goodguygrifter (
goodguygrifter) wrote2016-04-10 06:11 am
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Good old Route 20. It starts in Boston and stretches all the way out to some-fucking-where in Oregon, and it's one of - if not The - the longest road in these great and United States. Stan knows that, because over the past few years Stan has learned a little thing or two about highways. Highways take you over state lines, they take you out of local cop jurisdiction, they take you toward your next big break. By this point highways and Stan are kinda' old friends. This one he don't know that well - not that he don't head up north sometimes, but he tries to stay lower, where the nights are warmer and he don't have to use up so much gas workin' the heater so hard.
Good old Route 20. Taking him away from - god, or more like God, the real big guns, upper case G-O-D 'cause there's been a time or two in the past, the past however long where Stan thinks he mighta' caught himself mid prayer, not that he's ever been a praying kinda' guy, especially not for a while, but sometimes shit just happens. He thinks a part of him might still be at it right now. If that feeling really is a part of him still praying he don't know why he's doing it or what he might be praying for but he don't stop himself, because oh, oh sweet baby Moses if there's a guy in a hundred miles who needs a miracle more than Stan Pines - or Stu Oakley, the latest in a long line of gen-u-ine home made fake IDs - then that poor bastard's earned it.
This rest stop might be the big break he's looking for. Not a huge break, but you take 'em where you can find 'em and he mighta' found it now because whichever armpit of the US he's tucked all snug into right now decided not to give their taxpayer funded state-welcome-and-rest-area working lamps over the parking lots. Stan hardly looks around, just keeps hobbling right over the curb and for once he ain't thinkin' about how he'd come off if anyone saw, he's not thinking about the extreme roadrash wide and red over his legs and his forearms and the backs of his hands, or the blood that dripped and dried from high up on his forehead where he didn't get his hands far up enough, or that one shoe he lost to who knows where, or anything. He just makes a beeline for the nearest car, yanks at the handle, and this sure is the big break because it comes right open, he stumbles back with how easy it comes open and kneels and makes a noise because fuck, what's left of the skin on his back really don't wanna' move like that and whatever's caked into the mess he's made of his knees sure don't want company, but this is his big break and he's not going to fuck it up and he's going to reach under the wheel and he's going to get those wires and he is gonna' go go go, and he is gonna' meet up with his good old friend the highway of Route 20 and he is going to be okay and he is going to be gone.
Good old Route 20. Taking him away from - god, or more like God, the real big guns, upper case G-O-D 'cause there's been a time or two in the past, the past however long where Stan thinks he mighta' caught himself mid prayer, not that he's ever been a praying kinda' guy, especially not for a while, but sometimes shit just happens. He thinks a part of him might still be at it right now. If that feeling really is a part of him still praying he don't know why he's doing it or what he might be praying for but he don't stop himself, because oh, oh sweet baby Moses if there's a guy in a hundred miles who needs a miracle more than Stan Pines - or Stu Oakley, the latest in a long line of gen-u-ine home made fake IDs - then that poor bastard's earned it.
This rest stop might be the big break he's looking for. Not a huge break, but you take 'em where you can find 'em and he mighta' found it now because whichever armpit of the US he's tucked all snug into right now decided not to give their taxpayer funded state-welcome-and-rest-area working lamps over the parking lots. Stan hardly looks around, just keeps hobbling right over the curb and for once he ain't thinkin' about how he'd come off if anyone saw, he's not thinking about the extreme roadrash wide and red over his legs and his forearms and the backs of his hands, or the blood that dripped and dried from high up on his forehead where he didn't get his hands far up enough, or that one shoe he lost to who knows where, or anything. He just makes a beeline for the nearest car, yanks at the handle, and this sure is the big break because it comes right open, he stumbles back with how easy it comes open and kneels and makes a noise because fuck, what's left of the skin on his back really don't wanna' move like that and whatever's caked into the mess he's made of his knees sure don't want company, but this is his big break and he's not going to fuck it up and he's going to reach under the wheel and he's going to get those wires and he is gonna' go go go, and he is gonna' meet up with his good old friend the highway of Route 20 and he is going to be okay and he is going to be gone.
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"Ripoff," he mutters, trying to piece together what parts of that he did hear and figure out what Ford's asking him. "Yeah. But the town, they buy his story, right? And, uh, this Mandolin guy."
