[hr][center][sub][color=cecece]Present - Morning[/color] [color=734e66]◈[/color] [color=cecece]Marth Oldfox[/color] [color=734e66]◈[/color] [color=cecece]Central City District --> The Docks District[/color] [color=734e66]◈[/color] [color=cecece]Marth[@Memoria][/color][/sub][/center][hr][table][row][/row][row][cell][url=https://www.roleplayerguild.com/posts/5661930][img]https://media.discordapp.net/attachments/1069869642589409300/1510779496528216104/Marthclearskin.tuxpi.jpg?ex=6a1e0e8c&is=6a1cbd0c&hm=ffacb6a1330c56c3396c58a262f646a336b30b5302261befbd5e089b405a61ce&=&format=webp[/img][/url][color=2e2c2c]▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇[/color][/cell][cell][quote] [color=8d8e8f] Morning unlatched itself over Calder City in a wash of pale after-rain. The streets were not dry yet. They glimmered under the buses and the early shoes, every curb holding a little silver bruise of water. Buses sighed at curbs. Shop windows blinked awake one by one. On street corners, gilded banners hung from the lampposts for the Days of Remembrance, their edges stirring whenever the wind passed through. For the next three days, school would be closed and Calder City would remember its fallen heroes: the powered, the unpowered, the famous, the half-forgotten, the ones whose names had become statues and the ones whose names were only spoken now at kitchen tables. He sat in a coffee shop two blocks from the central train station, one elbow on the table, his notebook open beneath a little drift of eraser crumbs. The shop was warm and narrow and soft around the edges, with fogged windows, old brick walls, and pendant lamps that made little golden circles over the tables. Someone had pinned dried Amaranthus above the register. The air smelled of coffee, cinnamon, steamed milk, and the faint burnt sweetness of croissants left a minute too long in the case. Marth tried not to listen too closely to the minds around him. It was easier with family at the table. His younger brother, Bone, sat across from him, stirring an iced coffee so pale and sugary it could hardly be considered coffee anymore. Bone was not his given name, but one of those childhood nicknames that had attached itself like a burr and become more official than anything printed on paper. He worked at the coffee shop part-time, though his shift had not yet begun, which meant he was still allowed to behave like a customer and drink something with whipped cream leaning over the lid. One of his older sisters, Sybil, sat beside him in sunglasses, indoors, with the regal exhaustion of a woman once again between jobs. She had been fired again. Marth had not asked why this time. It seemed kinder. [b][color=dee5f7]“All right,”[/color][/b] he said, and looked down at his notebook as though it might bite him. [color=dee5f7][b]“Be honest, but not cruel.”[/b][/color] [b] Sybil folded her hands. “I make no promises.”[/b] Bone leaned forward. [b]“Read it.”[/b] Marth sighed. It was a very musical sigh, in his defense. He lifted the notebook a little and read, [color=dee5f7][b]“‘And if the dawn should find me ruined, let it find me with lips like mine...’”[/b][/color] Silence settled over the table. Not awe. Marth’s face changed in slow, private horror. Bone’s lips pressed together. Sybil lowered her sunglasses just enough to look at him over the rims. [b]"Well."[/b] Marth put his face in his hands. [color=dee5f7][b]“Lips like mine? Ugh...I can’t believe I wrote something that lame.”[/b][/color] [b]“You’ve written worse,”[/b] Sybil said. That startled a laugh out of him, small and helpless and mostly hidden behind his fingers. It was one of the gentler things about him, how easily laughter found him when he was not guarding the door. His shoulders shook once. Bone pointed at him with his straw. [color=dee5f7][b]"Honestly, it's been a month. I have been trying to write this song for a month, and I still can't get it right."[/b][/color] Marth lowered his hands and looked mournfully at the page. [color=dee5f7][b]“It keeps almost becoming something and then it just...fades into stardust..."[/b][/color] Bone considered this with all the gravity his whipped cream allowed. [b]“Maybe you should take a break. Come back to it later.”[/b] Marth looked at him fondly. [color=dee5f7][b]“That is sensible.”[/b][/color] Sybil leaned back, tapping one nail against her coffee cup. [b]“Are you coming to home later?”