetic end of a game he was so tired of playing, so broken by. Served Doefreckle right, to finally be the one made a fool of. To finally be the one who had to stay awake at night with the image of the tom he loved with someone else playing through his mind. Now he knew what it felt like. He wanted to beg forgiveness from everyone he’d ever hurt with this. When he continued, his voice was quiet with thick, numb exhaustion. He drifted his eyes down; he couldn’t see the lack of love in Hywel’s blue eyes. “Why does it matter where I’m going? You don’t care. Away from here. Back to SummerClan. I don’t know. You should go back to your plaything. He’s probably waiting. And everything I’m not.” Still not looking at Hywel, he moved to brush past him. He was already planning the route home, in a tired, dissociative, grey and misty sort of way - back past the townhouses, on the trail beside the woods, across the meadows…
Shaded would be there, or Vulturemalice - it would be wrong to use them but where had kindness got him... He had no appetite for it, felt sick and weary at the thought, like he’d rather die than be with anyone but Hywel, but he didn’t care, so... Maybe he’d go find someone else, some rogue or handsome kittypet who would be so enthralled by a warrior, even a broken one. He didn’t want to, would rather have curled up and slept and forgotten for just one grey hour, but if Hywel was doing it...
Post by achromatic on Oct 23, 2021 15:12:15 GMT -5
He began to follow Doefreckle but only realised when the tom had whirled around in anger, that he really didn’t know what to say to him. They had left each other that night without another word and he had been sent reeling, lost in a limbo of here or there, once again set upon a road he didn’t want to walk down.
It was the darkness in his eyes that Hywel had noticed first. There was a rage he had never seen before and for a moment there was a flash of guilt written across his face for the intimacy in which Doefreckle had caught him tangled up in, but the guilt quickly morphed into hurt, that seemed to resurface whenever Doefreckle’s face emerged in his mind like the stinging pain of an open wound, and then it quickly morphed into the same anger written on the tortoiseshell tom’s eyes.
He had no right to be angry. Or upset. Or jealous, or frustrated, or any of these things when he had left without so much as a goodbye, an explanation, anything. He had stolen a piece of Hywel without looking back and had the guts to be angry at him?
Gods, he wanted to hurt the other tom. Hurt him the same way Doefreckle had stabbed him in the chest and walked away without a second word. Perhaps the defeated look would’ve made anyone else stand down, but the silver tom had had enough.
“You have no right,” he replied quietly, furiously, “to judge me at all for anything, Doefreckle. You’re the one who left me. You didn’t even tell me why, and now you’re back for what? Why did you even come here in the first place?”
His glare didn’t leave the other cat. “You said we weren’t anything but temporary lovers, didn’t you?” he demanded, “and how many others have you woo’ed and left, hm?”
The fury was lashing out now; his voice shook from the effort it took to keep his calm, that was quickly edging into something else.
Doe’s defeat immediately turned to a petulant glare when Hywel wouldn’t let him pass. He shot daggers up at the taller tom. He didn’t understand anything. And how many others have you woo’d and left, hm? Doe’s jaw dropped slightly, his defiant expression giving way to genuine, startled shock. That was a low blow. He gathered himself and it quickly gave way to indignation. “None,” he shot back, stubborn and immediate - it was an obvious lie, but Doefreckle was in that self-righteous mood where he’d deny it to the point he honestly believed it. “I guess you’re special.” He raised his chin. It was both an insult and a betrayal of how he truly felt about Hywel - he was special. “And even if I had, to a thousand other toms, it wouldn’t have been any more than you’ve done it to.” His voice had that obnoxious, sanctimonious quality it got when he knew he was so far in the wrong that he began to believe he was in the right, his gaze averted and his head raised and his tone high and haughty and judgemental.