Stan rubs his hands over his arms, hunching his shoulders. He can't figure out which city it is outside. He's forgotten he was even trying. It's just blobs of light in the window now.
"So this uh, this old guy. He's a loser, but he's a loser who's got someone in his corner. Hope he makes it big before his friend decides to make tracks. That part always sucks. Hey, you got a coat? Mine, uh. It's kinda' on its last leg, ain't it?"
His laugh ain't all of one, it's kind of quiet and drifting off just like the rest of Stan's brain keeps trying to do, but it's a laugh, anyway, because it's funny. Kind of an understatement, or something.
"I bet you've got better ones. I bet you're the kinda' guy who's always got nice coats." He pulls his arms a little warmer around himself and closes his eyes, makes this noise, and he don't know if it's a satisfied noise or a disgusted one. He wants it to be the first one, but thinks maybe, probably, it was a little bit more of the second.
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Ford's not sure if he should let him drift off or not. God knows he could use the rest, among other things, but Ford's never had to deal with someone who looks so damn close to overdosing before. He doesn't event want to entertain the idea, but a big part of Ford is terrified that if he lets his brother fall asleep, he might not wake up again.
Suddenly uncomfortable with the silence that's fallen between them, Ford glances over at Stan, just, you know, to make sure he's still awake, still breathing. Despite knowing he should really keep both hands on the wheel, Ford gives in to the urge to reach over and lay a hand on his brother's shoulder. He gives a gentle squeeze, then a little shake, just - just to wake him up a little.
"Stanley? You still with me, buddy?"
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One shoulder hits something hard and he twitches his head around to look at what, a door, a window, lights outside, big blurry buildings starting to dot the side of the road. Those are new, they must be headed into town.
They. He looks on his other side, at the way the arm he flung out might've landed on someone else's arm, solid, warm. The arm's attached to a shoulder, to a face, a face like his. His back is killing him. He leans forward a little, wanting to save whatever's left of his skin from rubbing up against the seat, clears his throat, breathes. "Right, uh- Right. Yeah. I guess I, uh- Yeah. Can't sleep yet, huh?"
"In the middle of your story, too," he says, rubbing at his eyes, breathing. "I didn't mean to. It wasn't that it was boring or anything, but it was kinda' bleak, you know? At the end there. Did you turn on the heat? That'll eat up the gas, you know. Uh, what, what were we- Mandolin. Manolin. That kid. Do you think he was right, to stick around with that old guy when everyone knew he could do better?"
He tightens what's left of his coat around him, remembers the heat and dark and the smell, watches the heat come out of the vents in front of him and looks out the windshield ahead, wonders if maybe he could open the window a little. "I think that's where the author fell down. If he's gonna' make it all realistic he's gotta' go all the way, what do you think? You think someone would really stick around like that when they both know this kid could do better without some old nobody ridin' on his coattails?"
Stan makes another one of those noises he's been making since he got into this car, another one of those quiet, frustrated pain noises and he presses at his forehead because, "Fuck, what I wouldn't give for some advil. Or a beer. What wouldn't I do? Haha." It's quick, that last noise, amused but only really a laugh because it's not anything else. It's a laugh by default. Damn, a beer. Nice and cold. A beer would be nice.
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"I think..." He trails off, his eyes turning back towards the road.
He knows what he thinks about that sort of situation, in the context of Santiago's story. He knows how he feels about Manolin, how he feels about the difficult, brave choice the kid made - but something tells him that's not what they're talking about. That's not what his brother is really asking him, that's not what he actually wants to know.
Ford clears his throat, his eyes darting quickly as he hastily reads a road-sign before they fly right on past it.
"I think there's a gas station up ahead. I'll see if they have any aspirin, maybe get directions to a motel."
He risks a glance over at his brother, hoping that he hasn't noticed how blatantly he dodged his question.
"You, uh. You want anything else while I'm in there? Food, a pack of cigarettes or something?" He asks, despite not wanting to enable his brother's smoking habit. "You still like Lucky Strikes, right?"
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But that don't mean he expects this thing that looks like Ford to act like him, too, because he already ain't acting like Ford, Stan's brother is off in some big important school somewhere - or, a school, which is big time enough if you ask Stan - making some big important name for himself, and he's got no reason to talk to Stanley at all just yet.