[/b] What she meant was Prue Gables Bed & Breakfast, named after their great great grandmother Prudence. Marth's pencil stopped. “Old Prue Gables” was what guests called it when they wanted to sound charmed. To the family, it was just home: a grand dark plum Victorian home with a wraparound porch, fretwork trim, and the personality of a beloved aunt who had opinions about curtains. It had been passed down through the Oldfox family for generations and run, with varying degrees of competence and affection, as a bed and breakfast. Everyone helped. No one escaped. His maternal grandparents still held court in the parlor. His mother had once danced through the dining room with a tray of biscuits so gracefully that a honeymoon couple from Westlake had applauded. His father had painted half the guest rooms and then pretended the crooked bluebirds in room three were intentional. It was home in the way only a crowded place could be home—slightly inconvenient, deeply beloved, and always smelling faintly of lavender, old wood, and breakfast. For the Days of Remembrance, the family had planned a private observance for Marth’s late grandfather. He had been unpowered, a firefighter, and a hero of the city all the same. A man did not need a gift to run into a burning building. Marth’s gaze drifted to the window. [color=dee5f7][b]“I might,”[/b][/color] he said. Sybil watched him carefully. She had a gift for noticing the answer under the answer, though not a supernatural one. Just elder-sisterly suspicion, sharpened by years of practice. [b]“Might?”[/b] [color=dee5f7][b]“Well, I have essays to grade.”[/b][/color] Bone checked the clock on his phone and made a wounded sound. [b]“I have to become useful now. Pray for me.”[/b] [color=dee5f7][b]"Mhm."[/b][/color] Marth said with a subdued smile. Bone stood and collected his drink. Before leaving, he leaned over and kissed Marth on the top of the head because the Oldfox family had never quite respected personal solemnity. Sybil waited until he was out of earshot. Then after a few moments of glaring at Marth, she said, [b]“Is it that awful little prince again?”[/b] Marth looked at his notebook. The line blurred a little. [color=dee5f7][b]“Ugh...Sybil please, not today.”[/b][/color] [b]“Bitch, don’t ‘Sybil please’ me. Is it him?”[/b] The coffee shop seemed suddenly louder around them. Milk steam. Cups clinking. Someone laughing too hard near the pastry case. Marth kept his mind closed against it all, not with panic but with practice. Most people imagined telepathy as a door one opened. For Marth, it was more often a hundred doors trying to open at once, and his life had been the long, quiet education of keeping them shut. He tapped the eraser against the notebook. [color=dee5f7][b]“He’s been showing up,”[/b][/color] Marth admitted. Sybil’s mouth tightened. [b]“Again?”[/b] [color=dee5f7][b]“More lately.”[/b][/color] [b]“At your apartment?”[/b] [color=dee5f7][b]“Sometimes.”[/b][/color] [b]“At night?”[/b] Marth said nothing. Her face went cold in a way that made her look very much like their oldest sister. [b]“Drunk?”[/b] [color=dee5f7][b]“Sometimes,”[/b][/color] he said again. It was a small word. It did not deserve the amount of shame it carried. Sybil removed her sunglasses fully now. [b]“Why haven’t you called the police?”[/b] [color=dee5f7][b]“I have.”[/b][/color] [b]“And?”[/b] [color=dee5f7][b]“And by the time anyone gets there, he’s gone."[/b][/color] Sybil sighed as if suddenly remembering, [b]"Right right. The cheating little peacock can blink away when consequences come knocking. How fucking convenient."[/b] [color=dee5f7][b]“Mhmm”[/b][/color], Marth said with a weary sort of expression, laying his elbow on the table with his cheek rested in his palm. [b]“He is a parasite with cheekbones.”[/b] [color=dee5f7][b]"Sybil."[/b][/color] She ignored that and leaned closer. [b]“Use your powers on him.”[/b] Marth’s face softened, but not in agreement. More like something inside him had gone very tired. [color=dee5f7][b]“I don’t want to do that.”[/b][/color] [b]“He is stalking you.”[/b] [color=dee5f7][b]“I know.”[/b][/color] [b]“Then don’t say it like I’ve misunderstood."[/b] Marth closed the notebook. [color=dee5f7][b]“It isn’t that simple.”[/b][/color] [b]“It is exactly that simple.”[/b] [color=dee5f7][b]“No,”[/b][/color] he said, still gently. [color=dee5f7][b]“It isn’t.”[/b][/color] He did not raise his voice. He rarely did. But there was a kind of quiet in him that could lower the temperature of a room. He used it with students on the edge of tears, with siblings on the edge of theatrics, with himself on the edge of becoming less gentle than he wished to be. Sybil knew that tone. Everyone in his family did. Calm, kind, immovable. [color=dee5f7][b]“He’s spiraling,”[/b][/color] Marth said after a moment. [color=dee5f7][b]“That doesn’t excuse anything. I know that. But we shared a lot of history and it wasn't all ugly."[/b][/color] [b]“No. Just the cheating. The lying. The late night harassment."