I was afraid, he wanted to say. I love you; I was scared; I still am; I want to be with you; please see through what I’m saying. Inside, he was pleading and miserable. But he was too stubborn to say it aloud, too stubborn to back down from the fight even if he didn’t want to be in it. “I do have a right to be jealous, I think,” he continued in that easy-going voice, still not looking at Hywel, and wandered over to a different spot on the road to faux-absently play with a loose bit of tarmac with one paw. Like he was so unbothered by all this. It was like a boy from Eton pretending he was just one with the laypeople; normally Doe would never touch something like that, and he’d likely go and wash his paws frantically as soon as he was out of Hywel’s sight. “Especially because after me that’s the best you could do? How long did it take you, anyway? Was I even back beyond the SummerClan border by the time you were saying all those pretty things to someone else, do you think? And don’t—don’t call me Doefreckle. Like you don’t know me at all. Like I’m nothing. It’s—it’s—no, not even my leader calls me that.” As soon as he started talking about his name, his voice began to wobble with all the emotion he was trying to keep under wraps - the grief, the confusion, the hurt, the anger, the insecurity - and he spent the rest of the sentences trying to contain it and pretend Hywel wasn’t hearing what he must have been hearing. On like I’m nothing, his voice broke slightly; in the next sentence, the imperious, dismissive irritation was back, though weaker and more fragile and far more forced-sounding than before. He didn’t look at Hywel through any of it, aside from a quick glance at the pointed mention of the SummerClan border; he hoped Hywel didn’t catch how hurt his eyes were. Truthfully, he never wanted Hywel to stop calling him Doefreckle, never wanted to stop hearing his full name said in his voice - because no one else called him that. Because it was only Hywel. Because it was his thing, that strange formality despite the utter informality of him. But Doe wasn’t rational, he wasn’t thinking; he was floundering blindly between wanting him more than anything in the world and his utter inability to face the terror of it.
These weren’t the jibes Doe would have levelled at someone else, though. With Shadedsun on the mountaintop, his insults had been vicious - about Shaded’s own pathetic feelings for him, about his anxiety, about how insufferable and unloveable he was, about how Shaded had thrown himself at him and Doe still hadn’t wanted him. But now, this wasn’t maddened, confused grief over the death of their children that he regretted for the rest of his life - this was low, aching hurt. He wasn’t trying to tear Hywel apart — he was trying to say I love you without saying it, trying to beg and plead without begging and pleading, trying to say please see how much it hurts to be away from you with nothing but coldness. “I came back to give you a reason and some closure,” he continued in a stronger voice, still looking down at the chunk of tarmac with his brows raised, and what he meant to say was don’t listen to a word I’m saying; I know in my heart I came back to be with you. “But I see now you don’t need that. You’ve moved on fine. I was just another afternoon’s sport before dinner. No hard feelings, then. Hope I was good, at least - another mark for your bedpost.” His head tilted slightly as he spoke, rolling the black chunk back and forth under his mottled pads, brows rising higher disinterestedly to try and force down the stupid, treacherous betrayal.
Post by achromatic on Oct 24, 2021 16:08:49 GMT -5
The shock on Doefreckle's face had almost made him feel bad. Almost. An apology had almost been on the tip of his tongue, but the lie Doefreckle had given was so blatantly false that Hywel's eyes immediately narrowed. He hated the self-righteousness that was radiating off of him. How dare he? After everything he had put him through? After everything, Doefreckle thought he was the one at fault? For what? For trying to get over the fact that he couldn't do commitment?
A low growl was starting in his chest. The accusations were uncalled for, but worse, he had insinuated that what he had done that night was nothing worse than what Hywel was doing. How did that make any sense? That had been the lowest Hywel could remember, he had peeled back his layers one at a time, to show the messy, rotten core of himself to the other tom, laid out every fear and vulnerability, and Doefreckle had taken it, given him so much hope that things would be fine, things would be okay, had reassured him that there was nothing wrong with it, and then dashed every single one of those dreams without so much as an explanation.
The worst part? Hywel had almost believed him. He had almost believed that there really was something to love about him, that there would be someone who cared enough, who truly knew who he was and still saw worth in it all...and to hear Doefreckle speak so flippantly, to ask if he had picked up another lover before the love of his life had crossed the border? It filled him with an ungodly amount of rage, of anger, of hurt.
"You know, you really made me into some kind of fool, didn't you?" his voice was filled with pain, with anger and rage and disappointment, "you left me that night after I told you everything about myself and after you told me that you'd care for me despite everything in my past, and I didn't hear a single explanation. You didn't even let me try, and I didn't hear from you for days, and you expect me to what? Sit here and cry giant tears and beg you to come back to me? Is that what you wanted all along? Someone who loves and adores you and doesn't exist whenever you're not here?"