So this Ford, this whatever is going on here, can answer whatever he wants, he can offer whatever he wants. He can avoid whatever he wants, or forget to answer, or whatever. Stan slumps down in the seat a little more, dealing with the rub of the chair against a few different scrapes so that he don't have to hold himself up so much.
"Whatever's cheap." He laughs a little. "Get me whatever you can scrounge up with the old five fingered discount, you know." It's a joke, see, funny because it's true, Stan wiggles his fingers to help make his point that quick hands and fast fingers ain't only good for picking pockets. "Think I might have to wait on food for a while, though. Remember what I said about uh, about us? My jaw, you know, way back when?"
He sticks out his tongue, or tries to, again making a point and this time with all the cuts across it and the way it's still kind of swollen. Talking like that makes the lisp and slur in his voice even worse but that don't matter, Ford will know what Stan says anyway, he's sure of that. "Think, uh, that. A liquid diet, maybe a slushie or somethin'."
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Apparently that's gonna be a life-long trend for his brother, showing him things that both disgust him and break his heart at the same time.
Ford looks away abruptly, swallows hard, and tries to ignore the way he can almost taste copper on the back of his tongue, there's so much blood in the air of this stupid, cramped cabin.
"Right, yeah, okay." He opens the door a little too quickly, shuts it a little too hard, and practically sprints into the gas station.
He tries not to make it obvious that he's keeping an eye on the car, but if Stan cares to look in the windows he'll be able to see the nervous, anxious looks being shot his way every -oh, five seconds or so.
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Just then, because sometimes luck actually is on his side, he forgets about all that blood and spit still trying to run out of his mouth and he forgets to swallow it, and he chokes on it, and when he's sitting there coughing with his arm wrapped around his chest he feels something in one of his pockets, one of the pockets that stayed in one piece even while his skin got ripped all to pieces. He takes what's in there out and holds it up to the gas station lights, and turns the little pill around and around in his fingers.
"Huh," he says, thoughtfully, and then, "Not the best idea you had today, Hal old buddy," to himself, because who's around to hear him? "But not the worst," and then he has to laugh, because nah, not the worst, not today. "And hell, it might even work, wouldn't that be funny?"
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Without a moment to spare, evidently, because just as he feared Stanley is doing something stupid.
"Stanley!" No no no, no getting out of the car, no trying to leave. "If you needed some fresh air you could've just rolled the--"
He stops short, his eyes locking onto his brother's hand now that he's actually close enough to see what's in it. He stares, dread welling up inside his chest as he prays to whatever God that's listening that the thing in his brother's hand is just a pebble, or some pocket lint, or an M&M or anything other than what he thinks it is.
"---Stanley. What the hell is that."
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"Guess I could guess, if I wanted. But uh, you don't really say no when a guy like that decides to get generous, you know? Besides, uh, you used to know Stan Pines, didn't you? Did he ever say no to a free sample, even back then? And when they uh, when they, then they put another one in my pocket. A goin' away present. Haha. So uh, I guess what the hell this is is kind of a joke. They thought it was, anyway, I guess they thought bein' high'd keep me from gettin' out." His laugh then is a real one, quiet but real, and satisfied.
"Been doin' okay so far, right? I mean, I don't need to be all compos mentis or whatever, I got this far with just-" With just that friendly hallucination helping him out, doing things no hallucination should be able to do, and he makes a face, looks kind of barfy and the hand not holding that pill near his knees curls itself up around his stomach.
"Um... Where was I goin' with that? Shit, my head. Okay, uh, wouldn't it be funny, though? If that dickhole's joke ended up bein' what made all this worth it? Hey, you go to the john while you were in there, Ford? You might end up wishin' you had, I don't know if golden boy Stanford Filbrick Pines," and he says the name with relish, really tastes it coming out, and that one combo of letters feels good to hear, kind of warm and kind of awful like it always does whenever he finds another one of those opportunities to hear it, "ever had to drive a quick getaway with a full bladder but uh, it ain't gonna' do your upholstery no favors, you know what I mean?"
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He tries to say something, anything, but his mouth has gone dry. He wets his lips, for what little good that does him, and clears his throat so that his words can get past the constricted airway blocking their path.
"Stanley. Let me see that for a second." It's said gently, a little too calmly, but it's still more of a demand rather than a request.
He moves forward to the side of the car, one hand propped against the doorframe as he leans forward, offering his brother the carton he bought while inside the station.