[/b] Marth never mentioned that his ex had begun appearing during the day now too, more desperate than before. He gave her a look. [color=dee5f7][b]“I need to go to the school.” [/b][/color]He slipped his pencil into the notebook and closed the elastic band around it. [color=dee5f7][b]“The building is closed, but I have my key. I won’t grade anything properly at home, and certainly not at my apartment."[/b][/color] For a moment, the morning sat with them, then Sybil put her sunglasses back on with great dignity. [color=dee5f7][b]“Ok well, I’m staying here to job hunt.”[/b][/color] Marth stood and slung his satchel over his shoulder. He touched her shoulder as he passed, light and affectionate. [color=dee5f7][b]“Then I wish you the very best my dear.”[/b][/color] He smiled, bent to kiss her hair, and left her among the coffee cups, job listings, and whatever private war she was waging against cover letters. [hr] Outside, Calder City had become louder. Morning had found its full voice. People moved in shining currents beneath the Remembrance banners, coats brushing, phones lifted, voices rising into the sunlit air. Somewhere down the avenue, a brass ensemble had begun rehearsing for one of the public ceremonies, and the notes came thin and brave through the traffic. Marth walked with his mind closed. It took effort, though not as much as it once had. A muscle, that was all. A strange one. An invisible one. He held the city at a distance the way one might hold back heavy curtains. Without that discipline, the ambient thoughts of hundreds of people would come pressing in—train schedules, old grudges, hunger, love, irritation, holiday grief, a hundred private songs, the small animal thoughts people carried when they believed themselves alone. There had been years when he feared the noise might unmake him. But not now. Now he held the world out gently. Mostly. He boarded the train at Central Station and stood near the doors with one hand curled around the pole, his satchel tucked close against his side. The car smelled faintly of raincoats, metal, perfume, and someone’s paper bag of warm bread. Across from him, a little girl in a blue scarf swung her feet and hummed the same three notes over and over. Marth smiled at the floor. Oceanside Middle School sat in the Docks District, where Calder City loosened a little. The buildings stood lower there. The crowds thinner than downtown. Once Marth stepped off the train, he felt the difference at once with fewer minds pressing at the edge of his and fewer thoughts bumping shoulders in the invisible dark. He let his mind’s eye open just a little. Not fully. Never carelessly. Only enough to breathe. And then he heard it. [i]Marth.[/i] He stopped on the platform stairs. [i]Marth. Marth. Marth.[/i] His name, repeated with a dreadful tenderness. It did not shout. It pressed. It worried itself against him. Beneath the thought-voice lay urgency, want, obsession, liquor-warm desperation, and a twisted love that made Marth’s stomach tighten because it had once been less twisted. Once, perhaps, it had been only love. Marth knew before he looked. Before he breathed. Before the city made its next ordinary sound. He stepped off the main street and into a narrow alley beside a convenient store, hoping for a breath, a moment, a way to think without the crowd around him. The alley smelled of rain-soaked brick, old waters, and something metallic from the drains. A gull cried overhead like a rusty hinge. He had just reached for his phone when a hand closed around his wrist. For a stunned second, Marth was against him and his damp wool, expensive cologne soured by liquor, and under it all the crude mineral smell of obsidian smoke that always followed Bruno’s teleporting. Little black wisps still curled at the edges of the air, vanishing into nothing like burned lace. Marth’s stomach dropped so neatly it might have been rehearsed. [b][color=dee5f7]“Bruno.”[/color][/b] Bruno held him too tightly, swaying a little. His eyes were bright and unfocused. His handsome face, which had once made Marth foolish with hope, looked fevered with drink and certainty. [b]“I knew I’d find you,”[/b] Bruno said, smiling like this was romance and not ambush. [color=dee5f7][b]“Naturally...”[/b][/color] Marth said. Bruno didn't seem to pick up the tinge in sarcasm. [b]“I came to see you.”[/b] Bruno was considerably taller and leaned in from above, aiming for his cheek. The kiss missed and landed somewhere near his hair. [color=dee5f7][b]“Don’t."[/b][/color] Marth said. Bruno laughed, soft and wounded and drunk. [b]“You’re always so dramatic now.”[/b] Marth placed a hand against Bruno’s chest and pushed gently. Not a shove. Not enough to embarrass him. Not yet. [color=dee5f7][b]“Please let go.”[/b][/color] [b]“Just talk to me.”[/b] Marth eased backward when Bruno’s grip loosened by a breath. [color=dee5f7][b]“This is not a good time.”