His anger sounded broken. "I don't know what kind of cat you think you are right now, whether you think you're the victim of this little show, or that you're the main character and I only exist as your love interest whenever you don't have anything else to do, but I'm sick of it," his voice cracked, "I loved you and I only found everything else because I can't stop thinking about you, and gods, I wish you'd just let me love you and get close to you and actually be your friend or more than that, but I'm starting to think I'm nothing other than your own validation. Did you come here to explain because I deserved it, or because it'd put you in the clear?"
He wanted that explanation, but he was furious. "I love you but I'm sick of begging for you to stay," he replied, looking tired now, "as much as I love you, I can't keep giving you pieces of me and hoping you won't shatter it because you're bored of me too. As much as I love you, I'd rather not have my heart blown to pieces again."
When Hywel began, Doe's face was set in that defiant, stubborn anger. But the more he spoke, the more Doe's anger crumbled into guilt, into sorrow, into profound, aching grief, until all he could do was sit there and watch and listen, blinking at Hywel with his heart breaking in his chest. Because he hadn't known it had affected Hywel this much. He... Even up to a minute ago, there had been that theatrical part of Doefreckle that found this all a bit fun - everything he felt was genuine, all his jealousy and rage and indignation and hurt, but he'd also, deep down, just really enjoyed the knowledge that he'd done this, he'd caused this, he'd once again gotten close enough to someone to make them feel things because of him; pull their puppet strings and watch them dance. Maybe that was a defence mechanism too, to keep him at arm's length.
And now, it all fell apart. All the fun fell utterly apart and all he was left with was the bleak world, the reality, that he was in love with Hywel and he was afraid and he had caused this. Because it was true. Everything Hywel was saying was true. It had been true when Shadedsun had said it, and it was true now that Hywel was saying it: he just hurt and hurt and hurt and acted shocked and betrayed when they one day had enough. He was always too self-obsessed with his own life, too fully absorbed in the driver's seat, feeling everything too much except all the things he should have been feeling and was too afraid to - and now, when it finally all crumbled away, it was too late. He'd known the silver tom had fallen for him first, but he still hadn't... Hadn't really understood how deep those feelings went. That it was love. Real love. That he loved him. Hywel loved him. When at first he'd said it in the past tense, Doe's heart had fallen with grief, with the knowledge that he was too late - but when he said I love you, when he reiterated it over and over and over, the relief he felt with studded with just as much grief and none of the selfish glee he might usually have felt. This wasn't childish love, boys playing at romance for a game, like he'd thought it was, like he'd felt it was even up until a minute or two ago - this, he realised, was real. He loved Hywel, too, more than he thought he did. So much more.
He was the love of his life, he could feel it; the way he made his heart quiet, the way he lined his chest with softness, how safe and whole and loved he felt with him. He would never find another like him; this was the end of the road for Doe, even if he'd fall in love again, each time getting a little more brittle and a little more lifeless. He didn't want anyone else. He wanted Hywel. He wanted to call himself his mate and wake up to him every morning and get into petty little squabbles about the proper way to do stupid, meaningless things and fall deeper in love every day that passed. He wanted more than anything to go to him now, to close the distance and press himself to him and tell him he loved him, too. But he didn't. And he wouldn't. Much as his soft heart was begging him to just give in to being loved and go to him, his fear won out. Hywel didn't deserve this. He deserved someone who wouldn't hurt him like Doefreckle had.
Doe suddenly realised that he was crying. He raised his paw, startled, to his cheek, drawing it away to look at the wetness upon it; he quickly wiped his cheek and turned his head stubbornly away, sniffing once and continuing to look away until he was sure the tears were gone. When he looked back at Hywel, his gaze was convincingly cold. "Well, that's not going to happen," he replied quietly. Hurt him to save him; hurt him to make him stop loving the wrong tom. Doe was never going to be able to give him what he wanted. They both knew that. He was never going to stop being afraid of happiness, even though he would never stop searching for it. "So I suppose this is the end of it. I..." One final lie, to solidify it. "I never loved you, Hywel."