"Here, drink this while I take a look at it, alright? It should help."
It is not, in fact, a slushie, which should be pretty self-evident because of the fact it's in a carton. While the ice probably would have felt nice in the short term, the sugar wouldn't have done those lacerations any favors. Hopefully milk will be less abrasive.
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It's a stupid little detail to get stuck on, out of all the details he could choose from, after everything. But it's just, it's just- "Look," he says, dropping the hand that'd been reaching out for the carton and curling it tight around his knee instead. "Look, it's nothing personal, I just, um-"
How do you tell a guy you don't think he's real? Or maybe that ain't it, maybe it's that you can't tell him that you do think- But Stan's high, okay, and probably in shock or some shit, and he's full of stupid ideas any day of the week anyway, not usually pants-shittingly terrifying ones but this is just- You don't, anyway, the point is that you don't tell him, not when that guy is Stanford Pines, standing there looking at you with your face, your face but better, talking to you in that voice that was maybe meant to be yours back before you fucked that up too, telling you in a voice that's your voice but better that he wants to have something you can't let him have because what if one, what if the other, what if the lady behind door number one and the tiger behind door number two are both ready to step right up and swallow him whole, how do you tell a guy lookin' at you like he's your brother that you don't want any of it, you don't want to know- What does he say? Stan's got to say somethin'. Something, maybe something that'll stop that face lookin' at him like that.
"I don't usually take shit anyway, you know? Not on my own, 'cause you know how when you start takin' people think you're hooked, and when they think you're hooked they think you're helpin' yourself to the merchandise, and that's not a good break for my wallet or my kneecaps, you know? But this, just this- I mean, I think I deserve a break, you know? Just, just for a few more hours."
He sighs, slumps against the inside of the car door, and breathes a couple quiet words to himself, tired, years worth of tired. "A few more hours. Just a few."
"Then I'll get up and I'll think, and I'll stand up on my own two feet and I'll do, I'll do whatever it is I need to do. I'll be alright. I'll get out of this. Just- I mean, it's not that I don't trust- I mean- I just need to make sure this don't get lost, okay?"
He curls his fingers tight around the pill and looks up, ducks his head to wipe a little bloody spit out of the corner of his mouth and then looks up, all hope. "So I can't let you have this, but if I take it I can drink your nerdy-ass milk an' we can keep drivin', just for a few more hours, and uh, maybe you could tell me a few more of those weird, depressing stories of yours and everything'll be alright for a while. A few hours. What do you say? That sound like a night out to remember or what, huh Sixer?"
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Ford drops to one knee, lowers himself down so he's eye- to eye with his brother, and he grabs his hand - curls it over the fist holding tight to that pill - and he squeezes tight.
"Stanley." You'd think he'd follow that up with something, but no, no all he does is look at his brother and feel sick while looking at him because he had hoped if he had just played along long enough he'd have time to figure things out, to figure out what to do. But he can't do that, he can't go along with this anymore and he still doesn't have any goddamn idea what he's going to do and he's sorry.
He's supposed to be the one with the plan, the one who always knows what to do because knowing things is all he's good for. What does that say about him, if he can't even do this one thing, this one thing his brother needs him to do?
"I'm not going anywhere." He adds, just to say something, just - just to make it seem like he's got some sort of plan here, some sort of inkling of what he's doing.
"I'm here, okay?" He reaches out, curling his hand around the back of his brother's head, his fingers tangling in his unruly hair just to emphasize his point, to really drive it home. "I'm here. I'm here for you, and you don't - you don't need to take anything to make me stay. You don't need to do anything, alright? Just - just trust me, please. I need you to believe me. I need you to believe I'm not going anywhere."
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He doesn't look up then either, he just closes his eyes, kinda' squeezes them shut, and he takes a breath for a second, smells gas, smells real, wide-open air, finds himself looking for that moldy, sweaty, BO smell, the smell of his own sweaty pits mixed with the smell of the blood he's leavin' on the inside of that trunk-
He just smells open air. He smells the reassuring smell of nothing in particular and hears that unsettling sound of his brother's smooth, comforting voice and he holds himself still just for a second, he feels the hair trying to raise up on his arms and wonders if he's gonna' have bald patches there once he's all healed up, he wonders how much of that thick Pines body hair he lost along with all that road rash. He opens his eyes just enough to look down at his lap and he shivers once and his head gives a throb and he thinks about that, tries not to think about his brother down in front of him, down on one knee, fuckin' holding his hand and everything.