[/b][/color] [b]“It’s never a good time with you.”[/b] Bruno followed at once, as if distance itself offended him. [b]“That’s the problem. You keep dismissing me like I’m...like I’m nothing.”[/b] [color=dee5f7][b]“I’m not dismissing you.”[/b][/color] [b]“You are. You’ve decided I’m some terrible person when I’m the only one still trying. Do you know how many people would kill to have someone like me come back for them?”[/b] Marth looked at him then. Really looked. There was pain in Bruno, certainly. Shame too. Rage dressed up as devotion. Want turning itself spoiled at the edges. Marth could feel the thoughts pressing against his closed mind like fingers against a window. He did not open the window. [color=dee5f7][b]“Someone like you,”[/b][/color] Marth repeated softly. Bruno’s expression flickered. Marth’s voice stayed calm. [color=dee5f7][b]“Attractive and rich, you mean.”[/b][/color] [b]“That’s not what I—”[/b] [color=dee5f7][b]“It is though, a little.”[/b][/color] Bruno’s jaw tightened. [b]“I’ve changed.”[/b] Marth sighed deeply, his exasperation almost impossible to hide now. [color=dee5f7][b]“Mhmm.”[/b][/color] [b]“I’m drunk.”[/b] [color=dee5f7][b]“Yes, you are.”[/b][/color] Bruno reached for him again. [b]“Marth, please. I’m trying to tell you I’m sorry.”[/b] [color=dee5f7][b]“You were sorry last Thursday.”[/b][/color] [b]“I mean it this time.”[/b] [color=dee5f7][b]“You always mean it, Bruno...”[/b][/color] [b]“That’s not fair.”[/b] [color=dee5f7][b]“No,”[/b][/color] Marth said, and his gentleness thinned, just enough to show the bone underneath. [color=dee5f7][b]“What wasn’t fair was your beautiful penthouse, and your beautiful friends, and your beautiful lies, and me standing in the middle of all of it trying very hard not to understand what happened in your bedroom.”[/b][/color] Bruno recoiled as if struck. Marth looked away first. He hated that he had said it. He hated more that it was true. [color=dee5f7][b]“Please go home,”[/b][/color] he said. [color=dee5f7][b]“Back to the penthouse. Back to wherever else your infidelity happened. I don’t care anymore. Just go.” [/b][/color] Bruno grabbed his wrist again. Harder this time and more desperate. Marth inhaled. [b]“Marth, don’t do this.”[/b] Bruno’s voice broke open, then sharpened around the break.[b] “I can take us somewhere quiet. Just somewhere we can talk.”[/b] [b][color=dee5f7]“No.”[/color][/b] [b]“Just a few minutes.”[/b] [color=dee5f7][b]“No.”[/b][/color] [b]“I need you to hear me.”[/b] [color=dee5f7][b]“You’re hurting me.”[/b][/color] Bruno’s face changed, but his grip did not. [b]“I’m sorry,”[/b] he said quickly. [b]“I’m sorry, I’m not trying to...just give me a few minutes to make my case.”[/b] A bus groaned by on the street beyond. Someone laughed in the distance. Morning went on, indifferent and bright, while Marth stood with Bruno’s hand locked around his wrist and the faint scent of obsidian smoke at the back of his throat. For the first time in all the time they had known each other, Marth entered Bruno’s mind on purpose. Not deeply. Not cruelly. Only enough to place his voice where Bruno could not pretend the air had swallowed it. [i][color=dee5f7]You really need to stop. Now.[/color][/i] Bruno went still. Marth’s telepathic voice was not louder than speech. It was closer. A hand placed inside the room of thought. [i][color=dee5f7]Before this becomes something neither of us can take back[/color].[/i] Bruno’s breath caught, and then his eyes hardened. [b]“Did you just get in my head?”[/b] Marth swallowed. [color=dee5f7][b]“I asked you to let go.”[/b][/color] [b]“Is that a threat?”[/b] [color=dee5f7][b]“No,”[/b][/color] Marth said. He kept his voice even, though fear had begun to bloom quietly under his ribs, [color=dee5f7][b]“Not if you let go.”[/b][/color] Bruno stared at him, and the thought came into Marth's mind before he could close the door. [i]I could take us now.[/i] Everything inside Marth went quiet. His blood went pale and cold. Bruno’s grip tightened as a curl of obsidian smoke threaded between their shoes. Marth did not yank away. He did not raise his voice. He did not summon the light at his forehead, though he felt the small hidden tide of it wanting to answer fear with force. Marth was so keenly attuned to patience, even of the more unpleasant kind, but his limit had nearly been reached. He only stood there, gentle and frightened, trying very hard not to become desperate enough to use more of himself than he could forgive. [color=dee5f7][b]“Bruno,”[/b][/color] he said, very softly. [color=dee5f7][b]“Let go of my wrist.”[/b][/color] The city breathed beyond them. The alley held still. And neither of them did. [/color][/quote][/cell][/row][/table]