He turned away, gaze averted when he said the lie, the greatest lie he had ever told. He couldn't meet his eyes when he said it, couldn't look at him. To see the pain, or the cold reflected back - or, worse than any of it, the love slip away. "I hope you find happiness. But it won't be with me."
Post by achromatic on Oct 25, 2021 17:15:56 GMT -5
Was he always so heartless? That he had set a fire inside of him, only to watch it turn into a wildfire, destroying everything in its path?
Every kindness, every offered connection now felt like a weapon being used against him. He couldn't understand this. There were moments that they connected, truly connected, and Hywel wouldn't believe otherwise. Even that night, he had been so sure, so certain that it wasn't a lie, that there truly had been something there, something tying them together, and for him to say that he didn't care? That this was just a fling and nothing else? He handed over all of him to Doefreckle, and he had broken it in half, and here he was, acting as if he was the one who had skinned his knees falling for him.
Here he was, watching Hywel like the creature in his nightmares, haunting him like the soul he had left behind in the grasp of the ghosts he had hidden in his closets. It was that moment that Doefreckle had lost Hywel. There wasn't any light in his baby-blue eyes, and his expression was now emotionless, as if simply going through the motions of all of this. He had never loved him? Well, watch me as I never love again, he thought. He could feel the unsurmountable rage, the anger, the pain, rising within him.
So he shut it off. What was the point? He had never met a cat so cold, and he didn't believe any of it. That he had flirted and played along and dragged him through the mud, just to cry and play victim, to put cruelty into his words, to pretend that they had been anything, to break his heart like this, and worse, to make that fire within him still burn for him. It was cruel. It was perhaps the cruelest thing life had bestowed onto him, to fall so high for a cat who could not love him back.
"–and I hope you die trying to," his response was dull, emotionless, as he turned to return to whatever high he was using to numb the pain. He'd get over it one day, he told himself, reminded himself constantly, but tonight? He was going to drown himself in whatever vices he needed to indulge in to get over him, and he swore to himself he wasn't going to feel guilty over it. Never again.
And I hope you die trying to. With his back turned to Hywel, Doe's reaction was genuine. His eyes widened, utterly round and utterly distraught; his mouth fell open slightly; he just stared in helpless, unseeing disbelief at the road a little way ahead as the words rolled over him again and again. For all the venom he'd spat or presented so silkily to others, and for all the poison they'd snapped back, he'd never had pain delivered so succinctly. So absolutely. To hear it from someone so kind, so warm - to know he'd broken him to this point - made it hurt all the more. Guilt drowned him; hurt, deep as his bones, unfroze all the crackling ice and turned him pliant and soft and ruined as a child. Of all the things that had been wished upon him, death had never been one of them. Others had danced around the point, but none had ever just... said it. Rather than hardening him with indignant anger, it just left him weak.
But he wouldn't show that.
"Well," was all he replied, and his voice was so convincingly final, so dismissive, disapproving, like he was an aristocrat faced with such uncouth behaviour. There was no weakness there, just a low coldness. Turning more fully at the same time Hywel did, like it was the last goodbye neither of them would voice aloud, the final curtain falling on this half-story ended before its time and with all of destiny crying out in protest, he limped with immense dignity down the road and back towards SummerClan, as the tom he loved returned to his inebriation and numbing pleasures. And though he didn't feel it, any need or desire or want, Doe found some tom who found him very pretty and very cute and made himself perfectly, impishly agreeable, if only so if Hywel spared him a thought and wondered if he were doing the same thing he was, he would be. Because who didn't love an affected, upper-class little thing they could feel very distinguished and powerful ruining.
And when he buried himself in bloody euphoria with the tom who had slit Sunpetal's father's throat, he felt no guilt; and when he started the night with Stormstar a belligerent critic and ended it with all the tension melting out of his body and a tamed purr sighing in his throat and over his half-lidded eyes, he felt no guilt either. Baby blue eyes turned to snide green and electric sky and he didn't miss the former for a second. It was almost true - Doe was very good at emotional repression; but then, the very fact he sank back into the destructive habit he'd turned away from in the first place, alienating a furious, betrayed Sunpetal from him like that hadn't been his self-punishing goal as much as he begged and offered tearful excuses, showed how fully the loss of Hywel had shaken him.
It all came back to him.
He didn't know which of them he hated more for it.