"You look like you're about to propose, you know that?" Maybe he coulda' made his voice sound casual if he really tried, or maybe he couldn't have, but it's getting harder to believe that 'night out to remember' he was just talking about is actually gonna' happen so he's only half assing the whole sound-casual thing and it dips in and out of his voice, the words oughta' sound amused and that's what his tone's sort of reaching for but it don't ever really stay there. "I don't know, Ford, I'll wear your ring but I never looked all that good in white."
"You know what I believe? I believe my brother's gonna' get that-" Tell him, tell him, there's nothing you can't tell him when he's not real, I kept up with you, I kept after you, I called that school and asked 'em how you were doing, once a year I called 'em because I, god, Ford I- "He's gonna' get that twelfth degree of his and then I'll, um, it might be a little while before I got enough to show for myself to make it work but um, once I do, any day now, then things'll be- But you know how, if you try to make good on a plan too early you just end up run outta' town with nothin' to show for it but a couple warrants and an empty gas tank, right, that's why- It's just I can't let the high wear off yet. It's been on its way out for a while but it's too early, I- Not like this. It's not that I don't trust you, I just don't um, I don't- just don't feel too bad, okay, it's too early to let it wear off yet, that's all. Not like this."
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Ford would laugh at the audacity of it if he weren't so sure that he was one wrong breath away from crying, and wouldn't that just be the icing on the cake that is this horrible night.
Rather than laugh, or cry, or do anything that might open the goddamn floodgates and turn him into an emotional wreck, Ford simply exhales out of his nose. It's an ambiguous gesture, one that can be interpreted as everything from mild, begrudging amusement to getting choked up, which is fitting because Ford's genuinely not sure which end of the spectrum he's falling on right now. He's not sure of anything right now, honestly, least of all what he should do next.
It's a horribly disconcerting feeling, not knowing where to go from here. All his life, that had been his talent, his thing. He had been the brains to Stan's brawn, the half of their dynamic duo who always had a plan, a way out, a third option. And yet here he is, kneeling in a filthy parking lot without so much as a clue as to where to go from here.
Maybe he'll just have to improvise, take a leaf from his brother's book and just...go with things and see where it takes him.
"You know what I believe, Stanley?" His voice is soft, or at least, as soft has he can reasonably make it now that his throat feels like he's been gargling gravel all night. "I believe, without a shadow of a doubt, that I'm not going anywhere. Hallucination or not, I'm gonna stay with you, alright? I'm gonna get you through this."
He knows it didn't do much good the first time, but he squeezes his brother's hand one more time, just for emphasis, just because he can.
"You've got to trust me, Stan. You don't have to think I'm real, but I can't- I can't help you if you don't let me."
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But this voice, now, this other one, it's his brother's voice and it sounds sure, it sounds a lot of things but it sounds sure, too. And the words themselves, they sound- A deep breath digs its way inside Stan's ribcage and then another one, those words are hitting his insides and bouncing around just like bullets and he don't know whether they're hurting just like bullets too or if they're doing something else entirely.
There's a part of Stan that always looks out for opportunities, times lady luck's dice roll his way, little ins with the people around him, a part that just stays on the lookout for chances. There's a part of him that always will. That part of him sees a chance now, a last chance that's about to whizz right on by because he's on the edge of believing something, something stupid, and once he does fall over that edge the other shoe's going to drop and it's going to kick him directly in the ass.
But before that happens, while he's over here teetering on this, this cliff or whatever, anything he happens to say is just like - well, it's like hearing some especially deep, smooth voice of some radio announcer asking a question and answering back reflexively, it's like catching a look at some part of his face in the rearview mirror and muttering an observation about anything, about his latest run of bad luck, about himself, about traffic, and then muttering a reply right back, deeper, quieter so no one but Stan can really hear. It's just like that. There's all sorts of things you can say when you know no one's listening. Even the truth, sometimes.
"I can't decide if it's a miracle or a fuckin' joke, hearin' that." Stan thinks he can feel the words falling out of his mouth there, he can feel them on what's left of his skin tumbling right out the corner where those cuts keep pulling open and instead of blood trickling down his chin it's words, ones that want to get out quick before Stan can think too hard about locking them back in where they maybe oughta' be, where anyone wiser and smarter would probably keep words like that locked up. But this is his last chance, maybe one of his last chances, and let no one say that Stan Pines lets any opportunity pass him by.
"Hearin' it now. I coulda' heard that in Columbia. I coulda' heard it in Russia. I coulda' heard it in fuckin'- in fuckin' Jersey, on that stupid beach, hidin' out in that fuckin' boat! What I wouldn't a' gave to hear that back when I coulda', back when I didn't know-"
"This ain't even what I wanted to say to you. Ain't that funny? Earlier today- musta' been just like, this afternoon, I was thinkin'- I mean, what I wouldn't a' gave, you know? That's what I wanted to say, here. I just wanted you to know how much I always, I always wanted- maybe you or, or even just some Joe Schmoe, just anybody, to-"
Then it's like a brain-switch flicks inside of Stan, or maybe it's like a brain fuse box, taking too much emotional current and stopping it right there. Anything that mighta' been like desperation drops out of his voice and his eyes drop off that face and he looks at a puddle of gas nearby instead, he looks at all the colors in it shining under those bright gas station lights. He focuses on that. "But I guess it don't work, your dialogue sounds wrong. Go back and rework your script, maybe some day you'll come back and really sell it to me."
He looks down at that puddle over there and feels his eyebrows pulling together and his jaw pulling tight and the line of his lips shaking just a little and his hand loosens around that pill and turns around to try and give that six-fingered hand a hard squeeze and tries to hold on tight, maybe too tight, and a deep breath digs into him and Ford's words, that help you, that get you through this, bounce around in his chest like bullets.
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He thinks about that instead of Russia and Columbia and the waver in his brother's voice, because if he thinks about any of those things for too long he might just lose what little composure he's got left. One of them has to be the designated Adult here, at least one of them has to have their shit together and make sure this clusterfuck of a situation gets resolved somehow, and Ford's not about to foist that responsibility off on Stan. Between the two of them, at least he's not high off his ass and in the process of staving off what appears to be one spectacular emotional breakdown just waiting to happen.
"I'm not trying to sell you anything, Stanley." His voice sounds a little tighter than he'd like, but at least it doesn't waver. "You know I'm not."
He pauses, swallowing hard despite how dry his mouth feels.
"We grew up inside a pawn shop. I think you know what a sales pitch sounds like."
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"You know," he adds, interrupting himself before that first sentence even really got started. "It's been a long time since I uh, you know, held anyone's hand. Not 'cause it'd look stupid, it just uh, it, it doesn't feel, uh..."
Stan realizes he's looking down at his hand holding tight around those six fingers and then he blinks a few times, he frowns and presses the heel of his free hand against his temple. "Where was I goin' with that other stuff? That's right, you and your shitty sales pitch. I could teach you a thing or two. Heh, bet I could teach dad a thing or two, shit. Even if you mean it, you never start out tellin' the guy everything he wants to hear, not straight off. That ain't... it ain't how life works. You don't just get shit, you don't just get what you want. You gotta', you gotta' make 'em work through some BS first, everyone wants to feel like a discernin' customer. But you know, since we're here-"
He stares down at their hands, he tries to chew at his lip, he grimaces as a couple cuts pull and he fails, totally and completely, to sound casual.
"-You might as well, you know, since you already blew that train outta' the station, you might as well tell me what you want. I mean, you said I had to let you help. You, uh. What is it you want me to do?"
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It's not just a habit, or an instinct. It's a rule, a law - it's an unspoken promise they've never once broken, not in all their life. You don't let go until it stops hurting. You just don't.
"Come on, Stanley." His voice hasn't cracked like that since puberty was kicking his ass up and down the stairs, but you know what that's just what having a raw, tight throat will do to you.
"Don't make me repeat all that. I will, if I have to. I'll say it as many times as it takes for you to believe it, but I think - I think you already know that. I think you want me to be telling you the truth, and--and that's why you don't think I am. Because why would anything ever go your way, right?"
It hurts, saying that. It hurts his throat and his heart and his soul, and he'll be damned if his glasses aren't fogging up as proof of it. The heat behind his eyes has built up to the point where he's genuinely surprised they haven't started melting yet, though the dampness of his lashes certainly seems to imply otherwise.
"Why...why would someone who hasn't talked to you in years suddenly care when they, when they were the one who--"
He cuts himself off abruptly, closing his eyes tight for a moment as he swallows down a pathetic, miserable sound before it can escape his throat. He is not going to cry, God Damn it, not for himself. If he's going to cry for any reason at all, it's going to be for his brother, for what's been made of him, for what he let happen to him - he refuses to allow guilt, as heavy as it might be, to be the thing that finally pushes him over the edge.
Ford swallows hard, his eyes screwed shut tight as he drags in a shaky breath though his nose and lets it out in a quite curse.
"God." He breathes. "Stanley, I'm - I'm sorry. I'm so sorry."
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So he stares at his brother - at his brother's face - for a minute, or for a couple seconds. He blinks, takes a slow breath through his nose, leans back a little bit and turns over the fist of the hand that's holding that pill and he looks at his fingers, silently. Some kinda' expression might leak back onto his face eventually, but for now all he looks is thoughtful.
"I take back what I said about your sales pitch," he says finally, honestly, and depending on how tangled up the hand holding the pill is with Ford's flock of fingers, Stan's going to open up his fist and let his one way out of all this bullshit just sit there out in the open, at the mercy of god and everybody.
Or, you know, at the mercy of Ford. Which is worse.
There's no way things can go from here that ain't worse. Either the high fades off and so does the absolute worst trip of Stan's life and that's that, you know, finito, or the high fades off and his brother is here. Either his brother is gone and, to the surprise of no one, gives not one single solitary shit about any of this, or Mr. Perfect is here and stays here and he knows. He sees.
Either Ford never sees him again or Ford sees him like he was never supposed to, Ford sees him like this.
Like he really is. Stan can think that now, he can admit the truth to himself right now as long as he never thinks too hard about it again. Either he's lost Ford again, and that would be bad enough, but if he doesn't then Ford sees the guy his brother really is.
There is no way giving up this pill is going to end well. Not for the guy who, once upon a time, went by the name Stanley. But everyone has their price, and he knows his when he hears it.
"This is what you wanted, right?" His voice isn't empty but it isn't full of anything in particular, either. There's no reason to pour it full of anything. The deal's gone down, the rest of it's just details.
"Oh yeah, and that milk of yours. Wanted me to drink that too." He stretches out his fingers and then curls them in a few times, beckoning the milk closer. "Come on. Gimme. Gotta' get my calcium, or some shit."
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Ford breathes out gently through his nose as he waits for the hammer to fall, for the court to be dismissed. He waits for Stanley to throw his apology back in his face like the worthless sentiment it is because there's no making amends for what he's done - for letting things come to this. For turning a blind eye while the world happened to his brother.
But, wouldn't you know it, the hammer never falls. That apology never comes back to hit him where he lives. Stanley just...turns his hand, uncurls his fingers. He doesn't hand over the pill, but he gives up on trying to keep it to himself.
Shocked, and maybe just a little hysterical with relief, Ford curls his own fingers tight around Stan's hand, trapping the pill between their palms. He could have just knocked the damn thing to the ground, snatched it up and put it in his pocket so maybe someone at the hospital could figure out what the hell it is, but no. No, this feels better. This feels more right.
"Y-yeah. Yeah, right. Right, right, ha-"
His smile is a shaky, unstable thing, and the amusement in his tone is nervous and forced. This emotional roller coaster just keeps throwing him for loops, and he's finally starting to feel the whiplash.
He fumbles for the milk, forgetting for a moment where he set it, before practically shoving it at Stan in a jittery fit of over-enthused nerves, as if Stan might just change his mind after a second's delay.
"Here, uh. You can drink it or just use it as a rinse. It, it doesn't really matter. Whatever makes you feel better."
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Whatever.
He dismisses the thought, just watches Ford all jittery and maybe babbling a little, showing the kind of nerves he'd never imagine Ford having after a moment like that, not even in an uncontrollable hallucination, and he feels that weight hanging over his head.
"Thought about hearing you say that about a million times," he shares in a voice whose tone has started to slip over from 'bland' into 'dull'. He can't think of any reason not to share. It's too much work, anyway, to keep his thoughts from coming out his mouth. He lets Ford clasp their hands together, feels those six fingers against his like some lost and golden dream and tilts his head back to take a swig of that milk, making a face as he tries to decide whether it hurts his mouth.
It's not too bad. He swallows, and considers a second more. "I never figured you'd get all spazzy after."
He puts the milk between his knees so he can rub his forehead, eyes briefly closed, and he feels some vague sort-of regret at having had to trade off that last pill. Maybe that heavy feeling ain't all because of Mr. Friendly Hallucination waving that metaphorical Greek sword around, and the pill coulda' put that off a little while.
It was a good trade. A great trade. The best deal he'll ever make in his life, probably. But that don't mean it ain't a shame, sort of.
"Come on." He straightens up, swinging his legs inside the car and leaning back against the seat, leaning his head back, too, so no part of his body has to try and hold itself up and he looks up at Ford through eyes that don't want to stay all the way open. "I know those guys, uh, from before, I know they were real but I don't, uh, I don't really know how far I got. So we better vamoose while the vamoosin's good. Goin' until you run outta' gas is usually a good start, but I don't know when they woulda' noticed. Maybe on the road. Car woulda' been lighter, at least, and I mighta' made some noise..."
He trails off, eyes sliding off to one side of Ford's face and going out of focus as he tries to think about it. "Hey, Mr. Successful, you happen to know anything about spottin' tails?"
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He's got this. He's got this situation under control. He is definitely, definitely not just hanging on by the skin of his teeth and hoping that will somehow be enough to keep this house of cards that is his fucking life from collapsing in on itself.
He flashes Stan a small, tight smile that he almost doesn't have to force and tries his damnedest to look encouraging, like someone who Stan could have even the slightest bit of confidence in.
"I don't think that's going to be a problem, Stanley."
Or at least he sure hopes it isn't, but if he can pretend for at least a little while that they have one less massive problem on their plate then maybe he can actually get them through this clusterfuck of a situation with his nerves intact.
"But just in case, why don't you keep an eye on the rear-view for me? Watch my six?"
Just like when they were kids, pretending to be soldiers or explorers or some other daring pair of adventures who were in way over their heads. Just like that, only this time the danger is real and they can't just avoid it by deciding they don't want to play anymore.
"The closest motel is about thirty minutes away, twenty if we ignore the speed limit a little. Think you can stay up that long?"
It's not a necessity, really, it's probably not even something that needs to be done at all, but if it helps Stan relax and it gives him something to do, to keep himself distracted, then Ford has no qualms with playing along and pretending it's important. Besides, having a task might help keep him awake, and Ford would very much rather be able to drive without having to take his eyes off the road every three seconds to make sure his brother is still breathing.
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After a second, maybe a couple seconds, he realizes he hasn't answered. "Uh, yeah, sure. If you're real nice I might even watch your twelve."
Then he settles back, content to wait for Ford to hang around some more or start driving or whatever it is he wants to do.
"I never found out what you were like on road trips," he says after a little bit in a slow, musing voice. "Not real ones, long ones, you know. Guess it makes sense you'd be the kinda guy who plans out his hotel stops."
He hesitates. It's, like - okay. So if Ford's real- but the penny hasn't really dropped on that one yet. It isn't like Stan don't know how he looks, he probably looks like he feels and he feels like one giant, pulsing scab. And if Ford, genius college graduate grown man PH-goddamn-D Ford is actually here looking at the giant, pulsing scab that used to be his brother then he already knows, it's already too late to disappear and come back when he's finally made something of himself. But it doesn't feel too late. That's the weird part, and he's putting it down to that drug, whatever it was.
But if he asks after Ford's life, like this guy sitting beside him is a real guy with real travel plans and destinations and all that shit, then that makes him even more real, doesn't it? Or it makes him real sooner. Or something.
But if he doesn't ask about Ford's life now, before that penny finally drops and maybe shatters Stan's skull or something equally shit-awful, he's sure as hell not going to ask after. And he wants to know.
"So, uh, where you headed, anyway?" he asks, and realizes as he says it that he doesn't know how much time went by since he mentioned Ford's road trip habits in the first place, and doesn't know if Ford tried to say anything to him, and doesn't know if they even started driving. Maybe if he keeps the conversation going a little he'll figure some of that out. Turning his head to look out the window to figure out the rest he can do, but in a minute. Turning his head sounds like work. "Far enough from Backupsmore that you gotta' plan out your hotels and shit? Wasn' sure how I'd keep track of ya' after you graduated so I uh, I guess I was kinda' hopin' you wouldn't go that far."
He starts to close his eyes but then opens them again. Eyes on the road. Eyes on those rearview mirrors. Right.